29. CHAPTER THE THIRTY-SEVENTH.
THE single gentleman, among his other peculiarities—and he had a
very plentiful stock, of which he every day furnished some new
specimen—took a most extraordinary and remarkable interest in the
exhibition of Punch. If the sound of a Punch's voice, at ever so
remote a distance, reached Bevis Marks, the single gentleman,
though in bed and asleep, would start up, and, hurrying on his
clothes, make for the spot with all speed, and presently return at
the head of a long procession of idlers, having in the midst the
theatre and its proprietors. Straightway, the stage would be set
up in front of Mr. Brass's house; the single gentleman would
establish himself at the first floor window; and the entertainment
would proceed, with all its exciting accompaniments of fife and
drum and shout, to the excessive consternation of all sober
votaries of business in that silent thoroughfare. It might have
been expected that when the play was done, both players and
audience would have dispersed; but the epilogue was as bad as the
play, for no sooner was the Devil dead, than the manager of the
puppets and his partner were summoned by the single gentleman to
his chamber, where they were regaled with strong waters from his
private store, and where they held with him long conversations, the
purport of which no human being could fathom. But the secret of
these discussions was of little importance. It was sufficient to
know that while they were proceeding, the concourse without still
lingered round the house; that boys beat upon the drum with their
fists, and imitated Punch with their tender voices; that the
office-window was rendered opaque by flattened noses, and the
key-hole of the street-door luminous with eyes; that every time the
single gentleman or either of his guests was seen at the upper
window, or so much as the end of one of their noses was visible,
there was a great shout of execration from the excluded mob, who
remained howling and yelling, and refusing consolation, until the
exhibitors were delivered up to them to be attended elsewhere. It
was sufficient, in short, to know that Bevis Marks was
revolutionised by these popular movements, and that peace and
quietness fled from its precincts.
Nobody was rendered more indignant by these proceedings than Mr
Sampson Brass, who, as he could by no means afford to lose so
profitable an inmate, deemed it prudent to pocket his lodger's
affront along with his cash, and to annoy the audiences who
clustered round his door by such imperfect means of retaliation as
were open to him, and which were confined to the trickling down of
foul water on their heads from unseen watering pots, pelting them
with fragments of tile and mortar from the roof of the house, and
bribing the drivers of hackney cabriolets to come suddenly round
the corner and dash in among them precipitately. It may, at first
sight, be matter of surprise to the thoughtless few that Mr. Brass,
being a professional gentleman, should not have legally indicted
some party or parties, active in the promotion of the nuisance, but
they will be good enough to remember, that as Doctors seldom take
their own prescriptions, and Divines do not always practise what
they preach, so lawyers are shy of meddling with the Law on their
own account: knowing it to be an edged tool of uncertain
application, very expensive in the working, and rather remarkable
for its properties of close shaving, than for its always shaving
the right person.
“Come,” said Mr. Brass one afternoon, “this is two days without a
Punch. I'm in hopes he has run through 'em all, at last.”
“Why are you in hopes?” returned Miss Sally. “What
harm do they do?”
“Here's a pretty sort of a fellow!” cried Brass, laying
down his pen in despair. “Now here's an aggravating
animal!”
“Well, what harm do they do?” retorted Sally.
“What harm!” cried Brass. “Is it no harm to have a
constant hallooing and hooting under one's very nose, distracting one
from business, and making one grind one's teeth with vexation? Is it no
harm to be blinded and choked up, and have the king's highway stopped
with a set of screamers and roarers whose throats must be made
of—of—”
“Brass,” suggested Mr. Swiveller.
“Ah! of brass,” said the lawyer, glancing at his clerk,
to assure himself that he had suggested the word in good faith and
without any sinister intention. “Is that no harm?”
The lawyer stopped short in his invective, and listening for a
moment, and recognising the well-known voice, rested his head upon
his hand, raised his eyes to the ceiling, and muttered faintly,
“There's another!”
Up went the single gentleman's window directly.
“There's another,” repeated Brass; “and if I could
get a break and four blood horses to cut into the Marks when the crowd
is at its thickest, I'd give eighteen-pence and never grudge it!”
The distant squeak was heard again. The single gentleman's door
burst open. He ran violently down the stairs, out into the street,
and so past the window, without any hat, towards the quarter whence
the sound proceeded—bent, no doubt, upon securing the strangers'
services directly.
“I wish I only knew who his friends were,” muttered
Sampson, filling his pocket with papers; “if they'd just get up a
pretty little Commission de lunatico at the Gray's Inn Coffee House and
give me the job, I'd be content to have the lodgings empty for one
while, at all events.”
With which words, and knocking his hat over his eyes as if for the
purpose of shutting out even a glimpse of the dreadful visitation,
Mr. Brass rushed from the house and hurried away.
As Mr. Swiveller was decidedly favourable to these performances,
upon the ground that looking at a Punch, or indeed looking at
anything out of window, was better than working; and as he had
been, for this reason, at some pains to awaken in his fellow clerk
a sense of their beauties and manifold deserts; both he and Miss
Sally rose as with one accord and took up their positions at the
window: upon the sill whereof, as in a post of honour, sundry young
ladies and gentlemen who were employed in the dry nurture of
babies, and who made a point of being present, with their young
charges, on such occasions, had already established themselves as
comfortably as the circumstances would allow.
The glass being dim, Mr. Swiveller, agreeably to a friendly custom
which he had established between them, hitched off the brown
head-dress from Miss Sally's head, and dusted it carefully
therewith. By the time he had handed it back, and its beautiful
wearer had put it on again (which she did with perfect composure
and indifference), the lodger returned with the show and showmen at
his heels, and a strong addition to the body of spectators. The
exhibitor disappeared with all speed behind the drapery; and his
partner, stationing himself by the side of the Theatre, surveyed
the audience with a remarkable expression of melancholy, which
became more remarkable still when he breathed a hornpipe tune into
that sweet musical instrument which is popularly termed a
mouth-organ, without at all changing the mournful expression of the
upper part of his face, though his mouth and chin were, of
necessity, in lively spasms.
The drama proceeded to its close, and held the spectators enchained
in the customary manner. The sensation which kindles in large
assemblies, when they are relieved from a state of breathless
suspense and are again free to speak and move, was yet rife, when
the lodger, as usual, summoned the men up stairs.
“Both of you,” he called from the window; for only the
actual exhibitor—a little fat man—prepared to obey the summons.
“I want to talk to you. Come both of you!”
“Come, Tommy,” said the little man.
“I an't a talker,” replied the other. “Tell him
so. What should I go and talk for?”
“Don't you see the gentleman's got a bottle and glass up
there?” returned the little man.
“And couldn't you have said so at first?” retorted the
other with sudden alacrity. “Now, what are you waiting for? Are
you going to keep the gentleman expecting us all day? haven't you no
manners?”
With this remonstrance, the melancholy man, who was no other than
Mr. Thomas Codlin, pushed past his friend and brother in the craft,
Mr. Harris, otherwise Short or Trotters, and hurried before him to
the single gentleman's apartment.
“Now, my men,” said the single gentleman; “you have
done very well. What will you take? Tell that little man behind, to
shut the door.”
“Shut the door, can't you?” said Mr. Codlin, turning
gruffly to his friend. “You might have knowed that the gentleman
wanted the door shut, without being told, I think.”
Mr. Short obeyed, observing under his breath that his friend seemed
unusually “cranky,” and expressing a hope that there was no
dairy in the neighbourhood, or his temper would certainly spoil its
contents.
The gentleman pointed to a couple of chairs, and intimated by an
emphatic nod of his head that he expected them to be seated.
Messrs Codlin and Short, after looking at each other with
considerable doubt and indecision, at length sat down—each on the
extreme edge of the chair pointed out to him—and held their hats
very tight, while the single gentleman filled a couple of glasses
from a bottle on the table beside him, and presented them in due
form.
“You're pretty well browned by the sun, both of you,”
said their entertainer. “Have you been travelling?”
Mr. Short replied in the affirmative with a nod and a smile. Mr
Codlin added a corroborative nod and a short groan, as
if he still felt the weight of the Temple on his shoulders.
“To fairs, markets, races, and so forth, I suppose?”
pursued the single gentleman.
“Yes, sir,” returned Short, “pretty nigh all over
the West of England.”
“I have talked to men of your craft from North, East, and
South,” returned their host, in rather a hasty manner; “but
I never lighted on any from the West before.”
“It's our reg'lar summer circuit is the West, master,”
said Short; “that's where it is. We takes the East of London in
the spring and winter, and the West of England in the summer time.
Many's the hard day's walking in rain and mud, and with never a penny
earned, we've had down in the West.”
“Let me fill your glass again.”
“Much obleeged to you sir, I think I will,” said Mr.
Codlin, suddenly thrusting in his own and turning Short's aside.
“I'm the sufferer, sir, in all the travelling, and in all the
staying at home. In town or country, wet or dry, hot or cold, Tom
Codlin suffers. But Tom Codlin isn't to complain for all that. Oh, no!
Short may complain, but if Codlin grumbles by so much as a word—oh
dear, down with him, down with him directly. It isn't his place to
grumble. That's quite out of the question.”
“Codlin an't without his usefulness,” observed Short with
an arch look, “but he don't always keep his eyes open. He falls
asleep sometimes, you know. Remember them last races, Tommy.”
“Will you never leave off aggravating a man?” said
Codlin. “It's very like I was asleep when five-and-tenpence was
collected, in one round, isn't it? I was attending to my business, and
couldn't have my eyes in twenty places at once, like a peacock, no more
than you could. If I an't a match for an old man and a young child, you
an't neither, so don't throw that out against me, for the cap fits your
head quite as correct as it fits mine.”
“You may as well drop the subject, Tom,” said Short.
“It isn't particular agreeable to the gentleman, I dare
say.”
“Then you shouldn't have brought it up,” returned Mr.
Codlin; “and I ask the gentleman's pardon on your account, as a
giddy chap that likes to hear himself talk, and don't much care what he
talks about, so that he does talk.”
Their entertainer had sat perfectly quiet in the beginning of this
dispute, looking first at one man and then at the other, as if he
were lying in wait for an opportunity of putting some further
question, or reverting to that from which the discourse had
strayed. But, from the point where Mr. Codlin was charged with
sleepiness, he had
shown an increasing interest in the discussion: which now attained a
very high pitch.
“You are the two men I want,” he said, “the two men
I have been looking for, and searching after! Where are that old man
and that child you speak of?”
“Sir?” said Short, hesitating, and looking towards his
friend.
“The old man and his grandchild who travelled with you—where are
they? It will be worth your while to speak out, I assure you; much
better worth your while than you believe. They left you, you say—
at those races, as I understand. They have been traced to that
place, and there lost sight of. Have you no clue, can you suggest
no clue, to their recovery?”
“Did I always say, Thomas,” cried Short, turning with a
look of amazement to his friend, “that there was sure to be an
inquiry after them two travellers?”
“You said!” returned Mr. Codlin. “Did I
always say that that 'ere blessed child was the most interesting I ever
see? Did I always say I loved her, and doated on her? Pretty creetur,
I think I hear her now. ‘Codlin's my friend,’ she says,
with a tear of gratitude a trickling down her little eye;
‘Codlin's my friend,’ she says—‘not Short. Short's
very well,’ she says; ‘I've no quarrel with Short; he means
kind, I dare say; but Codlin,’ she says, ‘has the feelings
for my money, though he mayn't look it.’”
Repeating these words with great emotion, Mr. Codlin rubbed the
bridge of his nose with his coat-sleeve, and shaking his head
mournfully from side to side, left the single gentleman to infer
that, from the moment when he lost sight of his dear young charge,
his peace of mind and happiness had fled.
“Good Heaven!” said the single gentleman, pacing up and
down the room, “have I found these men at last, only to discover
that they can give me no information or assistance! It would have been
better to have lived on, in hope, from day to day, and never to have
lighted on them, than to have my expectations scattered thus.”
“Stay a minute,” said Short. “A man of the name of
Jerry—you know Jerry, Thomas?”
“Oh, don't talk to me of Jerrys,” replied Mr. Codlin.
“How can I care a pinch of snuff for Jerrys, when I think of that
'ere darling child? ‘Codlin's my friend,’ she says,d
‘dear, good, kind Codlin, as is always a devising pleasures for
me! I don't object to Short,’ she says, ‘but I cotton to
Codlin.’ Once,” said that gentleman reflectively, “she
called me Father Codlin. I thought I should have bust!”
“A man of the name of Jerry, sir,” said Short, turning
from his selfish colleague to their new acquaintance, “wot keeps a
company of dancing dogs, told me, in a accidental sort of way, that he
had seen the old gentleman in connexion with a travelling wax-work,
unbeknown to him. As they'd given us the slip, and nothing had come of
it, and this was down in the country that he'd been seen, I took no
measures about it, and asked no questions—But I can, if you
like.”
“Is this man in town?” said the impatient single
gentleman. “Speak faster.”
“No he isn't, but he will be to-morrow, for he lodges in our
house,” replied Mr. Short rapidly.
“Then bring him here,” said the single gentleman.
“Here's a sovereign a-piece. If I can find these people through
your means, it is but a prelude to twenty more. Return to me to-morrow,
and keep your own counsel on this subject—though I need hardly tell you
that; for you'll do so for your own sakes. Now, give me your address,
and leave me.”
The address was given, the two men departed, the crowd went with
them, and the single gentleman for two mortal hours walked in
uncommon agitation up and down his room, over the wondering heads
of Mr. Swiveller and Miss Sally Brass.