his head in pity; “you are much mistaken; my wormy relatives, you are much deceived! The stars are perfectly contented (I suppose so) in their several spheres. Why are not you? Oh! do not strive and struggle to enrich yourselves, or to get the better of each other, my deluded friends, but look up there, with me!”

Mrs. Lupin shook her head, and heaved a sigh. It was very affecting.

“Look up there, with me!” repeated Mr. Pecksniff, stretching out his hand; “with me, a humble individual who is also an Insect like yourselves. Can silver, gold, or precious stones, sparkle like those constellations! I think not. Then do not thirst for silver, gold, or precious stones; but look up there, with me!”

With those words, the good man patted Mrs. Lupin’s hand between his own, as if he would have added “think of this, my good woman!” and walked away in a sort of ecstasy or rapture, with his hat under his arm.

Jonas sat in the attitude in which Mr. Pecksniff had left him, gazing moodily at his friend; who, surrounded by a heap of documents, was writing something on an oblong slip of paper.

“You mean to wait at Salisbury over the day after tomorrow, do you, then?” said Jonas.

“You heard our appointment,” returned Montague, without raising his eyes. “In any case I should have waited to see after the boy.”

They appeared to have changed places again; Montague being in high spirits; Jonas gloomy and lowering.

“You don’t want me, I suppose?” said Jonas.

“I want you to put your name here,” he returned, glancing at him with a smile, “as soon as I have filled up the stamp. I may as well have your note of hand for that extra capital. That’s all I want. If you wish to go home, I can manage Mr. Pecksniff now, alone. There is a perfect understanding between us.”

Jonas sat scowling at him as he wrote, in silence. When he had finished his writing, and had dried it on the blotting paper in his travelling-desk; he looked up, and tossed the pen towards him.

“What, not a day’s grace, not a day’s trust, eh?” said Jonas bitterly. “Not after the pains I have taken with tonight’s work?”

“To night’s work was a part of our bargain,” replied Montague; “and so was this.”

“You drive a hard bargain,” said Jonas, advancing to the table. “You know best. Give it here!”

Montague gave him the paper. After pausing as if he could not make up his mind to put his name to it, Jonas dipped his pen hastily in the nearest inkstand, and began to write. But he had scarcely marked the paper when he started back, in a panic.

“Why, what the devil’s this?” he said. “It’s bloody!”

He had dipped the pen, as another moment showed, into red ink. But he attached a strange degree of importance to the mistake. He asked how it had come there, who had brought it, why it had been brought; and looked at Montague, at first, as if he thought he had put a trick upon him. Even when he used a different pen, and the right ink, he made some scratches on another paper first, as half believing they would turn red also.

“Black enough, this time,” he said, handing the note to Montague. “Goodbye.”

“Going now! How do you mean to get away from here?”

“I shall cross early in the morning to the high road, before you are out of bed; and catch the day-coach, going up. Goodbye!”

“You are in a hurry!”

“I have something to do,” said Jonas. “Goodbye!”

His friend looked after him as he went out, in surprise, which gradually gave place to an air of satisfaction and relief.

“It happens all the better. It brings about what I wanted, without any difficulty. I shall travel home alone.”

XLV

In which Tom Pinch and his sister take a little pleasure; but quite in a domestic way, and with no ceremony about it.

Tom Pinch and his sister having to part, for the dispatch of the morning’s business, immediately after the dispersion of the other actors in the scene upon the wharf with which the reader has been already made acquainted, had no opportunity of discussing the subject at that time. But Tom, in his solitary office, and Ruth, in the triangular parlour, thought about nothing else all day; and, when their hour of meeting in the afternoon approached, they were very full of it, to be sure.

There was a little plot between them, that Tom should always come out of the Temple by one way; and that was past the fountain. Coming through Fountain Court, he was just to glance down the steps leading into Garden Court, and to look once all round him; and if Ruth had come to meet him, there he would see her; not sauntering, you understand (on account of the clerks), but coming briskly up, with the best little laugh upon her face that ever played in opposition to the fountain, and beat it all to nothing. For, fifty to one, Tom had been looking for her in the wrong direction, and had quite given her up, while she had been tripping towards him from the first; jingling that little reticule of hers (with all the keys in it) to attract his wandering observation.

Whether there was life enough left in the slow vegetation of Fountain Court for the smoky shrubs to have any consciousness of the brightest and purest-hearted little woman in the world, is a question for gardeners, and those who are learned in the loves of plants. But, that it was a good thing for that same paved yard to have such a delicate little figure flitting through it; that it passed like a smile from the grimy old houses, and the worn flagstones, and left them duller, darker, sterner than before; there is no sort of doubt. The Temple fountain might have leaped up twenty feet to greet the spring of hopeful maidenhood, that in

Вы читаете Martin Chuzzlewit
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату