IN WHICH A FRIENDLY MOVE IS ORIGINATED
The arrangement between Mr Boffin
and his literary man, Mr Silas Wegg, so far altered
with the altered habits of Mr Boffin’s life,
as that the Roman Empire usually declined in the morning
and in the eminently aristocratic family mansion,
rather than in the evening, as of yore, and in Boffin’s
Bower. There were occasions, however, when Mr
Boffin, seeking a brief refuge from the blandishments
of fashion, would present himself at the Bower after
dark, to anticipate the next sallying forth of Wegg,
and would there, on the old settle, pursue the downward
fortunes of those enervated and corrupted masters of
the world who were by this time on their last legs.
If Wegg had been worse paid for his office, or better
qualified to discharge it, he would have considered
these visits complimentary and agreeable; but, holding
the position of a handsomely-remunerated humbug, he
resented them. This was quite according to rule,
for the incompetent servant, by whomsoever employed,
is always against his employer. Even those born
governors, noble and right honourable creatures, who
have been the most imbecile in high places, have uniformly
shown themselves the most opposed (sometimes in belying
distrust, sometimes in vapid insolence) to their
employer. What is in such wise true of the public
master and servant, is equally true of the private
master and servant all the world over.
When Mr Silas Wegg did at last obtain
free access to ‘Our House’, as he had
been wont to call the mansion outside which he had
sat shelterless so long, and when he did at last find
it in all particulars as different from his mental
plans of it as according to the nature of things it
well could be, that far-seeing and far-reaching character,
by way of asserting himself and making out a case
for compensation, affected to fall into a melancholy
strain of musing over the mournful past; as if the
house and he had had a fall in life together.
‘And this, sir,’ Silas
would say to his patron, sadly nodding his head and
musing, ’was once Our House! This, sir,
is the building from which I have so often seen those
great creatures, Miss Elizabeth, Master George, Aunt
Jane, and Uncle Parker’ whose very
names were of his own inventing ’pass
and repass! And has it come to this, indeed!
Ah dear me, dear me!’
So tender were his lamentations, that
the kindly Mr Boffin was quite sorry for him, and
almost felt mistrustful that in buying the house he
had done him an irreparable injury.
Two or three diplomatic interviews,
the result of great subtlety on Mr Wegg’s part,
but assuming the mask of careless yielding to a fortuitous
combination of circumstances impelling him towards
Clerkenwell, had enabled him to complete his bargain
with Mr Venus.
‘Bring me round to the Bower,’
said Silas, when the bargain was closed, ’next
Saturday evening, and if a sociable glass of old Jamaikey
warm should meet your views, I am not the man to begrudge
it.’
‘You are aware of my being poor
company, sir,’ replied Mr Venus, ’but be
it so.’
It being so, here is Saturday evening
come, and here is Mr Venus come, and ringing at the
Bower-gate.
Mr Wegg opens the gate, descries a
sort of brown paper truncheon under Mr Venus’s
arm, and remarks, in a dry tone: ’Oh!
I thought perhaps you might have come in a cab.’
‘No, Mr Wegg,’ replies Venus. ‘I
am not above a parcel.’
‘Above a parcel! No!’
says Wegg, with some dissatisfaction. But does
not openly growl, ‘a certain sort of parcel
might be above you.’
‘Here is your purchase, Mr Wegg,’
says Venus, politely handing it over, ‘and I
am glad to restore it to the source from whence it flowed.’
‘Thankee,’ says Wegg.
’Now this affair is concluded, I may mention
to you in a friendly way that I’ve my doubts
whether, if I had consulted a lawyer, you could have
kept this article back from me. I only throw it
out as a legal point.’
‘Do you think so, Mr Wegg?
I bought you in open contract.’
’You can’t buy human flesh
and blood in this country, sir; not alive, you can’t,’
says Wegg, shaking his head. ‘Then query,
bone?’
‘As a legal point?’ asks Venus.
‘As a legal point.’
‘I am not competent to speak
upon that, Mr Wegg,’ says Venus, reddening and
growing something louder; ’but upon a point of
fact I think myself competent to speak; and as a point
of fact I would have seen you will you
allow me to say, further?’
‘I wouldn’t say more than
further, if I was you,’ Mr Wegg suggests, pacifically.
’Before I’d
have given that packet into your hand without being
paid my price for it. I don’t pretend to
know how the point of law may stand, but I’m
thoroughly confident upon the point of fact.’
As Mr Venus is irritable (no doubt
owing to his disappointment in love), and as it is
not the cue of Mr Wegg to have him out of temper, the
latter gentleman soothingly remarks, ’I only
put it as a little case; I only put it ha’porthetically.’
‘Then I’d rather, Mr Wegg,
you put it another time, penn’orth-etically,’
is Mr Venus’s retort, ’for I tell you candidly
I don’t like your little cases.’
Arrived by this time in Mr Wegg’s
sitting-room, made bright on the chilly evening by
gaslight and fire, Mr Venus softens and compliments
him on his abode; profiting by the occasion to remind
Wegg that he (Venus) told him he had got into a good
thing.
‘Tolerable,’ Wegg rejoins.
’But bear in mind, Mr Venus, that there’s
no gold without its alloy. Mix for yourself and
take a seat in the chimbley-corner. Will you
perform upon a pipe, sir?’
‘I am but an indifferent performer,
sir,’ returns the other; ’but I’ll
accompany you with a whiff or two at intervals.’
So, Mr Venus mixes, and Wegg mixes;
and Mr Venus lights and puffs, and Wegg lights and
puffs.
’And there’s alloy even
in this metal of yours, Mr Wegg, you was remarking?’
‘Mystery,’ returns Wegg.
’I don’t like it, Mr Venus. I don’t
like to have the life knocked out of former inhabitants
of this house, in the gloomy dark, and not know who
did it.’
‘Might you have any suspicions, Mr Wegg?’
‘No,’ returns that gentleman.
’I know who profits by it. But I’ve
no suspicions.’
Having said which, Mr Wegg smokes
and looks at the fire with a most determined expression
of Charity; as if he had caught that cardinal virtue
by the skirts as she felt it her painful duty to depart
from him, and held her by main force.
‘Similarly,’ resumes Wegg,
’I have observations as I can offer upon certain
points and parties; but I make no objections, Mr Venus.
Here is an immense fortune drops from the clouds upon
a person that shall be nameless. Here is a weekly
allowance, with a certain weight of coals, drops from
the clouds upon me. Which of us is the better
man? Not the person that shall be nameless.
That’s an observation of mine, but I don’t
make it an objection. I take my allowance and
my certain weight of coals. He takes his fortune.
That’s the way it works.’
’It would be a good thing for
me, if I could see things in the calm light you do,
Mr Wegg.’
‘Again look here,’ pursues
Silas, with an oratorical flourish of his pipe and
his wooden leg: the latter having an undignified
tendency to tilt him back in his chair; ’here’s
another observation, Mr Venus, unaccompanied with
an objection. Him that shall be nameless is liable
to be talked over. He gets talked over.
Him that shall be nameless, having me at his right
hand, naturally looking to be promoted higher, and
you may perhaps say meriting to be promoted higher ’
(Mr Venus murmurs that he does say so.)
’ Him that shall
be nameless, under such circumstances passes me by,
and puts a talking-over stranger above my head.
Which of us two is the better man? Which of us
two can repeat most poetry? Which of us two has,
in the service of him that shall be nameless, tackled
the Romans, both civil and military, till he has got
as husky as if he’d been weaned and ever since
brought up on sawdust? Not the talking-over stranger.
Yet the house is as free to him as if it was his,
and he has his room, and is put upon a footing, and
draws about a thousand a year. I am banished to
the Bower, to be found in it like a piece of furniture
whenever wanted. Merit, therefore, don’t
win. That’s the way it works. I observe
it, because I can’t help observing it, being
accustomed to take a powerful sight of notice; but
I don’t object. Ever here before, Mr Venus?’
‘Not inside the gate, Mr Wegg.’
‘You’ve been as far as the gate then,
Mr Venus?’
‘Yes, Mr Wegg, and peeped in from curiosity.’
‘Did you see anything?’
‘Nothing but the dust-yard.’
Mr Wegg rolls his eyes all round the
room, in that ever unsatisfied quest of his, and then
rolls his eyes all round Mr Venus; as if suspicious
of his having something about him to be found out.
‘And yet, sir,’ he pursues,
’being acquainted with old Mr Harmon, one would
have thought it might have been polite in you, too,
to give him a call. And you’re naturally
of a polite disposition, you are.’ This
last clause as a softening compliment to Mr Venus.
‘It is true, sir,’ replies
Venus, winking his weak eyes, and running his fingers
through his dusty shock of hair, ’that I was
so, before a certain observation soured me. You
understand to what I allude, Mr Wegg? To a certain
written statement respecting not wishing to be regarded
in a certain light. Since that, all is fled,
save gall.’
‘Not all,’ says Mr Wegg,
in a tone of sentimental condolence.
‘Yes, sir,’ returns Venus,
’all! The world may deem it harsh, but I’d
quite as soon pitch into my best friend as not.
Indeed, I’d sooner!’
Involuntarily making a pass with his
wooden leg to guard himself as Mr Venus springs up
in the emphasis of this unsociable declaration, Mr
Wegg tilts over on his back, chair and all, and is
rescued by that harmless misanthrope, in a disjointed
state and ruefully rubbing his head.
‘Why, you lost your balance,
Mr Wegg,’ says Venus, handing him his pipe.
‘And about time to do it,’
grumbles Silas, ’when a man’s visitors,
without a word of notice, conduct themselves with the
sudden wiciousness of Jacks-in-boxes! Don’t
come flying out of your chair like that, Mr Venus!’
‘I ask your pardon, Mr Wegg. I am so soured.’
‘Yes, but hang it,’ says
Wegg argumentatively, ’a well-governed mind can
be soured sitting! And as to being regarded in
lights, there’s bumpey lights as well as bony.
In which,’ again rubbing his head, ’I
object to regard myself.’
‘I’ll bear it in memory, sir.’
‘If you’ll be so good.’
Mr Wegg slowly subdues his ironical tone and his lingering
irritation, and resumes his pipe. ’We were
talking of old Mr Harmon being a friend of yours.’
’Not a friend, Mr Wegg.
Only known to speak to, and to have a little deal
with now and then. A very inquisitive character,
Mr Wegg, regarding what was found in the dust.
As inquisitive as secret.’
‘Ah! You found him secret?’
returns Wegg, with a greedy relish.
‘He had always the look of it, and the manner
of it.’
‘Ah!’ with another roll
of his eyes. ’As to what was found in the
dust now. Did you ever hear him mention how he
found it, my dear friend? Living on the mysterious
premises, one would like to know. For instance,
where he found things? Or, for instance, how he
set about it? Whether he began at the top of
the mounds, or whether he began at the bottom.
Whether he prodded’; Mr Wegg’s pantomime
is skilful and expressive here; ’or whether
he scooped? Should you say scooped, my dear Mr
Venus; or should you as a man say prodded?’
‘I should say neither, Mr Wegg.’
‘As a fellow-man, Mr Venus mix again why
neither?’
’Because I suppose, sir, that
what was found, was found in the sorting and sifting.
All the mounds are sorted and sifted?’
’You shall see ’em and pass your opinion.
Mix again.’
On each occasion of his saying ‘mix
again’, Mr Wegg, with a hop on his wooden leg,
hitches his chair a little nearer; more as if he were
proposing that himself and Mr Venus should mix again,
than that they should replenish their glasses.
‘Living (as I said before) on
the mysterious premises,’ says Wegg when the
other has acted on his hospitable entreaty, ’one
likes to know. Would you be inclined to say now as
a brother that he ever hid things in the
dust, as well as found ’em?’
‘Mr Wegg, on the whole I should say he might.’
Mr Wegg claps on his spectacles, and
admiringly surveys Mr Venus from head to foot.
’As a mortal equally with myself,
whose hand I take in mine for the first time this
day, having unaccountably overlooked that act so full
of boundless confidence binding a fellow-creetur to
a fellow creetur,’ says Wegg, holding Mr Venus’s
palm out, flat and ready for smiting, and now smiting
it; ’as such and no other for
I scorn all lowlier ties betwixt myself and the man
walking with his face erect that alone I call my Twin regarded
and regarding in this trustful bond what
do you think he might have hid?’
‘It is but a supposition, Mr Wegg.’
‘As a Being with his hand upon
his heart,’ cries Wegg; and the apostrophe is
not the less impressive for the Being’s hand
being actually upon his rum and water; ’put
your supposition into language, and bring it out,
Mr Venus!’
‘He was the species of old gentleman,
sir,’ slowly returns that practical anatomist,
after drinking, ’that I should judge likely to
take such opportunities as this place offered, of stowing
away money, valuables, maybe papers.’
‘As one that was ever an ornament
to human life,’ says Mr Wegg, again holding
out Mr Venus’s palm as if he were going to tell
his fortune by chiromancy, and holding his own up
ready for smiting it when the time should come; ’as
one that the poet might have had his eye on, in writing
the national naval words:
Helm a-weather, now lay her close,
Yard arm and yard arm she lies;
Again, cried I, Mr Venus, give her t’other
dose,
Man shrouds and grapple, sir, or she flies!
that is to say, regarded
in the light of true British Oak, for such you are
explain, Mr Venus, the expression “papers"!’
’Seeing that the old gentleman
was generally cutting off some near relation, or blocking
out some natural affection,’ Mr Venus rejoins,
’he most likely made a good many wills and codicils.’
The palm of Silas Wegg descends with
a sounding smack upon the palm of Venus, and Wegg
lavishly exclaims, ’Twin in opinion equally with
feeling! Mix a little more!’
Having now hitched his wooden leg
and his chair close in front of Mr Venus, Mr Wegg
rapidly mixes for both, gives his visitor his glass,
touches its rim with the rim of his own, puts his own
to his lips, puts it down, and spreading his hands
on his visitor’s knees thus addresses him:
’Mr Venus. It ain’t
that I object to being passed over for a stranger,
though I regard the stranger as a more than doubtful
customer. It ain’t for the sake of making
money, though money is ever welcome. It ain’t
for myself, though I am not so haughty as to be above
doing myself a good turn. It’s for the
cause of the right.’
Mr Venus, passively winking his weak
eyes both at once, demands: ’What is, Mr
Wegg?’
‘The friendly move, sir, that
I now propose. You see the move, sir?’
’Till you have pointed it out,
Mr Wegg, I can’t say whether I do or not.’
’If there is anything to
be found on these premises, let us find it together.
Let us make the friendly move of agreeing to look for
it together. Let us make the friendly move of
agreeing to share the profits of it equally betwixt
us. In the cause of the right.’ Thus
Silas assuming a noble air.
‘Then,’ says Mr Venus,
looking up, after meditating with his hair held in
his hands, as if he could only fix his attention by
fixing his head; ’if anything was to be unburied
from under the dust, it would be kept a secret by
you and me? Would that be it, Mr Wegg?’
’That would depend upon what
it was, Mr Venus. Say it was money, or plate,
or jewellery, it would be as much ours as anybody else’s.’
Mr Venus rubs an eyebrow, interrogatively.
’In the cause of the right it
would. Because it would be unknowingly sold with
the mounds else, and the buyer would get what he was
never meant to have, and never bought. And what
would that be, Mr Venus, but the cause of the wrong?’
‘Say it was papers,’ Mr Venus propounds.
’According to what they contained
we should offer to dispose of ’em to the parties
most interested,’ replies Wegg, promptly.
‘In the cause of the right, Mr Wegg?’
’Always so, Mr Venus. If
the parties should use them in the cause of the wrong,
that would be their act and deed. Mr Venus.
I have an opinion of you, sir, to which it is not
easy to give mouth. Since I called upon you that
evening when you were, as I may say, floating your
powerful mind in tea, I have felt that you required
to be roused with an object. In this friendly
move, sir, you will have a glorious object to rouse
you.’
Mr Wegg then goes on to enlarge upon
what throughout has been uppermost in his crafty mind: the
qualifications of Mr Venus for such a search.
He expatiates on Mr Venus’s patient habits and
delicate manipulation; on his skill in piecing little
things together; on his knowledge of various tissues
and textures; on the likelihood of small indications
leading him on to the discovery of great concealments.
‘While as to myself,’ says Wegg, ’I
am not good at it. Whether I gave myself up to
prodding, or whether I gave myself up to scooping,
I couldn’t do it with that delicate touch so
as not to show that I was disturbing the mounds.
Quite different with you, going to work (as you
would) in the light of a fellow-man, holily pledged
in a friendly move to his brother man.’
Mr Wegg next modestly remarks on the want of adaptation
in a wooden leg to ladders and such like airy perches,
and also hints at an inherent tendency in that timber
fiction, when called into action for the purposes
of a promenade on an ashey slope, to stick itself into
the yielding foothold, and peg its owner to one spot.
Then, leaving this part of the subject, he remarks
on the special phenomenon that before his installation
in the Bower, it was from Mr Venus that he first heard
of the legend of hidden wealth in the Mounds:
‘which’, he observes with a vaguely pious
air, ‘was surely never meant for nothing.’
Lastly, he returns to the cause of the right, gloomily
foreshadowing the possibility of something being unearthed
to criminate Mr Boffin (of whom he once more candidly
admits it cannot be denied that he profits by a murder),
and anticipating his denunciation by the friendly movers
to avenging justice. And this, Mr Wegg expressly
points out, not at all for the sake of the reward though
it would be a want of principle not to take it.
To all this, Mr Venus, with his shock
of dusty hair cocked after the manner of a terrier’s
ears, attends profoundly. When Mr Wegg, having
finished, opens his arms wide, as if to show Mr Venus
how bare his breast is, and then folds them pending
a reply, Mr Venus winks at him with both eyes some
little time before speaking.
‘I see you have tried it by
yourself, Mr Wegg,’ he says when he does speak.
‘You have found out the difficulties by experience.’
‘No, it can hardly be said that
I have tried it,’ replies Wegg, a little dashed
by the hint. ‘I have just skimmed it.
Skimmed it.’
‘And found nothing besides the difficulties?’
Wegg shakes his head.
‘I scarcely know what to say
to this, Mr Wegg,’ observes Venus, after ruminating
for a while.
‘Say yes,’ Wegg naturally urges.
’If I wasn’t soured, my
answer would be no. But being soured, Mr Wegg,
and driven to reckless madness and desperation, I suppose
it’s Yes.’
Wegg joyfully reproduces the two glasses,
repeats the ceremony of clinking their rims, and inwardly
drinks with great heartiness to the health and success
in life of the young lady who has reduced Mr Venus
to his present convenient state of mind.
The articles of the friendly move
are then severally recited and agreed upon. They
are but secrecy, fidelity, and perseverance. The
Bower to be always free of access to Mr Venus for
his researches, and every precaution to be taken against
their attracting observation in the neighbourhood.
‘There’s a footstep!’ exclaims Venus.
‘Where?’ cries Wegg, starting.
‘Outside. St!’
They are in the act of ratifying the
treaty of friendly move, by shaking hands upon it.
They softly break off, light their pipes which have
gone out, and lean back in their chairs. No doubt,
a footstep. It approaches the window, and a hand
taps at the glass. ‘Come in!’ calls
Wegg; meaning come round by the door. But the
heavy old-fashioned sash is slowly raised, and a head
slowly looks in out of the dark background of night.
‘Pray is Mr Silas Wegg here? Oh! I
see him!’
The friendly movers might not have
been quite at their ease, even though the visitor
had entered in the usual manner. But, leaning
on the breast-high window, and staring in out of the
darkness, they find the visitor extremely embarrassing.
Especially Mr Venus: who removes his pipe, draws
back his head, and stares at the starer, as if it were
his own Hindoo baby come to fetch him home.
’Good evening, Mr Wegg.
The yard gate-lock should be looked to, if you please;
it don’t catch.’
‘Is it Mr Rokesmith?’ falters Wegg.
’It is Mr Rokesmith. Don’t
let me disturb you. I am not coming in. I
have only a message for you, which I undertook to deliver
on my way home to my lodgings. I was in two minds
about coming beyond the gate without ringing:
not knowing but you might have a dog about.’
‘I wish I had,’ mutters
Wegg, with his back turned as he rose from his chair.
St! Hush! The talking-over stranger, Mr Venus.’
‘Is that any one I know?’ inquires the
staring Secretary.
‘No, Mr Rokesmith. Friend of mine.
Passing the evening with me.’
’Oh! I beg his pardon.
Mr Boffin wishes you to know that he does not expect
you to stay at home any evening, on the chance of his
coming. It has occurred to him that he may, without
intending it, have been a tie upon you. In future,
if he should come without notice, he will take his
chance of finding you, and it will be all the same
to him if he does not. I undertook to tell you
on my way. That’s all.’
With that, and ‘Good night,’
the Secretary lowers the window, and disappears.
They listen, and hear his footsteps go back to the
gate, and hear the gate close after him.
‘And for that individual, Mr
Venus,’ remarks Wegg, when he is fully gone,
‘I have been passed over! Let me ask you
what you think of him?’
Apparently, Mr Venus does not know
what to think of him, for he makes sundry efforts
to reply, without delivering himself of any other
articulate utterance than that he has ‘a singular
look’.
‘A double look, you mean, sir,’
rejoins Wegg, playing bitterly upon the word.
’That’s his look. Any amount
of singular look for me, but not a double look!
That’s an under-handed mind, sir.’
‘Do you say there’s something against
him?’ Venus asks.
‘Something against him?’
repeats Wegg. ’Something? What would
the relief be to my feelings as a fellow-man if
I wasn’t the slave of truth, and didn’t
feel myself compelled to answer, Everything!’
See into what wonderful maudlin refuges,
featherless ostriches plunge their heads! It
is such unspeakable moral compensation to Wegg, to
be overcome by the consideration that Mr Rokesmith
has an underhanded mind!
‘On this starlight night, Mr
Venus,’ he remarks, when he is showing that
friendly mover out across the yard, and both are something
the worse for mixing again and again: ’on
this starlight night to think that talking-over strangers,
and underhanded minds, can go walking home under the
sky, as if they was all square!’
‘The spectacle of those orbs,’
says Mr Venus, gazing upward with his hat tumbling
off; ’brings heavy on me her crushing words that
she did not wish to regard herself nor yet to be regarded
in that ’
’I know! I know! You
needn’t repeat ’em,’ says Wegg, pressing
his hand. ’But think how those stars steady
me in the cause of the right against some that shall
be nameless. It isn’t that I bear malice.
But see how they glisten with old remembrances!
Old remembrances of what, sir?’
Mr Venus begins drearily replying,
’Of her words, in her own handwriting, that
she does not wish to regard herself, nor yet ’
when Silas cuts him short with dignity.
’No, sir! Remembrances
of Our House, of Master George, of Aunt Jane, of Uncle
Parker, all laid waste! All offered up sacrifices
to the minion of fortune and the worm of the hour!’