A man made of money

By Douglas William Jerrold

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Title: A man made of money

Author: Douglas Jerrold

Illustrator: John Leech

Release Date: April 6, 2023 [eBook #70481]

Language: English

Produced by: Bob Taylor, Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed
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  Transcriber’s Note
  Italic text displayed as: _italic_




[Illustration:

  A
  MAN MADE OF MONEY.

  BY

  DOUGLAS JERROLD.

  WITH TWELVE ILLUSTRATIONS ON STEEL

  BY JOHN LEECH.


  LONDON:

  PUBLISHED AT THE

  PUNCH OFFICE,

  85, FLEET STREET.

  1849.
]




  LONDON:
  BRADBURY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.

[Illustration: _Mr. Jericho when can you let me have some Money?_]




A MAN MADE OF MONEY.




CHAPTER I.


“Mr. Jericho, when can you let me have some money?”

This curious question was coldly put by a gentlewoman in morning
undress to a man in gown and slippers. The reader, who is always
permitted to wear the old cloak of the old stage mystery—the cloak
that maketh invisible—must at once perceive the tender relation that
lives and flourishes between the interesting person who puts this
familiar interrogative, and the being who suffers it. They are man
and wife. The marriage certificate is legible in every line of Mrs.
Jericho’s face. She asks for money with a placid sense of right; it
may be, strengthened by the assurance that her debtor cannot escape
her. For it is a social truth the reader may not have overlooked,
that if a man be under his own roof, he must be at home to his own
wife.

“I ask again, Mr. Jericho, when can you let me have some money?”

Mr. Jericho made no answer. He could not precisely name the time;
and he knew that whatever promise he made, its performance would be
sternly exacted of him by the female then demanding. Whereupon, Mr.
Jericho laid down his pen, and resignedly upturned his eyeballs to
the ceiling.

“When—can—you—let—me—have—some—money?”

There is a terrible sort of torture, the manner of which is to let
fall cold water drop by drop upon the shaven head of the sufferer.
We think Mrs. Jericho had never heard of this cruelty; and we are
almost prepared to be bound for her, that she would have suffered
herself to be cut into little diamond pieces ere, knowing the mode
of torment, she would in any way have imitated it. And upon her
incorporate self too—her beloved husband! Impossible. Nevertheless
love, in its very idleness—like a giddy and rejoicing kitten—will
sometimes wound when most playful. The tiny, tender claws _will_ now
and then transgress the fur.

Mrs. Jericho, without at all meaning it, distilled the question,
letting it fall, cold syllable by cold syllable, upon the naked ear
of her husband. Mr. Jericho bounced up in his chair; and then, like a
spent ball, dropt dumbly down again. He had for a few moments raised
himself above the earthy and material query of Mrs. Jericho, and with
his eyes fixed upon the ceiling, was contemplating an antipodean fly
that holding on with the rest of his legs, was passing two of them
over his head and collar-bone, as flies are accustomed curiously to
do. Mr. Jericho—so rapid is thought, especially when followed by a
creditor—Mr. Jericho had already taken refuge in the republic of
flies—for that flies, unlike bees, are not monarchical, is plain
to any man who contemplates their equality and familiarity in his
sugar-basin and other places—and was beginning to envy the condition
of that domestic insect that had the run of his house, the use of
his very finest furniture, gratis,—when he, the nominal master, the
apparent possessor thereof, had truly no lawful hold thereupon.

What shall we say of a man of a decent and compact figure, a man of
middle height; who nevertheless wishing to stand two inches taller
in the world than fairly beseems him, consents to be stretched by
the rack in the hope of walking the higher for the pulling?—Now Mr.
Jericho was this foolish man. He wanted to stand higher in the world
than his simple means allowed him; and he had submitted himself to
the rack of debt, to be handsomely drawn out. To get appearance upon
debt is, no doubt, every bit as comfortable as to get height upon the
rack. The figure may be expanded; but how the muscle of the heart,
how all the joints are made to crack for it.

Mrs. Jericho—when last she spoke—dropt her question in the coldest,
and most measured manner. Mr. Jericho, recalled from the land of
flies, with curved lips, looked silently, sternly at the life-tenant
of his bosom. And now the syllables fall hotly, heavily, as drops of
molten lead.

“When can I have some money?” and Mrs. Jericho’s figure naturally
rose with the question.

Mr. Jericho jumped from his seat the better to measure himself to his
wife’s attitude. His first purpose was to swear; the oath was ready;
but some good anatomical genius twitched a muscle, the jaw of Jericho
closed, and the unuttered aspick died upon his tongue. He would not
swear; he would not enter upon that coward’s privilege; he felt the
soreness of great provocation; felt that the smallest and least
offensive oath would do him sudden and mysterious good. Nevertheless,
he swallowed the emotion, striking his breast to keep the passion
down. He would be cold as cream.

Mrs. Jericho, however, having the right of arithmetic upon her
side, repeated her question; asking it with a terrible calmness,
at the same time, as though to make the query stinging, waving her
right hand before her husband’s face, with a significant and snaky
motion.—“When can I have some money?”

“Woman!” cried Jericho, vehemently; as though at once and for ever he
had emptied his heart of the sex; and, rushing from the room, he felt
himself in the flattering vivacity of the moment a single man. The
transient feeling fell from him as he ran up stairs; and ere he had
begun to shave, all his responsibilities returned with full weight
upon him. “I’m sure, after all, I do my best to love the woman,”
thought Jericho, as he lathered his chin, “and yet she will ask for
money.”

Mrs. Jericho, baffled but not subdued, half-confessed to herself that
there never was such a man; and then, beginning a little household
song—familiar to families as winter robin—she thought she would go
out. She wanted to make a little purchase. She had tried it before;
there was nothing like shopping for lowness of spirits; and—yes,
she remembered—she wanted many things. She would go forth; and—as
Jericho was in his airs—she would lay out money on both sides of the
street.

And Mr. Jericho, as he shaved, quietly built up the scheme of a day’s
pleasure for himself and three special friends. As his wife was in
one of her aggravating tempers, he thought it an opportunity—sinful
to let pass—to have a little quiet dinner somewhere: he could hardly
decide upon the place; but a quiet banquet, at which the human heart
would expand in good fellowship, and where the wine was far above a
doubt.

Shopping and a dinner! Thus was the common purse to bleed in secret,
and at both ends.

Mr. Jericho drest himself with unusual care. He was a man not without
his whimsies; and believed that a good dinner was eaten with better
enjoyment, when taken in full dress. “I hold it impossible”—he would
say—“quite impossible, for a man to really relish turtle in gown and
slippers. No; when turtle was created, it was intended to be eaten
in state; eaten by men in robes and golden chains, to a flourish or
so of silver trumpets.” Mrs. Jericho was fully aware of this marital
superstition. Thus, when with an eye—a wife’s eye—at the bed-room
door, she saw her husband slide down stairs as though the bannister
was buttered, she knew from his dress that it was a day out; and when
the disturbed air wafted back the scent of lavender from the linen of
her lord, mingled with _huile des roses_ from his locks,—it will not
surprise the student of human nature, when we aver that the heart of
the married woman almost sank within her.

Speedily recovering herself, Mrs. Jericho determined upon her best
and brightest gown; her richest shawl; her most captivating bonnet.
These things endued, she took her purse, and as the bank-paper
crumpled in her resolute palm, catching a departing look at the
glass, it was plain to herself that she smiled mischief.

Mrs. Jericho had the profoundest opinion of the powers of her
husband: she believed him capable of any amount of money.
Nevertheless, the man would reject the flattery sometimes with
argument, sometimes with indignation. Again and again the husband
assured his wife, he must—and no help for it—die a beggar; but the
woman armed her heart with incredulity—she laughed, and would not
believe it. Indeed, it seemed her one purpose to show and to preach
an inextinguishable belief in the pocket of her husband. Everywhere,
she made converts. Tradesmen bowed down to her and believed her. On
all sides, dealers—cautious, knowing men, made circumspect by wives
and children—humbled themselves at the door of her pony phaeton,
taking orders. Mrs. Jericho did so possess them with a faith in
Jericho, that had she required the doorway to be laid with velvet
or cachemire, there would have been no scruple of hesitation in the
dealer; the foot-cloth would have been surely opened out, and put
down. Moreover, Mrs. Jericho was aided by her two daughters whom, on
her second marriage, she had handsomely presented to Mr. Jericho;
further enhancing the gift with a son; a young gentleman declared by
the partiality of friends to be born for billiards.

Mr. Jericho was forty when he married; therefore that, in one day, he
should find himself the father of three children, was taking the best
means to make up for the negligence of former years.

Mrs. Captain Pennibacker was made a widow at two-and-twenty by an
East Indian bullet; but it was not until she had laboured for eight
years to become calm about Pennibacker, that she fluttered towards
Jericho. And thus, at one blow, she made him her second husband, and
the second father of Pennibacker’s son and daughters. Offering such
treasures to Mr. Solomon Jericho, she naturally thought he could not
make too much of them. And for a season, Mr. Jericho showed a proper
sense of his good fortune; yet, though his wife would never fail to
assure him that he possessed a priceless treasure in herself and
children, as time wore on, the ungrateful man would now and then look
doubtfully at the family jewels.

Somehow, the Pennibackers failed to see in Mr. Jericho a flesh and
blood father-in-law. From their earliest introduction to him, they
considered him as they would consider a rich plum cake; to be sliced,
openly or by stealth, among them. As they grew up, Mr. Jericho merely
held in their opinion the situation of the person who paid the bills.
It was, we say, the household superstition that Jericho had an
unknown amount of wealth. Hence, he met with little thanks for what
he gave; for the recurring thought would still condemn him for what
he kept back. He possessed a sea of money; and yet he was mean enough
to filter his gold by drops. In a word, he never gave anything that
he, the donor, did not appear to the son or daughter receiving, the
paltriest of human creatures.

And let the truth be said. Mr. Jericho was persecuted by the natural
growth of his own falsehood. If at home he sat upon thorns, from his
own tongue had dropt the seed that produced the punishment. In early
times he had sown broadcast, notions of his abounding wealth; and the
pleasant lies, as lies will do, had come up prickles. They grew thick
in his daily path. Scarcely could he set foot forth without treading
upon them.

The widow Pennibacker, it will at once be understood, had married
Jericho wholly and solely for the sake of her children. It was, at
the cost of any personal sacrifice, a duty she owed her infants to
provide them with a wealthy father. She, herself—and we seek, we
ask no other testimony than her own declaration—she would have been
only too happy to join the dear deceased. But she had a duty to
fulfil—a stern duty that held her to the earth. And she shrank not
from its performance. No; suppressing her higher feelings, she gave
her hand to Solomon Jericho, and chastised herself to think with
calmness upon Pennibacker in his Indian tomb. She offered up—it was
her frequent expression to all her bosom friends—she offered up the
feelings of the widow to the duties of the mother. For what a man
was Pennibacker! Especially in his grave. But such indulgent thought
softens even asperity towards the departed. A natural and wholesome
tenderness. The grave is the true purifier, and in the charity of the
living, takes away the blots and stains from the dead.

When widow Pennibacker was first introduced to Mr. Jericho, he was
whisperingly, confidentially, recommended to her indulgent notice
as—a City Gentleman. Hence, Jericho appeared to the imagination
of the widow, with an indescribable glory of money about him. She
was a woman of naturally a lively fancy; a quality haply cultivated
by her sojourn in the East, where rajahs framed in gold and jewels
upon elephants were common pictures: hence, Jericho of the City of
London was instantaneously rendered by the widow a man of prodigious
wealth. She gave the freest, the most imaginative translation of
the words—City Gentleman. Though not handsome, he was instantly
considered to be most precious. Had she looked upon the Idol Ape,
Tinum Bug, whose every feature is an imperial jewel set in the
thickest skull of gold, and then cast a glance at Jericho, she would,
we fully believe it, have chosen the City Gentleman in preference
to the idol; so far, in the dizzied judgment of an impulsive,
imaginative woman, did Solomon Jericho outshine Tinum Bug.

And much, it must be granted, is to be allowed to Mrs. Pennibacker
as a woman and a mother. A City Gentleman! What a vision; what
exhalations rise from the ink that, like magic drops fallen from
Circe’s finger tips, create the radiant animal upon the white sheet
before us! What a picture to the imagination, the—City Gentleman!
Calm, plain, self-assured in the might of his wealth. All the bullion
of the Bank of England makes back-ground details; the India-house
dawns in the distance; and a hundred pennants from masts in India
Docks tremble in the far-off sky.

Great odds these, against the simplicity of woman! The Bank, the
India-house, and a hundred ships! Mrs. Pennibacker had huge strength
of character; but she succumbed to the unknown power of visionary
wealth; to the mysterious attributes of the City Gentleman. No man
could less look the part, yet Jericho bowed to the widow, a perfect
enchanter.

Again, Jericho was charmed, elevated by the graciousness of the
lady. Like an overlooked strawberry, he had remained until in his
own modesty he began to think himself hardly worth the gathering.
Therefore, when Mrs. Pennibacker vouchsafed to stoop to him, he was
astonished at her condescension, and melted by his own gratitude.
For Mrs. Pennibacker was a majestic woman. She had brought back
nothing of the softness of the East. She was not—she never had
been—an oriental toy for the grown child, man. It would have been
hard to couple her with thoughts of love-birds, and antelopes
and gazelles. No; she rather took her place with those legendary
Indian queens who hide their softness under golden bucklers; whose
bows are strung with tiger-gut; and whose feminine arrows, if
parrot-feathered, are fanged with mortal steel. In the picture of an
ancient panther-hunt, you would have looked to see such a figure as
the figure of Mrs. Pennibacker, thrusting a spear with a dread smile
of self-approbation in the bowels of the objecting pard.

And then, Jericho himself had in this case imagination too: indeed,
everybody has, when money is the thought, the theme. The common brain
will bubble to a golden wand.

It was whispered, sharply whispered to Jericho, that the widow had
many relations, many hopes in India. Immediately, Jericho flung about
the lady all the treasures of the East. Immediately she stood in a
shower-bath of diamonds; elephants’ teeth lay heaped about her; and
rice and cotton grounds, and fields of opium, many thousands of acres
of the prodigal east, stretched out on all sides of her, and on all
sides called her mistress. Yet for all this, Solomon Jericho was
ordinarily a dull, matter-of-fact man. Talk to him of Jacob’s ladder,
and he would ask the number of the steps.

All his life had Jericho trod upon firm earth; but widow Pennibacker
whipped him off his leaden feet, and carried him away into the fairy
ground of Mammon; and there his eyes twinkled at imaginary wealth,
and his ears burned and stood erect at the sound of shaken shadowy
money-bags.

And so, each trusting to each, Solomon Jericho and Sabilla
Pennibacker wooed and won each other; and the winning over, each had
to count the gains. It was very strange. Jericho himself could not
bear to think of the folly, the crime of the omission. Such neglect
had never before betrayed him. Why had he not assured himself of
the woman’s property, ere he made the woman his own? And then, for
his cold comfort, he would remember that he had, on two or three
occasions touched a little gravely upon the subject, whereupon Mrs.
Pennibacker so opened her large, black, mysterious orbs, that his
soul, like a mouse when startled by Grimalkin’s eyes—ran back into
its hole. Again and again—it was a wretched satisfaction for the
married man to think it—the question had been upon his tongue; when
some smile of haughty loveliness would curve the widow’s lips and—how
well he recollected the emotion—he felt himself the meanest wretch to
doubt her.

Mrs. Pennibacker had, on her part, just played about the property of
Jericho; but, with the trustingness of her sex, she was more than
satisfied when Jericho, with all the simplicity of real worth, spoke
calmly, yet withal hopefully, of the vast increase of profit arising
from his platina mines. The word “platina” sent Mrs. Pennibacker to
her Encyclopædia, which, however, comforted her exceedingly. She had
instinctively known it all along; but she now felt assured,—Solomon
Jericho, the holder of mines, possessed wealth inexhaustible. Being a
City Gentleman, of course he sold his platina on the Stock Exchange.

The wedding was very gorgeous. Very rarely are two people joined
together with so much expense. Nevertheless the contribution of
either party—had the other known it—would have somewhat shaken Hymen;
if, indeed, it had not wholly frightened him out of the church.
Mrs. Pennibacker, when introduced to Jericho, was so deep in debt,
that often, let folks try as they would, they could not see her.
And Jericho—doubtless from a short supply of platina—was an object
of extreme solicitude to a large number of dealers. When, however,
it was understood that the widow was to be married to a rich man in
the City, the lady found the very handsomest outfit for herself and
children made delightfully easy. And Jericho, bearing in mind the
heavy expense of an intoxicating honeymoon, readily obtained the
means, when _his_ circle—and every man has a circle, though of the
smallest—rang with the news that he was in imminent likelihood of
marrying the widow of an Indian Nabob!

And so bridegroom and bride—with a mutual trust even beyond mutual
expectation—walked to the altar, there to be welded into one. They
were married at St. George’s Church,—married in the bosom of a few
surrounding friends. The bride’s children were present, and cast a
mixed interest of pensiveness and pleasure on the ceremony. The bride
had told her bridesmaids that, “It would cost her a struggle, but
the dear children should be present; it was right they should. They
ought to have the sacrifice impressed upon their minds in the most
solemn way; the sacrifice that their poor mother consented to make
for them. Nobody but herself knew what a struggle it was; but, it was
her duty, and though her heart was with dear Pennibacker,—yes, she
would go through with it. Mr. Jericho had given the dear girls the
most beautiful lace frocks; and to Basil a lovely gold hunting-watch;
therefore, they ought and they should, witness the sacrifice.”

And Miss Pennibacker and Miss Agatha Pennibacker, like little
fairies, clothed in muslin and lace from elfin-looms, saw the
sacrifice with a vivacity of heart that almost spirted out at the
corners of their lips; and Basil Pennibacker, a gaunt, reedy boy
of twelve, did nothing during the ceremony but take out his new
gold hunting-watch—open it—snap it to—and return it again, as
though he had already had a glimpse of the preparations for the
wedding-breakfast, and with his thoughts upon all the delicacies of
the season, was impatient for the sacrifice to be completed.

And the last “Amen”—the last blow on the rivet—was struck, and
Solomon Jericho and Sabilla Pennibacker were man and wife. Whereupon,
in a hysteric moment, the bride turning to her children, took the
three in one living bunch in her arms, and sweeping them over to
Jericho, said—“You are their father now.”

Turning to the church books of St. George’s we find that the date of
this interesting deed of gift makes it about eight years to the date
of the particular emphatic question with which Mrs. Jericho, as with
a flourish of a silver trumpet, opened this little history.




CHAPTER II.


It was what we will venture to call a vinous hour of the morning,
when Mr. Jericho returned home after the dinner eaten abroad in
defiance of his own household gods, we fear sadly despised upon the
occasion. For Mr. Jericho, with accessory boon-fellows, had partaken
of a luxurious repast; little caring that his own stinted lares were
served with, at best, metaphoric cold mutton. Mr. Jericho had tested
the best resources of the larder and cellar of the Apollo Tavern; and
full of meat and wine, and his brain singing with fantastic humours,
he had surveyed the river Thames with simpering complacency; had seen
big-bellied ships, stowed with India and Africa, drop silently with
the tide towards their haven. It was impossible to enjoy a serener
evening or a nobler sight. The setting sun, with a magnificence
quite worthy of the west-end, coloured all things gold and ruby;
the black hulls of ships glowed darkly and richly; and their sails
were, for the time, from Tyrian looms. The gorgeousness of the hour
enriched every common object with glorious beauty. Every cold, mean
common-place of the common day seemed suffused in one wide harmonious
splendour. And the brain of Jericho, meditating the scene, was
expanded and melted into it; and in that prodigal wealth of colour,
the illusion a little assisted by the swallowed colours within him,
Jericho felt himself a part and parcel of the absorbing richness. The
wine in his heart, a Bacchus’ jack-o’-lantern, reflected the rosy,
golden light that came upon him.

This sweet illusion lasted its pleasant time, fading a little when
the bill was rung for. Nevertheless, Jericho, by the force of the
scene and the wine, felt himself in much easier circumstances than
the hard tyranny of truth, when he was in a calm condition to respect
its dictum, was likely to allow. And so, at that hour when sparrows
look down reproachfully from their eaves at the flushed man trying
the street-door—at that penitential hour, with the hues of the past
romantic evening becoming very cold within him—Mr. Jericho stood
beneath his own oppressive roof.

Mrs. Jericho was gone to bed.

Mr. Jericho breathed a little lighter. Such a load was taken off
him, that he mounted the staircase tenderly, as though he trod upon
flowers; as though every woollen blossom in the carpet from the stair
to the bed itself was living heart’s-ease; which it was not.

Being somewhat ashamed of Mr. Jericho who, as it has been shown,
left his wife to the solitude of her dinner-table, whilst he,
luxurious spendthrift, could dine with company abroad,—we should
be very happy if we could, without any more ado, put him to bed at
once, and indignantly tucking him up, and with perhaps an allowed
allusion to the sort of head that awaited him in the morning, let the
good-for-nothing fellow snore till the curtain-rings danced again,
allowing him only to wake up in time for the next chapter. But this
we cannot do. The stern, iron moral it is our wish to impress upon
the world—yielding as it always is to such impressions—compels us
to steady Mr. Jericho to his bed-side; and even when there, not for
awhile to leave him.

In the reproachful quietude of his dressing-room, Jericho prepared
himself for his couch. Tenderly did his fingers dwell upon and wander
about buttons. He caught a sight of himself in the looking-glass,
and—to dodge his conscience—set himself to feign to whistle: and
then it struck him it must be very, very late, his beard had grown
so much. And the day in a moment seemed to have opened its broad,
staring eye; and the sparrows cried more saucily; and the reproachful
voice of the pigeons perched upon the chimney-top, came down in
muffled murmur upon Solomon’s ear; and with a very little more he
would have felt himself a villain.

The culprit placed his hand upon the handle of the bed-room
door. Had he been a burglar with a felonious intention upon Mrs.
Jericho’s repeater, instead of the man responsible for the rent
and taxes of the house in which he at that moment stood in his
shirt and shuddered,—had he, we say, at that point of time been an
unlawful thief _in posse_, in lieu of a lawful husband _in esse_,
his knees—unless he had been a very young and sensitive rogue
indeed—could not have so knocked together. With his face crumpled
into a thousand lines, he opened the door. What a blessing; the
hinges did not that time creak, and before they always did! Assured
by the omen, Jericho took a little bit of heart. The night-light was
winking its last. There was not a sound. The bed-curtains hung like
curtained marble. Jericho paused, turning up his ear. Still not a
sound. Sabilla did not ordinarily sleep so light. The stillness was
peculiar—curious—very odd.

  “And if my Lucy should be dead!”

At the moment Solomon Jericho, though he did not know it, was quite
as much the author of that line as William Wordsworth. Still silent?
Hush! A gnat drones its tiny trump between the curtains. _Ubi flos,
ibi apis._ Suddenly Jericho is assured; and with two long, soft
strides, is at his own side of the bed. Sabilla is evidently in a
sound, deep, sweet sleep. Untucking the bed, and making himself the
thinnest slice of a man, Jericho slides between the sheets. And there
he lies, feloniously still; and he thinks to himself—being asleep,
she cannot tell how late I came to bed. At all events, it is open to
a dispute; and that is something.

“Mr. Jericho, when can you let me have some money?”

With open eyes, and clearly ringing every word upon the morning air,
did Mrs. Jericho repeat this primal question.

And what said Jericho? With a sudden qualm at the heart, and with
thick, stammering tongue, he answered—“Why, my dear, I thought you
were sound asleep.”

“I should be very happy if, like some people, I could sleep, Mr.
Jericho. I should be very glad indeed if, like some people, I could
leave the house and take my pleasure, and run into every sort of
extravagance. But no! I must remain at home. But I tell you this, Mr.
Jericho, I have made my mind up. Lying here, and being bitten by the
gnats as I have been”—

“I’m sure, I’m very—very sorry”—

“Not you, indeed. No—no. You don’t care how I’m bitten; or, for that
matter, who bites me. But that is not what I was going to say. What
I was going to observe is this—Neither you nor any man in this world
shall make a cat’s-paw of me.”

“I never thought of it. Never entered my head,” said Jericho,
screwing his skull into the pillow.

“Nothing but a cat’s-paw, and I’m not come to that. I was deceived at
the altar,” said Mrs. Jericho: “grossly, shamefully played upon; and
I have been deceived ever since.”

“For the matter of that,” cried Jericho, a little doggedly, “I was
deceived too. Of course, everybody said you’d money; and so I was
deceived—grossly deceived,” cried Jericho, melting a little with a
sense of his injury. “I don’t want to return to the subject, Mrs.
Jericho. But of course I thought you rich.”

“Mercenary wretch! If the girls were only stirring, I’d get up,” was
the threat. “I’m sure it’s time.”

“Just as you like, Mrs. Jericho: only be good enough to let me go to
sleep. Bed,” said Jericho, making himself vigorously up for rest,
“bed isn’t the place to talk in.”

“I don’t wish to talk,” replied Mrs. Jericho, “I don’t wish to
exchange a word with such a creature as you are. All I want to know
is this—When can you let me have some money?”

“Money!” gasped Jericho.

“Money!” repeated Mrs. Jericho, with inexorable resolution.

“Mrs. Jericho,” said the husband, bolting himself upright in bed,
and looking aside, down upon the face of his unmoved wife—“will
you permit me to sleep, now I’ve come to my own bed? I think it
particularly hard when a man has been out all the day as I have been,
toiling for his wife and family—I say I think it particularly hard”—

“I don’t want to prevent your sleeping, Mr. Jericho. Sleep as long
as the sleeping beauty, and I’m sure I should be the last person to
attempt to wake you. All I want to ask of you is what I asked in the
morning. Nothing more. When shall I have some money?”

“Zounds, woman!”—cried Jericho.

“Don’t call me woman—man!” exclaimed Mrs. Jericho. “Major
Pennibacker”—

“He was only a captain,” hiccupped Jericho.

“Major Pennibacker,” reiterated his widow, “a soldier and a
gentleman, never called me woman yet. Glorious creature! His sword
would rattle in its scabbard if he knew how I was treated.”

“Is this the time,” cried Jericho, a little fiercely, “the time to
talk of swords and scabbards, with the sun shining in at the windows?
Why can’t you let me go to sleep, and talk at the proper horns? After
a man has been toiling and slaving for his wife and family”—

“No doubt. And I wonder how many wives—and how many families—that’s
it!” cried Mrs. Jericho, with a strange, cutting significance, that
instantly levelled her husband; for Solomon desperately stretched
himself in the bed; and lugging the nightcap over his ears, turned
round, determined upon plucking up sleep, like poppies, by the roots.

“I’m not to be deceived by your indignation, Mr. Jericho. I know
everything, or else where could your money go to? However, as I
said, I will no longer be made a cat’s-paw of. For eight years
have I been married to you, under what I may call false pretences.
People called you the Golden Jericho, or is it likely that I could
have forgotten the heroic man who—I feel it—has a slight put upon
him in his warrior’s grave, by your being in the nightcap you wear
at this moment? However, he forgives me. At least, I trust”—and
Mrs. Jericho spoke with a spasm—“I trust he does. It was all for
the sake of his precious orphans that I am in the bed I am. Yes,
Pennibacker”—and his widow cast up her eyes, as though addressing her
first husband, looking down benignly upon her from the tester—“Yes,
dear Pennibacker, you know for what I sacrificed the best of wives,
and the most disconsolate of widows. I could have wished, like
the Hindoo, to be burnt upon the pyre; I was equal to it; I could
have rejoiced in it. But I re-married, unwillingly re-married, to
sacrifice myself for our children. Yes, Pennibacker”—

“Damn Pennibacker!” cried Jericho.

“Mr. Jericho,” said Pennibacker’s widow, with her deepest voice, and
with thunder brooding at her brows—“Mr. Jericho, will you dare to
desecrate the ashes of the dead? Demon! Will you?”

“Well, then,” said Jericho, a little appalled, for an impartial
circle had called Mrs. Jericho the Siddons of private life, she could
so freeze her friends with her fine manner—“Well, then, let me go to
sleep. It’s very hard, Mrs. Jericho; very hard, that you will always
be throwing your husband’s ashes in my face.”

“No levity, sir; no levity,” said Mrs. Jericho, very ponderously.
“Though unhappily I am your wife, I cannot forget that I am Miss
Pennibacker’s widow.” And then Mrs. Jericho drew a sepulchral sigh;
and then she hopefully added—“but he forgives me. However, as I
believe I have observed once before, Mr. Jericho, I will no longer be
made a cat’s-paw of.”

“Of course not. Why should you?” said Jericho. “I’m sure, for my
part, I want a wife with as little of the cat as possible.” And then
Jericho shrank in the bed, as though he had ventured too much.

Possibly Mrs. Jericho was too imperious to note the coarse affront;
for she merely repeated—“Very well, Mr. Jericho: all I want to know
is this—I ask to know no more. When—when will you let me have some
money?”

As though the bed had been strown with powdered pumice, Jericho
shifted and writhed.

“I don’t wish to annoy you, Mr. Jericho,” said the woman, with dread
composure. “But you compel me, gracious knows, much against my
nature, to ask when—when will you let me have some money?”

Jericho shook and groaned.

“It is much more afflicting to my nature, much greater suffering to
me to ask, than it can be for you to hear. Major Pennibacker never
had a pocket to himself. He, dear fellow, always came to me. Ha! how
few men can appreciate the true dignity of married life. As I always
used to say,—one heart and one pocket. However, as it’s quite time
for me to get up; and as I suppose you intend to go to sleep—and
as people will be here, and I must give them an answer of some
sort,—permit me, Mr. Jericho, to ask you—I’m sure it’s painful enough
to my feelings, and I feel degraded by the question—nevertheless, I
must and will ask you,—when will you let me have some money?”

Jericho—as though a dagger had been suddenly struck up through the
bed—bounced bolt upright. There was a supernatural horror in his
look: even his own wife, familiar as she was with his violence,
almost squealed. However, silently eyeing him through the small
murderous loop-holes of her lace border, Mrs. Jericho saw her
pale-faced husband snatch off his cap, holding it away at arm’s
length: then, breathing hard and casting back his head, he cried in
tones so deep and so unnaturally grating, that the poor woman, like a
night-flower, shrank within herself at the first sound,—

“I WISH TO HEAVEN I WAS MADE OF MONEY!”

Mrs. Jericho, considerably relieved that it was no worse, added in a
low, deep, earnest voice—“I wish to Heaven you were.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Foolish and wicked wishes do not fly upwards, but there is no doubt
of it, descend below; where, though they are but bodiless syllables,
they are often fashioned by the imps into pins and needles, and
straightway returned to the world to torment their begetter.

And Solomon Jericho, with a silly, sinful wish at his heart—a wish
further emphasised by the thoughtless amen of his wife—subsided into
muddled sleep; snoring heavily, contemptuously, at the loneliness of
his spouse. She, poor woman, lay awhile, silently struggling with her
indignation. At length, however, her feelings growing too strong for
her, she got up the better to wrestle with them.

And Jericho was left alone—alone in bed? Not alone. He had
desperately fitted his night-cap to his head, and resolute upon
sleep, had punched his head deep, deep into his pillow. Mrs. Jericho
would have doubted her eyes had she seen the creatures in her house;
but standing upon a ridge of her husband’s night-cap, and looking
wisely down upon her husband’s dreaming face, were two fleas. An
elder and a younger flea.

Their ancestors had come from the far East, and carried the best
royal blood within them. It would be no difficult matter to trace
them up to the court of king Crœsus, whither they were first brought
in the cloak of Æsop. Let it suffice, that from this Lydian stock
descended the two fleas, at the time of our story, perched—like
ruminating goats upon a ledge of rock—upon the night-cap of Jericho.
Their progenitors had not come in, like many others, with the
Conquest; but were brought to England in the train of a Persian
Ambassador. After a wandering life, the race remained for some forty
years comfortably settled in a lodging-house at Margate, bringing
up a multitudinous family. From this stock came our two fleas,
travelling, cosily enough, to London. How from the Apollo Tavern,
where they first put up on their arrival in the metropolis, they
made their way to the home of Jericho, passes our knowledge to
declare. Very sure we are, that Mrs. Jericho believed she had no such
creatures in _her_ house.

Well, the two fleas having jumped upon the brow of Jericho, we shall,
without any scruple, make use of them. They stand above the brain
of the sleeper, and—being descended from the fleas of Æsop—shall,
for the nonce, be made to narrate to the reader the vision of the
dreaming victim.

“Miserable race!”—said the father flea, with its beautiful bright eye
shining pitifully upon Jericho—“Miserable craving race! You hear,
my son; man, in his greed, never knows when he has wherewithal. He
gorges to gluttony, he drinks to drunkenness; and you heard this
wretched fool, who prayed to heaven, to turn him—heart, brain and
all—into a lump of money. Happily, it is otherwise with fleas. We
take our wholesome, our sufficient draught, and there an end. With
a mountain of enjoyment under our feet, we limit ourselves to that
golden quantity—enough.”

“Therefore, oh, my sire, let us not, for our temperance, be
gluttonous of self-praise. Seeing that fleas are the crowning work
of the world; seeing that as sheep, and bullocks, and fish and fowl
are made for man, and man for us; let us be charitable towards our
labouring servant,—poor biped; our cook and butler.”

“My son, true it is, man feeds for us, drinks for us. Man is the
labouring chemist for the fleas; for them he turns the richest meats
and spiciest drinks to flea wine. Nevertheless, and I say it with
much pain, man is not what he was. He adulterates our tipple most
wickedly.”

“I felt it with the last lodgers,” said the younger flea. “They
drank vile spirits: their blood was turpentine, with, I fear me, a
dash of vitriol. How they lived at all, I know not. I always had the
head-ache in the morning. Here, however”—and the juvenile looked
steadfastly down upon the plain of flesh, the wide champain beneath
him—“here, we have promise of better fare.”

“The soil is woundily hot; hard, and dry, and hot as a volcano;
and—mercy me,” cried the elder, “how it throbs and heaves.
Hark!”—and the flea inclined its right ear—“the fellow’s brain
sings like a kettle. Now is he going off into a galloping dream.
Our ancestors—some of whom, my son, as I have often told you,
lived the bosom friends of conjurors and soothsayers—were, as
many of their descendants are at the present day, to be met with
amongst fortune-tellers and gypsies—our ancestors had the gift of
following a dream in all its zig-zag mistiness. And the wisdom of our
ancestors”—and here the flea raised itself upon its legs, and looked
with a serene pride about it—“the wisdom of our ancestors has come
down in its fullness upon myself; to be left, my dear child, whole
and unimpaired, and I may add, unimproved to you.”

“What a sight is this,” cried the young flea, staring at Jericho’s
face. “What an earthquake must be tumbling and rumbling in the
fellow’s heart; and how his teeth clang together! Is that thunder?
No. But did you ever hear such snoring?”

“In a minute, my son, and he’ll be in the thick of it. Attend; and
I’ll follow him through the maze; showing you all the odd things
that shower up and down in his brain, just as the golden air-bubbles
of yesterday sparkled in his wine-glass. But first, my child, let
us drink.” Saying this, the elder flea, raising itself pretty well
upright, and with its strong claws taking a firm hold of the flesh
beneath, for better purchase, struck its lance home, and opening its
shoulders, drew up, with its sucker, such a hearty draught of drink,
that Jericho, the unconscious cup-bearer, gave a sudden twist, so
deep and hearty was the pull of the drinker. “Very good; very good,
indeed,” said the flea. “There’s a fine delicate bouquet in it.”

“Humph,” cried the younger flea, “for my part, I think ’twould bear
a little more body. But, my sire, as I’ve heard you say, there’s
no judging truly from the first cup. Here goes again. Why, how the
fellow kicks!”

[Illustration: _Mr. Jericho’s Marvellous Dream._]

“Such, my son,” said the elder flea, “is man: such his wastefulness
upon himself, such his injustice to what—cocking his nose towards the
stars—he calls the lower animals. At least, two bottles of wine, a
gill or more of brandy, to say nothing of a draught or two of malt,
are burning in his arteries, and in hot mist rising to his brain.
Now, what work, what watching, what risk of limb and life—what
multiplication of toil—to produce the various beverage he has
guzzled! What digging and ploughing of the land; what vine-dressing;
what sailing upon the stormy seas; what glass-blowing; what bottling,
before the liquor, like a melted jewel, shone in his eye, and
trickled down his throat! Yet here he lies, and with no conscious
labour of his own, is at once the wine-press and distiller for the
fleas. And when we seek to take our temperate draught—smallest drops;
merest seed-rubies—how the miser kicks, and flounders, and when he
has sense enough, what wicked words at times he pitches at us! But
such”—said the elder flea, preparing itself for another stoup—“such
is man.” And again the flea pierced the wine-skin, and sucked up
another draught, and again Jericho plunged, and twisted.

“The bin improves,” said the younger flea, drinking very hard. “And
yet, I’m sure there’s burgundy in it. Now, never but twice before
have I tasted burgundy; and then I suffered for it; just as if the
grapes were grown on a soil of sulphur. Nevertheless, ’tis a rare
cellar this, after the turpentine and vitriol of our last lodgings:
so, hang the headache, and let’s have t’ other bumper.”

“Not another drop,” cried the elder flea. “Let the poor wretch
beneath us teach us moderation. Consider his face. How dead and
stupified it looks! How it shone above the table last night; and what
a piece of dirty dough it looks at this moment! What light was in the
lamp, and now what dullness and smoke!”

“And yet,” said the younger flea, “the dough begins again to work.
Surely, he’s on with his dream now.”

“Now, he’s fairly off. A while ago, and the brain was only
fluttering—like a bird trying its wings—but now, yes—now it’s off.
Ha! ha! A very droll dream, even so far as it goes;” and the old flea
looked very wise.

“Tell it, father; tell it. You never told me a dream before: surely,”
said the young one, “I’m old enough to learn now.”

“Listen, my son, and be instructed. The sleeping man is at this
moment following his heart. The thing has been plucked out of his
bosom by a laughing little creature, with painted wings: a strange
creature, half-elfin half-angel. The elf, or angel, or whatever it
is, hugs the heart in its plump arms, and its eyes twinkle with
mischief, and its cheeks are pitted with dimples, and its lips pout
as over-full of the fun that will rise to them; and still away the
child carries the heart.”

“And the man!—Where’s the man that owns it? Still following?” asked
the young flea.

“Still following, and in a pretty pucker about his property. But,
my son, be silent; and do not interrupt me. The elf, still flying
with the heart, is now in the open country. A peaceful, quiet spot.
Beautiful meadows, starred with daisies. Ha! they remind me of a
scene of early youth. That green velvet quilt sprinkled with little
silver flowers—the quilt of the sweet Princess of Satinskin—that
sweet, beautiful quilt in the palace of”—

“Never mind the palace,” said the young flea. “You are now in the
open country; keep to the meadow.”

And the elder flea, rebuked, proceeded. “There’s cattle and sheep in
the meadows; and the boy, in sport, flies and flutters above them.
And now he jumps from lamb’s back to lamb’s back, and the man still
following, with all his eyes watching his heart, that the little elf,
in the wildest fun, tosses up, like a ball in the air, catching it
again, and again tossing it up, and”—

“I should guess something odd,” said the young flea: “for how the
fellow here kicks; and how his face is broken into moving hills and
vallies. How he moans, too, about his heart. Poor devil!”

“And now, the little imp trips across a bridge, that leads to a large
wooden building—still in the open country. He runs into the building,
the fellow following him, as though now he was sure of getting his
heart back again. Not a bit. The youngster throws the heart to a
strange-looking woman; a sort of Egyptian fortune-teller,—and she,
with a sharp glittering knife, begins to cut the heart into little
pieces.”

“Oh, ho! Look at his face,” cried the young flea. “And if he doesn’t
shift and twist like a worm on a hook!”

“The woman cuts the heart into small pieces, and the owner of the
heart—how his knees twitch up and down, and how his head rolls upon
the pillow, at every touch of the knife—at length sits down in a
sort of curious despair to see what will become of his heart. And
now, he looks about him—yes, he knows he is in a paper-mill. And
strangely enough appears to him a kind of living history of the rise
and progress of paper. He sees the flags of Egypt growing in a ditchy
nook—and red Egyptians pulling and peeling it. And here flourishes
a field of bamboo, and here a Chinaman, with his side-long almond
eyes, cuts and shreds the skin from the bark. And the dreamer seeing
his heart in bits tossed into a trough, is suddenly smitten with the
sense that his heart, the great machine and blood-pump of his life,
is to be made into paper. He tries to protest against the injury. He
tries to roar out, but not a word will come. He sits straining and
gasping, and dumb withal, as a caught fish. And now, he sees the bits
of his heart curiously sorted by these hags of women; gloomy and wild
as sybils,—for, my son, I know what sort of folk sybils are from the
wisdom of my ancestors; our great forefathers having been closely
entertained by them.”

“Go on, father: I’m impatient to know what they make of the heart,”
cried the younger flea.

“The women, with sharp hooks, pick out the little knots and hard bits
from the heart, and then souse the sorted stuff into boding water:
and then they cut the bits with a turning thing toothed with knives;
cut it and shred it; and now what was a fine, firm, full-weight
heart, labouring in and through life, in the bosom of this wretched
tipsiness below us, is soft and liquid as a dish of batter.
Nevertheless, bating a chalky paleness in the fellow’s face, he seems
to do as well without his heart as with it.”

“But it can’t last, father; it can’t last. He must have something of
a heart to live,” said the young flea.

“Be patient a minute, and you shall learn. Now, one of the hags
scoops the batter edgewise into a little frame and shakes it
and—presto!—all is done: the heart of the dreamer is worked up into I
know not how many sheets—but there seems a lumping lot—a lumping lot
of the finest and whitest paper.”

“Poor devil, I say again. He can’t live with that; he can’t go
through life with a heart of paper.”

“Don’t interrupt me. Whilst you spoke, everything changed. At this
moment, the imp that vanished when he threw the heart to the hags,
now carries it in a square bundle upon his head; laughing and
skipping along London streets; and the man without a heart still
following his tormenter. My son, the imp and the man are now going up
Ludgate Hill”—

“Do you know the place?” asked the younger flea.

“Perfectly well; many years ago—for what a vulgar error it is to
think fleas short-lived—many years ago, I walked on a Lord Mayor’s
day.”

“Walked!” cried the young flea.

“Walked; that is, was carried in the miniver fur of the alderman of
the Fishmongers’ Company; and upon my life, a very noble sight it
was. Yes, my child, I think I ought to remember that show, for it was
on that very day, in that very miniver, I first met your poor mother.
Ha! that was a happy day—and we saw all the fun from the beginning to
the end; for we contrived to get upon the alderman, and sitting close
and keeping quiet—for that’s an art fleas have to learn, if they
would see, and not in the end be seen—sitting close in the nape of
the alder man’s neck, we were present at the banquet. I shall never
forget the beautiful sight we had, when the alderman got upon his
legs to make a speech. Well, we were carried home and put to bed with
the alderman, and from that time”—

“Never mind the alderman,” cried the pert young flea, “but get on
from Ludgate-Hill.”

“While I’ve talked, the imp and the man have gone round St. Paul’s,
and are now crossing into Cheapside. Shall I ever forget how, when we
came to Cheapside, the giants—well, I won’t think of that now. The
imp with the load of paper on his head runs by Bow-Church, and the
dreamer here stretches after him. My son, both imp and man,” said
the flea solemnly, “both imp and man have now entered the Bank of
England.”

“The Bank of England!” repeated the young flea, impressed by the
sudden seriousness of its parent.

There was a short pause. The elder flea, a little dry in the mouth
with so much talking, again inserted its piercer in the skin beneath
it, and drew up another glass of flea wine. And in this the son
dutifully imitated the father.

“The imp,” continued the elder flea, much refreshed by the draught,
“the imp has entered the Bank printing-office. The man without
the heart, the poor wretch wriggling and moaning under our feet,
resignedly drops upon a stool. He sits wringing his hands for his
lost heart; and now his veins tingle, for he hears the creaking of
presses. Their motion seems, strangely enough, his motion. And now,
the imp that had vanished, comes back again, bringing in his arms the
poor man’s heart.”

“It can’t be of any use to him, now,” said the younger flea.

“Of the best use, my child, as he thinks it. The imp jumps upon
the man’s knee, and the heart—it has lost its red colour, and its
flesh-like look, and as though all the blood had been discharged
from it, is white as a rag, save that the veins show through it all
black—yes, black as ink; the heart, nicely fitted by the imp, beats
again in its place inside the sleeper. You see! how he smiles—and
how his whole body heaves with the chuckle—as he again feels the old
acquaintance. And now he can’t make too much of the imp; he throws
his arms about him, and paws his little cheeks in drunken fondness.
You hear! You hear, how the laugh gurgles in the fool’s throat,—and
all because he’s got his heart back again.”

“And now, as the dream’s over, father—what say you to another drink?”
asked the young flea.

“In a minute, for ’tisn’t over yet. No. The place is changed, and the
sleeper is carried to see what appears to him Gold’s Grand Review in
the Bank cellars.”

“What do you mean by Gold’s Review?” demanded the junior.

“The imp and the dreamer are in the Bank Cellars. Here, my son, in
mighty bars—in bars that can break even the backs of emperors—is
gold. The imp takes a new sovereign piece from its bosom, and
holds it above its head. Like a small golden sun, it illumines the
place. Whereupon, all the bars of gold become pigmy shapes, and
all in action. Here we have a whole army—all in gold—marching,
wheeling, forming into lines and squares. Here we have little golden
shipwrights hammering at golden craft; here, cooks of gold sweating
at golden dainties; here, in the cellar, all the works and labours,
the commands and services of the world, are shown by the imp in
action—drawn into life, for a brief space, from what was a moment
before bars of inert metal. It is, my son, as if all the world
outside of the walls of the Bank, was imitated by the world’s masters
down in the Bank cellars. I can see the Lord Mayor and Court of
Aldermen in little men of gold not bigger than an Alderman’s thumb:
and here they act in the metal itself what the metal makes acted in
the flesh outside.”

“And for what purpose—I don’t see the use of it,” said the young flea.

“As a farewell show to our dreamer here. And he is mightily pleased
with it,—for he rubs his hands, and then rubs his heart as though he
found all happiness there.”

“And has he found it, think you?” asked the youngster.

“Humph! That will be seen,” said the old one.




CHAPTER III.


It was mid-day when Mrs. Jericho next entered her bed-room. She came
in, humming a little piece of a song. Whereupon, the culprit between
the sheets took courage to observe—“I don’t think I ever passed so
wretched a night.”

“Considering the night was over when you came home, Mr. Jericho, you
of course are the best judge. How should I know anything about it?”
Such was the home-thrust relentlessly given by Mrs. Jericho. She
would not be mollified.

“I went, my dear,”—began Jericho.

The outraged wife would not be insulted. Suddenly twisting round, as
though stung by the hypocritic tenderness, Mrs. Jericho desired the
man to keep his fine words for people out of doors. Her eyes were at
length opened; she had a long time—too long—been fondly blind; but at
last she knew all; she was satisfied, and—she again repeated it—she
would not be insulted.

Jericho was not to be diverted into a quarrel. Pacific man! He would
struggle to keep the peace. Hence, in tones, feloniously intended to
soften and cajole, he returned to what he called the terrors of the
past night.

“If I were to live a thousand years, my love”—

“Love!” exclaimed Mrs. Jericho, and this time she turned full upon
the offender. For a minute, she stood withering him from between the
bed-curtains. And Jericho, not wholly lost to shame, dragged his
night-cap over his brow, and shrinking, rolled himself upon the other
side. With his heavy eye upon the parrots and parroquets perched
and flying upon the bed-room paper that adorned the wall—for Mrs.
Jericho, as she told her bosom friends, would have that paper at any
price; the birds, and the palms, and the savannahs, as she said, so
reminding her of past happiness with Pennibacker,—Jericho manfully
continued:

“Yes, a thousand years, I shouldn’t forget last night.”

“Very likely not,” said Mrs. Jericho. “I’ve no doubt you deserve to
remember it. I shouldn’t wonder.”

“You don’t know, my dear Sabilla”—Mrs. Jericho trod the room
anew, impatient of such daring familiarity—“you don’t know what
I’ve suffered. Such an extraordinary dream! I feel it now. It has
almost killed me with bile. But it’s the usual case with me. An
uncomfortable dream always does. Killed with bile.”

(The wretched hypocrite! With such baited cunning, he angled in the
depths of woman’s tenderness for unmerited sympathy. But we trust
the reader will feel a grim pleasure at his disappointment; he took
none.)

“The dream, my love, the dream has quite scorched me up. I’m a man—as
I believe you’ll give me credit for, dear Sabilla—a man with a mind
above such things; otherwise, I should think something dreadful, very
dreadful, was going to happen. Could you give me some soda-water?”

“I am very sure, Mr. Jericho, there is not a single drop of
soda-water in the house.”

Hereupon the sufferer ventured to make a suggestion.

“Couldn’t you send for some?”

“Certainly not,” replied Mrs. Jericho, with instant decision.
“If I cannot reclaim you to propriety, at least let me have the
satisfaction, for the sake of your children, Pennib—Mr. Jericho—for
their sake, let me, if possible, hide from an inquisitive world
the vices of their father. Let me, at least, have such barren
consolation.” Jericho was silent. In consequence thereof, Mrs.
Jericho, with gushing fluency, continued—“I have no wish, sir, to
busy the idle world with my private wrongs; none whatever.”

“I don’t see, my—my dear”—said Jericho, from under the clothes—“I
don’t see why you should.”

“And yet you ask me to send the servants for soda-water at this
time of the day. But what do you care how the domestics talk! How
your conduct as a husband and a father is made the gossip of the
neighbourhood! I can just fancy, at this hour, Edwin asking for
soda-water; and how very cleverly you’d be brought upon the counter.
Of course, servants will talk. No wages will stop ’em. And—no, Mr.
Jericho, no”—and his wife spoke as though sternly re-assured in her
purpose—“you may stab my heart if you will; but at least you shall
not—that is, if I can help it—you shall not call about the vulgar and
unfeeling world to gaze upon the bleeding wound.” And Mrs. Jericho
sat down.

“I wouldn’t do such a thing, and you know I wouldn’t. Sabilla, dear,
you know I wouldn’t.” Mrs. Jericho made no spoken reply; but her
foot, tapping the carpet, was eloquent of unbelief and wrong.

There was no answering this, therefore Jericho adroitly sought to
turn the current of discourse. For several minutes he hunted for a
thought, his wife’s foot still accompanying him on the search. At
last he deemed himself successful, and with the vivacity of good
fortune, said—

“Can I have a cup of tea?”

Mrs. Jericho rose like a sultana, and with a cold dignity, and in
deep searching tones, that made Jericho wince in the sheets, said—“Of
course, Mr. Jericho; you are master in your own house. Of course, you
can have a cup of tea.” And with this assurance, Mrs. Jericho slowly
swept from her profaned bed-room.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Well, and what does the old felon say? The scaly old griffin! What’s
he got to answer for himself?”

A young gentleman close upon one of the privileges of legal
manhood—the privilege of going to prison for his own debts—put
this sudden question to Mrs. Jericho, on her instant return to the
drawing-room, from the interview narrated above.

“Come, what is it? Will he give me the money? In a word,” asked the
hurried youth, “will he go into the melting-pot like a man and a
father?”

“My dear Basil, you mustn’t ask me,” replied Mrs. Jericho to her
emphatic first-born.

“Oh, mustn’t I, though?” cried Basil. “It’s as little as I can do.
Ha! you don’t know the lot of people that’s asking me. Bless you!
they ask a hundred times to my once. Well, will old Jericho tip the
loyalty? Did you give him my sentiment, mother, eh? Money—money’s
like the air you breathe; if you have it not you die. Have you
brought me the beggarly allowance?—If I don’t blush a hole in my
cheek to take it! It’s disgusting. A hundred a year! Not enough to
keep a blind man in dogs.”

“My dear Basil, where do you imbibe such extraordinary parallels?”
asked Mrs. Jericho; and with her eyes feeding upon the knowing,
impudent face of the young man, she affectionately adjusted his
cravat. “What a careless child you are—I’m sure you don’t take care
of yourself.”

“First make it worth my while, mother. Care! What’s the use of
buttoning an empty pocket? But about this worse half of yours; this
supernumerary father of mine. Only wished I’d ha’ guessed what he’s
turned out. Little as I was, I’d ha’ forbid the banns—I would—if I’d
jumped upon a three-legged stool to do it.”

Mrs. Jericho drew a deep, deep sigh, and tenderly pressed the hero in
her arms.

“Don’t sigh, ma’am,” said the youth, “don’t sigh; for times are bad,
and bobbin’s getting dearer.” Mrs. Jericho tapped the young gentleman
on his cheek. “To business, as the sun said when he rose late—to
business, my dear madam. What does that ruffian-in-law answer to my
just proposal?”

“Basil, really, my dear Basil, I cannot listen: whatever Mr.
Jericho’s faults may be, if I can endure them—if I can be silent—at
least I may expect my children”—

“Not at all, my dear lady, not at all. Your children never said a
word to the bargain. They only looked on while you were sold. They
have all the freedom of English subjects, and may abuse your husband
_ad libitum_. I do nothing rashly, dear madam; I’ve inquired into the
law, and I know it. My allegiance, my dear lady, is due to my own
buried father; and as I’m told, he was a gentleman”—

“Basil, don’t—pray don’t! You bring him up before me. Ha! Basil, your
father _was_ a man.”

“No doubt of it, my dear lady; no doubt of it, my revered mother;”
and the young gentleman, with really a touch of grace, bent his head,
and raised his mother’s hand to his lips. “Would shoot the fellow, my
dear lady, who doubted it. Well, why did you hook-and-eye yourself
to the individual up stairs? Why were you induced to drop upon the
golden name of Pennibacker the tin extinguisher of Jericho? As Hamlet
somewhere says, why did you leave that Primrose Hill of clover, to go
to grass on Wormwood Scrubs?”

“I entreat you, Basil—I supplicate, my dearest boy, that you desist!
You”—

“All right, my dear lady, all right, and got the receipt. What I
meant to say was this. You sacrificed yourself for the good of your
family?” And Basil Pennibacker, with wrinkled forehead, looked
inquiringly about, gesticulating as though chewing his emotion.
“Didn’t you?”

“I did, Basil, I did; but don’t grieve for that—I can be resigned; I
_have_ been resigned.”

“Like a tame lamb,” said Basil, bursting into metaphor, “like a tame
lamb you wreathed your brow with orange flowers, and in the very
handsomest manner gave yourself away. Can I forget it? Ought I to
forget it? Ought my sisters to forget it? Never. You married our
destroyer-in-law—pardon my feelings, my dear madam; as your dutiful
son I must call him so: you married our cannibal-in-law, to make the
fortunes of your innocent orphans? Did you not?”

“I did, Basil,” said Mrs. Jericho, and she shuddered. “Your father
knows I did.”

“In which case, madam, as one of those orphans, it is my first duty
to take care that your intentions are honourably carried out. Now,
madam, can I see Mr. Jericho?”

“My dear child,” said Mrs. Jericho, “he is not yet up.”

“And nearly one o’clock—what an insult”—and Basil pointed towards the
sun—“what a marked insult to that respectable luminary. Never mind.
We’ll hold a little bed of justice in this matter. For I do assure
you, my dear lady, I tremble for myself; I do indeed. I never was so
disloyal in all my life; never.”

Let not Mr. Basil Pennibacker suffer in the opinion of the faithful
subject. That young gentleman—it was his whim, his characteristic
mode of speech—adopted the word disloyalty as his synonym of poverty.

“My good sir,”—we give in the way of illustration a speech of
Basil’s to an earnest tailor—“my good sir, you know I always desire
to respect the constituted authorities. I always like to have
their images about me. But my good sir, I have not seen the face
of the monarch, sir, no not on the smallest piece of silver, for a
natural twelvemonth, sir. I never felt myself such a traitor, sir.
Look here”—and Basil twitched out his empty purse—“look here; not
a pennyweight of loyalty in it, sir. ’Pon my life, sir, I’ve quite
forgotten the quarterings of my native land. I’m a quadruped, sir,
and not a gentleman, if I know whether Britannia holds a trident or a
dung-fork. I’m disgusted with life, sir; for I’ve no loyalty—not an
ounce of loyalty.”

Thus, Mrs. Jericho—familiar with the figurative style of her son—was
in no way alarmed, when he declared he felt himself the greatest
traitor on earth; he had been so long lost to loyalty.

“I should be very sorry, my dear madam,” he added, “for the credit of
the family, very sorry to be left alone with the crown, a blue bag
in my hand, and the door open. I tremble, madam, at the picture. For
I know it, my dear madam—I feel it, my affectionate parent—you would
not like to see the head of your only and erring son upon Tower Hill.
I’m sure, my dear lady, you could not survive that moment. Therefore,
to prevent serious consequences, when am I to have an advance of
loyalty?”

“My dear Basil, you are so impetuous. I have not yet had an
opportunity”—

“Had an opportunity! Make one, my dear lady. But I see how it is;
you shrink before the tyrant. The ruffian that you have ennobled
by consenting to wear his name, refuses to make the advance. Did
you tell him that with three years’ allowance down, I’d throw off
five per cent. for the ready loyalty? And he refuses! Why, my dear
lady, it’s next to embezzlement. Upon my life, I wish to treat the
individual with respect; nevertheless, it does flash across my
mind that it’s nowhere written that a man may not thrash his own
father-in-law.”

“Basil, I will not hear this. I tell you, I will not. Whatever may
be the faults of Mr. Jericho—and who should know them better than
myself?—I cannot sanction such sentiments. At a proper season”—

“My dear maternal lady, money isn’t like green peas, coming in with a
season; the proper season for money’s when money’s wanted. A season
with me, my dear madam, that lasts all the year round, I can assure
you,” and again Basil kissed the hand of his anxious parent.

“The truth is, Basil, I do believe that Mr. Jericho is very much
pressed—very much. And you know he is indulgent to you; and so,
you must not be hard upon him: indeed, my love, you must not. I am
very much afraid,”—and Mrs. Jericho looked at the youth with new
affection—“very much afraid that you’re an extravagant child.”

“’Pon my life, my dear madam, when I see what other young fellows do,
I feel myself a mean man; sometimes despise myself. You don’t know
how I struggle to keep down the miser in me. I’ve a dreadful idea
sometimes, of what my end will be.”

“My dear Basil!” cried the mother, in tender alarm.

“Sometimes, dear lady, I look into the middle of next century, and
see myself a wretched being. Long beard, nails like fish-hooks, one
shirt a year, and dinners of periwinkles. Unless I exert all my
strength of mind, I shall go off in mildew—die a miser. ‘He denied
himself the common necessaries of life’—that’s what I sometimes fear
will be my history—‘and thus, it is believed, hastened his wretched
and untimely end.’”

“Basil! How can you!”

“That’s my fate, I fear. ‘On his room being searched, bank-notes to
a large amount were found in an old tinder-box, and a hundred and
fifty guineas of the time of George the Second, secreted in a German
flute!’ Sometimes, when I’m melancholy and disloyal, I think that’s
my fate; but I’ll struggle against the feeling,” said Basil with
filial emphasis—“I will struggle, my dear lady.”

Whereupon Mrs. Jericho, haply comforted by his moral heroism, assured
her boy that she would not let Mr. Jericho rest until he gave a
definitive answer to his son-in-law’s moderate proposition.

“That is all I want to know, my dear lady. Whether I’m to stop short
at sudden ruin, or to go on. I’m disgusted with life at present, but
I’m open to any arrangement that shall make me change my opinion.
Hallo! Aggy, why you’re come out of a rainbow.”

This sudden salutation was addressed to Miss Agatha Pennibacker
who, fine and gauze-like as a dragonfly, floated into the room,
and settled upon a sofa. “I have told you twenty times,” said the
young lady with face severely set, “I will not be called Aggy. It’s
hideous.”

“Then why don’t you change it? I say, mother, when are you going to
consign these girls to India? Market’s full here. Bless you, such a
glut of wedding-rings, I’m told they hang mackerel on ’em.” And Basil
laughed saucily at Agatha; and Agatha pouted contemptuously.

“My dear Basil, I thought I heard your voice. Where have you been,
you naughty child? I’m sure your poor sisters”—it was Monica
Pennibacker who spoke as she entered—“your poor sisters might as well
be without a brother.”

“That’s their opinion Nic,” and the youth was about to chuck Monica’s
chin, when Monica drew herself like a pouter pigeon above the
familiarity.

“When you can address your elder sister as you ought, Basil”—

“Come, if you’re going to act domestic tragedy I shall leave the
house, and not take a check to come back,” said Basil. “What’s the
matter with you both? Why, you’re as stiff as if you slept in sheet
iron and boarded on whalebone. What’s the matter? Just wish you’d
some of my troubles. Only yesterday, I lost Scrub my terrier; a love
of a thing that would kill rats as fast as he could see ’em. Turn
out a hundred rats, and in a twinkling he’d make ’em feel as if the
eyes of Europe were on ’em. And that dog’s dead. Yet look at me,” and
Basil passed his fingers through his hair, and with much fortitude,
wiped an imaginary tear from his eye. “Scrub’s departed, yet I
consent to breathe.”

“Scrub! Bringing terriers before ladies,” said Monica; “do not be so
vulgar.”

“Indeed Basil,” chirrupped young Agatha, “you get so low, your
sisters must disown you.”

“Poor little kittens,” cried Basil, and he dropped astride a chair,
and shook his head at the young ladies, and sighed.—“Well, ’pon my
life, I do wish you were out of this world!”

“Basil!” exclaimed the sisters, with a slight hysteric scream.

“Basil!” said Mrs. Jericho in deep, reproving thunder.

“You’re too good for this earth, you are, indeed, girls. Take it in
the lump, and see what a lot of it’s beneath your notice. What a
little of it’s really respectable. If it wasn’t unmanly, I could weep
to think that my superfine sisters lived in the same wicked vulgar
world that makes black-puddings and sells cat’s-meat.”

“My dear Basil,” said Mrs. Jericho in a tone of tender remonstrance,
“do not be so extravagant. And you hurt your sisters; you do, indeed.
A man”—and Mrs. Jericho took breath for a great utterance—“a man
never so beautifully shows his own strength, as when he respects our
softness.”

“No, indeed;” said the young ladies, speaking and shaking their heads
in sympathy. “No!”

“I’ve a whole bank of respect in me, ma’am”—and Basil spread his
fingers over his breast—“but I don’t pay a penn’orth of it to forged
drafts. Now, softness is one thing; and—my dear parent I am quite
prepared to prove what I say—and gammon is another.”

“If you allude to me, sir,”—said Monica, who had evidently made up
her mind for an apothegm—“permit me once and for all to observe, that
I don’t know what you mean.”

“That’s exactly my feelings on the subject, Monica dear,” cried
Agatha.

“Now, children, I cannot endure this. It distresses me. These
little quarrels lacerate me. You know, as I have often said, girls,
I gave up everything for my children. Had I consulted my own
feelings, I should have glided a solitary thing to—to your father.
Therefore,”—here Mrs. Jericho drew forth her pocket-handkerchief;
and both the girls, with a precision quite military, imitated the
movement—“therefore, kiss one another and be friends.”

“With all my heart, and all my mouth,” said Basil. “Come along,
girls”—and he folded his arms—“come along; I won’t bite.”

“What a creature you are!” cried Monica, wiping her eyes, as her
mother moved her towards Basil.

“I dare say,” said the young Agatha, lifting herself upon her toes,
to Basil, “I dare say, now, you don’t kiss Bessy Carraways in that
manner.”

“Bessy Carraways,” said Basil, and the blood ran all over his face,
his mother silently smiling at the emotion—“Bessy Carraways is a—a—”
Basil stammered, then laughed—“a flower.”

“No doubt, dear Basil,” said Monica. “So are all young ladies of
Bessy’s age; all flowers.”

“But I mean,” said Basil, “the natural thing. You see, my beloved
sisters, there are two sorts of flowers. Now, Bessy isn’t too fine,
or too good for this world. No; she’s a flesh and blood flower,
growing upon the earth, and not thinking it too dirty for her: a
flower that gives out the sweetness of her own natural self, and
doesn’t think it too good for other people: and why, because she
thinks no more about it, than a rose or a lily, or any other blossom
that’s delicious and doesn’t know it.”

“Upon my word, Basil,” cried Mrs. Jericho, with joyous emphasis, “you
are quite a poet.”

“Should be very sorry, ma’am, for the respectability of the family,”
said Basil.

“Oh, quite a bard,” exclaimed Monica, with a sarcasm so very fine, it
was unfelt by its object. “Now, you have given us one sort of female
flower, what—dear boy—what is the other?”

“Certainly, Nic,” and Basil took his sister’s hand between his own.
“The other flower doesn’t root in the world at all: earth’s too
vulgar for it, dearest maid. It’s a flower so fine, it’s grown out of
silk or velvet, and stands upon a wire stalk. Whatever scent it has,
it isn’t its own: it doesn’t come out of itself, sweet girl, but out
of the fashion. Very fine flowers; very bright, and very sweet, and
very wax-like,—but still, my darling virgin, they are flowers, sown
in silk, cultivated by the scissors, and perched upon stiffness. Not
at all the sort of flower for my button-hole, I can tell you.”

“Dear no! Of course not,” cried the wicked Agatha, clapping her
hands. “Bessy is, of course, _your_ heart’s-ease.”

“My dear little puss,” said Basil, “I like Bessy, as I said, because
she doesn’t think herself too good for other people: for all that,
I’m not good enough for her. No, my little tortoise-shell, I shall
always study humility, it’s safest—shall always think myself not good
enough for any woman in the world. When I die, this is the epitaph
I shall have grown over me:—‘_He was so humble of spirit, he never
lifted his thoughts to marriage. Reader, go and do likewise._’”

“My dear, strange Basil!” said Mrs. Jericho, with an incredulous
laugh.

“Shall endeavour to leave five pounds a-year, to have that epitaph
grown over me in mustard and cress. Five pounds a-year, ma’am, to the
sexton, to keep my memory green.”

“I wonder what Miss Carraways would say if she heard you. But I know
better,” said Monica. “I think, Agatha, we had better bespeak our
posts as bridesmaids.”

“Wouldn’t suffer it, my darling girls,” said Basil. “If ever I was to
marry—not that I ever shall; no, no,—I shall walk through the world
with the mustard-and-cress steadily in my eye—you shouldn’t come near
my wife. No, no; you’re too good, too fine, too embroidered, for the
plain work of matrimony. Bless your little filagree hearts, before
you marry you ought to perform quarantine in cotton, and serve seven
years to pies and puddings.”

“Now, my dear, dear Basil”—

But Edwin, entering with a letter, destroyed Mrs. Jericho’s sentence
in its early syllables.

“How curious!” cried Mrs. Jericho. “A letter from Mrs. Carraways. I
know her dear hand from all my friends: there is such a flow of the
lady about it. Ha! the party. ‘_Mr. and Mrs. Carraways request the
honour of—_’ yes; we are all invited. This is to be the great fête of
the season. Jogtrot Lodge will be burningly brilliant. The richest
people will be there, and I have heard,” and Mrs. Jericho lowered her
voice, “I have heard, some of the nobility.”

“No doubt,” said Basil; “just a lord or two, to keep ’em sweet.”

“Really, Basil, you ought to go and live in a cave, upon wild
elder-berries; you ought,” said Monica; and then she turned to her
parent, with a look of touching helplessness. “But, my dear mamma;
_how_ are we to go?”

“Yes, mamma,” said the forlorn Agatha, “_how_ are we to go?”

Mrs. Jericho was looking about her for an answer, when Basil
observed—“I see; got no gowns. Ask a woman to a tea-party in the
Garden of Eden, and she’d be sure to draw up her eyelids, and
scream—‘I can’t go without a gown.’”

“I think, Basil”—said Miss Monica, a little majestically,—“you had
better confine yourself to terriers, and things that, perhaps, you
understand. What do you know about gowns?”

“Very true, my eider-duck, very true. And, mother, as I am to show
at the Lodge, I must really have a supply of loyalty: for I quite
sympathise with the girls; feel it quite impossible, my honoured
lady, to appear at the same table twice in the same toothpick.”

Mrs. Jericho, tapping her palm with the missive from Jogtrot Lodge,
was descending deep into meditation. Who shall say what visions rose
before her? It had always been her ambition that her girls should—in
her own nervous words—“make a blow in marriage.” And she felt—felt as
a mother—that, perhaps, the time was come. The girls should go armed
at all points for conquest. “It shall be so,” said Mrs. Jericho,
self-communing; and then she serenely smiled upon all her children.

“Proud to take your word for it, my revered lady,” said Basil. “So
as I’ve got to look at another dog at Chambers,—though Scrub’s a
first-love I shall never get over; yes, that dog’s a bruised place
here, I can tell you”—and the mourner pointed his fore-finger to his
heart—“I’ll be back in a couple of hours. I suppose, girls, you’ll go
to this fête, like the rest of ’em, in your war-paint?” (The young
ladies could not tell what he meant.) “Therefore, for the honour of
the family, I must start a new tooth-pick. So, the loyalty I must
have, my dear madam—the loyalty, my honoured parent, or in two hours
I’m cutting my name with a shilling pen-knife in the Tower of London.
Good morning,” and Basil, with his best grace, saluted the hand of
his mother, filliped a kiss to both the girls, and strode from the
room.

“Well, he is a handsome fellow,” said Monica.

“Handsome! he’s beautiful,” cried Agatha.

“Beautiful!”—exclaimed the mother, sighing—“he’s his own father, when
I first met him. Yes; every look, and every tone a Pennibacker.”

“Mr. Jericho’s in his room, ma’am,” said Edwin the page.

“Oh!” said Mrs. Jericho.




CHAPTER IV.


Mr. Jericho sat in his study; and still his dream sat astride his
spirit. Much of the first distinctness of the vision had faded in the
morning light; nevertheless, he could piece out sufficient from its
mistiness to make him dull and dumpish. He was not a superstitious
man—certainly not. He would despise himself to be troubled by a
dream; and then he shifted in his seat, and took up the newspaper
and laid it down again. And then he thought all dreams were to be
read backwards: and thus, his vision of the Bank Cellars was to be
mockingly realised by the Queen’s Bench. And then he looked about
him and took heart. Pooh! dreams were playthings for conjurors and
gypsies; quite beneath the thought of a reasonable, a respectable
man. He had often dreamt he had been hanged, and what had come of
it? Nothing; good or bad. Mr. Jericho again took up the newspaper,
and was endeavouring to interest himself in the affairs of his
holiness the Pope, when the door opened. He winced, for he knew the
feminine turn of the handle; he winced, we say, but nevertheless
manfully with the paper before his eyes tried to keep his soul
apart—far away at the Court of Rome. He heard the well-known rustling
of the well-known skirts, and shivered just a little at the sound.
Three or four of the softest footsteps told distinctly on the
silence; and then—he knew it, though he saw it not—Mrs. Jericho in
her morning muslin, subsided upon the opposite chair like a summer
wave.

Mr. Jericho, almost without knowing it, had shifted himself to the
Tyrol, and was trying to wonder at the next move of the Emperor of
Austria, when Mrs. Jericho slightly coughed. Upon this, Jericho, a
little agitated, found himself among the list of bankrupts; then
he took flight to the House of Commons; where he became intensely
absorbed by the Sugar Question, in which he would have been happy to
be busied all the morning, when the wife of his bosom observed,—

“Mr. Jericho”——

“My dear, just now it is impossible,” said Jericho, shifting.

“What is impossible, Mr. Jericho?” asked the lady, with cold wonder.

“Why, just now—I—I cannot let you have any money,” said Jericho; and
he wiped his brow.

“Did I ask for money, Mr. Jericho?” inquired the wife, wounded by the
imputation.

“Eh! Why—humph! Didn’t you?” cried Jericho, somewhat incredulous.

“Will you oblige me, Mr. Jericho, by looking at that?” and Mrs.
Jericho handed in the Carraways’ letter.

“Oh! Ha!” cried Jericho—“An invitation to their grand party. Very
kind of ’em. People who ought to be cultivated. Considering the money
they have, they don’t hold their head quite high enough, to be sure;
nevertheless, very good people; very rich people. We shall go, my
dear, of course.”

Mrs. Jericho folded her hands together, dropt them gently into
her lap, then turned her very placid face full in the face of her
husband, and slowly, and very anxiously put to him these words—“And
_how_ are we to go, Mr. Jericho?”

“How, my dear!” cried Jericho, in the darkest ignorance—“How would
you go?”

“As your family, Mr. Jericho; as your wife and daughters”—said the
lady, “we ought to go drest.”

“Why, yes, my dear”—said Jericho—“’twould look very particular, if
you didn’t. He! he!”

“I admire wit, true wit, Mr. Jericho,” said the lady, with a pitying
smile; “but no real gentleman ever descends to humour. Major
Pennibacker never—but that is not the question. In a word, Mr.
Jericho, your wife and daughters have no clothes to go in. Therefore,
as you have decided to accept the invitation, may I ask, when can you
let me have some money?”

Jericho dropt the paper, pushed himself from the table, and groaned.

“Oh, very well, very well”—said Mrs. Jericho, with cutting
vivacity—“I can write a refusal: of course; we are ill, or are going
out of town, or have a better engagement; anything will do.”

“Now, my dear creature, will you be reasonable?” cried Jericho,
intreatingly. “What _do_ you want?”

Mrs. Jericho replied with admirable brevity. “Want! Everything.”

“Impossible,” said Jericho.

“If we cannot go like your wife and daughters, we had better—far
better for your credit—stay at home. Well, I did not think it would
come to this”—said Mrs. Jericho, a little affected—“I did not think
when I consented to marry you, that you would suffer my dear girls to
want the necessaries of life.”

“Why, you don’t call fine extravagant clothes the necessaries of
life?” cried Jericho.

“Yes, I do, sir; for such a party as that of Carraways; and for
girls that are marriageable. Why all the world—that is, the richest
people in the world—will be at the fête. And are the poor things, the
dear girls, to remain always at home—kept in the dark, like jewels
in boxes—for nobody to see them? Why, Mr. Jericho, you’re a king
Herod to the dear children, and nothing better. Indeed to kill them
outright, would be more merciful.”

“My dear creature”—Mrs. Jericho snatched an angry look at the
word—“my dear Sabilla, what would you have me do? I’m sure I don’t
want to keep the girls at home. I’m sure—” Jericho spoke with
increasing earnestness—“I’m sure I should be delighted to see them
married. Why, you must confess, my dear; you must own, my love, that
it was only a fortnight ago, I gave you fifty pounds, for”—

“And what’s fifty pounds among three women?” asked Mrs. Jericho.

Jericho, with early habits of clerkship, quickly replied—“Sixteen
pounds, thirteen and fourpence a piece.”

“I have told you, Mr. Jericho, that I admire wit—but no low humour.
As much wit as you please, sir, but no buffoonery. Very well”—and
Mrs. Jericho rose—“I’ll write and decline the engagement.”

“You know best, my dear, of course. I’ll leave it all to you;” and
Jericho resumed the paper. A brief pause; and then he added,—“I’m
sure I only wish I was made of wealth; but, I can’t make money, you
know; I wish I could. The expenses of this family”—

“No, no, Mr. Jericho; not of _this_ family,” and Mrs. Jericho hissed
on the pronoun: “not _this_.”

“My good woman,” cried Jericho, falling back in his seat with a
hopeless stare, “what _do_ you mean?”

“You know very well what I mean; and—no, no, Mr. Jericho—I am not
to be deceived by such hypocrisy. I have tried to smother the dark
thought as it rose; I have struggled to crush the scorpion suspicion
that preys upon my peace; I have wrestled with myself to hide my
sorrow from the world, that my wound”—

“Wound!” cried Jericho, striking the table; “in heaven’s name, woman,
what wound?”

“That my wound might bleed inwardly”—continued the wife—“but it is
impossible for me to consent to be quite a fool: no, indeed, you ask
too much. Not quite a fool, Mr. Jericho.”

Let us at once explain. Let us possess the reader with the dark
thought that, fitfully, would shadow the clear day of Mrs. Jericho’s
life; let us at once produce upon the page the scorpion complained of.

Mrs. Jericho was so convinced that her household expenses were of
such petty amount; was so assured that the family, in its various
outlay, cost the head of the house next to nothing,—that when Mr.
Jericho pleaded lack of means, the scorpion aforesaid, with the
malice of its kind, would insinuate the cruellest, the falsest
suspicion of the truth and constancy of the husband. Not, however,
that Mrs. Jericho believed it: let us do her so much justice. Hence,
when—to the first horror of Jericho—she hazarded an opinion that
“there must be another wife and family out of doors, or where could
the money go to?”—when to Jericho’s contempt, astonishment, and
wrath, his honoured wife implied so withering an accusation, the good
woman herself had really no belief in the treason. It was the very
waywardness of affection; it was love-in-idleness frolicking now
with a thorn, and now a nettle. This, however, was in earlier days.
As time wore on, Mrs. Jericho would press the thorn, would flourish
the nettle, with greater force and purpose, and possibly for this
reason; she had found the instruments of unexpected value. Jericho,
to escape them, would make the required concession, would consent to
the expense demanded. Briefly, Mrs. Jericho had only to call up the
shadowy wife and family out-of-doors, to compel Jericho to concede to
any request for the living spouse and children beneath his roof. So
useful, so valuable were these shadows found by Mrs. Jericho, that it
is not to be wondered at that the good woman, without even confessing
it to herself, should, as time wore on, believe them to be something
more than shades; and yet not real things; on the other hand, not
altogether ideal mist. Having explained this much, the reader will
take the taunts of Mrs. Jericho at their real worth; will value them
as so much thistle-down that, blown about by idle air, nevertheless
contains in its floating lightness the seed of thistles.

Mrs. Jericho remained the undisputed possessor of the last word. With
a despairing twitch, Jericho had again seized the newspaper. “Well,
then”—said the wife—“it is no use my wasting my time; I will write to
the Carraways that we shan’t come.”

“You will do just as you please, I am sure, my dear. You always do,”
said Jericho.

“Not I indeed; oh dear no. But, I dare say, your wife out of doors
does as she likes; I have no doubt of that. I am sure, again and
again have I wished I had been a Hindoo wife; then I had sacrificed
myself upon the pyre and been happy—but I am rightly served.”
Jericho, resolutely, held fast by the newspaper, determining to
forego his allowed share of the conversation in favour of his wife:
she should have all the talk; he would not deprive her of a single
syllable. “And, Mr. Jericho, you have decided? We are not to go to
Jogtrot Lodge? We are to miss—what I consider, thinking of my poor
dear girls—miss one of the greatest opportunities of the season!
And this because you spend out of doors what should go to your own
family. I dare say, if I could only see—and I will, if I live, that
I am determined upon—if I could only see how other people are drest;
if I could only know the jewellery that’s lavished upon them; if I
could only know what they cost, it would be pretty plain why we are
debarred the common decencies of life. Once, I was foolish, weak
enough to believe that your wife and family—I mean the wife and
family under this roof—had all your money, and all your thoughts;
but I have lived to find the bitter contrary.” Still Jericho held
manfully by the newspaper; and with his blood burning and bubbling in
his ears, would not make reply—not one word. “And you are resolved
that the dear girls shall not go? You have made your mind up to
blight their future prospects? You are determined to keep us all here
like nuns, that other people—I said other people, Mr. Jericho—should
run riot in what lawfully belongs to your own family? And your excuse
is—you haven’t the means! But I know better.”

And here Jericho, with a wan look, laid down the newspaper; then
ventured to glance appealingly in the face of Mrs. Jericho, and
sighed.

Mrs. Jericho was not to be moved. She was there to fulfil a great
purpose. She had, or thought she had, some solemn warning in her
breast that the approaching festival at Jogtrot Lodge portended
greatness to one, haply to both her daughters: and the children
should make a seemly preparation for their destiny. They should be
drest and adorned for the best luck that could befal them. With
whatever state it might please fortune to smile upon them, they
should be worthy of her most affectionate notice. This determination
every moment grew stronger in the heart of the mother, who dropt her
cold regards upon the newspaper, and then slowly raised it in her
hand. A cruel, cutting smile of irony sharpened her lips. “Oh yes,”
she said, “I see what has engaged you in this paper. It’s very plain!”

“What’s plain?” asked Jericho.

“Oh, the advertisement here. ’Pon my word, I think the press of the
country has come to something, when it brings morning vipers into the
bosom of a family.”

“Morning vipers! What is the woman after?”

“The liberty of the press! The libertinism, Mr. Jericho, that’s the
word. Now, do you suppose that I can be so darkened, not to see that
this advertisement is addressed to you?” and Mrs. Jericho pointed her
finger like a dagger to the top of a column.

“Is the woman mad?” asked Jericho.

“No, sir; and it’s the wonder of all my friends—all who know your
conduct—that I am not. For this—this is enough to make me mad,” and
Mrs. Jericho read from the top column these mysterious words:—

  BARBARA ***** is anxious to hear from J. The last Bank-note was
  received. Darling S. is quite well; but prattles continually about
  J.

“And seated before me you can read this! Why, of course, that’s where
your money goes,” and Mrs. Jericho, to be prepared, twitched forth
her pocket-handkerchief.

Jericho groaned and shook his head; silent, helpless, hopeless.

The wife interpreted everything with astonishing readiness. “Of
course;” she said, as though pleased with the discovery, “Barbara
writes to J. And who can J. be, but Jericho! And their darling S. who
prattles so, is Solomon;—of course, there can be no doubt of it. Mrs.
Barbara _Stars_ and your own ‘Solomon.’ It’s now all clear; and now
I’m sure of it; now I know where your money goes.”

It was very strange. At this moment, a smile suddenly broke
over Jericho’s face, and he looked straight at his wife. Mrs.
Jericho quickly drew up at the pleasant aspect of her lord. There
was something so queer, so odd in the man. Quite a new look of
satisfaction gleamed from his eyes, and his mouth had such a smile of
compliance! What could ail him!

“Jericho,” cried the wife, suddenly familiar.

“My dear—my love,” answered Jericho, the words dropping melted from
his heart.

“What—why—that is—I mean, what do you smile at? What makes you look
so very, very odd?”

“Really, my love,” said Jericho, with deepening tenderness, “I can’t
tell; but upon my word I don’t know how it is. I should think there
was a great lump of luck going to fall upon us. I—somehow, I—never
felt in such a pleasant humour in all my days. Upon my life, it _is_
strange! But everything about me seems to have a new glow—a strange
look of freshness in it. As true as I’m alive, Sabilla, you don’t
look above five-and-twenty. Never saw you look so young in all my
life.”

“There’s nothing so very—so particularly strange in that, Mr.
Jericho. But what is the matter with you? Anything in the paper
that”—

“Not at all; nothing—not a word. Ha! ha! well it is very odd; but I
somehow feel as if I could take everybody in the world—that is every
respectable person of course—take ’em all in my arms and embrace ’em.”

“I trust, Mr. Jericho,” said the wife—“I trust you have not been
eating opium? I have seen horrible examples in the East, and—no, you
have not been eating opium, Jericho?”

“Pooh! Opium! No drug in the world could make a man feel so happy as
I am now,” and Jericho snapt his fingers, and cut a caper. “Why, it’s
a bit of paradise.”

“He doesn’t look mad,” thought Mrs. Jericho, a little anxious.

“I feel as if I had got new blood, new flesh, new bones, new brain!
Wonderful!” Jericho trod up and down the room, and snapt his fingers;
now suddenly stopt at Mrs. Jericho, and—startled woman! she herself
could hardly believe it—and put his hand tenderly beneath her chin,
and inflicted upon her lips a vigorous kiss.

“Jericho! Well, this is stranger than everything,” said the
astonished wife.

“You cannot think, Sabilla, how happy I do feel,” and Jericho threw
himself in his chair, and rubbed his hands, and still looked joyously
about him. “Something’s going to happen.”

“Perhaps a new vein in the mines?” suggested Mrs. Jericho.

“Perhaps,” said Jericho, a little dubiously.

“And now, my dear, about this party to Jogtrot Hall. Are we to go?”

“Go! Of course,” said Jericho. “Let the dear girls go. I should be a
monster to refuse them. Besides, it’s only right they should go. And
Basil, too. A noble youth; a little too fond of rats and dogs,—but
a noble young fellow. Some day, no doubt, he’ll be an honour to
the bench. Fal lal de ral, lal, lal,” and Jericho’s full spirit
overflowed in song.

“It will not take a great deal of money, after all,” said Mrs.
Jericho.

“How much?” asked her husband, with a blithe carelessness.

“I think a hundred pounds—because I want the girls on such an
occasion to make a blow—I do almost think, yes I am nearly sure that
a hundred pounds, for we must have a few trinkets, will do pretty
well.”

“A hundred pounds, after all, isn’t much,” said Jericho, airily.

“Not with a great, a vital object in view,” responded his wife.

“And as the world goes,” said Jericho, “people who would be somebody
must make an appearance.”

“It is the compulsion of our artificial state of life: I wish it were
otherwise. But as it is so, my dear,—you will let me have the money?”

At this question a strangely pleasurable thrill passed through the
breast of Jericho; his heart glowed and expanded as it had never
done before; and he felt his hand drawn—as though some fairy pulled
at either finger end—to his bosom. His bare hand pressed his heart,
that, at the pressure, gave a sudden and delicious flutter.

“You will let me have the money?” repeated Mrs. Jericho.

Jericho answered not a word, but withdrew his hand from his breast:
between his finger and his thumb he held, in silver purity, a virgin
Bank of England note!

“What a dear, good creature you are, Jericho”—said his wife “to
surprise me in this manner! To bring a note for the exact amount with
you! Just a hundred! Well, you are a love,” and hastily pressing him
round the neck, Mrs. Jericho ran from the room, as though embarrassed
by the freedom.

And Jericho sat, with his heart beating the faster. Again, he placed
his hand to his breast; again drew forth another Bank note. He jumped
to his feet; tore away his dress, and running to a mirror, saw
therein reflected, not human flesh; but over the region of his heart
a loose skin of Bank paper, veined with marks of ink. He touched it;
and still in his hand there lay another note!

       *       *       *       *       *

His thoughtless wish had been wrought into reality. Solomon Jericho
was, in very truth, a Man made of Money.




CHAPTER V.


Jogtrot Hall was the one central grandeur, the boast and the comfort
of Marigolds; a village, it may be, overlooked, unknown to the town
reader, although so near to London, that on soft, calm nights, with
the light wind setting from the east, it is said the late villager
has heard the bell of St. Paul’s humming of the huge city in the
deep quietude of starlit fields. As yet, the iron arms of the rail
had not clipped Marigolds close to London. As yet, it lay some two
hours’ distant—reckoning the time by coach-horses. Therefore, it was
a day of wondrous promise to the villagers, when Squire Carraways
threw open the Hall to his London friends. All Marigolds glowed with
satisfaction, for the Hall was as the heart of the village; its
influence felt, acknowledged at the farthest extremity. In fact,
Squire Carraways was the feudal sovereign (he had, without knowing
it, so crowned himself) of the people of Marigolds. He lorded it over
every fireside; with the like power, if not with the like means, of
the good old blade-and-buckler generations.

Conceive Jogtrot Hall to be the awful castle of the domain; though,
to say the truth, there was not a frown to be got from it, see it
as you would. For the architects, in their various tasks undertaken
from time to time, had made the Hall a sort of brick-and-mortar
joke; a violation and a burlesque of all building. The Hall was a
huge jumble; here adorned with large beauty spots of lichen; there
with ivy; here with jasmine and roses; and, to be short, with a very
numerous family of flowering parasites, sticking and clinging, and
creeping everywhere about it. The Hall seemed to have been built
bit by bit as its owners got the wherewithal: as though, only when
fortune had made a good venture, the owner permitted himself to send
out for additional bricks and mortar. The Hall covered, or to speak
better, sprawled over half an acre of ground. And as it lay tumbled
on the greensward, dressed with all coloured plants and flowers; as
its fifty windows stared, and peeped, and looked archly at you, it
puzzled you which room to choose wherein to set your easy chair, and,
with the fitting accessaries, therein to take a long, deep pull of
blessed leisure.

And the lord of the Hall—Gilbert Carraways, merchant—had a high and
dignified sense of his station. He had, perhaps, his own notions of
feudality; but such as they were, he vindicated and worked them out
with a truly Saxon energy. In the first place, he hated a beggar:
he had, it would almost seem, an inborn horror of a destitute man:
therefore, he never permitted any misery soever—we mean the misery
of want—to find harbourage in Marigolds. If, in his walks, he met
with a strange starving vagrant, crawling his way to hungry death,
he would immediately take up the offender, and giving strictest
orders that the vagabond should be well looked after, that is fed—and
with amended covering, and a shilling in his pocket, be sent forth
rebuked upon his journey. As for the vassals, or villagers, the Lord
of the Hall knew every man, woman, and child; and at certain times,
would call them to strict account. He would so carry it even in
their homes, that he knew—as winter came—how many blankets were in
every cottage, what logs of wood, and what store of coals. He would
moreover busy himself with the meanest circumstances of the meanest
mortality; for example, in such mishaps as the death of a cow, a
horse, nay, even pigs, when the property of a labouring villager. He
would thereupon resolve himself into a jury of inquiry; and satisfied
with the evidence, would replace the cow, give another horse, send a
pig or two from his own store. Moreover, this lord in the deep vaults
of his Hall had captives buried from the light for ten and twenty
years: and these at Christmas and at holiday times he would set free
for the especial merriment of the folk of Marigolds.

Jogtrot Hall was partly surrounded by an advance guard of magnificent
elms: huge, sturdy timber, with the wrinkles of some two hundred
years in their bark; but green and flourishing, and alive and
noisy with a colony of rooks, the descendants of a long flight of
undisturbed ancestry. Between the elms, and lifted on a gentle rise
of ground, Jogtrot Hall looked down with smiling, hospitable face.
There was no rampant lion over the gates; no eagle, ready to swoop
upon the new-comer. You approached the door through a double hedge of
holly, winding up the slope; a double line of green-liveried guards
bristling and berried. Two peacocks cut in yew—the bird crest of
former occupants—were perched at the upper end on either side. Their
condition, in the midst of flourishing beauty, gave warning of its
fleetness. They were fast withering. One bird was dying from the
head; the other from the tail; they looked forlorn and blighted; an
eyesore amidst health and freshness. Nevertheless, Carraways would
not suffer them to be cut down. “In the first place,” he would say,
“it would be a mean act towards those who had lived there before
him: to the original owners of the peacocks. And secondly, in the
sunniest seasons the dying birds preached a sermon, nothing the less
solemn because to a rustling, fine-dressed congregation of leaves and
flowers.”

Now, whatever discourse the peacocks may have held to the master of
the domain, we have no belief that the dying preachers will obtain a
moment’s attention from the crowd of visitors now on their way from
London, to eat and drink, and dance and sing, and to act love and
to make enmity, to embrace one another, and to pick one another to
pieces, for half-a-day’s happiness at Jogtrot Hall. Family parties,
gatherings of friends and acquaintances came with every week to the
house; but this was a day special—a day set apart for the reception
of a multitude. Never, since Carraways had come down to the village,
had Marigolds been so roused. The day was, we say, a general
festival. All the folks were in their best; and the schoolmaster
and schoolmistress—both functionaries paid from the privy purse of
Jogtrot Hall—gave their boys and girls a holiday, that, in their
cleanest attire, and with big nosegays stuck in their bosoms and held
in their hands, they might, as small retainers of the Lord of the
Hall, do honour to him and pleasure to themselves.

For three hours at least the children and the younger villagers had
been prepared, arranged in seemly rows, to confront the fine, the
awful folks from London. “They’re coming now, Jenny,” said a young
fellow, “take care of yourself;” and familiarly pressing the arm of
a fair, slim, country girl, who stood in the doorway of White, the
schoolmaster—a place where she had the best claim to be, for in truth
she was the schoolmaster’s daughter—the earnest adviser, Robert Topps
by name, ran at his best speed back to the Hall. And now, on one side
of the road, the boys’ school, with old White at their head, and his
daughter at the threshold, with her fair pink face a little flustered
by expectation, and, perhaps, by the counsel of Bob Topps,—on one
side, the boys’ school, with flowers and green boughs, is on tiptoe
with the first cheer; and immediately opposite, the girls’ school of
Marigolds, under the firm and temperate direction of Mrs. Blanket,
schoolmistress, duly prepared with a flourish of handkerchiefs; one
or two of the more impulsive threatening to shout and flourish very
much out of season.

At this turn of the road, reader,—this one whereby the carriages
must sweep to the Hall, receiving, as they pass, the fire of either
scholarhood—we have an excellent view of the guests. How the
ladies—spick and span from the mint of fashion—bring in their caps,
and bonnets, and hoods, and gowns, the most delightful wonders to
the folks of Marigolds! It is London splendour, in all its mystery,
brought to their doorways. If hats and caps were new stars, they
would not be stared at with half so much wonderment. And now—there is
a very narrow turning further up the road—the carriages go so slowly,
that the young scholars, boys as well as girls, feel abashed to cheer
in the fixed presence of the fine people. It is only when the line
loosens, and the carriages roll quicklier on, that the children take
new courage and shout and pipe their welcome.

We do not propose to introduce every guest to the reader,—merely two
or three of the folks; and for this reason. As the reader will never
again meet with the great body of the gathering, we shall suffer
whole clouds of lace and muslin to drive on, like the lovely clouds
over our head, with passing admiration, but with no hope of further
knowledge of their lustre. The few persons whom we propose to make
known will form part of the acquaintance of the traveller through
this book, should he gird his loins to journey to the end.

That lady ripening in the sun beneath a pink parasol, is the Hon.
Miss Candituft. You will be kind enough to look very attentively,
yet withal deferentially, at that lady; and for this reason: it is
to her enlarged knowledge of the true elements of society—as she has
been known to call them—that you are indebted for the condescending
attendance of the distinguished people who will this day eat,
drink, and make merry at Jogtrot Hall. It was the good fortune of
Miss Carraways to meet Miss Candituft abroad, travelling with her
brother, the Hon. Cesar Candituft, whose baggage—with a large sum
of money—had been secretly cut from his vehicle by the guilty hands
of a demoralized banditti! The Carraways were then making a tour;
they were very serviceable to the Canditufts, and a friendship
began between the two young women that grew fast and close as ivy.
Miss Candituft is called a fine woman; has been so called for some
years. Her face, you perceive, is large and classical; very pale,
and very full of intellect. There is only one reason why she is
not married—the men are afraid of her. We think it only right to
give this fact the widest publicity: to proclaim it with the most
significant emphasis; it is so frequent a calamity, and yet so
unsuspected by the principal sufferers. They know not—they who have
eaten so much of the tree of knowledge, swallowing fruit, pips,
leaves, twigs, bark and all—they know not how terrible they make
themselves to a bachelor man. He may be six feet high, with shoulders
broad as a table, and yet—we have known it—before such a woman his
heart has melted into water. He has held his hand to her, with all
the old feeling that he held forth his palm to the school ferula.
Let Minerva take this axiom to her cool crystal breast—If she would
condescend to marry, she must consent to leave her owl at home.
Now, Miss Candituft would always carry the pet to parties with her;
and, we have given the result; the men—poor birds!—were alarmed,
and fluttered away from her. Nevertheless, she had a fine look: a
very white skin, a large—a little icy, perhaps—full, blue eye; a
close, controlled mouth; a well-cut, very high-bred nose; and large
long twists of amber-coloured ringlets, dancing in her lap, like
burnished snakes. For all this, men walked about her as though her
very beauties were combustible—destructive. And knowing their fears,
at length she never spared them.

The Hon. Cesar Candituft sits beside his sister. Could we get
behind those scenes that every man carries in his brain—(acting,
with his tongue and eyes, just so much of the play as seems fit
to him)—it is not improbable that we should behold the gentleman
levelling this hedge—widening this road—pulling down that scrubby
row of cottages—and making many other improvements, by anticipation,
in his property of Marigolds. _His_ property, when he shall marry
Bessy Carraways; and her father—finally put aside from the mildew
of the city—shall sleep in the village church beneath a substantial
covering of very handsome marble. With the hopes, nay the certainty
of marrying old Carraways’ heiress, it was not Mr. Candituft’s fault
if these very natural thoughts would present themselves. Certainly
not. Who can control thought? Who can dismiss it, like an insolent
servant? Who, too, can prophesy, what thought the dial finger on the
next minute will bring him? We are thus earnest in common-place, that
we may attempt to excuse Cesar Candituft; of all men—all men say it
of him—the most kind, the most obliging; nay, the most forgiving.
Let Candituft have an enemy seeking him with a drawn sword; and
Candituft, with no more than a rose in his hand, will strike away the
blade; and in a quarter of an hour make the wicked fellow ashamed
of himself, that he could feel a moment’s anger against so good, so
calm, so generous a creature as Candituft. Good, noble, sagacious
Candituft! They who know him best, call him the Man-Tamer.

That old tall man, with a very big head on a thin stalk of neck, is
Colonel Bones. He goes everywhere. He looks vulgar and grubby; yet
is he accounted as costly clay among a certain number of very worthy
Christians; as precious as is Jerusalem earth to exiled Hebrews.
He gives himself out as prodigiously poor; but people, in these
times, are not to be gulled. The world—(that is, the kernel of the
world—for the world is as a cocoa-nut; there is the vulgar outside
fibre, to be made into door-mats and ropes; the hard shell, good for
beer-cups; and the white, delicate kernel, the real worth, food for
the gods)—the world knows the secret of Colonel Bones. Ingenuous
old soul! He believes the world will take him at his word; will
receive him as the pauper he declares himself. Sly Colonel! The world
knows better. The world, in its winding sagacity, has worked out
the truth; and therefore, with a good-tempered smile, gives a very
pleasant reason for all the oddities of the good, dear, old Colonel.
He will not afford himself the luxury of a carriage; therefore, a
carriage is always sent for him. He will not take care of himself
at his own table; and therefore he must always dine with one of
his best friends. Why, it was only last winter that, having bound
himself by previous promise to grant the request of a petitioner,
he consented to become godfather, with the enforced proviso that he
should _not_ give his godson a single ounce of plate. Up to this
moment, the child—Bones Mizzlemist, eldest son of Mizzlemist of
Doctors’ Commons—is without a mug. Colonel Bones—he served somewhere
in some regiment at some date in the militia—Colonel Bones insists
upon playing the pauper on an annuity of fifty pounds, and the world
lets the poor old fellow have his feeble whim, his little joke. Very
right; an old man, and to be humoured.

That slight young man, with the handsome face of blank meaning (a
fine lamp with no light in it) is Sir Arthur Hodmadod. He is scarcely
cool in his baronetcy, having only succeeded to the title in the
spring. He bows to Miss Candituft a little timidly; for even yet he
does not feel himself altogether safe. He looks at her as though he
still beheld in her the dread possibility of Lady Hodmadod. However,
he takes heart, and rides up to the carriage.—Only hear him.

“That’s a nice thing there;” and Hodmadod points towards Jenny White,
the schoolmaster’s daughter.

“Where?” asks Miss Candituft, opening her eyes to take in everybody.

“There; that thing with the—what is it?—the silver bee; isn’t it a
bee? buttoning the black riband at her throat.”

“Yes, it is a bee,” says Miss Candituft, using her glass; and then
staring at the baronet. “It is a bee. Ha, Sir Arthur! What an
aquiline eye you have! Not even a bee escapes you! Well, it is a bee.”

“Really, a beautiful thing. So white, and pink, and smooth; so like
Dresden china, you might put the wench upon a mantel-piece. Eh?” and
Hodmadod looks for the lady’s opinion.

Miss Candituft stares at Sir Arthur; she did not expect to be
appealed to upon so domestic an arrangement. And then, without
winking, and with a fixed wondering face, Miss Candituft says, “I
don’t know.”

“Charming thing!” And the uneasy Hodmadod turns in his saddle to look
at Jenny. “A child of nature!”

“You think so?” asks Miss Candituft, with a searching emphasis, that
somehow goes through the baronet.

Hodmadod finds himself put upon his proofs; and in his usual logical
manner, hastily sets his meaning in its clearest, strongest light.
“Quite a child of nature. That is, you know, when I say a child of
nature, why I mean, of course, a—a perfect kitten.”

“Of course; that is evident,” says Miss Candituft, with her large,
cold eyes in the brain of the baronet. Defenceless man! He feels his
exposed condition—and touching his hat, speeds past the carriage.
Well, we do not yet think him safe. Miss Candituft pursues him
with such a look that, even now, we would not insure him from the
life-long consequences of her resolution. However, let him flutter
his hour while he may. We shall see.

On either side boys and girls set up so loud, so shrill a welcome,
it is plain they have caught sight of some bit of bravery—some
splendour that hitherto is the chief glory of the show. Quick and
perceptive is the wit of childhood; and—they know it—the little ones
have not spent their best cheer without good judgment. For look at
that magnificent equipage. Four glorious horses, wearing the most
superb caparison, with—it would seem—a full sense of its costliness,
for everywhere it is set and bossed with precious silver—four horses,
dancing—as though, like immortal steeds, they pawed the empyrean,
not the Queen’s highway—draw a sky-blue phaeton. There is another
shout, as the vehicle turns the corner; and horses, and postilions,
and carriage and company, are revealed at full. The horses seem to
toss their heads, as with a sense of beauty, coquetting with the
public approbation; and the postilions, in their gold-coloured satin
jackets, have an assured and knowing look, and very proud of their
horse-flesh, pat the beasts, as though blood was immortal, and there
was not a dog in the world. And who are the company who sit in the
phaeton, drinking in, as at every pore of the skin, the looks of
wonder and admiration that from all sides are cast upon them? It is
difficult—we feel the task—very difficult to obtain belief for the
assertion; nevertheless, as faithful chroniclers, we must at any
peril make it. The ladies are Mrs. Jericho and her two daughters,
Miss Monica and Miss Agatha Pennibacker; the gentleman is Mr. Solomon
Jericho.

No, sir; we are not abashed at your look of incredulity; we expected
it. We had no thought that, at the word, you would take our avowal
for the truth; the folks are, every one of them, so changed; so
refined, and yet withal so enlarged. Mrs. Jericho was always a woman
of commanding presence; she could not, even when she most desired
to unbend, she could not without very much ado, subside into the
familiarity of gentleness. But now, she looks as though she had been
passing a visit with Queen Juno, and had brought home the last large
manners from Olympus. Albeit she only shares the phaeton with three
others, she seems as though she filled, nay overflowed it; manner,
manner does so much. The nasty children scream, and the horrid
bumpkins shout; yet it is gratifying, very pleasant, indeed, that the
phaeton (her taste,) and the postboys’ jackets (her taste,) are not
lost upon the creatures. Nevertheless, Mrs. Jericho will not bow; no,
not wink an eyelid in recognition of the applause; she will receive
the homage as the fealty born to. And the young ladies are worthy
of their majestic mother. They are wondrously changed. They have,
with all the elasticity of the female character, so sympathized with
fortune in her sudden good-nature, that already she seems to them a
life-long acquaintance.

Solomon Jericho is only fourteen days older since he and the reader
were last together. Fourteen days only have been filtered into the
sea of the past since Solomon Jericho—with a strange musical tingling
of every nerve of his body; with a lively, melodious flourish to
Plutus—entered upon the mysterious cares of wealth. Whenever it
pleased Solomon, he could lay his hand upon his heart, and find a
hundred pounds of ready money there. Yes; we say it. When Solomon
wanted real happiness, he had only to place his hand upon his heart,
and he touched the ready felicity. He was mightily stirred by the
first knowledge of the secret. The reader may haply remember, that
ere Jericho—to his vast astonishment—drew forth the first note; ere
the property of his bosom, like a dried autumn leaf, came off into
his palm, he was raised to a state of ecstasy. He felt, without
knowing the cause, all the blessedness of the triumph that makes
man, by force of a golden sceptre, one of the kings of the world.
Earth, with all its delights, was suddenly made to him little other
than one huge market, whereat he might purchase whatever took his
choice. Without knowing it, he celebrated his coming of age; the
unexpected birth-day of a full-grown heir. Now this emotion passed
almost as soon as Jericho was assured of possession. He himself
could not have believed in the easiness of his self-accommodation
to the boundlessness of money. Nevertheless, next morning he woke
to fortune, as though she had always shared his pillow. Even Mrs.
Jericho was astonished at the equanimity with which her husband
received the gifts of luck, as vouchsafed to him from discovered
veins of platina; for no, not even to the partner of his bosom, had
Jericho revealed his bosom’s wealth. Little, indeed, did Mrs. Jericho
know the value of the heart that beat—did it really beat?—beside her.
It was, in truth, the one great secret of his breast that Jericho
held undiscovered from the nominal mistress of that region.

Fourteen days only has Solomon Jericho been new-made; that is, made
of money; and wondrous in the new-made man is the new change! Once
was he an easy, slipshod sort of fellow, with a high relish for a
joke; or when the joke itself was not to be had, with anything that
at a short notice could be supplied in its place. Frequently was it
the painful duty of his wife to rebuke him for his humour; humour
being, Mrs. Jericho would ever insist, beneath a gentleman. Now only
fourteen days, and what an improvement! “Money has its duties, Mr.
Jericho,” the wife observed; “duties that are above a joke.” And to
her great satisfaction, she acknowledged that Jericho in his new
dull dignity solemnly carried out her own conviction. She was almost
delighted with the man; he was such an improvement upon himself. She
confessed it to him.—“He had greatly improved: now he never laughed;
he never joked; he never talked of people below his own station; he
had given up buffoonery, and philanthropy, and vulgar notions of all
kinds; and, really she must say it, he showed himself worthy of the
good fortune that had fallen upon him. Moreover, she always knew—she
always felt—a presentiment of what the mines would produce; hence
she had borne the privations of former years without word, without
a tear. She had always loved him; and it had often caused her a
struggle to disguise her affection: nevertheless, she did not think
she could love him as she did; and for this reason—she could not deny
it—she had not believed in the moral dignity his wealth had developed
in him. She would say it—she was proud of him!”

“Lovely weather, madam,” says Basil Pennibacker, prancing up to
the phaeton. “But, my dear lady, may I be permitted to ask your
unprejudiced opinion of the dust?”

“A slight drawback; very slight, my love,” says Mrs. Jericho,
heroically. “But what a heavenly sky!”

“Over-head unexceptionable; the other extremity detestable. And with
such distress as there is, old Carraways might have hired all the
workhouse cheap, to weep in the highway. Such very queer dust, too!”
and Basil smacks his lips. “Not at all the Rotten Bow flavour. Full
of sand! Agatha, duck, keep your mouth shut; or you’ll be turned into
an hour-glass.”

“There, now, Basil, set your spurs to your gallant steed like a good
boy, and run away,” says Monica.

“A wonderful animal, sir,” observes Basil confidentially to Mr.
Jericho. “Hallo! not well, sir?”

“Well? Admirable! Never so well,” says Jericho, in a cold voice, and
with a dim smile.

“’Pon my life, you look so wire-drawn and so thin! Blessed if you
don’t look as if you’d been locked out last night, and dragged to bed
through the keyhole.”

“Basil! My child!” cries Mrs. Jericho; and Jericho smiles, but dimmer
than before.

“Extraordinary animal, sir,” says Basil, thinking it best to return
to the horse. “Only three hundred. I’m satisfied, and shall buy him.
Only three hundred. Cheap, my honourable sir—cheap for a water-cart.
Look at him, sir. None of your horses, put together with skewers for
a day out, to tumble to the dogs as soon as they get home: shall,
certainly, lay down the loyalty for him. Take care of yourself, my
good sir; men like you can’t be spared. Good bye, we shall meet on
the daisies.”

“Bye, bye,” says Agatha. “Don’t forget Bessy.”

“Upon my life, you girls look too nice,—you do, indeed;—too nice,”
says Basil, holding in his horse.

“Oh!” cry the young ladies, laughing and shaking their heads. “Oh!”

“You do, indeed. Too nice to marry, and not nice enough to eat;”
and Basil gives his horse his head, and bounds forward, followed by
a groom, mounted worthy of the new master he attends. Mrs. Jericho
smiles proudly, and looks at her husband; who industriously tries,
and at length succeeds, to smile in return.

And now the great crowd of guests is set down at the Hall; and now,
we invite the reader to enter the house, to stray among the grounds,
and to enjoy the large hospitality that from every nook and corner of
the place cries—“Eat, drink, and be merry.”




CHAPTER VI.


The Hon. Mr. Candituft had a genius for society. In the marks of
a man’s face, he could, he thought, generally interpret the marks
of a man’s bank-book. With an unbounded benevolence for all the
world, he nevertheless—though he would not avow the instinct—best
liked the acquaintance of that portion of society that, raised far
above the cares of money, could do the fullest justice to the moral
and spiritual and, he would add, the tasteful and elegant man. He
looked upon all mankind as brethren; but, still, preferred the elder
brethren of the richest branches. And why? Possibly, because it was
the condition of humanity to forego so much of its original bloom
and goodness in the vulgar pursuit of the vulgar means of life. Not
that he did not honour even the horny hand of sordid labour. To be
sure; and has been known, on more than one festive occasion, to take
the said hand in his own naked palm, at the same time passing a high
eulogium on the original profession of Adam. Still, it must be owned,
that of the two conditions of Adam, he much preferred the landlord of
Eden to the labourer outside.

“Introduce you, my dear sir? To be sure—not that there’s any need
of introduction at Jogtrot Hall; think it a family party, sir; a
family party.” Such was the cordial outspeaking of the host, Gilbert
Carraways, esquire; a fine, simple, hearty, old gentleman; with a
bright grey eye; and white, thin, silky hair. Time had used him
like an old friend, kindly, considerately. At three score, Squire
Carraways—for such was his dignity throughout Marigolds—carried
his years, as a lusty reaper carries a sheaf; with ruddy face and
unbent back. “I say to you again, my good friend,” cried the host to
Candituft, “think it a family party.”

“My dear sir,” said the Hon. Cesar Candituft, catching the hand of
his host, and looking almost pathetically into his face, “my dear
sir, would that we all had your benevolence! Would that all the world
could be brought to think all the world a family party! Look at that
man, sir; that very brown man, sir,”—and Candituft pointed to an
Indian juggler, who, hired for the day, was crossing the grounds to
begin the shew,—“look at that deep-dyed individual, sir; why, I can
consider him my brother.”

“Very kind of you,” said Carraways; who, hooking his thumbs into his
waistcoat pockets, looked a little slily at the philanthropist. “You
never come into the City? Humph! you’d be dreadfully shocked to see
so many of your relations with brooms.”

“Of course,” said Candituft, as the best thing he could say. “But, my
dear sir—here he is—introduce me.”

At this moment, Jericho, between his wife and eldest daughter,
marched slowly up.

“Mr. Jericho, Mr. Candituft—the Hon. Mr. Candituft,” said Carraways:
and, turning from the newly-known brethren, the host took Mrs.
Jericho and Monica under his charge.

“You’ll find us somewhere, Jericho,” said the wife. “We must join
dear Mrs. Carraways.”

“And sweet Bessy,” cried the emphatic Monica.

“Really, Mrs. Jericho, I should like to see your husband look
somewhat stouter. Isn’t he a—a little thin?” asked Carraways.

“Oh, dear, no! not at all,” answered Mrs. Jericho, quite eagerly. “By
no means.”

“Papa, you know, was always thin,” said Miss Pennibacker, so very
confidently, that Carraways felt he ought to be mistaken. It was
clear—Jericho was always thin. “Well, well, it’s my blunder; yet, I
thought, perhaps, the shock of sudden property. By the way, I’m glad
to hear such wonders of the mines.”

“Very kind of you, dear Mr. Carraways. But”—added Mrs. Jericho,
philosophically and sonorously—“after all, what is money? Money
cannot bestow happiness.”

“Why, perhaps not,” said the merchant host; “nevertheless, it often
supplies a good imitation of the article. Come, come, you mustn’t
abuse money, Mrs. Jericho. That’s the rightful privilege of people
who can’t get it.”

“Dear Mrs. Carraways! Well, this is lovely! Quite oriental! Superb!”
cried Mrs. Jericho, with deepening emphasis greeting the lady of the
place. “I vow, it takes one quite back to the Persian poets.”

“Very good company, no doubt,” said Carraways, laughing; “but, after
all, I rather prefer this to any gardens on foolscap. Better company,
too”—and the old gentleman bent gallantly to Mrs. Jericho and
Monica—“much better company than the best of people, made of the best
of ink. My dear,” said Carraways to his wife, “where’s Bessy?”

“Oh yes! Where is dear Bessy?” cried Monica, with tremulous anxiety.
Mrs. Carraways nodded towards a party of dancers, where was Bessy
Carraways—a girl, whose best beauty was the open goodness of
her face—dancing with Sir Arthur Hodmadod; Miss Candituft apart
smiling—as the Spartan young gentleman smiled with the fox that fed
upon him—and following Bessy with speaking eyes, and shaking her
golden tresses, and beating her silver foot in blithe accompaniment
of the measure.

“How beautiful is Bessy to-day!” said Miss Candituft, joining Bessy’s
father and mother.

“Quite delicious,” cried Miss Pennibacker to Bessy’s mother; and Miss
Candituft swerved her fair neck, and opened her cold eyes at Monica,
as though resenting any admiration of so interesting a subject as a
trespass upon her own monopoly of love. And then she said, with new
supply of fervour—“She carries all hearts with her.”

“She is _so_ beautiful,” again interposed Monica.—Again Miss
Candituft stared.

“Why, as for that, she’s very good—and very like her mother,” said
Carraways, and then he laughed at his wife, and added—“and so we
won’t talk so much about the beauty. However, perhaps I’m grown too
old to judge;” and the father looked towards his child, and his face
glowed with pride and pleasure as she nodded to him, and wove in and
out the dance, young, healthful, and happy as a nymph.

“Ugh! Mr. Carraways,—this is too good; too fine; too grand for poor
folks. It’s cruel of you—sheer barbarity, sir; hard-hearted pride
of purse, nothing better. Cruel, sir; cruel,” gasped Colonel Bones,
offering his hand to the hostess, then to the host, and then making
a courteous sweeping bow to the ladies; for Bones was gallant to the
last.

“What, then, Colonel”—cried Miss Candituft—“you don’t enjoy this
elysium? You don’t like to tread upon asphodel?”

“An insult to poverty, Miss Candituft—an insult;” and Colonel Bones
smiled a hard smile, and his dark, deep sunk eyes twinkled from
behind his ragged eyebrows. “Too bad of our host to drag a beggar
like me here: really too bad. Tyrannous, tyrannous to scourge poverty
with golden rods. Humph?” And the Colonel looked around.

“I dare say you can bear it, Colonel,” answered Miss Candituft,
staring at him, and reading in the human antiquity the hidden mystery
of wealth. Before the eyes of the far-seeing spinster the heart of
Colonel Bones lay all revealed; open, discovered, like the valley
of diamonds. “You can bear it;” and saying this, the smiling lady
drew the very best flower from her bouquet, and threaded it in the
Colonel’s button-hole.

“Ugh!” said Colonel Bones, with a grim smile looking down upon the
operation. “Ugh! Winter, winter adorned by spring. Oh dear! Why will
you take such pains to spoil a beggar? Eh? Humph?” ended the Colonel,
with his usual spasm of interrogation.

At this moment Candituft and Jericho advanced to the party. Colonel
Bones, with a sudden jerk, was moving off, when Candituft stept
forward, with open hand.

“Ugh! No, sir; I can’t do it—I won’t do it. The fact is, sir,—though
this is not the place to name it—the fact is, it was I, Colonel
Bones, who on Saturday last black-balled you at the Cut-and-come.”
Thus spoke Bones, and somewhat defyingly.

“My good Colonel,” said Candituft very meekly, “I know it. What then?
It was a mistake.”

“No mistake at all, sir; not a bit; I’d do it again to-morrow.
Wouldn’t I? Humph?”

“Because, my dear Colonel, you don’t know me. Ignorance causes all
the family quarrels of the brotherhood of man. I lament your error;
but I have no malice. And what is human life,—what is moral dignity,
if it can’t live down these small mistakes? The brotherhood of man,
my dear sir.”

“Eh? What? There you are, at it again, Candituft! The brotherhood of
man! When you come out to enjoy yourself, why the devil can’t you
leave all your poor relations at home?”

“Ha! Commissioner, glad to see you. Why, you look as flourishing and
as bountiful as one of your own bread-trees. It’s food and lodging
to behold you.” This was the ready, flattering reply of Candituft
to a short, thick, very black, and very red man, who had the look
of having been dried like pepper, hard and hot, in a fiery climate;
though there were people who, when Commissioner Thrush talked of his
travels in Siam, stared very doubtingly upon the boastful rover. Be
such doubts just or unjust, the Commissioner made a very good use of
the king of Siam; putting off upon the royal whim, or royal wisdom,
his own jest. Thus, when Commissioner Thrush wanted to shoot at
impertinence or folly, he would very modestly shoot with the king of
Siam’s proper long-bow.

“Why, my dear good Thrush, will you so speak of human nature?” asked
the indomitable Candituft. “Why will you take such pains to hide
that noble heart of yours? That heart enlarged by travel—softened by
experience—purified by”——

“Well, it’s wonderful,” said the Commissioner, scrutinizing the cheek
of the Man-Tamer—“wonderful how you can do it. But you talk of hearts
and homes, and keep your face like a figure-head. It’s a good thing,
Candituft, you ar’n’t in Siam. They’d put you in petticoats; they
would, sir; for life—without hope of pardon, sir, for the term of
your natural life. In petticoats.”

“Ugh!” cried Colonel Bones with a sneering grin, “shouldn’t a bit
wonder. What for? Humph?”

“You see, Colonel, it is the custom of the king of Siam—or was, when
I knew him, for let me be particular—it was his Majesty’s custom,
when any of his ministers, or judges, or generals, or people of that
sort of kidney persisted in doing or talking of matters they didn’t
understand—not that I insinuate anything of the sort against our
friend Candituft—by no means; don’t mistake me—it was the king’s
custom, I say, to make his ministers, for the rest of their days,
wear nothing else but the cast-off clothes of the oldest women in
his dominions. When I left Siam, which is now—how time flies! a
good while ago—there were three prime ministers, one chancellor of
the exchequer, a chief justice, and two field marshals, all in old
women’s petticoats, sir. And for life! What do you think of that?”

“For my part,” said Carraways, “I must think the old ladies much
scandalised by the practice. But, Jericho, I want you”—

“Why, it isn’t Jericho!” cried Thrush, rushing up to our Man of
Money, and laying hold of his coat with both hands—“It can’t be
Jericho! Only a dividend of him. As I’m alive, you don’t look a
shilling in the pound of yourself.”

“Looks, sir—looks,”—said Jericho, with a dignity that did his wife’s
heart good—“are the cheats of the simple. If, however, I do look
thin, be assured I’ve my own private reasons for it. May I have the
pleasure, madam?”—and Jericho offered his arm to Miss Candituft,
her brother having introduced Jericho, and being with his sister
introduced to Jericho’s wife and daughter in honourable return.
Jericho made for a distant crowd, gathered about the juggler. “Very
odd, madam, that people can’t keep their foolish opinions under
their own hats,” said Jericho: and Miss Candituft—forewarned by
a significant look, an emphatic whisper from her brother—jumped
instantly to the like conclusion. Indeed Miss Candituft had very
quickly gathered the Jericho family to her bunch of treasured
friends: adding them readily as new flowers to chosen blossoms.

“Well, Mr. Jericho is certainly not so stout as he was,” said Mrs.
Carraways to Jericho’s wife, “but then I think he looks a great deal
better. He was a little _too_ stout,” suggested the good-natured
hostess.

“Decidedly too stout,” said Mrs. Jericho. “He wanted activity of
mind and body. I have prevailed upon him of late to take exercise,
and he is a great deal better. But, really, it would seem as if
there was a general conspiracy to frighten the poor man out of the
world. Absolutely a wicked design to throw me into the despair of
widowhood.” And then, as tearing herself with a wrench from the idea,
Mrs. Jericho blandly suggested—“Let us follow the world, and go to
the juggler.”

Candituft, Colonel Bones, and Commissioner Thrush slowly trod the
greensward. “Why,” said Thrush, “money seems to have taken all the
colour out of him. He was a jolly fellow, red and ripe as a peach;
and now—I wonder if he’s made his will. Depend upon it, he won’t live
long.”

“Don’t say that! Dear fellow—I mean, poor creature! Dreadful times
for such people to die, when by living”—and Candituft, with finger at
his cheek, shook his head—“they could do so much good to the family
of man. Really, Mr. Jericho ought to have the best advice.”

“Ugh! If he’s so very rich, Candituft, you’ll bestow advice gratis,”
grinned Bones. “You’ll feel his pulse,—I’m sure of that. Now a beggar
like me—a pensioner upon a crust—can’t hope for such a doctor. Humph?”

“Ha, Colonel! You know you may say anything. You know you may use
your friends as you please; you can’t offend ’em. They know your
heart,”—said Candituft—“and what matters the rest?”

“I say, Colonel, you’ll remember Candituft in your will for all
this?” said Thrush.

“My will! Ugh!” cried Colonel Bones. “When I die, I shall leave—I
shall leave—the world.”

“Talking of wills,” said Thrush, returning to his self-laid trap,
“talking of wills, there was an odd thing happened in Siam.”

“No doubt. Odd if there hadn’t,” cried Candituft, smiling with
confidence on the unmoved Bones.

“You’ll like to hear it, Candituft. Very odd. There was an old
muckthrift died, and left to the dear friend that had best flattered
him a curious bequest. You’ll never guess it—it was a jar of treacle,
mixed with caterpillars.”

“Disgusting!” cried Candituft.

“Good! devilish good!” laughed Colonel Bones.

“And so it became a saying in Siam. Whenever,” said Thrush, with a
leer at the Man-Tamer—“whenever a man coaxed and flattered another
for his own ends, folks would say—‘He’s laying on the treacle, and
may come in for the caterpillars.’ And this, I assure you, was in
Siam.”

“Charming! excellent! quite a delicious apologue!” said Candituft,
with a smile that declared him invulnerable. “You are a happy fellow,
Thrush. When you are most bitter, you are most wholesome. It’s
impossible not to relish you. After a talk with you, I feel my morals
braced, toned I may say, for a month. Capital fellow!” and Candituft
laid his outspread hand affectionately on Thrush’s shoulder.

“Hallo! Basil, boy, how d’ye do?” said Thrush to young Pennibacker,
who, looking anxiously about him, ran upon the party. “’Pon my word,
you haven’t done growing yet. Why, how you’ve shot up this last
month!”

“No doubt, my dear sir; climb like a honeysuckle. But the truth is,
we talk of the degeneracy of the age. I’ve found out the cause, sir;
it’s straps. They hold down the free-born Briton, sir; they dwarf a
giant race, sir. Every man, if he likes, has his discovery; straps is
mine.”

“Admirable!” cried Candituft, with convulsive laughter; for Basil had
already been shown to the Man-Tamer as the son-in-law of the gorgeous
Jericho. “Most ingenious; and yet most simple discovery! Ha! ha!”

“That’s it, sir,” said Basil, taking quick measure of
Candituft—“that’s it. We look abroad for causes, when the thing
is under our foot. What has lowered the standard of the British
army?—straps. Why, in these days, sir, have we no high drama, sir—no
high art? Straps, sir; straps. Men are tied to their boots, and
can’t reach it. Why have we no political greatness, sir? Why does
an unprincipled minister every night of his parliamentary existence
violate the spotless constitution?”

“Ugh! Hear! Hear! Humph?” cried Colonel Bones, and he rubbed his big,
raw hands.

“Why have we no public spirit left, sir? Why do we not rise against
tyranny, and taxation, and free trade, and the Pope? The disgrace and
the answer, gentlemen, are in one crushing syllable—straps!”

“Hear! hear! hear! Loud cheers!” cried Candituft. At this moment
Bessy, under the protection of Miss Candituft, was crossing the
lawn, when Basil, without further word, immediately broke from
his audience. Candituft, however, with some sudden and violent
commendation of Basil’s vivacious talent, instantly followed.

“My dear lady,” said Basil, sweeping off his hat, and reddening and
stammering somewhat—“may I now beg the goodness of your promise?
These little work-people of yours”——

“Really, Mr. Pennibacker, you’ll not care about them,” said Bessy, in
a voice made sweeter by her simple, affectionate looks. “But if you
really wish to see them”——

“Yes, yes; that’s right, Bessy. It’s a sight that may do the young
men of our day good,” said old Carraways, coming up with a host of
visitors, Mrs. Jericho and Monica being of the number. “It will be a
change, too, from the juggler. By the way—that poor brother of yours,
Mr. Candituft”——

“Brother, Mr. Carraways!” cried Candituft; and then he recollected
the human relationship, and warmly smiled, and said—“Oh yes! very
true; to be sure.”

“He earns his daily mutton hard enough. I never knew such tricks. Ha!
ha! Stock Exchange is nothing to it,” said Carraways, and he led the
way between high laurel hedges—winding and winding—until he came into
a small garden. Here the company heard clamorous shouts of laughter.
The quiet, well-bred mirth of the party seemed to have migrated
hither to break loose into the largest enjoyment. A few paces, and a
happy scene revealed itself. The garden was skirted by a hay-field. A
heavy second crop had blessed the land. Some thirty or forty of the
youngest and sprightliest of the visitors were making hay; and—one
or two or three in a violent spirit of romps—were pitching the hay
at one another. “Ha! ha! ha! I like this,” cried Carraways. “Well, I
do think that young folks never look so happy or so handsome as when
they’re making hay. What say you, Mrs. Jericho?”

“I was ever of that sentiment,” said Mrs. Jericho, with one of her
fullest smiles. “’Tis so pastoral—so innocent; so far away from the
fastidious conventionalities of life.” And then Mrs. Jericho darkly
frowned, and suddenly squeezing her daughter Monica by the arm,
and whispering anxiously between her maternal teeth, cried—“That
never can be your sister, Agatha!” But it was; and the flushed
delinquent—with a sharp, chirping laugh—was at the moment throwing
a wisp of hay at Sir Arthur Hodmadod, who had evidently made up his
mind to receive it as the largest of blessings.

“It _is_ Agatha,” said Monica, sharing more than her mother’s trouble
at the exposure; for she much wondered that her younger sister could
take such freedom with a baronet.

“Don’t mind Sir Arthur,” said Miss Candituft in her own sympathetic
way, to the anxious parent. “Nobody minds him. He hasn’t the genius
to be even dangerous.” Mrs. Jericho stared, and then smiled and
jerked her head, at once acknowledging and despising the information.

In a minute the disturbed merry-makers, as suddenly grave as they
might be, joined the party, Carraways laughing and giving them
heartiest praise for their romps. “That’s it! I love to see people
not ashamed to enjoy themselves after their own hearts. For my part,
I never see a haycock that I don’t wish to go plump head over heels
into it. I think, somehow, it’s an instinct of the natural family of
man, eh, Mr. Candituft?”

“No doubt, my dear sir,” said Candituft; “not the least doubt—a
remnant of Eden that still sweetens the fall.”

“Agatha, I am ashamed of you,” whispered Mrs. Jericho to her
red-faced daughter as she sidled up. The next moment Sir Arthur
Hodmadod, with a gay confident look, proffered to the rebuked Agatha
an arm of the baronetage. The motion was not lost upon the scrupulous
Monica; who—to comfort her mother—immediately whispered—“And I’m
ashamed of her, too, ma.”

“Here we are,” cried Carraways, halting at an apiary of the trimmest
and prettiest order. “Here’s Bessy’s work-people. And I can tell you,
charming it is to see them coming in and going out; and delightful to
meet ’em in the fields—for upon my life, I sometimes think they know
us—as they go bouncing, buzzing by.”

“I’m sure they know me, papa,” said Bessy; and then she modestly
added—“at least I think so.”

“Ugh! They must know you,” said Colonel Bones; “bees, bees must be
the best judges of flowers. Humph?”

“Delicious! A sweet thought, Colonel,” said Candituft. “Excellent!”

“It is very pretty,” cried Hodmadod, surveying the apiary. “So
nicely thatched, too; so very snug. I call it”—said the baronet with
authority—“I call it quite a bijou.”

“Do you, indeed?” asked Agatha, all smiles.

“I do,” said Sir Arthur; “that is, when I say a bijou, I mean—of
course—a picture.”

“The inference is so plain,” said Miss Candituft, and she looked
in that wild moment at the flushed Agatha as though she could have
bitten her bold, red cheek.

“Wonderful creatures, bees!” cried Hodmadod. “Only to think that such
little things should make all the wax candles!” There was a pause,
when the modest baronet asked—“They do make all the wax candles, eh?
don’t they?”

“Make everything in wax,” said Basil. “Wonderfully arranged, sir. The
white bees make wax; and the black bees—the nigger bees—make pitch.”

“Very well; very good; but no—I can’t quite believe that. Still, it
is wonderful. And Miss Carraways, permit me to ask”—said Hodmadod—“do
your labourers here work all the year round?”

“Not all the year, Sir Arthur,” answered the smiling Bessy.

“Ha! I see; the bees have a recess. Ha! ha! They’re like us in
Parliament,” said Hodmadod. “Ha! ha!”

“Oh, very like you in Parliament,” cried the cool, cutting Miss
Candituft.

“That is, when I say that bees are like members of Parliament, I
don’t mean”—explained the logical Hodmadod—“I don’t mean that members
of Parliament make wax candles, you know.”

“No, no, no,” cried Carraways with a laugh; and the company, to be
relieved, would see a joke, and laughed most heartily; Hodmadod still
laughing loudest.

“But we are not the only bee-keepers,” said Mrs. Carraways. “We have
what we call our honey-feasts. And you should only see Bessy’s silver
bees.”

“Silver bees! Well, that is strange. Now I call it curious”—cried
Hodmadod—“but on the road, I did see a silver bee settled—when I say
settled, of course I mean buckled—on the throat of a nice little
girl. Wasn’t she, Miss Candituft?”

“A very pretty, fair thing with flaxen hair,” remarked Miss Candituft.

“That’s Jenny White. She’s the silver bee of this year; you see,
it’s a whim of our Bessy’s”—Mrs. Carraways would talk, regardless
of Bessy’s looks—“to give prizes every year to the folks hereabout
whose hives weigh most honey. Besides these prizes, there’s a silver
bee to be worn on holidays.”

“’Pon my word,” said Hodmadod, “I think I shall take a cottage here,
and enter myself for the stakes. When I say myself, of course I mean
my bees, because I couldn’t very well go into a lily,—eh?”

“Not in boots,” said Basil with a knowing clench.

Here Topps winding his way round the company, with importance in his
looks, made up to his master. “This way,” cried Carraways, giving
his arm to Mrs. Jericho. “I think I know where we can light upon the
merry-thought of a chicken.”

In a very few minutes, the host was seated at the head of the table
under a long, wide tent. On the table were the most delicious proofs
of the earth’s goodness; with every kitchen mystery. And these
vanished and were replaced, and guests came and went, and came and
went; and so the hours flew, eating, drinking, laughing and dancing
by; until the stars came out, and the music played more noisily, and
the merriment grew louder and louder.

Some twenty or thirty were seated together. Mr. Jericho, taciturn and
dignified, graced the board. Candituft sat next him; and with others,
among whom were Commissioner Thrush, and the miserly Colonel Bones,
clubbed their share of mirth. An elderly gentleman, pock-marked, with
a pink nose, had been particularly silent; admiring, when and where
required, with soberest discretion. And now, for the past half hour,
he had been seized with a passion to drink everybody’s health. This
vinous philanthropist was Doctor Mizzlemist of Doctors’ Commons.
He had at last discovered the great duty of life; and was resolved
to perform it. For the third time, he rose to give “the health of
Solomon Jericho, Esquire; an honour to his country.” For the third
time, the Doctor dwelt upon the hidden virtues of his excellent
toast, emphasizing them with a dessert fork, which never failed in
its downward descent to make three marks upon the table. Finally
wrought into enthusiasm by a contemplation of his subject, Doctor
Mizzlemist delivered himself with such energy, that at the same
time he struck the fork between the bones of Jericho’s right hand,
pinning it where it lay. The planted weapon trembled in the mahogany.
Mr. Jericho’s head was at the moment turned aside. A shout from the
company proclaimed some calamity. Mr. Jericho slowly turning, saw the
fork still quivering in his flesh. He calmly withdrew the weapon from
the wood, laid it down, passed his palm over his bloodless hand, and
with a smile said—“It’s nothing.”

“What wonderful forbearance!” “What extraordinary firmness!” thought
the company, and still they looked strangely, curiously at the
serene, the philosophic Jericho.

       *       *       *       *       *

The fireworks died in darkness—the lamps twinkled fainter and
fainter—and at some hour in the morning the last vehicle rolled
from the gate of Jogtrot Lodge.—Perhaps, some four hours before the
postman delivered his letters at the house of Carraways in the City.




CHAPTER VII.


“Six inches less round the body, as I’m a sinner! Six inches less,
Mr. Jericho, and I last took your measure only six weeks ago.” Thus
spoke Breeks, the tailor, holding his strip of parchment to the eye
of the attenuated Jericho. “I never did know such a shrink.”

“I’m glad of it,” said Jericho with dignity. “I was fast losing my
figure, Breeks.”

“Oh dear, no!” said Breeks. “A little stout, to be sure; but noways
out of character. Some people’s only made to be stout, and nothing
else. And now in six weeks six inches! Why, in a twelvemonth, do you
know what that’ll come to? Eh?”

“You will measure me without observation, Mr. Breeks,” said Jericho,
“or not measure me at all.”

[Illustration: _The Man made of Money shows his want of feeling._]

The faintest, briefest “Oh!” rounded the mouth of Breeks, and with
tenderest touch he proceeded in his task. It is at least one of
the humanising beauties of credit that it begets familiarity. Debt
despises the distance of ceremony. Now Breeks had for many years made
for Jericho; and Jericho was never above the tailor’s joke. There
might be a reason for this. Breeks was never in a hurry to push. His
bills were like oak-leaves; new ones always grew under the old. (A
pretty thought this; and quite at the service of all tailorhood.)

Breeks took his measures in silence. He knew that Jericho was become
rich, and therefore felt that he, the rich man’s tailor, must become
dull and respectful. Ready money was, after all, better than a ready
laugh. “Shall I allow anything, sir, for”—and Breeks held the body
of Jericho as in a parchment bridle—“anything for stoutness? It may
come, sir, when you least expect it?”

“A little, just a little, Breeks. Though I don’t think I’m a bit
thinner than—than many people?”

“Not a bit, sir: and then, sir, where natur’ leaves us, we can always
lay hold upon art. Flesh”—said Breeks, waving his arm—“flesh may fall
away, but paddin’s contin’ally with us.”

“Just so! and therefore, Breeks, you may give a little puff—just the
smallest roundness”—

“I know, sir; just an ounce or two more flesh in the waistcoast.
It shall be done, sir. I wish you a humble good morning, sir,” and
Breeks bowed in excess of homage.

“Breeks,”—a thought had come upon Jericho,—“Breeks, are you married?”
Breeks stared: for how many times, years gone by, had Mrs. Breeks
herself opened the door to Mr. Jericho!

Breeks delicately resented this forgetfulness of the man of money.
With a low bow, the tailor replied—“I am not _yet_ a widower, Mr.
Jericho.”

“Ha! To be sure. Humph”—mused Jericho—“then it’s out of the question;
otherwise, Breeks, I might have served you.”

“Mrs. Breeks, Mr. Jericho,”—replied the tailor,—“is too dootiful a
wife to stand in the light of her husband. Whatever it is, may I be
so bold as to say, mention it?”

“Not now—no matter—another time. Go,” said Jericho; and the tailor,
with an awe of the sudden dignity of money—an awe he would not
confess to—shrank from the dressing-room.

“Here’s a change! After all, there’s no such paddin’ for human natur’
as Bank-notes!” Now this is what Breeks declared to himself outside
the door; and again and again repeated as he stept onward from
Jericho’s house. Indeed, so intent was he upon the felicitous thought
that—with a strange self-delusion—he avowed to his wife, delighted
by her husband’s wit and courage, that he flung the words—hard and
hot like a thunderbolt—“in Jericho’s face.” And the elevated tailor
almost thought as much. Nevertheless, for Jericho’s face, truth
meekly supplies Jericho’s knocker.

The waistcoat that six weeks ago had wrapt Jericho, lay on the
ground. How wide and large it looked! An expanded cere-cloth of
perished flesh! How much of him—of him, Jericho—was once in that
waistcoat that was now—where? It could not be possible that the bank
in his bosom was supplied at the cost of his fleshly substance? He
was not paying himself away transmuted into paper? Pooh! Nonsense!
He never felt better; never felt so hard and firm. Nevertheless, he
looked upon the waistcoat as upon an opened book, written with mortal
meanings. And then again he felt assured his fleshly store did _not_
supply his money, and then—he determined to measure his waist, and in
exactest balance—unknown to all men—to weigh himself every morning.
The first part of the discipline he would immediately commence.
Whereupon, with a silken lace he encompassed his chest, snipping
close where both ends joined. Scarcely had he finished the operation,
when light, yet peremptory fingers, tapped at the door. “May I come
in, love?” It was the voice of Mrs. Jericho.

“Certainly,” said Jericho; “what do you want, Sabilla, my dear?”

Let us endeavour to explain this mutual familiarity. The truth
is, in a very soft moment Jericho had murmured to his wife this
honey-sweet intelligence—He knew no bounds to his wealth! Whereupon,
with a responsive burst of sympathy, Mrs. Jericho declared that,
in such case, she saw no end to his greatness. We have said that
Mrs. Jericho was a woman of great imagination. Instantaneously she
beheld herself upon the topmost peak of the Mountains of Millions;
whose altitude is just ten thousand thousand times higher than the
Mountains of the Moon. So high that the biggest pearls in the very
oldest coronets appeared to Mrs. Jericho no bigger than mustard-seed.
With boundless riches she instantly felt boundless ambition. Mrs.
Jericho had ever made her best curtsey to the power of wealth: but
with the unexpected Plutus as her guest, she was suddenly rapt,
sublimated. The Lady Macbeth of a money-box.

“Solomon,”—never until his day of riches had even his own wife called
him Solomon—“make haste: you are wanted. Something very particular—a
great proposal—vital to us—all we could wish.”

“Who is it, my dear? What’s it about?” asked Jericho with dull
composure.

“I have already told you,”—said Mrs. Jericho in a deep, organ
note—“that you may fill the world. You _shall_ fill it.” Jericho
rubbed his chin; then—he could not help it—looked askance upon
the all-wide, cast-off waistcoat. “Make haste, and meet me in the
drawing-room.” Saying this, Mrs. Jericho, in all her natural pomp,
departed.

Whilst Jericho finishes his toilette, making really the most of
himself, let us proceed to the drawing-room. Miss Agatha Pennibacker
never looked prettier: she is neatly, gracefully attired in morning
muslin web; and stands for the moment looking down with full eyes
upon the cup of a flower, into which, with pouting lips, she idly
blows. And who could think that that little flower should reflect
such a rosy flush upon the face of Agatha? Perhaps, however, it
is not all the flower: it may be, that the presence of Sir Arthur
Hodmadod, who stands some way apart, half twirling a chair in the
hollow of one hand, and with a smile showing all his line teeth to
the simple Agatha,—perhaps, the baronet has at least a share of the
blush with the scarlet anemone.

“I am delighted to hear, my dear madam, that you suffered no
fatigue—took no cold,” very tenderly observes the baronet—“beauty is
a jewel—when I say a jewel, of course I mean a flower—that sometimes
suffers from the night.”

“But, Sir Arthur—it was so fine, you recollect! Do you not remember
the brilliancy of the moon that, you observed, looked like a new nun
that had just taken the veil; and surely—_can_ you forget”—asks the
emphatic Agatha—“the beautiful compliment you paid to the stars?”

“I assure you, now, that’s just like me—I do,” replies the modest
man. “Haven’t a notion.”

“Oh, you said—I recollect it so well,” says the earnest creature,
raising her liquid eyes—“you said that the stars were the diamonds of
the poor.”

“That’s very like me: but I am so liable to forget. Still, I should
have sworn to the thought anywhere.”

Thus may man commit unconscious perjury. For, be it at once known
that it was Candituft who, in his large benevolence, gave the stars
to the poor man for his jewels: a sort of liberality Candituft was
very prone to, for it in no way impoverished himself.

“You are aware, dear madam,” said Sir Arthur, a little abruptly,
“that in the days of chivalry, it was the custom for ladies to be
leeches. You know, when I say leeches, I don’t of course mean the
nasty things in ponds, but surgeons. Then every lady-love dressed her
own knight. Of course, I mean his wound.”

“To be sure; I’ve read it all very often. Yes”—and Agatha looked
suddenly devoted—“in those dear olden times women fulfilled their
mission, and were leeches. We shall never see those days again!”

“Suppose we try,” said Hodmadod, handing a chair to Agatha, dropping
into one himself, and drawing close to the fluttered young lady,
whose timid eye now and then turned to the door. “What do you
think of that hand, dearest Miss Agatha?” and Sir Arthur gracefully
presented his open palm.

“Oh! gracious!” cried the young lady, flinging away the anemone,
clasping her hands, and looking piteous sorrow. Wherefore? The hand
had been blistered; and a little wound—Miss Agatha might have covered
it with a guinea, if she had had the coin and the thought about
her—lay in the palm.

“Your candid opinion, sweet girl? In its present wounded state—when I
say wounded, of course I mean it’s quite as good as ever—I couldn’t
offer the hand to a lady?”

“Dear me!” cried Agatha, “what a question! How should I know? But how
did it happen?”

“Why, you see, not used to the sort of thing, it was the hay-fork;
when I say a hay-fork, I think I may venture to observe”—and here the
handsome baronet looked in the glowing face of Agatha, and smiled
with all his might—“the dart of Cupid.”

“Dear me!” and Agatha looked at the hurt, with evidently no thought
of the figurative weapon that had caused it—“dear me! it must give
you dreadful pain.”

“Dreadful! that is, of course, great pleasure. Now, dear young lady,
I want you to be my leech.”

“La! Sir Arthur; we don’t live in such times, you know;” and Agatha
was delighted.

“As I am determined to offer this hand with all my heart in it—when I
say all my heart I mean my title—to a young lady whom you know, and
I believe very much respect—as upon that resolution I am a perfect
rock—when I say a rock, I mean I am hard upon being happy—why then—”

“I see exactly what you mean, Sir Arthur,” said Agatha, to the rescue.

“That’s delightful. That’s a true woman who, when a man has only half
a meaning, supplies the other half. It’s that that makes the full
circle of the wedding-ring. When I say the wedding-ring, of course I
mean”—

“I know,” cried Agatha quickly.

“Well, dear Miss Pennibacker, will you undertake the cure, for the
lady you are best acquainted with?”

“I’m sure I—I’d do anything in such a case to serve any lady. But
hadn’t I better call mamma? She’s a beautiful surgeon! Oh, what a
leech she’d have been in those sweet old times. Yes, I’d better call
mamma;” and, like a startled antelope, the maiden bounded from the
room.

Sir Arthur Hodmadod, left to himself, incontinently walked up
to a mirror. It was, at the worst, his old resource. To him a
looking-glass was capital company. It always brought before him the
subject he loved best; a subject he never grew tired of; a subject
that, contemplate it as he would, like every other truly great work,
revealed some hitherto undiscovered excellence. Thus, in a very few
seconds, Sir Arthur was so intently fixed upon the well-known, yet
ever new production before him; was so profoundly satisfied with
the many merits appealing to his impartial judgment, that he heard
not the door open; heard not the soft footsteps of two ladies.—Sir
Arthur, in the intensity of his study, was wholly unconscious of the
approach of Miss Monica Pennibacker and her very recent, and very
fast friend, Miss Candituft. Monica was about to break in upon the
grateful meditation of the baronet, when Miss Candituft raised her
eloquent forefinger. This gesture was followed by nods and smiles;
and Monica, with sudden knowledge of their mysterious import, jerked
her head, and laughed in answer; and without a word, but with a huge
enjoyment of the jest, quitted the ground.

Sir Arthur is still at the glass, and Miss Candituft sinks upon a
sofa. The cold, calm face of the lady very nearly approached the face
of the gentleman in the mirror; nevertheless, so fixed was he upon
his subject, that the intrusion failed to rouse him. Miss Candituft
caught the reflected features of the baronet; and though she felt
all the force of their vacancy; though she thought she despised
that handsome mask of man more than ever; she felt stir within her
remorseless thoughts of vengeance. In that stern moment, she fixed
the Baronet’s fate. He, poor victim! with all his soul on tiptoe
walking the outline of his right whisker, he knew not what awaited
him.—He knew not that behind him, sat a weak woman who had determined
to snatch him from himself; to carry him away, whether he would or
not; to hurry him to a venerable edifice; and then and there rivet
on him a chain for life. And this, it is our faith, is a sentence
often passed in silence on the unsuspecting sufferer: a sentence
pronounced in self-confidence in play-house boxes, in ball-room
corners; possibly, even in cathedral pews. The judge, all outward
smiles and tenderness, has thoughts of a life-long sentence at heart.
How beautiful that it should be so! To our imagination how much more
delicious the simple, balmy flower, when we know that it smiles so
sweetly, and to all appearance so unconsciously of the wedding-ring
gold, so very deep below.

“Well, I do look well—devilish well to-day,” said Sir Arthur to
the baronet in the glass. “I don’t think I ever saw myself look
better. Handsome—when I say handsome, I mean quite a butcher. Miss
Candituft,” cried Sir Arthur, suddenly startled by the vision.

“I didn’t speak! I didn’t say a word—did I?” cried Hodmadod. “I don’t
think I spoke. Eh?”

“Not a word,” answered the lady; “not a syllable; it was only ‘the
mind, the music breathing from his face.’ What a shame it is you
should be so handsome, Sir Arthur. Really, you go in great danger.
You’ll be carried off by some band of desperate women, and afterwards
raffled for; you’ll be married some day in spite of your screams. By
the way, Sir Arthur,”—and Caroline fixed the baronet with her cold,
full look—“What brings _you_ here?”

“Oh, friendship. That is, when I say friendship, I”—

“Yes; the old meaning. Well, you always had an admirable taste,
Sir Arthur. I must say that; an admirable taste, even before your
looking-glass. Dear me!”—and she suddenly rose and crossed to the
window—“quite a garden here. Well, I have often wondered what fools
flowers were, to grow in London: I mean—but Sir Arthur, of course,
you know what I mean.” And saying this, Miss Candituft stept upon
the verandah; and for a time, there is no doubt of it, divided her
admiration between flowers and music; the geraniums about her, and a
barrel organ below her.

The next minute, and Agatha returned with even a deeper flush in her
face—with a more vivacious sparkle in her eye—with a quicker tremor
in her voice. To be made love to by a baronet! For the suspicion had,
during her long absence, strengthened into assurance. Great had been
her growth of heart, large her addition of knowledge, in the few
minutes employed to pass to her room, and to bring together every
kind of imaginable anodyne; every sort of balsamic remedy.

“My dear Miss Agatha,” cried Hodmadod pretty loudly, that Miss
Candituft might have the fullest benefit of his intonation; “my dear
lady, I blush for this trouble: when I say, I blush I—I really don’t
know what to say.”

“Don’t name it, Sir Arthur. I couldn’t disturb mamma; still I—I wish
I had, for upon my word and honour, I don’t know what to do. Oh dear!
it is very bad,” and again Agatha glanced at the baronet’s abraded
hand.

“Dear me! This is the thing—the very thing,” and Hodmadod took up
a card of court-plaister; a healing substance so very rare, and
requiring such nice wisdom to prescribe it, that of course the
baronet had never thought of the remedy until produced by the anxious
maid before him.

“Well, Sir Arthur, I thought that possibly might do: dear me! why
didn’t you think of it before? What you must have suffered!” said
Agatha with thoughts of pain distressing her pretty face.

“The fact is, I had the misfortune, that is the delight to receive
the wound”—Miss Candituft unconsciously tore a camellia to bits as
she listened—“in the most beautiful society; and in that society I
said to myself, it shall be healed. When I say healed”—

“It will be quite well to-morrow,” said Agatha very earnestly; and
now she cast an eye at the wound, measuring its smallness, and with a
pair of scissors cut the plaister to the diameter of the hurt. When
she had delicately rounded a piece the size of a shilling; trimming
and trimming it as though it was to her impossible to make too nice
an adjustment; she gently laid it on the fingers of the baronet, at
the same time, with the prettiest grace and humility, dropping a
curtsey.

Sir Arthur Hodmadod looked smilingly at Agatha, and then at the round
black patch lying on his fingers.—“My dear madam, you must breathe
upon it.”

“Oh dear no! Not at all! Certainly not,” cried Agatha.

Sir Arthur, holding the little patch by the extreme edges of his
finger and thumb-nail, presented it to the lips of Agatha. “Breathe,
my dear madam; when I say breathe, I mean waft a—a—”

“I couldn’t think of such a thing,” cried Agatha, retreating.

“The whole charm—the spell—when I say the charm, I mean the
medicine—is in the breath that warms it. My dear Agatha,” and Sir
Arthur attempted to encircle the timid creature’s waist.

“How very foolish!” cried Agatha, still shrinking. “How very
foolish!” And then she made her little mouth into the smallest bud,
and blew quickly twice or thrice. “How very foolish!”

“Now, I may call the cure almost complete,” said Sir Arthur, and
he placed the patch upon the wound. “Upon my life! Beautiful!
Delicious!” and he cast his eyes rapturously towards the ceiling.

“Has it done you so much good already, Sir Arthur? I’m so glad! Such
a simple thing, too.”

“My dearest girl, it is the delightful magic of your breath. I feel
it—from this little patch, it goes through and through all my blood.
I’m drinking champagne all over,” cried the impassioned patient.

“La! Sir Arthur, how can you?” cried Agatha.

“When I say champagne, I mean nectar’s nothing to it. What a
beautiful surgeon!” and Sir Arthur took Agatha’s hand, and pressed
it in his wounded palm,—pressing the patch to make the operation
perfect. “Dear me!” and the gentleman feigned sudden surprise, “that
I should be near forgetting it!”

“Forgetting what, Sir Arthur?” asked the ingenuous maid.

“The fee, sweet girl; the fee,” and Sir Arthur, quite ere the young
lady was aware of his intention, pressed his lips to her hand—to the
hand that was rapidly snatched away as from the touch of a nettle.
“And now, my dear little leech—when I say leech, I mean my blooming
cherub—when do you think the hand will be fit to go to church?”

“I should say, Sir Arthur, that the lady herself, whoever she may
be, could best answer such a strange question.” Here Agatha tried to
trill a careless note or two.

Sir Arthur very much enjoyed the pretty confusion of Agatha, and
was highly delighted by the torment that, in the courage new to
himself, he had, he was sure of it, inflicted upon Miss Candituft.
It was really capital recreation, excellent sport, at one and the
same time to play with the hearts of two women. And one such a pretty
little simpleton—the other such a high-topping task-mistress! The
baronet felt proud of himself. And then he thought of his face, his
figure; and took the incident as a matter of course. How could it be
otherwise?

“You can’t predict the time?” and Sir Arthur gaily returned to the
question.

“Haven’t an idea,” said Agatha; “no, not an idea.”

“At all events, then, you will see the patient every day?” Whereupon
the baronet would look as though he had all his heart in his eyes.

“Why, really, Sir Arthur, upon such a subject I feel—I mean—you must
ask my mamma. Ha!”—and Agatha snatched her hand away, for the door
opened, and Mrs. Jericho, most sumptuously caparisoned, flowed into
the room—“And here is mamma,” said the confused maiden.

Mrs. Jericho had a mother’s eyes, and would not then and there see
the blushes of her daughter. As though Agatha had not been in the
room, Mrs. Jericho, all smiles and presence of mind, received and
returned the compliments of the baronet.

“Agatha, my child,” observed Mrs. Jericho in the softest voice, “I
thought the Hon. Mr. Candituft—”

“Oh, Cesar is talking to Monica,” said Miss Candituft, stepping from
the balcony, whilst Agatha felt it was impossible that she could
do otherwise than faint to behold her. “Really you have a charming
prospect from this window. I’ve been quite fixed by it—quite. Did not
expect to see anything like what I have seen,” said Miss Candituft;
and Agatha shuddered. The next moment Monica joined the party,
informing her mamma that the Hon. Mr. Candituft had been removed into
the study by Mr. Jericho. Thither let us follow them.




CHAPTER VIII.


Mr. Candituft still grasps the hand of his excellent new friend.
“Upon my honour, my dear sir, the sight of you looking so well lifts
a mountain from my mind. I wouldn’t have had the feelings of Dr.
Mizzlemist for the honours of the earth.” Mr. Jericho feebly smiles,
lifting his shoulders in deprecation of further sympathy. “Surely
this—this is the hand the fork went through, yet not so much as a
scar.”

“It was nothing: I’m happily formed, Mr. Candituft; that is, my flesh
heals directly. It all arises from a wonderful purity of blood no
doubt, but nothing hurts me,” said Jericho, “nothing.”

“A common person, Mr. Jericho—now the danger’s past I don’t mind
saying it—a common man from such a wound must have had lockjaw.” Here
Candituft put his hand before his eyes, to shut out the horror of
the picture. Recovering himself, he proceeded, with a gay, playful
look—“And lockjaw, Mr. Jericho, would not have served your turn in
the House of Commons.”

“My good sir,” answered Jericho, with an air of instruction, “I am
not in the House of Commons.”

“Not taken the oaths and seat, certainly, but ’tis good as done. My
dear sir, you are reserved for great things: the whole brotherhood
of man will one day feel disposed to bless you. And, my dear sir,
permit me to congratulate you on your heroic helpmate, Mrs. Jericho.”

“She’s a—a fine woman,” said Jericho: he could say no less.

“A woman of far-seeing ambition. She already beholds you on the
top of the tree, sir; on the top of the tree,” and Candituft shook
Jericho’s hand till he shook him into smiles.

“Why, sir, I am not backward—goodness forbid!—not backward to
acknowledge the responsibility. Money is the support of the world:
the pillar of the social edifice. Without money, man is little above
the brute.”

“A great political truth,” cried the astonished Candituft, “a very
great political truth.”

“Let us look through the animal world, Mr. Candituft. What makes
the elephant powerful?—his trunk and tusks. What makes the lion
dangerous?—his teeth and claws. And, what tusks and teeth are to
the lower creatures, money is to man. Is it not so?” asked Jericho,
confidently.

Candituft suddenly folded his arms, and looking downward, as though
speaking to the carpet, said very vehemently—“It is.”

“I think,” continued Jericho, “I think it is the great Lord Bacon who
somewhere observes—‘Knowledge, turned into ready money, is power.’ I
am of his lordship’s opinion.”

“Of course, Mr. Jericho. It was to be expected of you. And now, my
dear, dear sir, to business. Mrs. Jericho informed me, at Jogtrot
Lodge, that you burn to get into Parliament. You are right. _That_ is
your sphere.”

“I don’t think I could make a speech—don’t think I could say a dozen
words,” urged the modest Jericho, “unless, I had the decanters before
me.”

“We don’t look for long speeches from men of wealth, sir. We’ve
plenty of speakers whose only bank is the English language; and
tremendously they draw upon it. What we want—what we can’t have too
much of—is the substantial, unmistakeable power of property. When a
man rises with a million of money in his pocket, people think it’s
his wealth that talks and not he. Therefore, boggle as he may, he is
sure to say something worth listening to. The world is charitable,
sir, and tolerates the man for the metal.”

“Of course; very right. I don’t know,” said Jericho, re-assured,
“that I ought to fear Parliament—much.”

“Fear! Your party would embrace you! You’d be the pet of the—by the
way, what are your politics?” asked Candituft.

“The politics of—of the human heart,” answered Jericho, “of course,
nothing less.”

“I thought so: our side! My dear sir, you will find it will be
impossible for us to make too much of you. And now to the question
that has brought me here. The borough of Toadsham is at your service.
You needn’t even show yourself; all you have to say is—yes; and take
your seat. You can’t imagine how your dear, your noble wife has
jumped at the notion.”

“Well, ‘yes’ is soon said,” observed Jericho.

“And you’ll say it? I knew you would,” and Candituft shook Jericho by
the hand. “Ha, sir! what a career is open to you. With your boundless
wealth”—

“Pooh! pooh! no such thing, Mr. Candituft. What could have put it
into your head?”

“With your boundless wealth, sir, after serving your country with
your patriotic votes in the Commons, you’ll be gathered to the House
of Lords in your green old age. Think of that, sir. In your very
green old age. Rank, title, honours! Why, who shall say that the
little ermine destined to trim your robe, are not at this minute
playing somewhere in the Ural Mountains? Who shall say that the
silk-worms that shall spin the silk for your blue riband, are not at
this moment in the egg?”

Jericho thought he felt his heart warm with the fancy. He flattered
himself that the organ absolutely fluttered. He observed—“What will
be the price—the lowest price of Toadsham?”

“Not more than ten thousand,” answered Candituft, very blithely.

“That is a large sum, Mr. Candituft,” cried Jericho.

“Well, now, you do surprise me! I cannot disguise it; you do astonish
me. I did think you’d wonder at the cheapness. Ten thousand pounds
for a seat in Parliament! After all—with your enlarged views—what
is it but so much money put out to the interest of your country and
yourself? You must recollect, sir, we live in revolutionary times.
Now, there is such a cry for purity of election, as it’s called, that
the selling price—when a pennyworth is to be had—_must_ go up. It’s
in the nature of human things, Mr. Jericho. In its time, sir, I give
you my honour, Toadsham has brought double the money. Double the
money, sir,” averred Candituft.

“When can the business be arranged? When can I go in?” asked Jericho.

“When the usual forms are over—and in your case, they are only
forms—directly, my dear sir.”

“Well, as it will please my wife, and—as you observe, Mr.
Candituft—property ought to prop the nation, I don’t think I shall
refuse. No: you may book me for Toadsham.”

At this moment Mrs. Jericho entered the room. “Permit me, madam, to
congratulate you on the admirable resolution of Mr. Jericho. He has
consented”—said Candituft, as though relieved of great anxiety—“he
has consented to stand by the country. He will sit for Toadsham.”

“Of course, my dear sir. These are not times”—said Mrs. Jericho—“for
property to desert its post. No, sir, we must stand by our
institutions. Ar’n’t they beautiful, my dear Solomon?”

“The pride of surrounding nations,” answered Jericho, without moving
an eyelid.

“A fiddlestick! I mean the diamonds,” and Mrs. Jericho exhibited a
magnificent suite of jewels.

“They look very bright,” said Jericho.

“Bright, my dear! Why, as Miss Candituft observed, they are
positively scintillations of the sun. Bright! Why”—and Mrs. Jericho
waved the jewels to and fro—“there’s no looking at them.”

“What will be the use of wearing ’em, then?” asked the apathetic
Jericho.

“My dear, how very literal you are. Why, I thought you’d be delighted
to see them,” said Mrs. Jericho.

“I am; very much delighted,” and Jericho looked at the gems with as
much light in his eye as would have been reflected therein from so
many pewter buttons. “Very fine; whose are they?”

“Whose are they!” cried Mrs. Jericho. “What a question! Why, whose
should they be?”

“I’m the worst of all men at a riddle,” said Jericho. “I can’t guess.”

“Why, Mr. Jericho, they are your wife’s—of course,” cried the
majestic owner, with proud emphasis.

“How did you get ’em?” inquired the frigid husband.

“What a question to ask a woman in London! My dear Jericho—ha!
ha!—why, my good man, what is the matter with you? I thought you’d be
delighted with my taste. Any other man would be proud of his wife,
with such a choice. Eh, Mr. Candituft?”

“And so is Mr. Jericho. Only he’s a philosopher; he won’t show the
rapture that swells his heart.” No winter-tortoise ever slept sounder
in its shell, than did the heart of Jericho in his bosom.

“You know, my dear,”—said Mrs. Jericho, in her sweetest, most
convincing voice—“you know ’twould be impossible to go to court
without diamonds. One isn’t drest without diamonds.”

“Court!” Jericho opened his eyes; and a wan smile broke on his thin,
blank cheek. “Are you going to court?”

“Why, of course. Are we not, dear Mr. Candituft?” The Man-Tamer
placed his hand upon his heart, and smiled assent. “What would be
thought of us, if we did not pay our homage to”—

“To be sure; very right; I shall only be too happy,” said Jericho;
“it’s expected of us, no doubt.”

“And ’twill not be my fault, my dear, if we do not go like ourselves.
The dear girls are quite delighted with their pearls”—

“Pearls!” groaned Jericho.

“Pearls,” repeated Mrs. Jericho very vivaciously—“quite delighted
and”—

The sentence was broken by the sudden appearance of Monica and
Agatha, each bearing a jewel-case; and looking radiant with the
possession.

“Thank you, dear papa,” said Monica, curtseying and smiling her best
to Jericho.

“They’re beautiful! Thank you—dear, dearest papa”—cried the more
impulsive Agatha, and—thoughtless of the presence of Candituft—she
threw her arms about Jericho’s neck.

“And the pair of you have pearls, eh?” asked Jericho, very hopelessly.

“Look,” said Monica, and she exhibited her treasure.

“Look,” cried Agatha, and she half-dropt upon one knee, on the other
side, to show _her_ jewels.

“Beautiful!” cried Candituft. “Pray ladies, don’t stir.”—The
girls, with pretty wonder in their faces, kept their positions on
either side of Jericho. “My dear Madam”—and Candituft appealed to
Mrs. Jericho—“Is not this a delightful group? An exquisite family
picture? It ought to be painted. On either side beauty lustrous with
thankfulness, and for the centre figure, benevolence unconscious of
its worth. Positively it must go to the Academy.”

“Milton and his Daughters quite common-place to it,” averred Miss
Candituft, joining the party: for the interesting group above had
been suddenly scattered by the arrival of the jeweller. Hence, Sir
Arthur Hodmadod shortly afterwards edged himself into the circle,
contributing his admiration in his own nervous style. Ere, however,
his praises could call forth a response, there was an addition to the
party in the flushed and hurried person of Basil Pennibacker.

“Beg your pardon. Like a cannon-ball, you see, bring my own apology
with me,” cried Basil.

“My dear child,” said Mrs. Jericho. “What is the matter? Why are you
always in such a hurry?”

“Credit’s long, ma’am, life is short, as the latin tailor says,” and
Basil bowed to the guests.

“Look at mamma’s diamonds and our pearls,” cried Agatha.

[Illustration: _A Family Picture._]

“Why, my honoured madam, you are not going to wear these diamonds?
You are? When?” cried Basil.

“Oh, at the drawing-room, on Thursday,” said Mrs. Jericho.

“Well, then, my revered lady, let me embrace you; I shall never see
you again. Never,” said the despairing son.

“What do you mean, you foolish boy?” and the fond mother smiled at
her child, and shook her head.

“You’ll be carried off, ma’am, stolen beyond the hope of all
Hue-and-Cry. You must go to St. James’s with two policemen in your
carriage; two with blunderbusses, or the property’s lost. Eh? What’s
here?”—and Basil looked at the treasures of his sisters. “Pearls, eh?
Why what a lot!—there’s the lining of a hundred beds of oysters.”

“Basil, how can you!” cried Agatha.

“Cost a pretty penny, eh? Take the oysters at eight-pence a dozen,
and say two dozen subscribe one pearl, how much will the pair of
you be worth, when you’re both drest? Eh, sir! That’s a nice bit of
arithmetic,” said Basil, turning to Jericho. “How much, sir?”

“I don’t know, young man”—said Jericho with dignity. “What is more—I
don’t want to know.”

“No, sir; but it’s odd how folks will force disagreeable knowledge
upon us; crab-apples, sir, that we must eat, and defy the
stomach-ache.”

“Basil!” exclaimed Mrs. Jericho, in her very deepest voice.

“I suppose,” said the unchecked Basil, “you’ve not heard—no, I’m
sure you haven’t, by the holiday looks of you all. I’m certain, Mr.
Candituft, you’ve heard nothing disagreeable, otherwise you’d have
been alarming to look at.”

“Dear Mr. Pennibacker”—and Candituft clasped his hands, “what _has_
happened?”

“Ha! you’ve something like a heart, you have; so fresh, and so full
now. Some people’s hearts are shrunk in them like dried nuts. ’Pon my
life, you can hear ’em rattle as they walk.”

“Mr. Pennibacker!” said Jericho solemnly.

“Sir!” said Basil, folding his arms, and drawing himself up.

“You will keep these similes for your associates. There are ladies
and gentlemen here,” said Jericho.

“Very good, sir; I’m easy of belief; wasn’t made for a martyr. No,
sir,” said Basil, “warranted not to burn.”

“My dear Basil, for all this levity,” said Mrs. Jericho, “I can see
there’s something wrong. What is it?”

“Well then, here it is.” Basil cleared his throat, yet his eyes
moistened, and his mouth twitched as he spoke. “Well then, to begin;
your friend Carraways is ruined.”

“Ruined!” echoed all.

“That fine old man—that noble gentleman—that capital chap crowned in
his cradle the king of good fellows—that man that was as free of the
loyalty as the skies are free of rain—well, he’s ruined! A blank—£.
_s. d._ scratched clean out of him—in one word, the vital spark of
money has left him, and in the city he’s worse than a dead man.”

“Poor fellow! Poor—dear—fellow!” said Candituft grieved, but very
placid.

“It’s quite impossible!” cried Mrs. Jericho; “so sudden! How could it
have happened?”

“Easily enough. House gone in India. Nothing safe there. For my part,
I hardly believe in India at all. I think India’s a magnificent
illusion, like a grand sunset. Somehow or the other every fortune
in India has an earthquake wrapt up in it. Any way, Carraways is
swallowed;” and Basil bit his lip.

“Well, I am sorry,” said Miss Candituft. “I must say I am very sorry.”

“Very good of you, madam. And of you too, sir;” and Basil looked
gloomily in the unconcerned countenance of Candituft. “I’m sure your
heart is broken. I can see the pieces in your face.”

“The fact is, dear sir,” said Candituft, and he spoke truly, “I was
a little prepared for the intelligence. Still I feel deeply for my
friend.”

“And poor Mrs. Carraways! Poor dear soul! What will she do? I feel
for her,” said Mrs. Jericho.

“And sweet Bessy! It will be a dreadful blow! Such a gentle
creature,” said Monica, glancing at her pearls.

“Why, she can’t come to positive want, you know,” said Hodmadod; and
then, looking about him in his wise way, he added—“I don’t think
she’ll come to want, do you? She’s accomplished, you know, and when I
say accomplished”—

“I know,” said Basil bitterly, his eye flashing. “I know; turn
governess—an upper housemaid, with privilege to go without caps.
Teach children to gargle their little throats with the gamut. Of
course, she can’t starve. But I beg your pardon, Mr. Candituft,
people did say you were in love with Bessy.”

“I always admired Miss Carraways, but love—never, sir, never,” said
Candituft with solemn emphasis; and Monica again looked at her
pearls, and serenely smiled.

“Well, I only wish she’d have me,” said Basil. “I never did think I
should go the way of most flesh—but as matters have turned out, I’d
marry Bessy myself.”

Mr. Jericho rose with great dignity from his seat. He looked about
him, as though bespeaking all attention for the coming utterance.
When he deemed the company sufficiently toned down to appreciate the
value of his words, he looked sternly at Basil, and said—“I cannot
consent to remain in the room and listen to such folly—such headlong
folly.” With this, our Man made of Money majestically retired.

“Better not drive me desperate,” said the youth; “better not, or
I’ll marry her, and—to get a bit of honest bread—disgrace the
family. Shouldn’t at all mind sweeping a crossing in diamond studs,
mahogany stick and lavender broom. Elegance in distress. Must melt a
discerning public. Ha! ha!” and the young man laughed very savagely.

“Basil, I must say it—your conduct is most extravagant,” cried Mrs.
Jericho. “Marry, indeed!”

“Why not? As Bessy can make satin pincushions, and I can sell ’em,
my wife will serve the family cheap, my dear lady, if only for old
acquaintance. Ha! ha!”

“Don’t be foolish, Basil. For my own part,” said Mrs. Jericho, “I
would make any sacrifice for the poor things.”

“And so would I, mamma,” said Monica.

“And gracious goodness knows,” cried Agatha, “so would I.”

“And you mean it? Well, I begin to be proud of you,” said Basil. “And
it isn’t friendship made easy? Oh no; certainly not. Capital little
girls you are! Let us have a good stare at these sons of oysters,”
and Basil took the pearls from his sisters; whilst Mrs. Jericho with
important looks moved silently from the room. “I suppose”—and Basil
waved the jewels in the light—“I suppose they’re warranted real
natives?”

“What do you mean, Basil?” cried Monica.

“Beautiful jewels,” and Basil still admired the pearls. “But what
a jewel is true friendship, eh? Nothing like that jewel for the
time-piece of life to go upon; is there, Sir Arthur?”

“Certainly not,” answered the baronet. “When I say certainly not, I
mean—it’s quite a matter of opinion.”

“How very handsome you’ll look with these upon you! ’Pon my word,
girls, they’ll think you’re mermaids come to court; come, with the
family pearls from the Indian seas. They _will_,” cried Basil,
earnestly. “You’ll look beautiful with them; but, if you’ll take my
advice, much more lovely without ’em.”

“Without ’em! Go to court without jewels! Foolish boy! What would you
have us wear?” asked Monica.

“Friendship, my pretty one. It is such a jewel, and I’ll tell you how
you may best display it.”

Whilst Basil describes to impatient cars a very uninteresting
operation, we will follow Mrs. Jericho. She has just entered Mr.
Jericho’s study. “My dear,” she observes, “you must let me have some
money.”

Mr. Jericho did not rouse himself at the sound. He sat in his
arm-chair, pale and thin, and melancholy.

“What is the matter, Solomon? Surely you are not ill?” said Mrs.
Jericho.

“Certainly not; do I look ill?” asked the Man of Money.

“Why,—no. Nevertheless, my dear, you don’t seem to have that zest for
life that—with such a prospect opening upon us—you ought to have. In
a few weeks you’re in Parliament: a peerage must follow in proper
time: we can command that. Our money must make us one of the bulwarks
of the constitution. Why, you don’t attend to me, my love: one of the
bulwarks,” repeated Mrs. Jericho.

“To be sure; of course,” said the listless peer in embryo.

“And now”—said Mrs. Jericho, in her most cordial manner—“now, let me
have a thousand pounds.”

“A thousand pounds! What for?” cried Jericho.

“To pay the jeweller. The man—I’m determined never to lay out another
shilling at the house—the man has orders not to leave the jewels
without the money. He little knows whom he insults,” said Mrs.
Jericho; twisting her neck to strangle her indignation.

“He won’t leave the jewels without the money?” said Jericho. “Then
let him take them back—we won’t have ’em.”

“Why,” answered the wife, “’twould be only what the fellow deserves;
but the truth is, I’m very much taken with them. Besides, to reject
them we—we might be misunderstood.”

Jericho had, in truth, no mind to lay out a thousand pounds. A
terrible suspicion of the nature of his money made him pause. He
would therefore turn to his own account the caution of the tradesman.
“I’ll not be insulted, Mrs. Jericho. The man has refused to leave the
goods without the money; very well—let him take them back.”

“Mamma!” cried the weeping Monica, running into the room.

“Dear mamma!” sobbed Agatha, following in larger grief.

“Why, what’s the matter? Tears! What can have happened?” asked their
mother.

“Is the parrot dead?” was the cold query of Jericho.

“That Basil has run away with my pearls,” cried Monica.

“And mine!” sobbed Agatha.

“Put them in his pocket in the most shameful manner, and said he’d
turn them into—into—” Monica could get no farther for her tears;
whereupon Agatha vigorously wiped her eyes, checked her sorrow, and
indignantly continued—

“Into friendship for Bessy Carraways. Because we said we’d show
our friendship in any way, he told us a fine story about a
better—better—better jewel—and—and—and pearls in his pocket—gone
away,” sobbed Agatha, incapable of unbroken speech.

Mrs. Jericho knitted her brow in deep black lines; then smiled and
said—“’Tis only Basil’s jest; but certainly a very foolish one.
Now, Mr. Jericho, the money must be paid; we have not the jewels to
return. Now, we have no other alternative.” Jericho groaned. “I will
send the man to you.”

“When I ring the bell,” said the haggard Jericho.

“Come, girls, ’tis only Basil’s frolic, but certainly a very—very
foolish one.” And Mrs. Jericho, with an arm about the neck of either
daughter, led her weeping offspring from the room.

“The thousand pounds must be paid,” thought Jericho. “They shall be
paid; and at once I’ll be resolved.” A few minutes the Man made of
Money sat in a maze of thought: he then drew a thousand pounds—ten
notes—from his mysterious bank; he rang the bell; the jeweller was
shown in, and laid the receipt before his customer. Jericho, with
offended dignity, cold and silent, pointed to the ten bank notes. The
jeweller took them up—counted them. As they rustled, Jericho felt as
though his heart was compressed within a cold iron hand.

“A thousand pounds—very much obliged to you, sir,” said the jeweller,
and took his leave.

For some minutes Jericho sat motionless—all but breathless. He would,
however, know his fate. He took out the silk lace with which an hour
ago he had measured his chest. Again he passed it round his body. He
had drawn upon the bank, and he had shrunk an inch.

Truly he was a Man made of Money. Money was the principle of his
being; for with every note he paid away a portion of his life.




CHAPTER IX.


In due season, Mr. Jericho—on the authority of his wife—was a pillar
and an ark; a staff and a sword; a flambeau and a pair of scales;
a buckler and a British lion. For, in the metaphoric mind of Mrs.
Jericho all these things were contained in a member of Parliament;
even as a variety of spoons may be held in a single cherry-stone.

In addition to this, Mr. Jericho, on the like conjugal assurance,
found himself to his passing pleasure, one of the trees of the
constitution. He wanly smiled when he learned that, with his giant
arms, he was to shelter the altar and the throne. He was a little
flattered in his self-love, when he heard that the weary would seek
for comfort in his shadow, and the multitude feed with thankfulness
upon his fruit.

As the cedar of Lebanon, without conscious effort of its own,
represents the property of timber; so did Solomon Jericho represent
the property of Parliament. And cedar and man—we have it upon
the faith of Mrs. Jericho—are noble presences to contemplate.
What—observed that intellectual woman—what would the little birds of
the air, the robin-redbreasts and all the family of finches, do—were
there no cedars with hospitable boughs and twigs to house and roost
them? And what would become of the poor and the weak, were there no
Jerichos to protect and comfort them? Mr. Jericho was, doubtless,
much delighted as he pondered the question.

It must be owned that the genius of money has a liking for fair play.
Now and then, it takes pleasure in equity. If, at times, it brings
trouble upon men, as men are too apt in their excess of sincerity
to declare,—it must be allowed that the trouble it saves them is to
the full as great as the perplexity it inflicts. In the old poetic
time the same fairy that would lead men astray for the sake of the
mischief; would, by way of recompense, churn the butter and trim up
the house, while the household snored. Now, money is the prose fairy
of our mechanical generation. If now and then it leads simpletons
into a Fleet Ditch; on the other hand, as deftly as ever imp or
brownie laboured, it works even for the slumbering. Solomon Jericho,
by the labouring means of ten thousand pounds, became member for
Toadsham. He ate, drank, and slept; and, without sense of the great
change working in him by workman money, became a legislator. Even
as the olden fairies churned butter, it may be stamping the lumps
with their own elfin impress; so had ten thousand ministers silently
transformed Jericho into a legislator, stamping him with M.P. There
is no such Puck as the Puck of the Mint.

Solomon had paid the money for his seat; every farthing of the sum
had been deposited in the hand of the Hon. Cesar Candituft, who,
whilst he was ever congratulating the country upon the acquired
patriotism of Jericho, could not, much as he tried, be insensible of
the shrunken and still shrinking anatomy of the new legislator. “’Tis
anxiety, my dear madam; no doubt, anxiety,” said Candituft, a little
puzzled, to Mrs. Jericho.

“A nervous apprehensiveness,” said the wife. “He thinks too much
of the responsibility. I tell him ’tis nothing; am continually
assuring him that, with his property, he may expect every indulgence;
nevertheless, it is plain, dear sir, that the thoughts of Parliament
wear him to a shadow. But he’ll get the better of it: at least I
hope—I must hope”—said the resigned woman—“that he’ll get the better
of it. Without such hope, I should be forlorn indeed. For, I have
other troubles, dear sir. That sweet, I mean, that foolish boy of
mine”—

“A delightful study, madam; what I call a delicious study. It is so
cheering, so sustaining to contemplate the generosity of youthful
emotions, when the ardent heart beats towards the entire human race;
that is to the whole family of man. Delightful!” and Candituft
upturned his eyes.

Mrs. Jericho civilly acknowledged the general truth delivered by the
philanthropist; nevertheless she felt a mother’s anxiety, a mother’s
grief, that her boy Basil would select from the human family one
particular individual as the depositary of an affection that, for a
time at least, might be expended upon the world at large. Had matters
remained as they were, the union of Basil and Bessy would have been
at once natural and advantageous; but that Carraways should be turned
into rags at the very time that Jericho was sublimated into money,
rendered the idea of such a marriage quite preposterous. It was plain
that Basil as the son of the wife of a man of boundless wealth, might
marry whom he would; might, improving on the manner of the sultan,
throw a wedding-ring at whomsoever he pleased. Therefore, to unite
himself to the child of a pauper, was to fly in the face of fortune.
It was wicked, presumptuous. Mrs. Jericho was not a superstitious
woman; nevertheless, she could do no otherwise than tremble to think
of it.

Some six weeks had passed since the festival at Jogtrot Lodge; and
Mr. and Mrs. Jericho, with the two young ladies seated in their
barouche, again travelled the road. The Hon. Mr. Candituft and Sir
Arthur Hodmadod, all grace and goodness, rode on either side of the
carriage.

“My dear Jericho, I do think this is the most lovely country! Quite
an Eden;—is it not?” asked Mrs. Jericho; and the Man made of Money
looked upon God’s glorious work, as though he stared at so much
whity-brown paper. “Quite a Paradise!” Jericho grunted. “Don’t you
recollect these beautiful swelling fields?”

“Like a green velvet bed,” cried Hodmadod. “That is, when I say a
bed, I mean to be sure a—a bed in Paradise; of course. All beds green
there, Candituft? I think they’re green, eh?”

“No doubt,” said Candituft. “Green with heartsease borders.”

“You recollect these fields, eh, Solomon?” and Mrs. Jericho looked in
her husband’s eyes.

“To be sure; of course; green fields. One field’s pretty well like
another,” answered the listless Jericho.

“And there, upon the hill; that noble clump of oaks?” said Mrs.
Jericho. “Well, I do love oaks!”

“Wonderful trees, oaks,” said Hodmadod. “Extraordinary. I tell you
what happened to me.”

“Oh _do_,” said Agatha, gently closing her hands in attitude of
meekest entreaty.

“Only last autumn, I saw all the Channel Fleet. All with their sails
set; all like so many clouds: when I say clouds, of course I mean
canvas. Well, said I, this is wonderful. To think, said I—for it
never struck me before—to think that all these three-deckers should
come out of little acorns.” Then the baronet paused a second; then
rapidly asked, “They do come out of acorns, don’t they?”

“Oh, undoubtedly,” cried Agatha, with most assuring emphasis. “Most
certainly.”

Mrs. Jericho employed her thoughts solely upon the shifting beauties
of the scene. “What a lovely mass of wood, is that, rising up as
it were to meet us, as we mount the hill. Quite a retreat for
Druids,—don’t you think so, dearest? That wood, there,” and Mrs.
Jericho appealed to her husband.

“Humph!” said Jericho; “it must be damp—devilish damp. I’m very fond
of woods; very; but it’s when they’re turned into comfortable houses.”

“You hav’n’t an eye for the picturesque, Mr. Jericho,” said the hasty
Hodmadod.

“Sir,” cried Jericho; at the same time shutting his brow in such a
deep tight fold that had a fly been at the time upon his forehead, it
must have been crushed to bits in the sudden wrinkle.—“Sir!”

“When I say the picturesque, I mean you don’t like houses in trees;
that is, houses in the raw material? Houses, without carpenters, you
know? They _are_ without carpenters,—eh?”

A very few weeks ago, and had Sir Arthur Hodmadod, Bart., dropt a
single syllable to Jericho, he would have treasured it even as a
syllable of the girl, whose biggest words were the largest jewels.
And now, in contemptuous silence, he looked upon the baronet
with a grim, sharp face; keen, inexorable; the aspect of an axe.
Possibly, the imaginative baronet regarded it as such; for he seemed
irrepressibly to pass his hand round the back of his neck; at the
same time urging on his steed, as though pricked by sudden peril.

“Why, my dear Jericho,” said Sabilla, “what a love you had for the
country.”

“I’ve grown out of green food, madam; can’t abide it,” said Jericho.

“Never tell me, Solomon, I know you love it still. And how delicious,
after your work in the Commons—how delicious when you can, to come to
such a place as this. A place that must give you new strength, new
ideas, new freshness,” said Mrs. Jericho. “Every man with such an
amount of national work must be the better for the country.”

“It’s like going to grass, you know,” said Hodmadod, again dropping
back.

“Quite,” said Candituft. “The country is the natural abode of
man. Nothing like the fruits of rustic thought. Give me an Act of
Parliament that smells of the green earth.”

“Delicious,” said Hodmadod. “An Act of Parliament that smells like
a nosegay. When I say a nosegay, of course I mean, smells of the
landed interest. Nothing like the country for a statute. Without the
country, you know, we should have no laws against poachers. Should
we?” There was no spoken answer; none: but Agatha always eloquently
replied, for she always smiled.

“Certainly the loveliest village, I ever saw,” cried Mrs. Jericho
as the carriage—according to orders—rolled slowly through a double
line of cottages. “Delightful, is it not? The first time I saw it, I
thought to myself,—well, here I could gather myself up to repose for
life.”

“Like a cat on a cushion,” cried the too impulsive Hodmadod.
Instantly, he felt his face shot clean through by the eye-balls
of Mrs. Jericho. Whereupon, he stammered,—“When I say a cat on a
cushion, I mean of course a lady—a lady in her own house, you know.”

“My dear Jericho,” said the wife to the dullard made of money, “you
don’t seem to recollect where you are.”

“Where?” asked Jericho, holding his cheek on edge. “Where?”

“Why, at Marigolds. Don’t you remember those cottages, where the
children stood, and where”—

Jericho growled, and no more. Possibly, he had the fullest
recollection of the scene; and cared not to own it. Nevertheless,
the place seemed blighted, changed. The two opposite schoolrooms
where infant voices would answer voices, were empty, silent. There
were knots of children playing at the doorways; here and there a
straggler sprawling in the road: but the room of Schoolmaster White
was tongueless; alike silent, and soon to be deserted, the school of
Widow Blanket. Squire Carraways, who had fed these little rills of
learning, was a fountain dried up, and the rills had sunk with the
source. A few of the folks of Marigolds looked from doors and peeped
out at casements as the carriage ceremoniously rolled along the road;
and there was an air, a look of curiosity in the people; but nothing
frank, nothing hearty in their manner. The party must have felt
that they entered the village as conquerors, rather than as future
householders and patrons.

“Eh! Why, here we are at Jogtrot Hall,” cried Jericho as the carriage
rolled through the gates and wound up the sweep.

“Dear me, how dull everything looks!” said Mrs. Jericho, as she stept
from the carriage. Dull indeed. The life of the Hall was gone—it
seemed only the carcase of the house. All the furniture was removed;
and vacancy stared through every window.

“Well, I don’t know,” said Hodmadod a little gravely. “Seems quite
the ghost of bricks and mortar. Makes one low—very low. When I say
low, I mean quite a woman. No; I don’t mean that—I”—

“The emotion, my dear Sir Arthur,” said Candituft, “does honour to
your nature. There’s hardly a piece of the house that doesn’t seem to
mourn the absence of the dear people who gave it warmth and life. I’m
sure the family seem to come all about me; but—there is such a chill,
such a loneliness—they come like ghosts.”

“I didn’t think,” said Agatha, and two tears peeped into her eyes,
“I didn’t think there could be such a—a sort of feeling in an empty
house. I’m sure there’s something quite—quite religious about it.”

“Miss Pennibacker!” cried Jericho, with a reprehensive frown,
“Religious! For shame!”

“It seems to me, as if dear—dear Bessy”—cried Monica—“would glide
into the room every moment.”

“It is wonderful, Mr. Jericho”—said Candituft, as the party lounged
on, and then paused, looking from the lawn into the dining-room—“it
is wonderful, how the imagination will people space.”

Jericho rubbed his chin, and said—“Wonderful!”

“Ha, sir! what a family was here! There, sir, as perhaps you may
recollect”—said Candituft,—“was the head of the table; there sat
dear Mrs. Carraways; and there the master’s chair. And there Bessy’s
place; she always sat beside the old man.”

“Sweet girl!”—cried Hodmadod—“clung to him like a honeysuckle; when I
say a honeysuckle, I mean of course, a—a devilish affectionate thing.”

“Ha! Mr. Jericho,” said Candituft, “I have passed many delightful
dinners here, sir. I spent, I think—yes, I did—I spent last Christmas
here. And—pray pardon me—it is impossible to think of that room
unmoved. There, sir, as I’ve said, was Mrs. Carraways; a kind, soft,
beaming, hearty woman—plain to be sure, in her manners; in fact, very
plain—but well meaning, poor soul! very well meaning, in spite of her
bad French.—And there was Carraways himself. A good man—I’m pretty
sure, a good man; though perhaps a little sanguine: at least, they
accuse him of it in the City. But when people have a tumble, the
world always gives a good-natured reason for the slip. That, sir, I
have remarked—always. There he sat, with his face lighted with the
best of hearts, the best of wine, and the best of good spirits; his
eyes swimming in jollity, and looking and talking as though he could
have received all the brotherhood of man at his Christmas mahogany.”

“Mr. Carraways was always very kind”—observed Mrs. Jericho—“I don’t
think any body can deny it.”

“And there sat Bessy”—continued Candituft, warming as he went
on—“there she sat; and though not a beauty—certainly, not a
beauty—still, very well she looked. And next her was—I forget his
name—but he was an amazingly rich person, and a very pleasant
man. And there, opposite, was an Indian friend of Carraways—a
Brahmin banker or something—very curious about English Christmas, I
recollect; a man of most liberal sentiments—above national prejudice.
Took mince-pie and burnt brandy in a manner that quite warmed one’s
heart.—Beside him I recollect was the last year’s Lady Mayoress; very
fine, very interesting woman; I well remember her; she never spoke
a syllable. And on that side again, was a very—very distinguished
traveller. He had hunted a unicorn somewhere, and was asked to a
round of dinners to tell all about the sport.—And opposite to him was
the rich”—

“You’re not going to string off the whole set, are you?”—growled
Jericho.

“A thousand pardons. I was carried away by the magic force of old
associations. Still, I must say, it was a beautifully mixed party;
that is, an equal share of wealth and wit. Poor dear Carraways! He
certainly did keep up Christmas. I believe there was absolutely a
plum-pudding boiled, and put out cold for the robin-redbreasts.”

“Poor little things,” cried Hodmadod, “how they’ll miss it!”

“Possibly not,” said Mrs. Jericho with a proud look. “There may be
others here, Sir Arthur, equally hospitable to robins.”

“Yes, Sir Arthur,” exclaimed Agatha. “Rather than they should go
without, I’d make the pudding myself.”

“Bravo! Beautiful!” cried Candituft. “Should you ever be lost in a
wood, be sure of it, dear young lady—the robins will remember your
goodness.”

“Faugh!” said Jericho, at the same time looking a fierce rebuke at
Candituft; who with the magic of his self-possession turned the
censure into a jest. “Let us go in.”

An old woman stood behind the opened door. An old, calm, sorrowful
face looked timidly at the new-comers. Once or twice she sighed
heavily; and then looked angrily as though, in her way, resenting the
ill-manners—as they seemed to her—of the visitors.

“You needn’t follow us—we know the house well”—said Mrs. Jericho to
the old dame.

“I know you do,” said the old woman. “And so being, I hope you’ll use
it tenderly—poor thing.”

“Tenderly! Why”—cried Monica—“the old woman talks as if the house was
alive.”

Mrs. Jericho raised her finger; forbidding any remark upon any
probable meaning of such a person. And the old woman dropt herself
upon a stair and, heedless of hearers—as though she eased her heart
with the utterance—she answered, while the tears ran down her
face—“Alive! Aye, and it be alive, more alive than some flesh and
blood. Dear! dear! dear! An’ I’ve seen them folks look at the squire,
as though it was bread and meat to ’em; and cosset and coax him, as
if they could ha’ put their necks under his shoe-leather: and now to
stand afore the Hall—in the trouble it’s in—and to grin and to make
game—eh, dear! dear!—it’s like laughing in the face of a corpse.” And
Widow Blanket—for it was the old village school-dame, removed from
her seat of learning to dwell awhile in the Hall, before her final
removal to the Poor-house—Widow Blanket sighed heavily; and as though
to comfort her sorrow, seemed to fold it in her arms, and rock it to
and fro.

The tread of the visitors—echoed loudly by the empty walls—sounded
hollowly, heavily above. At the sound the old woman shivered a sigh,
raised her eyes, and then continued to swing backwards and forwards,
as though she would hear nothing more. Will the reader—for two or
three minutes—mount the staircase?

“A very noble house,” said Jericho, his eye sweeping the
reception-rooms.

“And what a lovely prospect,” said Mrs. Jericho, approaching a
window. “What an undulation of hill and meadow! What a prospect!”

“_This_, Mrs. Jericho,” said the Monied Man, “is my prospect.
_This_ I can make my own; this is property: in its essence, I may
say, property. But where’s the property in what you call a lovely
prospect; that any beggar may look at as well as I? Any vagabond
tinker—or poet or any ragamuffin of that sort—may pitch his tent, and
boil his kettle, and smoke his pipe, and take his pleasure of the
prospect, quite as if it was his own—upon lawful parchment, his own.
This, I own it—this interferes with my righteous sense of property.
What belongs to a man, belongs to him. If the sun goes down upon my
property, I’ve a clear title to that sunset; if the clouds over my
land are remarkably fine, they are my clouds; and it’s a sort of
moral larceny—though unhappily there’s no law for it—but a moral
larceny it is to all intents and purposes—for any beggar at his
pleasure to enjoy what is over my land; to have—as the term is—the
usufruct of that sunset—of those clouds.”

Mr. Candituft pulled up to his face a look of strong conviction. “The
question, my dear sir, in its whole breadth and depth, never struck
me before. There is great primitive truth in what you say.”

“A law could meet it,” cried Hodmadod. “Couldn’t a law meet it? At
all events, if you can’t secure the clouds and sunsets, of course the
landlord has a clear right to all the thunderbolts.”

“Ass!” was at the lips of Mr. Jericho; but he swallowed the word,
possibly to treasure it for another time. Stalking through the
apartments, and looking about him, he flowed in speech; and Mrs.
Jericho was too wise to stay the stream. “A very fine house—very
fine; but it wants a great deal—a very great deal done.”

“How fortunate, Solomon!” at length observed Mrs. Jericho. “Were it
otherwise, there would be no opportunity for the development of your
taste.”

After a due examination of the upper house, the party descended the
stairs, Dame Blanket slowly rising from her seat to make them way.
“There is one room that is locked. Have you the key?” asked Mrs.
Jericho.

“That room be Miss Bessy’s,” said the old woman.

“Yes; I know it, very well. You have the key?” said the lady.

“Yes, ma’am,” answered Dame Blanket, a little creakingly.

“Give it me,” said Mrs. Jericho.

“No, ma’am,” said Dame Blanket, straightening her back.

“Were you desired to retain that key?” asked Monica sharply.

“No, I warn’t bid to keep it; but I warn’t bid to give it,” cried the
Dame, her voice rising. “And as it’s as much one as t’other, I shall
do one and not t’other.”

“I call that logic in petticoats,” said Candituft.

“I call it damned impertinence,” cried Jericho—“whether in petticoats
or in”—

“My dear Jericho,” said his wife, with deprecating tenderness,
“don’t, love.” Then, turning round to the dame, “Woman, give me the
key; I tell you, I know Miss Carraways.”

“_You_ know her, ma’am!” cried the dame with a doubting smile. “La,
bless ’ee, ma’am, I put on her first things.” And Widow Blanket
thought she had closed the conversation as with an iron spring.

“You are not aware, woman, who may become the master of this house,”
said Mrs. Jericho, “you are not aware what you may want, and then”—

“La, ma’am! I’m sure to get what I want,” said the Dame smiling.
“Sartin. I shall soon want nothin’ but a coffin; and folks must give
me that for their own sakes.”

“What do you think of that?” asked Jericho. “’Pon my life! these
people talk of coffins as if they’d a right, to ’em—as if they came
into the world with a future property in coffins.”

“At your years,” said Monica, venturing a reflection, “you ought to
be ashamed to talk in that, manner. Like an aged heathen—as if you’d
no fear of death.”

“Fear, Miss! Oh dear! Oh dear! What a world would this be, special to
folks like I,—if there was no death! What a cruel prison, Miss! And
now, after what. I’ve seen, and what I’ve borne, what a comfort it
is—like sabbath after work—what a comfort it is, to think of rest in
the churchyard. Ay”—said the old woman, raising her shaking hand, and
smiling us she scanned the gentlefolks about her—“Ay, what a comfort
to think of that long, sweet Saturday-night in the grave.”

“She _is_ quite a heathen,” said Hodmadod, “When I say a heathen, I
mean a very strange old woman.”




CHAPTER X.


Mr. and Mrs. Jericho, arm-and-arm and in closest communion of soul,
for some half-hour longer hung about the ground. The young ladies
with Candituft and Hodmadod loitered where they would; too well
occupied to break, by word or motion, upon the privacy of man and
wife. Jericho listened very complacently to the magnificent designs
of his helpmate. She had made her mind up that he should fill the
world. She could never die happy if he did not fill it. Jogtrot
Hall, for one country sent to begin with, was indispensable to his
greatness. “I am assured, love, by Mizzlemist”—began Mrs. Jericho—

“Humph! Where is he? You said it was an engagement. To be sure. He
was to meet us here,” interrupted Jericho, tetchily.

“The engagement was provisional; it was, indeed, love; and he may
come yet. Well, Solomon, the Doctor tells me that the whole estate
may be had for thirty thousand pounds,” and Mrs. Jericho at the
moment looked as artless, as innocent, as though she had said thirty
thousand pence. There are people who make even a million a very small
matter, merely by the condescending way of speaking of it. Mrs.
Jericho had the art in perfection. “Only thirty thousand”—

“Only thirty thousand!” cried Jericho,—“Do you know where the money
comes from?”

“Why, where should it come from,” said the wife, with a sparkling
smile, and tapping Jericho’s cheek,—“where, but from where it grows?”

Jericho’s jaw fell. Had his wife discovered his secret? “And where,”
he asked grimly,—“where is that?”

“Why, my dear, in our mine, of course. Did you not say ’twas
inexhaustible? and, to be sure, I asked no further. Besides, I’ve a
great faith in nature; nature’s a pattern maid-of-all-work, and does
best when least meddled with. So you’ll buy the estate? You must:
your position in Parliament requires it. All statesmen love the
country.”

“Mr. Pitt lived at Wimbledon,” said Jericho, willing to be won.

“Of course,” said Mrs. Jericho. And in a very few minutes the member
for Toadsham consented to live at Marigolds; and to become the squire
and patron of the village. Yet as he promised, he winced; for he
thought of his wasting bank. Such was his life; urged by the devil
expense upon one hand, and plucked by the devil remorse on the other.
Never mind. He had a way to win back all. He would stop the waste;
and once again grow plump and fat: though he was never better; never
stronger. Still, people wondered to see him wither. Moreover, they
looked oddly at him; and he had heard them drop strange, mystic
words. Only twice more; only twice would he draw upon his bosom bank.

Mrs. Jericho, as she turned with her lord to meet her daughters,
in the prettiest manner twitched a slip of laurel from a shrub,
and waved it over Jericho’s head. “I have conquered”—said Mrs.
Jericho—“here is the lord for life of Jogtrot Hall.”

“Oh, mamma! you will change the horrid name, I hope?” said Monica.

“And take away those dreadful peacocks?” cried Agatha, “They make one
shiver.”

“Magna Charta House would be a good name,” said Hodmadod; “that
is, when I say Magna Charta, I mean Runnymede Cottage. Of course,
my dear sir, you’ll ask all Parliament, lords and commons, to the
house-warming?”

“Couldn’t we make it a fancy ball, and have ’em in historical
dresses?” cried Agatha, jumping up and down, tipsy with happiness.

Candituft, with a sudden, serious look, took Jericho aside. “It has
just struck me,” he said, “and I must out with it, though it is
abrupt.” He then took Jericho by the right hand, squeezed it, looked
tenderly in his face, and with a voice of emotion, like one compelled
to suggest a sharp surgical operation, asked—“How should you like to
be made a baronet?”

Jericho twitched his shoulders; drew himself up; and put his hand in
his bosom. “I have not the least ambition of the kind. But it might
please my wife. Title is a straw that tickles women; so, for the sake
of Mrs. Jericho, I might not resist.”

Candituft looked relieved. It was plain a leaden weight of doubt was
removed from his soul. He smiled, and again squeezed Jericho’s hand,
saying as he squeezed—“Good creature! Bless you!”

Mr. Jericho returned to the party; and again and again he was hailed
by all as the lord of the domain. “Hurrah!” cried the impulsive
Agatha, jumping up, and hitching a wreath of honeysuckle about the
head of Jericho, “hurrah for the king of Marigolds!” The next moment
Jericho stepped under an apple-tree; and the next, a shower of apples
fell bouncing about him.

“The devil!” cried Jericho, running; and the ladies screamed.

[Illustration: _Basil’s Practical Joke._]

“May it please your majesty,” said a voice from the apple-tree, and
immediately Basil Pennibacker’s earnest face stared down through
the boughs—“may it please your majesty, when a king is crowned, it is
always customary to let fall a shower of golden pippins.”

“Why, Basil, my love—you strange boy!—how came you in that tree?”
cried Mrs. Jericho.

“Wonderful escape, my anxious madam, but calm your fears. You’ll not
believe my story. Never mind; in this world truth can wait: she’s
used to it,” and in another moment Basil descended from the tree.

“Why, you were not here a few minutes ago, Basil,” said Monica: “how
did you get into the tree?”

“The fact is,” said Basil, “I went up in a balloon, had a quarrel,
and dropt my company. Quite in luck to fall among you, wasn’t I? Now
the hard truth is, I came here on business.”

“On some labour of love, no doubt,” said Candituft, winking with all
his might.

“My dear sir,” cried Basil, “I never see you that I don’t wish I was
a bulrush, to do nothing but bow. May I say one word, my revered
sir?” and Basil turned to Jericho, who coldly assented, walking
apart. “Now, sir, did you receive my letter?”

“I did,” said Jericho.

“And you did not answer it? Because, don’t let me blame the postman,”
said Basil.

“I did not answer it, young man,” cried Jericho with his best
emphasis. “Where nothing is to be said, I take it, silence is the
best reply. In a word, I will not advance a single farthing.”

“Not to assist your old friend Carraways?” cried Basil.

“He was never any friend of mine; a mere acquaintance,” said Jericho
impatiently.

“To be sure; friendship in ill-luck turns to mere acquaintance. The
wine of life—as I’ve heard it called—goes into vinegar; and folks
that hugged the bottle, shirk the cruet.”

“I have nothing more to say, young man,” said Jericho, turning from
Basil.

“Well, I’m not sorry for it,” answered Basil waspishly, “for the
sample I have had, doesn’t encourage me to go on.” Basil strove to
dash aside his anger, and returned gaily to the party. “And so you’ve
taken the Lodge, eh?”

“Yes, Basil,” cried Monica, “and we shall have such a rout to begin
with.”

“Then, of course you’ll want your jewels,” said Basil, wickedly. “The
butcher brought ’em back, I hope?”

“The butcher! What _do_ you mean?” cried Agatha. “Butcher!”

“There, girls—never mind him,” cried Mrs. Jericho.

“I sent ’em back by the butcher.” A mode of conveyance hitherto
disguised to the young ladies. “I met him coming to the house, and on
second thoughts I”—

“You foolish boy,” cried Mrs. Jericho, anxious to set aside the
subject; “come and tell me what really brought you here. Who could
have expected you!”

“Arn’t you delighted, dear boy,” said the appeased Monica, “that
we’re coming to live here?”

“Live here! why none of you will ever be able to sleep for the
ghosts,” cried Basil.

“Ghosts!” exclaimed the ladies.

“Yes: the ghosts of the feasts you’ve had at the cost of good old
Carraways. At twelve o’clock every night”—

“Now, don’t be foolish, Basil,” exclaimed Monica.

“I won’t hear you,” said Agatha, putting her fingers in her ears, and
tripping backwards.

“At twelve o’clock at night every saucepan will be haunted: every
mug, every tankard, every goblet, and every custard-cup will go
banging, clanging, ringing, tinkling, with the ghosts of the dinners
and the suppers you’ve had in this house. You won’t air your bed of
nights, that there sha’n’t be a red-hot ghost in the warming-pan.”

“Then, I fear, Basil, we may not count upon you as a visitor, unless
indeed you defy apparitions?” said Mrs. Jericho.

“No, my dear madam, I shall never rent a spare bed here, I assure
you. Moreover, pray don’t summon me to King Jericho’s banquet, for I
shall be sure to have other business. By the way, as you’ve entered
upon your dominion, permit me”—said Basil, taking off his hat and
approaching his father-in-law—“permit me, your majesty, to give you
seizin of it.”

“What does the boy mean?” cried Mrs. Jericho. “Seizin!”

“Quite right, my dear madam. Seizin’s the word. You’ve no notion
of the amount of law I know. In another fortnight I’m called, and
then—upon my life when I think of some people, they fire me with
ambition. They do. I’ll get upon the bench, if it’s only to hang ’em.”

“Not you, my dear sir,” said Candituft—“you don’t know your own
heart. We do.”

“I haven’t your charity; I wish I had: only a little—you’ve too
much. You waste it. ’Pon my life, you are so good, you’d pour
rose-water over a toad,” and Basil leered at the Man-Tamer. Then,
stooping, Basil picked up an apple, and holding it between his
finger and thumb, with ceremonious gravity addressed the ireful Man
of Money.—“Permit me, sir, in this little apple to give you seizin
of the land. And, sir, this little apple is wondrously appropriate
to the interesting occasion. It is golden, and smiling, and like
yourself.”

“Beautiful, Basil! and so true,” said Agatha.

“During your many visits, you were here when this apple was a
blossom. No doubt of it, gorgeous sir, that when this apple was a
pretty pink and white flower, you were here, rosy, and light, and
glad; and looking full of pleasant promise to jolly old Carraways.
Times are changed, sir; you’re very rich: the blossom’s grown into
fruit. A flower you were, and”—and Basil threw the apple up, catching
it—“and a golden pippin you are. Therefore, sir, take the apple as
seizin; ’tis so like you. Oh, very like! See, a golden promise”—Basil
bit the apple in half—“a sour and bitter inside; and to make the
thing complete—look, sir—a maggot at the heart.” And Basil dropt the
fruit with the sentence.

There was general consternation at the boldness, the wickedness (as
Candituft whispered) of the simile. Mrs. Jericho, with all the fears
of woman, moved between her husband and Basil. The young man bowed
to his mother, turned upon his heel, and went his way. There was a
dead pause. At length, Mr. Jericho solemnly proclaimed to his wife:
“Mrs. Jericho, I will no longer encourage that viper. Either you give
up your son, or give up me.” Mrs. Jericho made no answer; it was not
a genial moment for reply. She silently placed her arm in Jericho’s,
and led the way to the carriage. They would make a little circuit of
the country, ere they returned to town.

A very few words will account for the sudden appearance of Basil in
the apple-tree. Bob Topps, the old serving-man of Carraways—we may
say old, for he had grown from mere childhood to the maturity of
seven-and-twenty in the Squire’s house—had, within the past week,
married Jenny White, honoured, it may be remembered, in a former
page, by the praise of Sir Arthur Hodmadod. Mrs. Topps had removed
with her husband to London, where Bob had started as an independent
cabman, driving his own vehicle—certainly, the very neatest on the
stand; for the which neatness there was this reason: the cab had
been the property of Carraways: one of the chattels of the Hall,
knocked down, dispersed by the hammer—at times more terrible, more
crushing, more causeful of blood and tears than the hammer of
Thor—the hammer of the broker. Topps with his savings bought the
carriage. “It might fall into worse hands,” he said. “Now, he felt
almost a love for it, for the sake of them as had ridden in it.”
Again; he said “he shouldn’t like to go into any other service. A
cabman’s life was, after all, an independent thing. He could sit upon
his box, and—beholden to nobody—could see how the world wagged about
him.” True it is that Mrs. Topps had a first objection to the brass
badge, an objection that had more than its inherent force, for it
was made in the honeymoon. Still, as it was the honeymoon, she the
more readily smiled and, as Bob said, “listened to reason.” “I tell
you what, Jenny,” said Bob, “the noblest sight on earth is a man
talking reason, and his wife sitting at the fireside listening to
him.” Everybody wore a badge of some sort, ran the philosophy of Bob.
Brass or gold, the thing was the same, it was only the metal that
was different. Whereupon Mrs. Topps was thoroughly convinced, and we
verily believe was rather proud of her husband’s badge than otherwise.

A very natural incident had thrown Basil and Bob together. The night
before, Basil had supped some three miles from his chambers. Bob by
chance was hailed, and drove young Pennibacker to his student’s home.
“What have I to pay?” asked Basil. “Why, sir,” said the neophyte,
“I hope you won’t think eighteenpence too much.” “What!” cried
Basil, in thrilling surprise. “Well, then, sir, say sixteenpence,”
said the shrinking cabman. Basil, laying hold of the man’s collar
and crying—“A vehicular phenomenon! I must have a portrait of you,”
pulled him under a lamp; and thereupon took place what Basil called a
tremendous recognition. In few words, Bob told of his marriage, and
his prospects; and moreover, that he was going to Marigolds the next
day. He was going to drive his wife there—he had borrowed a cab, and
lent his own for the day; for he hoped he knew himself better than
to take what had been Squire Carraways’ to the village. Miss Bessy
wanted a few trifles that Jenny knew best about; and Jenny herself
had not brought all her things from Marigolds: indeed, she seemed as
if there would be no end to her moving; it seemed as if the things
grew she had left behind her. In few words, Basil made an appointment
with Bob for the journey. “I should like to see the Hall once more
myself,” said Basil, “and I should like to go quietly; so I tell
you what. I’ll take the cab for the day; and out of my abounding
generosity shall be happy to present Mrs. Topps with a lift.” “You’re
very kind, sir,” said Bob, delighted. “She can ride on the box close
aside me.” And Basil came, a visitor to the Hall. When he learned
that his family were there, in the idleness of his high spirits, he
mounted a tree in the hope of a joke; and, such as the joke was in
the apple-shower, he had it. Mrs. Topps very soon despatched her
errand at the Hall, where poor Mrs. Blanket duly wept over her as
“one she had nursed from a baby, and one who was going back, a wife,
to London.”

Basil, we must observe, did not, as he had appointed, arrive at
the village in the cab of Topps. In the morning he somehow thought
horseback would be a more fitting, a more expeditious mode of
transit. Mrs. Topps herself was very soon reconciled to the new
arrangement. She could not but reflect that she would then have
all the inside of the vehicle for a few of the things she had left
behind. As the Jerichos drove through the village, they looked
curiously at a London cab at a cottage-door, with baskets, and
shrubs, and flowers in pots standing about it; and with “that young
woman that wore the silver bee” kissing a score of children one
after the other, duly setting aside every child when finished. It
was, indeed, a very busy, a very exciting afternoon in Marigolds,
when Mrs. Topps returned, just for an hour or two, from London. She
brought an importance with her, that the people could not but feel,
though they could not explain. She had seen all the sights of London;
and she was stared at as though some of their glory hung still about
her. There was Westminster Abbey, St. Paul’s, the Queen’s Palace, the
Waxwork, and all the playhouses in some odd way mixed up with Jenny
Topps. (It would be hard for some of us to look at a man fresh from
the Chinese court, and not think of long almond eyes, white clay
faces, pigtails, and peacocks’ feathers.) Jenny had, from babyhood,
been a favourite with all the village. She was so good-natured, so
cheerful, and what was an especial virtue, in the words of a female
eulogist, “she never seemed to think nothing of her good looks.”
Clever Jenny! Twenty times had she been asked how she liked London,
and how she liked her husband? Whether she was as happy as when at
home—and whether—and here the querists hugely laughed—and whether she
would not like to come back again. To all these inquiries Jenny with
a sweet gravity—for they were grave questions to her—made due reply.
“She had no notion, though she had been there twice before, that
there had been such a place as London in this world; and she never
thought anybody could be so happy as she was, out of London.” And
then she dwelt upon a fear that did now and then possess her. It was,
that her husband would some day quite lose himself—it was so hard for
him in his business to learn the ways of town.

Basil, in a dull, dreamy mood, turned his horse towards London. He
had seen the Hall for the last time. Had taken, as he then believed,
a long farewell of its new possessors. In his indignation at the
selfishness of Jericho, he felt a new strength in himself. He felt
a spirit of independence. He would not owe the benefit of another
shilling to such a man, upon whom fortune seemed to have fallen like
a disease, withering and corrupting him. And there was a mystery
in the means of the man, so suddenly rich, that, he was sure of
it, would burst in some terrible catastrophe. Of course, Basil had
no suspicion of the supernatural source of Jericho’s wealth: the
young man’s imagination was insufficient to such a thought; again,
even in the days of Jericho, the foolish old faith in fairy-works,
and compacts with the devil, ensuring ready profit for future
perdition,—was dead and scorned. If men came by strange modes to
sudden, mysterious wealth, it could not be by conjuration; but by
dull, prosaic craft. The wizard’s circle was of no more avail; the
devil no longer rose in the infernal ring to barter wealth for
souls. Nothing was left but the mere hocus-pocus of unromantic
knavery. Hence, in the conviction of Basil, father-in-law Jericho had
juggled with the dark spirits of fraud to possess himself of sudden
substance. There could be no doubt of the horrid truth; and the
wasted, and wasting condition of the rich man, proclaimed the ravages
of his conscience; of the worm in his brain he could not kill. And
then Basil suddenly thought of Jericho’s ghastly look, as the apple
fell at his foot. And the next thought imparted to the young man a
vigour of mind, a hopefulness of heart, he had hitherto unknown. As
he rode on, the cloud cleared away. He had seemed to himself shut
in, narrowed, dwarfed, whilst depending upon the aid of another. And
now in his very contempt for the man—so strangely, so monstrously
rich—the future stretched brightly before him. He would stand up, and
fight the world in his own strength, and take no condescending help
from any man. Armed and assured by this blithe determination, Basil,
some ten miles still from home, and the evening closing in, spurred
his horse. It would not be too late even that very evening—at least
he would not suffer himself to think so—to call upon Bessy’s father.
Yes: he would at once put his new faith in practice; he would not
sleep without taking the first—and that the most important, most
anxious step,—in the bright, open path that he would hereafter
journey.

“Hey, hallo! Why, Basil—Mr. Pennibacker,” cried Doctor Mizzlemist,
leaning far out of the first-floor window of the Silver Lion, the
glad half-way house twixt Marigolds and London. “Hallo! Why so fast?
If you knew what was in the cellar, you’d draw bridle, I take it.”

“That he would; humph?” cried Colonel Bones; who had joined
Mizzlemist; both, it appeared upon evidence, then and there in the
Silver Lion, enjoying what the Doctor in his meekness was wont to
call his glass of wine and his nut.

“You haven’t seen anything of Mr. Jericho and the ladies?” asked
Mizzlemist. “They must have gone the other road; and so we’ve missed.
Very provoking; but we’re trying to comfort ourselves. Won’t you join
us?”

“So you had an appointment with my honoured father, eh, Doctor?”
asked Basil.

“Why, that is, rather an appointment. Not exactly a fixed thing,
but come in; you haven’t dined,” said Mizzlemist. After a minute’s
thought Basil turned about, and dismounted at the door. Instantly
he stood in the best room of the Silver Lion, with both his hands
pressed and shaken by Mizzlemist. “I suppose you’ve been to the Hall,
eh? Been to pick out your own corner, I take it? Noble fabric, my
dear young sir. Noble fabric! The very look of it is an honour to
the hospitality of the country! Wasn’t I saying as much, Colonel? A
palace for the king of good fellows?”

“What do I know of palaces?” cried Bones. “A beggar like me! I only
wish you’d let me keep quiet in my own corner cupboard. With my own
mutton chop and my pint of small ale,” and Bones poured out the wine,
looked at it with an unctuous tremor of the lip, and threw it off.

“But you’ve not dined,” cried Mizzlemist to Basil. “What will you
have? Country fare, you know.”

“Nothing. The fact is, I picked a bit with the gypsies; always dine
with the gypsies when I come into the country; always,” said Basil
with a laugh.

“With gypsies! Bless me—can’t be true—I mean, very odd company,
Mr. Pennibacker. Very,” and Mizzlemist rubbed his hands, looking
doubtfully askaunce at Basil.

“Most polite people on earth,” cried Basil. “And for poultry, I
assure you, quite by themselves. True, upon my life; I can eat
nobody’s ducks but the gypsies’. Ha, sir! Gypsy life is the real
life, sir. Nothing to do with parchment, Doctor.”

“Why, no, young gentleman,” said Mizzlemist with dignity, “save,
perhaps, when they go sheep-stealing.”

“No house-rent; no taxes; no rates; no infernal respectability,”
cried Basil, bent upon his humour.

“Ha! ha! very good. Beggars all. Humph?” cried Bones. “Capital state,
when people have no respectability. Ugh! it eats a beggar like me out
of house and home.”

“Well, I didn’t imagine that, Colonel,” said Basil. “I thought you
always put out your respectability to board on other people.”

“Capital! Very good! The fact is, my dear young sir—come, take a
glass of wine—people won’t let me alone. They will carry me about
with them; no doubt, to show their humility. I tell them I’m a
beggar: what then? they will have the pauper with them—they will.
Here’s the Doctor—would drag me out to-day, to come and look at old
Carraways’ Lodge”—and again Bones emptied his glass.

“Of course,” said Mizzlemist: “if your friends didn’t look after you,
Colonel, you’d never stir. You’d take no exercise. You’d sit in that
arm-chair of yours till the sexton came for you. And the fact is”—and
the Doctor archly smiled—“we’re not going to lose you in that way.
No: it’s our duty as fellow-creatures and Christians to take care
of you, and we will do it;” and Mizzlemist’s kindly emphasis almost
brought the tears into his eyes. “Poor lone creature! You never knew
what it was to have the tenderness of a wife. You haven’t a dear
soul, growing all the kinder and tenderer for age, haunting your
fireside; and so we must take care of you—and we _will_, old fellow.”

“All too good, much too good to a beggar,” cried Bones, with his
fore-finger scratching the nape of his neck.

“Come, sir, take a glass of wine,” and Mizzlemist urged Basil. Then
dropping back in his chair, he gazed at the young gentleman in all
the fulness of after-dinner admiration. “Ha, sir! it is something
delightful—nay, very delightful, indeed, only to look at you.”

“Indeed,” cried Basil, “glad to hear it. Easy way of getting a
living. Shilling a-head for grown fools, six-pence for children. Come
sir, down with your money.”

“In your connection with Mr. Jericho, you have a grand field before
you,” said the unoffended Mizzlemist.

“Humph! Can you tell me if the field’s in crop? And what it is?”
asked Basil.

“Whatever you like, sir. I am afraid, Mr. Pennibacker”—and Mizzlemist
became very serious—“I am afraid you do not sufficiently estimate the
position of Mr. Jericho. See what he has done already. Is he not in
Parliament? Is he not in the very highest society? Next Tuesday—yes,
absolutely next Tuesday—he dines with the Duke St. George, at Red
Dragon House; and with his inestimable lady and daughters will,
at once, be dipped in the Pactolean vortex—if I’ve not forgot
my Christchurch classics—in the Pactolean vortex of fashionable
existence.”

“Well, and what will Mr. Jericho pay? What, for self, wife and
daughters?” asked Basil, “what will be the price of admission to the
Red Dragon mahogany?”

“Price, Mr. Pennibacker!” cried Mizzlemist.

“Price. Why, you can’t tell; neither can Jericho himself. More than
that, I’ve my doubts, if even the Duke of St. George has made up his
mind to the exact sum to be borrowed of the Man of Money. It must
be for a loan, or do folks think money, like the measles, catching?
The Duke St. George, of Red Dragon House! Why, he’s a very river of
royal blood. From the heptarchy downwards, there’s been a prince or
a princess, or a royal bishop, or something of the sort, cut into the
stream—and he contains in himself the very best blood, laid on from
twenty crowned houses. And to think that he should shake hands with
Jericho—that he should invite such a piece of clay—why it must be for
the gilding.”

“My dear young gentleman,” said Mizzlemist, with a gravity almost
affectionate, “disabuse your mind of such vulgar cant. Be above it,
sir. Don’t think that money can do anything and everything—it can’t.
There must be inward worth. The gold candlestick—if I may be so bold
as to use a figure—the gold candlestick may be prized I grant; but
its magnificence is only subservient to its use; the gold is very
well: but after all, it is the light we look to.” And Mizzlemist
believed he had clenched the question.

“Yes,” said Basil; “so that the candlestick has gold enough, I take
it, it may burn anything—mutton fat’s as good as wax.”

“I say again, don’t think it. Mr. Jericho, independent of his wealth,
is a man of talent. I assure you”—now Mizzlemist was never more
serious—“I assure you, I forget them, but some of his admirable bits
of wit are now going about. I forget them, but I pledge myself, they
are allowed to be very brilliant.”

“All’s one for that,” and Basil emptied his glass.

“But as I was observing, Mr. Pennibacker, you have all the world
before you,” said Mizzlemist.

“I quite feel that, sir, in the new profession that within this
half-hour I have determined to adopt.”

“Why, sir, when you go to the bar”—began Mizzlemist.

“No, I’ve abandoned the thought. The bar’s too full. Bench can’t be
lengthened to hold a thousandth part of us: and mustn’t sit in each
other’s laps. So many, nine-tenths must die like spiders with nothing
to spin. I thought of the army. But that’s going, sir; going, soon
to be gone. Bless you, laurels are fast sinking from the camp to the
kitchen. In a very little while, sir, and the cook will rob Cæsar of
his wreath to flavour a custard.”

“Ha! ha! very good. Wait a little though,—humph?” cried Colonel Bones.

“I do not very fully grapple with your position,”—said Mizzlemist,
hesitating.

“Don’t try, then, sir,” said Basil, “’twill only strain your
intellect. Therefore, as I see all the usual avenues shut up—‘no
thoroughfare’ writ over ’em—I shall strike out a road for myself.
Meet a want, or make a want, that’s the motto, sir, for a new
business?”

“Well, there really is something in that,” said Mizzlemist.

“Now, I intend to meet a want—a very craving want,” said Basil. “And
with such benevolent determination, I purpose to start in life as a
Comic Undertaker.”

“Good, devilish good!” and Bones rubbed his hands; and Mizzlemist
stared.

“It will be my lasting reputation,” said Basil, “to meet the grand
desire of the age. For do you not perceive, sir, the great tendency
of our time is to sink the serious, and to save the droll? Folks who
have an eagle in their coat-of-arms begin to be ashamed of it, and
paint it out for the laughing goose. In a very little while and we
shall put a horse-collar round about the world, expressly for all the
world to grin through it.”

“You know best, Mr. Basil,” said Mizzlemist, “but surely ’twill be a
great stop to business.”

“Now, in pursuit of the comic,” said Basil, “I think we might very
successfully carry fun into the churchyard. A man of true humour,
sir, and such a man every morning when I rise I am in the habit of
considering—himself may put a capital joke into an epitaph, and get
a broad grin from a skeleton. I think I see my board and card—‘Basil
Pennibacker, the Original Comic Undertaker. Funerals acted in the
happiest vein of humour. Mutes of every drollery.’ I think that will
do, sir.”

“It will never be permitted, sir; never,” said the literal
Mizzlemist. “The legislature, sir, will not permit it. I like a joke,
sir; I think I may say I like a joke, but when the ashes of”—

“What! Eh? Why here comes Mr. Jericho, pelting along. Humph?” cried
Colonel Bones, who had run to the window.

“Then I’m off,” said Basil, and instantly he ran down to the door,
jumped in his saddle, and was speedily far away in a cloud of dust.

Mizzlemist approached the window. Jericho’s equipage came rattling
down the hill, Hodmadod and Candituft galloping a little in advance.
The carriage pulled up at the door of the Silver Lion. Mizzlemist had
descended, and approached Mr. Jericho. “I am very sorry, sir, that I
should have missed you,” said the Doctor. “I brought out the Colonel
for a ride, and thought we should all meet at the Lodge. I thought
you’d have stopt”—

“I don’t stop, Doctor Mizzlemist,” said Jericho coldly, whilst
Mizzlemist stept back in astonishment—“I don’t stop for anybody.
Who are you, sir—whom do you take me for?” bellowed Jericho, whilst
Mizzlemist stared, and his jaw fell in mute wonder. Here, Colonel
Bones, benevolently thought he might come to the rescue of his
friend. Whereupon bending his iron face into a very severe smile, he
began—

“I do assure you, Jericho, that”—

“Jericho!” exclaimed the Man of Money, with an oath that passed
upon the Colonel a very hot and very summary sentence, “Who asked
you to speak? A toad-eater! A bone-picking pauper! Drive on!” and
Jericho sank back like an exhausted savage; the coach and cavaliers
flew forward, and Mizzlemist confounded, groped his way back to the
Colonel, whom he found seated, foaming at the mouth, and violently
cutting the air about him with a knife he had taken from the
table, inarticulately spluttering—“Toad-eater! Majesty’s officer!
Bone-picker! Blood—blood—blood!”

After a time, Mizzlemist took the knife from the Colonel, and
entreated him to be calm. He was immediately obedient. He filled a
bumper, glanced at his friend, and in a soft but very decided voice,
as though making himself a solemn promise of some especial treat,
said—“I’ll have his blood, sir, his blood.”




CHAPTER XI.


We have again to introduce the reader to Gilbert Carraways. The
circumstances under which the reader and he last met were so very
different, so opposite to the present condition of the worthy
gentleman,—that we may be justified in treating the old man with
something of the deference due to a stranger. In one of the Primrose
Places to be found selvaging London—for we care not to be a whit
more definite in the whereabout—Carraways, his wife and daughter,
had taken refuge from the storm that had broken over their heads; a
storm that had made clear work of every stick of their property. No
hurricane could more completely sweep away a field of sugar-cane. In
a small, neat, comfortable room sat the ruined family. The old man
was reading, or thought he read. In a few weeks, the snow had come
down upon his head with a heavy fall. In a few weeks, his cheeks were
lined and lengthened. He had been held—so ruthlessly held—face to
face with misery, that his smile, that was constant as the red in his
cheek, had well nigh vanished. Now and then, as he exchanged looks
with his daughter, it glimmered a little; played about his mouth, to
leave it only in utter blankness. Still he went on reading; still he
turned page after page; and believed that he was laying in a stock
of knowledge for his future life. For he had again—he would tell his
daughter with a bright look—he had again to begin the world. Hard
beginning! Dreary voyage, with neither youth to fight the storm;
nor the hope of youth to wile away the long, dark, dreary, watch—to
sing the daylight in. But this he would not think of. At least he
thought he would not. He felt himself as strong as ever; yes, even
stronger. He could not have hoped to have borne the blow so well.
He was never better; never. His glorious health was left him; and
therefore, why despair? In this way will the brain of the stout man
cheat itself. It will feel whole, and strong; and for the viler
cracks and flaws, they are not to be heeded. Mere trifles. And then
some day, some calm and sunny time, that peace has seemed to choose
for itself, for a soft, sweet pause—with the tyrant brain secure and
all vain-glorious,—the trifle kills. In this way do strong men die
upwards.

Gilbert Carraways was, at our first meeting, set about by all the
creature delights of life. He was the lord of abundance. The man who
had nothing to do with want and misery, but to exercise the noblest
prerogative of happy humanity—namely, to destroy them wheresoever
he found them preying upon his fellows. Wealth was gone. He was a
beggar; but in his poverty were thoughts that might glorify his
fireside. He had used his means for good; and, at least, might feel
enriched by the harvest of his recollections. With his face anxious,
lengthened, and dim, there was a dignity in the old man that we do
not think we ever recognised at the Hall. For he had to bear a load
of misery; and he sat erect, and with his spirit conquering, looked
serenely about him.

Bessy and her mother sat at work, and to see them for the first time,
they seemed as though they had never had a finer room to sit in.
Already were they so self-accommodated to the place. In their days
of fortune, Mrs. Carraways—good, kind creature ever!—nevertheless
loved to show to folks the finest outside. She confessed to a pride
in exhibiting to the world the best holiday proofs of worldly
prosperity. Her husband would call her his old butterfly. And, in a
few weeks, she had cast all such thoughts, even as the butterfly its
wings, never again to be enjoyed, or dreamt of. She looked the good
wife of one of Carraways’ late clerks, at some hundred and fifty
pounds a year; with those sixty shillings a week—to provide home and
food, and raiment; the worldly all-in-all. And if at times she was
a little, just a little wayward, in the full blaze of fortune—as
the best-tempered folks are sometimes apt to be tetchy in over-warm
weather—now, she sat in the shade all gentleness, and smiles, and
patience; as though she, perhaps, remembered those little breaks of
temper, to be afforded when at ease with the world, but all too
serious, too wilful an extravagance for a poor man’s home.

Bessy was at first astonished, broken-hearted that she had never
seen, scarcely heard, and that coldly, ceremoniously, of many of
her friends. She could not for a long time comprehend the cause.
And then, she speedily agreed with her mother that, possibly, an
extreme sense of delicacy kept them absent—silent. “They may not like
to intrude upon our misfortune,” said Mrs. Carraways very sadly.
Bessy at once acknowledged it must be so with Miss Candituft. She
recollected that with that young lady it was a favourite phrase—“the
sacredness of adversity.” And then Bessy could not but think—“She
might have written more than once.” But Bessy was young and hopeful.
The tempest had blown over her; and once passed, she was again
smiling and erect. A lily after a thunder-storm.

Such the group at the fireside. There is, however, a person at the
street-door well-known to the reader. We have tried, with all his
faults, to make him a sort of favourite. This outside person is
Basil Pennibacker. He has galloped to London, and straightway taken
the road to Primrose Row. He has hardly shaped his thoughts into
the roughest form of speech; but he feels that he has something to
say: nay, his heart is full of it—and it shall out before he sleeps.
And with this brave determination, he marches to the door; feeling,
nevertheless, as though with all his courage, he was walking up to
a cannon. He stops short at the step. The next moment he mounts it,
and the next he raises the knocker. And the next, as softly, tenderly
as ever human fingers touched a human wound, he lays the knocker
down. He is much relieved, and gently descends the step. It is too
late—much too late to call. Hush! The clock of St. Asphodel’s strikes
nine—it is unreasonable, unmannerly to think of it. Basil crosses the
road, and much comforts himself looking at an upper window. There is
a light; and now a female figure moves to and fro. It is Bessy! Her
light, active form; the turn of her head, so like a wood-nymph’s!
Now, she comes to the window; and now the light is gone and the
room is dark. For a moment, the hope of Basil is quenched—dead.
And the next instant, raising his hat, and gazing at the window, he
cries—“God bless you!” and takes to his heels, as though he had done
something wrong, unmannerly.

Now, as it must be evident to the well-meaning few who read these
pages, that we propose to set down nothing but truth, let us clear up
as we go. It was not Bessy, as believed by Basil. It was a solitary,
pale young thing—one of the cloud of genteel phantoms that flit
across our daily path—who compliment life, by endeavouring to live by
needle and thread. It was not Bessy, upon whom Basil called down a
benison. But let it rest upon the stranger’s head. Who so spiritually
rich as not to need it?

“And do you think, Bessy”—said her father, for having disposed of
Basil for the night, we return to the fireside—“and do you think, my
wench, that you’ll make a good sailor?”

“I don’t know,” said Bessy, “but I’ll try.”

“Well said. It’s the most we can promise against sea-sickness. A long
voyage, wench,” said Carraways.

“My dear Gilbert,” said the wife with anxious looks. “Are you
resolved—are you really resolved?”

“I have looked at it every way, lass: I have turned the matter
on every side. Weighed the risks with the good chances. And I am
resolute.” A deep sigh escaped the wife. “Why, what’s the matter?”
asked her husband.

“Nothing. I meant nothing—at least, nothing, if you are resolved. And
yet, Gilbert, we are old”—

“Aye, that’s it; old to move. But, my good dame, what will our years
bring us if we stop? I tell you, I can’t bear to think of it. I
should die a thousand deaths here in London. I couldn’t go into the
City—and somehow, I know myself, I should be sure to be going there
if I was near it—I couldn’t go there, that every other face wouldn’t
seem to stab me. Oh! I have seen the sight myself,—and I won’t
provide the show.”

“What sight, father?” asked Bessy, almost heedless of the question.

“The sight of a ruined man. An old man broken to bits, with, no
hope, no chance of patching. A piece of utter ruin with grey hairs
upon it. The ghost of one who was ‘a good man.’ I’ve seen it. And
I know what follows. I should pass people, and hear ’em talk—yes,
feel ’em point at me. ‘There, sir’—says one to a country friend—‘do
you see that old man? Once one of the proudest fellows in the City,
sir. One who held his head above everybody. One who was as high as
Lucifer’”—

“Oh, father! they never, never, could say that of you,” cried Bessy,
and her face coloured, and her eyes filled with tears.

“Ha! ten to one but they would say it though. ’Tis hard for a man to
tumble, and not get dirt about him, deserve it or not. ‘As proud as
Lucifer’ they’d say; ‘and now look at him—poor fellow!’ Yes they’d
call me—‘poor fellow; not a penny, sir; not a farthing.’ Now, I won’t
endure this. I’ve talked to myself. I’ve had a little conversation
with this Gilbert Carraways—old fellow!—he and I were not such
intimate acquaintance as we ought to have been in fair weather
times—but I’ve talked to him since we’ve been in trouble, and the end
of it is, wife, he won’t suffer it. He won’t,” and Carraways struck
the table.

“My dear Gilbert, do as you will—go where you will. Anywhere”—said
the wife, and at length her heart loosened, and she fell upon her
husband’s neck—“so that we go all together.”

Bessy laid down her work, and silently crept round her father’s
chair, and without a word, mingled her arms with her mother’s. The
old man felt the pressure of his daughter, and hugging wife and child
close at his heart, he cried—“Yes; all together—all together.” And in
a minute, in a gay voice, and his eyes sparkling through their mist,
Carraways said—“Come, it’s time to go to bed. Good night,” and he
kissed his daughter. “I shall not be up long; but I want to finish
these few pages.” And Carraways was left alone; trying with all his
might to see a Land of Promise for his old age in a golden book,
written for the hopes of emigrants.

The next morning, Basil Pennibacker—for we must for a page or two
return to him—rose, determined to see Primrose Row by daylight. As
he took his breakfast, his looks fell with peculiar satisfaction upon
a large bunch of heartsease that, ere he slept, with his own hands he
had placed in water; that, ere he had sat down to begin his meal, he
had examined with an eye more curious than was his wont in the small
matter of flowers. Indeed, he was himself a little surprised at the
interest hanging about his heart for those few bits of purple and
yellow “freaked with jet.” However, he was satisfied of their beauty
and freshness; and therefore breakfasted as heartily as man with
cheerful conscience may.

It was about mid-day when Bessy was broken in upon by the servant
girl, who came almost in a bunch into the room—so hurried, so
anxious, and withal so pleased seemed she to deliver her tidings—to
proclaim with scarlet face, and panting breath that—“there was
a gentleman below that wanted Miss.” Now, neither Mr. nor Mrs.
Carraways were in. This circumstance the girl observed, she knew, and
had already acquainted the gentleman with the fact; a fact that, in
truth, had in no way disconcerted him. Bessy was finally stopt in her
inquiries by the girl, who remembered she had a card.

“Mr. Basil Pennibacker.”—

Bessy reddened as she took it. “Yes, Miss, I’ll show him up
directly,” said the girl.

“Stay, Susan—I—yes; you are quite right. Pray show the gentleman in,”
said Bessy; and, as she heard the foot of Basil on the stairs, her
heart kept count with every step, and she felt cold as a stone.

Basil entered the room. We verily believe his own mother—doting
parent that she was—would not have known him. He was almost awkward
in his bashfulness; his eyes wandered; he feebly smiled; and deeply
blushed. Bessy, somehow, showed most courage of the two.

“I’m very sorry, Mr. Pennibacker, that there is no one but myself at
home. Very sorry that”—

“Pray don’t mention it, Miss Carraways; I assure you I—that is—I hope
Mr. and Mrs. Carraways are well; as well, my dear madam”—and Basil
began to feel his ground—“as well as I could wish them.”

“Quite well,” said Bessy, “I do not think my mother can be long. And
I’m sure she’ll be glad to see you. We do not see many friends now,”
said Bessy; and then she could have bitten her tongue that she had
said it; he might believe that she hinted at his mother and sisters.

“After all, Miss Carraways,” said Basil, “how very few people there
are worth thinking friends.”

“It may be so, sir; I fear it is so; but,” said Bessy, “it is a hard
truth to learn, learn it when we may.”

Basil was again at fault; again his tongue hung fire; and he
wondered, and was a little piqued at the self-possession of Bessy,
when he—a man—was in such a tremor. His brain was wandering for
new words, when happily, his eyes fell upon the superb bunch of
heartsease idly grasped by his hand. “Happily, Miss Carraways,” said
Basil, suddenly supported, “happily there are friends that will smile
upon us till death.”

“Oh dear, yes! Life, indeed, would be a sad lot could we not think
so,” and Bessy’s eyes glistened; and glistening, made Basil wince.

She never looked so beautiful. Heaped about with luxury; a little
rose-bud queen in a golden palace, with fairy birds singing to
her, and happiness like an atmosphere around her—she never looked
so beautiful as in that bit of tenpenny muslin—standing upon
Kidderminster, at the rate of eighteen shillings a-week, boots
included. (Now all this went jumbling, jostling through the brain of
Basil, as he caught the dewy flash of Bessy’s innocent blue eyes.)

“There are friends, Miss Carraways, whom you have been kind to, who
still have grateful looks. There are friends, I saw thousands of
them yesterday, looking all the happier for your care. I was told of
some, for whom you had a particular regard. I”—here Basil began again
to feel abashed and tongue-tied. “I mean friends by the outer wall,
opposite the summer-house with—with Diana in it”—

“I recollect the summer-house,” said Bessy, and her little hand
clutched the back of a chair.

“Of course. I was sure you would. Well, the truth is, my dear
lady—pardon me, Miss Carraways—I was there, and I thought you would
like to see some of these friends, and—the fact is,—my dear Bessy—ten
million pardons, madam, I—the fact is, as I said, thinking you would
like to see them, I gave them a—a general invitation,—have brought
’em here, and here they are.”

Basil held the heartsease towards Bessy. She curtseyed, held her
trembling hand to take them. “Thank you! A thousand thanks!” she
smiled. And then she fell in a chair, and burying her face among the
flowers, gave up her heart to weeping.

Poor Basil! he felt awe-struck by the passion he had roused. He
wished the floor to open, and himself—to use his own afterphrase—to
be repealed for ever. “If I had thought”—he stammered.

“Oh thank you, sir—a thousand thanks,” cried Bessy, and she wept anew.

“My dear madam,” said Basil, “I am a foolish person; a very foolish
person. Another time I hope to be permitted to assure you that I
meant no folly; upon my soul, I mean truth—earnest, honest, eternal
truth, if truth be in this world. I”—And here Basil distressed,
discomfited, rushed from the room.

In another hour, Bessy was calm and sad—yet not altogether sad. The
heartsease were placed in a glass, and again and again Bessy would
go to them, and, as though putting her finger under the chin of baby
loveliness, as though the flower were a sentient thing, she would
lift the curl of the blossom as it hung over the vessel. She was
gazing at the heartsease when Jenny Topps was shown into the room.

“Well, Mrs. Topps,” said Bessy with a melancholy smile.

“Now, not that I’m ashamed of Topps’s name, why should I be?”—said
the young wife, looking very proud of it,—“but do call me Jenny,
Miss, as afore. Do, please.”

“Well, then, Jenny”—

“Well, then, what do you think Miss? We went to the Hall yesterday.
Ha, you should only see it now! No; I didn’t mean that. I wouldn’t
have you see it for any money. We’ve brought away what you wanted.
But that’s not it. What do you think? Now, don’t cry—promise me, you
won’t cry.”

“Well, then, Jenny, I promise you,” and somehow Bessy made the
promise with better self-assurance than she could have boasted a
little more than an hour ago.

“Well, then, them nasty Jerichos—for I hate ’em”—

“You should hate nobody, Jenny,” said Bessy.

“Perhaps not, ma’am. But nature that makes us love, makes us hate,
and we can’t help it. Them Jerichos is going to take the Hall.”

“Is it possible?” asked Bessy, with strange calmness.

“I saw ’em all there. Going to take the Hall,” repeated Jenny, much
incensed.

“Very well. Somebody must live there,” said Bessy. And then,
strangely perplexed, she looked at the heartsease, and knew not what
to think.

Basil, on his hurried way home, was no less perplexed. He accused
himself of folly, cruelty. He had torn open the girl’s heart with his
clumsy blunder; and of what avail was it, that he would die to dry
her tears?

“Why, my dear fellow,” said an acquaintance, stopping Basil, fuming
with remorse, “My dear fellow, what is the matter with you? Anything
wrong? Anything I can do to help you?”

“Yes,” exclaimed Basil. “Bind me to you for life, and get me a
coalheaver.”

“A coalheaver!” cried his friend.

“A coalheaver,” repeated Basil. “In my present state of feeling,
nothing—I know it—nothing can restore me to tranquillity till I’ve
licked a coalheaver.”




CHAPTER XII.


Already had Mr. Jericho banked the purchase-money for Jogtrot Hall.
Thirty thousand pounds’ worth of flesh had he sacrificed to buy
to himself a country mansion; the better, in the flattering words
of his wife, to fill the world; who delighted as she was with the
obedient ambition of her lord, was, nevertheless, touched in her
tenderest affections when she contemplated his diminished presence.
Even Jericho himself, prepared as he was for the astonishment of his
family and familiars, winced as he caught the astounded glances of
his circle. Breeks, the tailor, began to measure, and to re-measure
with an increasing wonder, that in a little time deepened into
awe, and threatened to explode into terror. “It’s like measuring
a penknife for a sheath,” Breeks declared to his wife. “That Mr.
Jericho’s quite a puzzle, Julia; quite. There’s no knowing where
the paddin’ ends and the man begins. Man, Julia! He isn’t a man at
all, but a cotton-pod. Why he can’t have no more stomach than a
’bacco-pipe.” Such were the confidential communings of man with wife;
and, after certain intervals, with a whole round of Mrs. Breeks’s
bosom gossips. In a little time, it was the growing-belief of a large
circle that Jericho was no flesh, no man at all. “He was made up of
coats,” ran the rumour, “like an onion.”

Jericho, we have said, was tenderly alive to his daily waste. Again
and again had he passed the silken lace about his chest; the lace
that, if the bank continued to be drawn upon, soon promised to
wind round and round the anatomy of Jericho, like whipcord round a
boy’s peg-top. Jericho, however, comforted himself—so had he taken
measures—that the bank should be closed for many a day. He would
not peel himself to a leaf, let his wife conjure as she might.
Fortunately, he was never in better health. If he lost in substance,
mere flesh, he somehow obtained an unusual toughness and strength
of fibre. He was lithe, elastic as a rod of steel. And after all,
what was flesh? Animal grossness. The less he had of it, the more
spiritual the human creature.

But Mrs. Jericho would not thus be comforted. She had half-uttered
her fears to Mr. Candituft. Would introduce Doctor Dodo, a friend
of his, as a friend; not to alarm Mr. Jericho. Certainly not. But
merely to lead him in the meanderings of a pleasant morning talk to
his own individual case. Mrs. Jericho might depend upon the care of
Candituft. He would study even the weakness of dear Jericho as a
weakness to be reverenced. “Some weaknesses,” said Candituft, “were
like flawed China: quite as good as the perfect thing, if not too
rudely handled.” Mrs. Jericho declared the thought to be true and
beautiful.

Now, it grieves us, as faithful chroniclers of this history to pain
the reader with the intelligence that at the very time conjugal
love and manly friendship were sweetly plotting for better health
and insured life in the person of Solomon Jericho, there were
men—certainly two constructive homicides—who contemplated the
probable funeral of the Man of Money, and never once winced at the
thought of the sable feathers. Let the reader judge.

Almost at the exact time that Basil Pennibacker fled in sorrow and
confusion from the door of Carraways, Commissioner Thrush knocked
at the postern of Solomon Jericho. And had Jericho’s household gods
been as anxious, waking, instead—as we fear it too often happens with
household gods in general—instead of sleeping, like pet spaniels at
the fireside, sure we are that the chimney deities would have given
a sympathetic shriek, or howl, or cry, or squall—hearing murder’s
messenger at the door. “Is Mr. Jericho within?” asked the assistant
homicide with a serene gravity worthy of the coming funeral. The
victim was at home. The undertaker might walk up stairs; and making
due allowance, might measure the living customer. And all this time,
though the household gods might see in the burning embers, the
splendid funeral of their master prefigured in glowing rays, with—if
it further pleased them—a view, between the second and third bar, of
the widow weeping over a pyramidal monument, weeping in a cloud of
veil, with streaming wisp of handkerchief,—although every part and
piece of this alarming spectacle were to be seen in the live coals of
Jericho’s hearth, nevertheless Jericho’s household gods took no more
account of the show than if it were a congregation of burning vapours
brought together to roast the family goose, or cook the family mutton.

Commissioner Thrush walks placidly up to Mr. Jericho, and offers him
his hand. And Jericho takes the palm in his own, never dreaming that,
probably, he grasped a piece of churchyard clod.

“Though I come upon an unpleasant business, my dear sir—by the way I
think you get thinner and thinner,” said Thrush.

“I believe Commissioner,” said Jericho very austerely, “I believe in
polite society, a man’s flesh is silently permitted to be quite a
matter for his own contemplation.”

“Mr. Jericho, I am corrected, and very properly. A thousand pardons.
I bring this from my friend Colonel Bones,” and fixing his eye like a
snake upon Jericho, Thrush discharged a letter upon him.

Jericho read the letter. With a stony face of contempt he looked down
upon it. “This is quite ridiculous,” said Jericho.

“It may be droll, devilish droll,” said Thrush. “Men differ so in
their tastes. You may think a challenge a joke; may, indeed, think
pistols when they click, merely _diseurs de bons mots_. Every man as
he likes.”

“You do not intend to say, Commissioner Thrush, that this Colonel
Bones—this gingerbread hero—this”—

“Colonel Bones is my friend,” said Thrush. “Colonel Bones has served
her Majesty: at least, if not her Majesty, her Majesty’s uncle. It’s
all in the family; just the same thing. You insulted the Colonel.”

“The fact is”—Jericho paused, but only one instant, for a lie—“The
fact is, the day was hot; I had drunk too much—”

“I am sorry to hear it. For now it is impossible to accommodate
matters. Now, sir, the Colonel must be a charcoal-burner; you must
taste his saltpetre,” and Thrush smacked his lips, as recommending
its flavour.

“Impossible to accommodate! When it was abuse in a moment of wine,”
cried Jericho.

“Sir, an offence committed in wine must be between intimates a double
offence; and for this reason; this iron-bound reason. It implies
long-smouldering malice,” cried Thrush.

“I don’t see that,” exclaimed Jericho, becoming interested in the
question. “How do you prove it?”

“You shall hear, sir, in a very few words; and those, the very words
of my late excellent and sagacious friend, the king of Siam.”

“I don’t see,” cried Jericho, “that the king of Siam”—

“If you please; one moment,” said Thrush, with mild authority.
“‘Drunkards’ his majesty would say ’are of two sorts. The
good-natured and the malicious. Now, the good-natured man in his
drink babbles his praises and his affections; and with all his
goodness, would blush when sober to say the loving things that run
from him in his wine. His sober thoughts are written in his heart in
the milk of human goodness. Now, the malicious man, who in his steady
hours, has kept a fair face and a clean lip to his fellow—in his
time of drink talks reviling and abuse. His thoughts are written not
in milk, but in vinegar: but the fire of the wine brings out either
character, showing both true, the words of milk and the words of
verjuice.’ Now, this, sir, was the judgment of the king of Siam.”

“I—I do not see it. I can’t see it. Ridiculous! Preposterous,” cried
Jericho.

“The king of Siam though in his royal tomb, and sprinkled with the
loving ashes of fifty of his wives burnt at a great expense for that
occasion only—the king of Siam” said Thrush with ominous gravity,
“is still my friend. When we have disposed of our present business,
I shall be happy to give the readiest attention to any disparagement
you may feel disposed to vent upon the lamented potentate.”

“I am not at all the man, sir, to do anything of the sort,” cried
Jericho. “I respect the—the—yes, the constituted authorities, in
their tombs or out of ’em.”

“I am very happy to hear it. Because you must at once concede, on
the authority of my friend, the king, that an affront in drink is a
double insult. You called my friend, Colonel Bones, an officer in her
Majesty’s uncle’s service”—

Jericho who, though he trod upon thorns, could not resist the sneer,
asked, “What regiment?”

“No matter, sir,” said Thrush, “I have forgotten it. The Colonel
himself may have forgotten it. Any regiment you like. The 59th
Harlequins, or the 74th Pantaloons—it is no matter. You have
insulted an officer; it may be, insulted him for years. You called
him toad-eater—pauper—bone-picker! Now, sir, who shall say how long
you may have carried about you those opprobrious epithets, written
in the strongest vinegar upon your heart? Written, and only waiting
the required volume of hot, fruity port, to dawn and break out
into diabolic blackness? At length you drink; you become drunk;
and thereupon immediately publish to the world the calumny writ in
withering acid.” Jericho was astonished. Thrush, wiping his forehead
after the exertion, dropt his voice, and in the politest, meekest
manner, asked, “To whom will you do me the honour to refer me? Who is
your friend?”

“Certainly; to be sure,” said Jericho with alacrity; and he
immediately sat down, and penned a note to the Hon. Cesar Candituft.
With what a halo of benevolence was that good creature immediately
surrounded! With something of a smile at his lip, Jericho penned
a few familiar lines. “He would leave the matter entirely in his
hands.” This done, he handed the missive to Thrush, who took it with
the satisfied air of a man who felt that he was proceeding in a
manner most satisfactory to the feelings of all parties.

“Good morning, Mr. Jericho, this little affair—end as it may—will,
I trust, make no alteration in our intimacy. I give you my word of
honour, so impartial am I in this matter—so little personal feeling
have I mixed up in this business, that had you instead of the Colonel
called upon me, I should have had equal pleasure in attending upon
yourself.”

“You are very good, very good,” said Jericho very icily.

“Not at all. I consider that in going out with any man, I merely
fulfil a great social duty, and think upon that account I have an
equal claim—should the occasion fall—upon equal services from any of
my fellow-creatures. Dear sir, good morning.” And Thrush went his way.

It may seem odd, when we aver that Jericho sat in the completest
state of ease. He was never more tranquil, and for this reason,—he
was profoundly secure in the friendship, the sweet humanity, of
Candituft. _He_, he an accomplice to draw him into a duel! That
noble fellow would rather meet the ball himself. Besides, he
recollected—and very much soothed was he by the recollection—that
Candituft abhorred duelling. He had heard him denounce the practice
as murderous, fratricidal. “A duellist!” Candituft would say,—“A
duellist is only Cain in higher life.” Very much comforted was
Jericho with this sweet philanthropic sentence. Again and again did
he speak it to himself: pass the beautiful words one by one before
his moral vision, as a girl admires bead by bead of a new necklace.

Only half-an-hour had passed, and Candituft was announced. “A
duellist is only Cain in high life,” thought Jericho triumphantly, as
he rose to press the hand of his friend.

“Dear, good sir,” said Candituft, “I am delighted to see you look so
happy. Yes; it is a moment like this that shows the true man. That
proves the constitutional serenity of his soul. That shows him ready,
if it must be, at the call of honour—ready to quit life when life has
its best blandishments—ready to leave the flowery path of wealth and
prosperity, and to descend into the cold and comfortless tomb. The
friendship of such a man makes me proud indeed;” and Candituft shook
Jericho’s hand.

“Tomb! What do you mean by tomb?” cried Jericho. “Don’t talk to me of
tombs.”

“Of course, my dear friend, only as a figure of speech. Goodness
forbid anything graver,” said Candituft.

“You have seen that Thrush?” asked Jericho, trying to be careless.

“I met him as I was coming here. An unpleasant business. But I’ve
settled matters, I think, very comfortably,” said Candituft.

“I knew you would. My best of friends,” cried Jericho, clapping
Candituft on the shoulder.

“My friend’s honour is as dear—I don’t know if it isn’t dearer—than
my own. You were quite safe in my hands.” Here Candituft pulled out
his pocket-handkerchief, used it with considerable vigour; and after
a seemly pause, said, “We fight at eight.”

“Eight!” shrieked Jericho, and he leaped as though already struck by
the bullet.

“Everything is settled quite according to routine, and we’ll take a
light, early dinner, and”—

“And do you mean, sir,” exclaimed Jericho, “to call yourself my
friend, and want me to fight?”

“I do assure you, my dear sir, it is the most touching proof of—I
will not stop at friendship—I will say, of affection. Yes, sir,
brotherly affection,” said Candituft, a little moved by a sample of
the emotion.

“Why, sir, I have heard you call duelling murder! Have you not?”
cried Jericho.

Candituft was instantly explicit. “Murder it is, sir.”

“Fratricide!” exclaimed Jericho.

“There can be no doubt of it: slaughter carried among the brotherhood
of man.”

At length Jericho came to the clenching sentence.—“Have you not
called a duellist, Cain in high life?”

“Very true, my dear sir. But if Cain is admitted into the circles,
it is not for us to object to his introduction. I trust, sir, that I
love my fellow-creatures. I hope I know what is due to the family of
man; nevertheless I can’t be expected to give up my place in society,
from the mere weakness of affection.”

“Seriously, Mr. Candituft,” asked Jericho, “do you expect me to fight
Colonel Bones?”

“You placed yourself in my hands, my very dear sir—and though I
should lament any fatal issue on your side—when I say lament it, I
feel ’twould blight my future existence—nevertheless, as my friend,
and as a man in society, as a man owing to the world the efficacy of
high example, you must fight.” Thus judged the Hon. Cesar Candituft.

“But I won’t fight,” exclaimed Jericho. “Fighting isn’t in my way.”

Candituft merely observed—“Kicking may be.” Jericho drew himself up.
“Pardon me, my dear friend—I”—Candituft struggled with his feelings;
at length, he fell upon Jericho’s neck, and in an agony of friendship
exclaimed—“Worthiest of beings! Best of creatures! You must fight!”

Jericho was a little subdued by such devotion.—“You really think I
must fight?”

“Do you think,” said Candituft, “that the Duke of St. George would
suffer a man who refused a challenge to sully the door-step of Red
Dragon House? Noblest of men as he is, and kindest of the human race,
he would feel it to be his duty to spit upon you. Metaphorically, my
dear friend, of course.”

“You are right,” said Jericho, giving his courage a wrench—“I will
fight.”

“I knew it”—and Candituft seized Jericho’s hand between his own—“I
was sure of it.”

“At eight you say. And where”—Jericho felt a little dizzy—“where the
place?”

“The best, the noblest, the most heroic spot,” said Candituft.
“Battersea-Fields, of course.”

“Humph! I thought Wimbledon was more genteel,” observed Jericho,
wanderingly.

“It was: but surely, my dear sir, you can’t forget. The Duke
himself—the immortal Wellington, has thrown an undying lustre upon
Battersea-Fields.”

“I recollect,” said Jericho. “Of course—to be sure he has.”

“Such being the case, I suffer no friend of mine to receive any man’s
fire on any meaner ground. For my own part, I have always considered
Battersea-Fields, as a sort of battle-field-of-ease to Waterloo.
Possibly, my dear friend, the same thought may have struck you.”

“I can’t say that it has”—replied Jericho—“but I shall remember it
for the future no doubt.”

“And now, my dear Solomon”—Jericho winced at the affectionate
familiarity; there sounded in it a raven note—“my dear friend, you
may have a few matters to settle. You may have to speak to Mrs.
Jericho”—

“Why, I mus’n’t tell her of it!” asked Jericho.

“Not for ten thousand worlds! it would spoil all. We know what women
are, dear creatures! They smell powder, and they scream police.” Mr.
Jericho never felt a warmer admiration of the wisdom of the sex.
“Not a word to Mrs. Jericho. Nevertheless you may manage indirectly
to convey certain wishes. I’ve said enough. Adieu; I’ll not fail at
seven, to the minute. Good bye,” and the friend and philanthropist
took an affectionate leave.

Ever since Mr. Candituft had blown the praises of Doctor Dodo, Mrs.
Jericho, like an earnest and affectionate wife, wished to introduce
him to her husband: even though by stratagem. Responsive to the
lady’s call, the Doctor came to the house; arriving some half-hour
before the return of Candituft. After a brief, confidential gossip,
the Doctor suggested that Mrs. Jericho should introduce him as
called in by herself. She had the vapours; was nervous; failing in
appetite. Happily, an excuse could never be wanted by a fine lady for
a physician. Fortunately, Mr. Jericho—anxiously seeking his wife, to
give some indirect council ere Candituft should return—came upon the
doctor in consultation with the lady. “My dear,” said Mrs. Jericho,
“Doctor Dodo. I have called him in about my horrid nerves.”

“Why, what’s the matter with them? I never heard that anything ailed
them. Nevertheless, I’m very happy to see Doctor Dodo. Surely, a
friend of Mr. Candituft’s?” said Jericho.

“We are very old friends, very old,” said the Doctor, and he took
hold of Jericho’s hand, treating it to a somewhat prolonged shake.

“Don’t let me hurry you, my dear,” said Jericho, about to retire. “I
shall be in the library. Doctor Dodo, I shall be very happy to make
your acquaintance. Very happy;” and Jericho walked restlessly to the
window.

Doctor Dodo shook his head, saying in a whisper, “Mr. Jericho must be
seen to, dear madam. His appetite is not good?”

“Excellent,” whispered Mrs. Jericho, with emphasis.

“It looks a decided case of—however, we shall see. Pulse, very
extraordinary—very extraordinary,” said the Doctor.

“Doctor Dodo, will you take a short notice,” said Mrs. Jericho,
aloud, “and in a homely sort dine with us to-day?”

“I dine out, my dear,” said Jericho: “dine at the Club with
Candituft, and”—a deep, sepulchral knock shook the door—“and here he
is to fetch me.”

Candituft was delighted to see Doctor Dodo. The very man whom he
wanted to meet. Perhaps, in the doctor’s way, he would set Jericho
and himself, Candituft, down at the Club. It was exactly in the
Doctor’s drive, and he would be only too happy. “Come along, dear
sir,” said Candituft to Jericho significantly, “or they may wait
dinner for us.”

“Good bye, Sabilla, my love,” said Jericho, and squeezed his wife’s
hand a little to his wife’s astonishment.

“And now, Doctor,” said Candituft, when the three were in the
carriage, “Your work is over for the day. You must oblige us with a
drive—we have a little call to make; therefore, allow me to direct
the coachman. After our call—we shan’t be long—we’ll all dine
together.”

[Illustration: _The Duel._]

“Doctor Dodo was the most polite of men. He at once acceded to the
request; and the coachman, guided by Candituft, at eight precisely
drove on Battersea-Fields. “Eh!” cried the Doctor—“What! I smell
powder!”

“And there’s the game,” cried Candituft, and he pointed to Colonel
Bones and Thrush who had just alighted from a cab, driven to the
field by the unconscious Bob Topps.

“This is not fair, Mr. Candituft. You’ve entrapped me here; I shall
not stop,” said the Doctor.

“Nay, only five minutes, for Mrs. Jericho’s sake,” said Candituft.
“You may be needful, Doctor.”

“I can be of no use, none whatever. You’ll please to remember I’m
a physician, not a surgeon. However, as I’m here, if you’ll use
dispatch”—and the Doctor looked at his watch—“I’ll see the business
through.”

“Thank you—a thousand thanks,” said Candituft, and immediately he
and Thrush conferred. The parties came to fight—not to explain: the
seconds ruled that. Whereupon, the men were immediately placed.
Candituft looked at them with an eye of admiration; saying to
himself,—“I think, as near as possible, precisely on the Duke’s own
ground.”

All ready. Colonel Bones, with a grunt and a grin, fires at the
signal. His ball goes clear through Jericho’s bosom, knocking off a
button in its passage, and striking itself flat against a pile of
bricks.

“A dead man!” cried the doctor, running to Jericho.

“My friend!” exclaimed Candituft. “Have you made your will?”

“Eh! What’s the matter?” said Jericho.

“Matter!” exclaimed Doctor Dodo, and he pointed his cane to the hole
in the front of Jericho’s coat, immediately over the region of his
heart; and then, walking round him, stared at the hole between the
fourth and fifth rib. “Matter! It’s the first time, I ever heard a
man with a bullet clean through his heart, ask—what’s the matter!”

“I’m blessed if here ain’t the ball, as flat as a penny, with the
waddin about it,” cried Bob Topps, picking up the lead.

“What! Eh? Why, gentlemen,” said the Doctor, taking the ball, and
peeling from it the fragments of paper—“are you so rich that you wad
with bank-notes?”

The Colonel’s ball had passed through Jericho’s bank-note-paper
heart; and Jericho lived and moved, and was none the worse for it.
Jericho fired in the air; whereupon the Colonel and Thrush, with a
strange leer at him avowed themselves more than satisfied. Jericho
declared the whole matter to be a good joke, and was about to enter
the Doctor’s carriage. “I beg your pardon, sir,” said the Doctor,
“but no man, or devil, or whatever he may be, rides in my carriage,
who can live with a hole through his heart.” And the Doctor jumped
inside, shouted “home,” and was whirled from the ground.

Neither Thrush nor Bones cared to ride back; indeed, they proposed to
walk. Whereupon, Jericho beckoned to Topps—“Not if you’d turn these
fields into gold and give ’em me,” cried Bob; and he jumped on his
box, and drove away.

“Dev’lish impudent fellow,” said Jericho to Candituft: but Candituft
made no answer. He cared not to talk even to the Man of Money, the
money having a hole in its heart.




CHAPTER XIII.


The ball that went through Jericho’s heart, killed Doctor Dodo’s
reputation. The Doctor was one of those stiff-necked men who will
believe their own senses in opposition to their own interests. He
was signally punished for his obstinacy; and, we trust, will stand
pilloried in these pages as an instructive example of misfortune,
bigoted to a faith in its own eyes, ears, and understanding. Why—with
a wife and increasing family hanging at his coat pockets,—why would
Doctor Dodo, in defiance of the world, insist upon enjoying his own
convictions? How many men have been ruined by the extravagance;
nevertheless, headlong simplicity will not take warning!

Doctor Dodo declared that he had been inveigled to the ground—the
Battersea Waterloo—and therefore was under no professional pledge
of silence. Again, the gun-shot wound enjoyed by Jericho—as Dodo
sneeringly phrased it—was so extraordinary, so marvellous, seeing
that the man was no worse for it—that, with trumpet-voice, the case
must sound an alarm to the whole profession. If men were to live with
holes in their hearts, there was an end of the delicate mystery of
anatomy. Man became no jot more dignified than polypus.

“I tell you, Doctor Stubbs, a hole clean through the fellow’s heart,”
cried Dodo to a brother physician, who, with finger and thumb
dreamily fondling the tip of his nose, looked askance at the heated
narrator. Dodo fired at the look of doubt, and bellowed, “I tell you
clean—clean! If the ball had passed through a crumpet, it couldn’t
have gone cleaner.”

“And the—the man walked from the ground?” said Stubbs, with wary look
and voice.

“Never felt it,” said Dodo. “Walked away, Stubbs; strode off like an
ostrich.”

“Humph!” said Stubbs; and the good fellow thought of Dodo’s large
family with friendly concern. “Humph! And was there much hemorrhage?”

“None, none, Stubbs: no more than if you’d fired through a pancake,”
exclaimed Dodo.

“You couldn’t”—Stubbs spoke very tenderly—“you couldn’t be mistaken,
my dear Dodo? It _was_ the heart?”

The blood rushed to Dodo’s face, choking his speech. Giving a violent
jerk at his neckcloth, then sternly composing himself, Doctor Dodo
gave the following testimony solemnly, as though the honour of a
life depended on it:—“My dear sir—Doctor Stubbs—I am not a man to
joke, sir; I defy my worst enemy to say that. Well, sir, upon my
professional reputation, Colonel Bones’s bullet went through the left
ventricle of Jericho’s heart.”

“Dear me! Very odd—very odd! Of course, if you aver this——”

“Aver it! I saw the wound; the hole, Doctor Stubbs, the hole. I say
it, on my professional reputation, standing before Jericho, I saw
through him. As I am a gentleman, I saw the setting sun through his
fourth and fifth ribs.”

“Very strange,” said Stubbs, in the kindest, most conciliating way.
“What do you think of it?”

“Think! Why, when I saw the man walk away; when I know that he is
now as well as ever; what must I think—averse as I am from all such
notions—what must I think but that Jericho has sold himself to the
devil? What do you smile at, Doctor Stubbs?” cried Dodo, angrily.

“I couldn’t have thought you believed in such bargains,” said Stubbs,
gently. “Besides, whatever may have happened in the dark times, we
mustn’t believe in such transactions now-a-days. Political economy
forbids it.”

“I don’t see; I don’t see,” cried Dodo: “I say, sold himself to the
devil; and why not?”

“Why, my dear Dodo, you see we must concede that supply is ruled
by demand, and”—and Stubbs thought to pacify Dodo—“and between
ourselves—if half we hear be true, I think the devil must have his
hands full. And so, my good friend, take my advice; say nothing about
the matter.”

“What!” cried Dodo, “close my eyes—shut my mouth? Not out of my
grave, Doctor Stubbs; certainly not. I know you’re a prudent man,
with a reverence for the world, and so forth. But for myself—as I
say—not out of my grave. No, no; not out of my grave,” and with a
smile and a wave of the hand that said—“Doctor Stubbs, you’re a
pitiful fellow,” Dodo strode from his mean adviser.

Colonel Bones—it was at the Cutancome Club that the Doctors met—dropt
in a few minutes after the departure of Dodo: five minutes after,
came Commissioner Thrush. It was plain from the strange looks of
the men that there was a dark secret between them. Bones lifted his
eyebrows; Thrush upraised his. Bones drew his mouth into a small
significant hole; Thrush puckered his lips to a point. Bones threw up
his hands; Thrush, with shaking palms, responded to the gesture. And
then Bones and Thrush seated themselves at the opposite sides of a
table; and squaring their elbows upon the board, looked silently in
one another’s faces.

“Humph?” cried Bones, after a pause. “Humph? Ever seen anything like
it in Siam?”

“Who could have thought it!” cried Thrush. “Who could believe the
devil such a fool—such an ass?”

“After all, Commissioner, it’s long been my opinion that the devil is
a fool. We’ve flattered him too much; thought too highly of him. The
devil’s a nincompoop. Humph?” said Bones.

“He must be; or could he ever have bought such a penn’orth as
Jericho?” asked Thrush.

“Vulgar notion, Commissioner. The devil buys nobody: folks when
they’ve a mind to it, give themselves away. The wonder is, some of
’em are taken even at a gift. Humph?”

“Wrong, Colonel, wrong; I’m certain of it, the devil’s a liberal,
punctual dealer in the market, and when he buys outright, pays ready
money for his goods. I wonder how much he’s given for Jericho? Who’d
have thought that Doctor Faustus should come up again in our time!
That hole in his heart accounts for the money in his pocket. Colonel
Bones,”—cried Thrush, with sudden solemnity.

“Commissioner Thrush,” said Bones, sonorously responding.

“We owe a duty to society. We must expose this fiend,” exclaimed
Thrush, rapping the table.

“Strip him to the world,” coincided Bones, “that the world may see
through him. Humph?”

“Tear the demon from his gilded temple,” cried Thrush, eloquent in
his indignation, “and appal mankind with the hideousness of wicked
wealth.”

“Beautiful! Humph?” and Bones rubbed his hands, pleased with promised
sport.

“Nevertheless, Colonel, let us proceed regularly, respectably. I
have turned the matter over; and I think our best line of action is
this.—Is this,” and Thrush gathering himself to the table, brought
his forefinger to his nose, to steady his opinion. “We will call upon
the rector of the demon’s parish.”

“Humph?” said Bones, doubtingly. “Well, if you think so.”

“We will inform him of the existence of the fiend your bullet has
discovered”—Thrush paused.

“Very good,” cried Bones, encouragingly. “Very proper—if you think
so.”

“The rector will then lay the matter before the bishop of his
diocese”—Thrush again paused—

“Excellent; quite according to discipline,” said Bones, “and what
then? Humph? What then?”

“Why, then,” continued Thrush, with an awful expression of face, “why
then, the bishop—I have no doubt of it, whatever—the bishop will,
with his pastoral grasp, seize upon Jericho, and haul him into the
ecclesiastical court.”

The fierce, grim, cannibal look of the Colonel was softened into
compassion. “Poor devil!” said Bones.

“There is no help for it,” cried Thrush, with the air of a man
determined upon making a sacrifice in no way distressing to himself.
“No help for it. Perhaps, it is not agreeable to be mixed up with
such a matter. It is certainly not pleasant to go down to posterity
in company with a demon. Nevertheless, we owe a debt to society;
therefore, we will first obtain the attestation of Doctor Dodo, and
so assured, proceed to Doctor Cummin of St. Shekels. Man owes two
solemn debts; one to society, and one to nature. It is only when he
pays the second, that he covers the first.”

“Beautiful! Humph?” said Bones.

“My dear fellows,” said Stubbs, joining the two friends vowed to the
destruction of the demon Jericho, “have you seen Dodo lately?”

“Saw him last night, didn’t we?” answered Thrush, with a wink, to
Bones.

“I may speak to both of you confidentially,” observed Stubbs in
trustful tone. “I believe we all have a regard for poor Dodo: an
excellent fellow—will talk, that’s the worst. Has no stopper to his
mouth; what rises from his heart will run out at his lips, that’s
his misfortune, poor fellow! but—well, well,—we all have our faults.
Now, I want to ask you”—and Stubbs, looking about him, lowered his
voice—“I want to ask, have you observed anything odd about Dodo?
Anything at all flighty?—you know what I mean.”

“Why, upon my word”—said Thrush, dragging out the syllables, and then
pausing.

“He has a large family; I may say, a sweet family. An excellent
wife, too. But, poor fellow! he has not had time to be rich, and I
hope—yes, I do hope,” said Stubbs, emphatic, “that the brain’s all
right.”

“What! Cracked?” cried Bones. “Does it ring as if cracked—humph?”

“This is in the closest confidence,” again urged Stubbs; “but I
assure you that, for half-an-hour, Dodo would insist upon it that a
man—it would be unjust, ungenerous, to mention his name, but a man of
unbounded wealth and equal honour—had received a bullet through the
left ventricle, you understand, of his heart; and that the man was
still alive. And this,” Dodo said, “he had witnessed; had seen the
sunset through the perforation. And still alive!”

Bones slowly rubbed his hands.

“Well?” said Thrush, coldly.

“Well!” cried Stubbs. “My dear sir, when a man makes such an avowal,
we know that the brain—for the time, at least—is gone. And when,
moreover, the man happens to be a physician, why then”—and the
Doctor, in despair of utterance big enough to express the result,
took a pinch of snuff.

At this moment Doctor Mizzlemist joined the party. “Seen Dodo
lately?” said he, looking mysterious. “Very odd. I suppose he means
it as a joke; but jokes are not exactly the things for physicians;
indeed, not for any man who’d ride in his carriage. Jokes are the
luxury of beggars; men of substance can’t afford ’em.”

“Very true, Doctor,” said Stubbs, nodding serious affirmation.

“Must be mad, I think,” said Mizzlemist. “Going all about the town,
swearing that he saw a man shot through the heart, and the man walk
from the ground. Why, his diploma isn’t worth so much ass’s-skin.
Who’d employ such a physician? Now, this is Dodo’s dilemma—law,
insanity, poverty; the prongs of the caudine fork—if I haven’t
forgotten my classics,” and Mizzlemist extended his three fingers.

“What do you mean? And only for saying a man was shot,” stammered
Thrush, “what do you mean?”

“In the first place”—and Mizzlemist smacked his lips—“there is
libel, inasmuch as to assert that a man lives with a bullet-hole in
his heart, in the opinion of every sound lawyer implies a diabolic
compact.”

“Good,” cried Stubbs, much satisfied.

“Secondly, if the physician escape libel, he is open to a writ _de
lunatico_,” said Mizzlemist, his voice cheerfully rising.

“There can be no doubt of it,” averred Stubbs.

“Thirdly, if he get clear of libel, and, more extraordinary still,
escape a lunatic jury, why, the physician’s practice is gone—dead as
a fly in his own ointment.”

“Physicians don’t keep ointment,” said Stubbs, with dignity. “We
prescribe—simply.”

“His practice is gone,” repeated Mizzlemist, “and then, if he’s not
made his fortune, then”—and Mizzlemist rolled the verdict over his
tongue,—“then there is poverty, emphatic poverty. And so, as friends
of Dr. Dodo, give him a hint, do. Are you going westward, Stubbs? I
see your wheels are at the door. Can you give me a trundle?”

“With pleasure,” and Stubbs and Mizzlemist straightway departed.

“You did not see the hole yourself, Colonel?” asked Thrush, with
contemplative face.

“Why, no. I was the last person to look at it, you know. Humph?”
cried Bones.

“I wish I had had a peep. Would have been more satisfactory—much
more,” said Thrush, puzzled.

“I saw no blood; and I was near enough to see that. Humph?” and Bones
nibbled his thumb-nail.

“After all,” and Thrush spoke like a man of amended judgment,
“after all, it must be Dodo’s joke, or if not”—and Thrush pointed
expressively at his own forehead, “poor fellow! A large family, too.
At all events, we cannot be too prudent. And so, till we hear more, I
think we will postpone our call upon Doctor Cummin.”

“I must say I wouldn’t trouble either him or the bishop without
better grounds. For my part I think there must be a mistake. And then
there’s libel, and lunacy, and—though I’ve nothing to lose—there’s
poverty, and—upon my word”—and Bones seemed fixed in the opinion—“I
think we had better hold our peace.”

“I think so too,” cried Thrush, very readily. “For I recollect it was
a saying of the King of Siam’s, that the giant Whapperwo, who with
his little finger could level stone walls, was at last knocked down
by his own tongue.”

“Very strange,” said Bones, opening a letter—one of two brought by
the servant. “Jericho, I suppose to show he bears no malice, asks me
to dinner.”

“It is odd,” answered Thrush, reading the twin missive; “but here,
too, he asks me. This looks like conscious innocence. Dodo must be
jesting, or must be mad.”

“At all events, we’ll go—humph?—I say we’ll go”—Thrush bowed
assent—“if only to look about us. Nevertheless, I must say that I am
anxious for Dodo—anxious for his wife—anxious for his family. Humph?”

       *       *       *       *       *

And Rumour blew upon the hole in Jericho’s heart—blew as through a
brazen trumpet—making many modulations. We have heard her at the
luxurious Cutancome. Let us listen to her at the Horse and Anchor,
frequented by Bob Topps whose simplicity and good nature had made
him a sudden favourite with the rugged charioteers who drank and
baited at the hostelry. “What’s your fare, Bob?” a cabman wag would
ask, playfully satirical on Robert’s innocence, “what’s your fare,
now, from the first of April to Jerusalem?” Another, in the like
vein would demand of Bob “how much he’d take to drive over Lady-day,
and set down clear of the water-rate?” And Bob gave and took in the
best of humour, and in a few days, with the help of ale—the liberal
“footing” of a beginner—commanded, when he would, an attentive
audience. And Bob told the story of the duel from the beginning,
to pleased listeners. When, however, he came to the hole in the
duellist’s heart, the duellist still alive, he met with boisterous
unbelief.

“Upon my word and honour, gentlemen”—said Bob earnestly—“I picked the
bullet up myself; and it was as flat—as flat as any shilling. It had
gone clean through him.”

“And him as it hit,” asked one of the audience, “was still alive?”

“Alive! Why, I tell you, he wanted me to drive him home. But, no, no,
says I. In course not: I wasn’t goin’ to pison my cab, and a new un,
too, with brimstone,” said Bob sagaciously.

“Well, if that lie isn’t enough to take one’s wheel off,” said an
old man, holding Bob’s ale-pot in his hand; and then winking at the
donor, and taking a long, deep draught to right himself.

“A hole right through him, eh?” said another, a grave jester. “Why
didn’t you thread him with your whip, like a herrin’ through the
gills? There’s a song that talks o’ hollow hearts, but I ’spose the
song don’t mean hearts with holes in ’em like grindstones.”

“You may say what you like,” cried Bob, “I know the man; I saw the
light twinkling through him—and more than that, his name’s Jericho.”

“What! the rich man that they’re always talkin’ about in the paper?
The man that’s buying everything? The man that’s goin’ to have gold
scrapers at his door, and lion’s head knockers cut out o’ diamonds?
You’re a good fellow, Bob, though you know no more of the fares of
town than the Babies in the Wood,—still you’re a good fellow, and
I wouldn’t see you hurt. So you’d better say nothin’ against such
folks as Mr. Jericho. Why, what are you to such as him? He’d put you
into the Court of Chancery for scandal, and none of your dearest
friends—not even the wife o’ your bosom with the biggest telescope as
ever was, would ever be able to see a bit of you agin. Do mind what
you’re about,” and the philosopher and friend pulled at the ale.

“Don’t tell me,” cried Bob; “_that_ Jericho—oh, there’s something
precious wrong there! A man can’t live with a hole in his heart, and
the devil know nothin’ about it.”

A pelting shower came on; there was a sudden demand for cabs, and all
Bob’s audience were speedily on their several boxes. He alone sat in
the tap-room, pensive and puzzled.

“My good lad,” said the landlord of the Horse and Anchor, addressing
Bob with considerable kindness—“my good lad, I like you, but take
my advice—don’t give your mind to lying. A lie may do very well for
a time; but like a bad shilling, it’s found out at last—it is, upon
my word and honour. Still, if you must lie—if you can’t help it—tell
lies about them as is your equals; don’t lie agin them that has money
enough to eat you. Without salt!” added, in the way of exclamation,
the Horse and Anchor.

“Breeks, my dear, I’ve long been sure of it, though I never said
anything about it.”—

(The hole in the heart, reader, is now discussed beneath the
roof-tree of Breeks, Jericho’s tailor; Mrs. Breeks much outraged in
her feelings that her husband will continue to make for that serpent.)

“I never spoke—I never do ’till I’m forced—but as true as I wear a
wedding-ring, I always used to feel hot and cold shivers when you
came from measuring that creature. And some day, some twelve o’clock
at night, take my word for it, he’ll be carried off in a red-hot
chariot, with your clothes upon him.”

“Should be sorry, Julia, to lose so good a customer. To be sure, Mr.
Jericho is not the man he was”—said Breeks.

“Man! There’s no doubt of it, he’s sold himself to Belzebub, and
given a stamped receipt in his own blood for the money. Else I should
like to know how a man could live with a hole in his heart.”

“It’s nothin’ whatever,”—said Breeks—“easily enough.”

“Breeks, you’re getting quite a heathen, and for the sake of the dear
children, I won’t live with you,” pouted Mrs. Breeks.

“See, Julia, what a hole your eyes once made in my heart,” cried the
flattering tailor.

“Quite another sort of thing. Holes of that sort ar’n’t supposed to
kill;” and the wife proudly smiled.

“No; they certainly do heal, and don’t leave so much as a scar
behind. Time does fine-draw ’em wonderful. But don’t believe it,
Julia; certainly Mr. Jericho isn’t the man he was: he’s thin to
a wonder, and solemn to match. And once he was so lusty and so
droll. To be sure, then he never paid, and so took any joke. Do
you recollect once when I made him a whole suit, without a single
pocket? ‘Why Breeks,’—says he—‘why, there’s never a pocket; not
a single pocket.’ ‘I know that,’ says I. ‘I made the suit so a
purpose.’ ‘Why so?’ says he. ‘Why,’ says I, ‘Mr. Jericho, whenever
I ask you for money, you say you never by no means have so much as
a shillin’. Now, when a man never has money, what’s the use of
pockets? I wouldn’t any longer hurt your feelins to make ’em.’ Law!
how he laughed: never laughs now,—but in return, what a jewel of a
paymaster!”

“Paymaster! And how do you know where his money comes from? I
shouldn’t wonder if _his_ money in partic’lar isn’t after all—as Mr.
Jabez Spikenard says of all money—so much dust and ashes.”

“I can’t say,” answered Breeks; “all I know is, you very soon turn
it into mutton and tatoes. And as for the hole that’s talked of—if
Mr. Jericho’s heart had as many holes as a cullender, you’ll be good
enough to wink at ’em.”

“What! be blind to wickedness! I never was in all my life, Breeks,
not even afore I listened to Mr. Spikenard, and it isn’t likely
I’m going to shut my eyes now. I’ll learn all about this hole of
Satan’s make, depend upon it: I’ll give all the partic’lars to dear
Mr. Spikenard, and won’t he make a discourse on it that’ll drag the
hearts out of the very charity children! I _will_, Breeks,” averred
the wife.

“I’m sorry to hear it, Julia: because, I did intend to give you a new
cherry-coloured satin. You look well—’xtremely well in cherry-colour,
Julia. Yes: I had made my mind up to a new gown.”

“And what’s to baulk a blessed intention, Breeks?” asked Julia.

“Why, I’d put aside the money from a bill of Mr. Jericho’s. And only
to think, if when you was at chapel, the cherry-coloured satin should
turn upon your very back to sackcloth and ashes!”

“Breeks, my love,” said the wife with sudden energy, “I’ll risk it.”

“Mr. Jericho”—said the tailor—“is shamefully abused. ’Cause they
can’t find a hole in his coat, they pick one in his heart. See, too,
what we owe him! Any other man, when he got rich, would have left the
tailor of his struggling years; would have cut him off like an end o’
thread,—and gone to the west. Has Mr. Jericho done so?”

“He hasn’t, love,” said Mrs. Breeks, melting.

“Has money made any difference in him—’xcept this? Afore he never
paid, and now he does?”

“It’s a sweet truth,” cried the wife, continuing to soften.

“And as for this talk about the hole—it’s a venomous falsehood.
Besides, what is it to us?”

“What, indeed!” exclaimed Mrs. Breeks.

“He pays his way like a prince—I only wish all princes paid like
him,”—cried the emphatic Breeks—“’twould be better for some tailors.
And are we to see a hole in such a customer’s heart? Not if the sun
and moon and all the stars was shining through him. But I don’t
believe it. No: it’s a wicked scandal.”

“Backbiters, as Mr. Spikenard says, are like locusts; they love to
feed upon the fat of the land. They’ve no doubt bit the hole; nobody
else. Yes, my love; you’ve made me quite happy; quite restored my
confidence in our customer. I shall be proud to wear a gown out of
his money; it will show I don’t turn against him. And I think this
time, love”—and Mrs. Breeks patted the face of her lord with kitten
playfulness—“this time, not a cherry-colour; no, dearest; a crimson.”

       *       *       *       *       *

In Primrose Place the hole in the heart, played upon by the rapid
lips of Mrs. Topps, had a various effect. Bessy was struck with fear
and wonder; Bessy’s mother thought there might be something in the
story; and yet could not believe it: and Carraways laughed outright
at the tale. “I assure you, father, Jenny seems quite shocked at the
circumstance. Poor girl,” said Bessy, “she will have it, something’s
going to happen.”

“No doubt,” laughed Carraways, “or how would the world go on? Come,
tell us all about it, Jenny,” said the old gentleman, as Mrs. Topps,
with a staid, grave face, crept from an inner room. “Mr. Jericho got
a hole in his heart, eh?”

“Yes, sir; and everybody’s wondering about it—for he’s not dead, and
not likely to be,” said Jenny.

“And what do you think of it, Jenny? Come, speak out,” said Carraways.

“Why, if you please, sir, it isn’t for such as me to think anything;
still, I have heard of people selling themselves. I have heard that
the—the—the”—

“The devil, eh, Jenny?” said Carraways.

“If you please, sir,” and Jenny curtsied. “That he walks about like a
hungry lion to buy folks.”

“And you think he’s had a cheap penn’orth of Mr. Jericho, eh?”

“I didn’t say that, sir,” said Jenny; “still, everybody wonders
how he’s got so rich. He says it’s a mine of metal. Folks say, a
mine of brimstone. But this I know”—and Jenny encouraged, became
voluble—“this I do know. A bullet went through Mr. Jericho’s heart;
and the lead was as flat as a plate, for Bob picked it up, and after
that Jericho walked away. He wanted to ride; but Bob—bless him!—knew
better than that. Oh yes!”

“And this is Bob’s story, is it?” said Carraways, gravely. “Humph!
I’m sorry to hear it. I’m afraid, Jenny, my good girl, I’m afraid Bob
loves to drink.”

“La, sir! No more than a baby,” said Jenny.

“Just so,” said Carraways.

“Besides, there was a doctor that handled the bullet—a lucky thing
that, for dear Bob—and moreover, that saw through the hole in Mr.
Jericho’s breast—and more than that, that says he’ll have Mr. Jericho
afore the bishops, and put him in the Fantastical Court. And the
doctor, by what I hear”—said Mrs. Topps, with burning face—“drinks no
more than Robert.”

“Well, Jenny, well,” said Carraways, with a smile. “I like you to
defend your husband. It’s very natural; very proper. But the world,
my good girl, can’t and won’t think as you do. I know a little,
you’ll allow, of Bob; and though I can speak from no absolute
evidence, nevertheless, I have a suspicion that he has a liking for
drink. If this be so, try and reform him.”

“I will, sir,” said Jenny, and the tears came into her eyes.

“I may be wrong; but watch him, and if need be, persuade him against
so dreadful a vice.”

“I will, sir, indeed I will,” cried Jenny, weeping outright.

“I don’t believe this story. Nobody will believe it. Everybody will
take it as a drunkard’s tale; therefore, warn Bob; warn him from me.
There’s a good girl.”

“I will, sir; thank’ee, sir,” and poor Jenny, with saddened heart,
crept from Primrose Place, sorrowful for her weak and foolish
husband. It was the first thin cloud that had crossed the honeymoon;
and suddenly, the world had never looked so dark to Jenny.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Hon. Cesar Candituft, on the night of the duel, went to bed in a
state of grievous perplexity. There could be no doubt that the bullet
had passed through Jericho. The man, it was horribly clear, held
a supernatural tenure of existence. It was impossible to continue
his friendship, for the mystery would be blown in all corners of
the town. Impossible, too—or, at least, unsafe—to marry into such a
family. Who was to know what infernal compact did, or did not, exist
among them? That he, Cesar, should have a bosom friend, so rich, with
a hole in his heart!

Mr. Candituft, wearied by dreams in no way complimentary to Jericho,
sat late at breakfast. The servant brought in a small packet. It
was a letter from Mr. Jericho with a most magnificent diamond ring.
“Wear this diamond, my dear Cesar,” ran Jericho’s missive, “as the
type of a friendship, bright, unflawed, and everlasting.” Candituft
was a judge of diamonds. The stone was splendid; costly. As Cesar
sat, gazing at the lustrous present, his heart melted in charitable
emotions towards the donor; his brain sang thanksgiving. He rose, and
approaching the window, in sweet luxurious idleness of feeling, tried
the gem upon the glass. He wrote with diamond point:

    “Friendship, mysterious cement of the soul,
     I owe thee much.”

“Very good,” said Basil Pennibacker, looking over Cesar’s shoulder,
“but you hav’n’t put down the amount.”

“Mr. Pennibacker,” exclaimed Candituft, “this is an honour that”—

“Don’t name it. I’ve dropt in like a housebreaker upon you; but the
fact is, by what I hear, blue fire’s come into fashion again,” said
Basil.

“What can you possibly mean, dear Mr. Pennibacker?” asked Cesar,
sweetly unconscious.

“Mr. Candituft”—said Basil—“you must be kind enough to explain
a matter to me. Understand, I have no objection whatever to the
sale of any gentleman to the—I wish to be guarded in my words—to
the iniquitous principle. If people will take themselves to
Horns-and-Tail Market, why, that’s their affair. I may drop a
buttermilk tear or so, as you would do, but I shouldn’t think of
holding’em back. After all, sir, to speak plainly, it is said about
town that my respected father-in-law, Mr. Solomon Jericho, has sold
himself to the devil.” Candituft started. “Have you any knowledge of
the interesting transaction?”

“I! Mr. Basil Pennibacker!” exclaimed Candituft, his thoughts
wandering and wounded.

“Understand,” said Basil, very calmly: “pray, understand. I have no
objection whatever to the sale on Mr. Jericho’s personal account;
only the world may think that the sulphur runs through the whole
family.”

“Surely, sir”—said Candituft—“surely you are in jest?”

“If my words were engrossed on parchment, with a fifty pound stamp to
’em, they couldn’t be more serious. Last night, Mr. Jericho fought
a duel? Battersea fields? You were his second? So far, I find I’m
right. Well, sir, it is said that Colonel Bones fired a ball through
the heart—how the ball found it out, I can’t say—through the heart of
Mr. Jericho.”

Candituft dropped his eyelids—smiled—and shook his head.

“Is this true?” asked Basil. “Doctor Dodo swears it’s true; but
Dodo—some folks say—is a lunatic. Is it true that Jericho, with a
hole through his heart, like a hole through a tailor’s thimble,
laughed at the thing as a good joke, and walked like a postman from
the ground?”

“Mr. Pennibacker, in this world we light upon strange people”—

“What the monkey said”—cried Basil—“when he met his sweetheart in the
Ark. Go on.”

“Do you not perceive, Mr. Basil—is it not very strange—that a man of
your extraordinary acumen does not discover this bullet to be—a—a
metaphor?”

“I don’t know,” said Basil. “To be sure I have known metaphors of
the like metal. But what do you mean? Where’s the metaphor, when the
world calls Mr. Jericho, the Man with a Hole in his Heart!”

“Ha! sir,” cried Candituft, “it is saddening to a man who tries hard
to love his species—to be compelled to hear such things. Malice!
Envy! The cant of wicked poverty—nothing more. Because a man is rich,
he must have no emotions; because his pocket is crammed, his heart
must have a hole in it.”

“Humph!” said Basil doubtfully.—“Well, I’m—yes, I’m satisfied.”

And the hero, Cesar Candituft, glanced at his diamond, and said to
himself—“So am I.”




CHAPTER XIV.


Mr. Jericho was fully conscious of the malice of rumour. He well
knew that he appeared before the world in a supernatural, perhaps,
in a demoniacal light. The timidity, the tremors of Mrs. Jericho and
her daughters, convinced him that they saw in husband and father, a
man of most mysterious attributes. Monica, with all her strength of
mind, turned pale at the smallest courtesy of her parent; and Agatha,
suddenly meeting him on the staircase, squealed and ran away as from
a fiend. “Mamma, dear mamma,” she exclaimed in a moment of anxious
tenderness, “I’m sure Mr. Jericho’s sold; every body says so—sold.
If you love me, tell me now—does your night-light burn blue?” And
though Mrs. Jericho very majestically rebuked the giddiness of her
daughter, the wife in the deep, silent night—the shrunken Jericho
fast asleep, screwed up in himself as you would twist a bank-note—the
wife would feel the solemnity of her whereabout. “Should the buyer
come!” she thought while abed—and if folks could be arraigned for
their thoughts, what goodly company would throng the bar!—“should the
buyer come, I trust he’ll know his own side.”

Yet Jericho, from the first hour of his change, never felt so strong
in himself; so insolently vigorous in mind and body. It was clear
he should live for ever: he had been made immortal by money (not
so uncommon a creed this). Death was to be awed like the human
vulgar, and to pay respect to wealth. The principle of property was
to flourish everlastingly in him, Solomon Jericho! True it was, he
continued to shrink—to waste. Nevertheless, he could not wholly
disappear: he must have body, no matter for its tenuity. But that he
was elevated beyond the anatomical accidents of common humanity, was
plain from the ball that had passed through his heart, and he alive,
without the loss of one drop of blood. To be sure the hole—for he had
stood between two mirrors and seen through himself—the hole had an
ugly look, but who was to know it? A secret to be easily kept, with
proper caution, even from the wife of his bosom.

Therefore, Jericho despised the innuendoes, the hints that buzzed
up and down the world—no more valued them than a cloud of summer
gnats. And wherefore? He knew the way to confound and kill them. In
the might and immortality of his money, he would bring back homage,
flattery, devotion. He looked upon the world and its millions, as
his palace—his subjects. He felt himself the elect of wealth—the
chosen one designed to develope to the human race the enduring rule
of cash. From such moment, there was to him nothing high, nothing
great, nothing beautiful in humanity,—and for this reason, Jericho
believed he could purchase it. In his moneyed eye, man in his noblest
striving, woman in her holiest devotion, was ticketted and bore a
price. Truth and virtue at the highest and best, were things for
market: and Jericho scorned them,—because, when he would, he could
destroy either commodity, by huckstering for it.

Jericho strong, stern in his power, had cast about him the most
magnificent presents. He had sought occasion to bestow gifts of worth
and beauty upon the merest acquaintance; in all cases, contriving
that the donation should harmonise with the taste—melodiously
accord with the wish of the gifted. Jewels, pictures, horses had
Jericho—with more than imperial bounty—bestowed upon all sides. A
week only after the duel, and Jericho had more than trebled the
number of his friends and champions. The Hole in the Heart, in the
eye of Jericho’s world had gradually closed; and the heart was
nobler, better, truer, kindlier than ever.

Mrs. Jericho was soon sweetly comforted by the enthusiasm of crowds
of dear friends for her magnificent husband. She ought, indeed, to be
a happy woman, possessing such a man. Whereupon, Mrs. Jericho, with
the slightest touch of remorse for past ingenuous thoughts, owned he
was the best of creatures. And then she wondered how it was, that any
man with so large a soul, should have so little substance. It really
seemed as if all Jericho’s flesh went to make heart!

And Monica entirely vanquished her fears. And Agatha never screamed
again: no; she would smile when she met her dear father; more, would
raise herself upon her toes, and take a kiss from him, gulping it
with great content. How, indeed, could wicked rumours any longer pass
into the ears of the young ladies, when their father had hung there
the costliest ear-rings? Those diamonds—like the diamond shield of
St. George—shamed and confounded everything false that approached
them. A happy thought, this, of Jericho’s, to protect an ear with a
diamond!

Nevertheless, Mr. Jericho was doomed to meet with a rebuff. In the
full flush of victory he was to be chilled. Among his laurels there
was an ugly, domestic slug, that would stick there. And this, too,
with Jericho’s power of money! However, the annoyance was only
passing; a bank-note or two would wipe the eye-sore off; would
make the soiled leaf immortally green. Now, this contemptible, yet
irritating slug, was our young friend Basil, changed almost as much
as Jericho himself. Love had seemed to give sudden maturity to his
brain: had seemed to have advanced to meet time on his way, learning
by anticipation his goodly lessons. It was only at intervals that
Basil’s odd, quaint spirit, that had shone in him from boyhood,
would now reveal itself. At times, he would be as fantastic as ever,
but the fitful jest would die in sudden gravity. However, altered
as Basil was, his arrival at the mansion of Jericho was a matter of
delight to his mother and sisters. Mrs. Jericho’s only trouble was,
that her foolish boy would not be friendly with his excellent father.
And both the girls would earnestly assure their brother—though they
must own Mr. Jericho got awfully thin, and they could not account for
it—that after all he was a dear, kind man, and never refused anything.

“Why, what is the matter, my dear Basil?” said Mrs. Jericho. “Why,
you look ten years older. I’m sure you study too much. And, you
foolish boy, why should you study at all, now?”

“Why, indeed, mamma?” asked Monica. “Why not leave law to people—poor
creatures!—who have nothing but their wits? By what I hear, there’s
not room even for them: and, as Mr. Candituft says, it is not kind—it
is not philanthropic—for wealth to study to take the bread out of the
mouths of the indigent. Do give up those horrid chambers, and be a
gentleman.”

“Yes, dear,” said Agatha; “and if you must employ your time, why not
go into the army? You would look charming, Basil, you would, indeed;
and I’m sure Mr. Jericho would buy you as many regiments as you’d
like to be officer to. Do be a soldier—there’s a darling.”

“Or, my dear Basil,”—observed Mrs. Jericho with serious emphasis,—“as
you seem strangely inclined to a sober view of the world, if you
would prefer the church—not, for my own part, that I think any
profession necessary for you—nevertheless, if you have a regard for
the church—I do not see, looking into the probability of events, and
contemplating—as I have contemplated—the growing interest of Mr.
Jericho—I do not see, my dear child, why you should not be a bishop.”
And Mrs. Jericho resignedly folded her hands at the prospect of
Canaan.

“Thank you, my dear madam—in the meantime can I see Mr. Jericho?”
asked Basil.

“Of course, my love. He’ll be enchanted at your visit; delighted to
see you. Here, my dear.” Basil followed his mother; who, pausing in
an ante-room, turned to her son. “Now, my dear boy, do be courteous
to your father. He loves you—I know he loves you. And yet you will
look so coldly. Ha! Basil, you don’t know Mr. Jericho’s heart.”

“Humph!” said Basil.

“My dear,” said Mrs. Jericho, entering the library, where Jericho
sat, “I have brought you a truant.”

“Happy to welcome him,” said Mr. Jericho; and he rose, and
approaching Basil, held out his hand. Basil, with a look of horror,
started back.

“Basil! My love!” cried Mrs. Jericho, astonished at her son’s
emotion. “What is the matter?”

“Why, the truth is, dear madam”—said Basil—“I haven’t seen Mr.
Jericho for some time; and if he continue to dwindle at the same
rate, I take it in another month he’ll hardly be visible to the naked
eye.”

“Mr. Pennibacker,”—said Jericho, with all his power of money—“have
you any business with me?”

“If you please—in private,” and Basil looked at his mother.

“Basil!” cried Mrs. Jericho, in a tone of protest; but Jericho waved
his hand, and without another word, Mrs. Jericho obeyed the implied
gesture. Some shrews are tamed by the more tyrannous constitution.
Mrs. Jericho had been altogether overcome, softened into the most
docile of creatures by her husband’s money. He seemed to have bought
the good-will of her bad temper.

“I am to understand, Mr. Pennibacker,” said Jericho majestically,
“that you refuse my hand?”

“If you please,” answered Basil.

“It is my affection for your mother, my love for her daughters, and—I
ought to be ashamed perhaps to confess the weakness—and a lingering
esteem for you, that induce me to condescend to ask, why you presume
to refuse the hand—the hand, young man—that has fostered you?”

“Mr. Jericho,” said Basil, plunging into his subject, “are you aware
what the world says of you?”

“What?” asked Jericho, with a grim and ghastly smile.

“Why, it says that—common report, by the way, isn’t very choice in
its language—it says that you have sold yourself to the devil.”

Jericho rose, and with his sternest dignity and best composure,
asked—“Will you take the stairs, young man, or shall I have you
thrown out of the window?”

“Just one moment, sir, and when I’ve finished my business, I’ll make
my choice. You sent me some bank-notes, Mr. Jericho,” said Basil,
taking a letter from his pocket.

“I am almost ashamed to own it,” answered Jericho. “But I knew
that to a young man—-a youth of generous feelings—money was always
acceptable; and—yes I am ashamed to confess it—I was weak, foolish,
fond enough to supply you with a large sum of money.” Here Mr.
Jericho took out his pocket-handkerchief.

“I did not believe the story of the diabolic transfer,” said Basil;
and Jericho believed he had softened his son-in-law;—“not for want
of witnesses; because, we know, when the devil buys, two parties are
sufficient to the deed. That I know, allow me to say, as a moralist
and a lawyer.”

Jericho ventured to bow.

“I had heard the story of the duel; and inquired into it. As for the
bullet going through your heart, Mr. Jericho, and you still paying
the world the politeness to remain among us, I did not—though it
posed me at first—I did not believe that, either. The bullet was a
figure—the hole a metaphor—I was satisfied, and thought my mother
safe.”

“I respect your filial anxiety, Mr. Pennibacker, though it is so
ridiculously needless. Ha! ha! Then you were satisfied of the
insanity of Doctor Dodo? By the way, poor man! I’m sorry for
him—sorry for his family. Of course, his practice is gone; no man’s
life safe in his hands. Poor fellow! Well, well, we’re frail, feeble
creatures. Very arrogant in our wisdom, and yet—let a pin’s point
touch the brain, as Doctor Stubbs well observes—and where are we?
However, the poor Doctor’s family shall not starve. No: I shall most
assuredly provide for his widow and children.” But with all this,
Jericho failed to call forth any cordial love from Basil’s face. He
sat stern and self-sustained.

“You sent me this letter, Mr. Jericho,”—said Basil—“with bank-notes?”

“A thousand pounds in—I believe—in hundreds,” answered Jericho
carelessly.

“May I ask, sir, where you took these notes?” asked Basil.

“Where! What is that to you, sir?” and Jericho began to chafe. At
last, with a forced smile, as though disdaining himself for the
condescension, he said—“they’re new notes, ar’n’t they?”

Basil looked at Jericho, and then at the notes. Then he crumpled
the paper in his fingers, and the sympathetic heart—the heart of
money—felt a pang, and Jericho was, for a moment, drawn up in his
chair, knees to chin. Basil eyed him with a fierce look—eyed the
notes. “Humph!” he said, “Odd, tough paper! And the marks don’t look
like ink, but black blood.”

“What do you mean, villain?” cried Jericho; and—it was a momentary
flash of thought, of will—and Jericho saw Basil, dallying as he was
with the secret, silenced, killed, put out of the way.

[Illustration: _The perforated Bank Note._]

“And the hole, sir! Do you mark?” and Basil smoothed out a note.
“Odd, isn’t it? Just the round of a pistol bullet,” and Basil
advanced the perforated paper under the very nose of Jericho, who,
fallen in his chair, shrank up bodily from the note as from a spear’s
point. “Come, sir,” cried Basil, “confess at once.”

“Why, what is the matter? Confess!” cried Mrs. Jericho, who
had lingered near the door, and, alarmed and confused by the
half-sentences that reached her, re-entered the library. “Confess
what?”

“I will confess,” said Jericho: “and I could only wish that all the
world could hear me; that all the world might know your baseness,”
and the Man of Money glared at Basil.

“Baseness! Impossible! Dearest Solomon!” cried Mrs. Jericho.

“My love,” said Jericho: “I have acted weakly—I own it. Condescending
to the prejudices of society, in a rash moment, I consented to fight
a duel.”

“The rumour, Solomon, had reached me; but I would not reproach you:
no; I have struggled with my feelings, and been silent. You cared not
to make me a widow,” said Mrs. Jericho, “but heaven knows I forgive
you.”

“I received my adversary’s ball here,”—said Jericho, spreading his
hand over his heart. “A poor man must have been killed, but there is
a fate that watches over property. I was providentially preserved by
my money. I hope I am thankful,” and Jericho carefully wiped his dry
eyes.

“Proceed—I conjure you,” exclaimed Mrs. Jericho, with an alarming
gush of tenderness.

“I carried my pocket-book here: ’twas full of notes, the ball went
through every one of them; and”—

Mrs. Jericho shrieked, as though the peril was imminent.

“And stopt short at my shirt,” and Jericho paused.

“I breathe again,” exclaimed the thankful wife.

“Well, my dear, I now come to my confession. I had intended to
present your son with a handsome amount on his approaching
birth-day. I sent him a thousand pounds. It now appears—for the
circumstance had escaped me—that the notes were among those
perforated by the pistol-ball. I might have thought”—and Jericho
tried to feel much hurt—“that such perforation would have enhanced
the value—yes, of a thousand pounds; but, I regret to say it, the
young man is hardened—bronzed against the finest emotions of the
soul—even when recommended by money. Madam, he is incorrigible.”

Mrs. Jericho was wholly won by the story of her husband. Kind, good,
generous creature! So liberal to Basil. She sent to Jericho a look of
thankful fondness, and then shook her head at her abashed offspring.

Yes—abashed. Basil was puzzled by the ingenuous confession of his
father-in-law. For a moment he felt a touch of remorse, and was about
to spring forward and seize Jericho’s hand. And then he paused, and
doubt came up again. “If I am wrong, Mr. Jericho—if I have been rash
and rude, I shall be glad, delighted, sir, to ask your pardon. But
you must allow me to take a little time—to sift my evidence a little
finer. Meanwhile, sir, you may impound the money,” and Basil laid the
notes before Mr. Jericho. “Good bye, my dear mother; you’ll hear, I
hope, good news of me soon. Am on the high road of happiness, and
hope soon to put up at All Earthly Bliss.”

“A strange, wild creature,” said Mrs. Jericho, following her son with
loving looks as he darted from the room. “But good—yes, dear, believe
it, good. His heart, I know it, is in its right place. And these”—and
Mrs. Jericho took up the ten hundred pound notes with a hole in
each—“and these protected _your_ heart! Henceforth, to me they are
enhanced beyond all price.—Yes, Jericho—Solomon—husband,” and the
fond wife carefully folded up the bank notes, and as carefully placed
them in her bosom, laying her guardian hand above them—“yes, I shall
treasure them. No power—none, Jericho—shall tear them from me. They
saved your life, and to me they are hereafter beyond all price.”

Jericho endeavoured to look resigned—pleased. Such devotion flattered
him, though he could not but feel that it cost him a thousand pounds.

(With respect to the hole in the heart, let us clear up as we
proceed. In a very little while every bank-note was perfect as
before. This was to be expected. When a heart is wholly made of
money, how can it long feel the worst of wounds?)




CHAPTER XV.


And Mr. Jericho went on, a rejoicing conqueror. His huge town
mansion, burning with gold—the very domain of upholstery, massive,
rich and gorgeous, for the Man of Money was for the most substantial,
the most potent development of his creed, whereby to awe and oppress
his worshippers—his house, in its wide hospitality, embraced, as
Jericho devoutly believed, the world. Let all mankind outside his
walls suddenly sink and die, and he would be convinced that still
under his roof-tree were gathered together all the men and women who
composed the heart, the kernel of human life. The earth might be
replenished and set up again all the better, the finer; both for what
was lost, and what was spared. The kernel might grow kernels, without
husk or straw.

And comfortable, happy people, with the bread of competence and
the butter of comfort inch-thick, would nevertheless marvel at the
imagined happiness, the life-long rapture of Jericho. And honest,
well-to-do folk, from country homes would stare at Jericho House
as though it was made of a single diamond cut into chambers and
banquetting-halls: for it was to them a magnified Mountain of Light,
albeit they had never heard of the jewel. And London paupers stared
at the walls, as though they saw in them a strange, fantastic
reflection of their own rags and wretchedness; and took a savage
pleasure, a malicious joy in seeing their hungry faces flung back
from the House of Gold. And there were others who delighted, though
they tasted not of his labours, in all that Jericho did: they
instinctively loved him for his money, although they had no hope of
a farthing of it. Nevertheless was he to them a mighty power—a great
presence; one of the wonders of our mortal state. Could Mr. Jericho
have papered the sky with bank-notes, these impartial admirers would
have sung praises to the work and the workman. It would have been
a marvellous triumph of wealth; to be honoured by the well-to-do
accordingly.

Nevertheless, so headstrong, so self-destructive was Basil
Pennibacker, that he refused to cross the threshold of Jericho House.
He resolved to break for ever with the Man of Money. He had made his
last essay upon his own spirit; and impulsive and indignant, it rose
above the politic restraint. He would touch no farthing of Jericho’s
means; he would, in his own want, be nevertheless his own man of
money.

Basil sat in his chamber writing. A letter lay before him. It was
from his mother—the last of many, sent day after day—entreating him
to Jericho House. All the world would be there only too glad to show
delight upon the occasion; for it was Basil’s birth-day. On that day,
he came of age. On that day, he gave a quittance to natural and legal
guardians; and became invested with the rights of citizen. On that
day, in Basil’s own words, he was free to sit down in Parliament, if
he could only find a seat. On that day, he took possession of man’s
estate—with _his_ purposes and aspirations, a glorious heritage! And
Basil proposed to keep his birth-day in finest state, too, though
not at the board of his legal father. And this determination he
had again written—had folded and scaled the letter, when the clock
struck twelve. Basil rose to his feet at the first stroke, and,
with self-communing looks, paused until the hour was told. In that
brief space, he had entered into a compact with his heart, and—with
uplifted eyes—silently asked for strength to maintain it.

Basil then cast a heap of papers in the flames—letters and other
records of his dead, disowned life—and, as he stood leaning at the
fireside, watching the destruction of notes and recollections once
so treasured; as he looked down upon the curling flames, and now
and then tossed back some scattered fragments to the burning heap,
he laughed a moment as in contempt of his olden idols—for he had
worn some of those things in his bosom, had kissed them with his
lips, had read their words, as though he caught their syllables from
speaking mouths. And now he laughed; and the next moment a grave look
rebuked the levity. The flames went out; the papers were consumed;
and casting one look at their ashes, specked with dying fire, Basil
went to his rest. He had fulfilled his self-promise; had accomplished
his first work. He had, as he purposed, seen his birth-day in alone:
in due and solemn state—as he was fain in after-times to avow; with
preparation and with ceremony befitting the crowning One-and-Twenty.

Basil rose early on his birth-day. He was up and out; for he feared
to be waylaid by his mother and sisters—and he had resolved, and it
was hardly the day to begin with weakness, not to be made the show at
Jericho House. And he felt anger, pity, that Bessy and her father and
mother—the girl so sweet, so gentle; the old man with so cheery and
strong a heart; and the wife so soft and patient, with not a frown or
angry word for fortune—should be forgotten, cast aside like holiday
garments sported and worn out:—that his mother and sisters should
do this—should value his love for the daughter of a ruined man, as
a mere caprice—a wayward generosity, which, with any other youthful
freak, would last its time, and then subside and die—gave him the
heart-ache, not unmixed with shame—the sharp shame that comes with
blushes for those we love.

Basil, we say, left home early, resolved in his own fashion to
celebrate his coming of age. It was the first day he showed to the
world,—a citizen. He had determined to strip himself for the race
of life, casting aside all needless trappings; all foolish cumbrous
pride; all vanities, that at their best bladdery lightness, take much
room; and sometimes, make much idle noise. He would start in his
path like a runner in his course. But he shall give the history of
the day—an odd, curious day for a newly-risen heir—in his own words.
He shall give it as he narrated it years after; when the flush of
youth had passed from his brow; and in manly maturity of strength
and beauty, with some forty years descended with grace and goodness
on his head; some forty years hardening his cheek; and looking with
sober sweetness from his eyes,—he told the story of his twenty-first
birth-day, to his eldest boy aged eighteen.

“It was after this manner, Basil”—for the boy though some time
distant from the world, is upon arrival to have his father’s
name—“after this manner, boy.

“Up and early through the city to the fields; and there, in the eye
of God, my knees upon their kindred clay, my spirit seeking its
hoped-for home—I asked a blessing on the day. I prayed that my heart
might feel the freshness of life, even as my body felt in every limb
the freshness of the morning earth. I prayed that my soul might be
lighted, even as my sight, with the glory that from the gates of
heaven streamed upon the world. I prayed that I might carry through
my days the mingled feelings of that time.—The constant touch of
earth that warned me whence I came—the flooding light of heaven that
showed me where I’d go.

“And then, Basil, I walked about the fields, and began to school
myself—making little moralities by the way—to see nothing common
in my path, wheresoever it fell—still to wonder at a blade of
grass, with its thousand veins, carrying up and down the nourishing
green blood. And then, I would lay down awhile, and listen to the
lark—there is a mighty orchestra in fields and woods, if we would but
cultivate the ear to attend to the musicians,—listen until my blood
throbbed in my ears, and I sprang to the earth, bounding with joy
and life. And then, I peeped in and out of hedges, plucking little
gentle, bashful flowers, that looked so beautiful in the light, and
preached this lesson—one of the many of the day—to him who plucked
them; to look tenderly, thoughtfully for humble worth,—the hedge
flowers of the world; the very poor relations, but still relations,
of the lilies of the field.

“After an hour or two, I felt it must be time for breakfast; and
I resolved to take the meal in patriarchal state. And I moreover
resolved, on this day, to take a lesson of temperance. So I pitched
upon a little bit of a hillock, no higher than a woolsack, with a
tall poplar in the middle of it. Well, I lay myself down, and laid
my breakfast. Rolls, and butter, a bottle of milk and hard eggs. But
the moment I was about to fall to, a bird, perched on the top branch
of the tree, piped away, as though giving me especial welcome to his
breakfast parlour: pausing to acknowledge the creature’s civility, my
breakfast still remained untasted. Just as the music was finished, a
miserable woman—a moving bundle of rags—with three children, crawled
round a corner of the hedge and paused, and for the moment, seeing
my breakfast, looked as though they beheld the Land of Promise (if,
indeed, such misery had been ever cheered with the tidings of it).

“And now there were four unexpected guests—four hungry mouths that,
without uttering a syllable, had declared for my breakfast. The
wretched woman’s eyes shone with an uncomfortable light; a glittering
sharpness, as she saw the food. And the children though they never
stirred a foot—the bread and butter seemed to drag their hungry heads
and shoulders forward. A grand opportunity this for self-discipline.
Providence had so ordered it, that I might open my Twenty-First
Birth-Day in a goodly and hopeful manner. I gladly acknowledged the
occasion; and, at a word, called the woman and her children to the
outspread meal—there was not enough for all of us—and yielding my
place, departed. It was plain the woman thought me mad. She watched
me as I ascended the hill; and—I could see—wondering at the stranger,
sat down with her children, doubtless thanking her fortune that had
that day sent her a lunatic. And this was my breakfast when I came of
age—so began my trial birth-day.

“I made my way back to the town, that I might go on with my lessons:
for I determined to study one matter or the other until I returned to
bed. I walked in the Park. There was a drill-serjeant at work with
a score or so of young recruits; human clods in scarlet livery. It
was odd, and in my humour, sad to see with what pains and care the
master-man thumped and punched and rapped and rebuked his louting,
goggling, shambling, prentices. With what serene stupidity they took
a tap upon the knuckles, as though the cane was some light prettiness
of office—some radiant peacock’s feather; nought uglier or heavier,
descending. Curious, too, to see how contentedly these lumps of
men would swallow an oath and curse flung at them, as though the
blasphemy and malediction were an expected part and portion of their
daily bread. And so these civil babes and sucklings were swathed and
bandaged, and set upon their legs, and taught to walk, and shoot, and
stab, and—upon severe occasions—to throw firebrands among cottage
thatch, and bomb-shells upon consecrated churches. And I thought this
a sad sight; spectacle of folly, and crime, and ignorance. And I
determined, for my life forward, whenever I heard of glory, to think
and speak of it, as an evil in the ornaments of greatness—a harlot
in jewels and a crown; and these filched from the transmuted toil of
the peasant and the craftsman. And this was the next lesson of my
birth-day.

“Then I wandered to a famous spot.—It was where, in the olden time,
the great grim men in power—who wore authority, as though authority
should have the look and manners of an ogre, not of a sage—set up
the pillory wherein men were punished for having souls with more
than the proper daring and stubbornness of souls. Souls that would
have their own opinions, as their masters had their own teeth; to
digest for themselves, and not take in the spoon’s-meat of power,
with thankful looks for what was given them. And the bodies corrupted
with these wicked and rebellious souls were placed in the pillory—and
approaching the spot, I bowed to the place; the martyr-field of
opinion. And—perhaps, it was that I was hungry, and with empty
stomachs, men, they say, have sometimes wandering heads, but my
son”—(the reader, we trust, has not forgotten that Basil is all
the while talking in this page by anticipation—compelled to do so
by the tyranny of the quill, to his unborn boy Basil, junior)—“but
my son, I winked, and when I looked again, there, indeed, was the
pillory: but not the pillory of punishment; not the dry, meagre
wood; the hungry flesh-devouring timber.—No: the blood that had run
about it carried strange virtue with it; a strange excellence, under
the brooding wings of time. The naked wood imbibed the stream; and
the bare pillory became leafy as laurel, and fruitful as the vine:
the leaves of a strange sort, but undying; and filled with a sweet
perfume that scented far around. And the fruit was of a curious, a
delicious kind; bite and bite as you would, the lovely pulp returned,
the wound healed; now bitten, and now whole. Well, my boy, having
had my day-dream—my vision of the pillory—I learned to strive to
look backward with thankful looks: I learned to read the suffering
of the man by the light of his time, and—with all love for the
living—to have gratitude for the dead. We are too apt to bury our
accounts along with our benefactors; to enjoy the triumphs of others,
as though they were the just property of ourselves. Now, to think
against this, was another lesson—a lesson learned in the Place of
Pillory—of my birth-day.

“And then I looked into a Court of Law—then into a Church—then went
upon ’Change,—and in every place tried to divide man from his double
or false man—from the artificial twin-self that so often walks about
the world with him in profane places, and sometimes in sacred temples.

“And I went into miserable lanes, where human creatures styed like
swine, had little beyond the swine’s instinct,—to eat and drink, and
gabble brutishly. And even here, I learnt to reverence the human
heart, for, in some foul place, some very nest of misery,—there,
it would flourish in its best beauty, giving out even in such an
atmosphere the sweets of love, and charity, and resignation. It was
in one of these places, I took a crust for my dinner; and tried to
swallow a life-long lesson of patience, and contentment with the meal.

“And this and these were the lessons I tried to learn on my
twenty-first birth-day. Coming to man’s estate, I lost no time, you
see, but set out to contemplate for that day what it was that lay
about me.”

       *       *       *       *       *

The reader, who has advanced somewhat more than eighteen years, to
read the foregoing confession, will be pleased to turn back on the
road, it is to be hoped satisfied with the employment of Basil, whom
we left at early morn setting out for his birth-day work. We take
it there are few who thus upon the threshold of manhood welcome
one-and-twenty. Who knows? The example of Basil may beget followers.

Early the next morning, Basil took his road to Primrose Place. He
had resolved at once to ask Bessy of her father. He would not accept
a shilling of Jericho; he would not compromise his conscience by
submitting to the poorest obligation at his hands; nevertheless, he
felt in his heart such a spring-tide of hope and happiness, that
the worst worldly difficulties were but as a hedge of thorns, to be
thrust aside by an arm of resolution.

Mr. Carraways was alone: deep in his book; and more and more
assured that he was securing a stock of knowledge that should make
him flourish at the antipodes. It was a little late, as poor Mrs.
Carraways would meekly, sadly suggest, for such removal; but the
old man with every day and hour, assured his wife—assured Bessy,
who though she tried to smile and look content, pined and withered
beneath the sentence—that it was the only place for broken men to
grow whole again. They would yet see him in the fulness of fortune;
and he would yet leave his girl with the dowry of a lady.

“Good morning, Basil,” said the old man, with somewhat forced
politeness; for though he had a true regard for the youth he cared
not to see him so often at Primrose Place as in old times at Jogtrot
Lodge. However, the ship would sail soon, and, with this thought,
Carraways called up his old look of cordiality, and gave his old
grasp of the hand. “Why, you are out early for a reveller, eh? After
your doings, last night?”

Basil stared. He then remembered: Carraways doubtless spoke of the
festival held at Jericho House, in honour of the absent. He would not
explain this. He merely said—“I take but little sleep, sir.”

“Humph! How’s that?” asked Carraways. “But the fact is, Basil, you
seem changed altogether. I sometimes think that one of the judges has
lost his gravity, and you’ve picked it up: for after all, it doesn’t
seem very well to fit you. I hardly know if I like you so well in it
as in the boy suit. However, you’re right, lad. Be grave betimes:
’tis best, and prepares you before hand for the knocks that are
certain to come. Though, to be sure, if a man may count upon a bright
and easy road—a path of diamond dust with rosebud borders, like the
gardens in the fairy book—you are the man.”

“Indeed, sir,” and Basil shook his head, “I think—that is, I know you
mistake my path of life. ’Tis not so fine; and more, I hope not so
tedious as that you see for me. In a word, I shall owe nothing to Mr.
Jericho.”

“Indeed! What, quarrelled with him? I’m sorry for that. You should
remember your interest, Basil.”

“There, my good sir, without a thought you speak a wisdom that,
with a thought, you despise. I shall try to make interest one with
honesty; if it succeeds, why, the profits will bring the best sweets
of gain; if it fails, why still it leaves something behind; it is not
all beggary.”

“Very good, very excellent, Basil”—said Carraways—“nevertheless, you
must not cast away Mr. Jericho. He is a strange man, no doubt. If
half that’s said of him be true, a very strange man. But then again
only that very half, said of the most of us, would make a deuced
alteration in the best looking,—the most punctual and respectable.
Therefore, not half—no, not a twentieth part that’s said—is to be
listened to. Nevertheless Basil”—and, despite of himself, Carraways
looked grave, and felt the craving of curiosity—“nevertheless do you
know, it is all about the world that your father-in-law, a few days
since, received a pistol-bullet through his heart, and that moreover
his heart has a hole through it at this very moment?”

“Yes, I have heard the story,” said Basil. “One of the jokes of”—

“Ha! Well, I thought so; a joke is it? Bessy would have it that it
meant nothing more than a fable—or hieroglyphic—or something of that
sort. Of course, I knew that. I knew a man couldn’t live with a hole
in his heart,” for all which Carraways seemed a little disappointed
at Basil’s half-explanation at the moment. Common truth fell like
cold water upon the awakened fancy of the old merchant; with the
greater shock, as it was rare indeed that he laid himself out for an
enjoyment of the extraordinary.

“And now, sir,” said Basil, and he almost trembled as he spoke, “I
wish to address you upon the dearest question of my life.”

“Bless me!” said Carraways, and he gravely seated himself, and
motioned Basil to a chair. Then the old man, with a slight tremor of
hand, wiped his spectacles, replaced them on his nose, cleared his
throat, clasped his hands, and endeavoured to look the very study
of easy, unconscious courtesy—placid and polite. And at the time
the colour was tingling in his cheeks, and he felt his heart beat
distinctly, painfully.

In few stammering words, speech running freer as it flowed, Basil
spoke of his affection for Bessy. All that has been said since the
first father was first asked for the first daughter—if the reader
be capable of the task, may be imagined; and the most eloquent and
affectionate phrases assorted from the mountain of words, to piece
out at the bravest and best the declaration of Basil. At length he
paused. Carraways pressed his hand, and looked mournfully in the
young man’s face.

“My dear young man,” said the father, “once, when the fortune was of
our side, I should have been glad to hear this. I should have been
proud of you as a husband for Bessy. Now, it can’t be.”

“Why not? Indeed, dear sir, I”.—

“We have not a shilling, Mr. Pennibacker. Not a shilling. We have
just scraped together a loan—a gratuity—alms—whatever the world may
call it, to take ourselves out of the way. I will not quarter my
family upon your relations. Quarter! Why, ’twould be the town-talk
that that cunning old fox Carraways had gulled a foolish boy—the Man
of Money’s son—to marry a beggar girl. And all to end his own days in
clover. No, sir; no. You’re very good, Basil; you mean this honestly,
nobly; I’m sure you do; but you’ll think better of it; and with
the prospects that await you—with the part you have to play in the
world—in a little while, you’ll thank me for refusing you.”

“No, sir, no: for your refusal—though I can fully value the integrity
of its meaning—will change into consent, when you become assured that
no influence, no argument of wealth or station, can make me debtor
to Mr. Jericho for a single shilling. I will provide for my wife—for
Bessy”—

“You are very good,” said Carraways, melting somewhat at the passion
of the youth, “very good; but the fact is, my dear lad—and make
your mind up once and all to hear it—the fact is, Bessy is already
provided for.”

“Provided! Already!” cried Basil, and the young man turned pale as a
corpse, and shook from head to limb.

Carraways was yet more affected by the youth’s emotion. Kindly he
took Basil’s hand—“I mean, my good boy—don’t mistake me, I wouldn’t
be mistaken; for I can live back my life”—and the old man’s eyes
glistened, and his voice trembled—“live it back in my memory to the
very moment, when I asked for Bessy’s mother,—and I—I can feel for
you, my lad; believe it, Basil; I can, boy—I can,” and Carraways
stood shaking Basil’s hand, his eyes swimming the while,—begging him
to dismiss the matter from his mind, and be “a good boy and a man.”

“I entreat you, good sir—I entreat you, by the precious memories you
speak of—tell me what it is you mean! Bessy provided”—

“I mean with a—a ship,” said Carraways, with forced cheerfulness.

“A ship?” exclaimed Basil.

“Yes—a ship,” answered Carraways. “And I remember, I have an
appointment with the Captain. So if you will, you shall walk part of
the way with me?” A proposition that, as the reader will conclude,
the politic lover immediately assented to.




CHAPTER XVI.


Nothing could have been more perfect—more complete—than the
magnificent festival at Jericho’s house, in nominal honour of the
coming of age of Basil Pennibacker. At an early hour, Basil’s
chambers had been beset; beautiful presents and delicate bouquets
were sent to the student, and they who brought them found no one
to relieve the porters, no one to utter a word to them. All the
greeting they met with, was mutely delivered from a piece of written
paper, wafered outside the inhospitable door. The greeting ran as
follows:—“_To all who may present themselves. Mr. Basil Pennibacker
has gone out to spend the day with One-and-Twenty Friends. May not
return till to-morrow. No relatives admitted (on this day) either on
business or pleasure. Vivat the Tenant._” For all this, Mr. Jericho
felt assured that Basil would, some time of the evening, present
himself. The hours wore on, and though the hostess and the young
ladies were now and then anxiously, nay affectionately examined
upon the probable causes of Mr. Basil’s absence,—after a while, all
the world resolved to forget the cause of the junket, almost as
entirely as though it had been a funeral festival of the olden day; a
pottle-pot carouse in memory of the new deceased. And then, let every
fair excuse be charitably received. Folks had their own affairs to
attend to; their own little interests to look after—their own mortal
appetites to appease. Between four and five hundred people came to
do honour to Jericho’s household gods, honouring his son-in-law.
And if Basil could have flattered himself that his absence would
cast ten minutes’ cloud above that brilliant mob, very much indeed,
could he have taken a peep at it, would he have been rebuked for his
presumption. As we have said, people had their own affairs to mind.

Mrs. Jericho had, it is true, a mother’s heart, and every five
minutes—hour after hour—looked where Basil might appear; and as the
time wore on, and there was no Basil, the mother now drooped, and now
roused herself into some sudden happiness—some violent enjoyment at
some poor platitude, stamped for true wit, with impress sharp enough
to be passed on and on for the true coin.

Monica Pennibacker was sorry, vexed, that Basil had not come; it
was so wayward, so foolish. Nevertheless, she could not sacrifice
the lover to the brother; and the Hon. Mr. Candituft had, no doubt,
confounded by the blaze of Monica’s beauty—for even the best of
beauty has its happy killing times—a beauty, accidentally assisted
by magnificent jewels,—committed himself, as a man of honour,
once and for ever. He had snatched five minutes—hardly five—to
speak definitely of marriage; he had many times played about the
subject,—and now he had walked up to the ring,—why, at a blow, Monica
self-sustained as an Amazon, referred the gentleman to her father.
The thing was done; and the Hon. Cesar Candituft had nothing more
for it than to dance off reflection till the morning. But no: Cesar
thought of Monica’s dowry, and was not the man to jest, even to
himself, upon so solemn a subject.

When we know more about the laws of electricity, it is probable
that there may be a new statute—a law of society—against so many
people meeting to dance. Who shall say,—that one man, nerved to the
deed, to make an offer of marriage, in a window-corner or any other
angle of a ball-room—does not in fifty other places, electrically
affect fifty other people? For all our present ignorance permits us
to interpret, as many rings as go to bed-curtains may at the same
moment pass from hand to hand. We do not wish to anticipate or force
opinion on this most serious subject. But as prosaic chroniclers of
a prosaic history, we must state this much; leaving the inference to
the reader.—Almost at the same moment that Mr. Candituft solemnly
proposed to Monica, Sir Arthur Hodmadod, urging the lady to name the
inevitable day, assailed sweet Agatha. At the same moment; for the
young ladies, ere they slept, compared the time by their own little
tiny repeaters.

Colonel Bones never appeared so well—never had so comfortable an air
as at the party. He seemed, for that night, to have washed away his
grimy pauper look, and entered into an understanding with himself
to display the gentleman. Perhaps it was the new habit acquired
by Colonel Bones, that gave a certain air of courtesy and glitter
to him; for Colonel Bones took snuff from a box set with lovely
brilliants, the gift of his dear friend and late antagonist, Solomon
Jericho.

Commissioner Thrush and Doctor Mizzlemist, also jewelled by the
Man of Money, were after their fashion blithe and happy; with the
fullest conviction of the sound-heartedness of their host. Indeed,
the hole in Jericho’s heart had, in the world’s opinion, closed
like a hole in sand: he had, by the force of his magnificence, so
conquered and confounded slander. Only one foe remained unbeaten; the
obstinate, pig-headed Dodo, who—wherever he could tear the hole open
afresh—would avow his faith in the diabolic existence of Jericho. And
people listened, then shook their heads, and—behind his back—pitied
poor Dodo. Very zealous friendship had moved Jericho to prosecute
the slanderer; but the Man of Money, with his own magnanimity
replied—“Put Doctor Dodo in court! No, poor man; I would rather put
him in a strait waistcoast.”

The day after the birth-day festival, Mr. Jericho sat in his library
in the happiest of humours. In a very quiet way, and in the shortest
possible time, he had won of Lord Bezant five thousand pounds. Lord
Bezant was one of the Duke of St. George’s friends; one of the superb
knot of men with whom his Grace, in the most condescending manner,
had made Jericho intimate. Five thousand pounds! A sum in itself
of little account to our Man of Money; but as an earnest of the
favours of fortune, of the first and dearest importance. For every
thousand that Jericho won upon dice or cards—he might, moreover,
under friendly guidance, be lucky on the turf—was so much substance
saved. True it was, that he made the birth-day feast given in the
name of Basil a victory to himself; true it was, he had his passing
time of triumph; but he saw, he felt the cost. He knew that every
farthing came from his heart; he knew that to make such outward show
he had shrunk and dwindled to fearful tenuity. Hence, he now slept
apart; solitary in his chamber. He had no doubt of his vitality;
nevertheless, the principle of his wealth might wear him to a rag, a
shred; and, at the worst, this must be unknown. Therefore, we say, it
was a new delight to Jericho when a belief in his constitutional good
luck dawned upon and deepened in him. Men—a happy few—had carried
from the gambling table the splendours of wealth, and why should not
he be one of fortune’s—or the fiend’s—elect?

Jericho, since his introduction to the Duke of St. George—who had so
handsomely circulated the plebeian among a host of noble friends—had
never played that he had not risen a winner. Altogether, in the
merest point of time, he had won some fifteen thousand pounds. As
Jericho thought of this, he laid his hand above his paper heart, and
promised a long repose to the fund. Fortune had no doubt fallen in
love with him, and would give him all he asked. Therefore he would
make the grand tour, and—the Napoleon of Trumps—break every bank in
Europe.

Could Mrs. Jericho, bound as she was, upon the tenderest of missions,
break upon her lord in happier hour? Serene and softened by the
conviction of his destined magnificence, he was a little disposed
to enter, by way of passing amusement, into the sympathies and
affections of his people about him.

“No news of Basil,” said Mrs. Jericho: “but, be assured, Solomon, his
absence was no intended affront.”

“Don’t name it, my dear. He was not missed. To please you, we did
honour to his birth-day. The day was a graceful excuse for the
fête—and as the fête was all that was required, why no doubt,
everybody was pleased. At least, I saw no disappointment,” and
Jericho softly whistled.

“Nevertheless, for all his folly and perverseness—and I must blame
him for his conduct—for all his ill-manners, and I cannot wholly
justify him, I am sure, Solomon, sure that Basil loves you.”

“If such is your opinion, Mrs. Jericho, I must make up my mind to
suffer it.”

Mrs. Jericho thought she would not persevere in the theme: therefore,
with sudden vivacity, she changed the subject. “My dear, of course
you are aware that our girls must, some time or the other, settle in
life?”

“Your girls, my dear, have my free permission to settle when and
where they will.”

“I was sure of that, dear. I certainly think with our present
position we ought to have commanded something better than a younger
brother for Monica. Nevertheless, as Candituft is your friend, and
I believe a good creature—and as they seem determined to have one
another, why, why should we thwart them?”

“Why, indeed?” asked Jericho, very calmly.

“Sir Arthur Hodmadod,” said Mrs. Jericho, in a tone of apology for
the gentleman, “is certainly a fool”—

“What of that?” asked the philosopher. “Surely the family can bear
one fool—eh? Wise enough for that?”

“My dear Solomon, you know best of course. To be sure, had we been
tainted with worldly ambition, there is no doubt that we might have
married our children in the very heart of the peerage, but”—

“I’m quite content as matters stand,” said Jericho.

“As I say, you know best. Well, Monica informs me—and I thought,
my love, I would prepare you—that Mr. Candituft intends to see you
to-day; formally to ask your daughter at your hands.”

“Indeed. Well, as far as I’m concerned, I’ll give her to him with the
greatest pleasure in life.”

“Don’t speak with such levity, love; don’t,” said Mrs. Jericho
mildly; “marriage is not a mere bargain.”

“Certainly not. Solemn compact—very solemn compact:” and again
Jericho whistled.

“Well, then, Solomon, as you consent, what do you propose to give
with the dear child?”

“Give, Mrs. Jericho! I’ll give a magnificent party on the occasion.
More than that, I think—nay, I’m sure that to please me and honour
you—my friend the Duke”—it was thus Jericho began to speak of his
Grace of St. George—“my friend the Duke will give the wench away.”

“’Twill add a perfume to the orange blossoms,” cried Mrs. Jericho
with a gush of sentiment. “’Twill, if possible, add a solemnity to
the ceremony. But I mean what dowry do you give?”

“Dowry! I thought, my dear, you observed that marriage was no
bargain? Why, you’re making it quite a ready money transaction.”

“Now, my dear Jericho, I admire your wit. It is brilliant,
delightful—and I assure you, I am as proud of all your brilliant
sayings, quite as proud as if they were my own. But this is”—

Here the servant entered with the card of “The Hon. Mr. Candituft.”

“Show him in,” said Jericho with an instant decision.

“My dear,” exclaimed Mrs. Jericho, hurrying to depart, “I leave
Monica in your hands. I know your noble heart; I’m sure you will
treat her like a gentleman and—and a father.” With this confiding
speech Mrs. Jericho hastened from the room. Meeting Candituft at the
door, she took his hand with the greatest cordiality, and with the
prettiest ignorance of the purpose of his visit.

“’Pon my life, my dear sir,” said Candituft, “I never saw such luck
as you had last night.”

“Why, yes,” said Jericho, swelling into figure, “I think the blind
goddess smirked a little on me.”

“With such luck, had you set in for play, why, sir, before you rose
you might have been owner of Zebra Park. Not but what upon principle
I detest gambling. It is a vice destitute of the finer emotions
that ought ever to exist among the family of man. Nevertheless, if
a simpleton like Lord Bezant will be ruined, I do think he ought to
fall to the lot of a gentleman and a wise man,” and Candituft bowed
to Jericho. “It is devilish annoying to see a fool flung away upon a
mere vulgar brute of luck. It jars one’s sense of propriety. No, at
least, gentlemen ought to ruin gentlemen.”

“A beautiful motto, Candituft. Have it written up at the Club,” said
Jericho.

“Needless, my dear sir, quite needless; ’tis in the hearts of the
members. And now, my dear friend, for you are my friend,” said
Candituft, with his every-day emotion, “I have a delicate business to
open to you. An affair affecting the happiness of”—

“Go on,” said Jericho, quite prepared for the ordeal.

“But first let me not forget my friend,” said Candituft. “Hodmadod
is, we know, a fool.”

Jericho, nursing his knee, replied, “I do not think the Parliament
assembled could have the face to deny it.”

“Nevertheless, a very good creature, and, I dare say, will make a
good husband. Yes, he’ll drive well in the wedding-ring.”

“Let us hope so,” replied Jericho, prepared for the best or the worst.

“But he’s bashful as—as—’pon my life, I’m at a loss for a simile. And
as he and I are old friends, and as he knew that I should see you—in
fact, he’s in the house this moment; came along with me—He desired me
to inform you that Miss Agatha had consented to fix the—the—what d’ye
call it—the happy day.”

“Wish them joy,” said Jericho. “My friend the Duke shall give her
away.”

“As to the young lady’s dowry,” and Candituft hesitated.

“I can’t give a farthing. Can’t afford it, my dear Candituft,” and
the Man-Tamer laughed at the declaration as at an intended jest.
“Can’t afford it. Besides, think of the girl’s beauty, talents,
temper!”

“They have all had their full influence upon my friend. And
Arthur—good, silly fellow!—is not avaricious. Besides, he has a
handsome property of his own; and I’m sure he’ll be delighted, happy
to marry the young lady merely for herself.”

“That’s true love—Cupid, as you see him in the valentines, without
any property,” said Jericho.

“Of course, my good friend, you will bestow a handsome outfit and”——

“To be sure. Half-a-dozen of every thing,” said Jericho, and he
laughed hugely at the joke: and the Man-Tamer, as in friendship
bound, laughed his best in concert.

“Well, I have fulfilled my mission, and saved the awkwardness of my
friend. You object not to the day, whenever it may be? And for the
dowry, I mean the outfit, we who know your heart, may safely leave
that to you. Yes, yes; Arthur, my good soft friend, Arthur, is a
happy man. Once I fondly thought that my dear sister—however”—and
Candituft sighed—“it was not to be. And now, sir”—

“Yes,” cried Jericho, quite prepared for what was coming. “Yes; go
on.”

“You may have remarked my affection for Miss Monica? You must have
remarked it?”

“I beg a thousand pardons,” said the wag Jericho, “but it has quite
escaped me.”

Candituft wanly smiled. The jest was ill-timed; nevertheless he could
not resent it from his friend. Therefore, he smiled and proceeded.
“In a word, my dear sir, we have come to the sweet conclusion that we
were made for one another.”

“Dear me! Well, how lucky you should have met! I dare say, now”—and
the cruel wit, with all his teeth and talons, played with the timid,
mouse-like heart of his victim—“I dare say, now, there are thousands
of people made for one another, at the present moment wandering about
the world without a chance of coming together. Indeed, seeing how big
the world is, and how very few people are really made to match, it’s
next to a miracle that they should ever meet at all. Eh?”

“My dear sir, your views of life are always so just,—are always
clothed in such graceful and convincing language that I cannot
answer, I can only admire and bow. I trust, my dear sir, you do not
oppose our love?” and Candituft shuddered at the dreadful suspicion.

“By no means,” said Jericho. “Marry, marry, and be as happy as you
can.”

“A thousand thanks. You are aware, my dear sir, that my family is
rich”—

“Eh?” cried the Man of Money.

“Rich in historical associations. The blood of the Canditufts
fructifies the fields of Cressy and Agincourt.”

“Humph! And what’s the crop—what’s the yield? I have a great respect
for blood, Mr. Candituft; it is, in this world, a very useful, a very
indispensable article. Nevertheless, blood in a field—no matter how
old—is not the best investment. I speak, you know, as a vulgar Man of
Money.”

“I was about to observe,” said the easy-tempered, but withal pensive
suitor, “that I have too pure, too deep an affection for Miss
Pennibacker, to make her the partner of only the glories of my house.
A bachelor, my dear sir, though poor, receives a lustrous honour from
the chivalry of his name; but it is an honour that, alone, will not
do to marry upon.”

“You mean,” and Jericho grimly grinned, “the honour that’s enough for
one is not enough for two.”

“Why, yes”—and Candituft hesitated—“I may say that is pretty well my
meaning.”

“And in this marriage with Miss Pennibacker, you propose to find the
chivalry, the honour, if I—if I find the money? Eh?” cried Jericho.

“Mr. Jericho”—and Candituft thought he would assert the nobility of
the blood in the grounds of Cressy and Agincourt—“Mr. Jericho, I do
not come to deal with you for your daughter, as I would come to a
grazier for”—

“What!” cried Jericho, jumping to his feet.

“I mean, desirous of maintaining Miss Pennibacker in that sphere
which she was born to delight and illustrate, I _must_ ask—you force
me to be plain—what will you give with the young lady?”

“Not a farthing,” cried Jericho. “Not one farthing,” said the Man of
Money with determined emphasis.

At this moment, quite casually, Mrs. Jericho entered the room. Seeing
the stern looks of Jericho, the rebuked aspect of Candituft, she
innocently inquired “What is the matter?”

“Pooh! you know well enough,” cried Jericho, “Mr. Candituft wants to
marry Nic.”

“I was certainly aware of the honourable object of Mr. Candituft’s
ambition,” said Mrs. Jericho.

“But that’s not all,” cried the Man of Money, “he wants to be
handsomely paid for the trouble.”

“Paid!” exclaimed the lady.

“Why, that’s the plain thing. Paid. He wants a dowry.”

“My dear, we will not talk upon the subject at present,” said Mrs.
Jericho. “I see you are in one of your sportive humours; in one of
your gay moods, when you will make merry with the happy state.”

“Quite so, my dear lady,” said Candituft. “But as you say, we will
not pursue the subject. Another time.”

“By no means; better have it out at once,” said Jericho.

“Don’t name it,” said Candituft. “In fact, my good sir,” and the
lover grew of a sudden cool and circumspect; “I think we had better
postpone the matter till a more benignant season.”

“Mr. Candituft!” exclaimed Mrs. Jericho.

“Happily,” said the prudent suitor, “Miss Pennibacker is yet in
the first blush and florescence of youth; and it may be, my dear
lady, that fortune, with an amended estimate of the maiden’s merits,
may find her a nobler, a richer, though not”—and Mr. Candituft
endeavoured with manly fortitude to suppress his emotion—“though not
a fonder husband.”

“I am sure of that,” said Mrs. Jericho; “I have every confidence in
you, my dear sir; and so has Mr. Jericho.”

“Any amount of confidence,” said the Man of Money. “Any amount.”

“And as Monica has fixed her heart upon the union”—

“’Twould be a great pity,” said Jericho, determined upon his humour,
“to baulk a bold intention. Why, Mr. Candituft, the young lady is
such a treasure in herself, that, upon my word, I think you ought,
when you marry her, to remunerate us for our loss. It has always
seemed to me that certain savages—as they are shamefully called—have
the advantage of us in their habits of marriage.”

“No doubt, my dear sir, if you think so,” said Candituft stiffly.
“For myself, I am in ignorance of the superiority.”

“I mean in the habit that reverses the transaction: when the husband
buys his wife of her father; and not as in our shamefully corrupt and
sophisticated condition, when the father buys a husband for his girl.
I have always set my face against the custom,—and I feel the time is
come that I should strike a blow at the prejudice.”

“Now, my dear Solomon,”—Mrs. Jericho knew it was no time to pursue
the subject, and she contemplated, with some anxiety, the deepening
gravity of Candituft—“my dear Jericho, we will say no more upon the
matter. In your present merry humour, you care nothing for people’s
affections. You play what tune you please on people’s heartstrings.
Oh, you wits!” and the wife tapped the hard, dim face of the
humourist Jericho.

“Well, well, let us have the jig out,” said the relentless wag.
“Sir Arthur proposes to make Aggy Lady Hodmadod—I hear the day is
named, though with great self-forbearance I’ve not asked whether it’s
to-morrow or next day.”

“My dear Solomon,” said Mrs. Jericho, “this is too much levity.”

“Not at all: and I don’t see why both the birds mayn’t be trussed
by the same parson. And so, after all, my good friend,”—and the
traitorous Jericho smiled.

“My dear sir,”—and Candituft with his best energy smiled in return.

“After all, let us settle the sum. Eh?”

“Be it as you will,” said Mrs. Jericho, with the best duty of a wife,
calling herself back to the subject.

“Well, then,” said the Man of Money, and for his own private purpose
of humour, he still smiled and coaxed his voice, “what sum would
satisfy you?” It was a delicate question to be put thus nakedly.
“Come, name a figure. Say five thousand pounds.” Candituft looked
blank at Jericho, moving not a muscle. “What do you think of seven?”
The Man-Tamer gently lifted his eye-brows, deprecating the amount.
“Come, then, we’ll advance to ten?” Candituft’s face began to thaw,
and he showed some signs of kindly animation. “At a word, then,”
cried Jericho, with affected heartiness, “will you take fifteen
thousand?”

“From you—yes,” cried Candituft, and he seized Jericho’s hand. The
Man of Money looked at Candituft with a contemptuous sneer, and with
a wrench twisted his hand away. He then dropt in his chair, and a
strange, diabolical scowl possessed his countenance. The Man-Tamer
shrank from his friend; Mrs. Jericho ran to her husband, but screamed
at the sudden change that seemed to blot out the human character of
his face. The Man of Money, with his own features, looked a devil.

“And where—where do you think this money is to come from? Where?”
asked Jericho, and he rose from his chair, and it seemed as though
the demon possessing him would compel the wretch to talk—would compel
him to make terrible revealings. Every word he uttered was born
of agony. But there he stood; forced to give out utterances that
tortured him. “I will tell you,” roared Jericho, “what this money
is. Look about you! What do you see? Fine walls—fine pictures—fine
everything. Why, you see me—tortured, torn, worked up, changed.
The walls are hung with my flesh: my flesh you walk upon. There,
that—that”—and Jericho pointed to the diamond on Candituft’s
finger—“that gem—that jewel, as bright as the sun in heaven—what is
it? Why, it’s my blood—my blood distilled, then hardened into stone.
I am worn piecemeal by a hundred thieves, but I’ll be shared among
them no longer.”

By this time, the girls and Sir Arthur Hodmadod, alarmed by the cries
of Jericho, had entered the room.

“And you had a fine feast, had you not?” cried the possessed Man of
Money, writhing with misery, and howling his confession. “And what
did you eat? my flesh—what did you drink? my blood.”

“It’s impossible,” cried Hodmadod, aghast. “When I say impossible”—

“The food, the wines, the gold and silver, all—all of me—and so
I’m shared to feed fools and make a show. To make a show,” Jericho
repeated, his voice sinking, and he fell, as in a fit, in his chair.

For some minutes he lay as though he had passed into sleep: and the
malignant expression gradually cleared from his face.

“Very odd,” said Sir Arthur, “very strange. Better send for Doctor
Stubbs.”

“Hush! it’s a fit, a passing fit; he’s better now, and fast asleep,”
said Mrs. Jericho, whilst the girls exchanged strange looks with one
another. “Fast asleep.”

“I congratulate you,” said Candituft to Hodmadod, as they both left
the room, “he consents to your marriage.”

“Does he?” asked Hodmadod, a little staggered by the courtesy.

[Illustration: _Excitement of the Man of Money._]




CHAPTER XVII.


A man may be possessed with an evil spirit, and yet be wholly
unconscious of the presence of his tenant. This may seem, at the
first blush, an impossible circumstance; nevertheless, we are upon
reflection convinced that thousands of good, well-meaning people,
carry about with them fitful, moody, captious, disorderly spirits,
and are, notwithstanding, the very last folks to acknowledge the
existence of the inmates. Now, it would seem that Mr. Jericho
had this ignorance in especial strength and perfection. He was
blessed with the happiest forgetfulness of the demon that, as was
shown in the last chapter, afflicted his wife, and astonished his
acquaintance. He had no after-thought of the unseemly words, of the
vulgar violence uttered and committed by his evil spirit. Poor man!
He was spared the pain, the humiliation of such knowledge; hence,
the fit over, the spirit laid, Jericho was as gay and debonair as
ever—quite.

To be sure, Mrs. Jericho had affectionate misgivings; and the young
ladies, with a keen memory of the wildness of their father-in-law,
looked with hopefulness quite natural to the day when they should be
delivered from his tyranny by the new benevolence of a husband. The
girls, with the simple confidence of their sex, were assured of the
devotion of their lovers. Poor things! Now Sir Arthur Hodmadod, with
sudden treachery, had contemplated instant flight. He was alarmed,
terrified, at the thought of marrying the daughter of a man with such
strange, such diabolic notions. Sir Arthur thought of the beneficial
effect of a run through Italy. He could not disguise it from himself,
that his heart was broken; and therefore, he was in the most
interesting situation for a few months’ exile. He would forget the
living beauties of Agatha in the refined abstractions of paint and
marble. He had promised himself some day to cultivate his taste for
art, and it was plain, the proper time was come. And then—and then
the lover remembered—(how, for an instant, could he have forgotten
it?)—that Agatha bore no taint of Jericho’s blood. No: she was a
Pennibacker; the daughter of a warrior! And with this happy thought,
Sir Arthur, with the mixed remorse and generosity of true affection,
arrayed the dear one with newer, richer graces. But a mistress is
never so captivating as when considered through the penitence of love.

The Hon. Cæsar Candituft had sterner thoughts of marriage.
Perhaps, too, he had larger views than his simple, gentle friend;
and so, placed upon himself a corresponding value. We believe
Sir Arthur—could he have been induced to think at all—would have
considered matrimony as a very pleasant little trip in a gay little
boat; with a bright sky, a smooth sea, and now and then a mermaid to
come up, and warble a song of love. Now, Candituft would not attempt
the voyage so embarked. He was for a secure craft, extremely well
victualled, and—to be ready for the worst—carrying the heaviest
metal. Therefore had Candituft resolved on the most guarded civility
to Monica: he would, if possible, kill the love within her by the
cutting coldness of his courtesy. For he had well-considered himself:
he had sat in impartial judgment upon his own claims to a wife; and
he was convinced that if he could be brought to persuade himself to
marry into the family of a lunatic, at least he would be well paid
for the daring. Thus, if Monica’s determination towards marriage
could live through the cold season that was immediately to set in—if
the hardy rose would smile through the frost—why, the flower, like
the Druid’s misletoe, should only be gathered with a golden blade.

A week wore on, and Candituft was only the more hardened in civility.
A week wore on, and Hodmadod was only the more melted in love. But
Monica would not feel the bitter season—whilst Agatha smiled and
glowed in the full flush of the sunny time. Sir Arthur, on his part,
was a little astonished that Candituft could for a moment hesitate
to seize his happiness at the altar’s foot, at the very time that
he, the baronet, was to be crowned with joy for ever. Whereupon
Candituft assured Sir Arthur that, for one day, it would be more
than sufficient bliss to see his friend made happy. He doubted his
strength to stand up against the double delight of double nuptials.
Hence, for his part, he would wait. But we have a little anticipated;
and have now to introduce a third party come upon a nuptial errand,
to the Man of Money.

Basil, it may be remembered, left Primrose Place with Mr. Carraways,
bent—as the old gentleman declared—upon business with the captain of
a ship bound for the antipodes. It is needless to repeat any part
of the conversation between the lover and the father, as they took
their way to the _Halcyon_, a magnificent vessel, lying in the docks
in all the seeming confusion of outfit. We will at once come to the
result of the dialogue carried on—oddly enough—amid all the activity
and clamour of London streets. Earnest as were the words of Basil,
passionate as were his looks—was there a single passenger, of the
hundreds that passed and passed, who could have divined that the
young man was at such an hour, and in such a place, telling the story
of his heart, pleading the passion of a life? Yet it was even so. And
the old man, in his best blunt way, opposed the ardour of the youth;
even whilst his father’s heart glowed and throbbed at the expression.
And then, as they walked onward, the old man spoke less and less, and
Basil became more voluble. At length, Carraways stopt, and taking
Basil’s hand, said in a low, thick voice—“Well lad; thus it is. If
there is no objection at your home, and you are sure of Bessy,—she’s
your’s. And now, not another word upon the matter; for I see we’ve no
time to lose.”

As we are modestly convinced that every tittle of this history will
in a hundred years or more be a theme for commentators—(the worthy
folks who too often write on books, as men with diamonds write on
glass, obscuring light with scratches)—as we know that this volume
will be very thickly annotated, we shall make one point clear;
namely, the precise spot where Carraways pronounced his consent.
Well, then; it was exactly opposite the Royal Exchange, under the
shadow of the grasshopper. No bad emblem of a poor yet cheerful
lover, with little but hope and blithe spirits to begin the world
upon.

Nevertheless—says somebody—an odd neighbourhood for men to ask and
give in marriage. Well, it may be. Still, Hymen has been known to
have his walk on ’Change, as well as common merchants; and what is
more, with as fine a sense of profit and loss, as though in boyhood
he had sat on the same form and thumbed the same arithmetic with
Mercury.

And Carraways, true to his promise, presented himself at Jericho’s
house. The Man of Money felt a joyous revenge as he eyed the ruined
merchant’s card. It was very natural to Jericho. Sir Gilbert
Carraways, the beggar, had treated him in the most shameful—the most
insolent spirit. The poor wretch had, in no way, acknowledged the
supremacy of his old friend’s wealth. No; his studied silence, his
absence from the house, conveyed the contemptuous feeling of the
pauper towards the rightful majesty of money. To be sure, Jericho had
not offered assistance; certainly not; it was not his place to undraw
his purse-strings, if people—ruined people—had not the due humility
to ask it. But now—there could be no doubt of it—Carraways was
come to beg for aid: he was at length taught by suffering a proper
reverence for cash. And with this thought, Jericho armed himself to
receive him. We write knowingly—armed himself. For as carefully, as
cunningly as ever knight endued his frame with plates of steel or
brass,—so did Jericho hang upon that thin, cold, shivering soul of
his, the tremendous panoply of bank paper.

It is a curious sight—is it not?—to see the Man of Money sternly
awaiting the advent of the rude, forgetful beggar. “Show him in,”
brays Jericho to the servant. John quits the room, to serve up the
pauper. But two minutes pass—and there sits Solomon Jericho dreadful
in his arms of money: his visage sharp and cruel, newly whetted,
gleaming with scorn. The fat, ruddy, good-tempered face—with meat and
wine in the look of it—that was wont to glow and grin at Carraways’
board, is prematurely old, and shrunk, and sharpened; the hungry
outline of felonious age.

Carraways enters the room. “Gracious heaven! Why, what is this?” For
never since the merriment at the Hall, had Carraways and Jericho met.
Never, of course, since Carraways departed this life in the gazette,
had he seen the Man of Money. Therefore was the merchant astounded
at the thing that sat before him—for Jericho did not rise to his old
friend; oh no—he knew the prerogative of money better than that—and
therefore, in his own natural way did Carraways give utterance to his
wonderment. “Is it possible?”

“I believe, sir,” said Jericho, and contempt wrinkled his face, and
his voice croaked, frog-like—“I believe I see Gilbert Carraways, who
was a merchant?”

“Who was a merchant, and is Gilbert Carraways still,” said the old
man.

“Late of Jogtrot Hall?” said Jericho, with a low chuckle.

“Yes,” repeated Carraways clearly, sonorously ringing the words,
“late of Jogtrot Hall, of Marigolds. Now, of a second floor, of
Primrose Place.”

“Ha! ha! Well, now, I like that,” cried Jericho. “I like a man who
can play with fortune. I like a man who, when the wench—she’s a queer
cat, fortune, isn’t she, Mr. Gilbert Carraways?—when she spatters him
with mud, can give her as good as she sends. Ha! ha! Well, if you
have been covered with dirt, you’re merry still. But, why haven’t you
come to see me?” asked Jericho with a sneer.

“Because of the dirt, Mr. Jericho. You see, you ride upon fortune’s
wheel; now I only get the mud from it.”

“Very good,” said the patron Jericho. “And I’m glad you can try to
make a joke, Mr. Carraways; it must be a great comfort to a poor man.
Why, now, I can understand how a beggar of a cold night, if he can
only muster up heart enough to make a joke, how it must be as good as
a truss of straw to him; mus’n’t it, eh, Mr. Carraways?”

“’Pon my word, Mr. Jericho, I haven’t yet tried the experiment. And
I do hope, you’ll never be brought to it; otherwise, I do think—try
as you may—you’ll sleep plaguy coldly. But I didn’t come here to talk
in this idle fashion.”

“I hope not,” said Jericho, sharpening his malice with his best
might. “I hope you came to tell me, when you propose to see us at
Jogtrot Hall. By the way, I’m going to change the name.”

“I hope so,” said Carraways very calmly.

“Yes; my friend the Duke of St. George—do you know the Duke?—-my
friend has promised to give me a new name for it. Though I think, out
of compliment to him, I shall call it George and Garter Lodge. You
know, Mr. Gilbert Carraways, there’s no telling what one may come to.”

“No, Solomon Jericho,” said the merchant. “Still, just now, you must
have one comfort; you can’t come to less than you are.” Jericho
called up all his thunder to his brows. “Surely,” said Carraways
tranquilly, as though he was speaking of some monstrous abortion of
nature—“surely, ’tis wonderful! Why, my good man”—

“Good man!” roared Jericho.

“My good man,” and Carraways doggedly repeated the epithet, “where do
you put your heart? Why, it can’t be as big as a poppy-seed. Do you
ever walk out in the air? If so, pray put a gold-bar or so in your
pockets, or some day the wind will take you up—carry you into the
sky. And who knows? Some future astronomer—if I remember my schooling
right, the sort of thing has been done—some astronomer may make a
constellation of a bank-note.”

“I see,” said Jericho, with the most vigorous expression of pity. “I
see,—you’re a free-thinker. Bank-notes in the sky! Poor man! Poverty
has made you an atheist.”

“Not so,” said Carraways, placidly. “Indeed, not so. Strange as it
may seem to you, poverty has made me a believer in more goodness than
I dreamt of before. However, I didn’t come to talk of that.”

“I suppose not,” said Jericho.

“But, bless me!” cried the persevering Carraways, “how thin you are!
Why, you _can_ have no bowels.”

Mr. Jericho said nothing. He merely drew himself up, using a snaky
motion of the head to express his silent contempt of the doubt. And
silence was best. What spoken answer would have better met such
unbelief?

“But as I say,” repeated Carraways, “I didn’t come to talk about
that. I come—now attend to me, if you please, Solomon Jericho”—and
Jericho fell flat against the back of his chair, astounded at the
pauper’s impudence—“attend to me. I didn’t come to talk of that. I
came here, at once, to renounce all right and title, for me and mine
by gift or will now and for evermore,—all right, I say, to a shilling
of your money.”

“I think,” said Mr. Jericho suddenly recovering himself, “I think you
give yourself a very needless trouble.”

“Well, I hope so,” answered Carraways. “Still, I would not risk a
mistake. Your son-in-law”—

“Humph!” said Jericho, and with studied sarcasm. “Son-in-law! Yes;
the law bears very hard on us, now and then.”

“Has proposed to marry my Bessy. I have consented; and after what
I’ve said, I suppose, Mr. Jericho, you can have no objection to the
match?”

“Really, Gilbert Carraways,” replied the Man of Money, smiling the
while, “why should I? Your conditions are so advantageous, that I
should be a fool as well as a monster to come between two doting
hearts. All I can say is, I wish you joy of the young gentleman.”

“I have every faith in him,” said Carraways. “Perhaps, Mr. Jericho,
you will break the matter to Basil’s mother? I need not intrude upon
the lady’s better employment. We leave England in about a fortnight.”

“What! the young couple and all?” cried Jericho; “and where may you
be bound for?”

“The antipodes,” answered Carraways, very blithely.

“A capital determination, Gilbert. As you’ve been turned topsy-turvy
here, why going to the antipodes is, perhaps, the shortest way of
putting you on your legs again.” Here the servant answered the bell,
rang by the Man of Money. “Beg Mrs. Jericho to come to me,” said the
husband.

“Good morning,” cried Carraways rising. “I would rather not see the
lady. I’ll leave the explanation in your hands. ’Twill come better
from you. Much better. Well,”—and Carraways paused before Jericho,
and staringly read him up and down—“you _are_ thin! Why, you must
have no more blood than a cucumber, Solomon. To think that a man
should be so rich—ha! what luck you’ve had in platina, to be sure—so
rich and so meagre! Talk of the Wandering Jew, why if you live long
enough, you’ll be known as the Wandering Bank-note. Dear me! Well,
you’d be very curious under a microscope—very curious. Good morning,
good morning.” And Carraways bustled from the presence of the Man of
Money, who sat speechless and confounded by the easy insolence of the
pauper. Never, perhaps, since the first piece of metal was stamped
as the go-between of man and man, had the dignity of wealth been
so impudently put upon. In the savageness of his injured majesty,
Jericho could have brained the offender with a bag of money—dashed
him in little pieces with a golden thunderbolt; an article with which
Plutus often beats the iron of the bigger Jupiter.

“He is gone now—the pauper’s departed,” said Jericho scornfully to
his wife, as she entered.

“Who is gone? And whom can you speak of? A pauper, and here!” Mrs.
Jericho would as soon have thought to see a polecat basking on the
hearth-rug. “Pauper!”

“That fellow Carraways,” said Jericho, and his lips widened at the
name as at a filthy drug.

“Oh! I suppose the old story with such people. Came for money?” said
his wife.

“Not he; an impudent, blustering scoundrel. Came here to shake his
rags in my face, and show how very proud he was of them. Would
you believe it? He had the brazen effrontery to come here—here—to
renounce my offer of money, and that before it was made.”

[Illustration: _The Pauper & The Man of Money._]

“Dear me! Poor man!” said Mrs. Jericho, with a look and voice of
pity. “Insane, of course.”

“No—not he. Not more mad than thousands of people. For it’s wonderful
to think how near conceit is to insanity, and yet how many folks
are suffered to go free and foaming with it. Conceit, Sabilla; mere
conceit in a rabid state. Of all pride, the worst is the pride of
beggary. Of all madness, that madness is the worst and the most
disgusting that, squatted upon a dunghill, brags of the straw and
muck, as though they were gold and velvet.”

“Very true, indeed, my dear—beautifully true,” said the wife. “But we
must make great allowances; when a man is stripped of everything”—

“Well, when he is, it isn’t exactly the time for him to brag of the
buff he’s reduced to.”

“My dear!” cried Mrs. Jericho, with the prettiest glance of
remonstrance. “My love!”

“Moreover, when a family is stripped of everything,” cried Jericho,
“I don’t think it precisely the family to marry into.”

“Why, Solomon, what do you mean?” asked the wife, anxious and
foreboding.

“The meaning’s as short and as strong as the marriage service. Your
hopeful son is going to marry Bessy.”

“Impossible! He cannot mean it,” cried Mrs. Jericho. “It is a mere
folly of youth that he will outlive—that he _must_ outlive. The fact
is, my dear Jericho, we must send him abroad.”

“We needn’t trouble ourselves. In a few months he will be directly
under my foot.” Mrs. Jericho stared. “At the antipodes, my dear; at
the antipodes,” and Jericho rubbed his hands at the prospect.

“And that Carraways—oh, it’s a pretty plan, I see, to provide for the
daughter—that Carraways came here to tell you this?”

“With his compliments, or something like ’em, that I should open the
matter to you.”

“Solomon, my dear Solomon”—and Mrs. Jericho dropt in a chair beneath
her maternal feelings—“this is a great blow to our house.” Jericho
looked confidently; putting his thin hands into his pockets, as
though he would imply a conviction that the house was strong enough
to bear the shock. “’Twill break my heart, Solomon.” Still the
husband looked calm and self-possessed. “It will bring me to a
premature grave.” And still, and still the hopeful spouse blenched
not. “A foolish, enthusiastic child—when there was such a path open
to him!”

“All the road clean as a whistle to the Court of Queen’s Bench,” said
Jericho.

“No—no. The Duke of St. George’s eldest daughter; that beautiful
girl, the Lady Malypense—he has only to ask and have; I am certain of
it, Solomon. If I know what the human heart is made of”—

“And what is it made of?” inquired Jericho; for in the material of
hearts he had a strange interest. “What’s the stuff? People differ
on the point devilishly.” Mrs. Jericho stared. “What do you think I
heard? Why, that the heart of Lady Malypense—’twas that bitter fellow
Thrush who said it—that her heart was like a jewel cushion; merely a
thing to stick finery upon.” Mrs. Jericho looked wounded incredulity.
“Oh, I don’t believe it. I only tell you how folks gabble about
hearts. Ha! ha! every man talks of his neighbour’s heart, as though
it was his own watch.—A thing to be seen in all its works; and abused
for irregular going. I always laugh when I hear a man talk of another
man’s heart. And if anybody has a right to laugh, I think it’s
myself. Ha! ha!” and Jericho grinned disdainfully; and by such scorn
withered, as he believed, the wicked rumour that now and then would
gabble against him.

“I am resolved, my love,” said Mrs. Jericho, “that this boy shall not
sacrifice himself. I have fixed my heart upon a coronet for him, and
he shall have it. We deserve nothing less.”

“Humph! Do you think, my dear, that coronets hang on pegs that”—

“Nothing more easy,” broke in the wife and mother. “He marries the
Duke’s daughter; he obtains a high appointment at a foreign court;
he enters upon diplomacy; I’m sure he was born for it; he always had,
as a child, such a taste for mechanics. I only wish I’d kept the
mouse-trap he invented when he was six years old. Depend upon it,
he’s a born ambassador, my dear.”

“Isn’t marked anywhere with the name of the court, eh?” asked Jericho.

“Now, my love, I adore your wit; but do respect a mother’s feelings.
Consider, Jericho. As I say, he marries Lady Malypense. He is sent
abroad. Our politics are in a tangle somewhere—in Egypt, or Greece,
or Belgium, or the Sandwich Islands—’tis all the same—and Basil winds
the affair off as cleanly as a skein of silk. Then, of course, he is
ennobled—he has somehow saved his country; and, choosing an estate
from the map of England, it is bought for ever and for ever for him
by a grateful people, and he takes his seat among the lords spiritual
and temporal—a peer of the realm. I’m sure of it, from his genius;
though I never named it before. Certain.”

“Well,” said Jericho, satirically, “there’s something in it. And
yet to consider a peer in his robes and coronet—well, it must be
confessed ’tis a mighty grand thing to come out of a mousetrap.”

“Not at all,” said Mrs. Jericho, “peerages have come of much
smaller matters. And, in fact, my love, this intended marriage—this
folly—this sacrifice must, at any cost, be prevented.”

“As you please; but for my part, I think you’d better let matters
take their course.”

“Solomon!” cried the wife, in the voice of reproach.

“And as for a peerage, why, where Basil’s going, he may choose the
rank he best likes; earl, marquess, duke.—And what’s more, he can
have himself tattooed, dog-cheap, with garters on both legs, and
any number of orders.” And Jericho laughed at his own wit, with the
partiality of a parent.

Mrs. Jericho visited the scorner with one scathing glance of anger;
then half in pity, half in contempt, she cried—“Mr. Jericho, you are
not a mother.” And it must be confessed the Man of Money bore the
information with pattern tranquillity.




CHAPTER XVIII.


Poor mother! She had a double task to do—double and contrary. To
carry a daughter to the altar, and to tear a son from its perilous
precincts. Monica wondered that Agatha—but then she was always such
a selfish, giddy thing!—would not insist upon deferring her marriage
with the Baronet until her elder sister should wed her beloved.
For Candituft had made good—seeming good—his cause of delay. He
had suddenly discovered some dormant right to some long-forgotten
property; and he would first secure that to lay it as an offering
at the feet of his bride. Monica, in her warm affection, would have
gladly married at once, content to wait for after prosperity as it
might follow; but her mother thought it best to tarry. Great good
might come of a little delay; and Mr. Jericho could not be hurried to
name the exact amount of dowry. Now, with respect to Agatha, the case
was wholly different. She had not her sister’s strength of mind; and
the Baronet was in the full enjoyment of his full fortune; moreover,
with a liberality worthy of imitation, he would have been content to
marry Agatha even with no other dowry than the first bride brought to
the first bridegroom.

Therefore Jericho’s house hummed in every nook and corner with the
note of preparation; with the tuning prelude to hymeneal song.
Nevertheless, in Jericho’s house great and torturing was the
sacrifice of heart. For was it nothing for Monica to plate her
anxious face with smiles; to hover about her sister with looks and
words of gentle meaning; of sweet congratulation, when her own breast
was misery? Was it nothing to gather a marriage garland for another,
when she was yet smarting from nettles? Nothing to forego the robe
of the bride and to don the meaner garments—made robes of sorrow and
humiliation by disappointment—of the bridesmaid?

And there was another victim, another heroine who, with the fortitude
of an Amazon, would smile at self-suffering.—We mean, the Hon. Miss
Candituft. Can it be believed that that heroic young lady consented
to be second bridesmaid to her rival? Of course, the simple Agatha
dreamt not of the agony she inflicted when she prayed such grace of
her bosom friend; the rather that the devotion was accorded with the
sweetest, the most touching alacrity. Agatha was to wear the nuptial
wreath, and Miss Candituft the willow. Nevertheless, the rejected one
would carry it like a martyr, turning the reproach to glory.

Our Man of Money—absolved of the liability of dowry—was in the
best of moods. His opinion of the merits of Hodmadod continually
increased, though Candituft had somehow to pay for the growth. The
Baronet became every day a finer fellow; Candituft every day a meaner
dog. The excellence accorded to one, was remorselessly taken from
the other. Thus, pending the nuptial preparation, Hodmadod was the
favoured creature at the hearth of Jericho, whilst Candituft was
coldly allowed an unconsidered corner. Nevertheless, Candituft had
too much benevolence, too much affection for the brotherhood of man
to resent the neglect. Indeed, how should he, since he would not
behold it? Some men will not see an affront, even when big as a
street-door in their face: as there have been philosophers, so raised
above human weakness, who have not felt the violence of a leg, have
not discovered when they were kicked.

Now let us for a while leave the nuptial loves, busied with the best
and the finest, at Jericho House; and look in upon a certain second
floor, in Primrose Place.

       *       *       *       *       *

It is plain enough that Basil has told his story—won his wife. The
happy, altered looks of Bessy speak a new and deep content of heart.
Indeed, every person present—there are four women, all busy, hence
the room at Primrose Place may be considered full—gives indication
of a coming ceremony. Bessy is at work, it would appear with all her
heart in her sewing.—And Bessy’s mother is earnest, grave, in her
appeal to the better judgment of Mrs. Topps who, it is plain, has
just returned upon her errand, bringing a skein of silk that can in
no way be made to match with the colour of the piece to be made up.
Miss Barnes is appealed to—Miss Barnes is the young sempstress, the
lodger of the attic, who all unconsciously received the benison of
Basil, and who has come down to assist in the work—and Miss Barnes
joins her verdict against Mrs. Topps; who, a little vexed with
herself, ties her riband strings with an angry snatch, and descends
to amend her serious error, by changing the skein.

The most innocent and the most hardened bachelor of threescore,
brought into the room, would at once divine the sort of work prepared
by those three women. He would at once know their cutting and
their sewing to be spells preparatory to the tying of a knot that
should, for the term of natural life, hold tight together two fellow
creatures. The women worked so earnestly—so readily; whilst unseen
little loves fluttered up and down; now running along the edge of a
hem, and now giving a flourishing caper with some final stitch.

The room—Mrs. Carraways had a dozen times said as much—was in a
dreadful litter. Calicos and flannels, and stuffs, and brown holland,
and cotton webs with blue stripes lay heaped about, in very homely
contrast to the pretty lilac-coloured satin carefully worked at by
Miss Barnes; a satin that Bessy would now and then glance at as
though she felt towards it a living tenderness. And still looking,
she seemed all the happier with every look.

And Mrs. Carraways seemed much amended. She appeared to have set
aside her anxious aspect, and taken, as her husband jovially said,
a new lease of heart. And so, she worked with happy zeal; and
even hummed an old, old tune, as now and then she looked about
her, and her eye rested, now upon a canvas bag, now upon a hat of
tarpaulin,—things that, telling her of the long, long voyage to the
other side of the world, made her only a few days ago sick with
apprehension.

There was a sudden pause—a perfect silence. And then a carriage
whirled up Primrose Place, and stopt short at the door. “Who can
that be?” cried Mrs. Carraways, with a look of dread, and laying down
her work. Miss Barnes immediately went to the window, and fluently
enough described the brilliant carriage, and the many-coloured
liveries.

“I thought so,” cried Mrs. Carraways, turning pale, “it’s Mr.
Jericho.” As she spoke, the smitten knocker chattered—for it was a
modest knocker, too light and small to thunder—through the house.

“No,” cried Miss Barnes. “Not Mr. Jericho. A lady.”

“Mrs. Jericho!” exclaimed Bessy, becoming nervous—looking very
pale in her turn; and casting a strange, anxious glance at the
lilac-coloured satin laid down by Miss Barnes. “Is she alone?”

“Quite alone,” said Miss Barnes; and without another word, the
sempstress gathered up her work, and left the room.

In another moment, Susan entered with Mrs. Jericho’s card. “Show the
lady up stairs,” said Mrs. Carraways in a very twitter—“And say, we
will see her directly.” Susan descended upon her mission, and Mrs.
Carraways and Bessy ran to their several rooms, like startled rabbits
to their burrows.

Mrs. Jericho slowly ascended the stairs, and with prodigious dignity
entered the second floor front. “Missus Carraways, mum, will be with
you directly,” said Susan who, in her way, was a little flustered;
inasmuch as she had been suddenly summoned from peeling turnips to
wipe her hands for Mrs. Jericho’s card.

Mrs. Jericho stood alone in the apartment which, in all its
details, she set herself with her best intelligence, to read. Very
speedily she divined the meaning of the various articles about
her; the checked shirting; the plaids; the tarpaulin; with here
and there some tin utensil, bright and new for travel. They made
her sad, melancholy. She could have almost wept; for somehow, she
seemed to see in everything the loss of Basil. Pride was sinking;
affection rising in her heart; when her eye glanced upon a piece
of white satin—perhaps, it was for a bonnet, we cannot say—and in
that white, unspotted web, her woman’s shrewdness read a whole
history. Instantly she was herself; more than ever herself: full to
overflowing with the wrongs of a mother. In that bit of white satin,
did Mrs. Jericho read—as she firmly believed—the fatal marriage
warrant of her son, her eldest born.

Mrs. Carraways had, of course, to change her cap. Such was her first
intention; the serious purpose that had sent her flying to her room.
However, let no woman say she will at a pinch change her cap and
nothing more. For Mrs. Carraways had no sooner entered her room, and
caught a bit of herself in her glass, than she was convinced she must
also change her gown. She cared nothing for Mrs. Jericho; she had
ceased to have respect or esteem for her; nevertheless, it was due
to herself “not to be seen a figure.” These thoughts engaged Mrs.
Carraways, as her fluttered hand, like the last minstrel’s, wandered
among the strings. At length, however, in the best cap and gown that
fortune had left her, Mrs. Carraways appeared before her visitor.

Mrs. Jericho did not affect cordiality. She made no attempt to excuse
her absence—her neglect of old acquaintance. Mrs. Jericho was too
wise a woman; knew too well the person with whom she had to confer.
No: she would not attempt to shirk her ingratitude; but—if we may say
as much—at once took the scorpion by the tail.

“Mrs. Carraways, you will probably understand why we have not met
since our mutual circumstances have so completely changed?” Thus,
with hardest smile, spoke Mrs. Jericho.

“I would I could understand all things quite as well,” said Mrs.
Carraways, with cold and steady look.

“It would have been painful to you, painful to myself,” said Mrs.
Jericho.

“And you were quite right,” answered the broken lady, “to spare at
least one of us.”

Mrs. Jericho waived her head and arm, as much as to intimate
that all needful preface being done, she might at once begin the
subject-matter. “Do you know what brings me here, Mrs. Carraways?”

“I think, madam, I can guess,” was the ready answer.

“It is this, madam,” said Mrs. Jericho, with her best thunder,
raising the white satin. “This!”

Mrs. Carraways did not for one moment affect surprise. No: to the
astonishment of the sonorous Mrs. Jericho, she calmly replied—“I
thought so.”

Mrs. Jericho immediately disposed her soul for self-enjoyment. The
said soul felt a yearning for lofty exercise; and with good reason;
it had so long obeyed the soul of Jericho—aggrandised, sublimated by
money—that it longed to assert its natural importance; an importance
that, at the commencement of this history—if the reader recollects
as much—was made sufficiently evident. Mrs. Jericho’s majesty had
been confined, doubled up, like a snake in a box; and it was not to
be wondered at that, the occasion offering, it should desire to come
out and air itself, showing its fine proportions. The husband Jericho
had somehow been the snake-charmer; now Mrs. Carraways was weak and
ignorant as babyhood.

“And may I ask you, madam, what you propose by inveigling a young
man”—

“Really, Mrs. Jericho,” said Mrs. Carraways, and even with the
most placid manner she managed to rise above the violence of her
visitor—“really, I must hear nothing of this. Mr. Carraways has, I
believe, communicated with Mr. Jericho; and I take it, as they are
agreed”—and Mrs. Carraways was most provoking in her humility—“as
they are of accord, the less we women interfere the better.”

“That may be your degraded opinion of the rights of women, Mrs.
Carraways; of the rights of a mother. Happily, however, I have other
notions; other feelings. To be sure, you may very calmly contemplate
the marriage of your daughter with a husband of untold affluence—of
untold affluence, ma’am.”

“Untold,—I believe so; yes, untold,” observed Mrs. Carraways, very
quietly.

Mrs. Jericho would not pause in her course to notice the sarcasm.
“But, madam, it is otherwise to the mother whose child, whose
only son, is to be lured, entrapped, and cruelly sacrificed to the
hopeless condition of a penniless wife.”

“I assure you, madam,”—Mrs. Carraways’ cheek tingled a little; but
she had made up her mind to be cool, and cool she would be though—as
she afterwards phrased it—her blood was boiling—“I assure you, Mr.
Carraways has no thought of Mr. Pennibacker’s probable, I might say,
his problematical wealth; though, no doubt, it must be immense, if
all the stories be true about the mines of platina.”

“My dear Mrs. Carraways”—that lady stared at the sudden courtesy—“let
us understand one another. Mr. Jericho has, I can answer for it,
every wish to serve the family. You are about to make a voyage; about
to begin the world anew. Just grant us one favour, and there is
nothing we will not do for you.” It was thus, without effort, Mrs.
Jericho subsided from the imperious to the polite, when she found it
best to sink to an advantage.

“You are very kind; very suddenly kind,” said Mrs. Carraways; “but
I think even now we are so rich—yes, so very rich, that it is
impossible Mr. Jericho can assist us.”

“Come, come”—said Mrs. Jericho, laying her hand upon Mrs. Carraways’
hand, and the good lady smiled a little sourly at the action—“we are
both mothers; and must consider our children’s happiness. As for
Basil, he is quite a boy; absurdly young to take a wife. No fixed
affections. A very boy.”

“He is young; very young,” confessed Mrs. Carraways.

“Do not suppose, my dear madam, that I would thwart his affections
when pronounced and real. And as for any inequality of fortune, why,
after all, I would not weigh my boy’s heart against money. Certainly
not. So pray, my dear Mrs. Carraways, think what I said about
fortune, as so much idle temper; mere heat of words, with no meaning;
none, I assure you.” And then Mrs. Jericho, in the simplest manner
possible, asked—“Pray, when do you sail?”

“In about a fortnight, I believe,” was the answer, and Mrs. Carraways
could not repress a sigh.

“So soon!” cried Mrs. Jericho, and her face darkened.—“Well, that is
early—very early. Now, dear Mrs. Carraways”—and Mrs. Jericho drawing
up her chair, became impressive, then pathetic—“what I ask for the
happiness of both our children is only this.—Leave Basil here; let
him remain a year or two with us; and then, if his affection still
holds for your daughter, why, I’m sure the young people shall have
my—my blessing. Say two years only, my dear creature.”

“I can say nothing,” replied Mrs. Carraways. “Gilbert has pledged his
word.”

“A pledge that may be easily removed, explained; anything. All I ask
for Basil”—cried his mother with new energy—“is the trial of two
years.”

“A trial for me,” cried Basil, hurrying into the room, “my dear lady,
on what account? Ha! Ha! Susan told me you were here, and I lost no
time to ask your blessing,” and Basil bent his head, and kissed his
mother’s hand. Then, he gaily asked—“Where’s father?”

“I thought it best to come alone,” answered Mrs. Jericho.

“Oh! I wouldn’t trouble Mr. Jericho for the world; I meant my other
father,—father Carraways.” Mrs. Jericho frowned and bit her lip. “I
thought he’d be home before me. We’ve had such a ramble; and—my dear
lady—we have selected two such ploughs. Fit to plough Elysium.”

“Ploughs!” cried Mrs. Jericho. “In heaven’s name, Basil, what do you
mean?”

“Mean! The noblest meaning in the world, my dear mother. The first
meaning of the first man,—work, mother; work. Two such ploughs! The
true philanthropic iron,” cried Basil.

“My poor boy! you must be mad,” and Mrs. Jericho sighed and shook her
head.

“Not mad, my dear lady; only wondrous happy. You see, mother,
we’ve been shopping. Delightful employment, you’ll own that? Been
cheapening a few of Vulcan’s nick-nacks with which we propose to
set-off nature. Such ploughs, I say; fancy took a flight into the
future, and I thought I heard the corn wave to and fro while I looked
at ’em. Such axes! How they will startle the wood-nymphs! Such hoes,
such rakes, such pitchforks! I never felt so proud in my life, as
while I handled ’em. Every tool seemed to me at once the weapon and
the ornament of independence. With such magnificent arms a true man
may go forth and conquer the wilderness; making the earth smile with
the noblest of victories.”

“Rhapsodist!” cried Mrs. Jericho. “And you can leave home, can quit
fortune, family, every grace and happiness of life for the whim of a
desert?”

“Grace and happiness a man may, if he will, always carry with him.
The most valuable of luggage, they pack very easily. Desert! Look
here, my dear mother—see,” and Basil took from his pocket a map,
which unfolding, he spread upon the table. “Quite a land of plenty!
Earth is here so kind, that just tickle her with a hoe and she laughs
with a harvest.”

Mrs. Jericho said nothing; but shook her head and sighed. And here
Mrs. Carraways quietly withdrew.

“Look here, my dear mother,” and Basil traced the map with his
finger, “see, here’s where we shall disembark. Here, you see is Port
Pancake. Here is Van Dumplings Land—now we skirt along here, till
we come to Smokejack Point. Then we trend to the left by Pudding
Mount, until we break upon Sea Pie Bay. Then we at once get into the
Lavender.”

“Lavender!” echoed Mrs. Jericho feebly.

“Yes, a home in the Lavender is where we are bound for—and then, you
see—and then”—

For a minute Mrs. Jericho’s tears had fallen upon the map; Basil
would not see them; at length his voice thickened, then fairly broke,
and the next moment son and mother were sobbing in each other’s arms.

“And you can leave me—you can quit us?” said the mother. “Oh Basil!
can you leave us?”

“What remains for me,—what can I do? I shall be better away—much
better.”

“Wherefore better? Have you not position—fortune? All that should
make you happy?”

“My position, splendid serfdom”—answered Basil—“my fortune, money
that would damn me.”

“Basil,” said his mother, startled by the passion of her son. “Your
father’s money!”

“I would have avoided this; I hoped to avoid it,—but mother, I
suspect your husband.” The wife drew herself up; nevertheless, a
something in her heart seemed to baffle her. “There are odd tales
told of Mr. Jericho. Have an eye upon him. I don’t believe the words
in their vulgar, nursery meaning; but it is said that Mr. Jericho’s
mines, whence he derives his wealth, is the very mine that some day”—

Basil’s mother grew pale. She tried to speak; and then to smile, as
though in scorn and utter incredulity.

“I only repeat the rumour; of course, mother, I give no faith to
bonds of brimstone. Still, I should like to be assured of the source
of his means. Why, mother, you have eyes. You cannot, if you would,
be blind to the daily, hourly waste of the man. Like a waxen figure
made by a witch, he dwindles—dwindles. People say, too, such waste is
the tribute exacted by the devil.”

“Basil!” shrieked the frightened woman.

“And, I take it,” answered the young man with solemn voice, and
saddest looks, “I take it to be so. Come, you must hear me out. I
shall not offend again; and you must hear me. What are the ravages of
conscience but tribute paid to evil? What the pains, the tremors, the
heartquakes that I know the man endures—for I have watched him—what
are all, but the devil’s tribute?”

“You are a dreamer—an enthusiast—a foolish boy,” cried Mrs. Jericho,
laughing and shuddering.

“Well, we shall see—we shall see. We will talk no more of it,” said
Basil.

“With all my heart; I am sure I must reproach myself that I have
listened so long.”

“Yet, a word,” said Basil. “I quit England in a fortnight.”

“With a wife?” asked the mother, tremulously.

“With a wife,” exclaimed Basil, and with the words his heart shone in
his face.

“Foolish, imprudent, ungrateful boy!” and the mother wept.

“May you have no worse cause for tears, madam, till we meet again,”
said Basil proudly. “But pray hear me. We go to make a house in the
wilderness. Yet do not think, my mother, my sisters, are forgotten.
No: they shall find a home too.”

“In the wilderness?” asked Mrs. Jericho, with contempt.

“In the wilderness,” answered Basil, “and bless the solitude that
gives them happy shelter from the falsehood of the dreary finery of
life. I say, in the wilderness. Once there, what a new hunger you
will feel for nature! Well, all shall be prepared for you.”

“No, Basil,” said the mother mournfully, “we never meet again:
mother, sisters, all to you will be as the dead. I suppose you have
heard? Agatha marries Sir Arthur, and in a few days.”

“If it be so, poor wench!” said Basil. “But I have hope, mother;
hope.”

“Of course, Basil, you will come to the ceremony?”

“And Bessy?”—inquired Basil. His mother made no answer; Basil
calmly continued. “Nevertheless, should the wedding-cup slip from
the lip—there are such slips, you know—Aggy shall find that her new
sister has thought of her—even, I say, in the wilderness. I shall
leave behind those who will watch you”—

“Watch?” cried Mrs. Jericho, impatiently.

“For a kind purpose,” said the son. “And you shall see what a house
we’ll have for you. Oh! you’ll need it. What a garden! What freedom!
What a new life of happiness and honour—the life of the husbandman, a
life fed by the bounty of earth, and sweetened by the airs of heaven.
Good-bye.”

“Oh, Basil; we shall meet before you—before”—the mother could say no
more.

“Oh, yes; truly yes,” and Basil took his mother to his bosom; and
the woman’s heart flowed in tears—and pride and vanity, and worldly
thoughts were, for the moment, conquered. “Will you see Bessy?”
asked Basil; his mother responded with a pressure of her arms. In a
moment, Bessy—answering the call of Basil—stood, blushing in the room.

Mrs. Jericho felt rebuked, humbled, by the sweet, frank, innocence
of the girl. “Bless you, Bessy,” she cried; and kissing her, with an
effort smiled; then saying, “Basil, you will see me to the door,”
hurried down stairs. In a minute, Mrs. Jericho was in her carriage.
“Home!” cried Basil, and homewards the lady went. And the figure of
Bessy still went with her; the good, happy face of the fair creature
that had smiled so sweetly at the tyranny of fortune; that, in the
confiding purity of her heart, seemed invulnerable to evil,—the
face went with her; and the wife of the Man of Money for the moment
blushed for her possessions; felt ashamed of her wealth.

And then she thought of Basil and his young bride in the wilderness;
and the next thought sent the recollection of that word—was it
scornfully uttered by Basil?—that word “Home” through her brain.
Never before had the sound so jarred upon her heart. “Home!” With
what sad, sullen thoughts, she now considered that magnificent
dungeon; that gorgeous prison, her home. How its splendour came
feverishly upon her soul! How little was there in that home that
consecrated it from any temple where the creed was money, and the
worshipper, the world.

“Home!” a sweet and terrible word. How often may it have made its way
into the carriage, sickening youth and beauty with its sound—striking
cold misery to the poor, aching heart; some sad, church-bargain,
receipted by the priest. How often, the miserable creature, begging
at the carriage-door, kneading the mud beneath his naked feet, with
all his tattered wretchedness feels no such pang as that word “Home”
inflicts upon the seeming felicity he prays to. “Home!” How merrily
the hours dance onward! How the heart has forgotten, thrown down its
daily load, letting itself be cheated into joy! Still the hours glide
on, glowing as they pass, and sorrow is tricked into happiness. And
it may be the dream lasts until the dreamer departs. And then the
word “Home” is flung, like a snake, to the victim—the daily viper
that daily stings.

And whilst we have hammered out this iron sermon upon one
kind of home, what a different home have our lovers—Basil and
Bessy—already made in the wilderness! Basil has talked of all he has
purchased,—ploughs, axes, hammers; all sorts of field implements; and
Bessy has listened with an earnestness that tried to understand their
separate use. And then Basil had given particular orders for plants
and seeds. “For you see, my love,” said he, “I intend to take as much
of England as we can with us.”

“To be sure,” cried Bessy. “Oh yes!”

“And so, I’ve cuttings of raspberry, and currant, and gooseberry;
and for flowering shrubs, rhododendrons, and camellias, and roses as
various, yes as the beauty they are the type of.”

“And I too have seen to a great many seeds,” said Bessy. “Above all,
I’ve not forgotten the heart’s-ease.”

“That”—said Basil, taking a kiss as the best comment—“that, Bessy, I
may be always sure of.”




CHAPTER XIX.


Mr. Jericho, as in gratitude bound, was proud of the friendship of
the Duke of St. George. If, at any time, Solomon thought of the
peerage—and we cannot deny that his soul did now and then hover about
the House of Lords—it was his belief that to the high party interest
of the duke he should owe the strawberry leaves. Besides, Jericho had
his own personal claims. He was religiously observant of the wishes
of the Minister, and—if a dog could vote—not even that grateful
animal would have barked aye or no with better docility; or even
with quicker intelligence. Again, it was only too plain to Jericho’s
intimate friends that he was dying for his country. “Parliament
is killing that dear man,” was the frequent cry of Candituft.
“He is wasting piecemeal,” was the complaint of Mizzlemist. “All
his flesh,” cried Mrs. Jericho, the tears peeping from her eyes,
“all his flesh goes into those filthy blue books.” And this belief
became a very popular superstition among the crowd of folks who
visited the Man of Money. His blood and brain, aye the marrow of the
senator, all was consumed to reappear in statistical details: yes,
his very soul might be recognised by friendship, sympathetic and
imaginative, sacrificed to printer’s ink. And—as Colonel Bones would
ask—“What cared the people of Toadsham for the devotion of their
member?” Whilst Commissioner Thrush declared that to stick by his
seat with the tenacity of Jericho, was not to sit leisurely and like
a gentleman for a borough, but to be impaled in Parliament. To be
sure, Mrs. Jericho was again and again promised by sanguine friends
that “Mr. Jericho must some day have a coronet.” But the wife,
loath to be comforted, would again fall upon her husband’s daily
waste. “A coronet! Yes; a coronet is all very well, but if the dear
fellow dwindles and dwindles in Parliament as he has done, why—poor
creature—when the coronet comes, he’ll have no head to put in it.”
An impossible case, of course; and only to be received as the morbid
apprehension of conjugal affection.

It was a great pity that Jericho’s intimacy with the Duke did not
begin in early youth. His Grace himself sweetly confounded Jericho by
more than once protesting such regret. “My dear Solomon,” his Grace
would say, and at first all the blood in Jericho’s body seemed turned
into ichor by the condescension, “My dear Solomon; I only wish we
had met at College. However,” the Duke would add with fortitude, “we
must make the best of the time that remains to us.” And certainly,
Jericho might take to himself this comfort: at no period of his
life could his friendship have been so useful to St. George as at
the very moment of his acquaintance. The fact is, the Duke was in
debt. Debt, indeed, was his family distinction. All his ancestors,
from Hugh de Gorge—who, to give the slip to his Norman tailor, came
with William to Hastings, and cut for himself a good slice of land
with his carving sword—all St. George’s ancestors were in debt. They
were all born to prodigious bills, just as other high families are
born to thick lips and elliptic noses. Therefore, we say, Jericho
was now a cherished guest at Red Dragon House. Two days before the
marriage of Agatha, the Man of Money passed the greater part of the
night there: it was four in the morning when he returned home. Of
course, Mrs. Jericho thought him in Parliament; wasting himself, in
her own impatient words, upon those wretches of Toadsham. “And what
would they care if he killed himself outright in their service? Why,
they’d erect nothing to his memory. Not so much as his statue in gilt
gingerbread.” At this Mr. Jericho would smile incredulously; and in
his bitter way, declare a female patriot to be the rarest of animals.

It was late, very late when Jericho appeared in his library. The
servant, waiting at the breakfast-table, eyed his master with looks
of dismay. The honest fellow’s teeth chattered as though he was
compelled to wait upon a ghost. Jericho observed the condition of the
lacquey, and, affronted by his terror, ordered him to quit the room.
And the man, it was afterwards discovered, rushed to his bedchamber,
skinned himself of his livery; scratched on his old plain clothes,
and—as though he was making off with the silver tea-pot—sneaked
stealthily from the house. (That man—if we may quit our story to say
as much—that man is now in Bedlam; his hopeless madness a belief
that his own face is nothing more than a razor blade. Poor fellow!
Evidently possessed by the sharpened visage of Jericho, as it cruelly
gleamed upon him from the breakfast-table.)

And there was good reason for this new keenness of the face divine.
Ere Jericho quitted Red Dragon House, he had lent upon the most
satisfactory mortgage—so any way there was land for his money—no less
than five-and-forty thousand pounds to his Grace of St. George. It
was a great sacrifice; but the Man of Money could not withstand it.
Truly an enormous sacrifice; but it should be the last—the last—the
very last. And there was no doubt that the money, lent at such a
season, and to such a man, with parliamentary service and the fame
of wealth, would bring the peerage: a baronetcy Jericho had already
refused. A peerage! Nevertheless, how he had shrunk—how horribly
he had dwindled—how wretchedly small he had become to purchase it.
Aye,—how small? He would again measure himself: he would know the
exact waste. Whereupon Jericho took the silken cord, and passed it
round his breast. Why, it would twice encircle him—twice, and a piece
to spare. With horror and loathing, Jericho flung the cord in the
fire: he would never again take damning evidence against himself.
Yet, why should he fear? He lost no strength. On the contrary, as his
flesh wasted, his spirit became stronger—his passions fiercer. He
had waxed in dignity of soul—in might and vigour of self-assertion.
He had wholly lost the weak, easy-tempered part of himself, and was
a man of iron will; of all-subduing energy. And perhaps this was
the tenor of the compact; the condition of his wealth; that, as he
sloughed the fleshy weakness of human nature, his spirit should be
strengthened, sublimated to the temper of the diviner creature.
His very soul glowed and chuckled at the thought; and thus priding
himself, in the triumph of his folly he sat and smiled a ghastly
smile, and rubbed together his long, thin, bloodless hands.

“Why, what’s the matter, woman?” suddenly cried the Man of Money.
Mrs. Jericho had abruptly entered the room, and shouted astonishment
at the spectre of her husband. “What’s the matter?” The woman could
not answer; she trembled; yet with a frosty smile tried to overcome
her look of apprehension. Somehow, too, the strange manner of the
man—his eye and voice terrified and thrilled her. “I ask, what’s the
matter?”

“Nothing, my dear; nothing,” stammered the wife; “nothing if you—you
are well.”

“And why should I not be well? What ails me?” and Jericho frowned and
rose erect.

“You were so late at the House, I thought, my love, you must be
tired; that is all,” murmured Mrs. Jericho. “But my love, here is
Sir Arthur,” and Sir Arthur Hodmadod—the bridegroom of to-morrow
with the happy Agatha—came smiling into the room. Instantly, the
smile was struck from his face; he let fall his cane, and as though
he had looked upon Gorgon, stood with fixed eyes, dropt jaw, and
face of whitest stone. His bride, with instinctive trust, alarmed at
the spectre, clutched the coat skirt of her betrothed. Mrs. Jericho
trembled anew at this new display of terror; and with heroic effort,
tried to rattle the baronet back to himself.

“Well, my dear Sir Arthur; here are you and Agatha, like coupled
doves. Well, bless ye both,” and the gallant woman affectionately
patted the cheek of her future son, and gave an affectionate, but
sharpish pinch to her daughter’s cheek, possibly to bring back the
blood. “I only hope, my loves, that this time twenty years you’ll
keep as close together. But I have no doubt of it, none;” and she
violently shook Hodmadod’s hand, and gave another pinch to the other
cheek of Agatha.

“No doubt of it,” stammered Hodmadod. “Always domestic and always
together, like knife and fork; when I say knife and fork, of course I
mean cup-and-saucer.”

“To be sure,” cried Mrs. Jericho very cordially.

“My dear sir,” and Hodmadod looked anxiously, warily at Jericho;
“heavy debate last night; when I say heavy, I mean, you spoke of
course. What a shame it is, Mr. Jericho, that they never print your
speeches. Shameful. They print much worse, I’m sure. Didn’t divide
till three, I perceive. And with committees and all, it’s butchering
work. When I say butchering work, I mean that I look upon the House
of Commons as quite a slaughter-house. Best lives of the country
sacrificed there. Why, now, how ill you look!”

“Do you think so?” growled Jericho.

“Shocking ill. If I were you, I should take the Chiltern Hundreds.
When I say, Chiltern Hundreds, I mean medical advice; if not,
Parliament will kill you. Kill a bullock; when I say a bullock, I
don’t mean that you’re a”—

“Sir Arthur Hodmadod,” roared Jericho; and the baronet was in a
tremor, for he had not, though he had industriously essayed, talked
himself into courage. “Sir Arthur!” Mrs. Jericho was in new twitters,
and Agatha, about to faint, crept closer to her love—“Sir Arthur, I
say.”

“Well, sir,” answered the baronet very tremulously.

“I believe you marry that young lady to-morrow?”

“It is my rapturous destiny,” said Hodmadod, affecting a smile.—“When
I say rapturous”—

“I know,” roared the Man of Money, with his best brutality. “Now,
understand, once and for all, if I permit a jackass to marry into my
family, I do not suffer him always to bray to me.” And with this Mr.
Jericho stalked from the room.

“Jackass!” exclaimed Hodmadod—“I must have this explained. When he
says jackass of course he means”—

“Oh, dear no!” cried Mrs. Jericho, crushing the inference in its
shell—its goose-shell.

“Not for a moment, Arthur; don’t believe it,” interposed Agatha; and,
at the touch of her hand, the lion-hearted Arthur dropt his mane, and
the wrathful fire died in his pacific eyes.

“It’s all the debates,” cried Mrs. Jericho. “They’re wearing
him to a shadow. He’ll never be himself so long as he’s in that
horrid Commons. He _must_ retire into the Upper House. He’s losing
all his substance in Acts of Parliament. And what—what indeed
does anybody care? Except ourselves,” said Mrs. Jericho, with
self-correction—“except ourselves. And, dear Sir Arthur, I know your
friendship—I know your sympathy: that Mr. Jericho, in all his trials,
in all his anxieties for the country, that he may always depend upon.”

“Always,” responded Sir Arthur; with the better alacrity that he
remembered he was about to leave England for a year; or, as his bride
had more prettily expressed it to a friend, “for twelve honeymoons.”

Mrs. Jericho left the lovers to themselves. We shall imitate the
considerate example of Mrs. Jericho. We will not break upon the last
hour of single life left them to enjoy together. The last hour:
for when next they meet, they meet in the very handsome and very
florid structure of St. Shekel’s, there to be made one by the welding
ministration of Doctor Cummin.

About to quit Jericho House, Sir Arthur thought himself especially
favoured by fortune to meet Doctor Stubbs upon the door-step. “Sir
Arthur,” said the courteous physician, “I wish you great joy, though
in advance.”

“You’re a kind creature, Stubbs; when I say kind, I was just thinking
of you. That is, when I say thinking of you, I mean”—

“My dear Sir Arthur,” and Stubbs looked professionally anxious, “what
_is_ the matter?”

“Nothing’s the matter.—When I say nothing, I never felt so odd in my
life. Never was married before you know; and, upon my word, looking
at the church steeple there, it goes up and down, and I feel all over
sea-sick. Did you feel so, eh?” and Hodmadod took the arm of Stubbs,
and turning from the door, the bridegroom and physician walked gently
onward. “Quite sea-sick,” repeated the Baronet.

“It’s nothing;” said the physician, “merely your nerves.”

“That’s what I said to myself; only my nerves. Still, it isn’t
pleasant, is it, going to be married? Not but what I shall be happy.
Eh? Don’t you think I shall be happy?” asked the Baronet; for in all
things he liked to be confirmed by another opinion; he had, perhaps,
so little faith in his own.

“Miss Pennibacker was made to—to—to make you happy: no doubt of it,”
said Stubbs.

“When you say made, of course you mean ordered for me.—And when—but
bless me! how that steeple does go up and down, and how my
nerves—they are my nerves you say!—tingle too.”

“Well, well, we must put that all right,” said Doctor Stubbs. “It
won’t do for you to take nerves with you to the altar, to-morrow.
It’s the bride’s privilege to have nerves. You must be rock.”

“I should like it, above all things,” said Hodmadod. “Ought to be
rock at such a time, eh?”

“A piece of manly adamant,” responded Doctor Stubbs, and his eye
twinkled. “Well, that can be done. That can be done,” repeated the
Doctor slowly, the while he wrote with pencil upon a leaf of his
pocket-book. “Here, Sir Arthur. This will brace you up like a drum,”
and the Doctor, tearing the prescription from his book, handed it to
the tremulous bridegroom.

Sir Arthur cast his eye upon the medicinal Latin; muttered bits of
the written spells—“_Morph: Acetat. Hyoscyami. Digitalis. Ætheris
Sulphuric._ Yes; I see”—and the patient smiled, much comforted. “I
see; quite like a drum. Exactly.”

“There are two doses,” said Stubbs. “You will take one the last thing
to-night; and the other when you wake in the morning. That will, no
doubt, be early,” and Stubbs laughed.

“Oh yes,” cried Hodmadod, with joyous burst. “Oh, yes! Up with the
first chanticleer. When I say the first chanticleer”—

“To be sure,” said Stubbs. “And now, my dear Sir Arthur—why what _is_
the matter?”

“Nothing. When I say nothing, you can’t think how that steeple still
goes up and down. I’m always sick at sea; but never felt so sick as
now in all my life. Up and down!”

“Aye, aye; your nerves. Now, pray listen. You must keep yourself very
quiet. Because to-morrow”—Stubbs was the smallest of a wag—“to-morrow
you have to make a great moral demonstration.”

“Very moral. Marriage, you know. Nothing can be more moral. When I
say”—

“Yes, I apprehend. Therefore, you must be very quiet. Because your
temperament is excitable. You’re very impulsive. Your nerves are most
delicately strung.”

“Quite so. Often thought it. Smallest thing sets ’em tingling. I’m
quite like an Eolian harp; played upon by the least breath. When I
say”—

“To be sure. At this crisis you must be particularly careful. Pray
attend to me”—the Doctor looked at his watch—“for I’m past my time.
When you’ve taken the medicine, do not on any account suffer yourself
to be disturbed. Be most particular in this. You will then have a
sweet, refreshing sleep; and you will wake, as I say, like a drum.
God bless you”—and Doctor Stubbs shook the Baronet’s hand—“like a
drum.”

The Doctor returned to make his call at Jericho House, and Hodmadod
took his way to his own abode; resolved to shut himself up until
summoned by the chimes to his happy fate. Still the church steeple,
as he phrased it in his thoughts, went up and down in his head;
and he felt an increased sense of the necessity of quietude. With
strengthened determination to be tranquil, Hodmadod, arrived at
home, summoned his valet to his presence. “Atkins,” said Hodmadod,
and Atkins stared at the soft, subdued manner of his master.
What could ail him? “Atkins, you know what is about to happen
to-morrow.”—Atkins, responding to what he thought the dejection
of the Baronet, looked grave and shook his head. “Now, it is most
necessary to my reputation as a man and a rock, Atkins, that I should
not be disturbed. You understand?”

“Yes, sir; to be sure, sir; not disturbed, sir,” said Atkins.

“Very well. Then you will go yourself, Atkins, and get me that
prescription,” and Hodmadod gave the document to the suspicious
retainer. Yes; suspicious. For Atkins had grave doubts, as he took
his way to the chemist’s; doubts which his fidelity to his master
soon put into language.

“May I be so bold as to ask if there’s anything queer in that
physic?” asked Atkins, with the best unconcern he could assume.

“No; oh no,” said the chemist; and Atkins was greatly relieved.
“Merely soothing—merely soothing.”

And the evening closed in; and Hodmadod—though he would now and then
put his hand to his head, by which it was evident that the steeple
was still there—Hodmadod felt calmer and calmer; indeed, on the
whole, happy and resigned. And then again he felt so dull and lonely,
that he heartily wished the morning was come, and all was well over.
Time never moved so heavily. And now the bridegroom ran his fingers
along the piano—now he corrected his whiskers in the glass—now he
looked at the bracelet that, on the morning, he proposed to clasp
about the wrist of his bride. Still the minutes would lag; time would
limp, as with a thorn in either foot. Nevertheless, Hodmadod did the
best to speed him along. It was the last evening of his celibacy. He
would try a little reading. In his time, the Baronet had been a great
patron of the ring; but that thoughtless time was over. When his
faithful valet appeared with the night-light, Hodmadod was deep in
_Boxiana_.

“Everything’s ready for the morning,” said Atkins, following his
master to the room. “Very handsome, sir,” said Atkins, with the
freedom of an old favourite; “very handsome waistcoat. Must make
the lady quite proud of you;” and Atkins looked admiringly at the
delicate vest. “No lady could refuse a gentleman in such a waistcoat.
Not often, sir, the church sees anything like that.”

“Be silent, Atkins,” said Hodmadod. “Blockhead! When I say blockhead,
I mean ass; and when I say ass, I mean you—Atkins. Do you think
marriage consists in waistcoats? When I say waistcoats, do you think
the holy and blessed state is made up of—of—satin and—and”—

“Not at all, sir,”—said the faithful Atkins.

“Well, then, be silent, and attend to my last words, or
nearly”—Atkins stared—“as a bachelor. I must not be disturbed. I
will ring for you; but on no account, and for no purpose whatever,
break in upon me. You understand me, Atkins. I have my thoughts to
compose—medicine to take—and many things to think of. A great moral
demonstration to make, Atkins; when I say, a moral demonstration, I
have to be a rock to-morrow; adamant—moral adamant, at the altar.”

“Must be staggering, sir; ’specially the first time. But you’ll go
through it, sir,”—said the encouraging Atkins—“go through it, sir;
with credit to yourself, and—and with honour to your country.”

“Blockhead, go. And you hear, if you suffer me to be disturbed,
the world’s before you. When I say, the world’s before you, I mean
my door is for ever behind you. Go,” and Atkins with a bow and a
smile departed. Hodmadod prepared himself for rest. Yet, for a few
minutes, he sat before the glass. He took the miniature of Agatha
in his hand, and kissed it. Then his eye fell upon the soothing
medicine; and as with a new impulse, and pressing the picture,
again and again he saluted it. Then, laying it down, he took up the
anodyne. He read the direction, translated by the chemist—“_Half to
be taken the last thing at night; half the first in the morning._”
The whole was very little. Very little. A smile of self-satisfaction
crept over the face of Hodmadod as his eye rested on the bottle. He
had made a discovery; had achieved a wise thought, and his face was
illuminated in token of the triumph. And still he considered the
bottle; and silent, his mind thus talked.

“Very little in the bottle. When I say little, ’twould all go in a
wine-glass. Half now, half in the morning! Why shouldn’t it be all
taken now—all swallowed at once, and be done with? Why make two bites
of a cherry? When I say a cherry, I mean physic. It must come to the
same thing; must do the same work with the nerves, whether swallowed
at once, or at twice. Then, why shouldn’t it do double work? Why not
do all the bracing now, and have it over? To be sure. Why, what a
fool that Doctor Stubbs must be—and after all, he doesn’t look so
very wise—what a fool he must be to divide the stuff into two. No,
no; I shall not separate them;” and Hodmadod, with a laugh, shook
the medicine—“I shall not separate ’em,” talked his mind—“what the
chemist has mixed together, let no man separate;” and, tickled by
this timely joke, as he thought it, Hodmadod, with a nod at the
miniature, swallowed all the anodyne, and made the best of his way
to that bed, which he was to leave on the morning a rock—a piece of
adamant—moral adamant.

Magnificently rose the sun, and with the sun rose Agatha.

  “Uprose the sun, and uprose Emily.”

At earliest dawn, all Jericho’s house was astir; every
servant—especially the maids—from the housekeeper to the smallest
maid of the kitchen looking upon the day as a day in which she had
some most especial interest. Every female heart beat churchwards. We
will not dwell upon the thoughts of Agatha; how, when she awoke she
already pictured to herself Arthur animated and hopeful; his face
beaming with the like happiness that, she felt it, lightened her
own; how she endeavoured to anticipate the hours, to see through the
future; to look to eleven o’clock, and behold her bridegroom in the
vestry of St. Shekels; the appointed place of rendezvous, within a
few steps—and all a path of flowers—to the altar.

And, we regret to be compelled to confess it, that at the time the
bridegroom was fast asleep; not even dreaming of the bride that was
up and fluttering from lace to lace—from silk to silk.

Time wore on, and the family of Jericho were assembled—all but Basil.
Agatha sighed as she marked his absence; two or three tears came to
her eyes; and then she thought of Arthur and the cruelty of Basil
was, on the moment, forgiven and forgotten. Mr. Jericho put his best
face upon the day. He looked shining and as full as he well could be,
of content. If his face was sharp, it was—for the occasion—polished.
Mrs. Jericho had resolved to part with her daughter with dignified
fortitude. Monica was all resignation to her own disappointment, and
her sister bridesmaid, the Hon. Miss Candituft, pensive but proud;
with a furtive look of mischief in her eye, as it fell upon the
unconscious Agatha. And all the party were prepared for church.

       *       *       *       *       *

Atkins had twice or thrice listened at his master’s door; and still
his master slept. Atkins looked at his watch, and was astounded at
the hour. Still the bridegroom slept. Atkins thought he would rouse
his master; and then he thought of his master’s stern command and
threat; thought too of the profits of his place, and therefore let
the bridegroom sleep.

       *       *       *       *       *

The carriages rolled from Jericho House on their way to the church.
The white bows shone on the servants; the lily for a minute
triumphed in the face of the bride. St. Shekels opened on the bridal
company. The heart of Agatha beat thicker at the church-door.

       *       *       *       *       *

Atkins again listened at the chamber, again and again; not a sound.
The medicine—the drugs! A horrid suspicion—despite of the warranty of
the chemist—shot all through the valet. Along every nerve, throughout
every bone of his body—as he afterwards declared—a dreadful doubt of
double-dealing; of cowardly evasion of the hymeneal engagement by
means of poison. Atkins entered the chamber.

       *       *       *       *       *

The bridal party ascended the steps of St. Shekels. The looks of
Agatha hungered for her love: hungered, though bent upon the church
stones. Expectation, to the tips of Agatha’s fingers, awaited the
hand of Arthur to press _her_ hand. The bridal party entered the
vestry.

       *       *       *       *       *

Atkins stept stealthily to the bed side. The bridegroom was in such a
sweet, deep sleep, it seemed to Atkins a sin and a shame to wake him
to be married.

       *       *       *       *       *

The bridegroom had not arrived. Agatha looked all round the vestry;
again and again scrutinised its dimensions; and still refused to
believe the juggling evidence of her senses. “Not arrived!” cried
Mr. Jericho, looking fiercely at the clerk. “Impossible!” said Mrs.
Jericho. “Extremely ungallant,” whispered Monica. “He’ll be here in a
minute,” said the Man-Tamer. “Perhaps,” said Miss Candituft, “perhaps
he has mistaken the church.” The bride, of course, said nothing.
“Here he is,” cried Mizzlemist, the door opening; and the heart of
the bride opening with it. A false alarm. It was not the bridegroom:
it was the beadle. The clerk was wanted by Doctor Cummin.

       *       *       *       *       *

Atkins stood at the bedside, and resolving with himself, determined
to wake his master. “Sir, sir, it’s late—it’s very late, indeed,
sir,” cried Atkins.

       *       *       *       *       *

“If the bridegroom doesn’t come in five minutes,” said the Man of
Money, “I do not think I can permit the bride to stay a moment
longer.” “Now, my dear,” said Mrs. Jericho, “you are so impatient.
There must be some strange mistake—perhaps, some accident.” “Yes,
mamma, I’m sure that’s it—some accident,” said poor Agatha; and then
the tears ran freely down her cheeks. Poor little soul; her heart was
breaking; nevertheless, Miss Candituft—cruel bridesmaid!—smiled as
in revenge and scorn. “This is infamous!” shouted Mr. Jericho, with
every moment waxing wrathful.

       *       *       *       *       *

“You’ll be past the time, sir; you will really,” and Atkins shook his
master. “I know all about it,” grunted Hodmadod. “Steeple still up
and down—still in my head,” and the bridegroom again lapsed into the
depths of sleep. Atkins shook, but shook in vain.

       *       *       *       *       *

“This appears to me,” said Jericho, “a premeditated affront. All a
plan to insult your daughter, Mrs. Jericho; to insult the family; to
insult me. I wish the devil may”—“Beg your pardon, sir,” said the
clerk: “but you must remember where you are; can’t admit of such
language here.” Mr. Jericho drew himself up to reply; but could not
speak. At length his wordless scorn exploded in a burst of laughter.
“This is shameful,” cried the clerk. “Brawling in church.” “My dear
sir, it is vexing,” said Mizzlemist with quick knowledge of the
ecclesiastical law—“but control your feelings.” “And why—why should
I control them?” roared Jericho—“I suppose I can afford to pay for
them. The bride shall not stay to be insulted; the young lady shall
not remain a minute longer.” Dear Agatha! Then might be seen the
little loves, with blubbered cheeks, sitting squat among her orange
flowers; picking bud and blossom, and with sobbings, dropping them
upon the vestry floor. And every minute gave new fire to Miss
Candituft’s eye—new red to her cheek—new fulness to her lip.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Why, sir, sir,” cried Atkins, again shaking the bridegroom; “you’re
to be married to-day, sir; and it’s past the time. Have you forgot,
sir?” “I know all about it,” snorted Hodmadod; “scoundrel—disobeyed
my orders—leave my service—world before you—all before you;” and
with this, delivered very somnolently, Hodmadod rolled over upon his
side, and would not awake. “I see how it is,” thought Atkins. “He
has turned the matter over in his mind; he has thought better of it,
and this is his plan to get off the match.” And Atkins had his own
reasons for approving of his master’s determination: Atkins would
rather serve a bachelor, than a married man. Hence, when Candituft
presented himself at the house—sent by a whisper from Mrs. Jericho
to seek the bridegroom—Atkins declared that he knew nothing of his
master; therefore, could say nothing. All he knew was, that Sir
Arthur had intended to be married that morning; and if he was not
at the church; if he was not married by that time, why that was his
master’s business; and not his, Atkins’s. Moreover; perhaps Mr.
Candituft and Sir Arthur had missed one another on the road. Now,
Mr. Candituft was by no means urgent in his inquiries; he did not
sift the testimony of the valet; in fact, asked for no particulars;
but taking the suggestion of Atkins as the truth, assuming that the
bridegroom and himself had crossed each other, the Man-Tamer returned
to the vestry at the same leisurely rate at which he had set out upon
his journey.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Another five minutes, and ’twill be too late,” cried Mizzlemist.
Jericho said nothing; but rocked himself backwards and forwards in
a chair, his hands in his pockets, and grinning to himself the most
tremendous revenge. Mrs. Jericho sat frowning and tapping her foot;
Monica looked blank and sympathetic, she could not but feel for the
distress of the bride; Agatha wept without attempting to restrain her
tears, whilst the Hon. Miss Candituft, calmly looking down upon the
victim, held to the sobbing maid a bottle of salts. At this moment,
the Hon. Mr. Candituft entered the vestry; he looked about him, as
though expecting to see the bridegroom. “Why, he’s not come!” said
Candituft, surprised; “where can he be?” At this moment the church
clock struck. “It is past the canonical hour,” cried Mizzlemist, in
tones heavy and sad as passing-bell. “Too late to marry to-day,” said
the clerk, “if the gentleman comes now.” Mr. Jericho, without saying
a word, rose. He approached the bride; and in the most peremptory
manner offered his arm to the forlorn one. Agatha, wiping her tears,
and drawing her veil about her scalded face, laid her trembling hand
upon her father-in-law. Mr. Candituft, with words of sympathy, led
away Mrs. Jericho, who would have despised herself to say a syllable
then and there upon the shameful transaction. Monica followed with
Mizzlemist, and as she declared, from the bottom of her heart
pitying her poor sister; with a supplementary wish, accompanied by a
spasmodic clutching of her little right hand, “that she was only a
man to revenge dear Agatha.” Miss Candituft was silent; but as she
descended the church steps, her face glowed and her eyes sparkled
with triumph.




CHAPTER XX.


As St. Shekels clock struck twelve, the bridegroom awoke. Heavily
yawning, he called for Atkins. The faithful creature, hovering about
the door, immediately entered the room. “Atkins, what’s o’clock?”
demanded Hodmadod.

Atkins, afraid to give a direct reply, said, “Clock, sir? ha, sir!
don’t you know?”

“How the devil should I know?” asked Hodmadod, still yawning, and
then stretching himself, and rolling backwards and forwards, half
stupified by sleep. “What’s o’clock?”

“Why, sir”—Atkins was afraid to speak—“why, sir, it’s past twelve
o’clock.”

“Past twelve, eh? Past twelve,” grumbled Hodmadod, very drowsily.

“Do you recollect, sir,” and Atkins timidly approached the
subject—“do you at all recollect, sir, anything you had to do this
morning?”

“Humph!” grunted Hodmadod, with half-closed eyes.

Hereupon Atkins took up the bridal waistcoat, and shaking it—quite
as if he meant nothing—and smoothing it in the face of Hodmadod,
repeated the question. The bridegroom’s eyes gradually fixed
themselves upon the snowy garment: light and with it consciousness
gleamed within them. Suddenly, Hodmadod sat bolt upright in bed, and
violently and rapidly exclaimed—“Atkins, tell me, Atkins! Wasn’t I to
be married this morning?”

“This looks a little like it, sir,” said Atkins, at arm’s length
exhibiting the waistcoat.

Then Hodmadod, with a groan, fell back in his bed, and cried—“Atkins,
Stubbs has poisoned me; when I say poisoned me”—

“My dear fellow,” exclaimed Candituft, bursting into the room; “how
delighted am I at last to find you! What is the matter? Poison!
Attempted suicide? No doubt, to avoid this marriage. I always thought
your heart was not in it. But wherefore poison?”

“When I say poison, I mean—look there”—and Hodmadod pointed to the
phial. “Stubbs prescribed it; two doses, one at night, one in the
morning. Thought it quite the same to take ’em both at once—they were
only to strengthen my nerves, and they’ve”—

“I see; a narcotic. A double dose has been a tremendous
sleeping-draught,” said Candituft. “My dear friend—’tis a mercy you
ever woke again. I have only just left the Jerichos.”

[Illustration: _The Bride-groom!_]

“There’s no time to lose,” cried Hodmadod; “I feel dreadfully
stupid with the physic; when I say stupid, I mean I’ll be up,
dressed, and ready for church directly.”

“Too late, my dear boy,” said Candituft with touching solemnity. “I
came before to seek you—but your valet”—

“Acted according to orders, sir,” said Atkins. “Sir Arthur knows
that. He must clear me,” and assured of this, Atkins, with the
fullest self-satisfaction, left the room.

“Too late! How do you mean too late?” cried Hodmadod. “Never too late
to marry.”

“Too late to-day. We waited for you an hour; a full hour in the
church,” said Candituft.

“What a wretch I am!” exclaimed Hodmadod, striking the clothes with
his fist—“when I say a wretch, I mean a brute not fit to see the
light,” and executing his own sentence, he rolled his head in the
blankets. “Not fit to see the light,” he howled through the bed
clothes.

“Come, you must be comforted,” said Candituft. “Nevertheless, it was
a dreadful sight in the vestry. Enough to melt a heart of stone.”
Hodmadod groaned. “Mr. Jericho all colours with rage. Mrs. Jericho
still smiling, confident to the last.” Hodmadod, with much emotion,
shook his leg; and in smothered voice bellowed—“I don’t deserve it.”
Candituft continued. “Monica all tears. My sister—dear girl!—only
thoughtful of the happiness of others; regardless of her own
sufferings—but I will not dwell upon that—my sister, I say, doing all
she could to engage the attention of Agatha.”

“And—and—Agatha?” asked the culprit through the blankets. There was
no answer.—“Yes—my dear friend—tell me all her sufferings,” cried
Hodmadod in muffled voice—“all.”

“Well, I must say this much in her praise,” answered Candituft,
“she bore the delay with the greatest patience.” Gradually Hodmadod
unrolled his head from the blankets. “She talked and chatted away the
time in the prettiest and pleasantest manner.”

“You don’t say so?” cried Hodmadod, again showing his heated face
to the light, and staring in the eyes of the cool and traitorous
Candituft. “You don’t say so?”

“It might have been to disguise her real feelings,” said Candituft.
“Nevertheless, I must say, it did not seem like it. No; the fortitude
seemed genuine. I know your partiality—you like women with such
philosophy.”

“No, I don’t,” cried Hodmadod savagely. “When I say I don’t like ’em,
I mean I hate ’em.”

“It’s my mistake, my dear friend. Well, where was I? Oh, well—we
waited the hour; and when the clock struck we left the church,”
repeated Candituft.

“And Agatha?” moaned Hodmadod.

“Why, the little heroine skipped into her carriage, happy as a bird.”—

“She’s a flirt—a jilt”—cried Hodmadod. “I’m very much obliged to
Doctor Stubbs.”

“Do you really feel an obligation for that double dose?” asked
Candituft.

“I do—I do!” shouted Hodmadod, and he shook Candituft’s hand, and in
despair again rolled himself up in the bed-clothes.

       *       *       *       *       *

It was a very wicked rumour! A vile and cruel insinuation! And when
we are made to feel the combined meanness and wickedness of such a
slander; when we are oppressed by the power of such calumny; when our
spirit faints beneath a sense of the poison,—how apt we are to wish
the world at once at an end, that truth may vindicate its lasting
triumph. “Shut the book, my dear”—it was thus an old man spoke to his
grandchild, reading a chronicle of atrocity; of blood, and fire, and
infanticide, and the rest—“shut the book, my child, and let us pray
for the Judgment.”

Poor little Agatha! When she was assured by several bosom friends
that it was well known throughout the world that Sir Arthur Hodmadod
had taken poison—only, happily, a powerful constitution had triumphed
over the deadly dose—poison for the sole, determined purpose of
avoiding marriage with Miss Agatha Pennibacker,—she wished at once
to sink into her grave, to be well quit of a world that could coin
and circulate such a wicked, wicked counterfeit. Nevertheless,
Hodmadod did not show himself at Jericho House. What then? Good
Doctor Stubbs gave daily intelligence of his amending health. Still,
Hodmadod did not write! Why, no; Stubbs had forbidden him any mental
exercise soever; his nerves were still in a jangle, and pen and ink
were luxuries, in his delicate condition, not to be tasted. Agatha
continued to be assured of the devotion, the unalterable passion of
Sir Arthur. And she was willing to believe it. Nevertheless—her heart
would whisper as much in her bosom—nevertheless, the smallest of
notes would have been thankfully received from the dearest of lovers,
and still not a line from Sir Arthur! Not a syllable to give hope of
his speedy convalescence! Not even a hint of an early day to carry
out the beautiful intention, so disastrously marred at the very foot
of St. Shekels altar. Well; a knowledge of the wicked truth oppresses
us, and without further delay, we will at once make known the
treachery of Candituft and the falsehood of the Baronet. As Agatha’s
heart is, for a time, doomed to be broken, the blow may as well come
down at once. The earlier the damage, the sooner the repair.

“It is enough to make a man leave civilised life, and wear
goatskins,”—said Candituft, on his next visit to Hodmadod—“to know
and feel the malignity of the family of man.”

“Certainly,” said Hodmadod, “it’s a family that will pick one another
to pieces. When I say pick”—

“To be sure. Now, what do you imagine, my dear friend—what do you
conceive to be the cause of your deferred marriage with the beautiful
Agatha?”—

“Why, the physic—the sleeping draught. Morphine, wasn’t it?” asked
the innocent Hodmadod.

“To be sure: but the world will not have it so. No—no. The world
declares that you had thought better of the business”—

“Yes?” cried the Baronet, a little impatient.

“And between the bride and poison, chose the drug,” and Candituft
spoke as one disgusted.

“Impossible! It can’t be!” exclaimed Hodmadod.

“My dear friend, I will not suffer myself to tell you how this
falsehood is propped—buttressed up I may say—by other lies. I heard
it avowed—malignantly avowed—that if you should, even now, marry Miss
Pennibacker, the young lady will be indebted for a husband, not to
his own choice, but entirely to a stomach-pump.”

“But it isn’t true, you know,” said the Baronet.

“What matters truth to a scoffing world? I must, however, say
that some—indeed a great many—excellent people were most kind,
most sympathetic. They entirely believed in the innocence of your
mistake: they kindly attributed your swallowing a double dose to the
unreflecting fervour of a lover. But at the same time, they one and
all declared, that in their opinion, the finger of fate was in it.”

“When you say the finger of fate you mean,—I was sent to sleep by the
kindness of Providence?”

“Exactly so. In a word, it is evident”—say reflecting people—“it is
evident that Sir Arthur was not to marry Miss Pennibacker.”

And—to be brief—the people were right. For, in a few days, Sir
Arthur wedded with Miss Candituft. And, when Agatha most needed the
protection of a husband! For never had Mr. Jericho shown himself such
a ruthless and intolerable tyrant. The servants began to declare he
was mad, and such sad belief every hour gained ground with Jericho’s
family. Mrs. Jericho thought she would seek counsel of Basil; and
then she feared to discover all her bodings to him. Again; it might
be only another of the frantic fits that had of late shaken her
helpmate; although this time, the insanity took a more terrible
development.

The Man of Money, though he had controlled his indignation, quitted
St. Shekel’s church an enraged and wounded individual. Yes; wounded
in his delicate sense of money. Sir Arthur Hodmadod had shown to the
world his contempt of the alliance—had proclaimed his indifference,
his scorn of Solomon Jericho! The slight, the insult put upon the
bride, was of little account—the blow was aimed at the father-in-law
through the daughter. Already the Man of Money thought of pistols;
and then, the risk of another hole through his monetary heart made
him at once resolve upon peace. For two days Jericho considered with
himself; brooded in silence over his new design. At length he was
resolved. At length, he had made the true discovery of the true value
of wealth. The value was power—not show. Now this great and original
discovery, as his disordered brain believed it, worked on him with
the rage of madness. It was now his fond conviction that the money he
bore about him, carried with it an immortal principle: if he ceased
to exhaust his heart—his bank of life—he should live for ever. He
would, therefore, not draw another note; no; not another. He would
live upon what he had. He would turn the foolish superfluities about
him into hard, tangible money. He would enjoy avarice; for avarice
was power. The miser was the ragged king, and the finest of fools
were his merest subjects. And with this thought, Jericho wandered
throughout his house; now muttering, now talking, and now threatening
the types and shows of wealth about him. He would no longer feed
the eyes of the world—a perilous waste—but govern men with a golden
sceptre. “Why, it was a vanity—a miserable vanity—the stupid pride
of the peacock—to spread before the world a splendid show! Now,
the magpie was a wiser creature that concealed its treasures.” And
then he—the Man of Money—had had enough of public homage. He would
therefore turn miser, and make men look upon his outside wretchedness
with wonder; make them bow and simper to his very tatters. Again,
mystery ever hung about the miser; for it was the serf-like weakness
of the poor to multiply his riches.

“Mrs. Jericho,” said the Man of Money. The trembling wife had been
summoned to receive her husband’s orders. She had scarcely power to
meet the eyes of her helpmate. In two days, twenty years seemed to
have gathered upon him. His face looked brown, thin, and withered
as the last year’s leaf. His whole body bent and swayed like a piece
of paper, moved by the air. As he held his hand aloof, the light
shone through it. Basil’s words again sounded in the woman’s ears:
it was plain, there was some horrid compact between her lord and the
infernal powers; or—it was all as one—the tyranny of conscience had
worn him to his present condition.

“Mrs. Jericho, madam, you will instantly bring me all your
diamonds—jewellery—all. Give the like orders to your daughters; the
mincing harpies that eat me.”

“My dear—my love!” cried the wife.

“My love! Well, well, you mean the same thing; but the words should
not be ‘my love’—but ‘my money.’”

“You are not well, Solomon. You have been vexed by this
disappointment; you have taken it too much to heart,” stammered Mrs.
Jericho.

“To heart! ha! ha! Very well—be it so. Heart and pocket, ma’am; all’s
one.”

“My dear, let me send for Doctor Stubbs.” The wife shrinkingly
approached the Man of Money, and—timidly as a wood-nymph might put
her hand upon a wolf—was about to encircle with her arm the neck of
Jericho.

“Away with you! I’ll have none of it. Woman’s arms! The serpents that
wind about a man’s neck, killing his best resolutions. Away with
you, and do as I command. Bring me all your treasures—all. And your
minxes! See that they obey me too. And instantly.”

“Yes, my love; to be sure,” said Mrs. Jericho; for she was all but
convinced that Solomon’s reason was gone, or going. It was best and
wisest for the time to be calm with him—to humour him. “And why, my
love, do you wish for these things? Of course, you shall have them.
But why?”

“To turn them into money, madam,” cried Jericho, rubbing his hands.
“We have had enough of the tom-foolery of wealth—I now begin to
hunger for the substance. I’ll do without fashion. I’ll have power,
madam; power.”

“Yes, Solomon; certainly. But tell me, dearest, is not fashion
power?” asked the wife, essaying a smile.

“The power of a fool. Am I a fool?” The wife raised her hands,
forbidding the thought. “What’s all this show—all this outside
trumpery? Do I enjoy it? Am I the master of it?”—

“Yes, love; of course,” said Mrs. Jericho.

“I say no—no. The fools, the wretches who come about us—’tis theirs
as much as mine. To see it is to have it. Now why should I rob myself
to feed the eyes of asses? No: I’ll have all my money all to myself.
I’ll keep the power in my own hands—in my own hands. I’ll raise an
army, an army, madam;” and Jericho chuckled, and his wife was more
convinced of his increasing insanity. “Now, woman, do you know what
an army is?”

“Of course, my dear; I should hope so,” and the wife still tried to
coax the madman.

“I mean, the rich man’s army; the miser’s army, if you will. Now
I propose to raise—let me see—let me see—a couple of million of
fighting men.”

“Mad! Past hope—mad!” thought the wife in despair.

“Do you hear me, woman?” roared the Man of Money, and he shook like a
green flag in the wind.

“Yes, love; every word—every syllable. Of course;” and again the wife
trembled.

“Two millions of fighting men. And how will I raise them? Why,
there’s your jewels; the jewels—for I’ll have every stone of ’em—of
those kittens, your daughters.”—

(“If I could only manage to send for Doctor Stubbs,” thought Mrs.
Jericho.)

“Then there’s this house and all its lumbering trumpery. And—and—that
cursed hermitage you made me buy for the time I was to be Prime
Minister of England.”—

(“Oh—that Doctor Stubbs would make a morning call!” silently prayed
the wife.)

“I shall turn all—all into fighting men. And such men! Ha! ha! they
are never killed; no—no; they multiply. Yes—yes”—and Jericho bent his
head, and joined his hands, “they increase and multiply.”—

(“He shall not be left alone,” determined Mrs. Jericho, with a
shiver.)

“And these millions of fighting men are men with the royal stamp upon
’em, Mrs. Jericho; men who sing a continual chorus _Dei gratia_; men,
who it may be, kill—kill upon fields of parchment: kill dead, dead as
the sheep that carried the skin,—what then? all’s clean and clear,
not a drop of blood.”

“No. Oh, no; not a drop”—said Mrs. Jericho. Poor bewildered woman!
What could she say?

“Now, when I make myself the general of these two millions of golden
men, I send them out—some on one campaign—some on another. Some to do
service for young heirs, and eat ’em afterwards. Well, they return to
me. They come home, bringing prisoners; other golden captives. Every
soldier his one, or two, or three soldiers. Eh?”

“Yes, love; of course,” assented Mrs. Jericho.

“And therefore, madam,” cried Jericho with ferocity—“therefore, we
will have no more of this trumpery to waste upon others. No: I will
have the power—the power in my own hands. I will have my fighting
millions of good gold pieces; and—though we live in a hovel, and all
of us wear sackcloth, as we all shall”—

“To be sure, my dear,” said Mrs. Jericho, and—she could not help
it—she thought of a strait-waistcoat.

“Why, even then, when folks point at me, crawling about in outside
beggary—even then the world shall acknowledge me to be greater than
Cæsar, with all his legions.”

“Yes—yes—dear,” sighed Mrs. Jericho.

“Cæsar, with all his legions,” repeated the man possessed; and he
poised himself in his chair as upon a throne; and called into his
shadowy face, as he believed, an imperial look of money.




CHAPTER XXI.


Leaving King Jericho—anointed, crowned with wealth; wealth, the
sceptre in his right hand; wealth, the ball of the world, in his
left;—we must bestow our thoughts upon a few of the subject people,
who from time to time have appeared in these pages. We therefore
speed our way to the frigate-built ship, _Halcyon_, Captain Goodbody,
commander. One minute, reader, and arm-in-arm we stand upon the deck.

Some dozen folks with gay, dull, earnest, careless, hopeful, wearied
looks, spy about the ship, their future abiding-place upon the
deep for many a day. Some dozen, with different feelings, shown in
different motions, enter cabins, dip below, emerge on deck, and
weave their way among packages and casks, merchandise and food,
lying in labyrinth about. The ship is in most seemly confusion. The
landsman thinks it impossible she can be all taut upon the wave in
a week. Her yards are all so up and down; and her rigging in such
a tangle, such disorder; like a wench’s locks after a mad game at
romps. Nevertheless, Captain Goodbody’s word is as true as oak. On
the appointed day, the skies permitting, the frigate-built _Halcyon_,
with her white wings spread, will drop down the Thames—down to the
illimitable sea.

She carries a glorious freightage to the Antipodes; English hearts
and English sinews. Hope and strength to conquer and control the
waste, taming it to usefulness and beauty. She carries in her the
seed of English cities; with English laws to crown them free. She
carries with her the strong, deep, earnest music of the English
tongue; a music, soon to be universal as the winds of heaven. What
should fancy do in a London Dock? All is so hard, material, positive.
Yet there, amid the tangled ropes, fancy will behold—clustered like
birds—poets and philosophers, history men and story men, annalists
and legalists, English all, bound for the other side of the world, to
rejoice it with their voices. Put fancy to the task, and fear not,
fancy will detect Milton in the shrouds—and Shakespeare, looking
sweetly, seriously down, pedestalled upon yon main-block. Spenser,
like one of his own fairies, swings on a brace; and Bacon, as if in
philosophic chair, sits soberly upon a yard. Poetic heads of every
generation, from the half-cowled brow of Chaucer to the periwigged
pate of Dryden, from bonnetted Pope to nightcapped Cowper—fancy sees
them all—all; aye, from the long-dead day of Edward to the living
hour of Victoria; sees them all gathered aloft, and with fine ear
lists the rustling of their bays.

Such passengers, however, are prone to steal their transit, paying
no shilling to owners. We have therefore given sufficient—more than
sufficient—paper and ink to their claims upon us. For here are
passengers, crossing from the wharf to the deck; good folks journied
from Primrose Place to inspect their sometime house upon the wave.
Carraways and Basil have, on former visits, inspected every nook and
corner of the _Halcyon_, and therefore tread the deck with an assured
manner, as though they already felt themselves at home. And Bessy,
with happy face, and sparkling eyes, looks vivaciously around, as
though she was truly surprised by the excellent accommodations, the
comforts and conveniences, manifest at a glance. Poor Mrs. Carraways
tries to smile, but shudders at the dirt and confusion; and then,
casting a hopeless look at the tangled ropes, fairly sighs in despair
at the dreadful untidiness about her.

“A magnificent vessel, my dear,” says Carraways. “Her first voyage,
too.”

“Very pretty, indeed, Gilbert,” falters the wife.

“Beautiful, isn’t she, mamma?” cries Bessy, exulting in the positive
loveliness of the craft.

“A noble ship, madam,” says Basil; “and everybody predicts as swift
as a bird.”

Mrs. Carraways glances aloft, then sideways; then sliding her hand
under the arm of her husband, she asks, a little tremulously, “Do
you think, Gilbert, she is quite safe? The first voyage! Of course,
somebody must go the first voyage. Still, do you feel confident she
is safe?”

“Safe as the ark, my dear,” answers Carraways, with a jocund laugh,
squeezing his wife’s arm at the same time.

“And how long”—Mrs. Carraways had already twenty times put the
self-same query—“how long shall we be shut up in this ship? I mean,
how long will the voyage”—

“Oh, Captain Goodbody will pledge his name and fame as a
sailor,”—cries Carraways—“not more than four months. Perhaps, a bare
sixteen weeks. Why, what’s the matter?”

“Nothing, dear; nothing,” says the wife, with a blank face. “It’s
the—the smell of the tar—the pitch—it always made my heart sink;
but—it’s very strange—never so much as now.”

“How very odd, mamma!” cries Bessy; “but you will think me a curious
creature. Upon my word, I think the odour rather pleasant; indeed,
positively agreeable,” and the bride inhaled the pitched deck and
tarred ropes as though she stood in a rose-garden. Bessy’s valorous
nostril made even her mother smile through her paleness; and
Carraways with a laugh declared the girl ought to have been born a
mermaid. Basil, with proud and glowing looks, silently listened to
the enthusiasm of his betrothed.

“I never did see a place in such a litter,” said Mrs. Carraways,
looking with the eye of huswife at the crowded, scattered deck. “And
all those ropes, Gilbert; why, they never can get them out of tangle
by the time they say.”

“Never fear, lass; sailors can do anything. All they have to do with
time is to beat it. But come, let us look over our house. As we are
to be tenants for some weeks, you’ll like to see the drawing-room and
dining-room; the parlours, the kitchens, the garrets; and all the
other conveniences of the dwelling. And let me tell you, it has one
capital recommendation: it has no taxes. Basil, lad, show the way.”

Basil, with Bessy under his arm, immediately proceeded to make the
best of the way to the principal cabin. This, through a zig-zag path
of various cargo, was at length accomplished; and the four stood in
some dark place, in which one candle, with funereal wick, survived
sullenly in the gloom.

“This,” said Basil, very boldly, “is the state cabin.”

“Oh!” said Mrs. Carraways.

“It’s dark now, mamma,” said the hopeful Bessy, “because the docks
and the—the other ships are close at the windows; but when we are at
sea, of course it will be beautiful. Such a view!”

“No doubt, Bessy,” cried her father. “Here you’ll sit and see
the dolphins and the flying-fish, and the stormy petrels, and
the—the—that is, all the other sea-sights.”

“Very, very interesting indeed,” sighed Mrs. Carraways.

“The place, it must be owned,” said Basil, “is a little gloomy at
present. In fact, cabins always are, in dock. But I assure you, my
dear madam, when once wide at sea, and from the windows here you
look out and behold a wide, wide wilderness of water, blue or green,
now intermingled with the red flood of morning, now crested with the
white foam of noon, now deepened with the golden sunset—with star by
star coming out, like angel eyes, to smile good night upon you—I do
assure you, my dear mother, that then the place will show a very,
very different aspect.”

“Yes: I dare say,” confessed Mrs. Carraways; and she felt she could
confess no less.

“Oh, it will be beautiful,” cried Bessy, and her hopeful, cordial
voice, sounded sweetly through the miserable, musty gloom. “Beautiful
to sit here, and work, and read; and watch the changes of the sea;
the albatrosses, and the coral reefs, and all the ocean wonders.
Beautiful!”

“And now we’ll go below,” said Carraways; for he felt the contrast of
the present and the future a little too glowing for his wife; whose
only answer to the raptures of Bessy was a deeper sigh.

“Where are we going now?” asked Mrs. Carraways, as she suffered
herself to be led in and out of what she called the shocking fitter
upon the deck. “Yes; I recollect—down stairs.”

“A very noble ship, indeed; beautiful—very beautiful,” said
Carraways, pausing, and looking about him, in his way to the
companion-ladder; for he felt that the dreadful moment, the fearful
instant of trial was at hand; and therefore ventured to deliver
himself of a triumphant flourish upon the magnificence of the
floating prison in general, ere he introduced his wife to her dark,
close berth; her condemned cell for many, many weeks.

“Many more stairs?” asked Mrs. Carraways, having taken about three in
her descent.

“None; that is, none to speak of,” answered her husband; still and
still descending. “Here we are,” he cried at length. “Fine and roomy
between decks. Nothing can be more airy,” said Carraways, taking off
his hat.

“I feel as if I should faint,” said Mrs. Carraways.

“Admirably ventilated,” observed the husband.

“I had no idea it could be so nice,” said Bessy, and she looked
with as much hope, as much sweet cheerfulness about her, as though
she stood in her own old, early summer bower: the play-place of her
childish days.

“Here are the cabins,” and Carraways opened a door, and showed in a
sort of long box two opposite rows of boards.

“Cabins! My dear Carraways,” cried the desponding wife; “why, they’re
like kitchen shelves, and not a bit broader. I couldn’t sleep in one
of them”—

“Oh yes, mamma,” cried Bessy, “I’m sure they’re much broader than
they look.” Still Mrs. Carraways considered that shelf whereupon for
four months she was to be laid aside, with a troubled eye—a very
rueful face. “And, after all, I’ve no doubt, mamma, with a little
use they’re much nicer than a bed.” Carraways said nothing; but made
up his mouth, as though contemplating the enjoyment of a whistle.
“Very much nicer than a bed, especially at sea. And if the ship
should ever go up and down—I say if it should—why, it’s impossible
to fall out with this ledge to the shelf. Nothing could be more
considerate; nothing could be more comfortable.” The face of Mrs.
Carraways gradually relented at the cheerful voice of Bessy: by
degrees, too, it took a somewhat comic look; there was, in truth,
positive fun peeping through its sadness, and breaking up its shadow.
And Bessy still continued eloquent upon the unintrusive advantages
of a shelf—as Carraways avowed to himself not much broader than a
boot-jack—over the ostentatious pretensions of any bedstead soever.
“I’m sure, I shouldn’t wonder, mamma, when you’ve become quite used
to this, if you ever care to sleep upon a bedstead again.”

Here Mrs. Carraways burst into a hearty laugh. The affectionate
exaggeration of Bessy was not to be resisted; and her mother, with
tears in her eyes and laughter at her lips, threw her arms about
Bessy’s neck, and doatingly kissed her. “Yes, my love; yes, my own
Bessy; I will see everything with your own good, glad eyes. I ought
to do so; and I will, love, from this moment.” And, in very truth, it
was delightful to see with what instant earnestness Mrs. Carraways
set about the good work. She, who went below, moping and dim, and
sad, returned to the deck with such smiling looks, that they fell
like sunlight upon her husband and the lovers. The whole party looked
as though they had come to secure berths for a voyage to Utopia
or Atlantis; with the further delight that there were kindred and
friends gone thither long before, and anxiously expecting them. The
party mounted the poop of the vessel, and Mrs. Carraways declared
it would be a very beautiful place in fine weather to bring her
knitting, and to work there and watch the birds and fishes. And the
ship’s deck, that, a while past, was in such a dreadful litter, was
reconsidered with a very tolerant eye. Nay, we will not avouch that
even the pitch and tar had not, within a few minutes, contracted a
sweet and flowery odour—a whiff of lilac or violet—deemed impossible
before. In a word, everything about the _Halcyon_ was better than
Hope—even were she a royal academician—could have painted it. And
when Captain Goodbody, in the forepart of the ship, was pointed out
to Mrs. Carraways; the said Captain at the time employed dancing up
and down at arm’s length an infant passenger of some eight or nine
months’ worldly experience; and dancing the little one, chuckling and
crowing in concert with his playmate,—when, we say, Mrs. Carraways
saw the commander of the _Halcyon_ so genially employed,—she
emphatically avowed that then she had not another care about the
voyage on her mind; and if the luggage had only been aboard, and the
ship cleared of its litter, she would have been quite ready for sea
that very minute.

“That’s a good lass,” said Carraways. “Still, not this minute. Here’s
a pair of doves to be coupled, before we take ship in the ark;” and
Bessy blushed.

“Why, of course, Gilbert,” replied his wife. “I meant that and all;”
and Bessy blushed still deeper.

At this moment, a gentleman, his wife, and—Mrs. Carraways counted
them as they came up the poop ladder—a family of nine children,
ascended in procession. The gentleman approached Carraways with a
ceremonious elevation of beaver: then, with measured syllables,
began,—“I believe, sir, I have the pleasure of addressing a brother
passenger that will be?” Carraways bowed. “My name, sir, is Dodo: a
name, I believe, pretty well known in that place they call the world,
down there,” and Dodo, as with accusing finger pointed towards the
west, and bitterness seemed to well to his lips. Basil stared at the
change wrought in the man. His face, once shrewd, earnest, yet withal
honest and good-tempered, seemed edgy, as sharpened on the world’s
grindstone. His thin hair was white as paper; and when he spoke, it
was with a twitch, as though every syllable he uttered stung his lips
with a sense of wrong. Basil at once recognised Dodo, although Dodo
had no remembrance of Basil.

“I trust, sir,” continued Dodo, “I may take the freedom of a
self-introduction; as I am to have the care of you during the voyage.
I go out as doctor of the vessel. And my best wishes are that none
of you will have any need of me.” Carraways bowed in thankfulness
of such benevolence. “I go out, understand me,” said Dodo; and then
he smiled scornfully—“but never, never to return. I will not take
a particle of the dust of England with me. Not a particle. When I
finally step aboard, it shall be in a pair of new shoes; bran-new
shoes. Not a particle of that ungrateful earth,” and Dodo pointed to
the west.

“I am sorry, sir,” said Carraways, “you should have such cause for
new shoe-leather.”

“It is no matter, sir; no matter,” and Dodo raised his hands, and
shook his fingers, as though shaking all annoyance from them. “No
matter. We go to a fine country, sir; a virgin country, sir. A
country, fresh from the hand of nature; a country, glorious and
flourishing with living wood; a country yet unburdened, sir, with
heavy sins of brick and mortar. A magnificent country. So fertile!
A crop with every quarter; splendid pasturage; wonderful cattle;
beautiful flowers, and birds, and fishes”—

“And”—said Mrs. Carraways—“and no snakes.”

At the sentence, Doctor Dodo fairly leapt from his feet. “That’s it,
my dear madam—that’s it, my truthful lady! No snakes—no reptiles—no
vipers; that’s it,” and Dodo rubbed his hands, and chuckled with
a wildness of enjoyment, somewhat akin to ferocity. Mr. Carraways
remembered the reports of Dodo’s insanity; and began to wonder at,
perhaps to regret, his appointment as doctor of the _Halcyon_.
“Excuse me, sir,” said Dodo; “but it’s a subject I must feel deeply.
Allow me to introduce Mrs. Dodo; our children, with one at the breast
at home. Well, sir; here we are, twelve of us, stung out of the
country by vipers; bitten out of house and home by adders. Am I wrong
then, when I thank heaven that where we’re bound to, there are no
snakes?”

“Indeed, Doctor Dodo,” said Carraways, “your numerous family adds
an interest to your story. What do you mean? Bitten, stung! I don’t
understand you.”

“By the snakes that walk, sir. The snakes that still have speech,
plainly as the first snake that ever wagged his three-forked lie,
sir. The vipers that kill a man’s reputation; the snakes that trail
their slime over his daily bread.”

“My dear George,” said Mrs. Dodo, soothingly.

“Be quiet, Charlotte. Stung as I have been, when I can get a
gentleman to hear me—for that’s a comfort not always granted—when
I can get a gentleman with a heart in his face to listen to me, it
does my soul good to tell my wrongs—to tell my wrongs;” and the poor
man trembled, and grew very pale. Then, putting down his emotion
with a strong will, he proceeded, as he believed calmly, to narrate
his injuries. And thus he now muttered, and now gasped them.—“You
see, sir, there is a fellow in this town, named Jericho,”—Carraways
was about to stop Dodo, but Basil by a look, forbade him,—“a sort
of man-devil, sir; man-devil. A fiend with bowels made at the Bank,
and just smeared with a paste of flesh to seem human. Well, this
demon was shot through the heart. I saw it, sir. I looked through the
perforation; could have run my cane through the hole; a hole as clean
as a hole in a quoit; and the devil walked away alive, and is alive
yet; though shredding away, sir; shredding like scraped horseradish.
Well, sir, not to fatigue you, I proclaimed what I had seen. I rose
before the world; and—I never denied the truth in my life, never
when I was a bachelor, and shall I do it now, with ten children to
blush for me?—and I denounced this Jericho to be the devil that I
know he is. I made oath that I had seen the sunlight through what
ought to have been the left ventricle of the demon’s heart; and what,
sir; what was my reward—what my return by the world? Why the world
called me lunatic, madman! My patients fell from me in a day. A few
hours, and my hand was unblessed with a single guinea. The devil
Jericho threw gifts about him; and all society turned itself into a
knot of vipers, and stung my reputation—killed my practice—poisoned
my bread. And so, sir”—and Dodo gasped for breath, and strove for
serenity,—“and so, I have resolved to leave the land. We all go,”—and
Dodo smiled—“all, mother and myself, the nine here, and the one at
the breast. I’ve brought ’em—dear hearts!—to show ’em their berths.
I’m afraid, I’ve tired you; good morning, sir. Come along, Charlotte;
come along, my loves. We go where there are no snakes—no snakes.”
And poor Doctor Dodo, with his meek and melancholy wife, descended
to the deck; and thence, followed by the nine children, dived to the
sleeping shelves below.

“Poor dear man!” said Mrs. Carraways; and then she added—“but I’m
so glad he’s going with us. If one is never ill, still Gilbert, it
always gives one confidence to have a doctor of the party.”

“To be sure, my love,” answered Gilbert. “A doctor may be an
excellent warranty of health. For the very reason that he’s at hand,
we may resolve to do without him, eh?” And Carraways looked waggishly
in his wife’s face; and seemed to take a new stock of good spirits
from the happiness he saw there. Indeed, all the four were in the
blithest mood. And we may say of Bessy, wherever she looked she
seemed to carry light and pleasure with the glance.

They were about to descend, when from the dark state-cabin came a
long gurgling laugh that made them all pause. “I’m sure I know that
laugh,” cried Mrs. Carraways.

“Oh! I’m certain it’s she,” avowed Bessy, gravely confident. “It must
be”—and it was—Jenny Topps. She ran out like a kitten after her tail
upon the deck, and then looking up, caught the faces of her friends.
Whereupon, Jenny bobbed a deep curtsey, blushed, and immediately put
her arm under the protecting arm of Topps as he lounged out from the
cabin. Instantly, Topps himself was as much confused as his wife;
which confusion he signified, by taking off his hat, and without a
word smoothing down his hair.

“Why, Robert, what brings you here?” asked Carraways, descending the
ladder.

“Why, sir—please, sir,” answered Robert, “come to see the ship, sir;”
and Robert looked at Jenny.—“That’s all, sir; nothing more, sir.”

“Now, Robert, you know I hate dogmatism”—Robert bowed—“nevertheless,
I must know what brings you here. Come, tell me; what is it?”

Still Robert smoothed his hair; still he answered—“Come to see the
ship, sir. Nothing more, sir.”

“Indeed,” said Carraways. “Well, then, Robert; let’s go and look a
little for’ard. I havn’t seen the caboose yet, myself. Come, Basil.”
And the wary man moved onward with the two, leaving Jenny Topps
in charge of Mrs. Carraways and Bessy. Scarcely had the three men
proceeded beyond the mainmast, when the three women had plunged into
the subject that, as Carraways knew, he alone should fail to fathom.

“Well, then, dear ma’am, if you’ll not tell Robert that I told you,”
said Jenny, burning to speak, “we’ve made up our minds to go wherever
you go; and we’ve come to take our places.”

“My dear Jenny,” said Mrs. Carraways, touched by the affectionate
fidelity of the young couple, “my good girl, I hope you have well
considered this step. It would make us all very unhappy, should you
for a moment repent it. To leave your friends”—

“But we’ve none to leave; for father goes with us,” cried Jenny,
pouring out her news. “And you can’t believe how happy the old man
is at the thought of it. He says it will be so beautiful for him
in his old age to carry reading and writing to the children in the
wilderness. For he declares he will have a school there, if all his
scholars learn under the naked sky, and sit upon stumps of trees.
You can’t think how happy he is. And then, ma’am”—added Jenny with
graver looks—“I’m sure it will be the saving of Robert. It will,
indeed, ma’am. That cab-work, ma’am,” and Jenny raised her hands, “is
dreadful.”

“It must be,” said Mrs. Carraways. “Out all weathers.”

“It isn’t so much the weather, as the company. It ’ud spoil an angel
to be a cabman,” averred Jenny—“waiting for the people, he has to
wait for, so late at clubs. But, pray, ma’am, don’t tell master,
ma’am; for Robert’s set his heart upon surprising him when he finds
him in the ship. And it will make Robert so happy to wait upon master
all the passage; and me to wait upon you—and I’m never ill, never.
Been up and down to Blackwall a dozen times, and felt it no more than
if I’d been in my own room. And so, I’m sure, I can be of some use
to you.”

“My good, good girl,” cried Bessy, giving both her hands to the
excellent creature.

“And above all,” said Jenny, very seriously, “there is one thing in
this passage that will be a great load off my mind. It is this. The
passage, they say, lasts four months. Now in that time, I shall be
certain sure to finish my patchwork quilt.”

Here Carraways and Basil returned, Topps following apart. Mrs. Topps,
dropping a hasty curtsey, made off to her husband, and Carraways
regarding his wife and daughter, with laughing, curious looks,—with
Basil conducted them from the ship. The guilty Mrs. Topps, hanging
on her husband’s arm, had an instant dread that her lord would
question her upon the suspected subject of conversation with the
ladies. Whereupon, with fine instinct, she resolved to be beforehand
in the way of interrogation.—“Robert, my dear,” said Jenny, with the
deferential air of a scholar; “Robert, what did Mr. Carraways mean
when he said he hated dog—dogmatism?” Topps was puzzled. “Robert, my
dear,” Jenny urged, “what—what in the world is dogmatism?”

Now it was the weakness of Topps never to confess ignorance of
anything soever to his wife. “A man should never do it,” Topps has
been known in convivial seasons to declare; “it makes ’em conceited.”
Whereupon Topps, wrested from his first purpose of examination, by
the query of his spouse, prepared himself, as was his wont, to make
solemn, satisfying answer. Taking off his hat, and smoothing the
wrinkles of his brow, Topps said—“Humph! what is dogmatism? Why, it
is this—of course. Dogmatism is puppyism come to its full growth.”




CHAPTER XXII.


And Jericho lived in his large house, like a rat in a hole.
Avarice had seized upon him; and with every hour bent and subdued
every thought and purpose to coin all his possessions. He _would_
have his millions of fighting pieces. Hence, he loathed to look
upon the finery about him. It was a wicked, a wasteful folly. A
shameful sacrifice to the eyes of others. He had discharged all his
servants—had no one, save one old man; the pauper grandfather of one
of his footmen, who had haunted the house for offal; and, as Jericho
believed, was in lucky hour discovered by his master to become
the most faithful of retainers. This old man seemed of congenial
wickedness with Jericho. Indeed, there looked between them a strange
similitude; twin brethren damned to the like sordidness, the like
rapacity; with this difference, that the master could enjoy to his
soul’s triumph the lust of wealth; whilst the more wretched serf
was ravenous with the will alone. It was very odd. Jericho and old
Plutus—the Man of Money was a grim wag; and in his savage drollery
had nicknamed the crust-hunting pauper Plutus—Jericho and Plutus
were in face and expression alike as two snakes; alike in key their
voices, as viper’s hiss to hiss: though Plutus, be it known, was the
fatter and the louder reptile.

The Man of Money sat in one of his garrets; a den of a place, though
crowning the magnificent fabric of Jericho House. The scullion had
slept there. And there remained the very bed, the very table, the one
chair enjoyed by the discarded drudge. It was the worst, the meanest
nook of the house; and therefore, Jericho rejoicing, took possession
of its squalor. It was with one effort, a triumph over a lingering
weakness for the nice, the soft appliances of life. He sat there, in
that low, slant garret, the sovereign of himself; the conqueror of
the spendthrift, the reveller, and the glutton. The wretchedness that
surrounded him was the best, the seemliest pomp to declare and grace
his victory.

“’Tis a pity, Plutus—a pity, you wretch—that all the vultures cannot
alight in one day; a great pity; for I’ll not quit here, till all’s
sold and the money bagged. A great pity. And they can’t all come
to-morrow? But I’ll not leave the carcase. No. I’ll stop till all’s
gone—all’s gone.” And Jericho swathed his gown, ostentatiously
tattered, about his withering body; and rubbed together his
transparent hands.

“Good master,” said the old slave, with a slavish cringe, “good
master, if the dealers could come all in one day, would it be wise to
have them in a crowd—all in a crowd?”

“Yes, wise; very wise. That they might maul and bid over one another.
Nevertheless, be it as you say. But they’ll all come?”

“All; good, kind sir,” answered Plutus. “There’s Israel, and Ichabod,
and Laban, and Seth, and Shem, and Issachar”—

“Peace, you old dog,” cried Jericho; and the menial bowed and smiled
at the abuse—“you needn’t bark all their names. It is enough, if
they will all come—all come. And when I have melted all that’s
here—for every bit shall to the crucible—why, then there’s that
accursed hermitage—that home of vanity that my wife made me buy. Me,
poor fool! then as fine and brainless as a horse-fly. Where is”—and
Jericho’s leaf-like body shook, and his eye glowed like a carbuncle
as he dragged the words out—“where is that woman? Where, those young
white-faced witches that would have me melt like wax before the
fires of perdition; would utterly consume me, so they might live and
rejoice, and array themselves in my destruction? What! They defy me
in my own house? That woman, the mother witch, that years long-past
ensnared me with a lie; that lured me to the church with what seemed
gold. A damned jack-a-lanthorn! And there she stood; her hand in
mine, and a lie in her heart. I see her now. Her large beautiful
face—for it was beautiful—with a smile all over it; and that smile
all a lie. Humph!”—said Jericho moodily, “I was a happy, careless
jackass, till I thrust my neck under a yoke, running for what seemed
golden oats—golden oats.”

“Be of good heart, master,” said old Plutus with a mischievous leer,
“’tis a common case. The best of men have fallen in the snare; the
best of women, too. Wasn’t mistress herself a little choused—-just a
little?”

“What of that? When two beggars marry, still the she-beggar has the
best of it: for the he-pauper—poor, damned devil!—has tatters to find
for two. And this woman now defies me. And her young tiger kittens!
Well, well, we shall see—we shall see,” cried Jericho; and again he
rubbed his hands, warming them as with some horrid resolution. “They
dare me in my own house. They will not stir, they cry. They will
not—mother wolf, and young ones—they will not let go their hold.
Well, I’ll sell them bare—bare. Their beds from under them; their
clothes from off them. I will turn that woman—that lie—ha! ’tis a
harder and a sharper lie than it was; older and baser looking, than
when first it cheated me—I’ll turn her upon the world, without a
shred, without a doit.”

“You can’t do it,” said the grimy serving-man, with a hard grin,
“can’t do it, indeed, dear master. The law makes a man provide for
his wife. Such is the world. More’s the pity!”

“Law! What’s the law to a man with millions of mercenaries? With
fighting yellow-boys, fighting where still they’ve won—are still to
win—the bloodiest of battles; though no blood is seen? In law’s very
courts? In the very courts?” And then Jericho, with his brow in his
hand, sat for some minutes, silently brooding; his filthy attendant
looking steadily at him; and, it seemed strange—growing more and more
like his horrid master. At length the Man of Money started from his
meditation. “Why, what a brain is mine!” he cried: “sometimes I feel
it fluttering in my skull—fluttering like a bird; and sometimes,
humming and buzzing like a beetle.”

“It may be want of rest,” said the pliant Plutus.

“Liar!” roared Jericho: “but that’s no matter. Go; get me a crowbar.
Stop. This will do,” and Jericho took the poker—the foreign luxury
had been brought to the scullion’s bower by the serving-man—and
balancing it, he repeated mutteringly: “This will do. Now, follow me
down stairs. This will right me. This will punish the lie—the fine
lie—the lie that first betrayed me.”

“Dear, good sir,” cried Plutus, with hypocritic whine, “you’ll do
no violence, you won’t harm the dear ladies? Consider, dear, good
master; consider your own safety. If you consider nobody else—and
why, indeed, should you?—at least, consider your sweet self. Dear,
dear master! Have mercy on your own days, and don’t hurt the ladies.”

“I’ll have my right—I’ll have my own. I’ll have what my blood, and
flesh, and marrow are turned into. I’ll have it all back. You dog,
follow me.”

“As in duty bound, dear master,” said the old slave; and with a
smile and a light step, he followed Jericho who, as he descended the
stairs, muttered revenge against the lie—the chain of lies—that as he
said, had bound him.

       *       *       *       *       *

Poor Mrs. Jericho—more and more assured of the madness of her
husband—had resolved to take counsel of her dear and valued
friends. Again and again she had determined to seek Basil, and then
she faltered; for she feared the wild enthusiasm of his temper.
He would, it was her dread, make such strange conditions; would
doubtless insist upon her renunciation of Jericho’s wealth; would
require herself and daughters to forego the luxuries that custom
had made necessary as daily bread. Therefore she would appeal to
the judgment of wise, practical people; of men who really knew the
world; of folks who, strong in the religion that it was the best
possible abiding-place, never dreamt of quitting it. (Thus, whilst
Jericho was raving in the garret, Mrs. Jericho was giving audience
to councillors and friends. The Man of Money saw his wife and her
daughters homeless, destitute, and enjoyed happiness, as at a
draught, meditating such misery. And at the same moment, Mrs. Jericho
contemplated the Man of Money secure in a mad-house; made harmless
and made as comfortable as his sad condition would allow. Jericho,
his brain the while singing with sweet music, was reviewing his
millions of golden soldiery. And at the like instant, Jericho’s wife,
anticipating time, beheld her lunatic lord in paper diadem and straw
boots.)

Doctor Stubbs, combining the two noble characters of doctor and
friend, was prompt—aye, affectionately prompt—with his best aid.
And Doctor Mizzlemist united great private regard with great public
erudition. Mizzlemist had flown in his carriage with his best
consolation. Colonel Bones, in his hard, coarse way—but solacing
withal, like sugar from wood—came ready with his counsel, though at
the peril of his life. Commissioner Thrush, filled with exotic wisdom
culled from the spiceries of Siam, attended, a comforter; and the
Honourable Cesar Candituft, though bleeding with an inward wound for
the falsehood of a friend, even Candituft at such a moment would not
absent himself.—No; though Agatha had been betrayed, treacherously
supplanted by his own sister, it was still his duty to suppress his
feelings, and watch the interests of Monica; the more especially that
destiny might haply interknit them with his own.

And, at the very time that Jericho bethought him of a crowbar as
the instrument of some tremendous deed, at the very time, these
councillors, with Mrs. Jericho, Monica, and Agatha Pennibacker sat in
the drawing-room; sat solemn in druidic circle. Indeed, the extreme
caution—manifest in the looks and manner of all, gave a strange
air of mystery to the gathering. Mrs. Jericho, though reduced to a
single maid—who would not be turned out, though Jericho abused and
threatened never so lustily—had resolved not to quit the premises.
No: she had made up her mind; and if it must be, she would die in
that drawing-room. Therefore, as her councillors one by one arrived,
they were, to their own astonishment and passing disquiet, hushingly
admitted across the threshold, and stealthily conducted to the
presence chamber. “Gently, sir,”—said Wyse, the maid, as she admitted
Candituft, the last comer, “gently, if you please: tread like a cat;
for if the madman should hear you, I wouldn’t answer for your life.”
Warned by such intelligence, Candituft—after an unconscious backward
glance at the street door—stept, like any dancing-girl, upon his toes
to the drawing-room.

“My dear friends,” said Mrs. Jericho, “in the great calamity that has
fallen upon our house—upon our house—it is at least a consolation
that I can cast myself upon your sympathies.”

“To be sure, certainly,” said Mizzlemist. “These are the times that
try friends.”

“For myself, I could endure my fate without a murmur. I could follow
poor Mr. Jericho,—I could follow him to the end of the world.”

“You mustn’t think of it, my dear madam,” said Doctor Stubbs.
And then not content with a single declaration, he iterated with
professional emphasis—“You must _not_ think of it.’

“But I have daughters,” said Mrs. Jericho; and for a time she
evidently felt she had said sufficient. For, she let her right arm
fall, as with a weight of emotion; and statue-like, looked icily
before her.

“It is of course your duty, madam, to take care of yourself,” said
Commissioner Thrush. “Happily, we live in a Christian country; where
we look upon woman—lovely woman—as something divine.”

“An angel in the rough. Humph?” said Bones.

“We can all see, my dear lady,” said Candituft, “that the wife
wrestles with the parent. But after all, what would this world be
without its trials? They do us good; they are meant to do us good.”

(Poor little Agatha! She sighed, and bit her lip; totally rejecting
this side-wind consolation.)

“And therefore, my dear friends”—said Mrs. Jericho with new
nerve—“counsel me; advise me. Upon your knowledge of the world I
rely. It will be a hard struggle; but Mr. Jericho’s property must be
protected; and therefore, I fear Mr. Jericho—as I say, it will cost
me many a pang—Mr. Jericho must be restrained.”

“Make yourself comfortable, madam,” said the voice of consolation,
speaking through Stubbs; “there is nothing more easy; nothing more
easy.”

“It’s done every day,” cried Mizzlemist, as though he spoke of eating
a meal or taking a pinch of snuff.

“The calamity is common,” said Candituft, with his mind made up at
the very worst to endure it.

“And, in this country,” remarked Thrush, much comforted with the
thought, “lunatics are so well considered.”

“Happy as kings. Humph?” cried Bones.

“Still I have hope,” said Mrs. Jericho. “I have consolation in the
belief that the poor dear creature—ha, what a heart he has under all
his strange manner!—only wanders for a time. And the truth is, my
dear friends, it must be confessed he has been sorely tried.” The
friends stared. “It is no wonder that the strongest brain should reel
a little under so sudden a blow.” The friends stared anew. “To be
singled out by fortune; to be selected from millions to suffer what
he has done! To be called upon, at a moment I may say, to stand with
such a mountain on his head! To be made, at a minute’s notice, if I
may use the expression, another Atlas; why, it’s enough to make a
giant stagger.”

“Why, what—what trial?” asked Doctor Stubbs with pompous concern.

“What blow?” inquired Mizzlemist, looking sagely adown his waistcoat.

“Singled out! How,—what for? Humph?” growled Bones.

“A mountain on his head! What’s the mountain about?” asked Thrush.

“Excellent, worthy creature! An Atlas in calamity! And none of us to
know it,” cried Candituft.—“My dear madam, what is it—what has Mr.
Jericho had to suffer?”

“Why, riches”—answered Mrs. Jericho, a little surprised at the
dullness of her councillors.

“Oh!” exclaimed the friends, feeling at once sympathetic and rebuked.

“The sudden load of wealth was enough to crush any brain: and
though—dear Solomon!—for a time stood up like a hero beneath the
shock; still, I do fear, it has been too much for that fine web of
reason, as, Doctor Stubbs, I think I’ve heard you call the brain.”—

“Never, madam,” cried Stubbs hastily; “could not possibly have done
it. For the brain is not a web, but a series of convolutions, divided
into two hemispheres, that”—

“To be sure; that is exactly what you said,” rejoined Mrs. Jericho.
“Well, then, I’m afraid of the hemispheres.”

“In a word, and to come at once to business,” said Mizzlemist, who
for some time had shifted in his chair, as though he had sat on lumps
of pounce—“in a word, madam, it is your opinion that your husband—our
unfortunate friend—is at the present time incapable of controlling
his own affairs?”

Mrs. Jericho, placing her handkerchief before her face, said, “That
is my opinion.”

“Very good,” rejoined Mizzlemist, satisfied that matters were at
length shaping themselves into form. “Very good. However, let us
proceed with certainty. Let us hear the evidence. For I need not
observe, it would be very painful to poor Jericho’s family—very
painful to his friends—to sue out a commission of lunacy, and after
all not to succeed. Waiving my friendship, failure would hurt my
feelings as a professional man.” Saying this, Mizzlemist drew himself
up to a table, whereupon were those dangerous implements—paper, pen,
and ink. Then with pen in hand, put the opening question—“What was
the first wild symptom, my dear madam? Yes; as you conceive, the
first indication of Mr. Jericho’s insanity?”

“The first? Oh! It was this,” answered the troubled wife and witness.
“This. He said, that as he felt himself a goose in the House of
Commons—goose, I remember was the word—he would go to stubble in
September, and never return to Parliament again.”

“Humph!” said Mizzlemist; and a little baulked, he rubbed his nose,
and looked down upon the virgin sheet. Then, as though taking heart,
he said—“But we’ll proceed, if you please. The next?”

“The next symptom? It was when—when—you will recollect, Mr.
Candituft, the circumstance—when we spoke of Monica’s dowry, and—and”—

“Perfectly well,” said Candituft, “and in the wildest manner, he
refused a single penny.”

“Well?” said Mizzlemist, still twiddling the impending pen. “That
doesn’t help us. What next?”

“Why, then,” deposed Mrs. Jericho with amended alacrity, “the poor
fellow raved and stormed, and said the house was furnished with money
that was his blood.” And still Mizzlemist wrote not a syllable. “His
blood,” repeated Mrs. Jericho, with pathetic emphasis.

“Humph!” cried Mizzlemist, “we get no nearer to it. No nearer. But
let’s proceed.”

“And then I perfectly recollect”—chimed in Candituft—“that our
unfortunate friend, foaming while he said it—foaming, my dear Doctor
Mizzlemist—declared that he was being eaten alive by society. That,
in other words, people of the best condition who came to his parties,
were no better than cannibals.”

Doctor Mizzlemist laid down the pen, and with a blank stare thrust
both his hands in his pockets. “I must confess,” he said at length,
“we are all in the dark as yet. I don’t see a ray of light; not a
glimmer.”

“Why, surely, all this must be madness? Plain as the moon at the
full?” said Candituft.

“The fact is,” answered Mizzlemist, “as Mr. Jericho’s friends, we
may have our own convictions. We may not doubt his insanity. But,
unfortunately, we have to convince a jury.”

“Ha! that’s it,” said Monica with a sigh; and Agatha shook her little
head and sighed, “that’s it.”

Colonel Bones had, for some time, been in thought. At length he
observed—“Could nothing be made out of the poor fellow’s conduct the
day when—when Miss Agatha—was _not_ married?”

“Oh, Colonel!” exclaimed Agatha with a spasm of sorrow.

“Beg your pardon,” said Bones. “Better luck next time. But I was only
thinking,—was there no bit of madness then? Laughed very wildly,
didn’t he?”

“Won’t do for a jury,” cried Mizzlemist. Then, with great zeal, he
resumed the pen. “Come, we must not be beat in this way. Can’t you
help us, doctor?” and Mizzlemist appealed to Stubbs.

“By-and-bye; in good time,” said Stubbs. “Keep me to the last. I
prefer it.”

Mizzlemist looked eloquently at Mrs. Jericho. “With submission,
doctor,” said the lady, hesitatingly and mournfully, “I think the
state in which you find us, is sufficient evidence of the calamity
that afflicts our house. All the servants discharged. Mr. Jericho
himself, attended by some hideous creature—who he is, and whence he
came I know not—Mr. Jericho, shut up in a garret, like some wild
beast in a cave—Mr. Jericho, I say”—

“Very true; and bad as true,” said Mizzlemist, “but still,” he added
with a sigh, “no evidence.”

“Why, what is wanted?” cried Monica, out of all patience with the
stupidity of law.—“Are we to wait until we are all killed—now, mamma,
I must speak—are we to wait till we are all made dreadful victims,
until the law will protect us?”

“Very good, indeed; very well said,” observed Mizzlemist, pleased
with the spirit of the maiden; whilst Candituft a little gravely
gazed upon the flushed cheeks and flashing eyes of his betrothed.
“Perhaps, my dear young lady, you can assist us, after all?” said
Mizzlemist. “Your mamma will, I know, permit you to depose to
whatever you know. Now; have you witnessed any symptoms of insanity
on the part of Mr. Jericho?”

“Thousands,” exclaimed the impassioned and imaginative Monica.

“Name one; one to begin with,” said the Doctor, “that will prove to a
jury your worthy father-in-law to be wholly incapable of controlling
his own affairs. One instance.”

[Illustration: “_And there stood Jericho!_”]

“Well, then,” said Monica, entering with rapture on the task, and
for one instance ready to run over twenty, touching them like keys
of music—“well, then, he’s discharged all the servants—he’s locked
up all the plate—he’s asked for our jewels back again—he’s going to
sell the house, and turn us into apartments—he’s threatened the three
of us with gowns of sackcloth—and—and—and—he called me on Monday
last—and at the very time I was singing too—he called me a screeching
wild puss of the woods!”

“Did he, indeed?” said Mizzlemist.

“It was worse than puss,” cried Monica, hysterical.

“Nevertheless,” and Mizzlemist dropt the pen, “there is no evidence
in all this; no evidence that Solomon Jericho, Esq., M.P., is of
unsound mind and incapable of managing his own affairs.”

As Doctor Mizzlemist delivered this opinion, a crash was heard in
an adjoining room. Another and another; and then a loud, triumphant
laugh from the throat of Jericho.

Wife and daughters, with jury of friends, started to their feet.
Candituft, ere he was aware—for had he reflected a moment, he would
as soon have unbarred a lion’s cage—opened the door. And there stood
Jericho, laden with spoil! The girls shrieked when they beheld their
jewel cases in the gripe of the Man of Money; and Mrs. Jericho,
when she saw all her diamonds repossessed by their donor, felt as
a mother must feel, beholding her cherished little one—her only
treasure—crunched between the teeth of a royal tiger. Jericho said
not a word; but stood, and leered upon the company, and with a savage
chuckle, the while shaking the iron implement—the burglarious poker
with which he had broken up cases and cabinets—rejoicingly exhibited
his plunder. Then, about to ascend to his garret, he roared to the
felonious familiar that grinned at his elbow—“See all these robbers
into the street—the street; and then come to me;” and still hugging
the spoil, Jericho, with another laugh, flitted up the staircase.

“Surely, Dr. Mizzlemist,” cried the impulsive Agatha, “this must
satisfy anybody? This is madness—to steal my pearls!”

“My amethysts!” sobbed Monica.

“And my diamonds!” cried Mrs. Jericho, with so deep an utterance of
wrong, that every other injury was lost in it—straws in a whirlpool.

Doctor Mizzlemist shook his head. “Very violent; very selfish;
nevertheless, the fact would by no means satisfy a jury that Solomon
Jericho is incapable of looking after his own property.”

And the sheet of paper provided to contain a crowd of evidence
against the sanity of Jericho, remained without a mark; a virgin
page. Its whiteness went to the very heart of Mrs. Jericho, as her
listless eye fell upon it. Life itself seemed a blank.




CHAPTER XXIII.


To-morrow morning, the church of St. Asphodel—Bessy, from her window
in Primrose Place, could see its spire tapering above the distant
trees—would hold within its walls a happy couple. To-morrow, Basil
and Bessy were to be writ in the church-books one. It would be a
magnificent wedding; hopes and affections would so adorn and elevate
the ceremony. But, when the time arrives, we will endeavour as
faithfully as we may, to chronicle the doings of the hour. As the
day before a wedding will to some parties seem the longest day that
ever dawned and died, so to others it will appear the shortest day
imaginable; a day that just shows itself and is gone. However Basil
and Bessy may have measured the day of which we write, thinking it
a day without an end, sure we are that Mrs. Carraways more and more
believed it impossible that the wedding could take place on the
morrow, so much had still to be completed.

“How ever I shall get through what I have to do, I can’t tell,” said
the good woman to her incredulous husband. “I only hope, we shan’t
have to put it off.” Carraways laughed. “Yes, my dear, it’s all very
well. You men think that things can do themselves; but Bessy can’t go
if her luggage isn’t packed.”

“Why not? I suppose she doesn’t want to take her trunk to church,”
said the aggravating Carraways, and again he laughed with such a want
of consideration! And here, Miss Barnes came full of meaning into
the room; and suddenly paused, seeing Carraways. It was of no use;
Mrs. Carraways would at once assert her authority. Therefore she set
herself face to face with her husband.

“Now, my dear Gilbert; you must go out; you must indeed. And, there’s
a dear, don’t let me see you again until the evening.” Miss Barnes,
of course, said nothing: but her looks eloquently and stedfastly
seconded the wishes of the matron.

“What! I’m in the way? Well, Bessy and I are going upon a little
business.”

“Bessy,” cried her mother, rather astonished; and then she
complacently added—“to be sure; why not? We can do everything
better without her, can’t we, Miss Barnes? And poor thing, she’s as
pale,—for she hasn’t been out these three days. So, you’d better go;
both of you.”

In a very short time, considering that Bessy had only to put on her
bonnet, the bride and her father had left the house; surrendered
the field to Mrs. Carraways and Miss Barnes made happy by their
employment. And leaving them deep in trunks, let us accompany father
and daughter.

Bessy had resolved upon carrying with her to her new country, a
very swarm of illustrious strangers: constant, untiring labourers
that should fill the air with sweetest music—music that should
murmur of her English home—still winning from the fields the most
delicious gains. It appeared that this order of labourers—wonderful
workers, at once singers, chemists and masons,—we mean, in a word,
the honey-bee—had not yet travelled to the Antipodes.[1] Honey-bee
had yet to cross the ocean to a new world. Though his great
progenitors—the Adam and Eve bees—had sung and worked in the roses
of Eden—none of their million million descendants, to the time of a
certain lady—and let the name of the benefactress shine like a star
in future Antipodean history—had touched upon the other side of the
Pacific. The flowers and blossoms of ages had budded and fallen,
and not a bee had drunk of their honey-cups.—This, become known to
Bessy, she determined to carry with her a swarm of colonists to her
new home: to people the waste with millions of workers; the toiling,
happy bond-folk—(pity there should be any other!)—of imperial man.

And the bees were of the old Jogtrot stock. Of the family that had
worked in the gardens and orchards of Marigolds; descendants in
right regal descent of the same line that had sung and worked about
Bessy’s childhood; that had awakened her infant thought, had engaged
her youthful care. We believe that Robert Topps had been Bessy’s
silent agent in the work; and with consummate skill and secresy had
conveyed away a hive of the old household from their native village,
taking them to nurse at a certain gardener’s, some three or four
miles distant from Primrose Place. And thither, to learn how fared
the little ones, wended Bessy and her father. The old man, though
doubtful of the prosperity of the scheme, nevertheless entered
into it with all the cordiality of his nature. “There’s always a
sure comfort about attempting good; delight if you succeed, and
consolation if you fail.” With this creed, Carraways listened with
pleasure to the plan of Bessy who had kept the scheme a secret from
her mother and Basil.

“Won’t they be surprised, when they see them aboard the ship,”
cried Bessy, glowing with pleasure. (And by the way, in the course
of the two past paragraphs, Bessy and her father have reached the
gardener’s, and are now in front of the very hive; close to the swarm
of insect colonists, the pilgrim bees, the emigrant honey-makers.)
“Won’t they be surprised!” repeated Bessy.

“Well, I doubt,” said Carraways, smiling down upon the hive, “I
doubt, if Queen Dido—yes, I think it was Dido—carried with her
more useful colonists; and I take it, say what they will, few so
innocent.” Bessy looked inquiringly.—“I don’t think you know much of
Queen Dido, my dear; and to say the truth, my school knowledge with
the lady was at the best a nodding acquaintance. But, if you can only
preserve them!” and the old gentleman folded his hands thoughtfully.

“Oh, I have no fear of that. I am certain, dear father—I feel so sure
of it—they will arrive with us all safe and well. And then”—

“And then, my love,”—said the old man—“you will not have lived in
vain. No, my child, you will have done your share in the great human
work—have obeyed the behest that lays it as a solemn task on all to
share with all the good that, for some wise end, was only meted to
a few. Only land the bees safe; let the swarm be but well upon the
wing; let them once set to work, making honey—the new manna in the
wilderness—where honey was never made before,—why do this, Bessy, and
you are greater than any of the men Queens, that ever lived—greater
than any of the topping masculine ladies out of place in petticoats.
Catherine and Christina and such folks—humph! very great no
doubt,—but their memory is not exactly kept in honey. And Queen
Elizabeth—yes, an extraordinary virgin—but what a small stinging
insect in a stomacher—how useless to the world is Queen Elizabeth
against Queen Bee!”

“I am sure they will live,” repeated Bessy; “and ’twill be such nice
employment, during the voyage, to take care of them. And then, in a
little time when they swarm and swarm”—

“Why, then, my dear—yes, I see it all”—and the old man, with a
thoughtful smile, and as though dallying with a fancy, continued—“I
see it all, and can prophesy. In some hundred years or so, when men
think it the true glory to build up, not to destroy; when work, not
slaughter, is the noble thing; when, in a word, the eagles of war
shall be scouted as carrion fowl, and the bees of the garden shall
be the honoured type of human wisdom,—why, then, Bessy—then, my
child—that is some hundred years to come—in the city that will then
flourish, I predict that the people will raise a statue to the memory
of the woman, who gave to the Antipodes the household glory of the
honey bee.”

“Oh, father!” cried Bessy.

“If the bees prosper, why you and Basil shall in the new country take
a bee for your crest; by the way, not at all bad emigrant heraldry,”
laughed the old man. “Let me see; a bee _or_ on a thistle proper. And
the motto, ‘_Honey from suffering!_’ A good Christian legend,” said
Carraways. “And then, in a hundred years, as I predict, a statue”—

“A statue!” and Bessy laughed.

“Well,” said the father with a gentle seriousness, “I’m getting old,
Bessy. But I feel ’tis good—very good—to gain hope for the world,
even as we gain years. It makes the sweeter sunset for our human day.”

And now anticipating awhile, we have only to say that at the proper
season the hive was tenderly conveyed on board the _Halcyon_, there
to await the cares of its coming mistress.

       *       *       *       *       *

Looking in—as we are permitted to do—at the chamber-window of Basil,
we find him assorting friends and companions for his future home.
Though a wild sportive lad—bouncing through the early chapters of
this veracious history,—he was so deeply touched by his love of
Bessy; so suddenly pulled up to a serious contemplation of the
world, by the strange events of his family,—that, after a brief
pause, he sprang, as at a bound, to a nobler, higher view of human
dealings. Hence, he had soon gathered some glorious books. A blessed
companion is a book! A book that, fitly chosen, is a life-long
friend. A book—the unfailing Damon to his loving Pythias. A book
that—at a touch—pours its heart into our own.

And some of these friends, with looks that may not alter, with tones
that cannot change,—Basil set apart for his companions in the wilds.
As he chose them one by one—for some must remain behind, he might
not take them all—he looked gravely down upon them; with almost
a tenderness of touch laid them aside,—his fellow-voyagers. Some
twoscore were selected; special friends. There they lay; motionless
and dumb. And yet the chamber was filled with lovely presences; was
sounding with spiritual voices: the beautiful and mighty populace,
evoked by the memory of the living friend—the friend in the flesh,
the companion and the scholar of the souls of the dead.

And this was Basil’s last employment, the day before his bridal. He
marshalled a magnificent array of friends to bear him company in the
wilderness. He carried with him an invisible host of bright spirits;
spirits of every kind and degree; and all friends—sound friends;—of
friendship made in solitude; and without patch or lacker, lasting to
the grave.

       *       *       *       *       *

Five minutes, reader; and your company to the once decent lodging—now
turned topsy-turvy—of Mr. and Mrs. Topps. They, too, are in the very
fury of packing-up. Or rather, Mrs. Topps and two or three friends.
For Robert and his father-in-law—Goodman White, late and future
schoolmaster—remain passively in the way; both of them discussing
the apparent merits of some score of young rooks; that Bob, on his
own account, and as a special offering to his old master Carraways,
had with some difficulty and danger, kidnapped from the high-top
elms that surround Jogtrot Hall. Bob, in his snatch of reading,
had learned that rooks were at the Antipodes precious as birds of
paradise. He had therefore obtained some twenty nestlings, “very
sarcy upon their legs, indeed.” They would be worth their weight in
gold, he declared to his father-in-law, to pick up the worms and the
grubs.

“It’s a capital thing for a bird or a brute,” said Bob, “to be born
to be of some use. Eh?” The schoolmaster assented. “Now, I shouldn’t
have liked to be born a magpie—or a weasel; it’s like being born a
thief”—

“I doubt, aye, I more than doubt whether anybody’s born a thief,”
said White.

“I’m not a scholar,—that is, compared to you; I can’t say. But a rook
is a serviceable cretur; he earns his living; and nobody can’t grudge
it him. They _are_ precious hearty, arn’t they,” and Bob, with an eye
of pride surveyed the nestlings. “There’s only one thing that I’m
sorry about: but it’s impossible—and this it is; I am only sorry we
couldn’t take the trees from the Hall, too.”

“Ha! We shall find trees enough, there,” said White, intent upon the
birds. “Well, they _are_ strong!”

“No fear of they’re making capital sailors. And they’ll be quite
company, won’t they, to feed ’em, and watch their ways? And what’s
more, when we get reg’larly settled, why their noise will always
remind us of England. How they will caw and caw, eh! Rather have ’em
with us”—and Bob slapt his leg to emphasise the preference,—“rather
have ’em than a band of music.”

       *       *       *       *       *

And the sun set and rose and shone out the bridal morning. As the
good folks of Primrose Place had determined that the ceremony should
be performed with the best quiet and simplicity, we are left but
little to do as chroniclers of the marriage. We may merely observe
that Bessy flushed into a positive beauty; and her mother, as
Carraways said, had somehow flung clean away twelve or fourteen
years from her face, determined on that occasion only to look the
bride’s elder sister. Miss Barnes, the bridesmaid—for Carraways would
have none other—was, despite of herself, sad. The event seemed to
bring into her face, a past history. Of Basil we have nothing to say;
the bridegroom is so rarely interesting.

Topps claimed the privilege of driving the bride to church. (The
slim Mrs. Topps, with riband and bows, had burst out in white
like a cherry-tree in brilliant blossom). Topps, however, to the
passing—very passing disquiet—of Carraways, who wished everything to
be so simple, drove to the door with a white favour in his hat, as
big as a ventilator; a favour in his coat; and four favours to match
on the heads of the horses.

“A stupid fellow!” said Carraways.

“Well, after all, my dear,” said his wife, “I don’t know if Robert
isn’t right. There’s no harm in a bit of riband; and why should we
steal to church as if we were ashamed of what we’re doing? What do
you think, Miss Barnes?”

“It’s quite right,” said Carraways; for he well knew what Miss Barnes
would think. “Drive on, Robert.”

In a short time the bridal party reached St. Asphodel’s church. A
short time and Basil and Bessy stand hand in hand at the altar. The
minutes pass; and the lovers’ destinies—as before their hearts—grow
into one. The priest is silent; and “amen” like consecrating balm,
hallows the mystery.

And then father and mother, and humble friends, gather close to the
wedded; press them and bless them. And the spirits that await on
human trustfulness, and human hope, when plighted to each other to
make the best and lightest of the world’s journey, be it through a
garden or over a desert; arrayed with roses, or strown with flint—the
spirits that sanctify and strengthen simple faith and all unworldly
love,—hover about bride and bridegroom, and as they take their way
from the church, bless them on their pilgrimage.

Another hour, and Robert Topps is again in attendance at Primrose
Place. Trunks are brought to the door, and packed on the carriage;
and in a few minutes Basil hands his wife to her seat. There has
been a shower of tears within at the separation; though mother and
daughter are to meet again in so short a time. For be it known that
Basil and his bride are westward bound, to pass the first three or
four days of the honeymoon on the coast; to be duly taken thence by
the good ship _Halcyon_ calling there on the voyage out.

It may have been at the very minute that Basil and his bride
quitted Primrose Place, that a letter was delivered at Jericho
House. The letter was for Miss Pennibacker, written in the pangs of
disappointment, in the agony of a broken heart, by the Hon. Cesar
Candituft. We sum up the meaning of the epistle, gladly avoiding
the fulness of its contents—gladly, too, avoiding any attempted
description of the profound astonishment, disgust, and horror, of
poor Monica. It may be remembered that the lover, baulked of the
dowry by the loathsome avarice of Mr. Jericho, was fain to trust to
the successful issue of some vague law-suit for the means of married
life in its required magnificence. Well, the uncertainty of the law,
is a grim joke that generations of men have suffered and bled under.
And—to be brief—Candituft after his late visit to Jericho House,
discovered that, with the best of causes he had the worst of luck,
and so—and so—with a bleeding heart he released from all her vows the
betrayed Monica. He was about to leave London, to seek consolation in
the society of his brother-in-law and his sweet sister.

“The villain!” cried Monica, “and after I had been brought to promise
him my hand! To leave me, and perhaps for another.”

“The cruel creature!” little Agatha spoke of Hodmadod—“after I had
cured his hand, to go before my face, and give it to that—that little
scorpion!”


FOOTNOTES:

[1] The earliest attempt to introduce bees from England was made by
Mrs. Wills, in May 1842; but this first colony died on the passage.
Shortly afterwards, a healthy hive sent by Mrs. Allom, of London,
arrived safely, and was established at Nelson.—_Handbook for New
Zealand._




CHAPTER XXIV.


Though Mrs. Jericho had failed in her hopes of sympathetic assistance
from the friends she had summoned about her, she would not quit
the field. She would dispute the ground inch by inch. On her final
interview with Basil—she would rather not see Bessy, she wished
to be spared the trial—she declared that, albeit Mr. Jericho was
strangely wayward, it was but a passing whim. However, be that as
it might, it was her duty as a wife and mother to remain where she
was. And Basil, having taken his measures that, at the worst, his
mother and sisters might be protected, bade them a gay farewell; for
he felt that the separation would be only for a short time. “My dear
mother,” he said, “in a while, and you’ll be making pumpkin pie in a
log-hut; as rosy as the ruddiest milkmaid.” Mrs. Jericho smiled very
wanly at the picture. “And you, girls, why, what hands you’ll be at
rearing chicks, and fattening pigs.” The young ladies shuddered at
the thought. And when Basil prophesied for them a brace of stalwart
farmers for husbands, why, in their own words, “their blood ran cold
at the bare idea.”

Meanwhile our Man of Money hugged himself in his triumph. He had
despoiled his wife and her daughters of the costly gifts that in his
horns of ignorant weakness had been beguiled from him. And when he
looked at the jewels—when he knew that they were his own again,—the
victory was saddened by the despairing thought that, he could by no
known means, repossess himself of all the money—all he had wasted
upon them. “No; no. It is a curse to think it, but _they_ cannot to
the crucible. They cannot yield up an ounce—nay not a grain—of the
glorious money cast away upon their pampered flesh—their mincing
appetites—their brainsick whims. No: that money is gone; buried in
the graves of vanity, and gluttony, and show. Gone! Gone! In another
land I might have sold those milk-faced witches for something to
reimburse me. But there is no help for it here—none.” These savage
and fantastic thoughts fermented in the brain of Jericho; and, still
defeated in his moody musings, he would still return to the idea of
his loss, to the hope to cover it. “To think that they—the sleek
white cats!—to think that they should be the tombs wherein I have
buried so much! To think that they should have so devoured me! That
they should have worn my heart! Should have been arrayed with my
life! Should have worn it in their ears, about their tiny wrists!
Nay, should have trod upon it, in their damned glass slippers! And
not a penny—not a penny can I melt from them!” And then, as some
consolation, the miser would look at the jewels—the plunder he had
secured. Any way, that was something snatched from the wreck. Yet it
was hard to gain nothing more. Hard to know that the cost of past
days, the bye-gone pomp and luxury,—was irrevocable as the departed
hours.

The Man of Money sat crouched in the scullion’s garret. His sordid
serving-man—with his eyes fiercely bent upon his master; his mouth
curved with a sharp grin, as though he read odd, strange, diabolic
matter in the brain laid bare to his looks—his servant Plutus stood
apart. The morning was come, and in a while, the buyers would crowd
to purchase; to buy the contents of the mansion bit by bit, so
that—as Jericho rejoiced—he might carry them in his pocket.

“There’s some of them,” said Jericho, turning up his cheek as the
knocker struck through the house. The Man of Money, followed by
his servant, descended the stairs, with tripping pace. “Bring them
to me—here,” said Jericho, passing into a room; whilst the menial
proceeded to the door. “Not gone, yet—not yet!” exclaimed the Man of
Money to his weeping wife as, pale and trembling, she approached him.

“My dear Solomon,”—

“Well?” answered Jericho, with hyena laugh, “well, my very dear
wife?”

“For the last time, let me supplicate you,” said the woman.

“I am content, for the last time. Well, go on; supplicate,” answered
the Man of Money.

“You will destroy us,” exclaimed the poor wife—“utterly, utterly
destroy us.”

“Well? I know it—I know it,” answered Jericho. “And may I not destroy
what I have made? You were all beggars when I took ye, and to
beggars ye shall return. The rags, with my blood, were changed into
gold-cloth. Now, I’ll have my blood again—I will—and you shall have
your rags.”

“Dear Jericho! This is madness,” cried the wife.

“No, it isn’t,” answered Jericho, with a strange calmness. “It isn’t
madness, my dear, dear spouse, as the wise Doctor Mizzlemist has
signified. Oh, it was a rare meeting! How happy you might have been!
What rare junkettings, here! What a world of fashion, making this
house a heaven,—and the poor devil, the madman owner, the maniac bone
of your bone—the lunatic flesh of your flesh—fast bound, fast barred!
What music you would have had—and he, the Bedlamite, howling to the
moon. Go!” yelled the Man of Money, stamping his thin noiseless foot
upon the floor; but the woman, drawing herself up, resolved to stand
her ground. “What! you thought because you had not yet eaten the
fruit, you would never taste its bitterness.”

“What fruit? What bitterness?” cried Mrs. Jericho, rising in spirit.

Jericho gave no direct reply. Hugging his arms about him, he swayed
to and fro. “Some lies,” he cried, “like some truths, are of long
growth ere they bear; but they do bear at last. Now, the lie you
sowed”—

“I!” exclaimed the indignant wife.

“The lie you sowed,”—repeated Jericho doggedly—“fell upon hard
ground, ’tis true. The altar stone, no less. Still, the lie has
sprouted, has struck root; has shot up, and its fruit—like the fruit
of every lie, I know that much now—is bitterness. The wine it makes
is misery, to the dregs of life—and you shall drink your fill of it.
No; I am not mad; even, saying this, I am not mad;” cried Jericho,
for he marked the eloquent meaning of the woman’s looks—“not mad, but
enlightened. This is not frenzy, madam; but wisdom—withering wisdom,”
sighed Jericho, and there was such a sound of human suffering in
the words that, with a smile in her face, the wife looked up at her
persecutor.

“My dear, you are not well—this is”—

“Why stay you here?” cried the Man of Money, with the old ferocity.
“Why will you not be warned? Well, well, take your own way—you know
best; you know best. But in a few hours, and there’s not a bed left
for your fine, costly bones to lie upon. Now, will you depart?” cried
Jericho.

“No,” exclaimed the wife. “I know my course. I am advised.” Jericho
laughed. “Oh, do not doubt that,” repeated the angry woman. “I will
not quit the house while a tatter remains. It shall be your work to
leave me destitute, and then”—

“Aye, destitute; as I took you. The rich widow—the Indian queen—the
sultana”—

“The man of wealth—the shipowner—the holder of stocks—the golden
merchant”—

“Well, and has it turned out otherwise?” asked Jericho, sullenly
and proudly. “Has my wealth been wanting? Did I cheat you? Have you
not shared and shared? Have you not cursed me? You married me for
your money-drudge—your golden slave. And still, with your speech you
goaded me; still with that whip of asp—a shrew’s tongue—you scourged
me. Money—money! And despairingly I wished even of the fiend for
money. I have my wish”—and Jericho slowly fixed his eyes upon his
wife, whose sympathy returned with the man’s suffering—fixed his
eyes, whilst his face became ghastly pale, though with the paleness
came back something of the calmer look of former days—“I have my
wish,” groaned Jericho, spreading his hand upon his breast—“and—I
feel it—I am damned for it.”

“Husband!” cried the wife, and her arm sought to embrace him.
“Heavens!” she screamed in terror; and with her arm—some time
divorced—around her husband, her blood stood frozen at the change.
His body seemed as a wand—a willow wand. The wife trembled, and did
not dare to look at what she deemed monstrous—devilish. With her
heart beating thick, her brow bedewed, her arm fell as dead to her
side.

“The brain burns brightest, I have heard,” said Jericho, with
mournful, meaning voice—with features pale and tranquil, and with a
gleam of their old expression—“brightest a while before ’tis clay—if
it be so, in the running of some minutes, I _was_. My God! What do
I see?” and Jericho stared with eyes suddenly lustrous, “What do
I see?” he groaned. “The skeletons of things! Outside beauty has
departed, and here—here I stand—in a house of dust. I know that was
some fine thing upon you—some silken rag of pride—and now it is a
web of dust—of woven dust! I look upon your face—that fine, large,
glowing, breathing lie that was, and it is a lie no longer. No; it is
resolved into the one truth—the universal dust, the _caput mortuum_
of the last day.”

“My love,” said the wife, with a voice of terror; but the man
possessed would not hear.

“Why could I not see this before? Why, I know that thing about your
neck was gold; _is_ gold still to the blind ignorance of the world.
It is a piece of yellow dust; so light, a breath must scatter it. All
dust. Your fine, proud, sweeping body! Why, now I see it as it is.
I could crumble it with my hands. And your heart, I see that too!
And what is called the blood passing through it. Blood! why, it is a
gush of sand. And your brain?—as busy as an ant-hill; as busy and as
earthy.”

“My dear,” said the wife, struck with the change, yet fain to play
the comforter, “you are better now.”

“Much better; for I can see through all things. Why had I not one
glance of this before? Are we only to know what dirt is pride and
pomp, only to know it when the tongue begins to taste the clay? But
it is no matter,” and the wild look again dawned in the sick man’s
face. Again, the fierce, wild, violent spirit grew strong within him.
“It is no matter. All’s well. Very well! As I said—as I said. I am
rich, and I am damned for it. I have earned hell—well earned it”—

“For the love of heaven,” cried the woman in despair, for the moment
feeling a partner in the horror.

“None of that! No cowardice! No craven—twelfth-hour puling. Be honest
when you can’t help it. ’Twas a bargain; a fair bargain with hell.
So let the devil have his own. And mark you! Woman of sin—thing of
smiles and fraud! you and your young hags take a witch’s flight, and
be gone. You had best: much best. Wait another day, and there’ll not
be a broomstick to fly with.”

And here, introduced by Plutus—how Mrs. Jericho shuddered at the
creature’s presence!—came certain tradesmen; wreckers never absent
when a fortune founders. Israel, Laban, and Issachar stood before
the Man of Money, who, on the instant, returned to his hungry,
ravenous self. Yes; at sight of the dealers, the face of Jericho
put on its former wickedness; and philosophy and remorse were dumb
and dead, and cunning and avarice again active and voluble. With a
contemptuous chuck of the head, Jericho acknowledged the presence
of the chapmen, and then turned fiercely upon his wife. “Are you
advised now? A few hours, and if you will stay here, you shall rule
the mistress of naked walls. Go!” And the poor woman, with terror in
her looks, fled from the spot. How—in that moment—she accused the
lingering, guilty pride, that had withheld her from communing with
Basil! How willingly would she have followed him! With what alacrity
have flung aside, like tarnished finery, her present life, and drawn
the breath of simplicity and peace! And with this thought she sought
her daughters. This thought she uttered with fervent utterance; and
found no according sympathy. But youth is apt to be disdainful.
And so it was with Monica, so even with the less courageous Agatha.
Both of them bade their mother—she herself had taught the lesson,
and now her pupils bade her not forget it—have a nobler spirit. They
were prepared to defy the tyrant to the last! Indeed, in a wild,
passionate moment, burning with revenge, Monica laughing and clapping
her hands, declared it would be noble sport to set fire to the house,
and all perish in the flames. Poor girl! We verily believe she had no
such wicked intention. She only spoke from a desperate waywardness
of spirit; for it must not be forgotten that the treasonous letter
of the dastard Candituft—(he married, ten years after, a tyrannous
old maid, with enormous expectations that ripened into nothing better
than erysipelas)—the coward letter, like a live coal, was eating up
Monica’s heart. However, the mother was re-assured by the spirit of
her children; and having gathered together all the property—body
goods, no other—allowed them by the tyrant Man of Money, was resolved
to stay to the last. Neither would she take the judgment of the jury
of friends as final. She must believe—moreover Monica, upon the
strength of her grey experience was convinced—that the law was too
kind, too just and benevolent towards feeble woman, not to dethrone
and confine for life, her maniac despot.

In the meantime, the dealers, accompanied by Jericho, prowled from
room to room. Furniture, plate, pictures—all that had made the
glory of Jericho—were duly considered and duly debased by the men
who wished to make them their own. For a while, Jericho endured the
chaffering of the tribe. At length, he suddenly drew up. “Look ye
here,” said the Man of Money, prepared at once to make clean work of
it; for his impatience subdued his avarice,—“Look ye, here. I treat
with men of honour; with scrupulous merchants whose only wish is a
fair profit. I know this, gentlemen. The tone of your voices, the
clear look of your eyes, the sterling worth of your words, as we have
passed from room to room, considering the goods,—all convince me
that I am safe in your hands.”

Israel, Laban, and Issachar, staring somewhat, bowed.

“Safe in your hands,” repeated Jericho. “Well, then, why should we
waste time? I want to be quit of this. I want, at a thought, to melt
all you see and have seen, into ready money. I know I must be a
mighty loser. Oh yes! For money never was so scarce—trade never so
very dead. This I knew before; so not a word about it now. Well then,
worthy gentlemen, princely dealers, take counsel with yourselves, and
to save a public hubbub—for I would pass from this fiery furnace of a
house, this mansion burning with gold, to the peaceful corner I have
provided me. You understand?”—

Again Israel, Laban, and Issachar, bowed. They understood perfectly.

“Take counsel, I say, and make me an offer, a lumping offer for the
whole. Eh?”

Israel, Laban, and Issachar were impressed with the comprehensive
largeness of the thought. It would save time, and trouble, and the
liberal, the right royal Jericho would be a gainer—there could be no
doubt of it—a great gainer in the end.

“Fellow,” and Jericho turned to his serf, “conduct the merchants into
every corner. And gentlemen, let me have your offer—be it ever so
rough a guess, still something like it—your offer to-night. No later;
to-night.”

Israel, Laban, and Issachar, with their hearts glowing in their eyes,
and smiling at their mouths, rubbed their hands, and promised. The
magnificent Jericho should have their offer in the evening. They, the
merchant friends—old associates, time-tried fellows—with one another
would soon decide; and—there should be no miss in the matter—a plain,
distinct offer should be made in the evening.

Whereupon, the Man of Money ascended to his garret, and the dealers
pursued their occupation. There was only one apartment shut against
them. And here, Mrs. Jericho and her daughters defied a siege. Every
other place was searched, and every article scanned by the dealers,
who at length with a grave joy departed from the house, big with the
belief in a glorious pennyworth.

The Man of Money sat alone in his garret. Evening closed in, and the
moon rose, and looked reproachfully at the miser. The same moon that
looked so tenderly upon millions; the same moon that shone upon the
silvery sails of the _Halcyon_, flying like a sea-bird to its home.

The Man of Money started in his chair. “What’s that?” The garret door
opened. “You,—is’t not?”

“I,” answered the slave Plutus.

“Well? Has it come?” cried the master.

“Here it is,” answered the servant; and he laid a letter upon the
table.

“Well, now for their conscience!” exclaimed the Man of Money. “Go,
while I read it,” and the servant departed. “Stay, dog. A light—I
cannot read else. Do you hear? A light.”

The fellow came not in; but his voice was heard without. “There is a
candle on the table; and paper prepared to light it.”

Most precious paper! The heart’s flesh and blood of the Man of Money.
For the devilish serving-man had folded a note—(how obtained, can
it matter?)—a note peeled from the breast of his master; a piece of
money, a part of the damned Jericho, sympathising with him.

The Man of Money took the paper,—the devil with his ear upturned
crept closer to the door—and thrust it amidst the dying coals. A
moment, and the garret is rent as with a lightning flash.

Yelling, and all on fire, the Man of Money falls prostrate, with
hell in his face. Then his lips move, but not a sound is heard. And
the fire communicated by the sympathy of the living note—the flesh
of his flesh—like a snake of flame, glides up his limbs, devouring
them. And so he is consumed. A minute; and the Man of Money is a
thin, black paper ash. Now, the night wind stirs it; and now, a
sudden breeze carries the cinerous corpse away, flattering it to dust
impalpable.

And at the moment, the possessions of Jericho—all he had bought with
his flesh, and blood, and soul—all was blasted to tinder, consumed to
ashes. The pictures dropt in dust from the walls; the walls crumbled;
the very gold the wretch had hoarded became as nought.

Candituft looked at his diamond ring—the gift of Jericho—and it was
a speck of charcoal. Bones and Thrush, drawing forth their golden
snuff-boxes, found in their hands two lumps of soot.

Mrs. Jericho and her daughters were alike disenchanted. The very
moment Jericho passed away in flame, they found themselves in
garments of tinder.

And thus were all things of the Man made of Money—things of dust and
ashes.

       *       *       *       *       *

The night has passed, and day—lovely summer time—smiles a benison
upon the world. The _Halcyon_, with her sea-pilgrims aboard,
lies-to off the western shore. There are two voyagers yet to come.
And there—a thing no bigger than a nautilus—a boat comes shooting
out; tussling and bounding with the breeze and sea, and now fairly
leaping from wave to wave towards the ship, as with the instinct of
some creature towards its parent breast. “There they are!” shouts
Carraways, and his wife cries and laughs—and Jenny Topps jumps
about—and Robert claps his hands—and Old White blesses himself—and
Doctor Dodo smiles, and Mrs. Dodo is so happy—and the nine children
Dodos—baby at the breast counting for nothing—give a scream and a
shout of delight!

[Illustration: _The end of the Man of Money._]

Another minute, and the boat is alongside. And there are bride and
bridegroom,—there is Bessy with such happiness filling her good face,
with Basil’s arm around her—and Basil looking proud of his treasure!
Another minute, and Bessy is upon the deck in her mother’s arms; and
Basil grasps the hand of father Carraways.

Captain Goodbody’s eye—he sees all but says little—glistens at the
meeting. The boat’s cast off—all’s right.

“’Bout ship!” cries the Captain. The yards swing round; the canvas
fills as with the breath of good spirits. May such await the trusting
and courageous hearts our vessel carries—await on them and all who,
seeking a new home, sail the mighty deep!


THE END.




  LONDON:
  BRADBURY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.




  Transcriber’s Notes

  pg 45 Changed: you havn’t the means
             to: you haven’t the means

  pg 98 Changed: paid the money for his saet
             to: paid the money for his seat

  pg 114 Changed: and his wife sittin at the fireside
              to: and his wife sitting at the fireside

  pg 122 Changed: put a horse-collar round about the the
              to: put a horse-collar round about the

  pg 127 Changed: I could’nt go into the City
              to: I couldn’t go into the City

  pg 132 Changed: But natur that makes us love
              to: But nature that makes us love

  pg 136 Changed: committed in wine must be betwen
              to: committed in wine must be between

  pg 140 Changed: has thrown an undying ustre
              to: has thrown an undying lustre

  pg 147 Changed: with a smile and a waive
              to: with a smile and a wave

  pg 267 Changed: Wont they be surprised
              to: Won’t they be surprised

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