Sketches by Boz, by Charles Dickens (1836) - Tales - Chapter 10 - 1
CHAPTER X—A PASSAGE IN THE LIFE OF MR. WATKINS TOTTLE
CHAPTER THE FIRST Matrimony is proverbially a serious undertaking.
Like an over-weening predilection for brandy-and-water, it is a misfortune into
which a man easily falls, and from which he finds it remarkably difficult to
extricate himself. It is of no use telling a man who is timorous on these
points, that it is but one plunge, and all is over. They say the same
thing at the Old Bailey, and the unfortunate victims derive as much comfort from
the assurance in the one case as in the other.
Mr. Watkins Tottle was a rather uncommon compound of
strong uxorious inclinations, and an unparalleled degree of anti-connubial
timidity. He was about fifty years of age; stood four feet six inches and
three-quarters in his socks—for he never stood in stockings at all—plump,
clean, and rosy. He looked something like a vignette to one of
Richardson’s novels, and had a clean-cravatish formality of manner, and
kitchen-pokerness of carriage, which Sir Charles Grandison himself might have
envied. He lived on an annuity, which was well adapted to the individual
who received it, in one respect—it was rather small. He received it in
periodical payments on every alternate Monday; but he ran himself out, about a
day after the expiration of the first week, as regularly as an eight-day clock;
and then, to make the comparison complete, his landlady wound him up, and he
went on with a regular tick.
Mr. Watkins Tottle had long lived in a state of single
blessedness, as bachelors say, or single cursedness, as spinsters think; but the
idea of matrimony had never ceased to haunt him. Wrapt in profound
reveries on this never-failing theme, fancy transformed his small parlour in
Cecil-street, Strand, into a neat house in the suburbs; the half-hundredweight
of coals under the kitchen-stairs suddenly sprang up into three tons of the best
Walls-end; his small French bedstead was converted into a regular matrimonial
four-poster; and in the empty chair on the opposite side of the fireplace,
imagination seated a beautiful young lady, with a very little independence or
will of her own, and a very large independence under a will of her father’s.
‘Who’s there?’ inquired Mr. Watkins Tottle, as a
gentle tap at his room-door disturbed these meditations one evening.
‘Tottle, my dear fellow, how do you do?’ said
a short elderly gentleman with a gruffish voice, bursting into the room, and
replying to the question by asking another.
‘Told you I should drop in some evening,’ said the
short gentleman, as he delivered his hat into Tottle’s hand, after a little
struggling and dodging.
‘Delighted to see you, I’m sure,’ said Mr. Watkins
Tottle, wishing internally that his visitor had ‘dropped in’ to the Thames
at the bottom of the street, instead of dropping into his parlour. The
fortnight was nearly up, and Watkins was hard up.
‘How is Mrs. Gabriel Parsons?’ inquired Tottle.
‘Quite well, thank you,’ replied Mr. Gabriel
Parsons, for that was the name the short gentleman revelled in. Here there
was a pause; the short gentleman looked at the left hob of the fireplace; Mr.
Watkins Tottle stared vacancy out of countenance.
‘Quite well,’ repeated the short gentleman, when
five minutes had expired. ‘I may say remarkably well.’ And he
rubbed the palms of his hands as hard as if he were going to strike a light by
friction.
‘What will you take?’ inquired Tottle, with the
desperate suddenness of a man who knew that unless the visitor took his leave,
he stood very little chance of taking anything else.
‘Oh, I don’t know—have you any whiskey?’
‘Why,’ replied Tottle, very slowly, for all this was
gaining time, ‘I had some capital, and remarkably strong whiskey last
week; but it’s all gone—and therefore its strength—’
‘Is much beyond proof; or, in other words, impossible
to be proved,’ said the short gentleman; and he laughed very heartily, and
seemed quite glad the whiskey had been drunk. Mr. Tottle smiled—but it
was the smile of despair. When Mr. Gabriel Parsons had done laughing, he
delicately insinuated that, in the absence of whiskey, he would not be averse to
brandy. And Mr. Watkins Tottle, lighting a flat candle very
ostentatiously; and displaying an immense key, which belonged to the
street-door, but which, for the sake of appearances, occasionally did duty in an
imaginary wine-cellar; left the room to entreat his landlady to charge their
glasses, and charge them in the bill. The application was successful; the
spirits were speedily called—not from the vasty deep, but the adjacent
wine-vaults. The two short gentlemen mixed their grog; and then sat cosily
down before the fire—a pair of shorts, airing themselves.
‘Tottle,’ said Mr. Gabriel Parsons, ‘you know my
way—off-hand, open, say what I mean, mean what I say, hate reserve, and
can’t bear affectation. One, is a bad domino which only hides what good
people have about ’em, without making the bad look better; and the other is
much about the same thing as pinking a white cotton stocking to make it look
like a silk one. Now listen to what I’m going to say.’
Here, the little gentleman paused, and took a long pull
at his brandy-and-water. Mr. Watkins Tottle took a sip of his, stirred the
fire, and assumed an air of profound attention.
‘It’s of no use humming and ha’ing about the
matter,’ resumed the short gentleman.—‘You want to get married.’
‘Why,’ replied Mr. Watkins Tottle evasively; for he
trembled violently, and felt a sudden tingling throughout his whole frame;
‘why—I should certainly—at least, I think I should like—’
‘Won’t do,’ said the short gentleman.—‘Plain
and free—or there’s an end of the matter. Do you want money?’
‘You know I do.’
‘You admire the sex?’
‘I do.’
‘And you’d like to be married?’
‘Certainly.’
‘Then you shall be. There’s an end of that.’
Thus saying, Mr. Gabriel Parsons took a pinch of snuff, and mixed another glass.
‘Let me entreat you to be more explanatory,’ said
Tottle. ‘Really, as the party principally interested, I cannot consent
to be disposed of, in this way.’
‘I’ll tell you,’ replied Mr. Gabriel Parsons,
warming with the subject, and the brandy-and-water—‘I know a lady—she’s
stopping with my wife now—who is just the thing for you. Well educated;
talks French; plays the piano; knows a good deal about flowers, and shells, and
all that sort of thing; and has five hundred a year, with an uncontrolled power
of disposing of it, by her last will and testament.’
‘I’ll pay my addresses to her,’ said Mr. Watkins
Tottle. ‘She isn’t very young—is she?’
‘Not very; just the thing for you. I’ve said
that already.’
‘What coloured hair has the lady?’ inquired Mr.
Watkins Tottle.
‘Egad, I hardly recollect,’ replied Gabriel, with
coolness. ‘Perhaps I ought to have observed, at first, she wears a
front.’
‘A what?’ ejaculated Tottle.
‘One of those things with curls, along here,’ said
Parsons, drawing a straight line across his forehead, just over his eyes, in
illustration of his meaning. ‘I know the front’s black; I can’t
speak quite positively about her own hair; because, unless one walks behind her,
and catches a glimpse of it under her bonnet, one seldom sees it; but I should
say that it was rather lighter than the front—a shade of a greyish
tinge, perhaps.’
Mr. Watkins Tottle looked as if he had certain
misgivings of mind. Mr. Gabriel Parsons perceived it, and thought it would
be safe to begin the next attack without delay.
‘Now, were you ever in love, Tottle?’ he inquired.
Mr. Watkins Tottle blushed up to the eyes, and down to
the chin, and exhibited a most extensive combination of colours as he confessed
the soft impeachment.
‘I suppose you popped the question, more than once,
when you were a young—I beg your pardon—a younger—man,’ said Parsons.
‘Never in my life!’ replied his friend, apparently
indignant at being suspected of such an act. ‘Never! The fact is,
that I entertain, as you know, peculiar opinions on these subjects. I am
not afraid of ladies, young or old—far from it; but, I think, that in
compliance with the custom of the present day, they allow too much freedom of
speech and manner to marriageable men. Now, the fact is, that anything
like this easy freedom I never could acquire; and as I am always afraid of going
too far, I am generally, I dare say, considered formal and cold.’
‘I shouldn’t wonder if you were,’ replied Parsons,
gravely; ‘I shouldn’t wonder. However, you’ll be all right in this
case; for the strictness and delicacy of this lady’s ideas greatly exceed your
own. Lord bless you, why, when she came to our house, there was an old
portrait of some man or other, with two large, black, staring eyes, hanging up
in her bedroom; she positively refused to go to bed there, till it was taken
down, considering it decidedly wrong.’
‘I think so, too,’ said Mr. Watkins Tottle;
‘certainly.’
‘And then, the other night—I never laughed so much
in my life’—resumed Mr. Gabriel Parsons; ‘I had driven home in an easterly
wind, and caught a devil of a face-ache. Well; as Fanny—that’s Mrs.
Parsons, you know—and this friend of hers, and I, and Frank Ross, were playing
a rubber, I said, jokingly, that when I went to bed I should wrap my head in
Fanny’s flannel petticoat. She instantly threw up her cards, and left
the room.’
‘Quite right!’ said Mr. Watkins Tottle; ‘she could
not possibly have behaved in a more dignified manner. What did you do?’
‘Do?—Frank took dummy; and I won sixpence.’
‘But, didn’t you apologise for hurting her
feelings?’
‘Devil a bit. Next morning at breakfast, we
talked it over. She contended that any reference to a flannel petticoat
was improper;—men ought not to be supposed to know that such things were.
I pleaded my coverture; being a married man.’
‘And what did the lady say to that?’ inquired Tottle,
deeply interested.
‘Changed her ground, and said that Frank being a
single man, its impropriety was obvious.’
‘Noble-minded creature!’ exclaimed the enraptured
Tottle.
‘Oh! both Fanny and I said, at once, that she was
regularly cut out for you.’
A gleam of placid satisfaction shone on the circular
face of Mr. Watkins Tottle, as he heard the prophecy.
‘There’s one thing I can’t understand,’ said Mr.
Gabriel Parsons, as he rose to depart; ‘I cannot, for the life and soul of me,
imagine how the deuce you’ll ever contrive to come together. The lady
would certainly go into convulsions if the subject were mentioned.’ Mr.
Gabriel Parsons sat down again, and laughed until he was weak. Tottle owed
him money, so he had a perfect right to laugh at Tottle’s expense.
Mr. Watkins Tottle feared, in his own mind, that this
was another characteristic which he had in common with this modern Lucretia.
He, however, accepted the invitation to dine with the Parsonses on the next day
but one, with great firmness: and looked forward to the introduction, when again
left alone, with tolerable composure.
The sun that rose on the next day but one, had never
beheld a sprucer personage on the outside of the Norwood stage, than Mr. Watkins
Tottle; and when the coach drew up before a cardboard-looking house with
disguised chimneys, and a lawn like a large sheet of green letter-paper, he
certainly had never lighted to his place of destination a gentleman who felt
more uncomfortable.
The coach stopped, and Mr. Watkins Tottle jumped—we
beg his pardon—alighted, with great dignity. ‘All right!’ said he,
and away went the coach up the hill with that beautiful equanimity of pace for
which ‘short’ stages are generally remarkable.
Mr. Watkins Tottle gave a faltering jerk to the handle
of the garden-gate bell. He essayed a more energetic tug, and his previous
nervousness was not at all diminished by hearing the bell ringing like a fire
alarum.
‘Is Mr. Parsons at home?’ inquired Tottle of the man
who opened the gate. He could hardly hear himself speak, for the bell had
not yet done tolling.
‘Here I am,’ shouted a voice on the lawn,—and
there was Mr. Gabriel Parsons in a flannel jacket, running backwards and
forwards, from a wicket to two hats piled on each other, and from the two hats
to the wicket, in the most violent manner, while another gentleman with his coat
off was getting down the area of the house, after a ball. When the
gentleman without the coat had found it—which he did in less than ten
minutes—he ran back to the hats, and Gabriel Parsons pulled up. Then,
the gentleman without the coat called out ‘play,’ very loudly, and bowled.
Then Mr. Gabriel Parsons knocked the ball several yards, and took another run.
Then, the other gentleman aimed at the wicket, and didn’t hit it; and Mr.
Gabriel Parsons, having finished running on his own account, laid down the bat
and ran after the ball, which went into a neighbouring field. They called
this cricket.
‘Tottle, will you “go in?”’ inquired Mr. Gabriel
Parsons, as he approached him, wiping the perspiration off his face.
Mr. Watkins Tottle declined the offer, the bare idea of
accepting which made him even warmer than his friend.
‘Then we’ll go into the house, as it’s past four,
and I shall have to wash my hands before dinner,’ said Mr. Gabriel Parsons.
‘Here, I hate ceremony, you know! Timson, that’s Tottle—Tottle,
that’s Timson; bred for the church, which I fear will never be bread for
him;’ and he chuckled at the old joke. Mr. Timson bowed carelessly.
Mr. Watkins Tottle bowed stiffly. Mr. Gabriel Parsons led the way to the
house. He was a rich sugar-baker, who mistook rudeness for honesty, and
abrupt bluntness for an open and candid manner; many besides Gabriel mistake
bluntness for sincerity.
Mrs. Gabriel Parsons received the visitors most
graciously on the steps, and preceded them to the drawing-room. On the
sofa, was seated a lady of very prim appearance, and remarkably inanimate.
She was one of those persons at whose age it is impossible to make any
reasonable guess; her features might have been remarkably pretty when she was
younger, and they might always have presented the same appearance. Her
complexion—with a slight trace of powder here and there—was as clear as that
of a well-made wax doll, and her face as expressive. She was handsomely
dressed, and was winding up a gold watch.
‘Miss Lillerton, my dear, this is our friend Mr.
Watkins Tottle; a very old acquaintance I assure you,’ said Mrs. Parsons,
presenting the Strephon of Cecil-street, Strand. The lady rose, and made a
deep courtesy; Mr. Watkins Tottle made a bow.
‘Splendid, majestic creature!’ thought Tottle.
Mr. Timson advanced, and Mr. Watkins Tottle began to
hate him. Men generally discover a rival, instinctively, and Mr. Watkins
Tottle felt that his hate was deserved.
‘May I beg,’ said the reverend gentleman,—‘May I
beg to call upon you, Miss Lillerton, for some trifling donation to my soup,
coals, and blanket distribution society?’
‘Put my name down, for two sovereigns, if you
please,’ responded Miss Lillerton.
‘You are truly charitable, madam,’ said the Reverend
Mr. Timson, ‘and we know that charity will cover a multitude of sins.
Let me beg you to understand that I do not say this from the supposition that
you have many sins which require palliation; believe me when I say that I never
yet met any one who had fewer to atone for, than Miss Lillerton.’
Something like a bad imitation of animation lighted up
the lady’s face, as she acknowledged the compliment. Watkins Tottle
incurred the sin of wishing that the ashes of the Reverend Charles Timson were
quietly deposited in the churchyard of his curacy, wherever it might be.
‘I’ll tell you what,’ interrupted Parsons, who had
just appeared with clean hands, and a black coat, ‘it’s my private opinion,
Timson, that your “distribution society” is rather a humbug.’
‘You are so severe,’ replied Timson, with a
Christian smile: he disliked Parsons, but liked his dinners.
‘So positively unjust!’ said Miss Lillerton.
‘Certainly,’ observed Tottle. The lady looked
up; her eyes met those of Mr. Watkins Tottle. She withdrew them in a sweet
confusion, and Watkins Tottle did the same—the confusion was mutual.
‘Why,’ urged Mr. Parsons, pursuing his objections,
‘what on earth is the use of giving a man coals who has nothing to cook, or
giving him blankets when he hasn’t a bed, or giving him soup when he requires
substantial food?—“like sending them ruffles when wanting a shirt.”
Why not give ’em a trifle of money, as I do, when I think they deserve it, and
let them purchase what they think best? Why?—because your subscribers
wouldn’t see their names flourishing in print on the church-door—that’s
the reason.’
‘Really, Mr. Parsons, I hope you don’t mean to
insinuate that I wish to see my name in print, on the church-door,’
interrupted Miss Lillerton.
‘I hope not,’ said Mr. Watkins Tottle, putting in
another word, and getting another glance.
‘Certainly not,’ replied Parsons. ‘I dare
say you wouldn’t mind seeing it in writing, though, in the church
register—eh?’
‘Register! What register?’ inquired the lady
gravely.
‘Why, the register of marriages, to be sure,’
replied Parsons, chuckling at the sally, and glancing at Tottle. Mr.
Watkins Tottle thought he should have fainted for shame, and it is quite
impossible to imagine what effect the joke would have had upon the lady, if
dinner had not been, at that moment, announced. Mr. Watkins Tottle, with
an unprecedented effort of gallantry, offered the tip of his little finger; Miss
Lillerton accepted it gracefully, with maiden modesty; and they proceeded in due
state to the dinner-table, where they were soon deposited side by side.
The room was very snug, the dinner very good, and the little party in spirits.
The conversation became pretty general, and when Mr. Watkins Tottle had
extracted one or two cold observations from his neighbour, and had taken wine
with her, he began to acquire confidence rapidly. The cloth was removed;
Mrs. Gabriel Parsons drank four glasses of port on the plea of being a nurse
just then; and Miss Lillerton took about the same number of sips, on the plea of
not wanting any at all. At length, the ladies retired, to the great
gratification of Mr. Gabriel Parsons, who had been coughing and frowning at his
wife, for half-an-hour previously—signals which Mrs. Parsons never happened to
observe, until she had been pressed to take her ordinary quantum, which, to
avoid giving trouble, she generally did at once.
‘What do you think of her?’ inquired Mr. Gabriel
Parsons of Mr. Watkins Tottle, in an under-tone.
‘I dote on her with enthusiasm already!’ replied Mr.
Watkins Tottle.
‘Gentlemen, pray let us drink “the ladies,”’
said the Reverend Mr. Timson.
‘The ladies!’ said Mr. Watkins Tottle, emptying his
glass. In the fulness of his confidence, he felt as if he could make love
to a dozen ladies, off-hand.
‘Ah!’ said Mr. Gabriel Parsons, ‘I remember when I
was a young man—fill your glass, Timson.’
‘I have this moment emptied it.’
‘Then fill again.’
‘I will,’ said Timson, suiting the action to the
word.
‘I remember,’ resumed Mr. Gabriel Parsons, ‘when I
was a younger man, with what a strange compound of feelings I used to drink that
toast, and how I used to think every woman was an angel.’
‘Was that before you were married?’ mildly inquired
Mr. Watkins Tottle.
‘Oh! certainly,’ replied Mr. Gabriel Parsons.
‘I have never thought so since; and a precious milksop I must have been, ever
to have thought so at all. But, you know, I married Fanny under the
oddest, and most ridiculous circumstances possible.’
‘What were they, if one may inquire?’ asked Timson,
who had heard the story, on an average, twice a week for the last six months.
Mr. Watkins Tottle listened attentively, in the hope of picking up some
suggestion that might be useful to him in his new undertaking.
‘I spent my wedding-night in a back-kitchen
chimney,’ said Parsons, by way of a beginning.
‘In a back-kitchen chimney!’ ejaculated Watkins
Tottle. ‘How dreadful!’
‘Yes, it wasn’t very pleasant,’ replied the small
host. ‘The fact is, Fanny’s father and mother liked me well enough as
an individual, but had a decided objection to my becoming a husband. You
see, I hadn’t any money in those days, and they had; and so they wanted Fanny
to pick up somebody else. However, we managed to discover the state of
each other’s affections somehow. I used to meet her, at some mutual
friends’ parties; at first we danced together, and talked, and flirted, and
all that sort of thing; then, I used to like nothing so well as sitting by her
side—we didn’t talk so much then, but I remember I used to have a great
notion of looking at her out of the extreme corner of my left eye—and then I
got very miserable and sentimental, and began to write verses, and use Macassar
oil. At last I couldn’t bear it any longer, and after I had walked up
and down the sunny side of Oxford-street in tight boots for a week—and a
devilish hot summer it was too—in the hope of meeting her, I sat down and
wrote a letter, and begged her to manage to see me clandestinely, for I wanted
to hear her decision from her own mouth. I said I had discovered, to my
perfect satisfaction, that I couldn’t live without her, and that if she
didn’t have me, I had made up my mind to take prussic acid, or take to
drinking, or emigrate, so as to take myself off in some way or other.
Well, I borrowed a pound, and bribed the housemaid to give her the note, which
she did.’
‘And what was the reply?’ inquired Timson, who had
found, before, that to encourage the repetition of old stories is to get a
general invitation.
‘Oh, the usual one! Fanny expressed herself very
miserable; hinted at the possibility of an early grave; said that nothing should
induce her to swerve from the duty she owed her parents; implored me to forget
her, and find out somebody more deserving, and all that sort of thing. She
said she could, on no account, think of meeting me unknown to her pa and ma; and
entreated me, as she should be in a particular part of Kensington Gardens at
eleven o’clock next morning, not to attempt to meet her there.’
‘You didn’t go, of course?’ said Watkins Tottle.
‘Didn’t I?—Of course I did. There she was,
with the identical housemaid in perspective, in order that there might be no
interruption. We walked about, for a couple of hours; made ourselves
delightfully miserable; and were regularly engaged. Then, we began to
“correspond”—that is to say, we used to exchange about four letters a day;
what we used to say in ’em I can’t imagine. And I used to have an
interview, in the kitchen, or the cellar, or some such place, every evening.
Well, things went on in this way for some time; and we got fonder of each other
every day. At last, as our love was raised to such a pitch, and as my
salary had been raised too, shortly before, we determined on a secret marriage.
Fanny arranged to sleep at a friend’s, on the previous night; we were to be
married early in the morning; and then we were to return to her home and be
pathetic. She was to fall at the old gentleman’s feet, and bathe his
boots with her tears; and I was to hug the old lady and call her “mother,”
and use my pocket-handkerchief as much as possible. Married we were, the
next morning; two girls-friends of Fanny’s—acting as bridesmaids; and a man,
who was hired for five shillings and a pint of porter, officiating as father.
Now, the old lady unfortunately put off her return from Ramsgate, where she had
been paying a visit, until the next morning; and as we placed great reliance on
her, we agreed to postpone our confession for four-and-twenty hours. My
newly-made wife returned home, and I spent my wedding-day in strolling about
Hampstead-heath, and execrating my father-in-law. Of course, I went to
comfort my dear little wife at night, as much as I could, with the assurance
that our troubles would soon be over. I opened the garden-gate, of which I
had a key, and was shown by the servant to our old place of meeting—a back
kitchen, with a stone-floor and a dresser: upon which, in the absence of chairs,
we used to sit and make love.’
‘Make love upon a kitchen-dresser!’ interrupted Mr.
Watkins Tottle, whose ideas of decorum were greatly outraged.
‘Ah! On a kitchen-dresser!’ replied Parsons.
‘And let me tell you, old fellow, that, if you were really over head-and-ears
in love, and had no other place to make love in, you’d be devilish glad to
avail yourself of such an opportunity. However, let me see;—where was
I?’
‘On the dresser,’ suggested Timson.
‘Oh—ah! Well, here I found poor Fanny, quite
disconsolate and uncomfortable. The old boy had been very cross all day,
which made her feel still more lonely; and she was quite out of spirits.
So, I put a good face on the matter, and laughed it off, and said we should
enjoy the pleasures of a matrimonial life more by contrast; and, at length, poor
Fanny brightened up a little. I stopped there, till about eleven
o’clock, and, just as I was taking my leave for the fourteenth time, the girl
came running down the stairs, without her shoes, in a great fright, to tell us
that the old villain—Heaven forgive me for calling him so, for he is dead and
gone now!—prompted I suppose by the prince of darkness, was coming down, to
draw his own beer for supper—a thing he had not done before, for six months,
to my certain knowledge; for the cask stood in that very back kitchen. If
he discovered me there, explanation would have been out of the question; for he
was so outrageously violent, when at all excited, that he never would have
listened to me. There was only one thing to be done. The chimney was
a very wide one; it had been originally built for an oven; went up
perpendicularly for a few feet, and then shot backward and formed a sort of
small cavern. My hopes and fortune—the means of our joint existence
almost—were at stake. I scrambled in like a squirrel; coiled myself up
in this recess; and, as Fanny and the girl replaced the deal chimney-board, I
could see the light of the candle which my unconscious father-in-law carried in
his hand. I heard him draw the beer; and I never heard beer run so slowly.
He was just leaving the kitchen, and I was preparing to descend, when down came
the infernal chimney-board with a tremendous crash. He stopped and put
down the candle and the jug of beer on the dresser; he was a nervous old fellow,
and any unexpected noise annoyed him. He coolly observed that the
fire-place was never used, and sending the frightened servant into the next
kitchen for a hammer and nails, actually nailed up the board, and locked the
door on the outside. So, there was I, on my wedding-night, in the light
kerseymere trousers, fancy waistcoat, and blue coat, that I had been married in
in the morning, in a back-kitchen chimney, the bottom of which was nailed up,
and the top of which had been formerly raised some fifteen feet, to prevent the
smoke from annoying the neighbours. And there,’ added Mr. Gabriel
Parsons, as he passed the bottle, ‘there I remained till half-past seven the
next morning, when the housemaid’s sweetheart, who was a carpenter, unshelled
me. The old dog had nailed me up so securely, that, to this very hour, I
firmly believe that no one but a carpenter could ever have got me out.’
‘And what did Mrs. Parsons’s father say, when he
found you were married?’ inquired Watkins Tottle, who, although he never saw a
joke, was not satisfied until he heard a story to the very end.
‘Why, the affair of the chimney so tickled his fancy,
that he pardoned us off-hand, and allowed us something to live on till he went
the way of all flesh. I spent the next night in his second-floor front,
much more comfortably than I had spent the preceding one; for, as you will
probably guess—’
‘Please, sir, missis has made tea,’ said a
middle-aged female servant, bobbing into the room.
‘That’s the very housemaid that figures in my
story,’ said Mr. Gabriel Parsons. ‘She went into Fanny’s service
when we were first married, and has been with us ever since; but I don’t think
she has felt one atom of respect for me since the morning she saw me released,
when she went into violent hysterics, to which she has been subject ever since.
Now, shall we join the ladies?’
‘If you please,’ said Mr. Watkins Tottle.
‘By all means,’ added the obsequious Mr. Timson; and
the trio made for the drawing-room accordingly.
Tea being concluded, and the toast and cups having been
duly handed, and occasionally upset, by Mr. Watkins Tottle, a rubber was
proposed. They cut for partners—Mr. and Mrs. Parsons; and Mr. Watkins
Tottle and Miss Lillerton. Mr. Timson having conscientious scruples on the
subject of card-playing, drank brandy-and-water, and kept up a running spar with
Mr. Watkins Tottle. The evening went off well; Mr. Watkins Tottle was in
high spirits, having some reason to be gratified with his reception by Miss
Lillerton; and before he left, a small party was made up to visit the Beulah Spa
on the following Saturday.
‘It’s all right, I think,’ said Mr. Gabriel
Parsons to Mr. Watkins Tottle as he opened the garden gate for him.
‘I hope so,’ he replied, squeezing his friend’s
hand.
‘You’ll be down by the first coach on Saturday,’
said Mr. Gabriel Parsons.
‘Certainly,’ replied Mr. Watkins Tottle.
‘Undoubtedly.’
But fortune had decreed that Mr. Watkins Tottle should
not be down by the first coach on Saturday. His adventures on that day,
however, and the success of his wooing, are subjects for another chapter.