Sketches by Boz, by Charles Dickens (1836) - Tales - Chapter 1 - 1
TALES
CHAPTER I—THE BOARDING-HOUSE.
CHAPTER I. Mrs. Tibbs was, beyond all dispute, the most tidy,
fidgety, thrifty little personage that ever inhaled the smoke of London; and the
house of Mrs. Tibbs was, decidedly, the neatest in all Great Coram-street.
The area and the area-steps, and the street-door and the street-door steps, and
the brass handle, and the door-plate, and the knocker, and the fan-light, were
all as clean and bright, as indefatigable white-washing, and hearth-stoning, and
scrubbing and rubbing, could make them. The wonder was, that the brass
door-plate, with the interesting inscription ‘MRS. TIBBS,’ had never caught
fire from constant friction, so perseveringly was it polished. There were
meat-safe-looking blinds in the parlour-windows, blue and gold curtains in the
drawing-room, and spring-roller blinds, as Mrs. Tibbs was wont in the pride of
her heart to boast, ‘all the way up.’ The bell-lamp in the passage looked as
clear as a soap-bubble; you could see yourself in all the tables, and
French-polish yourself on any one of the chairs. The banisters were
bees-waxed; and the very stair-wires made your eyes wink, they were so
glittering.
Mrs. Tibbs was somewhat short of stature, and Mr. Tibbs
was by no means a large man. He had, moreover, very short legs, but, by
way of indemnification, his face was peculiarly long. He was to his wife
what the 0 is in 90—he was of some importance with her—he was nothing
without her. Mrs. Tibbs was always talking. Mr. Tibbs rarely spoke;
but, if it were at any time possible to put in a word, when he should have said
nothing at all, he had that talent. Mrs. Tibbs detested long stories, and
Mr. Tibbs had one, the conclusion of which had never been heard by his most
intimate friends. It always began, ‘I recollect when I was in the
volunteer corps, in eighteen hundred and six,’—but, as he spoke very slowly
and softly, and his better half very quickly and loudly, he rarely got beyond
the introductory sentence. He was a melancholy specimen of the
story-teller. He was the wandering Jew of Joe Millerism.
Mr. Tibbs enjoyed a small independence from the
pension-list—about 43l. 15s. 10d. a year. His
father, mother, and five interesting scions from the same stock, drew a like sum
from the revenue of a grateful country, though for what particular service was
never known. But, as this said independence was not quite sufficient to
furnish two people with all the luxuries of this life, it had occurred to
the busy little spouse of Tibbs, that the best thing she could do with a legacy
of 700l., would be to take and furnish a tolerable house—somewhere in
that partially-explored tract of country which lies between the British Museum,
and a remote village called Somers-town—for the reception of boarders.
Great Coram-street was the spot pitched upon. The house had been furnished
accordingly; two female servants and a boy engaged; and an advertisement
inserted in the morning papers, informing the public that ‘Six individuals
would meet with all the comforts of a cheerful musical home in a select private
family, residing within ten minutes’ walk of’—everywhere. Answers
out of number were received, with all sorts of initials; all the letters of the
alphabet seemed to be seized with a sudden wish to go out boarding and lodging;
voluminous was the correspondence between Mrs. Tibbs and the applicants; and
most profound was the secrecy observed. ‘E.’ didn’t like this;
‘I.’ couldn’t think of putting up with that; ‘I. O. U.’ didn’t think
the terms would suit him; and ‘G. R.’ had never slept in a French bed.
The result, however, was, that three gentlemen became inmates of Mrs. Tibbs’s
house, on terms which were ‘agreeable to all parties.’ In went the
advertisement again, and a lady with her two daughters, proposed to
increase—not their families, but Mrs. Tibbs’s.
‘Charming woman, that Mrs. Maplesone!’ said Mrs.
Tibbs, as she and her spouse were sitting by the fire after breakfast; the
gentlemen having gone out on their several avocations. ‘Charming woman,
indeed!’ repeated little Mrs. Tibbs, more by way of soliloquy than anything
else, for she never thought of consulting her husband. ‘And the two
daughters are delightful. We must have some fish to-day; they’ll join us
at dinner for the first time.’
Mr. Tibbs placed the poker at right angles with the fire
shovel, and essayed to speak, but recollected he had nothing to say.
‘The young ladies,’ continued Mrs. T., ‘have
kindly volunteered to bring their own piano.’
Tibbs thought of the volunteer story, but did not
venture it.
A bright thought struck him -
‘It’s very likely—’ said he.
‘Pray don’t lean your head against the paper,’
interrupted Mrs. Tibbs; ‘and don’t put your feet on the steel fender;
that’s worse.’
Tibbs took his head from the paper, and his feet from
the fender, and proceeded. ‘It’s very likely one of the young ladies
may set her cap at young Mr. Simpson, and you know a marriage—’
‘A what!’ shrieked Mrs. Tibbs. Tibbs modestly
repeated his former suggestion.
‘I beg you won’t mention such a thing,’ said Mrs.
T. ‘A marriage, indeed to rob me of my boarders—no, not for the
world.’
Tibbs thought in his own mind that the event was by no
means unlikely, but, as he never argued with his wife, he put a stop to the
dialogue, by observing it was ‘time to go to business.’ He always went
out at ten o’clock in the morning, and returned at five in the afternoon, with
an exceedingly dirty face, and smelling mouldy. Nobody knew what he was,
or where he went; but Mrs. Tibbs used to say with an air of great importance,
that he was engaged in the City.
The Miss Maplesones and their accomplished parent
arrived in the course of the afternoon in a hackney-coach, and accompanied by a
most astonishing number of packages. Trunks, bonnet-boxes, muff-boxes and
parasols, guitar-cases, and parcels of all imaginable shapes, done up in brown
paper, and fastened with pins, filled the passage. Then, there was such a
running up and down with the luggage, such scampering for warm water for the
ladies to wash in, and such a bustle, and confusion, and heating of servants,
and curling-irons, as had never been known in Great Coram-street before.
Little Mrs. Tibbs was quite in her element, bustling about, talking incessantly,
and distributing towels and soap, like a head nurse in a hospital. The
house was not restored to its usual state of quiet repose, until the ladies were
safely shut up in their respective bedrooms, engaged in the important occupation
of dressing for dinner.
‘Are these gals ’andsome?’ inquired Mr. Simpson of
Mr. Septimus Hicks, another of the boarders, as they were amusing themselves in
the drawing-room, before dinner, by lolling on sofas, and contemplating their
pumps.
‘Don’t know,’ replied Mr. Septimus Hicks, who was
a tallish, white-faced young man, with spectacles, and a black ribbon round his
neck instead of a neckerchief—a most interesting person; a poetical walker of
the hospitals, and a ‘very talented young man.’ He was fond of
‘lugging’ into conversation all sorts of quotations from Don Juan, without
fettering himself by the propriety of their application; in which particular he
was remarkably independent. The other, Mr. Simpson, was one of those young
men, who are in society what walking gentlemen are on the stage, only infinitely
worse skilled in his vocation than the most indifferent artist. He was as
empty-headed as the great bell of St. Paul’s; always dressed according to the
caricatures published in the monthly fashion; and spelt Character with a K.
‘I saw a devilish number of parcels in the passage
when I came home,’ simpered Mr. Simpson.
‘Materials for the toilet, no doubt,’ rejoined the
Don Juan reader.
- ‘Much linen, lace, and several pair
Of stockings, slippers, brushes, combs, complete;
With other articles of ladies fair,
To keep them beautiful, or leave them neat.’
‘Is that from Milton?’ inquired Mr. Simpson.
‘No—from Byron,’ returned Mr. Hicks, with a look
of contempt. He was quite sure of his author, because he had never read
any other. ‘Hush! Here come the gals,’ and they both commenced
talking in a very loud key.
‘Mrs. Maplesone and the Miss Maplesones, Mr. Hicks.
Mr. Hicks—Mrs. Maplesone and the Miss Maplesones,’ said Mrs. Tibbs, with a
very red face, for she had been superintending the cooking operations below
stairs, and looked like a wax doll on a sunny day. ‘Mr. Simpson, I beg
your pardon—Mr. Simpson—Mrs. Maplesone and the Miss Maplesones’—and vice
versâ. The gentlemen immediately began to slide about with much
politeness, and to look as if they wished their arms had been legs, so little
did they know what to do with them. The ladies smiled, curtseyed, and
glided into chairs, and dived for dropped pocket-handkerchiefs: the gentlemen
leant against two of the curtain-pegs; Mrs. Tibbs went through an admirable bit
of serious pantomime with a servant who had come up to ask some question about
the fish-sauce; and then the two young ladies looked at each other; and
everybody else appeared to discover something very attractive in the pattern of
the fender.
‘Julia, my love,’ said Mrs. Maplesone to her
youngest daughter, in a tone loud enough for the remainder of the company to
hear—‘Julia.’
‘Yes, Ma.’
‘Don’t stoop.’—This was said for the purpose of
directing general attention to Miss Julia’s figure, which was undeniable.
Everybody looked at her, accordingly, and there was another pause.
‘We had the most uncivil hackney-coachman to-day, you
can imagine,’ said Mrs. Maplesone to Mrs. Tibbs, in a confidential tone.
‘Dear me!’ replied the hostess, with an air of great
commiseration. She couldn’t say more, for the servant again appeared at
the door, and commenced telegraphing most earnestly to her ‘Missis.’
‘I think hackney-coachmen generally are
uncivil,’ said Mr. Hicks in his most insinuating tone.
‘Positively I think they are,’ replied Mrs.
Maplesone, as if the idea had never struck her before.
‘And cabmen, too,’ said Mr. Simpson. This
remark was a failure, for no one intimated, by word or sign, the slightest
knowledge of the manners and customs of cabmen.
‘Robinson, what do you want?’ said Mrs. Tibbs
to the servant, who, by way of making her presence known to her mistress, had
been giving sundry hems and sniffs outside the door during the preceding five
minutes.
‘Please, ma’am, master wants his clean things,’
replied the servant, taken off her guard. The two young men turned their
faces to the window, and ‘went off’ like a couple of bottles of ginger-beer;
the ladies put their handkerchiefs to their mouths; and little Mrs. Tibbs
bustled out of the room to give Tibbs his clean linen,—and the servant
warning.
Mr. Calton, the remaining boarder, shortly afterwards
made his appearance, and proved a surprising promoter of the conversation.
Mr. Calton was a superannuated beau—an old boy. He used to say of
himself that although his features were not regularly handsome, they were
striking. They certainly were. It was impossible to look at his face
without being reminded of a chubby street-door knocker, half-lion half-monkey;
and the comparison might be extended to his whole character and conversation.
He had stood still, while everything else had been moving. He never
originated a conversation, or started an idea; but if any commonplace topic were
broached, or, to pursue the comparison, if anybody lifted him up, he
would hammer away with surprising rapidity. He had the tic-douloureux
occasionally, and then he might be said to be muffled, because he did not make
quite as much noise as at other times, when he would go on prosing, rat-tat-tat
the same thing over and over again. He had never been married; but he was
still on the look-out for a wife with money. He had a life interest worth
about 300l. a year—he was exceedingly vain, and inordinately selfish.
He had acquired the reputation of being the very pink of politeness, and he
walked round the park, and up Regent-street, every day.
This respectable personage had made up his mind to
render himself exceedingly agreeable to Mrs. Maplesone—indeed, the desire of
being as amiable as possible extended itself to the whole party; Mrs. Tibbs
having considered it an admirable little bit of management to represent to the
gentlemen that she had some reason to believe the ladies were fortunes,
and to hint to the ladies, that all the gentlemen were ‘eligible.’ A
little flirtation, she thought, might keep her house full, without leading to
any other result.
Mrs. Maplesone was an enterprising widow of about fifty:
shrewd, scheming, and good-looking. She was amiably anxious on behalf of
her daughters; in proof whereof she used to remark, that she would have no
objection to marry again, if it would benefit her dear girls—she could have no
other motive. The ‘dear girls’ themselves were not at all insensible
to the merits of ‘a good establishment.’ One of them was twenty-five;
the other, three years younger. They had been at different
watering-places, for four seasons; they had gambled at libraries, read books in
balconies, sold at fancy fairs, danced at assemblies, talked sentiment—in
short, they had done all that industrious girls could do—but, as yet, to no
purpose.
‘What a magnificent dresser Mr. Simpson is!’
whispered Matilda Maplesone to her sister Julia.
‘Splendid!’ returned the youngest. The
magnificent individual alluded to wore a maroon-coloured dress-coat, with a
velvet collar and cuffs of the same tint—very like that which usually invests
the form of the distinguished unknown who condescends to play the ‘swell’ in
the pantomime at ‘Richardson’s Show.’
‘What whiskers!’ said Miss Julia.
‘Charming!’ responded her sister; ‘and what
hair!’ His hair was like a wig, and distinguished by that insinuating
wave which graces the shining locks of those chef-d’oeuvres of art
surmounting the waxen images in Bartellot’s window in Regent-street; his
whiskers meeting beneath his chin, seemed strings wherewith to tie it on, ere
science had rendered them unnecessary by her patent invisible springs.
‘Dinner’s on the table, ma’am, if you please,’
said the boy, who now appeared for the first time, in a revived black coat of
his master’s.
‘Oh! Mr. Calton, will you lead Mrs. Maplesone?—Thank
you.’ Mr. Simpson offered his arm to Miss Julia; Mr. Septimus Hicks
escorted the lovely Matilda; and the procession proceeded to the dining-room.
Mr. Tibbs was introduced, and Mr. Tibbs bobbed up and down to the three ladies
like a figure in a Dutch clock, with a powerful spring in the middle of his
body, and then dived rapidly into his seat at the bottom of the table, delighted
to screen himself behind a soup-tureen, which he could just see over, and that
was all. The boarders were seated, a lady and gentleman alternately, like
the layers of bread and meat in a plate of sandwiches; and then Mrs. Tibbs
directed James to take off the covers. Salmon, lobster-sauce, giblet-soup,
and the usual accompaniments were discovered: potatoes like petrifactions, and
bits of toasted bread, the shape and size of blank dice.
‘Soup for Mrs. Maplesone, my dear,’ said the
bustling Mrs. Tibbs. She always called her husband ‘my dear’ before
company. Tibbs, who had been eating his bread, and calculating how long it
would be before he should get any fish, helped the soup in a hurry, made a small
island on the table-cloth, and put his glass upon it, to hide it from his wife.
‘Miss Julia, shall I assist you to some fish?’
‘If you please—very little—oh! plenty, thank
you’ (a bit about the size of a walnut put upon the plate).
‘Julia is a very little eater,’ said Mrs.
Maplesone to Mr. Calton.
The knocker gave a single rap. He was busy eating
the fish with his eyes: so he only ejaculated, ‘Ah!’
‘My dear,’ said Mrs. Tibbs to her spouse after every
one else had been helped, ‘what do you take?’ The inquiry was
accompanied with a look intimating that he mustn’t say fish, because there was
not much left. Tibbs thought the frown referred to the island on the
table-cloth; he therefore coolly replied, ‘Why—I’ll take a little—fish,
I think.’
‘Did you say fish, my dear?’ (another frown).
‘Yes, dear,’ replied the villain, with an expression
of acute hunger depicted in his countenance. The tears almost started to
Mrs. Tibbs’s eyes, as she helped her ‘wretch of a husband,’ as she
inwardly called him, to the last eatable bit of salmon on the dish.
‘James, take this to your master, and take away your
master’s knife.’ This was deliberate revenge, as Tibbs never could eat
fish without one. He was, however, constrained to chase small particles of
salmon round and round his plate with a piece of bread and a fork, the number of
successful attempts being about one in seventeen.
‘Take away, James,’ said Mrs. Tibbs, as Tibbs
swallowed the fourth mouthful—and away went the plates like lightning.
‘I’ll take a bit of bread, James,’ said the poor
‘master of the house,’ more hungry than ever.
‘Never mind your master now, James,’ said Mrs.
Tibbs, ‘see about the meat.’ This was conveyed in the tone in which
ladies usually give admonitions to servants in company, that is to say, a low
one; but which, like a stage whisper, from its peculiar emphasis, is most
distinctly heard by everybody present.
A pause ensued, before the table was replenished—a
sort of parenthesis in which Mr. Simpson, Mr. Calton, and Mr. Hicks, produced
respectively a bottle of sauterne, bucellas, and sherry, and took wine with
everybody—except Tibbs. No one ever thought of him.
Between the fish and an intimated sirloin, there was a
prolonged interval.
Here was an opportunity for Mr. Hicks. He could
not resist the singularly appropriate quotation -
‘But beef is rare within these oxless isles;
Goats’ flesh there is, no doubt, and kid, and mutton,
And when a holiday upon them smiles,
A joint upon their barbarous spits they put on.’
‘Very ungentlemanly behaviour,’ thought little Mrs.
Tibbs, ‘to talk in that way.’
‘Ah,’ said Mr. Calton, filling his glass.
‘Tom Moore is my poet.’
‘And mine,’ said Mrs. Maplesone.
‘And mine,’ said Miss Julia.
‘And mine,’ added Mr. Simpson.
‘Look at his compositions,’ resumed the knocker.
‘To be sure,’ said Simpson, with confidence.
‘Look at Don Juan,’ replied Mr. Septimus Hicks.
‘Julia’s letter,’ suggested Miss Matilda.
‘Can anything be grander than the Fire Worshippers?’
inquired Miss Julia.
‘To be sure,’ said Simpson.
‘Or Paradise and the Peri,’ said the old beau.
‘Yes; or Paradise and the Peer,’ repeated Simpson,
who thought he was getting through it capitally.
‘It’s all very well,’ replied Mr. Septimus Hicks,
who, as we have before hinted, never had read anything but Don Juan.
‘Where will you find anything finer than the description of the siege, at the
commencement of the seventh canto?’
‘Talking of a siege,’ said Tibbs, with a mouthful of
bread—‘when I was in the volunteer corps, in eighteen hundred and six, our
commanding officer was Sir Charles Rampart; and one day, when we were exercising
on the ground on which the London University now stands, he says, says he, Tibbs
(calling me from the ranks), Tibbs—’
‘Tell your master, James,’ interrupted Mrs. Tibbs,
in an awfully distinct tone, ‘tell your master if he won’t carve
those fowls, to send them to me.’ The discomfited volunteer instantly
set to work, and carved the fowls almost as expeditiously as his wife operated
on the haunch of mutton. Whether he ever finished the story is not known
but, if he did, nobody heard it.
As the ice was now broken, and the new inmates more at
home, every member of the company felt more at ease. Tibbs himself most
certainly did, because he went to sleep immediately after dinner. Mr.
Hicks and the ladies discoursed most eloquently about poetry, and the theatres,
and Lord Chesterfield’s Letters; and Mr. Calton followed up what everybody
said, with continuous double knocks. Mrs. Tibbs highly approved of every
observation that fell from Mrs. Maplesone; and as Mr. Simpson sat with a smile
upon his face and said ‘Yes,’ or ‘Certainly,’ at intervals of about four
minutes each, he received full credit for understanding what was going forward.
The gentlemen rejoined the ladies in the drawing-room very shortly after they
had left the dining-parlour. Mrs. Maplesone and Mr. Calton played
cribbage, and the ‘young people’ amused themselves with music and
conversation. The Miss Maplesones sang the most fascinating duets, and
accompanied themselves on guitars, ornamented with bits of ethereal blue ribbon.
Mr. Simpson put on a pink waistcoat, and said he was in raptures; and Mr. Hicks
felt in the seventh heaven of poetry or the seventh canto of Don Juan—it was
the same thing to him. Mrs. Tibbs was quite charmed with the newcomers;
and Mr. Tibbs spent the evening in his usual way—he went to sleep, and woke
up, and went to sleep again, and woke at supper-time.
* * * * *
We are not about to adopt the licence of novel-writers,
and to let ‘years roll on;’ but we will take the liberty of requesting the
reader to suppose that six months have elapsed, since the dinner we have
described, and that Mrs. Tibbs’s boarders have, during that period, sang, and
danced, and gone to theatres and exhibitions, together, as ladies and gentlemen,
wherever they board, often do. And we will beg them, the period we have
mentioned having elapsed, to imagine farther, that Mr. Septimus Hicks received,
in his own bedroom (a front attic), at an early hour one morning, a note from
Mr. Calton, requesting the favour of seeing him, as soon as convenient to
himself, in his (Calton’s) dressing-room on the second-floor back.
‘Tell Mr. Calton I’ll come down directly,’ said
Mr. Septimus to the boy. ‘Stop—is Mr. Calton unwell?’ inquired this
excited walker of hospitals, as he put on a bed-furniture-looking dressing-gown.
‘Not as I knows on, sir,’ replied the boy. ‘
Please, sir, he looked rather rum, as it might be.’
‘Ah, that’s no proof of his being ill,’ returned
Hicks, unconsciously. ‘Very well: I’ll be down directly.’
Downstairs ran the boy with the message, and down went the excited Hicks
himself, almost as soon as the message was delivered. ‘Tap, tap.’
‘Come in.’—Door opens, and discovers Mr. Calton sitting in an easy chair.
Mutual shakes of the hand exchanged, and Mr. Septimus Hicks motioned to a seat.
A short pause. Mr. Hicks coughed, and Mr. Calton took a pinch of snuff.
It was one of those interviews where neither party knows what to say. Mr.
Septimus Hicks broke silence.
‘I received a note—’ he said, very tremulously, in
a voice like a Punch with a cold.
‘Yes,’ returned the other, ‘you did.’
‘Exactly.’
‘Yes.’
Now, although this dialogue must have been satisfactory,
both gentlemen felt there was something more important to be said; therefore
they did as most men in such a situation would have done—they looked at the
table with a determined aspect. The conversation had been opened, however,
and Mr. Calton had made up his mind to continue it with a regular double knock.
He always spoke very pompously.
‘Hicks,’ said he, ‘I have sent for you, in
consequence of certain arrangements which are pending in this house, connected
with a marriage.’
‘With a marriage!’ gasped Hicks, compared with whose
expression of countenance, Hamlet’s, when he sees his father’s ghost, is
pleasing and composed.
‘With a marriage,’ returned the knocker. ‘I
have sent for you to prove the great confidence I can repose in you.’
‘And will you betray me?’ eagerly inquired Hicks,
who in his alarm had even forgotten to quote.
‘I betray you! Won’t you
betray me?’
‘Never: no one shall know, to my dying day, that you
had a hand in the business,’ responded the agitated Hicks, with an inflamed
countenance, and his hair standing on end as if he were on the stool of an
electrifying machine in full operation.
‘People must know that, some time or other—within a
year, I imagine,’ said Mr. Calton, with an air of great self-complacency.
‘We may have a family.’
‘We!—That won’t affect you, surely?’
‘The devil it won’t!’
‘No! how can it?’ said the bewildered Hicks.
Calton was too much inwrapped in the contemplation of his happiness to see the
equivoque between Hicks and himself; and threw himself back in his chair.
‘Oh, Matilda!’ sighed the antique beau, in a lack-a-daisical voice, and
applying his right hand a little to the left of the fourth button of his
waistcoat, counting from the bottom. ‘Oh, Matilda!’
‘What Matilda?’ inquired Hicks, starting up.
‘Matilda Maplesone,’ responded the other, doing the
same.
‘I marry her to-morrow morning,’ said Hicks.
‘It’s false,’ rejoined his companion: ‘I marry
her!’
‘You marry her?’
‘I marry her!’
‘You marry Matilda Maplesone?’
‘Matilda Maplesone.’
‘Miss Maplesone marry you?’
‘Miss Maplesone! No; Mrs. Maplesone.’
‘Good Heaven!’ said Hicks, falling into his chair:
‘You marry the mother, and I the daughter!’
‘Most extraordinary circumstance!’ replied Mr.
Calton, ‘and rather inconvenient too; for the fact is, that owing to
Matilda’s wishing to keep her intention secret from her daughters until the
ceremony had taken place, she doesn’t like applying to any of her friends to
give her away. I entertain an objection to making the affair known to my
acquaintance just now; and the consequence is, that I sent to you to know
whether you’d oblige me by acting as father.’
‘I should have been most happy, I assure you,’ said
Hicks, in a tone of condolence; ‘but, you see, I shall be acting as
bridegroom. One character is frequently a consequence of the other; but it
is not usual to act in both at the same time. There’s Simpson—I have
no doubt he’ll do it for you.’
‘I don’t like to ask him,’ replied Calton,
‘he’s such a donkey.’
Mr. Septimus Hicks looked up at the ceiling, and down at
the floor; at last an idea struck him. ‘Let the man of the house, Tibbs,
be the father,’ he suggested; and then he quoted, as peculiarly applicable to
Tibbs and the pair -
‘Oh Powers of Heaven! what dark eyes meets she there?
‘’Tis—’tis her father’s—fixed upon the pair.’
‘The idea has struck me already,’ said Mr. Calton:
‘but, you see, Matilda, for what reason I know not, is very anxious that Mrs.
Tibbs should know nothing about it, till it’s all over. It’s a natural
delicacy, after all, you know.’
‘He’s the best-natured little man in existence, if
you manage him properly,’ said Mr. Septimus Hicks. ‘Tell him not to
mention it to his wife, and assure him she won’t mind it, and he’ll do it
directly. My marriage is to be a secret one, on account of the mother and my
father; therefore he must be enjoined to secrecy.’
A small double knock, like a presumptuous single one,
was that instant heard at the street-door. It was Tibbs; it could be no
one else; for no one else occupied five minutes in rubbing his shoes. He
had been out to pay the baker’s bill.
‘Mr. Tibbs,’ called Mr. Calton in a very bland tone,
looking over the banisters.
‘Sir!’ replied he of the dirty face.
‘Will you have the kindness to step up-stairs for a
moment?’
‘Certainly, sir,’ said Tibbs, delighted to be taken
notice of. The bedroom-door was carefully closed, and Tibbs, having put
his hat on the floor (as most timid men do), and been accommodated with a seat,
looked as astounded as if he were suddenly summoned before the familiars of the
Inquisition.
‘A rather unpleasant occurrence, Mr. Tibbs,’ said
Calton, in a very portentous manner, ‘obliges me to consult you, and to beg
you will not communicate what I am about to say, to your wife.’
Tibbs acquiesced, wondering in his own mind what the
deuce the other could have done, and imagining that at least he must have broken
the best decanters.
Mr. Calton resumed; ‘I am placed, Mr. Tibbs, in rather
an unpleasant situation.’
Tibbs looked at Mr. Septimus Hicks, as if he thought Mr.
H.’s being in the immediate vicinity of his fellow-boarder might constitute
the unpleasantness of his situation; but as he did not exactly know what to say,
he merely ejaculated the monosyllable ‘Lor!’
‘Now,’ continued the knocker, ‘let me beg you will
exhibit no manifestations of surprise, which may be overheard by the domestics,
when I tell you—command your feelings of astonishment—that two inmates of
this house intend to be married to-morrow morning.’ And he drew back his
chair, several feet, to perceive the effect of the unlooked-for announcement.
If Tibbs had rushed from the room, staggered
down-stairs, and fainted in the passage—if he had instantaneously jumped out
of the window into the mews behind the house, in an agony of surprise—his
behaviour would have been much less inexplicable to Mr. Calton than it was, when
he put his hands into his inexpressible-pockets, and said with a half-chuckle,
‘Just so.’
‘You are not surprised, Mr. Tibbs?’ inquired Mr.
Calton.
‘Bless you, no, sir,’ returned Tibbs; ‘after all,
its very natural. When two young people get together, you know—’
‘Certainly, certainly,’ said Calton, with an
indescribable air of self-satisfaction.
‘You don’t think it’s at all an out-of-the-way
affair then?’ asked Mr. Septimus Hicks, who had watched the countenance of
Tibbs in mute astonishment.
‘No, sir,’ replied Tibbs; ‘I was just the same at
his age.’ He actually smiled when he said this.
‘How devilish well I must carry my years!’ thought
the delighted old beau, knowing he was at least ten years older than Tibbs at
that moment.
‘Well, then, to come to the point at once,’ he
continued, ‘I have to ask you whether you will object to act as father on the
occasion?’
‘Certainly not,’ replied Tibbs; still without
evincing an atom of surprise.
‘You will not?’
‘Decidedly not,’ reiterated Tibbs, still as calm as
a pot of porter with the head off.
Mr. Calton seized the hand of the petticoat-governed
little man, and vowed eternal friendship from that hour. Hicks, who was
all admiration and surprise, did the same.
‘Now, confess,’ asked Mr. Calton of Tibbs, as he
picked up his hat, ‘were you not a little surprised?’
‘I b’lieve you!’ replied that illustrious person,
holding up one hand; ‘I b’lieve you! When I first heard of it.’
‘So sudden,’ said Septimus Hicks.
‘So strange to ask me, you know,’ said Tibbs.
‘So odd altogether!’ said the superannuated
love-maker; and then all three laughed.
‘I say,’ said Tibbs, shutting the door which he had
previously opened, and giving full vent to a hitherto corked-up giggle, ‘what
bothers me is, what will his father say?’
Mr. Septimus Hicks looked at Mr. Calton.
‘Yes; but the best of it is,’ said the latter,
giggling in his turn, ‘I haven’t got a father—he! he! he!’
‘You haven’t got a father. No; but he
has,’ said Tibbs.
‘Who has?’ inquired Septimus Hicks.
‘Why, him.’
‘Him, who? Do you know my secret? Do you
mean me?’
‘You! No; you know who I mean,’ returned Tibbs
with a knowing wink.
‘For Heaven’s sake, whom do you mean?’ inquired
Mr. Calton, who, like Septimus Hicks, was all but out of his senses at the
strange confusion.
‘Why Mr. Simpson, of course,’ replied Tibbs; ‘who
else could I mean?’
‘I see it all,’ said the Byron-quoter; ‘Simpson
marries Julia Maplesone to-morrow morning!’
‘Undoubtedly,’ replied Tibbs, thoroughly satisfied,
‘of course he does.’
It would require the pencil of Hogarth to
illustrate—our feeble pen is inadequate to describe—the expression which the
countenances of Mr. Calton and Mr. Septimus Hicks respectively assumed, at this
unexpected announcement. Equally impossible is it to describe, although
perhaps it is easier for our lady readers to imagine, what arts the three ladies
could have used, so completely to entangle their separate partners.
Whatever they were, however, they were successful. The mother was
perfectly aware of the intended marriage of both daughters; and the young ladies
were equally acquainted with the intention of their estimable parent. They
agreed, however, that it would have a much better appearance if each feigned
ignorance of the other’s engagement; and it was equally desirable that all the
marriages should take place on the same day, to prevent the discovery of one
clandestine alliance, operating prejudicially on the others. Hence, the
mystification of Mr. Calton and Mr. Septimus Hicks, and the pre-engagement of
the unwary Tibbs.
On the following morning, Mr. Septimus Hicks was united
to Miss Matilda Maplesone. Mr. Simpson also entered into a ‘holy
alliance’ with Miss Julia; Tibbs acting as father, ‘his first appearance in
that character.’ Mr. Calton, not being quite so eager as the two young
men, was rather struck by the double discovery; and as he had found some
difficulty in getting any one to give the lady away, it occurred to him that the
best mode of obviating the inconvenience would be not to take her at all.
The lady, however, ‘appealed,’ as her counsel said on the trial of the
cause, Maplesone v. Calton, for a breach of promise, ‘with a
broken heart, to the outraged laws of her country.’ She recovered
damages to the amount of 1,000l. which the unfortunate knocker was
compelled to pay. Mr. Septimus Hicks having walked the hospitals, took it
into his head to walk off altogether. His injured wife is at present
residing with her mother at Boulogne. Mr. Simpson, having the misfortune
to lose his wife six weeks after marriage (by her eloping with an officer during
his temporary sojourn in the Fleet Prison, in consequence of his inability to
discharge her little mantua-maker’s bill), and being disinherited by his
father, who died soon afterwards, was fortunate enough to obtain a permanent
engagement at a fashionable haircutter’s; hairdressing being a science to
which he had frequently directed his attention. In this situation he had
necessarily many opportunities of making himself acquainted with the habits, and
style of thinking, of the exclusive portion of the nobility of this kingdom.
To this fortunate circumstance are we indebted for the production of those
brilliant efforts of genius, his fashionable novels, which so long as good
taste, unsullied by exaggeration, cant, and quackery, continues to exist, cannot
fail to instruct and amuse the thinking portion of the community.
It only remains to add, that this complication of
disorders completely deprived poor Mrs. Tibbs of all her inmates, except the one
whom she could have best spared—her husband. That wretched little man
returned home, on the day of the wedding, in a state of partial intoxication;
and, under the influence of wine, excitement, and despair, actually dared to
brave the anger of his wife. Since that ill-fated hour he has constantly
taken his meals in the kitchen, to which apartment, it is understood, his
witticisms will be in future confined: a turn-up bedstead having been conveyed
there by Mrs. Tibbs’s order for his exclusive accommodation. It is
possible that he will be enabled to finish, in that seclusion, his story of the
volunteers.
The advertisement has again appeared in the morning
papers. Results must be reserved for another chapter.