At one period of its reverses, the
House fell into the occupation of a Showman.
He was found registered as its occupier, on the parish
books of the time when he rented the House, and there
was therefore no need of any clue to his name.
But, he himself was less easy to be found; for, he
had led a wandering life, and settled people had lost
sight of him, and people who plumed themselves on
being respectable were shy of admitting that they
had ever known anything of him. At last, among
the marsh lands near the river’s level, that
lie about Deptford and the neighbouring market-gardens,
a Grizzled Personage in velveteen, with a face so cut
up by varieties of weather that he looked as if he
had been tattooed, was found smoking a pipe at the
door of a wooden house on wheels. The wooden
house was laid up in ordinary for the winter, near
the mouth of a muddy creek; and everything near it,
the foggy river, the misty marshes, and the steaming
market-gardens, smoked in company with the grizzled
man. In the midst of this smoking party, the
funnel-chimney of the wooden house on wheels was not
remiss, but took its pipe with the rest in a companionable
manner.
On being asked if it were he who had
once rented the House to Let, Grizzled Velveteen looked
surprised, and said yes. Then his name was Magsman?
That was it, Toby Magsman which lawfully
christened Robert; but called in the line, from a
infant, Toby. There was nothing agin Toby Magsman,
he believed? If there was suspicion of such mention
it!
There was no suspicion of such, he
might rest assured. But, some inquiries were
making about that House, and would he object to say
why he left it?
Not at all; why should he? He
left it, along of a Dwarf.
Along of a Dwarf?
Mr. Magsman repeated, deliberately and emphatically,
Along of a Dwarf.
Might it be compatible with Mr. Magsman’s
inclination and convenience to enter, as a favour,
into a few particulars?
Mr. Magsman entered into the following particulars.
It was a long time ago, to begin with; afore
lotteries and a deal more was done away with.
Mr. Magsman was looking about for a good pitch, and
he see that house, and he says to himself, “I’ll
have you, if you’re to be had. If money’ll
get you, I’ll have you.”
The neighbours cut up rough, and made
complaints; but Mr. Magsman don’t know what
they would have had. It was a lovely thing.
First of all, there was the canvass, representin
the picter of the Giant, in Spanish trunks and a ruff,
who was himself half the heighth of the house, and
was run up with a line and pulley to a pole on the
roof, so that his Ed was coeval with the parapet.
Then, there was the canvass, representin the picter
of the Albina lady, showing her white air to the Army
and Navy in correct uniform. Then, there was
the canvass, representin the picter of the Wild Indian
a scalpin a member of some foreign nation. Then,
there was the canvass, representin the picter of a
child of a British Planter, seized by two Boa Constrictors not
that we never had no child, nor no Constrictors
neither. Similarly, there was the canvass, representin
the picter of the Wild Ass of the Prairies not
that we never had no wild asses, nor wouldn’t
have had ’em at a gift. Last, there was
the canvass, representin the picter of the Dwarf,
and like him too (considerin), with George the Fourth
in such a state of astonishment at him as His Majesty
couldn’t with his utmost politeness and stoutness
express. The front of the House was so covered
with canvasses, that there wasn’t a spark of
daylight ever visible on that side. “Magsman’s
amusements,” fifteen foot long by two foot
high, ran over the front door and parlour winders.
The passage was a Arbour of green baize and gardenstuff.
A barrel-organ performed there unceasing. And
as to respectability, if threepence ain’t
respectable, what is?
But, the Dwarf is the principal article
at present, and he was worth the money. He was
wrote up as Major TPSCHOFFKI, of the
Imperial BULGRADERIAN brigade. Nobody
couldn’t pronounce the name, and it never was
intended anybody should. The public always turned
it, as a regular rule, into Chopski. In the
line he was called Chops; partly on that account, and
partly because his real name, if he ever had any real
name (which was very dubious), was Stakes.
He was a uncommon small man, he really
was. Certainly not so small as he was made out
to be, but where is your Dwarf as is?
He was a most uncommon small man, with a most uncommon
large Ed; and what he had inside that Ed, nobody ever
knowed but himself: even supposin himself to have
ever took stock of it, which it would have been a stiff
job for even him to do.
The kindest little man as never growed!
Spirited, but not proud. When he travelled
with the Spotted Baby though he knowed himself
to be a nat’ral Dwarf, and knowed the Baby’s
spots to be put upon him artificial, he nursed that
Baby like a mother. You never heerd him give
a ill-name to a Giant. He did allow himself
to break out into strong language respectin the Fat
Lady from Norfolk; but that was an affair of the ’art;
and when a man’s ’art has been trifled
with by a lady, and the preference giv to a Indian,
he ain’t master of his actions.
He was always in love, of course;
every human nat’ral phenomenon is. And
he was always in love with a large woman; I never knowed
the Dwarf as could be got to love a small one.
Which helps to keep ’em the Curiosities they
are.
One sing’ler idea he had in
that Ed of his, which must have meant something, or
it wouldn’t have been there. It was always
his opinion that he was entitled to property.
He never would put his name to anything. He
had been taught to write, by the young man without
arms, who got his living with his toes (quite a writing
master he was, and taught scores in the line),
but Chops would have starved to death, afore he’d
have gained a bit of bread by putting his hand to a
paper. This is the more curious to bear in mind,
because HE had no property, nor hope of property,
except his house and a sarser. When I say his
house, I mean the box, painted and got up outside
like a reg’lar six-roomer, that he used to creep
into, with a diamond ring (or quite as good to look
at) on his forefinger, and ring a little bell out
of what the Public believed to be the Drawing-room
winder. And when I say a sarser, I mean a Chaney
sarser in which he made a collection for himself at
the end of every Entertainment. His cue for
that, he took from me: “Ladies and gentlemen,
the little man will now walk three times round the
Cairawan, and retire behind the curtain.”
When he said anything important, in private life,
he mostly wound it up with this form of words, and
they was generally the last thing he said to me at
night afore he went to bed.
He had what I consider a fine mind a
poetic mind. His ideas respectin his property
never come upon him so strong as when he sat upon a
barrel-organ and had the handle turned. Arter
the wibration had run through him a little time, he
would screech out, “Toby, I feel my property
coming grind away! I’m counting
my guineas by thousands, Toby grind away!
Toby, I shall be a man of fortun! I feel the
Mint a jingling in me, Toby, and I’m swelling
out into the Bank of England!” Such is the
influence of music on a poetic mind. Not that
he was partial to any other music but a barrel-organ;
on the contrary, hated it.
He had a kind of a everlasting grudge
agin the Public: which is a thing you may notice
in many phenomenons that get their living out of it.
What riled him most in the nater of his occupation
was, that it kep him out of Society. He was
continiwally saying, “Toby, my ambition is, to
go into Society. The curse of my position towards
the Public is, that it keeps me hout of Society.
This don’t signify to a low beast of a Indian;
he an’t formed for Society. This don’t
signify to a Spotted Baby; he an’t formed
for Society. I am.”
Nobody never could make out what Chops
done with his money. He had a good salary, down
on the drum every Saturday as the day came round,
besides having the run of his teeth and
he was a Woodpecker to eat but all Dwarfs
are. The sarser was a little income, bringing
him in so many halfpence that he’d carry ’em
for a week together, tied up in a pocket-handkercher.
And yet he never had money. And it couldn’t
be the Fat Lady from Norfolk, as was once supposed;
because it stands to reason that when you have a animosity
towards a Indian, which makes you grind your teeth
at him to his face, and which can hardly hold you from
Goosing him audible when he’s going through
his War-Dance it stands to reason you wouldn’t
under them circumstances deprive yourself, to support
that Indian in the lap of luxury.
Most unexpected, the mystery come
out one day at Egham Races. The Public was shy
of bein pulled in, and Chops was ringin his little
bell out of his drawing-room winder, and was snarlin
to me over his shoulder as he kneeled down with his
legs out at the back-door for he couldn’t
be shoved into his house without kneeling down, and
the premises wouldn’t accommodate his legs was
snarlin, “Here’s a precious Public for
you; why the Devil don’t they tumble up?”
when a man in the crowd holds up a carrier-pigeon,
and cries out, “If there’s any person here
as has got a ticket, the Lottery’s just drawed,
and the number as has come up for the great prize
is three, seven, forty-two! Three, seven, forty-two!”
I was givin the man to the Furies myself, for calling
off the Public’s attention for the
Public will turn away, at any time, to look at anything
in preference to the thing showed ’em; and if
you doubt it, get ’em together for any indiwidual
purpose on the face of the earth, and send only two
people in late, and see if the whole company an’t
far more interested in takin particular notice of
them two than of you I say, I wasn’t
best pleased with the man for callin out, and wasn’t
blessin him in my own mind, when I see Chops’s
little bell fly out of winder at a old lady, and he
gets up and kicks his box over, exposin the whole secret,
and he catches hold of the calves of my legs and he
says to me, “Carry me into the wan, Toby, and
throw a pail of water over me or I’m a dead man,
for I’ve come into my property!”
Twelve thousand odd hundred pound,
was Chops’s winnins. He had bought a half-ticket
for the twenty-five thousand prize, and it had come
up. The first use he made of his property, was,
to offer to fight the Wild Indian for five hundred
pound a side, him with a poisoned darnin-needle and
the Indian with a club; but the Indian being in want
of backers to that amount, it went no further.
Arter he had been mad for a week in
a state of mind, in short, in which, if I had let
him sit on the organ for only two minutes, I believe
he would have bust but we kep the organ
from him Mr. Chops come round, and behaved
liberal and beautiful to all. He then sent for
a young man he knowed, as had a wery genteel appearance
and was a Bonnet at a gaming-booth (most respectable
brought up, father havin been imminent in the livery
stable line but unfort’nate in a commercial crisis,
through paintin a old gray, ginger-bay, and sellin
him with a Pedigree), and Mr. Chops said to this Bonnet,
who said his name was Normandy, which it wasn’t:
“Normandy, I’m a goin
into Society. Will you go with me?”
Says Normandy: “Do I understand
you, Mr. Chops, to hintimate that the ’olé
of the expenses of that move will be borne by yourself?”
“Correct,” says Mr. Chops.
“And you shall have a Princely allowance too.”
The Bonnet lifted Mr. Chops upon a
chair, to shake hands with him, and replied in poetry,
with his eyes seemingly full of tears:
“My boat is on the shore,
And my bark is on the sea,
And I do not ask for more,
But I’ll Go: along with thee.”
They went into Society, in a chay
and four grays with silk jackets. They took
lodgings in Pall Mall, London, and they blazed away.
In consequence of a note that was
brought to Bartlemy Fair in the autumn of next year
by a servant, most wonderful got up in milk-white cords
and tops, I cleaned myself and went to Pall Mall,
one evening appinted. The gentlemen was at their
wine arter dinner, and Mr. Chops’s eyes was more
fixed in that Ed of his than I thought good for him.
There was three of ’em (in company, I mean),
and I knowed the third well. When last met, he
had on a white Roman shirt, and a bishop’s mitre
covered with leopard-skin, and played the clarionet
all wrong, in a band at a Wild Beast Show.
This gent took on not to know me,
and Mr. Chops said: “Gentlemen, this is
a old friend of former days:” and Normandy
looked at me through a eye-glass, and said, “Magsman,
glad to see you!” which I’ll
take my oath he wasn’t. Mr. Chops, to
git him convenient to the table, had his chair on
a throne (much of the form of George the Fourth’s
in the canvass), but he hardly appeared to me to be
King there in any other pint of view, for his two
gentlemen ordered about like Emperors. They was
all dressed like May-Day gorgeous! And
as to Wine, they swam in all sorts.
I made the round of the bottles, first
separate (to say I had done it), and then mixed ’em
all together (to say I had done it), and then tried
two of ’em as half-and-half, and then t’other
two. Altogether, I passed a pleasin evenin,
but with a tendency to feel muddled, until I considered
it good manners to get up and say, “Mr. Chops,
the best of friends must part, I thank you for the
wariety of foreign drains you have stood so ’ansome,
I looks towards you in red wine, and I takes my leave.”
Mr. Chops replied, “If you’ll just hitch
me out of this over your right arm, Magsman, and carry
me down-stairs, I’ll see you out.”
I said I couldn’t think of such a thing, but
he would have it, so I lifted him off his throne.
He smelt strong of Maideary, and I couldn’t
help thinking as I carried him down that it was like
carrying a large bottle full of wine, with a rayther
ugly stopper, a good deal out of proportion.
When I set him on the door-mat in
the hall, he kep me close to him by holding on to
my coat-collar, and he whispers:
“I ain’t ’appy, Magsman.”
“What’s on your mind, Mr. Chops?”
“They don’t use me well.
They an’t grateful to me. They puts me
on the mantel-piece when I won’t have in more
Champagne-wine, and they locks me in the sideboard
when I won’t give up my property.”
“Get rid of ’em, Mr. Chops.”
“I can’t. We’re in Society
together, and what would Society say?”
“Come out of Society!” says I.
“I can’t. You don’t
know what you’re talking about. When you
have once gone into Society, you mustn’t come
out of it.”
“Then if you’ll excuse
the freedom, Mr. Chops,” were my remark, shaking
my head grave, “I think it’s a pity you
ever went in.”
Mr. Chops shook that deep Ed of his,
to a surprisin extent, and slapped it half a dozen
times with his hand, and with more Wice than I thought
were in him. Then, he says, “You’re
a good fellow, but you don’t understand.
Good-night, go along. Magsman, the little man
will now walk three times round the Cairawan, and
retire behind the curtain.” The last I
see of him on that occasion was his tryin, on the extremest
werge of insensibility, to climb up the stairs, one
by one, with his hands and knees. They’d
have been much too steep for him, if he had been sober;
but he wouldn’t be helped.
It warn’t long after that, that
I read in the newspaper of Mr. Chops’s being
presented at court. It was printed, “It
will be recollected” and I’ve
noticed in my life, that it is sure to be printed that
it will be recollected, whenever it won’t “that
Mr. Chops is the individual of small stature, whose
brilliant success in the last State Lottery attracted
so much attention.” Well, I says to myself,
Such is Life! He has been and done it in earnest
at last. He has astonished George the Fourth!
(On account of which, I had that canvass
new-painted, him with a bag of money in his hand,
a presentin it to George the Fourth, and a lady in
Ostrich Feathers fallin in love with him in a bag-wig,
sword, and buckles correct.)
I took the House as is the subject
of present inquiries though not the honour
of bein acquainted and I run Magsman’s
Amusements in it thirteen months sometimes
one thing, sometimes another, sometimes nothin particular,
but always all the canvasses outside. One night,
when we had played the last company out, which was
a shy company, through its raining Heavens hard, I
was takin a pipe in the one pair back along with the
young man with the toes, which I had taken on for a
month (though he never drawed except on
paper), and I heard a kickin at the street door.
“Halloa!” I says to the young man, “what’s
up!” He rubs his eyebrows with his toes, and
he says, “I can’t imagine, Mr. Magsman” which
he never could imagine nothin, and was monotonous
company.
The noise not leavin off, I laid down
my pipe, and I took up a candle, and I went down and
opened the door. I looked out into the street;
but nothin could I see, and nothin was I aware of,
until I turned round quick, because some creetur run
between my legs into the passage. There was
Mr. Chops!
“Magsman,” he says, “take
me, on the old terms, and you’ve got me; if
it’s done, say done!”
I was all of a maze, but I said, “Done, sir.”
“Done to your done, and double
done!” says he. “Have you got a bit
of supper in the house?”
Bearin in mind them sparklin warieties
of foreign drains as we’d guzzled away at in
Pall Mall, I was ashamed to offer him cold sassages
and gin-and-water; but he took ’em both and
took ’em free; havin a chair for his table,
and sittin down at it on a stool, like hold times.
I, all of a maze all the while.
It was arter he had made a clean sweep
of the sassages (beef, and to the best of my calculations
two pound and a quarter), that the wisdom as was in
that little man began to come out of him like prespiration.
“Magsman,” he says, “look
upon me! You see afore you, One as has both
gone into Society and come out.”
“O! You are out
of it, Mr. Chops? How did you get out, sir?”
“SOLD OUT!” says he.
You never saw the like of the wisdom as his Ed expressed,
when he made use of them two words.
“My friend Magsman, I’ll
impart to you a discovery I’ve made. It’s
wallable; it’s cost twelve thousand five hundred
pound; it may do you good in life The secret
of this matter is, that it ain’t so much that
a person goes into Society, as that Society goes into
a person.”
Not exactly keepin up with his meanin,
I shook my head, put on a deep look, and said, “You’re
right there, Mr. Chops.”
“Magsman,” he says, twitchin
me by the leg, “Society has gone into me, to
the tune of every penny of my property.”
I felt that I went pale, and though
nat’rally a bold speaker, I couldn’t hardly
say, “Where’s Normandy?”
“Bolted. With the plate,” said Mr.
Chops.
“And t’other one?” meaning him as
formerly wore the bishop’s mitre.
“Bolted. With the jewels,” said
Mr. Chops.
I sat down and looked at him, and he stood up and
looked at me.
“Magsman,” he says, and
he seemed to myself to get wiser as he got hoarser;
“Society, taken in the lump, is all dwarfs.
At the court of St. James’s, they was all a
doing my old business all a goin three times
round the Cairawan, in the hold court-suits and properties.
Elsewheres, they was most of ’em ringin their
little bells out of make-believes. Everywheres,
the sarser was a goin round. Magsman, the sarser
is the uniwersal Institution!”
I perceived, you understand, that
he was soured by his misfortunes, and I felt for Mr.
Chops.
“As to Fat Ladies,” he
says, giving his head a tremendious one agin the wall,
“there’s lots of them in Society,
and worse than the original. Hers was a outrage
upon Taste simply a outrage upon Taste awakenin
contempt carryin its own punishment in the
form of a Indian.” Here he giv himself
another tremendious one. “But theirs,
Magsman, theirs is mercenary outrages.
Lay in Cashmeer shawls, buy bracelets, strew ’em
and a lot of ’andsome fans and things about
your rooms, let it be known that you give away like
water to all as come to admire, and the Fat Ladies
that don’t exhibit for so much down upon the
drum, will come from all the pints of the compass
to flock about you, whatever you are. They’ll
drill holes in your ’art, Magsman, like a Cullender.
And when you’ve no more left to give, they’ll
laugh at you to your face, and leave you to have your
bones picked dry by Wulturs, like the dead Wild Ass
of the Prairies that you deserve to be!” Here
he giv himself the most tremendious one of all, and
dropped.
I thought he was gone. His Ed
was so heavy, and he knocked it so hard, and he fell
so stoney, and the sassagerial disturbance in him must
have been so immense, that I thought he was gone.
But, he soon come round with care, and he sat up
on the floor, and he said to me, with wisdom comin
out of his eyes, if ever it come:
“Magsman! The most material
difference between the two states of existence through
which your unhappy friend has passed;” he reached
out his poor little hand, and his tears dropped down
on the moustachio which it was a credit to him to
have done his best to grow, but it is not in mortals
to command success, “the difference
this. When I was out of Society, I was paid
light for being seen. When I went into Society,
I paid heavy for being seen. I prefer the former,
even if I wasn’t forced upon it. Give
me out through the trumpet, in the hold way, to-morrow.”
Arter that, he slid into the line
again as easy as if he had been iled all over.
But the organ was kep from him, and no allusions was
ever made, when a company was in, to his property.
He got wiser every day; his views of Society and
the Public was luminous, bewilderin, awful; and his
Ed got bigger and bigger as his Wisdom expanded it.
He took well, and pulled ’em
in most excellent for nine weeks. At the expiration
of that period, when his Ed was a sight, he expressed
one evenin, the last Company havin been turned out,
and the door shut, a wish to have a little music.
“Mr. Chops,” I said (I
never dropped the “Mr.” with him; the world
might do it, but not me); “Mr. Chops, are you
sure as you are in a state of mind and body to sit
upon the organ?”
His answer was this: “Toby,
when next met with on the tramp, I forgive her and
the Indian. And I am.”
It was with fear and trembling that
I began to turn the handle; but he sat like a lamb.
I will be my belief to my dying day, that I see his
Ed expand as he sat; you may therefore judge how great
his thoughts was. He sat out all the changes,
and then he come off.
“Toby,” he says, with
a quiet smile, “the little man will now walk
three times round the Cairawan, and retire behind
the curtain.”
When we called him in the morning,
we found him gone into a much better Society than
mine or Pall Mall’s. I giv Mr. Chops as
comfortable a funeral as lay in my power, followed
myself as Chief, and had the George the Fourth canvass
carried first, in the form of a banner. But,
the House was so dismal arterwards, that I giv it
up, and took to the Wan again.
“I don’t triumph,”
said Jarber, folding up the second manuscript, and
looking hard at Trottle. “I don’t
triumph over this worthy creature. I merely
ask him if he is satisfied now?”
“How can he be anything else?”
I said, answering for Trottle, who sat obstinately
silent. “This time, Jarber, you have not
only read us a delightfully amusing story, but you
have also answered the question about the House.
Of course it stands empty now. Who would think
of taking it after it had been turned into a caravan?”
I looked at Trottle, as I said those last words,
and Jarber waved his hand indulgently in the same
direction.
“Let this excellent person speak,”
said Jarber. “You were about to say, my
good man?”
“I only wished to ask, sir,”
said Trottle doggedly, “if you could kindly
oblige me with a date or two in connection with that
last story?”
“A date!” repeated Jarber.
“What does the man want with dates!”
“I should be glad to know, with
great respect,” persisted Trottle, “if
the person named Magsman was the last tenant who lived
in the House. It’s my opinion if
I may be excused for giving it that he most
decidedly was not.”
With those words, Trottle made a low
bow, and quietly left the room.
There is no denying that Jarber, when
we were left together, looked sadly discomposed.
He had evidently forgotten to inquire about dates;
and, in spite of his magnificent talk about his series
of discoveries, it was quite as plain that the two
stories he had just read, had really and truly exhausted
his present stock. I thought myself bound, in
common gratitude, to help him out of his embarrassment
by a timely suggestion. So I proposed that he
should come to tea again, on the next Monday evening,
the thirteenth, and should make such inquiries in the
meantime, as might enable him to dispose triumphantly
of Trottle’s objection.
He gallantly kissed my hand, made
a neat little speech of acknowledgment, and took his
leave. For the rest of the week I would not encourage
Trottle by allowing him to refer to the House at all.
I suspected he was making his own inquiries about
dates, but I put no questions to him.
On Monday evening, the thirteenth,
that dear unfortunate Jarber came, punctual to the
appointed time. He looked so terribly harassed,
that he was really quite a spectacle of feebleness
and fatigue. I saw, at a glance, that the question
of dates had gone against him, that Mr. Magsman had
not been the last tenant of the House, and that the
reason of its emptiness was still to seek.
“What I have gone through,”
said Jarber, “words are not eloquent enough
to tell. O Sophonisba, I have begun another series
of discoveries! Accept the last two as stories
laid on your shrine; and wait to blame me for leaving
your curiosity unappeased, until you have heard Number
Three.”
Number Three looked like a very short
manuscript, and I said as much. Jarber explained
to me that we were to have some poetry this time.
In the course of his investigations he had stepped
into the Circulating Library, to seek for information
on the one important subject. All the Library-people
knew about the House was, that a female relative of
the last tenant, as they believed, had, just after
that tenant left, sent a little manuscript poem to
them which she described as referring to events that
had actually passed in the House; and which she wanted
the proprietor of the Library to publish. She
had written no address on her letter; and the proprietor
had kept the manuscript ready to be given back to
her (the publishing of poems not being in his line)
when she might call for it. She had never called
for it; and the poem had been lent to Jarber, at his
express request, to read to me.
Before he began, I rang the bell for
Trottle; being determined to have him present at the
new reading, as a wholesome check on his obstinacy.
To my surprise Peggy answered the bell, and told
me, that Trottle had stepped out without saying where.
I instantly felt the strongest possible conviction
that he was at his old tricks: and that his stepping
out in the evening, without leave, meant Philandering.
Controlling myself on my visitor’s
account, I dismissed Peggy, stifled my indignation,
and prepared, as politely as might be, to listen to
Jarber.