THE R. WILFER FAMILY
Reginald Wilfer is a name with rather
a grand sound, suggesting on first acquaintance brasses
in country churches, scrolls in stained-glass windows,
and generally the De Wilfers who came over with the
Conqueror. For, it is a remarkable fact in genealogy
that no De Any ones ever came over with Anybody else.
But, the Reginald Wilfer family were
of such commonplace extraction and pursuits that their
forefathers had for generations modestly subsisted
on the Docks, the Excise Office, and the Custom House,
and the existing R. Wilfer was a poor clerk.
So poor a clerk, though having a limited salary and
an unlimited family, that he had never yet attained
the modest object of his ambition: which was,
to wear a complete new suit of clothes, hat and boots
included, at one time. His black hat was brown
before he could afford a coat, his pantaloons were
white at the seams and knees before he could buy a
pair of boots, his boots had worn out before he could
treat himself to new pantaloons, and, by the time he
worked round to the hat again, that shining modern
article roofed-in an ancient ruin of various periods.
If the conventional Cherub could ever
grow up and be clothed, he might be photographed as
a portrait of Wilfer. His chubby, smooth, innocent
appearance was a reason for his being always treated
with condescension when he was not put down.
A stranger entering his own poor house at about ten
o’clock P.M. might have been surprised to find
him sitting up to supper. So boyish was he in
his curves and proportions, that his old schoolmaster
meeting him in Cheapside, might have been unable to
withstand the temptation of caning him on the spot.
In short, he was the conventional cherub, after the
supposititious shoot just mentioned, rather grey,
with signs of care on his expression, and in decidedly
insolvent circumstances.
He was shy, and unwilling to own to
the name of Reginald, as being too aspiring and self-assertive
a name. In his signature he used only the initial
R., and imparted what it really stood for, to none
but chosen friends, under the seal of confidence.
Out of this, the facetious habit had arisen in the
neighbourhood surrounding Mincing Lane of making christian
names for him of adjectives and participles beginning
with R. Some of these were more or less appropriate:
as Rusty, Retiring, Ruddy, Round, Ripe, Ridiculous,
Ruminative; others, derived their point from their
want of application: as Raging, Rattling, Roaring,
Raffish. But, his popular name was Rumty, which
in a moment of inspiration had been bestowed upon
him by a gentleman of convivial habits connected with
the drug-markets, as the beginning of a social chorus,
his leading part in the execution of which had led
this gentleman to the Temple of Fame, and of which
the whole expressive burden ran:
’Rumty iddity,
row dow dow,
Sing toodlely, teedlely,
bow wow wow.’
Thus he was constantly addressed,
even in minor notes on business, as ‘Dear Rumty’;
in answer to which, he sedately signed himself, ’Yours
truly, R. Wilfer.’
He was clerk in the drug-house of
Chicksey, Veneering, and Stobbles. Chicksey and
Stobbles, his former masters, had both become absorbed
in Veneering, once their traveller or commission agent:
who had signalized his accession to supreme power
by bringing into the business a quantity of plate-glass
window and French-polished mahogany partition, and
a gleaming and enormous doorplate.
R. Wilfer locked up his desk one evening,
and, putting his bunch of keys in his pocket much
as if it were his peg-top, made for home. His
home was in the Holloway region north of London, and
then divided from it by fields and trees. Between
Battle Bridge and that part of the Holloway district
in which he dwelt, was a tract of suburban Sahara,
where tiles and bricks were burnt, bones were boiled,
carpets were beat, rubbish was shot, dogs were fought,
and dust was heaped by contractors. Skirting
the border of this desert, by the way he took, when
the light of its kiln-fires made lurid smears on the
fog, R. Wilfer sighed and shook his head.
‘Ah me!’ said he, ‘what might have
been is not what is!’
With which commentary on human life,
indicating an experience of it not exclusively his
own, he made the best of his way to the end of his
journey.
Mrs Wilfer was, of course, a tall
woman and an angular. Her lord being cherubic,
she was necessarily majestic, according to the principle
which matrimonially unites contrasts. She was
much given to tying up her head in a pocket-handkerchief,
knotted under the chin. This head-gear, in conjunction
with a pair of gloves worn within doors, she seemed
to consider as at once a kind of armour against misfortune
(invariably assuming it when in low spirits or difficulties),
and as a species of full dress. It was therefore
with some sinking of the spirit that her husband beheld
her thus heroically attired, putting down her candle
in the little hall, and coming down the doorsteps
through the little front court to open the gate for
him.
Something had gone wrong with the
house-door, for R. Wilfer stopped on the steps, staring
at it, and cried:
‘Hal-loa?’
‘Yes,’ said Mrs Wilfer,
’the man came himself with a pair of pincers,
and took it off, and took it away. He said that
as he had no expectation of ever being paid for it,
and as he had an order for another ladies’
school door-plate, it was better (burnished up)
for the interests of all parties.’
‘Perhaps it was, my dear; what do you think?’
‘You are master here, R. W.,’
returned his wife. ’It is as you think;
not as I do. Perhaps it might have been better
if the man had taken the door too?’
‘My dear, we couldn’t have done without
the door.’
‘Couldn’t we?’
‘Why, my dear! Could we?’
‘It is as you think, R. W.;
not as I do.’ With those submissive words,
the dutiful wife preceded him down a few stairs to
a little basement front room, half kitchen, half parlour,
where a girl of about nineteen, with an exceedingly
pretty figure and face, but with an impatient and
petulant expression both in her face and in her shoulders
(which in her sex and at her age are very expressive
of discontent), sat playing draughts with a younger
girl, who was the youngest of the House of Wilfer.
Not to encumber this page by telling off the Wilfers
in detail and casting them up in the gross, it is
enough for the present that the rest were what is
called ‘out in the world,’ in various ways,
and that they were Many. So many, that when one
of his dutiful children called in to see him, R. Wilfer
generally seemed to say to himself, after a little
mental arithmetic, ’Oh! here’s another
of ’em!’ before adding aloud, ‘How
de do, John,’ or Susan, as the case might be.
‘Well Piggywiggies,’ said
R. W., ’how de do to-night? What I was
thinking of, my dear,’ to Mrs Wilfer already
seated in a corner with folded gloves, ’was,
that as we have let our first floor so well, and as
we have now no place in which you could teach pupils
even if pupils ’
’The milkman said he knew of
two young ladies of the highest respectability who
were in search of a suitable establishment, and he
took a card,’ interposed Mrs Wilfer, with severe
monotony, as if she were reading an Act of Parliament
aloud. ’Tell your father whether it was
last Monday, Bella.’
‘But we never heard any more
of it, ma,’ said Bella, the elder girl.
‘In addition to which, my dear,’
her husband urged, ’if you have no place to
put two young persons into ’
‘Pardon me,’ Mrs Wilfer
again interposed; ’they were not young persons.
Two young ladies of the highest respectability.
Tell your father, Bella, whether the milkman said
so.’
‘My dear, it is the same thing.’
‘No it is not,’ said Mrs
Wilfer, with the same impressive monotony. ‘Pardon
me!’
’I mean, my dear, it is the
same thing as to space. As to space. If you
have no space in which to put two youthful fellow-creatures,
however eminently respectable, which I do not doubt,
where are those youthful fellow-creatures to be accommodated?
I carry it no further than that. And solely looking
at it,’ said her husband, making the stipulation
at once in a conciliatory, complimentary, and argumentative
tone ’as I am sure you will agree,
my love from a fellow-creature point of
view, my dear.’
‘I have nothing more to say,’
returned Mrs Wilfer, with a meek renunciatory action
of her gloves. ’It is as you think, R. W.;
not as I do.’
Here, the huffing of Miss Bella and
the loss of three of her men at a swoop, aggravated
by the coronation of an opponent, led to that young
lady’s jerking the draught-board and pieces off
the table: which her sister went down on her
knees to pick up.
‘Poor Bella!’ said Mrs Wilfer.
‘And poor Lavinia, perhaps, my dear?’
suggested R. W.
‘Pardon me,’ said Mrs Wilfer, ‘no!’
It was one of the worthy woman’s
specialities that she had an amazing power of gratifying
her splenetic or worldly-minded humours by extolling
her own family: which she thus proceeded, in the
present case, to do.
’No, R. W. Lavinia has not known
the trial that Bella has known. The trial that
your daughter Bella has undergone, is, perhaps, without
a parallel, and has been borne, I will say, Nobly.
When you see your daughter Bella in her black dress,
which she alone of all the family wears, and when
you remember the circumstances which have led to her
wearing it, and when you know how those circumstances
have been sustained, then, R. W., lay your head upon
your pillow and say, “Poor Lavinia!"’
Here, Miss Lavinia, from her kneeling
situation under the table, put in that she didn’t
want to be ‘poored by pa’, or anybody else.
‘I am sure you do not, my dear,’
returned her mother, ’for you have a fine brave
spirit. And your sister Cecilia has a fine brave
spirit of another kind, a spirit of pure devotion,
a beau-ti-ful spirit! The self-sacrifice of Cecilia
reveals a pure and womanly character, very seldom
equalled, never surpassed. I have now in my pocket
a letter from your sister Cecilia, received this morning received
three months after her marriage, poor child! in
which she tells me that her husband must unexpectedly
shelter under their roof his reduced aunt. “But
I will be true to him, mamma,” she touchingly
writes, “I will not leave him, I must not forget
that he is my husband. Let his aunt come!”
If this is not pathetic, if this is not woman’s
devotion !’ The good lady waved her gloves
in a sense of the impossibility of saying more, and
tied the pocket-handkerchief over her head in a tighter
knot under her chin.
Bella, who was now seated on the rug
to warm herself, with her brown eyes on the fire and
a handful of her brown curls in her mouth, laughed
at this, and then pouted and half cried.
‘I am sure,’ said she,
’though you have no feeling for me, pa, I am
one of the most unfortunate girls that ever lived.
You know how poor we are’ (it is probable he
did, having some reason to know it!), ’and what
a glimpse of wealth I had, and how it melted away,
and how I am here in this ridiculous mourning which
I hate! a kind of a widow who never was
married. And yet you don’t feel for me. Yes
you do, yes you do.’
This abrupt change was occasioned
by her father’s face. She stopped to pull
him down from his chair in an attitude highly favourable
to strangulation, and to give him a kiss and a pat
or two on the cheek.
‘But you ought to feel for me, you know, pa.’
‘My dear, I do.’
’Yes, and I say you ought to.
If they had only left me alone and told me nothing
about it, it would have mattered much less. But
that nasty Mr Lightwood feels it his duty, as he says,
to write and tell me what is in reserve for me, and
then I am obliged to get rid of George Sampson.’
Here, Lavinia, rising to the surface
with the last draughtman rescued, interposed, ‘You
never cared for George Sampson, Bella.’
‘And did I say I did, miss?’
Then, pouting again, with the curls in her mouth;
’George Sampson was very fond of me, and admired
me very much, and put up with everything I did to
him.’
‘You were rude enough to him,’ Lavinia
again interposed.
’And did I say I wasn’t,
miss? I am not setting up to be sentimental about
George Sampson. I only say George Sampson was
better than nothing.’
‘You didn’t show him that
you thought even that,’ Lavinia again interposed.
‘You are a chit and a little
idiot,’ returned Bella, ’or you wouldn’t
make such a dolly speech. What did you expect
me to do? Wait till you are a woman, and don’t
talk about what you don’t understand. You
only show your ignorance!’ Then, whimpering
again, and at intervals biting the curls, and stopping
to look how much was bitten off, ’It’s
a shame! There never was such a hard case!
I shouldn’t care so much if it wasn’t
so ridiculous. It was ridiculous enough to have
a stranger coming over to marry me, whether he liked
it or not. It was ridiculous enough to know what
an embarrassing meeting it would be, and how we never
could pretend to have an inclination of our own, either
of us. It was ridiculous enough to know I shouldn’t
like him how could I like him, left
to him in a will, like a dozen of spoons, with everything
cut and dried beforehand, like orange chips.
Talk of orange flowers indeed! I declare again
it’s a shame! Those ridiculous points would
have been smoothed away by the money, for I love money,
and want money want it dreadfully.
I hate to be poor, and we are degradingly poor, offensively
poor, miserably poor, beastly poor. But here I
am, left with all the ridiculous parts of the situation
remaining, and, added to them all, this ridiculous
dress! And if the truth was known, when the Harmon
murder was all over the town, and people were speculating
on its being suicide, I dare say those impudent wretches
at the clubs and places made jokes about the miserable
creature’s having preferred a watery grave to
me. It’s likely enough they took such liberties;
I shouldn’t wonder! I declare it’s
a very hard case indeed, and I am a most unfortunate
girl. The idea of being a kind of a widow, and
never having been married! And the idea of being
as poor as ever after all, and going into black, besides,
for a man I never saw, and should have hated as
far as he was concerned if I had seen!’
The young lady’s lamentations
were checked at this point by a knuckle, knocking
at the half-open door of the room. The knuckle
had knocked two or three times already, but had not
been heard.
‘Who is it?’ said Mrs
Wilfer, in her Act-of-Parliament manner. ‘Enter!’
A gentleman coming in, Miss Bella,
with a short and sharp exclamation, scrambled off
the hearth-rug and massed the bitten curls together
in their right place on her neck.
’The servant girl had her key
in the door as I came up, and directed me to this
room, telling me I was expected. I am afraid I
should have asked her to announce me.’
‘Pardon me,’ returned
Mrs Wilfer. ’Not at all. Two of my
daughters. R. W., this is the gentleman who has
taken your first-floor. He was so good as to
make an appointment for to-night, when you would be
at home.’
A dark gentleman. Thirty at the
utmost. An expressive, one might say handsome,
face. A very bad manner. In the last degree
constrained, reserved, diffident, troubled. His
eyes were on Miss Bella for an instant, and then looked
at the ground as he addressed the master of the house.
’Seeing that I am quite satisfied,
Mr Wilfer, with the rooms, and with their situation,
and with their price, I suppose a memorandum between
us of two or three lines, and a payment down, will
bind the bargain? I wish to send in furniture
without delay.’
Two or three times during this short
address, the cherub addressed had made chubby motions
towards a chair. The gentleman now took it, laying
a hesitating hand on a corner of the table, and with
another hesitating hand lifting the crown of his hat
to his lips, and drawing it before his mouth.
‘The gentleman, R. W.,’
said Mrs Wilfer, ’proposes to take your apartments
by the quarter. A quarter’s notice on either
side.’
‘Shall I mention, sir,’
insinuated the landlord, expecting it to be received
as a matter of course, ‘the form of a reference?’
‘I think,’ returned the
gentleman, after a pause, ’that a reference is
not necessary; neither, to say the truth, is it convenient,
for I am a stranger in London. I require no reference
from you, and perhaps, therefore, you will require
none from me. That will be fair on both sides.
Indeed, I show the greater confidence of the two, for
I will pay in advance whatever you please, and I am
going to trust my furniture here. Whereas, if
you were in embarrassed circumstances this
is merely supposititious ’
Conscience causing R. Wilfer to colour,
Mrs Wilfer, from a corner (she always got into stately
corners) came to the rescue with a deep-toned ‘Per-fectly.’
‘ Why then I might lose
it.’
‘Well!’ observed R. Wilfer,
cheerfully, ’money and goods are certainly the
best of references.’
‘Do you think they are
the best, pa?’ asked Miss Bella, in a low voice,
and without looking over her shoulder as she warmed
her foot on the fender.
‘Among the best, my dear.’
’I should have thought, myself,
it was so easy to add the usual kind of one,’
said Bella, with a toss of her curls.
The gentleman listened to her, with
a face of marked attention, though he neither looked
up nor changed his attitude. He sat, still and
silent, until his future landlord accepted his proposals,
and brought writing materials to complete the business.
He sat, still and silent, while the landlord wrote.
When the agreement was ready in duplicate
(the landlord having worked at it like some cherubic
scribe, in what is conventionally called a doubtful,
which means a not at all doubtful, Old Master), it
was signed by the contracting parties, Bella looking
on as scornful witness. The contracting parties
were R. Wilfer, and John Rokesmith Esquire.
When it came to Bella’s turn
to sign her name, Mr Rokesmith, who was standing,
as he had sat, with a hesitating hand upon the table,
looked at her stealthily, but narrowly. He looked
at the pretty figure bending down over the paper and
saying, ’Where am I to go, pa? Here, in
this corner?’ He looked at the beautiful brown
hair, shading the coquettish face; he looked at the
free dash of the signature, which was a bold one for
a woman’s; and then they looked at one another.
‘Much obliged to you, Miss Wilfer.’
‘Obliged?’
‘I have given you so much trouble.’
’Signing my name? Yes,
certainly. But I am your landlord’s daughter,
sir.’
As there was nothing more to do but
pay eight sovereigns in earnest of the bargain, pocket
the agreement, appoint a time for the arrival of his
furniture and himself, and go, Mr Rokesmith did that
as awkwardly as it might be done, and was escorted
by his landlord to the outer air. When R. Wilfer
returned, candlestick in hand, to the bosom of his
family, he found the bosom agitated.
‘Pa,’ said Bella, ‘we have got a
Murderer for a tenant.’
‘Pa,’ said Lavinia, ‘we have got
a Robber.’
‘To see him unable for his life
to look anybody in the face!’ said Bella.
‘There never was such an exhibition.’
‘My dears,’ said their
father, ’he is a diffident gentleman, and I
should say particularly so in the society of girls
of your age.’
‘Nonsense, our age!’ cried
Bella, impatiently. ’What’s that got
to do with him?’
‘Besides, we are not of the
same age: which age?’ demanded Lavinia.
‘Never you mind, Lavvy,’
retorted Bella; ’you wait till you are of an
age to ask such questions. Pa, mark my words!
Between Mr Rokesmith and me, there is a natural antipathy
and a deep distrust; and something will come of it!’
‘My dear, and girls,’
said the cherub-patriarch, ’between Mr Rokesmith
and me, there is a matter of eight sovereigns, and
something for supper shall come of it, if you’ll
agree upon the article.’
This was a neat and happy turn to
give the subject, treats being rare in the Wilfer
household, where a monotonous appearance of Dutch-cheese
at ten o’clock in the evening had been rather
frequently commented on by the dimpled shoulders of
Miss Bella. Indeed, the modest Dutchman himself
seemed conscious of his want of variety, and generally
came before the family in a state of apologetic perspiration.
After some discussion on the relative merits of veal-cutlet,
sweetbread, and lobster, a decision was pronounced
in favour of veal-cutlet. Mrs Wilfer then solemnly
divested herself of her handkerchief and gloves, as
a preliminary sacrifice to preparing the frying-pan,
and R. W. himself went out to purchase the viand.
He soon returned, bearing the same in a fresh cabbage-leaf,
where it coyly embraced a rasher of ham. Melodious
sounds were not long in rising from the frying-pan
on the fire, or in seeming, as the firelight danced
in the mellow halls of a couple of full bottles on
the table, to play appropriate dance-music.
The cloth was laid by Lavvy.
Bella, as the acknowledged ornament of the family,
employed both her hands in giving her hair an additional
wave while sitting in the easiest chair, and occasionally
threw in a direction touching the supper: as,
‘Very brown, ma;’ or, to her sister, ‘Put
the saltcellar straight, miss, and don’t be a
dowdy little puss.’
Meantime her father, chinking Mr Rokesmith’s
gold as he sat expectant between his knife and fork,
remarked that six of those sovereigns came just in
time for their landlord, and stood them in a little
pile on the white tablecloth to look at.
‘I hate our landlord!’ said Bella.
But, observing a fall in her father’s
face, she went and sat down by him at the table, and
began touching up his hair with the handle of a fork.
It was one of the girl’s spoilt ways to be always
arranging the family’s hair perhaps
because her own was so pretty, and occupied so much
of her attention.
‘You deserve to have a house
of your own; don’t you, poor pa?’
‘I don’t deserve it better than another,
my dear.’
‘At any rate I, for one, want
it more than another,’ said Bella, holding him
by the chin, as she stuck his flaxen hair on end, ’and
I grudge this money going to the Monster that swallows
up so much, when we all want Everything.
And if you say (as you want to say; I know you want
to say so, pa) “that’s neither reasonable
nor honest, Bella,” then I answer, “Maybe
not, pa very likely but it’s
one of the consequences of being poor, and of thoroughly
hating and detesting to be poor, and that’s
my case.” Now, you look lovely, pa; why
don’t you always wear your hair like that?
And here’s the cutlet! If it isn’t
very brown, ma, I can’t eat it, and must have
a bit put back to be done expressly.’
However, as it was brown, even to
Bella’s taste, the young lady graciously partook
of it without reconsignment to the frying-pan, and
also, in due course, of the contents of the two bottles:
whereof one held Scotch ale and the other rum.
The latter perfume, with the fostering aid of boiling
water and lemon-peel, diffused itself throughout the
room, and became so highly concentrated around the
warm fireside, that the wind passing over the house
roof must have rushed off charged with a delicious
whiff of it, after buzzing like a great bee at that
particular chimneypot.
‘Pa,’ said Bella, sipping
the fragrant mixture and warming her favourite ankle;
’when old Mr Harmon made such a fool of me (not
to mention himself, as he is dead), what do you suppose
he did it for?’
’Impossible to say, my dear.
As I have told you time out of number since his will
was brought to light, I doubt if I ever exchanged a
hundred words with the old gentleman. If it was
his whim to surprise us, his whim succeeded.
For he certainly did it.’
’And I was stamping my foot
and screaming, when he first took notice of me; was
I?’ said Bella, contemplating the ankle before
mentioned.
’You were stamping your little
foot, my dear, and screaming with your little voice,
and laying into me with your little bonnet, which you
had snatched off for the purpose,’ returned her
father, as if the remembrance gave a relish to the
rum; ’you were doing this one Sunday morning
when I took you out, because I didn’t go the
exact way you wanted, when the old gentleman, sitting
on a seat near, said, “That’s a nice girl;
that’s a very nice girl; a promising girl!”
And so you were, my dear.’
‘And then he asked my name, did he, pa?’
’Then he asked your name, my
dear, and mine; and on other Sunday mornings, when
we walked his way, we saw him again, and and
really that’s all.’
As that was all the rum and water
too, or, in other words, as R. W. delicately signified
that his glass was empty, by throwing back his head
and standing the glass upside down on his nose and
upper lip, it might have been charitable in Mrs Wilfer
to suggest replenishment. But that heroine briefly
suggesting ‘Bedtime’ instead, the bottles
were put away, and the family retired; she cherubically
escorted, like some severe saint in a painting, or
merely human matron allegorically treated.
‘And by this time to-morrow,’
said Lavinia when the two girls were alone in their
room, ’we shall have Mr Rokesmith here, and shall
be expecting to have our throats cut.’
‘You needn’t stand between
me and the candle for all that,’ retorted Bella.
’This is another of the consequences of being
poor! The idea of a girl with a really fine head
of hair, having to do it by one flat candle and a
few inches of looking-glass!’
’You caught George Sampson with
it, Bella, bad as your means of dressing it are.’
’You low little thing.
Caught George Sampson with it! Don’t talk
about catching people, miss, till your own time for
catching as you call it comes.’
‘Perhaps it has come,’
muttered Lavvy, with a toss of her head.
‘What did you say?’ asked
Bella, very sharply. ‘What did you say,
miss?’
Lavvy declining equally to repeat
or to explain, Bella gradually lapsed over her hair-dressing
into a soliloquy on the miseries of being poor, as
exemplified in having nothing to put on, nothing to
go out in, nothing to dress by, only a nasty box to
dress at instead of a commodious dressing-table, and
being obliged to take in suspicious lodgers.
On the last grievance as her climax, she laid great
stress and might have laid greater, had
she known that if Mr Julius Handford had a twin brother
upon earth, Mr John Rokesmith was the man.