There's nothing there
but padding; and a greasy sort it is.'
'Nay, Mark,' urged Mr Pinch, interposing to prevent hostilities,
'tell me what I ask you. You're not out of temper, I hope?'
'Out of temper, sir!' cried Mark, with a grin; 'why no, sir.
There's a little credit—not much—in being jolly, when such fellows
as him is a-going about like roaring lions; if there is any breed
of lions, at least, as is all roar and mane. What is there between
him and Mrs Lupin, sir? Why, there's a score between him and Mrs
Lupin. And I think Mrs Lupin lets him and his friend off very easy
in not charging 'em double prices for being a disgrace to the
Dragon. That's my opinion. I wouldn't have any such Peter the Wild
Boy as him in my house, sir, not if I was paid race-week prices for
it. He's enough to turn the very beer in the casks sour with his
looks; he is! So he would, if it had judgment enough.'
'You're not answering my question, you know, Mark,' observed Mr
Pinch.
'Well, sir,' said Mark, 'I don't know as there's much to answer
further than that. Him and his friend goes and stops at the Moon
and Stars till they've run a bill there; and then comes and stops
with us and does the same. The running of bills is common enough Mr
Pinch; it an't that as we object to; it's the ways of this chap.
Nothing's good enough for him; all the women is dying for him he
thinks, and is overpaid if he winks at 'em; and all the men was
made to be ordered about by him. This not being aggravation enough,
he says this morning to me, in his usual captivating way, "We're
going to-night, my man." "Are you, sir?" says I. "Perhaps you'd
like the bill got ready, sir?" "Oh no, my man," he says; "you
needn't mind that. I'll give Pecksniff orders to see to that." In
reply to which, the Dragon makes answer, "Thankee, sir, you're very
kind to honour us so far, but as we don't know any particular good
of you, and you don't travel with luggage, and Mr Pecksniff an't at
home (which perhaps you mayn't happen to be aware of, sir), we
should prefer something more satisfactory;" and that's where the
matter stands. And I ask,' said Mr Tapley, pointing, in conclusion,
to Mr Tigg, with his hat, 'any lady or gentleman, possessing
ordinary strength of mind, to say whether he's a
disagreeable-looking chap or not!'
'Let me inquire,' said Martin, interposing between this candid
speech and the delivery of some blighting anathema by Mr Tigg,
'what the amount of this debt may be?'
'In point of money, sir, very little,' answered Mark. 'Only just
turned of three pounds. But it an't that; it's the—'
'Yes, yes, you told us so before,' said Martin. 'Pinch, a word
with you.'
'What is it?' asked Tom, retiring with him to a corner of the
room.
'Why, simply—I am ashamed to say—that this Mr Slyme is a
relation of mine, of whom I never heard anything pleasant; and that
I don't want him here just now, and think he would be cheaply got
rid of, perhaps, for three or four pounds. You haven't enough money
to pay this bill, I suppose?'
Tom shook his head to an extent that left no doubt of his entire
sincerity.
'That's unfortunate, for I am poor too; and in case you had had
it, I'd have borrowed it of you. But if we told this landlady we
would see her paid, I suppose that would answer the same
purpose?'
'Oh dear, yes!' said Tom. 'She knows me, bless you!'
'Then let us go down at once and tell her so; for the sooner we
are rid of their company the better. As you have conducted the
conversation with this gentleman hitherto, perhaps you'll tell him
what we purpose doing; will you?'
Mr Pinch, complying, at once imparted the intelligence to Mr
Tigg, who shook him warmly by the hand in return, assuring him that
his faith in anything and everything was again restored. It was not
so much, he said, for the temporary relief of this assistance that
he prized it, as for its vindication of the high principle that
Nature's Nobs felt with Nature's Nobs, and that true greatness of
soul sympathized with true greatness of soul, all the world over.
It proved to him, he said, that like him they admired genius, even
when it was coupled with the alloy occasionally visible in the
metal of his friend Slyme; and on behalf of that friend, he thanked
them; as warmly and heartily as if the cause were his own. Being
cut short in these speeches by a general move towards the stairs,
he took possession at the street door of the lapel of Mr Pinch's
coat, as a security against further interruption; and entertained
that gentleman with some highly improving discourse until they
reached the Dragon, whither they were closely followed by Mark and
the new pupil.
The rosy hostess scarcely needed Mr Pinch's word as a
preliminary to the release of her two visitors, of whom she was
glad to be rid on any terms; indeed, their brief detention had
originated mainly with Mr Tapley, who entertained a constitutional
dislike to gentleman out-at-elbows who flourished on false
pretences; and had conceived a particular aversion to Mr Tigg and
his friend, as choice specimens of the species. The business in
hand thus easily settled, Mr Pinch and Martin would have withdrawn
immediately, but for the urgent entreaties of Mr Tigg that they
would allow him the honour of presenting them to his friend Slyme,
which were so very difficult of resistance that, yielding partly to
these persuasions and partly to their own curiosity, they suffered
themselves to be ushered into the presence of that distinguished
gentleman.
He was brooding over the remains of yesterday's decanter of
brandy, and was engaged in the thoughtful occupation of making a
chain of rings on the top of the table with the wet foot of his
drinking-glass. Wretched and forlorn as he looked, Mr Slyme had
once been in his way, the choicest of swaggerers; putting forth his
pretensions boldly, as a man of infinite taste and most undoubted
promise. The stock-in-trade requisite to set up an amateur in this
department of business is very slight, and easily got together; a
trick of the nose and a curl of the lip sufficient to compound a
tolerable sneer, being ample provision for any exigency. But, in an
evil hour, this off-shoot of the Chuzzlewit trunk, being lazy, and
ill qualified for any regular pursuit and having dissipated such
means as he ever possessed, had formally established himself as a
professor of Taste for a livelihood; and finding, too late, that
something more than his old amount of qualifications was necessary
to sustain him in this calling, had quickly fallen to his present
level, where he retained nothing of his old self but his
boastfulness and his bile, and seemed to have no existence separate
or apart from his friend Tigg. And now so abject and so pitiful was
he—at once so maudlin, insolent, beggarly, and proud—that even his
friend and parasite, standing erect beside him, swelled into a Man
by contrast.
'Chiv,' said Mr Tigg, clapping him on the back, 'my friend
Pecksniff not being at home, I have arranged our trifling piece of
business with Mr Pinch and friend. Mr Pinch and friend, Mr Chevy
Slyme! Chiv, Mr Pinch and friend!'
'These are agreeable circumstances in which to be introduced to
strangers,' said Chevy Slyme, turning his bloodshot eyes towards
Tom Pinch. 'I am the most miserable man in the world, I
believe!'
Tom begged he wouldn't mention it; and finding him in this
condition, retired, after an awkward pause, followed by Martin. But
Mr Tigg so urgently conjured them, by coughs and signs, to remain
in the shadow of the door, that they stopped there.
'I swear,' cried Mr Slyme, giving the table an imbecile blow
with his fist, and then feebly leaning his head upon his hand,
while some drunken drops oozed from his eyes, 'that I am the
wretchedest creature on record.
1 comment