One would suppose that two people
who are to pass their whole lives together, and must
necessarily be very often alone with each other, could
find little pleasure in mutual contradiction; and yet
what is more common than a contradictory couple?
The contradictory couple agree in
nothing but contradiction. They return home
from Mrs. Bluebottle’s dinner-party, each in
an opposite corner of the coach, and do not exchange
a syllable until they have been seated for at least
twenty minutes by the fireside at home, when the gentleman,
raising his eyes from the stove, all at once breaks
silence:
‘What a very extraordinary thing
it is,’ says he, ’that you will
contradict, Charlotte!’ ‘I contradict!’
cries the lady, ’but that’s just like
you.’ ‘What’s like me?’
says the gentleman sharply. ’Saying that
I contradict you,’ replies the lady. ’Do
you mean to say that you do not contradict
me?’ retorts the gentleman; ’do you mean
to say that you have not been contradicting me the
whole of this day?’ ’Do you mean to tell
me now, that you have not? I mean to tell you
nothing of the kind,’ replies the lady quietly;
’when you are wrong, of course I shall contradict
you.’
During this dialogue the gentleman
has been taking his brandy-and-water on one side of
the fire, and the lady, with her dressing-case on the
table, has been curling her hair on the other.
She now lets down her back hair, and proceeds to
brush it; preserving at the same time an air of conscious
rectitude and suffering virtue, which is intended to
exasperate the gentleman and does so.
‘I do believe,’ he says,
taking the spoon out of his glass, and tossing it
on the table, ’that of all the obstinate, positive,
wrong-headed creatures that were ever born, you are
the most so, Charlotte.’ ’Certainly,
certainly, have it your own way, pray. You see
how much I contradict you,’ rejoins the
lady. ’Of course, you didn’t contradict
me at dinner-time oh no, not you!’
says the gentleman. ‘Yes, I did,’
says the lady. ‘Oh, you did,’ cries
the gentleman ‘you admit that?’ ’If
you call that contradiction, I do,’ the lady
answers; ’and I say again, Edward, that when
I know you are wrong, I will contradict you.
I am not your slave.’ ‘Not my slave!’
repeats the gentleman bitterly; ’and you still
mean to say that in the Blackburns’ new house
there are not more than fourteen doors, including
the door of the wine-cellar!’ ’I mean
to say,’ retorts the lady, beating time with
her hair-brush on the palm of her hand, ‘that
in that house there are fourteen doors and no more.’
‘Well then ’ cries the gentleman,
rising in despair, and pacing the room with rapid
strides. ’By G-, this is enough to destroy
a man’s intellect, and drive him mad!’
By and by the gentleman comes-to a
little, and passing his hand gloomily across his forehead,
reseats himself in his former chair. There is
a long silence, and this time the lady begins.
’I appealed to Mr. Jenkins, who sat next to
me on the sofa in the drawing-room during tea ’
‘Morgan, you mean,’ interrupts the gentleman.
’I do not mean anything of the kind,’
answers the lady. ’Now, by all that is
aggravating and impossible to bear,’ cries the
gentleman, clenching his hands and looking upwards
in agony, ’she is going to insist upon it that
Morgan is Jenkins!’ ‘Do you take me for
a perfect fool?’ exclaims the lady; ’do
you suppose I don’t know the one from the other?
Do you suppose I don’t know that the man in
the blue coat was Mr. Jenkins?’ ’Jenkins
in a blue coat!’ cries the gentleman with a
groan; ’Jenkins in a blue coat! a man who would
suffer death rather than wear anything but brown!’
’Do you dare to charge me with telling an untruth?’
demands the lady, bursting into tears. ‘I
charge you, ma’am,’ retorts the gentleman,
starting up, ’with being a monster of contradiction,
a monster of aggravation, a a a Jenkins
in a blue coat! what have I done that I
should be doomed to hear such statements!’
Expressing himself with great scorn
and anguish, the gentleman takes up his candle and
stalks off to bed, where feigning to be fast asleep
when the lady comes up-stairs drowned in tears, murmuring
lamentations over her hard fate and indistinct intentions
of consulting her brothers, he undergoes the secret
torture of hearing her exclaim between whiles, ’I
know there are only fourteen doors in the house, I
know it was Mr. Jenkins, I know he had a blue coat
on, and I would say it as positively as I do now,
if they were the last words I had to speak!’
If the contradictory couple are blessed
with children, they are not the less contradictory
on that account. Master James and Miss Charlotte
present themselves after dinner, and being in perfect
good humour, and finding their parents in the same
amiable state, augur from these appearances half a
glass of wine a-piece and other extraordinary indulgences.
But unfortunately Master James, growing talkative
upon such prospects, asks his mamma how tall Mrs.
Parsons is, and whether she is not six feet high;
to which his mamma replies, ’Yes, she should
think she was, for Mrs. Parsons is a very tall lady
indeed; quite a giantess.’ ‘For Heaven’s
sake, Charlotte,’ cries her husband, ’do
not tell the child such preposterous nonsense.
Six feet high!’ ‘Well,’ replies
the lady, ’surely I may be permitted to have
an opinion; my opinion is, that she is six feet high at
least six feet.’ ‘Now you know, Charlotte,’
retorts the gentleman sternly, ’that that is
not your opinion that you have no
such idea and that you only say this for
the sake of contradiction.’ ‘You
are exceedingly polite,’ his wife replies; ’to
be wrong about such a paltry question as anybody’s
height, would be no great crime; but I say again,
that I believe Mrs. Parsons to be six feet more
than six feet; nay, I believe you know her to be full
six feet, and only say she is not, because I say she
is.’ This taunt disposes the gentleman
to become violent, but he cheeks himself, and is content
to mutter, in a haughty tone, ‘Six feet ha!
ha! Mrs. Parsons six feet!’ and the lady
answers, ’Yes, six feet. I am sure I am
glad you are amused, and I’ll say it again six
feet.’ Thus the subject gradually drops
off, and the contradiction begins to be forgotten,
when Master James, with some undefined notion of making
himself agreeable, and putting things to rights again,
unfortunately asks his mamma what the moon’s
made of; which gives her occasion to say that he had
better not ask her, for she is always wrong and never
can be right; that he only exposes her to contradiction
by asking any question of her; and that he had better
ask his papa, who is infallible, and never can be
wrong. Papa, smarting under this attack, gives
a terrible pull at the bell, and says, that if the
conversation is to proceed in this way, the children
had better be removed. Removed they are, after
a few tears and many struggles; and Pa having looked
at Ma sideways for a minute or two, with a baleful
eye, draws his pocket-handkerchief over his face,
and composes himself for his after-dinner nap.
The friends of the contradictory couple
often deplore their frequent disputes, though they
rather make light of them at the same time: observing,
that there is no doubt they are very much attached
to each other, and that they never quarrel except
about trifles. But neither the friends of the
contradictory couple, nor the contradictory couple
themselves, reflect, that as the most stupendous objects
in nature are but vast collections of minute particles,
so the slightest and least considered trifles make
up the sum of human happiness or misery.