I am a Cheap Jack, and my own father’s
name was Willum Marigold. It was in his lifetime
supposed by some that his name was William, but my
own father always consistently said, No, it was Willum.
On which point I content myself with looking at the
argument this way: If a man is not allowed to
know his own name in a free country, how much is he
allowed to know in a land of slavery? As to
looking at the argument through the medium of the
Register, Willum Marigold come into the world before
Registers come up much, and went out of
it too. They wouldn’t have been greatly
in his line neither, if they had chanced to come up
before him.
I was born on the Queen’s highway,
but it was the King’s at that time. A
doctor was fetched to my own mother by my own father,
when it took place on a common; and in consequence
of his being a very kind gentleman, and accepting
no fee but a tea-tray, I was named Doctor, out of gratitude
and compliment to him. There you have me.
Doctor Marigold.
I am at present a middle-aged man
of a broadish build, in cords, leggings, and a sleeved
waistcoat the strings of which is always gone behind.
Repair them how you will, they go like fiddle-strings.
You have been to the theatre, and you have seen one
of the wiolin-players screw up his wiolin, after listening
to it as if it had been whispering the secret to him
that it feared it was out of order, and then you have
heard it snap. That’s as exactly similar
to my waistcoat as a waistcoat and a wiolin can be
like one another.
I am partial to a white hat, and I
like a shawl round my neck wore loose and easy.
Sitting down is my favourite posture. If I have
a taste in point of personal jewelry, it is mother-of-pearl
buttons. There you have me again, as large as
life.
The doctor having accepted a tea-tray,
you’ll guess that my father was a Cheap Jack
before me. You are right. He was.
It was a pretty tray. It represented a large
lady going along a serpentining up-hill gravel-walk,
to attend a little church. Two swans had likewise
come astray with the same intentions. When I
call her a large lady, I don’t mean in point
of breadth, for there she fell below my views, but
she more than made it up in heighth; her heighth and
slimness was in short the heighth of
both.
I often saw that tray, after I was
the innocently smiling cause (or more likely screeching
one) of the doctor’s standing it up on a table
against the wall in his consulting-room. Whenever
my own father and mother were in that part of the
country, I used to put my head (I have heard my own
mother say it was flaxen curls at that time, though
you wouldn’t know an old hearth-broom from it
now till you come to the handle, and found it wasn’t
me) in at the doctor’s door, and the doctor was
always glad to see me, and said, “Aha, my brother
practitioner! Come in, little M.D. How
are your inclinations as to sixpence?”
You can’t go on for ever, you’ll
find, nor yet could my father nor yet my mother.
If you don’t go off as a whole when you are
about due, you’re liable to go off in part,
and two to one your head’s the part. Gradually
my father went off his, and my mother went off hers.
It was in a harmless way, but it put out the family
where I boarded them. The old couple, though
retired, got to be wholly and solely devoted to the
Cheap Jack business, and were always selling the family
off. Whenever the cloth was laid for dinner,
my father began rattling the plates and dishes, as
we do in our line when we put up crockery for a bid,
only he had lost the trick of it, and mostly let ’em
drop and broke ’em. As the old lady had
been used to sit in the cart, and hand the articles
out one by one to the old gentleman on the footboard
to sell, just in the same way she handed him every
item of the family’s property, and they disposed
of it in their own imaginations from morning to night.
At last the old gentleman, lying bedridden in the
same room with the old lady, cries out in the old
patter, fluent, after having been silent for two days
and nights: “Now here, my jolly companions
every one, which the Nightingale club in
a village was held, At the sign of the Cabbage and
Shears, Where the singers no doubt would have greatly
excelled, But for want of taste, voices and ears, now,
here, my jolly companions, every one, is a working
model of a used-up old Cheap Jack, without a tooth
in his head, and with a pain in every bone: so
like life that it would be just as good if it wasn’t
better, just as bad if it wasn’t worse, and just
as new if it wasn’t worn out. Bid for
the working model of the old Cheap Jack, who has drunk
more gunpowder-tea with the ladies in his time than
would blow the lid off a washerwoman’s copper,
and carry it as many thousands of miles higher than
the moon as naught nix naught, divided by the national
debt, carry nothing to the poor-rates, three under,
and two over. Now, my hearts of oak and men
of straw, what do you say for the lot? Two shillings,
a shilling, tenpence, eightpence, sixpence, fourpence.
Twopence? Who said twopence? The gentleman
in the scarecrow’s hat? I am ashamed of
the gentleman in the scarecrow’s hat. I
really am ashamed of him for his want of public spirit.
Now I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you.
Come! I’ll throw you in a working model
of a old woman that was married to the old Cheap Jack
so long ago that upon my word and honour it took place
in Noah’s Ark, before the Unicorn could get in
to forbid the banns by blowing a tune upon his horn.
There now! Come! What do you say for
both? I’ll tell you what I’ll do
with you. I don’t bear you malice for
being so backward. Here! If you make me
a bid that’ll only reflect a little credit on
your town, I’ll throw you in a warming-pan
for nothing, and lend you a toasting-fork for life.
Now come; what do you say after that splendid offer?
Say two pound, say thirty shillings, say a pound,
say ten shillings, say five, say two and six.
You don’t say even two and six? You say
two and three? No. You shan’t have
the lot for two and three. I’d sooner give
it to you, if you was good-looking enough.
Here! Missis! Chuck the old man and woman
into the cart, put the horse to, and drive ’em
away and bury ’em!” Such were the last
words of Willum Marigold, my own father, and they were
carried out, by him and by his wife, my own mother,
on one and the same day, as I ought to know, having
followed as mourner.
My father had been a lovely one in
his time at the Cheap Jack work, as his dying observations
went to prove. But I top him. I don’t
say it because it’s myself, but because it has
been universally acknowledged by all that has had
the means of comparison. I have worked at it.
I have measured myself against other public speakers, Members
of Parliament, Platforms, Pulpits, Counsel learned
in the law, and where I have found ’em
good, I have took a bit of imagination from ’em,
and where I have found ’em bad, I have let ’em
alone. Now I’ll tell you what. I
mean to go down into my grave declaring that of all
the callings ill used in Great Britain, the Cheap
Jack calling is the worst used. Why ain’t
we a profession? Why ain’t we endowed
with privileges? Why are we forced to take out
a hawker’s license, when no such thing is expected
of the political hawkers? Where’s the
difference betwixt us? Except that we are Cheap
Jacks and they are Dear Jacks, I don’t
see any difference but what’s in our favour.
For look here! Say it’s
election time. I am on the footboard of my cart
in the market-place, on a Saturday night. I put
up a general miscellaneous lot. I say:
“Now here, my free and independent woters, I’m
a going to give you such a chance as you never had
in all your born days, nor yet the days preceding.
Now I’ll show you what I am a going to do with
you. Here’s a pair of razors that’ll
shave you closer than the Board of Guardians; here’s
a flat-iron worth its weight in gold; here’s
a frying-pan artificially flavoured with essence of
beefsteaks to that degree that you’ve only got
for the rest of your lives to fry bread and dripping
in it and there you are replete with animal food; here’s
a genuine chronometer watch in such a solid silver
case that you may knock at the door with it when you
come home late from a social meeting, and rouse your
wife and family, and save up your knocker for the postman;
and here’s half-a-dozen dinner plates that you
may play the cymbals with to charm baby when it’s
fractious. Stop! I’ll throw in another
article, and I’ll give you that, and it’s
a rolling-pin; and if the baby can only get it well
into its mouth when its teeth is coming and rub the
gums once with it, they’ll come through double,
in a fit of laughter equal to being tickled.
Stop again! I’ll throw you in another
article, because I don’t like the looks of you,
for you haven’t the appearance of buyers unless
I lose by you, and because I’d rather lose than
not take money to-night, and that’s a looking-glass
in which you may see how ugly you look when you don’t
bid. What do you say now? Come! Do
you say a pound? Not you, for you haven’t
got it. Do you say ten shillings? Not you,
for you owe more to the tallyman. Well then,
I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you.
I’ll heap ’em all on the footboard of
the cart, there they are! razors, flat
watch, dinner plates, rolling-pin, and away for four
shillings, and I’ll give you sixpence for your
trouble!” This is me, the Cheap Jack.
But on the Monday morning, in the same market-place,
comes the Dear Jack on the hustings his
cart and, what does he say?
“Now my free and independent woters, I am a
going to give you such a chance” (he begins
just like me) “as you never had in all your born
days, and that’s the chance of sending Myself
to Parliament. Now I’ll tell you what
I am a going to do for you. Here’s the
interests of this magnificent town promoted above
all the rest of the civilised and uncivilised earth.
Here’s your railways carried, and your neighbours’
railways jockeyed. Here’s all your sons
in the Post-office. Here’s Britannia smiling
on you. Here’s the eyes of Europe on you.
Here’s uniwersal prosperity for you, repletion
of animal food, golden cornfields, gladsome homesteads,
and rounds of applause from your own hearts, all in
one lot, and that’s myself. Will you take
me as I stand? You won’t? Well, then,
I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you.
Come now! I’ll throw you in anything you
ask for. There! Church-rates, abolition
of more malt tax, no malt tax, universal education
to the highest mark, or uniwersal ignorance to the
lowest, total abolition of flogging in the army or
a dozen for every private once a month all round, Wrongs
of Men or Rights of Women only say which
it shall be, take ’em or leave ’em, and
I’m of your opinion altogether, and the lot’s
your own on your own terms. There! You
won’t take it yet! Well, then, I’ll
tell you what I’ll do with you. Come!
You are such free and independent woters, and
I am so proud of you, you are such
a noble and enlightened constituency, and I am
so ambitious of the honour and dignity of being your
member, which is by far the highest level to which
the wings of the human mind can soar, that
I’ll tell you what I’ll do with you.
I’ll throw you in all the public-houses in
your magnificent town for nothing. Will that
content you? It won’t? You won’t
take the lot yet? Well, then, before I put the
horse in and drive away, and make the offer to the
next most magnificent town that can be discovered,
I’ll tell you what I’ll do. Take
the lot, and I’ll drop two thousand pound in
the streets of your magnificent town for them to pick
up that can. Not enough? Now look here.
This is the very furthest that I’m a going to.
I’ll make it two thousand five hundred.
And still you won’t? Here, missis!
Put the horse no, stop half a moment,
I shouldn’t like to turn my back upon you neither
for a trifle, I’ll make it two thousand seven
hundred and fifty pound. There! Take the
lot on your own terms, and I’ll count out two
thousand seven hundred and fifty pound on the footboard
of the cart, to be dropped in the streets of your
magnificent town for them to pick up that can.
What do you say? Come now! You won’t
do better, and you may do worse. You take it?
Hooray! Sold again, and got the seat!”
These Dear Jacks soap the people shameful,
but we Cheap Jacks don’t. We tell ’em
the truth about themselves to their faces, and scorn
to court ’em. As to wenturesomeness in
the way of puffing up the lots, the Dear Jacks beat
us hollow. It is considered in the Cheap Jack
calling, that better patter can be made out of a gun
than any article we put up from the cart, except a
pair of spectacles. I often hold forth about
a gun for a quarter of an hour, and feel as if I need
never leave off. But when I tell ’em what
the gun can do, and what the gun has brought down,
I never go half so far as the Dear Jacks do when they
make speeches in praise of their guns their
great guns that set ’em on to do it. Besides,
I’m in business for myself: I ain’t
sent down into the market-place to order, as they
are. Besides, again, my guns don’t know
what I say in their laudation, and their guns do,
and the whole concern of ’em have reason to
be sick and ashamed all round. These are some
of my arguments for declaring that the Cheap Jack
calling is treated ill in Great Britain, and for turning
warm when I think of the other Jacks in question setting
themselves up to pretend to look down upon it.
I courted my wife from the footboard
of the cart. I did indeed. She was a Suffolk
young woman, and it was in Ipswich market-place right
opposite the corn-chandler’s shop. I had
noticed her up at a window last Saturday that was,
appreciating highly. I had took to her, and I
had said to myself, “If not already disposed
of, I’ll have that lot.” Next Saturday
that come, I pitched the cart on the same pitch, and
I was in very high feather indeed, keeping ’em
laughing the whole of the time, and getting off the
goods briskly. At last I took out of my waistcoat-pocket
a small lot wrapped in soft paper, and I put it this
way (looking up at the window where she was).
“Now here, my blooming English maidens, is an
article, the last article of the present evening’s
sale, which I offer to only you, the lovely Suffolk
Dumplings biling over with beauty, and I won’t
take a bid of a thousand pounds for from any man alive.
Now what is it? Why, I’ll tell you what
it is. It’s made of fine gold, and it’s
not broke, though there’s a hole in the middle
of it, and it’s stronger than any fetter that
ever was forged, though it’s smaller than any
finger in my set of ten. Why ten? Because,
when my parents made over my property to me, I tell
you true, there was twelve sheets, twelve towels,
twelve table-cloths, twelve knives, twelve forks, twelve
tablespoons, and twelve teaspoons, but my set of fingers
was two short of a dozen, and could never since be
matched. Now what else is it? Come, I’ll
tell you. It’s a hoop of solid gold, wrapped
in a silver curl-paper, that I myself took off the
shining locks of the ever beautiful old lady in Threadneedle
Street, London city; I wouldn’t tell you so if
I hadn’t the paper to show, or you mightn’t
believe it even of me. Now what else is it?
It’s a man-trap and a handcuff, the parish
stocks and a leg-lock, all in gold and all in one.
Now what else is it? It’s a wedding-ring.
Now I’ll tell you what I’m a going to
do with it. I’m not a going to offer this
lot for money; but I mean to give it to the next of
you beauties that laughs, and I’ll pay her a
visit to-morrow morning at exactly half after nine
o’clock as the chimes go, and I’ll take
her out for a walk to put up the banns.”
She laughed, and got the ring handed up to her.
When I called in the morning, she says, “O
dear! It’s never you, and you never mean
it?” “It’s ever me,” says
I, “and I am ever yours, and I ever mean it.”
So we got married, after being put up three times which,
by the bye, is quite in the Cheap Jack way again,
and shows once more how the Cheap Jack customs pervade
society.
She wasn’t a bad wife, but she
had a temper. If she could have parted with
that one article at a sacrifice, I wouldn’t have
swopped her away in exchange for any other woman in
England. Not that I ever did swop her away,
for we lived together till she died, and that was thirteen
year. Now, my lords and ladies and gentlefolks
all, I’ll let you into a secret, though you
won’t believe it. Thirteen year of temper
in a Palace would try the worst of you, but thirteen
year of temper in a Cart would try the best of you.
You are kept so very close to it in a cart, you see.
There’s thousands of couples among you getting
on like sweet île upon a whetstone in houses
five and six pairs of stairs high, that would go to
the Divorce Court in a cart. Whether the jolting
makes it worse, I don’t undertake to decide;
but in a cart it does come home to you, and stick to
you. Wiolence in a cart is so wiolent,
and aggrawation in a cart is so aggrawating.
We might have had such a pleasant
life! A roomy cart, with the large goods hung
outside, and the bed slung underneath it when on the
road, an iron pot and a kettle, a fireplace for the
cold weather, a chimney for the smoke, a hanging-shelf
and a cupboard, a dog and a horse. What more
do you want? You draw off upon a bit of turf
in a green lane or by the roadside, you hobble your
old horse and turn him grazing, you light your fire
upon the ashes of the last visitors, you cook your
stew, and you wouldn’t call the Emperor of France
your father. But have a temper in the cart,
flinging language and the hardest goods in stock at
you, and where are you then? Put a name to your
feelings.
My dog knew as well when she was on
the turn as I did. Before she broke out, he
would give a howl, and bolt. How he knew it,
was a mystery to me; but the sure and certain knowledge
of it would wake him up out of his soundest sleep,
and he would give a howl, and bolt. At such times
I wished I was him.
The worst of it was, we had a daughter
born to us, and I love children with all my heart.
When she was in her furies she beat the child.
This got to be so shocking, as the child got to be
four or five year old, that I have many a time gone
on with my whip over my shoulder, at the old horse’s
head, sobbing and crying worse than ever little Sophy
did. For how could I prevent it? Such
a thing is not to be tried with such a temper in
a cart without coming to a fight.
It’s in the natural size and formation of a
cart to bring it to a fight. And then the poor
child got worse terrified than before, as well as
worse hurt generally, and her mother made complaints
to the next people we lighted on, and the word went
round, “Here’s a wretch of a Cheap Jack
been a beating his wife.”
Little Sophy was such a brave child!
She grew to be quite devoted to her poor father,
though he could do so little to help her. She
had a wonderful quantity of shining dark hair, all
curling natural about her. It is quite astonishing
to me now, that I didn’t go tearing mad when
I used to see her run from her mother before the cart,
and her mother catch her by this hair, and pull her
down by it, and beat her.
Such a brave child I said she was! Ah! with
reason.
“Don’t you mind next time,
father dear,” she would whisper to me, with
her little face still flushed, and her bright eyes
still wet; “if I don’t cry out, you may
know I am not much hurt. And even if I do cry
out, it will only be to get mother to let go and leave
off.” What I have seen the little spirit
bear for me without crying out!
Yet in other respects her mother took
great care of her. Her clothes were always clean
and neat, and her mother was never tired of working
at ’em. Such is the inconsistency in things.
Our being down in the marsh country in unhealthy
weather, I consider the cause of Sophy’s taking
bad low fever; but however she took it, once she got
it she turned away from her mother for evermore, and
nothing would persuade her to be touched by her mother’s
hand. She would shiver and say, “No, no,
no,” when it was offered at, and would hide
her face on my shoulder, and hold me tighter round
the neck.
The Cheap Jack business had been worse
than ever I had known it, what with one thing and
what with another (and not least with railroads, which
will cut it all to pieces, I expect, at last), and
I was run dry of money. For which reason, one
night at that period of little Sophy’s being
so bad, either we must have come to a dead-lock for
victuals and drink, or I must have pitched the cart
as I did.
I couldn’t get the dear child
to lie down or leave go of me, and indeed I hadn’t
the heart to try, so I stepped out on the footboard
with her holding round my neck. They all set
up a laugh when they see us, and one chuckle-headed
Joskin (that I hated for it) made the bidding, “Tuppence
for her!”
“Now, you country boobies,”
says I, feeling as if my heart was a heavy weight
at the end of a broken sashline, “I give you
notice that I am a going to charm the money out of
your pockets, and to give you so much more than your
money’s worth that you’ll only persuade
yourselves to draw your Saturday night’s wages
ever again arterwards by the hopes of meeting me to
lay ’em out with, which you never will, and why
not? Because I’ve made my fortunes by
selling my goods on a large scale for seventy-five
per cent. less than I give for ’em, and I am
consequently to be elevated to the House of Peers
next week, by the title of the Duke of Cheap and Markis
Jackaloorul. Now let’s know what you want
to-night, and you shall have it. But first of
all, shall I tell you why I have got this little girl
round my neck? You don’t want to know?
Then you shall. She belongs to the Fairies.
She’s a fortune-teller. She can tell me
all about you in a whisper, and can put me up to whether
you’re going to buy a lot or leave it.
Now do you want a saw? No, she says you don’t,
because you’re too clumsy to use one. Else
here’s a saw which would be a lifelong blessing
to a handy man, at four shillings, at three and six,
at three, at two and six, at two, at eighteen-pence.
But none of you shall have it at any price, on account
of your well-known awkwardness, which would make it
manslaughter. The same objection applies to this
set of three planes which I won’t let you have
neither, so don’t bid for ’em. Now
I am a going to ask her what you do want.” (Then
I whispered, “Your head burns so, that I am
afraid it hurts you bad, my pet,” and she answered,
without opening her heavy eyes, “Just a little,
father.”) “O! This little fortune-teller
says it’s a memorandum-book you want. Then
why didn’t you mention it? Here it is.
Look at it. Two hundred superfine hot-pressed
wire-wove pages if you don’t believe
me, count ’em ready ruled for your
expenses, an everlastingly pointed pencil to put ’em
down with, a double-bladed penknife to scratch ’em
out with, a book of printed tables to calculate your
income with, and a camp-stool to sit down upon while
you give your mind to it! Stop! And an
umbrella to keep the moon off when you give your mind
to it on a pitch-dark night. Now I won’t
ask you how much for the lot, but how little?
How little are you thinking of? Don’t
be ashamed to mention it, because my fortune-teller
knows already.” (Then making believe to whisper,
I kissed her, and she kissed me.) “Why,
she says you are thinking of as little as three and
threepence! I couldn’t have believed it,
even of you, unless she told me. Three and threepence!
And a set of printed tables in the lot that’ll
calculate your income up to forty thousand a year!
With an income of forty thousand a year, you grudge
three and sixpence. Well then, I’ll tell
you my opinion. I so despise the threepence,
that I’d sooner take three shillings.
There. For three shillings, three shillings,
three shillings! Gone. Hand ’em over
to the lucky man.”
As there had been no bid at all, everybody
looked about and grinned at everybody, while I touched
little Sophy’s face and asked her if she felt
faint, or giddy. “Not very, father.
It will soon be over.” Then turning from
the pretty patient eyes, which were opened now, and
seeing nothing but grins across my lighted grease-pot,
I went on again in my Cheap Jack style. “Where’s
the butcher?” (My sorrowful eye had just caught
sight of a fat young butcher on the outside of the
crowd.) “She says the good luck is the butcher’s.
Where is he?” Everybody handed on the blushing
butcher to the front, and there was a roar, and the
butcher felt himself obliged to put his hand in his
pocket, and take the lot. The party so picked
out, in general, does feel obliged to take the lot good
four times out of six. Then we had another lot,
the counterpart of that one, and sold it sixpence
cheaper, which is always wery much enjoyed. Then
we had the spectacles. It ain’t a special
profitable lot, but I put ’em on, and I see
what the Chancellor of the Exchequer is going to take
off the taxes, and I see what the sweetheart of the
young woman in the shawl is doing at home, and I see
what the Bishops has got for dinner, and a deal more
that seldom fails to fetch ’em ’up in their
spirits; and the better their spirits, the better
their bids. Then we had the ladies’ lot the
teapot, tea-caddy, glass sugar-basin, half-a-dozen
spoons, and caudle-cup and all the time
I was making similar excuses to give a look or two
and say a word or two to my poor child. It was
while the second ladies’ lot was holding ’em
enchained that I felt her lift herself a little on
my shoulder, to look across the dark street.
“What troubles you, darling?” “Nothing
troubles me, father. I am not at all troubled.
But don’t I see a pretty churchyard over there?”
“Yes, my dear.” “Kiss me
twice, dear father, and lay me down to rest upon that
churchyard grass so soft and green.” I
staggered back into the cart with her head dropped
on my shoulder, and I says to her mother, “Quick.
Shut the door! Don’t let those laughing
people see!” “What’s the matter?”
she cries. “O woman, woman,” I tells
her, “you’ll never catch my little Sophy
by her hair again, for she has flown away from you!”
Maybe those were harder words than
I meant ’em; but from that time forth my wife
took to brooding, and would sit in the cart or walk
beside it, hours at a stretch, with her arms crossed,
and her eyes looking on the ground. When her
furies took her (which was rather seldomer than before)
they took her in a new way, and she banged herself
about to that extent that I was forced to hold her.
She got none the better for a little drink now and
then, and through some years I used to wonder, as I
plodded along at the old horse’s head, whether
there was many carts upon the road that held so much
dreariness as mine, for all my being looked up to as
the King of the Cheap Jacks. So sad our lives
went on till one summer evening, when, as we were
coming into Exeter, out of the farther West of England,
we saw a woman beating a child in a cruel manner, who
screamed, “Don’t beat me! O mother,
mother, mother!” Then my wife stopped her ears,
and ran away like a wild thing, and next day she was
found in the river.
Me and my dog were all the company
left in the cart now; and the dog learned to give
a short bark when they wouldn’t bid, and to give
another and a nod of his head when I asked him, “Who
said half a crown? Are you the gentleman, sir,
that offered half a crown?” He attained to an
immense height of popularity, and I shall always believe
taught himself entirely out of his own head to growl
at any person in the crowd that bid as low as sixpence.
But he got to be well on in years, and one night
when I was conwulsing York with the spectacles, he
took a conwulsion on his own account upon the very
footboard by me, and it finished him.
Being naturally of a tender turn,
I had dreadful lonely feelings on me arter this.
I conquered ’em at selling times, having a reputation
to keep (not to mention keeping myself), but they
got me down in private, and rolled upon me.
That’s often the way with us public characters.
See us on the footboard, and you’d give pretty
well anything you possess to be us. See us off
the footboard, and you’d add a trifle to be off
your bargain. It was under those circumstances
that I come acquainted with a giant. I might
have been too high to fall into conversation with him,
had it not been for my lonely feelings. For the
general rule is, going round the country, to draw
the line at dressing up. When a man can’t
trust his getting a living to his undisguised abilities,
you consider him below your sort. And this giant
when on view figured as a Roman.
He was a languid young man, which
I attribute to the distance betwixt his extremities.
He had a little head and less in it, he had weak eyes
and weak knees, and altogether you couldn’t
look at him without feeling that there was greatly
too much of him both for his joints and his mind.
But he was an amiable though timid young man (his
mother let him out, and spent the money), and we come
acquainted when he was walking to ease the horse betwixt
two fairs. He was called Rinaldo di Velasco,
his name being Pickleson.
This giant, otherwise Pickleson, mentioned
to me under the seal of confidence that, beyond his
being a burden to himself, his life was made a burden
to him by the cruelty of his master towards a step-daughter
who was deaf and dumb. Her mother was dead,
and she had no living soul to take her part, and was
used most hard. She travelled with his master’s
caravan only because there was nowhere to leave her,
and this giant, otherwise Pickleson, did go so far
as to believe that his master often tried to lose
her. He was such a very languid young man, that
I don’t know how long it didn’t take him
to get this story out, but it passed through his defective
circulation to his top extremity in course of time.
When I heard this account from the
giant, otherwise Pickleson, and likewise that the
poor girl had beautiful long dark hair, and was often
pulled down by it and beaten, I couldn’t see
the giant through what stood in my eyes. Having
wiped ’em, I give him sixpence (for he was kept
as short as he was long), and he laid it out in two
three-penn’orths of gin-and-water, which so
brisked him up, that he sang the Favourite Comic of
Shivery Shakey, ain’t it cold? a popular
effect which his master had tried every other means
to get out of him as a Roman wholly in vain.
His master’s name was Mim, a
wery hoarse man, and I knew him to speak to.
I went to that Fair as a mere civilian, leaving the
cart outside the town, and I looked about the back
of the Vans while the performing was going on, and
at last, sitting dozing against a muddy cart-wheel,
I come upon the poor girl who was deaf and dumb.
At the first look I might almost have judged that
she had escaped from the Wild Beast Show; but at the
second I thought better of her, and thought that if
she was more cared for and more kindly used she would
be like my child. She was just the same age
that my own daughter would have been, if her pretty
head had not fell down upon my shoulder that unfortunate
night.
To cut it short, I spoke confidential
to Mim while he was beating the gong outside betwixt
two lots of Pickleson’s publics, and I put it
to him, “She lies heavy on your own hands; what’ll
you take for her?” Mim was a most ferocious
swearer. Suppressing that part of his reply which
was much the longest part, his reply was, “A
pair of braces.” “Now I’ll
tell you,” says I, “what I’m a going
to do with you. I’m a going to fetch you
half-a-dozen pair of the primest braces in the cart,
and then to take her away with me.” Says
Mim (again ferocious), “I’ll believe it
when I’ve got the goods, and no sooner.”
I made all the haste I could, lest he should think
twice of it, and the bargain was completed, which
Pickleson he was thereby so relieved in his mind that
he come out at his little back door, longways like
a serpent, and give us Shivery Shakey in a whisper
among the wheels at parting.
It was happy days for both of us when
Sophy and me began to travel in the cart. I
at once give her the name of Sophy, to put her ever
towards me in the attitude of my own daughter.
We soon made out to begin to understand one another,
through the goodness of the Heavens, when she knowed
that I meant true and kind by her. In a very
little time she was wonderful fond of me. You
have no idea what it is to have anybody wonderful
fond of you, unless you have been got down and rolled
upon by the lonely feelings that I have mentioned
as having once got the better of me.
You’d have laughed or
the rewerse it’s according to your
disposition if you could have seen me trying
to teach Sophy. At first I was helped you’d
never guess by what milestones. I
got some large alphabets in a box, all the letters
separate on bits of bone, and saying we was going
to Windsor, I give her those letters in that order,
and then at every milestone I showed her those same
letters in that same order again, and pointed towards
the abode of royalty. Another time I give her
cart, and then chalked the same upon the cart.
Another time I give her doctor Marigold,
and hung a corresponding inscription outside my waistcoat.
People that met us might stare a bit and laugh, but
what did I care, if she caught the idea?
She caught it after long patience and trouble, and
then we did begin to get on swimmingly, I believe you!
At first she was a little given to consider me the
cart, and the cart the abode of royalty, but that
soon wore off.
We had our signs, too, and they was
hundreds in number. Sometimes she would sit
looking at me and considering hard how to communicate
with me about something fresh, how to ask
me what she wanted explained, and then
she was (or I thought she was; what does it signify?)
so like my child with those years added to her, that
I half-believed it was herself, trying to tell me
where she had been to up in the skies, and what she
had seen since that unhappy night when she flied away.
She had a pretty face, and now that there was no
one to drag at her bright dark hair, and it was all
in order, there was a something touching in her looks
that made the cart most peaceful and most quiet, though
not at all melancholy. [N.B. In the Cheap Jack
patter, we generally sound it lemonjolly, and it gets
a laugh.]
The way she learnt to understand any
look of mine was truly surprising. When I sold
of a night, she would sit in the cart unseen by them
outside, and would give a eager look into my eyes
when I looked in, and would hand me straight the precise
article or articles I wanted. And then she would
clap her hands, and laugh for joy. And as for
me, seeing her so bright, and remembering what she
was when I first lighted on her, starved and beaten
and ragged, leaning asleep against the muddy cart-wheel,
it give me such heart that I gained a greater heighth
of reputation than ever, and I put Pickleson down
(by the name of Mim’s Travelling Giant otherwise
Pickleson) for a fypunnote in my will.
This happiness went on in the cart
till she was sixteen year old. By which time
I began to feel not satisfied that I had done my whole
duty by her, and to consider that she ought to have
better teaching than I could give her. It drew
a many tears on both sides when I commenced explaining
my views to her; but what’s right is right, and
you can’t neither by tears nor laughter do away
with its character.
So I took her hand in mine, and I
went with her one day to the Deaf and Dumb Establishment
in London, and when the gentleman come to speak to
us, I says to him: “Now I’ll tell
you what I’ll do with you, sir. I am nothing
but a Cheap Jack, but of late years I have laid by
for a rainy day notwithstanding. This is my
only daughter (adopted), and you can’t produce
a deafer nor a dumber. Teach her the most that
can be taught her in the shortest separation that
can be named, state the figure for it, and
I am game to put the money down. I won’t
bate you a single farthing, sir, but I’ll put
down the money here and now, and I’ll thankfully
throw you in a pound to take it. There!”
The gentleman smiled, and then, “Well, well,”
says he, “I must first know what she has learned
already. How do you communicate with her?”
Then I showed him, and she wrote in printed writing
many names of things and so forth; and we held some
sprightly conversation, Sophy and me, about a little
story in a book which the gentleman showed her, and
which she was able to read. “This is most
extraordinary,” says the gentleman; “is
it possible that you have been her only teacher?”
“I have been her only teacher, sir,” I
says, “besides herself.” “Then,”
says the gentleman, and more acceptable words was
never spoke to me, “you’re a clever fellow,
and a good fellow.” This he makes known
to Sophy, who kisses his hands, claps her own, and
laughs and cries upon it.
We saw the gentleman four times in
all, and when he took down my name and asked how in
the world it ever chanced to be Doctor, it come out
that he was own nephew by the sister’s side,
if you’ll believe me, to the very Doctor that
I was called after. This made our footing still
easier, and he says to me:
“Now, Marigold, tell me what
more do you want your adopted daughter to know?”
“I want her, sir, to be cut
off from the world as little as can be, considering
her deprivations, and therefore to be able to read
whatever is wrote with perfect ease and pleasure.”
“My good fellow,” urges
the gentleman, opening his eyes wide, “why I
can’t do that myself!”
I took his joke, and gave him a laugh
(knowing by experience how flat you fall without it),
and I mended my words accordingly.
“What do you mean to do with
her afterwards?” asks the gentleman, with a
sort of a doubtful eye. “To take her about
the country?”
“In the cart, sir, but only
in the cart. She will live a private life, you
understand, in the cart. I should never think
of bringing her infirmities before the public.
I wouldn’t make a show of her for any money.”
The gentleman nodded, and seemed to approve.
“Well,” says he, “can you part with
her for two years?”
“To do her that good, yes, sir.”
“There’s another question,”
says the gentleman, looking towards her, “can
she part with you for two years?”
I don’t know that it was a harder
matter of itself (for the other was hard enough to
me), but it was harder to get over. However,
she was pacified to it at last, and the separation
betwixt us was settled. How it cut up both of
us when it took place, and when I left her at the door
in the dark of an evening, I don’t tell.
But I know this; remembering that night, I shall
never pass that same establishment without a heartache
and a swelling in the throat; and I couldn’t
put you up the best of lots in sight of it with my
usual spirit, no, not even the gun, nor
the pair of spectacles, for five hundred
pound reward from the Secretary of State for the Home
Department, and throw in the honour of putting my
legs under his mahogany arterwards.
Still, the loneliness that followed
in the cart was not the old loneliness, because there
was a term put to it, however long to look forward
to; and because I could think, when I was anyways down,
that she belonged to me and I belonged to her.
Always planning for her coming back, I bought in
a few months’ time another cart, and what do
you think I planned to do with it? I’ll
tell you. I planned to fit it up with shelves
and books for her reading, and to have a seat in it
where I could sit and see her read, and think that
I had been her first teacher. Not hurrying over
the job, I had the fittings knocked together in contriving
ways under my own inspection, and here was her bed
in a berth with curtains, and there was her reading-table,
and here was her writing-desk, and elsewhere was her
books in rows upon rows, picters and no picters, bindings
and no bindings, gilt-edged and plain, just as I could
pick ’em up for her in lots up and down the
country, North and South and West and East, Winds
liked best and winds liked least, Here and there and
gone astray, Over the hills and far away. And
when I had got together pretty well as many books
as the cart would neatly hold, a new scheme come into
my head, which, as it turned out, kept my time and
attention a good deal employed, and helped me over
the two years’ stile.
Without being of an awaricious temper,
I like to be the owner of things. I shouldn’t
wish, for instance, to go partners with yourself in
the Cheap Jack cart. It’s not that I mistrust
you, but that I’d rather know it was mine.
Similarly, very likely you’d rather know it
was yours. Well! A kind of a jealousy
began to creep into my mind when I reflected that all
those books would have been read by other people long
before they was read by her. It seemed to take
away from her being the owner of ’em like.
In this way, the question got into my head: Couldn’t
I have a book new-made express for her, which she
should be the first to read?
It pleased me, that thought did; and
as I never was a man to let a thought sleep (you must
wake up all the whole family of thoughts you’ve
got and burn their nightcaps, or you won’t do
in the Cheap Jack line), I set to work at it.
Considering that I was in the habit of changing so
much about the country, and that I should have to find
out a literary character here to make a deal with,
and another literary character there to make a deal
with, as opportunities presented, I hit on the plan
that this same book should be a general miscellaneous
lot, like the razors, flat-iron, chronometer
watch, dinner plates, rolling-pin, and looking-glass, and
shouldn’t be offered as a single indiwidual article,
like the spectacles or the gun. When I had come
to that conclusion, I come to another, which shall
likewise be yours.
Often had I regretted that she never
had heard me on the footboard, and that she never
could hear me. It ain’t that I am
vain, but that you don’t like to put
your own light under a bushel. What’s the
worth of your reputation, if you can’t convey
the reason for it to the person you most wish to value
it? Now I’ll put it to you. Is it
worth sixpence, fippence, fourpence, threepence, twopence,
a penny, a halfpenny, a farthing? No, it ain’t.
Not worth a farthing. Very well, then.
My conclusion was that I would begin her book with
some account of myself. So that, through reading
a specimen or two of me on the footboard, she might
form an idea of my merits there. I was aware
that I couldn’t do myself justice. A man
can’t write his eye (at least I don’t
know how to), nor yet can a man write his voice, nor
the rate of his talk, nor the quickness of his action,
nor his general spicy way. But he can write his
turns of speech, when he is a public speaker, and
indeed I have heard that he very often does, before
he speaks ’em.
Well! Having formed that resolution,
then come the question of a name. How did I hammer
that hot iron into shape? This way. The
most difficult explanation I had ever had with her
was, how I come to be called Doctor, and yet was no
Doctor. After all, I felt that I had failed of
getting it correctly into her mind, with my utmost
pains. But trusting to her improvement in the
two years, I thought that I might trust to her understanding
it when she should come to read it as put down by my
own hand. Then I thought I would try a joke
with her and watch how it took, by which of itself
I might fully judge of her understanding it.
We had first discovered the mistake we had dropped
into, through her having asked me to prescribe for
her when she had supposed me to be a Doctor in a medical
point of view; so thinks I, “Now, if I give this
book the name of my Prescriptions, and if she catches
the idea that my only Prescriptions are for her amusement
and interest, to make her laugh in a pleasant
way, or to make her cry in a pleasant way, it
will be a delightful proof to both of us that we have
got over our difficulty.” It fell out
to absolute perfection. For when she saw the
book, as I had it got up, the printed and
pressed book, lying on her desk in her cart,
and saw the title, doctor marigold’s
prescriptions, she looked at me for a moment
with astonishment, then fluttered the leaves, then
broke out a laughing in the charmingest way, then
felt her pulse and shook her head, then turned the
pages pretending to read them most attentive, then
kissed the book to me, and put it to her bosom with
both her hands. I never was better pleased in
all my life!
But let me not anticipate. (I take
that expression out of a lot of romances I bought
for her. I never opened a single one of ’em and
I have opened many but I found the romancer
saying “let me not anticipate.”
Which being so, I wonder why he did anticipate, or
who asked him to it.) Let me not, I say, anticipate.
This same book took up all my spare time. It
was no play to get the other articles together in
the general miscellaneous lot, but when it come to
my own article! There! I couldn’t
have believed the blotting, nor yet the buckling to
at it, nor the patience over it. Which again
is like the footboard. The public have no idea.
At last it was done, and the two years’
time was gone after all the other time before it,
and where it’s all gone to, who knows?
The new cart was finished, yellow outside,
relieved with wermilion and brass fittings, the
old horse was put in it, a new ’un and a boy
being laid on for the Cheap Jack cart, and
I cleaned myself up to go and fetch her. Bright
cold weather it was, cart-chimneys smoking, carts pitched
private on a piece of waste ground over at Wandsworth,
where you may see ’em from the Sou’western
Railway when not upon the road. (Look out of the right-hand
window going down.)
“Marigold,” says the gentleman,
giving his hand hearty, “I am very glad to see
you.”
“Yet I have my doubts, sir,”
says I, “if you can be half as glad to see me
as I am to see you.”
“The time has appeared so long, has
it, Marigold?”
“I won’t say that, sir, considering its
real length; but ”
“What a start, my good fellow!”
Ah! I should think it was!
Grown such a woman, so pretty, so intelligent, so
expressive! I knew then that she must be really
like my child, or I could never have known her, standing
quiet by the door.
“You are affected,” says the gentleman
in a kindly manner.
“I feel, sir,” says I,
“that I am but a rough chap in a sleeved waistcoat.”
“I feel,” says the gentleman,
“that it was you who raised her from misery
and degradation, and brought her into communication
with her kind. But why do we converse alone
together, when we can converse so well with her?
Address her in your own way.”
“I am such a rough chap in a
sleeved waistcoat, sir,” says I, “and she
is such a graceful woman, and she stands so quiet
at the door!”
“Try if she moves at the old sign,”
says the gentleman.
They had got it up together o’
purpose to please me! For when I give her the
old sign, she rushed to my feet, and dropped upon her
knees, holding up her hands to me with pouring tears
of love and joy; and when I took her hands and lifted
her, she clasped me round the neck, and lay there;
and I don’t know what a fool I didn’t make
of myself, until we all three settled down into talking
without sound, as if there was a something soft and
pleasant spread over the whole world for us.
[A portion is here omitted from the
text, having reference to the sketches contributed
by other writers; but the reader will be pleased to
have what follows retained in a note:
“Now I’ll tell you what
I am a-going to do with you. I am a-going to
offer you the general miscellaneous lot, her own book,
never read by anybody else but me, added to and completed
by me after her first reading of it, eight-and-forty
printed pages, six-and-ninety columns, Whiting’s
own work, Beaufort House to wit, thrown off by the
steam-ingine, best of paper, beautiful green wrapper,
folded like clean linen come home from the clear-starcher’s,
and so exquisitely stitched that, regarded as a piece
of needlework alone, it’s better than the sampler
of a seamstress undergoing a Competitive examination
for Starvation before the Civil Service Commissioners and
I offer the lot for what? For eight pound?
Not so much. For six pound? Less.
For four pound. Why, I hardly expect you to
believe me, but that’s the sum. Four pound!
The stitching alone cost half as much again.
Here’s forty-eight original pages, ninety-six
original columns, for four pound. You want more
for the money? Take it. Three whole pages
of advertisements of thrilling interest thrown in
for nothing. Read ’em and believe ’em.
More? My best of wishes for your merry Christmases
and your happy New Years, your long lives and your
true prosperities. Worth twenty pound good if
they are delivered as I send them. Remember!
Here’s a final prescription added, “To
be taken for life,” which will tell you how
the cart broke down, and where the journey ended.
You think Four Pound too much? And still you
think so? Come! I’ll tell you what
then. Say Four Pence, and keep the secret.”]
So every item of my plan was crowned
with success. Our reunited life was more than
all that we had looked forward to. Content and
joy went with us as the wheels of the two carts went
round, and the same stopped with us when the two carts
stopped. I was as pleased and as proud as a Pug-Dog
with his muzzle black-leaded for a evening party, and
his tail extra curled by machinery.
But I had left something out of my
calculations. Now, what had I left out?
To help you to guess I’ll say, a figure.
Come. Make a guess and guess right. Nought?
No. Nine? No. Eight? No.
Seven? No. Six? No. Five?
No. Four? No. Three? No.
Two? No. One? No. Now I’ll
tell you what I’ll do with you. I’ll
say it’s another sort of figure altogether.
There. Why then, says you, it’s a mortal
figure. No, nor yet a mortal figure. By
such means you got yourself penned into a corner,
and you can’t help guessing a immortal
figure. That’s about it. Why didn’t
you say so sooner?
Yes. It was a immortal figure
that I had altogether left out of my Calculations.
Neither man’s, nor woman’s, but a child’s.
Girl’s or boy’s? Boy’s.
“I, says the sparrow with my bow and arrow.”
Now you have got it.
We were down at Lancaster, and I had
done two nights more than fair average business (though
I cannot in honour recommend them as a quick audience)
in the open square there, near the end of the street
where Mr. Sly’s King’s Arms and Royal
Hotel stands. Mim’s travelling giant,
otherwise Pickleson, happened at the self-same time
to be trying it on in the town. The genteel
lay was adopted with him. No hint of a van.
Green baize alcove leading up to Pickleson in a Auction
Room. Printed poster, “Free list suspended,
with the exception of that proud boast of an enlightened
country, a free press. Schools admitted by private
arrangement. Nothing to raise a blush in the
cheek of youth or shock the most fastidious.”
Mim swearing most horrible and terrific, in a pink
calico pay-place, at the slackness of the public.
Serious handbill in the shops, importing that it
was all but impossible to come to a right understanding
of the history of David without seeing Pickleson.
I went to the Auction Room in question,
and I found it entirely empty of everything but echoes
and mouldiness, with the single exception of Pickleson
on a piece of red drugget. This suited my purpose,
as I wanted a private and confidential word with him,
which was: “Pickleson. Owing much
happiness to you, I put you in my will for a fypunnote;
but, to save trouble, here’s fourpunten down,
which may equally suit your views, and let us so conclude
the transaction.” Pickleson, who up to
that remark had had the dejected appearance of a long
Roman rushlight that couldn’t anyhow get lighted,
brightened up at his top extremity, and made his acknowledgments
in a way which (for him) was parliamentary eloquence.
He likewise did add, that, having ceased to draw
as a Roman, Mim had made proposals for his going in
as a conwerted Indian Giant worked upon by The Dairyman’s
Daughter. This, Pickleson, having no acquaintance
with the tract named after that young woman, and not
being willing to couple gag with his serious views,
had declined to do, thereby leading to words and the
total stoppage of the unfortunate young man’s
beer. All of which, during the whole of the
interview, was confirmed by the ferocious growling
of Mim down below in the pay-place, which shook the
giant like a leaf.
But what was to the present point
in the remarks of the travelling giant, otherwise
Pickleson, was this: “Doctor Marigold,” I
give his words without a hope of conweying their feebleness, “who
is the strange young man that hangs about your carts?” “The
strange young man?” I gives him back,
thinking that he meant her, and his languid circulation
had dropped a syllable. “Doctor,”
he returns, with a pathos calculated to draw a tear
from even a manly eye, “I am weak, but not so
weak yet as that I don’t know my words.
I repeat them, Doctor. The strange young man.”
It then appeared that Pickleson, being forced to stretch
his legs (not that they wanted it) only at times when
he couldn’t be seen for nothing, to wit in the
dead of the night and towards daybreak, had twice
seen hanging about my carts, in that same town of Lancaster
where I had been only two nights, this same unknown
young man.
It put me rather out of sorts.
What it meant as to particulars I no more foreboded
then than you forebode now, but it put me rather out
of sorts. Howsoever, I made light of it to Pickleson,
and I took leave of Pickleson, advising him to spend
his legacy in getting up his stamina, and to continue
to stand by his religion. Towards morning I kept
a look out for the strange young man, and what
was more I saw the strange young man.
He was well dressed and well looking. He loitered
very nigh my carts, watching them like as if he was
taking care of them, and soon after daybreak turned
and went away. I sent a hail after him, but he
never started or looked round, or took the smallest
notice.
We left Lancaster within an hour or
two, on our way towards Carlisle. Next morning,
at daybreak, I looked out again for the strange young
man. I did not see him. But next morning
I looked out again, and there he was once more.
I sent another hail after him, but as before he gave
not the slightest sign of being anyways disturbed.
This put a thought into my head. Acting on
it I watched him in different manners and at different
times not necessary to enter into, till I found that
this strange young man was deaf and dumb.
The discovery turned me over, because
I knew that a part of that establishment where she
had been was allotted to young men (some of them well
off), and I thought to myself, “If she favours
him, where am I? and where is all that I have worked
and planned for?” Hoping I must confess
to the selfishness that she might not
favour him, I set myself to find out. At last
I was by accident present at a meeting between them
in the open air, looking on leaning behind a fir-tree
without their knowing of it. It was a moving
meeting for all the three parties concerned.
I knew every syllable that passed between them as
well as they did. I listened with my eyes, which
had come to be as quick and true with deaf and dumb
conversation as my ears with the talk of people that
can speak. He was a-going out to China as clerk
in a merchant’s house, which his father had
been before him. He was in circumstances to keep
a wife, and he wanted her to marry him and go along
with him. She persisted, no. He asked if
she didn’t love him. Yes, she loved him
dearly, dearly; but she could never disappoint her
beloved, good, noble, generous, and I-don’t-know-what-all
father (meaning me, the Cheap Jack in the sleeved waistcoat)
and she would stay with him, Heaven bless him! though
it was to break her heart. Then she cried most
bitterly, and that made up my mind.
While my mind had been in an unsettled
state about her favouring this young man, I had felt
that unreasonable towards Pickleson, that it was well
for him he had got his legacy down. For I often
thought, “If it hadn’t been for this same
weak-minded giant, I might never have come to trouble
my head and wex my soul about the young man.”
But, once that I knew she loved him, once
that I had seen her weep for him, it was
a different thing. I made it right in my mind
with Pickleson on the spot, and I shook myself together
to do what was right by all.
She had left the young man by that
time (for it took a few minutes to get me thoroughly
well shook together), and the young man was leaning
against another of the fir-trees, of which
there was a cluster, with his face upon
his arm. I touched him on the back. Looking
up and seeing me, he says, in our deaf-and-dumb talk,
“Do not be angry.”
“I am not angry, good boy.
I am your friend. Come with me.”
I left him at the foot of the steps
of the Library Cart, and I went up alone. She
was drying her eyes.
“You have been crying, my dear.”
“Yes, father.”
“Why?”
“A headache.”
“Not a heartache?”
“I said a headache, father.”
“Doctor Marigold must prescribe for that headache.”
She took up the book of my Prescriptions,
and held it up with a forced smile; but seeing me
keep still and look earnest, she softly laid it down
again, and her eyes were very attentive.
“The Prescription is not there, Sophy.”
“Where is it?”
“Here, my dear.”
I brought her young husband in, and
I put her hand in his, and my only farther words to
both of them were these: “Doctor Marigold’s
last Prescription. To be taken for life.”
After which I bolted.
When the wedding come off, I mounted
a coat (blue, and bright buttons), for the first and
last time in all my days, and I give Sophy away with
my own hand. There were only us three and the
gentleman who had had charge of her for those two
years. I give the wedding dinner of four in the
Library Cart. Pigeon-pie, a leg of pickled pork,
a pair of fowls, and suitable garden stuff.
The best of drinks. I give them a speech, and
the gentleman give us a speech, and all our jokes told,
and the whole went off like a sky-rocket. In
the course of the entertainment I explained to Sophy
that I should keep the Library Cart as my living-cart
when not upon the road, and that I should keep all
her books for her just as they stood, till she come
back to claim them. So she went to China with
her young husband, and it was a parting sorrowful and
heavy, and I got the boy I had another service; and
so as of old, when my child and wife were gone, I
went plodding along alone, with my whip over my shoulder,
at the old horse’s head.
Sophy wrote me many letters, and I
wrote her many letters. About the end of the
first year she sent me one in an unsteady hand:
“Dearest father, not a week ago I had a darling
little daughter, but I am so well that they let me
write these words to you. Dearest and best father,
I hope my child may not be deaf and dumb, but I do
not yet know.” When I wrote back, I hinted
the question; but as Sophy never answered that question,
I felt it to be a sad one, and I never repeated it.
For a long time our letters were regular, but then
they got irregular, through Sophy’s husband
being moved to another station, and through my being
always on the move. But we were in one another’s
thoughts, I was equally sure, letters or no letters.
Five years, odd months, had gone since
Sophy went away. I was still the King of the
Cheap Jacks, and at a greater height of popularity
than ever. I had had a first-rate autumn of it,
and on the twenty-third of December, one thousand
eight hundred and sixty-four, I found myself at Uxbridge,
Middlesex, clean sold out. So I jogged up to
London with the old horse, light and easy, to have
my Christmas-eve and Christmas-day alone by the fire
in the Library Cart, and then to buy a regular new
stock of goods all round, to sell ’em again
and get the money.
I am a neat hand at cookery, and I’ll
tell you what I knocked up for my Christmas-eve dinner
in the Library Cart. I knocked up a beefsteak-pudding
for one, with two kidneys, a dozen oysters, and a
couple of mushrooms thrown in. It’s a pudding
to put a man in good humour with everything, except
the two bottom buttons of his waistcoat. Having
relished that pudding and cleared away, I turned the
lamp low, and sat down by the light of the fire, watching
it as it shone upon the backs of Sophy’s books.
Sophy’s books so brought Sophy’s
self, that I saw her touching face quite plainly,
before I dropped off dozing by the fire. This
may be a reason why Sophy, with her deaf-and-dumb
child in her arms, seemed to stand silent by me all
through my nap. I was on the road, off the road,
in all sorts of places, North and South and West and
East, Winds liked best and winds liked least, Here
and there and gone astray, Over the hills and far
away, and still she stood silent by me, with her silent
child in her arms. Even when I woke with a start,
she seemed to vanish, as if she had stood by me in
that very place only a single instant before.
I had started at a real sound, and
the sound was on the steps of the cart. It was
the light hurried tread of a child, coming clambering
up. That tread of a child had once been so familiar
to me, that for half a moment I believed I was a-going
to see a little ghost.
But the touch of a real child was
laid upon the outer handle of the door, and the handle
turned, and the door opened a little way, and a real
child peeped in. A bright little comely girl
with large dark eyes.
Looking full at me, the tiny creature
took off her mite of a straw hat, and a quantity of
dark curls fell about her face. Then she opened
her lips, and said in a pretty voice,
“Grandfather!”
“Ah, my God!” I cries out. “She
can speak!”
“Yes, dear grandfather.
And I am to ask you whether there was ever any one
that I remind you of?”
In a moment Sophy was round my neck,
as well as the child, and her husband was a-wringing
my hand with his face hid, and we all had to shake
ourselves together before we could get over it.
And when we did begin to get over it, and I saw the
pretty child a-talking, pleased and quick and eager
and busy, to her mother, in the signs that I had first
taught her mother, the happy and yet pitying tears
fell rolling down my face.