Chapter 22
Nicholas Nickleby
by
Charles Dickens
Nicholas, accompanied by Smike, sallies forth to seek his
Fortune. He encounters Mr Vincent Crummles; and who he was, is herein
made manifest
The whole capital which Nicholas found himself entitled to,
either in possession, reversion, remainder, or expectancy, after
paying his rent and settling with the broker from whom he had hired
his poor furniture, did not exceed, by more than a few halfpence, the
sum of twenty shillings. And yet he hailed the morning on which he
had resolved to quit London, with a light heart, and sprang from his
bed with an elasticity of spirit which is happily the lot of young
persons, or the world would never be stocked with old ones.
It was a cold, dry, foggy morning in early spring. A few meagre
shadows flitted to and fro in the misty streets, and occasionally
there loomed through the dull vapour, the heavy outline of some
hackney coach wending homewards, which, drawing slowly nearer, rolled
jangling by, scattering the thin crust of frost from its whitened
roof, and soon was lost again in the cloud. At intervals were heard
the tread of slipshod feet, and the chilly cry of the poor sweep as
he crept, shivering, to his early toil; the heavy footfall of the
official watcher of the night, pacing slowly up and down and cursing
the tardy hours that still intervened between him and sleep; the
rambling of ponderous carts and waggons; the roll of the lighter
vehicles which carried buyers and sellers to the different markets;
the sound of ineffectual knocking at the doors of heavy sleepers--all
these noises fell upon the ear from time to time, but all seemed
muffled by the fog, and to be rendered almost as indistinct to the
ear as was every object to the sight. The sluggish darkness
thickened as the day came on; and those who had the courage to rise
and peep at the gloomy street from their curtained windows, crept
back to bed again, and coiled themselves up to sleep.
Before even these indications of approaching morning were rife
in busy London, Nicholas had made his way alone to the city, and
stood beneath the windows of his mother's house. It was dull and
bare to see, but it had light and life for him; for there was at
least one heart within its old walls to which insult or dishonour
would bring the same blood rushing, that flowed in his own veins.
He crossed the road, and raised his eyes to the window of the
room where he knew his sister slept. It was closed and dark. 'Poor
girl,' thought Nicholas, 'she little thinks who lingers here!'
He looked again, and felt, for the moment, almost vexed that
Kate was not there to exchange one word at parting. 'Good God!' he
thought, suddenly correcting himself, 'what a boy I am!'
'It is better as it is,' said Nicholas, after he had lounged on,
a few paces, and returned to the same spot. 'When I left them
before, and could have said goodbye a thousand times if I had chosen,
I spared them the pain of leave-taking, and why not now?' As he
spoke, some fancied motion of the curtain almost persuaded him, for
the instant, that Kate was at the window, and by one of those strange
contradictions of feeling which are common to us all, he shrunk
involuntarily into a doorway, that she might not see him. He smiled
at his own weakness; said 'God bless them!' and walked away with a
lighter step.
Smike was anxiously expecting him when he reached his old
lodgings, and so was Newman, who had expended a day's income in a can
of rum and milk to prepare them for the journey. They had tied up
the luggage, Smike shouldered it, and away they went, with Newman
Noggs in company; for he had insisted on walking as far as he could
with them, overnight.
'Which way?' asked Newman, wistfully.
'To Kingston first,' replied Nicholas.
'And where afterwards?' asked Newman. 'Why won't you tell
me?'
'Because I scarcely know myself, good friend,' rejoined
Nicholas, laying his hand upon his shoulder; 'and if I did, I have
neither plan nor prospect yet, and might shift my quarters a hundred
times before you could possibly communicate with me.'
'I am afraid you have some deep scheme in your head,' said
Newman, doubtfully.
'So deep,' replied his young friend, 'that even I can't fathom
it. Whatever I resolve upon, depend upon it I will write you
soon.'
'You won't forget?' said Newman.
'I am not very likely to,' rejoined Nicholas. 'I have not so
many friends that I shall grow confused among the number, and forget
my best one.'
Occupied in such discourse, they walked on for a couple of
hours, as they might have done for a couple of days if Nicholas had
not sat himself down on a stone by the wayside, and resolutely
declared his intention of not moving another step until Newman Noggs
turned back. Having pleaded ineffectually first for another
half-mile, and afterwards for another quarter, Newman was fain to
comply, and to shape his course towards Golden Square, after
interchanging many hearty and affectionate farewells, and many times
turning back to wave his hat to the two wayfarers when they had
become mere specks in the distance.
'Now listen to me, Smike,' said Nicholas, as they trudged with
stout hearts onwards. 'We are bound for Portsmouth.'
Smike nodded his head and smiled, but expressed no other
emotion; for whether they had been bound for Portsmouth or Port Royal
would have been alike to him, so they had been bound together.
'I don't know much of these matters,' resumed Nicholas; 'but
Portsmouth is a seaport town, and if no other employment is to be
obtained, I should think we might get on board some ship. I am young
and active, and could be useful in many ways. So could you.'
'I hope so,' replied Smike. 'When I was at that--you know where
I mean?'
'Yes, I know,' said Nicholas. 'You needn't name the place.'
'Well, when I was there,' resumed Smike; his eyes sparkling at
the prospect of displaying his abilities; 'I could milk a cow, and
groom a horse, with anybody.'
'Ha!' said Nicholas, gravely. 'I am afraid they don't keep many
animals of either kind on board ship, Smike, and even when they have
horses, that they are not very particular about rubbing them down;
still you can learn to do something else, you know. Where there's a
will, there's a way.'
'And I am very willing,' said Smike, brightening up again.
'God knows you are,' rejoined Nicholas; 'and if you fail, it
shall go hard but I'll do enough for us both.'
'Do we go all the way today?' asked Smike, after a short
silence.
'That would be too severe a trial, even for your willing legs,'
said Nicholas, with a good-humoured smile. 'No. Godalming is some
thirty and odd miles from London--as I found from a map I borrowed--
and I purpose to rest there. We must push on again tomorrow, for we
are not rich enough to loiter. Let me relieve you of that bundle!
Come!'
'No, no,' rejoined Smike, falling back a few steps. 'Don't ask
me to give it up to you.'
'Why not?' asked Nicholas.
'Let me do something for you, at least,' said Smike. 'You will
never let me serve you as I ought. You will never know how I think,
day and night, of ways to please you.'
'You are a foolish fellow to say it, for I know it well, and see
it, or I should be a blind and senseless beast,' rejoined Nicholas.
'Let me ask you a question while I think of it, and there is no one
by,' he added, looking him steadily in the face. 'Have you a good
memory?'
'I don't know,' said Smike, shaking his head sorrowfully. 'I
think I had once; but it's all gone now--all gone.'
'Why do you think you had once?' asked Nicholas, turning quickly
upon him as though the answer in some way helped out the purport of
his question.
'Because I could remember, when I was a child,' said Smike, 'but
that is very, very long ago, or at least it seems so. I was always
confused and giddy at that place you took me from; and could never
remember, and sometimes couldn't even understand, what they said to
me. I--let me see--let me see!'
'You are wandering now,' said Nicholas, touching him on the
arm.
'No,' replied his companion, with a vacant look 'I was only
thinking how--' He shivered involuntarily as he spoke.
'Think no more of that place, for it is all over,' retorted
Nicholas, fixing his eyes full upon that of his companion, which was
fast settling into an unmeaning stupefied gaze, once habitual to him,
and common even then. 'What of the first day you went to
Yorkshire?'
'Eh!' cried the lad.
'That was before you began to lose your recollection, you know,'
said Nicholas quietly. 'Was the weather hot or cold?'
'Wet,' replied the boy. 'Very wet. I have always said, when it
has rained hard, that it was like the night I came: and they used to
crowd round and laugh to see me cry when the rain fell heavily. It
was like a child, they said, and that made me think of it more. I
turned cold all over sometimes, for I could see myself as I was then,
coming in at the very same door.'
'As you were then,' repeated Nicholas, with assumed
carelessness; 'how was that?'
'Such a little creature,' said Smike, 'that they might have had
pity and mercy upon me, only to remember it.'
'You didn't find your way there, alone!' remarked Nicholas.
'No,' rejoined Smike, 'oh no.'
'Who was with you?'
'A man--a dark, withered man. I have heard them say so, at the
school, and I remembered that before. I was glad to leave him, I was
afraid of him; but they made me more afraid of them, and used me
harder too.'
'Look at me,' said Nicholas, wishing to attract his full
attention. 'There; don't turn away. Do you remember no woman, no
kind woman, who hung over you once, and kissed your lips, and called
you her child?'
'No,' said the poor creature, shaking his head, 'no, never.'
'Nor any house but that house in Yorkshire?'
'No,' rejoined the youth, with a melancholy look; 'a room--I
remember I slept in a room, a large lonesome room at the top of a
house, where there was a trap-door in the ceiling. I have covered my
head with the clothes often, not to see it, for it frightened me: a
young child with no one near at night: and I used to wonder what was
on the other side. There was a clock too, an old clock, in one
corner. I remember that. I have never forgotten that room; for when
I have terrible dreams, it comes back, just as it was. I see things
and people in it that I had never seen then, but there is the room
just as it used to be; that never changes.'
'Will you let me take the bundle now?' asked Nicholas, abruptly
changing the theme.
'No,' said Smike, 'no. Come, let us walk on.'
He quickened his pace as he said this, apparently under the
impression that they had been standing still during the whole of the
previous dialogue. Nicholas marked him closely, and every word of
this conversation remained upon his memory.
It was, by this time, within an hour of noon, and although a
dense vapour still enveloped the city they had left, as if the very
breath of its busy people hung over their schemes of gain and profit,
and found greater attraction there than in the quiet region above, in
the open country it was clear and fair. Occasionally, in some low
spots they came upon patches of mist which the sun had not yet driven
from their strongholds; but these were soon passed, and as they
laboured up the hills beyond, it was pleasant to look down, and see
how the sluggish mass rolled heavily off, before the cheering
influence of day. A broad, fine, honest sun lighted up the green
pastures and dimpled water with the semblance of summer, while it
left the travellers all the invigorating freshness of that early time
of year. The ground seemed elastic under their feet; the sheep-bells
were music to their ears; and exhilarated by exercise, and stimulated
by hope, they pushed onward with the strength of lions.
The day wore on, and all these bright colours subsided, and
assumed a quieter tint, like young hopes softened down by time, or
youthful features by degrees resolving into the calm and serenity of
age. But they were scarcely less beautiful in their slow decline,
than they had been in their prime; for nature gives to every time and
season some beauties of its own; and from morning to night, as from
the cradle to the grave, is but a succession of changes so gentle and
easy, that we can scarcely mark their progress.
To Godalming they came at last, and here they bargained for two
humble beds, and slept soundly. In the morning they were astir:
though not quite so early as the sun: and again afoot; if not with
all the freshness of yesterday, still, with enough of hope and spirit
to bear them cheerily on.
It was a harder day's journey than yesterday's, for there were
long and weary hills to climb; and in journeys, as in life, it is a
great deal easier to go down hill than up. However, they kept on,
with unabated perseverance, and the hill has not yet lifted its face
to heaven that perseverance will not gain the summit of at last.
They walked upon the rim of the Devil's Punch Bowl; and Smike
listened with greedy interest as Nicholas read the inscription upon
the stone which, reared upon that wild spot, tells of a murder
committed there by night. The grass on which they stood, had once
been dyed with gore; and the blood of the murdered man had run down,
drop by drop, into the hollow which gives the place its name. 'The
Devil's Bowl,' thought Nicholas, as he looked into the void, 'never
held fitter liquor than that!'
Onward they kept, with steady purpose, and entered at length
upon a wide and spacious tract of downs, with every variety of little
hill and plain to change their verdant surface. Here, there shot up,
almost perpendicularly, into the sky, a height so steep, as to be
hardly accessible to any but the sheep and goats that fed upon its
sides, and there, stood a mound of green, sloping and tapering off so
delicately, and merging so gently into the level ground, that you
could scarce define its limits. Hills swelling above each other; and
undulations shapely and uncouth, smooth and rugged, graceful and
grotesque, thrown negligently side by side, bounded the view in each
direction; while frequently, with unexpected noise, there uprose from
the ground a flight of crows, who, cawing and wheeling round the
nearest hills, as if uncertain of their course, suddenly poised
themselves upon the wing and skimmed down the long vista of some
opening valley, with the speed of light itself.
By degrees, the prospect receded more and more on either hand,
and as they had been shut out from rich and extensive scenery, so
they emerged once again upon the open country. The knowledge that
they were drawing near their place of destination, gave them fresh
courage to proceed; but the way had been difficult, and they had
loitered on the road, and Smike was tired. Thus, twilight had
already closed in, when they turned off the path to the door of a
roadside inn, yet twelve miles short of Portsmouth.
'Twelve miles,' said Nicholas, leaning with both hands on his
stick, and looking doubtfully at Smike.
'Twelve long miles,' repeated the landlord.
'Is it a good road?' inquired Nicholas.
'Very bad,' said the landlord. As of course, being a landlord,
he would say.
'I want to get on,' observed Nicholas. hesitating. 'I scarcely
know what to do.'
'Don't let me influence you,' rejoined the landlord. 'I
wouldn't go on if it was me.'
'Wouldn't you?' asked Nicholas, with the same uncertainty.
'Not if I knew when I was well off,' said the landlord. And
having said it he pulled up his apron, put his hands into his
pockets, and, taking a step or two outside the door, looked down the
dark road with an assumption of great indifference.
A glance at the toil-worn face of Smike determined Nicholas, so
without any further consideration he made up his mind to stay where
he was.
The landlord led them into the kitchen, and as there was a good
fire he remarked that it was very cold. If there had happened to be
a bad one he would have observed that it was very warm.
'What can you give us for supper?' was Nicholas's natural
question.
'Why--what would you like?' was the landlord's no less natural
answer.
Nicholas suggested cold meat, but there was no cold
meat--poached eggs, but there were no eggs--mutton chops, but there
wasn't a mutton chop within three miles, though there had been more
last week than they knew what to do with, and would be an
extraordinary supply the day after tomorrow.
'Then,' said Nicholas, 'I must leave it entirely to you, as I
would have done, at first, if you had allowed me.'
'Why, then I'll tell you what,' rejoined the landlord. 'There's
a gentleman in the parlour that's ordered a hot beef-steak pudding
and potatoes, at nine. There's more of it than he can manage, and I
have very little doubt that if I ask leave, you can sup with him.
I'll do that, in a minute.'
'No, no,' said Nicholas, detaining him. 'I would rather not.
I--at least--pshaw! why cannot I speak out? Here; you see that I am
travelling in a very humble manner, and have made my way hither on
foot. It is more than probable, I think, that the gentleman may not
relish my company; and although I am the dusty figure you see, I am
too proud to thrust myself into his.'
'Lord love you,' said the landlord, 'it's only Mr Crummles; he
isn't particular.'
'Is he not?' asked Nicholas, on whose mind, to tell the truth,
the prospect of the savoury pudding was making some impression.
'Not he,' replied the landlord. 'He'll like your way of
talking, I know. But we'll soon see all about that. Just wait a
minute.'
The landlord hurried into the parlour, without staying for
further permission, nor did Nicholas strive to prevent him: wisely
considering that supper, under the circumstances, was too serious a
matter to be trifled with. It was not long before the host returned,
in a condition of much excitement.
'All right,' he said in a low voice. 'I knew he would. You'll
see something rather worth seeing, in there. Ecod, how they are
a-going of it!'
There was no time to inquire to what this exclamation, which was
delivered in a very rapturous tone, referred; for he had already
thrown open the door of the room; into which Nicholas, followed by
Smike with the bundle on his shoulder (he carried it about with him
as vigilantly as if it had been a sack of gold), straightway
repaired.
Nicholas was prepared for something odd, but not for something
quite so odd as the sight he encountered. At the upper end of the
room, were a couple of boys, one of them very tall and the other very
short, both dressed as sailors--or at least as theatrical sailors,
with belts, buckles, pigtails, and pistols complete--fighting what is
called in play-bills a terrific combat, with two of those short
broad-swords with basket hilts which are commonly used at our minor
theatres. The short boy had gained a great advantage over the tall
boy, who was reduced to mortal strait, and both were overlooked by a
large heavy man, perched against the corner of a table, who
emphatically adjured them to strike a little more fire out of the
swords, and they couldn't fail to bring the house down, on the very
first night.
'Mr Vincent Crummles,' said the landlord with an air of great
deference. 'This is the young gentleman.'
Mr Vincent Crummles received Nicholas with an inclination of the
head, something between the courtesy of a Roman emperor and the nod
of a pot companion; and bade the landlord shut the door and
begone.
'There's a picture,' said Mr Crummles, motioning Nicholas not to
advance and spoil it. 'The little 'un has him; if the big 'un
doesn't knock under, in three seconds, he's a dead man. Do that
again, boys.'
The two combatants went to work afresh, and chopped away until
the swords emitted a shower of sparks: to the great satisfaction of
Mr Crummles, who appeared to consider this a very great point indeed.
The engagement commenced with about two hundred chops administered by
the short sailor and the tall sailor alternately, without producing
any particular result, until the short sailor was chopped down on one
knee; but this was nothing to him, for he worked himself about on the
one knee with the assistance of his left hand, and fought most
desperately until the tall sailor chopped his sword out of his grasp.
Now, the inference was, that the short sailor, reduced to this
extremity, would give in at once and cry quarter, but, instead of
that, he all of a sudden drew a large pistol from his belt and
presented it at the face of the tall sailor, who was so overcome at
this (not expecting it) that he let the short sailor pick up his
sword and begin again. Then, the chopping recommenced, and a variety
of fancy chops were administered on both sides; such as chops dealt
with the left hand, and under the leg, and over the right shoulder,
and over the left; and when the short sailor made a vigorous cut at
the tall sailor's legs, which would have shaved them clean off if it
had taken effect, the tall sailor jumped over the short sailor's
sword, wherefore to balance the matter, and make it all fair, the
tall sailor administered the same cut, and the short sailor jumped
over his sword. After this, there was a good deal of dodging about,
and hitching up of the inexpressibles in the absence of braces, and
then the short sailor (who was the moral character evidently, for he
always had the best of it) made a violent demonstration and closed
with the tall sailor, who, after a few unavailing struggles, went
down, and expired in great torture as the short sailor put his foot
upon his breast, and bored a hole in him through and through.
'That'll be a double encore if you take care, boys,' said Mr
Crummles. 'You had better get your wind now and change your
clothes.'
Having addressed these words to the combatants, he saluted
Nicholas, who then observed that the face of Mr Crummles was quite
proportionate in size to his body; that he had a very full under-
lip, a hoarse voice, as though he were in the habit of shouting very
much, and very short black hair, shaved off nearly to the crown of
his head--to admit (as he afterwards learnt) of his more easily
wearing character wigs of any shape or pattern.
'What did you think of that, sir?' inquired Mr Crummles.
'Very good, indeed--capital,' answered Nicholas.
'You won't see such boys as those very often, I think,' said Mr
Crummles.
Nicholas assented--observing that if they were a little better
match--
'Match!' cried Mr Crummles.
'I mean if they were a little more of a size,' said Nicholas,
explaining himself.
'Size!' repeated Mr Crummles; 'why, it's the essence of the
combat that there should be a foot or two between them. How are you
to get up the sympathies of the audience in a legitimate manner, if
there isn't a little man contending against a big one?--unless
there's at least five to one, and we haven't hands enough for that
business in our company.'
'I see,' replied Nicholas. 'I beg your pardon. That didn't
occur to me, I confess.'
'It's the main point,' said Mr Crummles. 'I open at Portsmouth
the day after tomorrow. If you're going there, look into the
theatre, and see how that'll tell.'
Nicholas promised to do so, if he could, and drawing a chair
near the fire, fell into conversation with the manager at once. He
was very talkative and communicative, stimulated perhaps, not only by
his natural disposition, but by the spirits and water he sipped very
plentifully, or the snuff he took in large quantities from a piece of
whitey-brown paper in his waistcoat pocket. He laid open his affairs
without the smallest reserve, and descanted at some length upon the
merits of his company, and the acquirements of his family; of both of
which, the two broad-sword boys formed an honourable portion. There
was to be a gathering, it seemed, of the different ladies and
gentlemen at Portsmouth on the morrow, whither the father and sons
were proceeding (not for the regular season, but in the course of a
wandering speculation), after fulfilling an engagement at Guildford
with the greatest applause.
'You are going that way?' asked the manager.
'Ye-yes,' said Nicholas. 'Yes, I am.'
'Do you know the town at all?' inquired the manager, who seemed
to consider himself entitled to the same degree of confidence as he
had himself exhibited.
'No,' replied Nicholas.
'Never there?'
'Never.'
Mr Vincent Crummles gave a short dry cough, as much as to say,
'If you won't be communicative, you won't;' and took so many pinches
of snuff from the piece of paper, one after another, that Nicholas
quite wondered where it all went to.
While he was thus engaged, Mr Crummles looked, from time to
time, with great interest at Smike, with whom he had appeared
considerably struck from the first. He had now fallen asleep, and
was nodding in his chair.
'Excuse my saying so,' said the manager, leaning over to
Nicholas, and sinking his voice, 'but what a capital countenance your
friend has got!'
'Poor fellow!' said Nicholas, with a half-smile, 'I wish it were
a little more plump, and less haggard.'
'Plump!' exclaimed the manager, quite horrified, 'you'd spoil it
for ever.'
'Do you think so?'
'Think so, sir! Why, as he is now,' said the manager, striking
his knee emphatically; 'without a pad upon his body, and hardly a
touch of paint upon his face, he'd make such an actor for the starved
business as was never seen in this country. Only let him be
tolerably well up in the Apothecary in Romeo and Juliet, with the
slightest possible dab of red on the tip of his nose, and he'd be
certain of three rounds the moment he put his head out of the
practicable door in the front grooves O.P.'
'You view him with a professional eye,' said Nicholas,
laughing.
'And well I may,' rejoined the manager. 'I never saw a young
fellow so regularly cut out for that line, since I've been in the
profession. And I played the heavy children when I was eighteen
months old.'
The appearance of the beef-steak pudding, which came in
simultaneously with the junior Vincent Crummleses, turned the
conversation to other matters, and indeed, for a time, stopped it
altogether. These two young gentlemen wielded their knives and forks
with scarcely less address than their broad-swords, and as the whole
party were quite as sharp set as either class of weapons, there was
no time for talking until the supper had been disposed of.
The Master Crummleses had no sooner swallowed the last
procurable morsel of food, than they evinced, by various
half-suppressed yawns and stretchings of their limbs, an obvious
inclination to retire for the night, which Smike had betrayed still
more strongly: he having, in the course of the meal, fallen asleep
several times while in the very act of eating. Nicholas therefore
proposed that they should break up at once, but the manager would by
no means hear of it; vowing that he had promised himself the pleasure
of inviting his new acquaintance to share a bowl of punch, and that
if he declined, he should deem it very unhandsome behaviour.
'Let them go,' said Mr Vincent Crummles, 'and we'll have it
snugly and cosily together by the fire.'
Nicholas was not much disposed to sleep--being in truth too
anxious-- so, after a little demur, he accepted the offer, and having
exchanged a shake of the hand with the young Crummleses, and the
manager having on his part bestowed a most affectionate benediction
on Smike, he sat himself down opposite to that gentleman by the
fireside to assist in emptying the bowl, which soon afterwards
appeared, steaming in a manner which was quite exhilarating to
behold, and sending forth a most grateful and inviting fragrance.
But, despite the punch and the manager, who told a variety of
stories, and smoked tobacco from a pipe, and inhaled it in the shape
of snuff, with a most astonishing power, Nicholas was absent and
dispirited. His thoughts were in his old home, and when they
reverted to his present condition, the uncertainty of the morrow cast
a gloom upon him, which his utmost efforts were unable to dispel.
His attention wandered; although he heard the manager's voice, he was
deaf to what he said; and when Mr Vincent Crummles concluded the
history of some long adventure with a loud laugh, and an inquiry what
Nicholas would have done under the same circumstances, he was obliged
to make the best apology in his power, and to confess his entire
ignorance of all he had been talking about.
'Why, so I saw,' observed Mr Crummles. 'You're uneasy in your
mind. What's the matter?'
Nicholas could not refrain from smiling at the abruptness of the
question; but, thinking it scarcely worth while to parry it, owned
that he was under some apprehensions lest he might not succeed in the
object which had brought him to that part of the country.
'And what's that?' asked the manager.
'Getting something to do which will keep me and my poor fellow-
traveller in the common necessaries of life,' said Nicholas. 'That's
the truth. You guessed it long ago, I dare say, so I may as well
have the credit of telling it you with a good grace.'
'What's to be got to do at Portsmouth more than anywhere else?'
asked Mr Vincent Crummles, melting the sealing-wax on the stem of his
pipe in the candle, and rolling it out afresh with his little
finger.
'There are many vessels leaving the port, I suppose,' replied
Nicholas. 'I shall try for a berth in some ship or other. There is
meat and drink there at all events.'
'Salt meat and new rum; pease-pudding and chaff-biscuits,' said
the manager, taking a whiff at his pipe to keep it alight, and
returning to his work of embellishment.
'One may do worse than that,' said Nicholas. 'I can rough it, I
believe, as well as most young men of my age and previous habits.'
'You need be able to,' said the manager, 'if you go on board
ship; but you won't.'
'Why not?'
'Because there's not a skipper or mate that would think you
worth your salt, when he could get a practised hand,' replied the
manager; 'and they as plentiful there, as the oysters in the
streets.'
'What do you mean?' asked Nicholas, alarmed by this prediction,
and the confident tone in which it had been uttered. 'Men are not
born able seamen. They must be reared, I suppose?'
Mr Vincent Crummles nodded his head. 'They must; but not at
your age, or from young gentlemen like you.'
There was a pause. The countenance of Nicholas fell, and he
gazed ruefully at the fire.
'Does no other profession occur to you, which a young man of
your figure and address could take up easily, and see the world to
advantage in?' asked the manager.
'No,' said Nicholas, shaking his head.
'Why, then, I'll tell you one,' said Mr Crummles, throwing his
pipe into the fire, and raising his voice. 'The stage.'
'The stage!' cried Nicholas, in a voice almost as loud.
'The theatrical profession,' said Mr Vincent Crummles. 'I am in
the theatrical profession myself, my wife is in the theatrical
profession, my children are in the theatrical profession. I had a
dog that lived and died in it from a puppy; and my chaise-pony goes
on, in Timour the Tartar. I'll bring you out, and your friend too.
Say the word. I want a novelty.'
'I don't know anything about it,' rejoined Nicholas, whose
breath had been almost taken away by this sudden proposal. 'I never
acted a part in my life, except at school.'
'There's genteel comedy in your walk and manner, juvenile
tragedy in your eye, and touch-and-go farce in your laugh,' said Mr
Vincent Crummles. 'You'll do as well as if you had thought of
nothing else but the lamps, from your birth downwards.'
Nicholas thought of the small amount of small change that would
remain in his pocket after paying the tavern bill; and he
hesitated.
'You can be useful to us in a hundred ways,' said Mr Crummles.
'Think what capital bills a man of your education could write for the
shop-windows.'
'Well, I think I could manage that department,' said
Nicholas.
'To be sure you could,' replied Mr Crummles. '"For further
particulars see small hand-bills"--we might have half a volume in
every one of 'em. Pieces too; why, you could write us a piece to
bring out the whole strength of the company, whenever we wanted
one.'
'I am not quite so confident about that,' replied Nicholas.
'But I dare say I could scribble something now and then, that would
suit you.'
'We'll have a new show-piece out directly,' said the manager.
'Let me see--peculiar resources of this establishment--new and
splendid scenery--you must manage to introduce a real pump and two
washing- tubs.'
'Into the piece?' said Nicholas.
'Yes,' replied the manager. 'I bought 'em cheap, at a sale the
other day, and they'll come in admirably. That's the London plan.
They look up some dresses, and properties, and have a piece written
to fit 'em. Most of the theatres keep an author on purpose.'
'Indeed!' cried Nicholas.
'Oh, yes,' said the manager; 'a common thing. It'll look very
well in the bills in separate lines--Real pump!--Splendid
tubs!--Great attraction! You don't happen to be anything of an
artist, do you?'
'That is not one of my accomplishments,' rejoined Nicholas.
'Ah! Then it can't be helped,' said the manager. 'If you had
been, we might have had a large woodcut of the last scene for the
posters, showing the whole depth of the stage, with the pump and tubs
in the middle; but, however, if you're not, it can't be helped.'
'What should I get for all this?' inquired Nicholas, after a few
moments' reflection. 'Could I live by it?'
'Live by it!' said the manager. 'Like a prince! With your own
salary, and your friend's, and your writings, you'd make--ah! you'd
make a pound a week!'
'You don't say so!'
'I do indeed, and if we had a run of good houses, nearly double
the money.'
Nicholas shrugged his shoulders; but sheer destitution was
before him; and if he could summon fortitude to undergo the extremes
of want and hardship, for what had he rescued his helpless charge if
it were only to bear as hard a fate as that from which he had wrested
him? It was easy to think of seventy miles as nothing, when he was
in the same town with the man who had treated him so ill and roused
his bitterest thoughts; but now, it seemed far enough. What if he
went abroad, and his mother or Kate were to die the while?
Without more deliberation, he hastily declared that it was a
bargain, and gave Mr Vincent Crummles his hand upon it.