One of these
flaws was, that having been long taught by his father to over-reach
everybody, he had imperceptibly acquired a love of over-reaching
that venerable monitor himself. The other, that from his early
habits of considering everything as a question of property, he had
gradually come to look, with impatience, on his parent as a certain
amount of personal estate, which had no right whatever to be going
at large, but ought to be secured in that particular description of
iron safe which is commonly called a coffin, and banked in the
grave.
'Well, cousin!' said Mr Jonas—'Because we ARE cousins, you know,
a few times removed—so you're going to London?'
Miss Mercy replied in the affirmative, pinching her sister's arm
at the same time, and giggling excessively.
'Lots of beaux in London, cousin!' said Mr Jonas, slightly
advancing his elbow.
'Indeed, sir!' cried the young lady. 'They won't hurt us, sir, I
dare say.' And having given him this answer with great demureness
she was so overcome by her own humour, that she was fain to stifle
her merriment in her sister's shawl.
'Merry,' cried that more prudent damsel, 'really I am ashamed of
you. How can you go on so? You wild thing!' At which Miss Merry
only laughed the more, of course.
'I saw a wildness in her eye, t'other day,' said Mr Jonas,
addressing Charity. 'But you're the one to sit solemn! I say—You
were regularly prim, cousin!'
'Oh! The old-fashioned fright!' cried Merry, in a whisper.
'Cherry my dear, upon my word you must sit next him. I shall die
outright if he talks to me any more; I shall, positively!' To
prevent which fatal consequence, the buoyant creature skipped out
of her seat as she spoke, and squeezed her sister into the place
from which she had risen.
'Don't mind crowding me,' cried Mr Jonas. 'I like to be crowded
by gals. Come a little closer, cousin.'
'No, thank you, sir,' said Charity.
'There's that other one a-laughing again,' said Mr Jonas; 'she's
a-laughing at my father, I shouldn't wonder. If he puts on that old
flannel nightcap of his, I don't know what she'll do! Is that my
father a-snoring, Pecksniff?'
'Yes, Mr Jonas.'
'Tread upon his foot, will you be so good?' said the young
gentleman. 'The foot next you's the gouty one.'
Mr Pecksniff hesitating to perform this friendly office, Mr
Jonas did it himself; at the same time crying:
'Come, wake up, father, or you'll be having the nightmare, and
screeching out, I know.—Do you ever have the nightmare, cousin?' he
asked his neighbour, with characteristic gallantry, as he dropped
his voice again.
'Sometimes,' answered Charity. 'Not often.'
'The other one,' said Mr Jonas, after a pause. 'Does SHE ever
have the nightmare?'
'I don't know,' replied Charity. 'You had better ask her.'
'She laughs so,' said Jonas; 'there's no talking to her. Only
hark how she's a-going on now! You're the sensible one,
cousin!'
'Tut, tut!' cried Charity.
'Oh! But you are! You know you are!'
'Mercy is a little giddy,' said Miss Charity. But she'll sober
down in time.'
'It'll be a very long time, then, if she does at all,' rejoined
her cousin. 'Take a little more room.'
'I am afraid of crowding you,' said Charity. But she took it
notwithstanding; and after one or two remarks on the extreme
heaviness of the coach, and the number of places it stopped at,
they fell into a silence which remained unbroken by any member of
the party until supper-time.
Although Mr Jonas conducted Charity to the hotel and sat himself
beside her at the board, it was pretty clear that he had an eye to
'the other one' also, for he often glanced across at Mercy, and
seemed to draw comparisons between the personal appearance of the
two, which were not unfavourable to the superior plumpness of the
younger sister. He allowed himself no great leisure for this kind
of observation, however, being busily engaged with the supper,
which, as he whispered in his fair companion's ear, was a contract
business, and therefore the more she ate, the better the bargain
was. His father and Mr Pecksniff, probably acting on the same wise
principle, demolished everything that came within their reach, and
by that means acquired a greasy expression of countenance,
indicating contentment, if not repletion, which it was very
pleasant to contemplate.
When they could eat no more, Mr Pecksniff and Mr Jonas
subscribed for two sixpenny-worths of hot brandy-and-water, which
the latter gentleman considered a more politic order than one
shillingsworth; there being a chance of their getting more spirit
out of the innkeeper under this arrangement than if it were all in
one glass. Having swallowed his share of the enlivening fluid, Mr
Pecksniff, under pretence of going to see if the coach were ready,
went secretly to the bar, and had his own little bottle filled, in
order that he might refresh himself at leisure in the dark coach
without being observed.
These arrangements concluded, and the coach being ready, they
got into their old places and jogged on again. But before he
composed himself for a nap, Mr Pecksniff delivered a kind of grace
after meat, in these words:
'The process of digestion, as I have been informed by anatomical
friends, is one of the most wonderful works of nature. I do not
know how it may be with others, but it is a great satisfaction to
me to know, when regaling on my humble fare, that I am putting in
motion the most beautiful machinery with which we have any
acquaintance. I really feel at such times as if I was doing a
public service. When I have wound myself up, if I may employ such a
term,' said Mr Pecksniff with exquisite tenderness, 'and know that
I am Going, I feel that in the lesson afforded by the works within
me, I am a Benefactor to my Kind!'
As nothing could be added to this, nothing was said; and Mr
Pecksniff, exulting, it may be presumed, in his moral utility, went
to sleep again.
The rest of the night wore away in the usual manner. Mr
Pecksniff and Old Anthony kept tumbling against each other and
waking up much terrified, or crushed their heads in opposite
corners of the coach and strangely tattooed the surface of their
faces—Heaven knows how—in their sleep. The coach stopped and went
on, and went on and stopped, times out of number. Passengers got up
and passengers got down, and fresh horses came and went and came
again, with scarcely any interval between each team as it seemed to
those who were dozing, and with a gap of a whole night between
every one as it seemed to those who were broad awake. At length
they began to jolt and rumble over horribly uneven stones, and Mr
Pecksniff looking out of window said it was to-morrow morning, and
they were there.
Very soon afterwards the coach stopped at the office in the
city; and the street in which it was situated was already in a
bustle, that fully bore out Mr Pecksniff's words about its being
morning, though for any signs of day yet appearing in the sky it
might have been midnight. There was a dense fog too; as if it were
a city in the clouds, which they had been travelling to all night
up a magic beanstalk; and there was a thick crust upon the pavement
like oilcake; which, one of the outsides (mad, no doubt) said to
another (his keeper, of course), was Snow.
Taking a confused leave of Anthony and his son, and leaving the
luggage of himself and daughters at the office to be called for
afterwards, Mr Pecksniff, with one of the young ladies under each
arm, dived across the street, and then across other streets, and so
up the queerest courts, and down the strangest alleys and under the
blindest archways, in a kind of frenzy; now skipping over a kennel,
now running for his life from a coach and horses; now thinking he
had lost his way, now thinking he had found it; now in a state of
the highest confidence, now despondent to the last degree, but
always in a great perspiration and flurry; until at length they
stopped in a kind of paved yard near the Monument. That is to say,
Mr Pecksniff told them so; for as to anything they could see of the
Monument, or anything else but the buildings close at hand, they
might as well have been playing blindman's buff at Salisbury.
Mr Pecksniff looked about him for a moment, and then knocked at
the door of a very dingy edifice, even among the choice collection
of dingy edifices at hand; on the front of which was a little oval
board like a tea-tray, with this inscription—'Commercial
Boarding-House: M.
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