Hard Times
Hard Times BOOK THE FIRST SOWINGCHAPTER I THE ONE THING NEEDFULCHAPTER II MURDERING THE INNOCENTSCHAPTER III A LOOPHOLECHAPTER IV MR. BOUNDERBYCHAPTER V THE KEYNOTECHAPTER VI SLEARY’S HORSEMANSHIPCHAPTER VII MRS. SPARSITCHAPTER VIII NEVER WONDERCHAPTER IX SISSY’S PROGRESSCHAPTER X STEPHEN BLACKPOOLCHAPTER XI NO WAY OUTCHAPTER XII THE OLD WOMANCHAPTER XIII RACHAELCHAPTER XIV THE GREAT MANUFACTURERCHAPTER XV FATHER AND DAUGHTERCHAPTER XVI HUSBAND AND WIFEBOOK THE SECONDREAPINGCHAPTER I EFFECTS IN THE BANKCHAPTER II MR. JAMES HARTHOUSECHAPTER III THE WHELPCHAPTER IV MEN AND BROTHERSCHAPTER V MEN AND MASTERSCHAPTER VI FADING AWAYCHAPTER VII GUNPOWDERCHAPTER VIIIEXPLOSIONCHAPTER IX HEARING THE LAST OF ITCHAPTER X MRS. SPARSIT’S STAIRCASECHAPTER XI LOWER AND LOWERCHAPTER XII DOWNBOOK THE THIRD GARNERINGCHAPTER I ANOTHER THING NEEDFULCHAPTER II VERY RIDICULOUSCHAPTER III VERY DECIDEDCHAPTER IV LOSTCHAPTER V FOUNDCHAPTER VI THE STARLIGHTCHAPTER VII WHELP-HUNTINGCHAPTER VIII PHILOSOPHICALCHAPTER IX FINALCopyright
Hard Times
Charles Dickens
BOOK THE FIRST SOWING
CHAPTER I THE ONE THING NEEDFUL
‘Now, what I want is, Facts. Teach these boys and girls
nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life.
Plant nothing else, and root out everything else. You can
only form the minds of reasoning animals upon Facts: nothing else
will ever be of any service to them. This is the principle on
which I bring up my own children, and this is the principle on
which I bring up these children. Stick to Facts,
sir!’The scene was a plain, bare, monotonous vault of a
school-room, and the speaker’s square forefinger emphasized his
observations by underscoring every sentence with a line on the
schoolmaster’s sleeve. The emphasis was helped by the
speaker’s square wall of a forehead, which had his eyebrows for its
base, while his eyes found commodious cellarage in two dark caves,
overshadowed by the wall. The emphasis was helped by the
speaker’s mouth, which was wide, thin, and hard set. The
emphasis was helped by the speaker’s voice, which was inflexible,
dry, and dictatorial. The emphasis was helped by the
speaker’s hair, which bristled on the skirts of his bald head, a
plantation of firs to keep the wind from its shining surface, all
covered with knobs, like the crust of a plum pie, as if the head
had scarcely warehouse-room for the hard facts stored inside.
The speaker’s obstinate carriage, square coat, square legs, square
shoulders,—nay, his very neckcloth, trained to take him by the
throat with an unaccommodating grasp, like a stubborn fact, as it
was,—all helped the emphasis.
‘In this life, we want nothing but Facts, sir; nothing but
Facts!’The speaker, and the schoolmaster, and the third grown person
present, all backed a little, and swept with their eyes the
inclined plane of little vessels then and there arranged in order,
ready to have imperial gallons of facts poured into them until they
were full to the brim.
CHAPTER II MURDERING THE INNOCENTS
Thomas Gradgrind, sir. A man of realities. A man
of facts and calculations. A man who proceeds upon the
principle that two and two are four, and nothing over, and who is
not to be talked into allowing for anything over. Thomas
Gradgrind, sir—peremptorily Thomas—Thomas Gradgrind. With a
rule and a pair of scales, and the multiplication table always in
his pocket, sir, ready to weigh and measure any parcel of human
nature, and tell you exactly what it comes to. It is a mere
question of figures, a case of simple arithmetic. You might
hope to get some other nonsensical belief into the head of George
Gradgrind, or Augustus Gradgrind, or John Gradgrind, or Joseph
Gradgrind (all supposititious, non-existent persons), but into the
head of Thomas Gradgrind—no, sir!In such terms Mr. Gradgrind always mentally introduced
himself, whether to his private circle of acquaintance, or to the
public in general. In such terms, no doubt, substituting the
words ‘boys and girls,’ for ‘sir,’ Thomas Gradgrind now presented
Thomas Gradgrind to the little pitchers before him, who were to be
filled so full of facts.Indeed, as he eagerly sparkled at them from the cellarage
before mentioned, he seemed a kind of cannon loaded to the muzzle
with facts, and prepared to blow them clean out of the regions of
childhood at one discharge. He seemed a galvanizing
apparatus, too, charged with a grim mechanical substitute for the
tender young imaginations that were to be stormed
away.
‘Girl number twenty,’ said Mr. Gradgrind, squarely pointing
with his square forefinger, ‘I don’t know that girl. Who is
that girl?’
‘Sissy Jupe, sir,’ explained number twenty, blushing,
standing up, and curtseying.
‘Sissy is not a name,’ said Mr. Gradgrind. ‘Don’t call
yourself Sissy. Call yourself Cecilia.’
‘It’s father as calls me Sissy, sir,’ returned the young girl
in a trembling voice, and with another curtsey.
‘Then he has no business to do it,’ said Mr. Gradgrind.
‘Tell him he mustn’t. Cecilia Jupe. Let me see.
What is your father?’
‘He belongs to the horse-riding, if you please,
sir.’Mr. Gradgrind frowned, and waved off the objectionable
calling with his hand.
‘We don’t want to know anything about that, here. You
mustn’t tell us about that, here. Your father breaks horses,
don’t he?’
‘If you please, sir, when they can get any to break, they do
break horses in the ring, sir.’
‘You mustn’t tell us about the ring, here. Very well,
then. Describe your father as a horsebreaker. He
doctors sick horses, I dare say?’
‘Oh yes, sir.’
‘Very well, then. He is a veterinary surgeon, a
farrier, and horsebreaker. Give me your definition of a
horse.’(Sissy Jupe thrown into the greatest alarm by this
demand.)
‘Girl number twenty unable to define a horse!’ said Mr.
Gradgrind, for the general behoof of all the little pitchers.
‘Girl number twenty possessed of no facts, in reference to one of
the commonest of animals! Some boy’s definition of a
horse. Bitzer, yours.’The square finger, moving here and there, lighted suddenly on
Bitzer, perhaps because he chanced to sit in the same ray of
sunlight which, darting in at one of the bare windows of the
intensely white-washed room, irradiated Sissy. For, the boys
and girls sat on the face of the inclined plane in two compact
bodies, divided up the centre by a narrow interval; and Sissy,
being at the corner of a row on the sunny side, came in for the
beginning of a sunbeam, of which Bitzer, being at the corner of a
row on the other side, a few rows in advance, caught the end.
But, whereas the girl was so dark-eyed and dark-haired, that she
seemed to receive a deeper and more lustrous colour from the sun,
when it shone upon her, the boy was so light-eyed and light-haired
that the self-same rays appeared to draw out of him what little
colour he ever possessed. His cold eyes would hardly have
been eyes, but for the short ends of lashes which, by bringing them
into immediate contrast with something paler than themselves,
expressed their form. His short-cropped hair might have been
a mere continuation of the sandy freckles on his forehead and
face. His skin was so unwholesomely deficient in the natural
tinge, that he looked as though, if he were cut, he would bleed
white.
‘Bitzer,’ said Thomas Gradgrind. ‘Your definition of a
horse.’
‘Quadruped. Graminivorous. Forty teeth, namely
twenty-four grinders, four eye-teeth, and twelve incisive.
Sheds coat in the spring; in marshy countries, sheds hoofs,
too. Hoofs hard, but requiring to be shod with iron.
Age known by marks in mouth.’ Thus (and much more)
Bitzer.
‘Now girl number twenty,’ said Mr. Gradgrind. ‘You know
what a horse is.’She curtseyed again, and would have blushed deeper, if she
could have blushed deeper than she had blushed all this time.
Bitzer, after rapidly blinking at Thomas Gradgrind with both eyes
at once, and so catching the light upon his quivering ends of
lashes that they looked like the antennæ of busy insects, put his
knuckles to his freckled forehead, and sat down again.The third gentleman now stepped forth. A mighty man at
cutting and drying, he was; a government officer; in his way (and
in most other people’s too), a professed pugilist; always in
training, always with a system to force down the general throat
like a bolus, always to be heard of at the bar of his little
Public-office, ready to fight all England. To continue in
fistic phraseology, he had a genius for coming up to the scratch,
wherever and whatever it was, and proving himself an ugly
customer. He would go in and damage any subject whatever with
his right, follow up with his left, stop, exchange, counter, bore
his opponent (he always fought All England) to the ropes, and fall
upon him neatly. He was certain to knock the wind out of
common sense, and render that unlucky adversary deaf to the call of
time. And he had it in charge from high authority to bring
about the great public-office Millennium, when Commissioners should
reign upon earth.
‘Very well,’ said this gentleman, briskly smiling, and
folding his arms. ‘That’s a horse. Now, let me ask you
girls and boys, Would you paper a room with representations of
horses?’After a pause, one half of the children cried in chorus,
‘Yes, sir!’ Upon which the other half, seeing in the
gentleman’s face that Yes was wrong, cried out in chorus, ‘No,
sir!’—as the custom is, in these examinations.
‘Of course, No. Why wouldn’t you?’A pause. One corpulent slow boy, with a wheezy manner
of breathing, ventured the answer, Because he wouldn’t paper a room
at all, but would paint it.
‘Youmustpaper it,’ said
the gentleman, rather warmly.
‘You must paper it,’ said Thomas Gradgrind, ‘whether you like
it or not. Don’t tellusyou wouldn’t paper it. What do you mean,
boy?’
‘I’ll explain to you, then,’ said the gentleman, after
another and a dismal pause, ‘why you wouldn’t paper a room with
representations of horses. Do you ever see horses walking up
and down the sides of rooms in reality—in fact? Do
you?’
‘Yes, sir!’ from one half. ‘No, sir!’ from the
other.
‘Of course no,’ said the gentleman, with an indignant look at
the wrong half. ‘Why, then, you are not to see anywhere, what
you don’t see in fact; you are not to have anywhere, what you don’t
have in fact. What is called Taste, is only another name for
Fact.’ Thomas Gradgrind nodded his approbation.
‘This is a new principle, a discovery, a great discovery,’
said the gentleman. ‘Now, I’ll try you again. Suppose
you were going to carpet a room. Would you use a carpet
having a representation of flowers upon it?’There being a general conviction by this time that ‘No, sir!’
was always the right answer to this gentleman, the chorus of No was
very strong. Only a few feeble stragglers said Yes: among
them Sissy Jupe.
‘Girl number twenty,’ said the gentleman, smiling in the calm
strength of knowledge.Sissy blushed, and stood up.
‘So you would carpet your room—or your husband’s room, if you
were a grown woman, and had a husband—with representations of
flowers, would you?’ said the gentleman. ‘Why would
you?’
‘If you please, sir, I am very fond of flowers,’ returned the
girl.
‘And is that why you would put tables and chairs upon them,
and have people walking over them with heavy boots?’
‘It wouldn’t hurt them, sir. They wouldn’t crush and
wither, if you please, sir. They would be the pictures of
what was very pretty and pleasant, and I would fancy—’
‘Ay, ay, ay! But you mustn’t fancy,’ cried the
gentleman, quite elated by coming so happily to his point.
‘That’s it! You are never to fancy.’
‘You are not, Cecilia Jupe,’ Thomas Gradgrind solemnly
repeated, ‘to do anything of that kind.’
‘Fact, fact, fact!’ said the gentleman. And ‘Fact,
fact, fact!’ repeated Thomas Gradgrind.
‘You are to be in all things regulated and governed,’ said
the gentleman, ‘by fact. We hope to have, before long, a
board of fact, composed of commissioners of fact, who will force
the people to be a people of fact, and of nothing but fact.
You must discard the word Fancy altogether. You have nothing
to do with it. You are not to have, in any object of use or
ornament, what would be a contradiction in fact. You don’t
walk upon flowers in fact; you cannot be allowed to walk upon
flowers in carpets. You don’t find that foreign birds and
butterflies come and perch upon your crockery; you cannot be
permitted to paint foreign birds and butterflies upon your
crockery. You never meet with quadrupeds going up and down
walls; you must not have quadrupeds represented upon walls.
You must use,’ said the gentleman, ‘for all these purposes,
combinations and modifications (in primary colours) of mathematical
figures which are susceptible of proof and demonstration.
This is the new discovery. This is fact. This is
taste.’The girl curtseyed, and sat down. She was very young,
and she looked as if she were frightened by the matter-of-fact
prospect the world afforded.
‘Now, if Mr. M’Choakumchild,’ said the gentleman, ‘will
proceed to give his first lesson here, Mr. Gradgrind, I shall be
happy, at your request, to observe his mode of
procedure.’Mr. Gradgrind was much obliged. ‘Mr. M’Choakumchild, we
only wait for you.’So, Mr. M’Choakumchild began in his best manner. He and
some one hundred and forty other schoolmasters, had been lately
turned at the same time, in the same factory, on the same
principles, like so many pianoforte legs. He had been put
through an immense variety of paces, and had answered volumes of
head-breaking questions. Orthography, etymology, syntax, and
prosody, biography, astronomy, geography, and general cosmography,
the sciences of compound proportion, algebra, land-surveying and
levelling, vocal music, and drawing from models, were all at the
ends of his ten chilled fingers. He had worked his stony way
into Her Majesty’s most Honourable Privy Council’s Schedule B, and
had taken the bloom off the higher branches of mathematics and
physical science, French, German, Latin, and Greek. He knew
all about all the Water Sheds of all the world (whatever they are),
and all the histories of all the peoples, and all the names of all
the rivers and mountains, and all the productions, manners, and
customs of all the countries, and all their boundaries and bearings
on the two and thirty points of the compass. Ah, rather
overdone, M’Choakumchild. If he had only learnt a little
less, how infinitely better he might have taught much
more!He went to work in this preparatory lesson, not unlike
Morgiana in the Forty Thieves: looking into all the vessels ranged
before him, one after another, to see what they contained.
Say, good M’Choakumchild. When from thy boiling store, thou
shalt fill each jar brim full by-and-by, dost thou think that thou
wilt always kill outright the robber Fancy lurking within—or
sometimes only maim him and distort him!
CHAPTER III A LOOPHOLE
Mr. Gradgrind walked homeward from the school, in a state of
considerable satisfaction. It was his school, and he intended
it to be a model. He intended every child in it to be a
model—just as the young Gradgrinds were all models.There were five young Gradgrinds, and they were models every
one. They had been lectured at, from their tenderest years;
coursed, like little hares. Almost as soon as they could run
alone, they had been made to run to the lecture-room. The
first object with which they had an association, or of which they
had a remembrance, was a large black board with a dry Ogre chalking
ghastly white figures on it.Not that they knew, by name or nature, anything about an Ogre
Fact forbid! I only use the word to express a monster in a
lecturing castle, with Heaven knows how many heads manipulated into
one, taking childhood captive, and dragging it into gloomy
statistical dens by the hair.No little Gradgrind had ever seen a face in the moon; it was
up in the moon before it could speak distinctly. No little
Gradgrind had ever learnt the silly jingle, Twinkle, twinkle,
little star; how I wonder what you are! No little Gradgrind
had ever known wonder on the subject, each little Gradgrind having
at five years old dissected the Great Bear like a Professor Owen,
and driven Charles’s Wain like a locomotive engine-driver. No
little Gradgrind had ever associated a cow in a field with that
famous cow with the crumpled horn who tossed the dog who worried
the cat who killed the rat who ate the malt, or with that yet more
famous cow who swallowed Tom Thumb: it had never heard of those
celebrities, and had only been introduced to a cow as a
graminivorous ruminating quadruped with several
stomachs.To his matter-of-fact home, which was called Stone Lodge, Mr.
Gradgrind directed his steps. He had virtually retired from
the wholesale hardware trade before he built Stone Lodge, and was
now looking about for a suitable opportunity of making an
arithmetical figure in Parliament. Stone Lodge was situated
on a moor within a mile or two of a great town—called Coketown in
the present faithful guide-book.A very regular feature on the face of the country, Stone
Lodge was. Not the least disguise toned down or shaded off
that uncompromising fact in the landscape. A great square
house, with a heavy portico darkening the principal windows, as its
master’s heavy brows overshadowed his eyes. A calculated,
cast up, balanced, and proved house. Six windows on this side
of the door, six on that side; a total of twelve in this wing, a
total of twelve in the other wing; four-and-twenty carried over to
the back wings. A lawn and garden and an infant avenue, all
ruled straight like a botanical account-book. Gas and
ventilation, drainage and water-service, all of the primest
quality. Iron clamps and girders, fire-proof from top to
bottom; mechanical lifts for the housemaids, with all their brushes
and brooms; everything that heart could desire.Everything? Well, I suppose so. The little
Gradgrinds had cabinets in various departments of science
too. They had a little conchological cabinet, and a little
metallurgical cabinet, and a little mineralogical cabinet; and the
specimens were all arranged and labelled, and the bits of stone and
ore looked as though they might have been broken from the parent
substances by those tremendously hard instruments their own names;
and, to paraphrase the idle legend of Peter Piper, who had never
found his way into their nursery, If the greedy little Gradgrinds
grasped at more than this, what was it for good gracious goodness’
sake, that the greedy little Gradgrinds grasped it!Their father walked on in a hopeful and satisfied frame of
mind. He was an affectionate father, after his manner; but he
would probably have described himself (if he had been put, like
Sissy Jupe, upon a definition) as ‘an eminently practical’
father. He had a particular pride in the phrase eminently
practical, which was considered to have a special application to
him. Whatsoever the public meeting held in Coketown, and
whatsoever the subject of such meeting, some Coketowner was sure to
seize the occasion of alluding to his eminently practical friend
Gradgrind. This always pleased the eminently practical
friend. He knew it to be his due, but his due was
acceptable.He had reached the neutral ground upon the outskirts of the
town, which was neither town nor country, and yet was either
spoiled, when his ears were invaded by the sound of music.
The clashing and banging band attached to the horse-riding
establishment, which had there set up its rest in a wooden
pavilion, was in full bray. A flag, floating from the summit
of the temple, proclaimed to mankind that it was ‘Sleary’s
Horse-riding’ which claimed their suffrages. Sleary himself,
a stout modern statue with a money-box at its elbow, in an
ecclesiastical niche of early Gothic architecture, took the
money. Miss Josephine Sleary, as some very long and very
narrow strips of printed bill announced, was then inaugurating the
entertainments with her graceful equestrian Tyrolean
flower-act. Among the other pleasing but always strictly
moral wonders which must be seen to be believed, Signor Jupe was
that afternoon to ‘elucidate the diverting accomplishments of his
highly trained performing dog Merrylegs.’ He was also to
exhibit ‘his astounding feat of throwing seventy-five
hundred-weight in rapid succession backhanded over his head, thus
forming a fountain of solid iron in mid-air, a feat never before
attempted in this or any other country, and which having elicited
such rapturous plaudits from enthusiastic throngs it cannot be
withdrawn.’ The same Signor Jupe was to ‘enliven the varied
performances at frequent intervals with his chaste Shaksperean
quips and retorts.’ Lastly, he was to wind them up by
appearing in his favourite character of Mr. William Button, of
Tooley Street, in ‘the highly novel and laughable hippo-comedietta
of The Tailor’s Journey to Brentford.’Thomas Gradgrind took no heed of these trivialities of
course, but passed on as a practical man ought to pass on, either
brushing the noisy insects from his thoughts, or consigning them to
the House of Correction. But, the turning of the road took
him by the back of the booth, and at the back of the booth a number
of children were congregated in a number of stealthy attitudes,
striving to peep in at the hidden glories of the
place.This brought him to a stop. ‘Now, to think of these
vagabonds,’ said he, ‘attracting the young rabble from a model
school.’A space of stunted grass and dry rubbish being between him
and the young rabble, he took his eyeglass out of his waistcoat to
look for any child he knew by name, and might order off.
Phenomenon almost incredible though distinctly seen, what did he
then behold but his own metallurgical Louisa, peeping with all her
might through a hole in a deal board, and his own mathematical
Thomas abasing himself on the ground to catch but a hoof of the
graceful equestrian Tyrolean flower-act!Dumb with amazement, Mr. Gradgrind crossed to the spot where
his family was thus disgraced, laid his hand upon each erring
child, and said:
‘Louisa!! Thomas!!’Both rose, red and disconcerted. But, Louisa looked at
her father with more boldness than Thomas did. Indeed, Thomas
did not look at him, but gave himself up to be taken home like a
machine.
‘In the name of wonder, idleness, and folly!’ said Mr.
Gradgrind, leading each away by a hand; ‘what do you do
here?’
‘Wanted to see what it was like,’ returned Louisa,
shortly.
‘What it was like?’
‘Yes, father.’There was an air of jaded sullenness in them both, and
particularly in the girl: yet, struggling through the
dissatisfaction of her face, there was a light with nothing to rest
upon, a fire with nothing to burn, a starved imagination keeping
life in itself somehow, which brightened its expression. Not
with the brightness natural to cheerful youth, but with uncertain,
eager, doubtful flashes, which had something painful in them,
analogous to the changes on a blind face groping its
way.She was a child now, of fifteen or sixteen; but at no distant
day would seem to become a woman all at once. Her father
thought so as he looked at her. She was pretty. Would
have been self-willed (he thought in his eminently practical way)
but for her bringing-up.
‘Thomas, though I have the fact before me, I find it
difficult to believe that you, with your education and resources,
should have brought your sister to a scene like this.’
‘I broughthim, father,’
said Louisa, quickly. ‘I asked him to come.’
‘I am sorry to hear it. I am very sorry indeed to hear
it. It makes Thomas no better, and it makes you worse,
Louisa.’She looked at her father again, but no tear fell down her
cheek.
‘You! Thomas and you, to whom the circle of the
sciences is open; Thomas and you, who may be said to be replete
with facts; Thomas and you, who have been trained to mathematical
exactness; Thomas and you, here!’ cried Mr. Gradgrind. ‘In
this degraded position! I am amazed.’
‘I was tired, father. I have been tired a long time,’
said Louisa.
‘Tired? Of what?’ asked the astonished
father.
‘I don’t know of what—of everything, I think.’
‘Say not another word,’ returned Mr. Gradgrind. ‘You
are childish. I will hear no more.’ He did not speak
again until they had walked some half-a-mile in silence, when he
gravely broke out with: ‘What would your best friends say,
Louisa? Do you attach no value to their good opinion?
What would Mr. Bounderby say?’ At the mention of this name,
his daughter stole a look at him, remarkable for its intense and
searching character. He saw nothing of it, for before he
looked at her, she had again cast down her eyes!
‘What,’ he repeated presently, ‘would Mr. Bounderby
say?’ All the way to Stone Lodge, as with grave indignation
he led the two delinquents home, he repeated at intervals ‘What
would Mr. Bounderby say?’—as if Mr. Bounderby had been Mrs.
Grundy.
CHAPTER IV MR. BOUNDERBY
Not being Mrs. Grundy, whowasMr. Bounderby?Why, Mr. Bounderby was as near being Mr. Gradgrind’s bosom
friend, as a man perfectly devoid of sentiment can approach that
spiritual relationship towards another man perfectly devoid of
sentiment. So near was Mr. Bounderby—or, if the reader should
prefer it, so far off.He was a rich man: banker, merchant, manufacturer, and what
not. A big, loud man, with a stare, and a metallic
laugh. A man made out of a coarse material, which seemed to
have been stretched to make so much of him. A man with a
great puffed head and forehead, swelled veins in his temples, and
such a strained skin to his face that it seemed to hold his eyes
open, and lift his eyebrows up. A man with a pervading
appearance on him of being inflated like a balloon, and ready to
start. A man who could never sufficiently vaunt himself a
self-made man. A man who was always proclaiming, through that
brassy speaking-trumpet of a voice of his, his old ignorance and
his old poverty. A man who was the Bully of
humility.A year or two younger than his eminently practical friend,
Mr. Bounderby looked older; his seven or eight and forty might have
had the seven or eight added to it again, without surprising
anybody. He had not much hair. One might have fancied
he had talked it off; and that what was left, all standing up in
disorder, was in that condition from being constantly blown about
by his windy boastfulness.In the formal drawing-room of Stone Lodge, standing on the
hearthrug, warming himself before the fire, Mr. Bounderby delivered
some observations to Mrs. Gradgrind on the circumstance of its
being his birthday. He stood before the fire, partly because
it was a cool spring afternoon, though the sun shone; partly
because the shade of Stone Lodge was always haunted by the ghost of
damp mortar; partly because he thus took up a commanding position,
from which to subdue Mrs. Gradgrind.
‘I hadn’t a shoe to my foot. As to a stocking, I didn’t
know such a thing by name. I passed the day in a ditch, and
the night in a pigsty. That’s the way I spent my tenth
birthday. Not that a ditch was new to me, for I was born in a
ditch.’Mrs. Gradgrind, a little, thin, white, pink-eyed bundle of
shawls, of surpassing feebleness, mental and bodily; who was always
taking physic without any effect, and who, whenever she showed a
symptom of coming to life, was invariably stunned by some weighty
piece of fact tumbling on her; Mrs. Gradgrind hoped it was a dry
ditch?
‘No! As wet as a sop. A foot of water in it,’
said Mr. Bounderby.
‘Enough to give a baby cold,’ Mrs. Gradgrind
considered.
‘Cold? I was born with inflammation of the lungs, and
of everything else, I believe, that was capable of inflammation,’
returned Mr. Bounderby. ‘For years, ma’am, I was one of the
most miserable little wretches ever seen. I was so sickly,
that I was always moaning and groaning. I was so ragged and
dirty, that you wouldn’t have touched me with a pair of
tongs.’Mrs. Gradgrind faintly looked at the tongs, as the most
appropriate thing her imbecility could think of doing.
‘How I fought through it,Idon’t know,’ said Bounderby. ‘I was determined, I
suppose. I have been a determined character in later life,
and I suppose I was then. Here I am, Mrs. Gradgrind, anyhow,
and nobody to thank for my being here, but myself.’Mrs. Gradgrind meekly and weakly hoped that his
mother—
‘ Mymother? Bolted, ma’am!’ said
Bounderby.Mrs. Gradgrind, stunned as usual, collapsed and gave it
up.
‘My mother left me to my grandmother,’ said Bounderby; ‘and,
according to the best of my remembrance, my grandmother was the
wickedest and the worst old woman that ever lived. If I got a
little pair of shoes by any chance, she would take ’em off and sell
’em for drink. Why, I have known that grandmother of mine lie
in her bed and drink her four-teen glasses of liquor before
breakfast!’Mrs. Gradgrind, weakly smiling, and giving no other sign of
vitality, looked (as she always did) like an indifferently executed
transparency of a small female figure, without enough light behind
it.
‘She kept a chandler’s shop,’ pursued Bounderby, ‘and kept me
in an egg-box. That was the cot ofmyinfancy; an old egg-box. As
soon as I was big enough to run away, of course I ran away.
Then I became a young vagabond; and instead of one old woman
knocking me about and starving me, everybody of all ages knocked me
about and starved me. They were right; they had no business
to do anything else. I was a nuisance, an incumbrance, and a
pest. I know that very well.’His pride in having at any time of his life achieved such a
great social distinction as to be a nuisance, an incumbrance, and a
pest, was only to be satisfied by three sonorous repetitions of the
boast.
‘I was to pull through it, I suppose, Mrs. Gradgrind.
Whether I was to do it or not, ma’am, I did it. I pulled
through it, though nobody threw me out a rope. Vagabond,
errand-boy, vagabond, labourer, porter, clerk, chief manager, small
partner, Josiah Bounderby of Coketown. Those are the
antecedents, and the culmination. Josiah Bounderby of
Coketown learnt his letters from the outsides of the shops, Mrs.
Gradgrind, and was first able to tell the time upon a dial-plate,
from studying the steeple clock of St. Giles’s Church, London,
under the direction of a drunken cripple, who was a convicted
thief, and an incorrigible vagrant. Tell Josiah Bounderby of
Coketown, of your district schools and your model schools, and your
training schools, and your whole kettle-of-fish of schools; and
Josiah Bounderby of Coketown, tells you plainly, all right, all
correct—he hadn’t such advantages—but let us have hard-headed,
solid-fisted people—the education that made him won’t do for
everybody, he knows well—such and such his education was, however,
and you may force him to swallow boiling fat, but you shall never
force him to suppress the facts of his life.’Being heated when he arrived at this climax, Josiah Bounderby
of Coketown stopped. He stopped just as his eminently
practical friend, still accompanied by the two young culprits,
entered the room. His eminently practical friend, on seeing
him, stopped also, and gave Louisa a reproachful look that plainly
said, ‘Behold your Bounderby!’
‘Well!’ blustered Mr. Bounderby, ‘what’s the matter?
What is young Thomas in the dumps about?’He spoke of young Thomas, but he looked at
Louisa.
‘We were peeping at the circus,’ muttered Louisa, haughtily,
without lifting up her eyes, ‘and father caught us.’
‘And, Mrs. Gradgrind,’ said her husband in a lofty manner, ‘I
should as soon have expected to find my children reading
poetry.’
‘Dear me,’ whimpered Mrs. Gradgrind. ‘How can you,
Louisa and Thomas! I wonder at you. I declare you’re
enough to make one regret ever having had a family at all. I
have a great mind to say I wish I hadn’t. Thenwhat would you have done, I should
like to know?’Mr. Gradgrind did not seem favourably impressed by these
cogent remarks. He frowned impatiently.
‘As if, with my head in its present throbbing state, you
couldn’t go and look at the shells and minerals and things provided
for you, instead of circuses!’ said Mrs. Gradgrind. ‘You
know, as well as I do, no young people have circus masters, or keep
circuses in cabinets, or attend lectures about circuses. What
can you possibly want to know of circuses then? I am sure you
have enough to do, if that’s what you want. With my head in
its present state, I couldn’t remember the mere names of half the
facts you have got to attend to.’
‘That’s the reason!’ pouted Louisa.
‘Don’t tell me that’s the reason, because it can’t be nothing
of the sort,’ said Mrs. Gradgrind. ‘Go and be
somethingological directly.’ Mrs. Gradgrind was not a
scientific character, and usually dismissed her children to their
studies with this general injunction to choose their
pursuit.In truth, Mrs. Gradgrind’s stock of facts in general was
woefully defective; but Mr. Gradgrind in raising her to her high
matrimonial position, had been influenced by two reasons.
Firstly, she was most satisfactory as a question of figures; and,
secondly, she had ‘no nonsense’ about her. By nonsense he
meant fancy; and truly it is probable she was as free from any
alloy of that nature, as any human being not arrived at the
perfection of an absolute idiot, ever was.The simple circumstance of being left alone with her husband
and Mr. Bounderby, was sufficient to stun this admirable lady again
without collision between herself and any other fact. So, she
once more died away, and nobody minded her.
‘Bounderby,’ said Mr. Gradgrind, drawing a chair to the
fireside, ‘you are always so interested in my young
people—particularly in Louisa—that I make no apology for saying to
you, I am very much vexed by this discovery. I have
systematically devoted myself (as you know) to the education of the
reason of my family. The reason is (as you know) the only
faculty to which education should be addressed. ‘And yet,
Bounderby, it would appear from this unexpected circumstance of
to-day, though in itself a trifling one, as if something had crept
into Thomas’s and Louisa’s minds which is—or rather, which is not—I
don’t know that I can express myself better than by saying—which
has never been intended to be developed, and in which their reason
has no part.’
‘There certainly is no reason in looking with interest at a
parcel of vagabonds,’ returned Bounderby. ‘When I was a
vagabond myself, nobody looked with any interest atme; I know that.’
‘Then comes the question; said the eminently practical
father, with his eyes on the fire, ‘in what has this vulgar
curiosity its rise?’
‘I’ll tell you in what. In idle
imagination.’
‘I hope not,’ said the eminently practical; ‘I confess,
however, that the misgivinghascrossed me on my way home.’
‘In idle imagination, Gradgrind,’ repeated Bounderby.
‘A very bad thing for anybody, but a cursed bad thing for a girl
like Louisa. I should ask Mrs. Gradgrind’s pardon for strong
expressions, but that she knows very well I am not a refined
character. Whoever expects refinement inmewill be disappointed. I hadn’t
a refined bringing up.’
‘Whether,’ said Gradgrind, pondering with his hands in his
pockets, and his cavernous eyes on the fire, ‘whether any
instructor or servant can have suggested anything? Whether
Louisa or Thomas can have been reading anything? Whether, in
spite of all precautions, any idle story-book can have got into the
house? Because, in minds that have been practically formed by
rule and line, from the cradle upwards, this is so curious, so
incomprehensible.’
‘Stop a bit!’ cried Bounderby, who all this time had been
standing, as before, on the hearth, bursting at the very furniture
of the room with explosive humility. ‘You have one of those
strollers’ children in the school.’
‘Cecilia Jupe, by name,’ said Mr. Gradgrind, with something
of a stricken look at his friend.
‘Now, stop a bit!’ cried Bounderby again. ‘How did she
come there?’
‘Why, the fact is, I saw the girl myself, for the first time,
only just now. She specially applied here at the house to be
admitted, as not regularly belonging to our town, and—yes, you are
right, Bounderby, you are right.’
‘Now, stop a bit!’ cried Bounderby, once more. ‘Louisa
saw her when she came?’
‘Louisa certainly did see her, for she mentioned the
application to me. But Louisa saw her, I have no doubt, in
Mrs. Gradgrind’s presence.’
‘Pray, Mrs. Gradgrind,’ said Bounderby, ‘what
passed?’
‘Oh, my poor health!’ returned Mrs. Gradgrind. ‘The
girl wanted to come to the school, and Mr. Gradgrind wanted girls
to come to the school, and Louisa and Thomas both said that the
girl wanted to come, and that Mr. Gradgrind wanted girls to come,
and how was it possible to contradict them when such was the
fact!’
‘Now I tell you what, Gradgrind!’ said Mr. Bounderby.
‘Turn this girl to the right about, and there’s an end of
it.’
‘I am much of your opinion.’
‘Do it at once,’ said Bounderby, ‘has always been my motto
from a child. When I thought I would run away from my egg-box
and my grandmother, I did it at once. Do you the same.
Do this at once!’
‘Are you walking?’ asked his friend. ‘I have the
father’s address. Perhaps you would not mind walking to town
with me?’
‘Not the least in the world,’ said Mr. Bounderby, ‘as long as
you do it at once!’So, Mr. Bounderby threw on his hat—he always threw it on, as
expressing a man who had been far too busily employed in making
himself, to acquire any fashion of wearing his hat—and with his
hands in his pockets, sauntered out into the hall. ‘I never
wear gloves,’ it was his custom to say. ‘I didn’t climb up
the ladder inthem.—Shouldn’t
be so high up, if I had.’Being left to saunter in the hall a minute or two while Mr.
Gradgrind went up-stairs for the address, he opened the door of the
children’s study and looked into that serene floor-clothed
apartment, which, notwithstanding its book-cases and its cabinets
and its variety of learned and philosophical appliances, had much
of the genial aspect of a room devoted to hair-cutting.
Louisa languidly leaned upon the window looking out, without
looking at anything, while young Thomas stood sniffing revengefully
at the fire. Adam Smith and Malthus, two younger Gradgrinds,
were out at lecture in custody; and little Jane, after
manufacturing a good deal of moist pipe-clay on her face with
slate-pencil and tears, had fallen asleep over vulgar
fractions.
‘It’s all right now, Louisa: it’s all right, young Thomas,’
said Mr. Bounderby; ‘you won’t do so any more. I’ll answer
for it’s being all over with father. Well, Louisa, that’s
worth a kiss, isn’t it?’
‘You can take one, Mr. Bounderby,’ returned Louisa, when she
had coldly paused, and slowly walked across the room, and
ungraciously raised her cheek towards him, with her face turned
away.
‘Always my pet; ain’t you, Louisa?’ said Mr. Bounderby.
‘Good-bye, Louisa!’He went his way, but she stood on the same spot, rubbing the
cheek he had kissed, with her handkerchief, until it was burning
red. She was still doing this, five minutes
afterwards.
‘What are you about, Loo?’ her brother sulkily
remonstrated. ‘You’ll rub a hole in your face.’
‘You may cut the piece out with your penknife if you like,
Tom. I wouldn’t cry!’
CHAPTER V THE KEYNOTE
Coketown, to which Messrs. Bounderby and Gradgrind now
walked, was a triumph of fact; it had no greater taint of fancy in
it than Mrs. Gradgrind herself. Let us strike the key-note,
Coketown, before pursuing our tune.It was a town of red brick, or of brick that would have been
red if the smoke and ashes had allowed it; but as matters stood, it
was a town of unnatural red and black like the painted face of a
savage. It was a town of machinery and tall chimneys, out of
which interminable serpents of smoke trailed themselves for ever
and ever, and never got uncoiled. It had a black canal in it,
and a river that ran purple with ill-smelling dye, and vast piles
of building full of windows where there was a rattling and a
trembling all day long, and where the piston of the steam-engine
worked monotonously up and down, like the head of an elephant in a
state of melancholy madness. It contained several large
streets all very like one another, and many small streets still
more like one another, inhabited by people equally like one
another, who all went in and out at the same hours, with the same
sound upon the same pavements, to do the same work, and to whom
every day was the same as yesterday and to-morrow, and every year
the counterpart of the last and the next.These attributes of Coketown were in the main inseparable
from the work by which it was sustained; against them were to be
set off, comforts of life which found their way all over the world,
and elegancies of life which made, we will not ask how much of the
fine lady, who could scarcely bear to hear the place
mentioned. The rest of its features were voluntary, and they
were these.You saw nothing in Coketown but what was severely
workful. If the members of a religious persuasion built a
chapel there—as the members of eighteen religious persuasions had
done—they made it a pious warehouse of red brick, with sometimes
(but this is only in highly ornamental examples) a bell in a
birdcage on the top of it. The solitary exception was the New
Church; a stuccoed edifice with a square steeple over the door,
terminating in four short pinnacles like florid wooden legs.
All the public inscriptions in the town were painted alike, in
severe characters of black and white. The jail might have
been the infirmary, the infirmary might have been the jail, the
town-hall might have been either, or both, or anything else, for
anything that appeared to the contrary in the graces of their
construction. Fact, fact, fact, everywhere in the material
aspect of the town; fact, fact, fact, everywhere in the
immaterial. The M’Choakumchild school was all fact, and the
school of design was all fact, and the relations between master and
man were all fact, and everything was fact between the lying-in
hospital and the cemetery, and what you couldn’t state in figures,
or show to be purchaseable in the cheapest market and saleable in
the dearest, was not, and never should be, world without end,
Amen.A town so sacred to fact, and so triumphant in its assertion,
of course got on well? Why no, not quite well.
No? Dear me!No. Coketown did not come out of its own furnaces, in
all respects like gold that had stood the fire. First, the
perplexing mystery of the place was, Who belonged to the eighteen
denominations? Because, whoever did, the labouring people did
not. It was very strange to walk through the streets on a
Sunday morning, and note how few ofthemthe barbarous jangling of bells
that was driving the sick and nervous mad, called away from their
own quarter, from their own close rooms, from the corners of their
own streets, where they lounged listlessly, gazing at all the
church and chapel going, as at a thing with which they had no
manner of concern. Nor was it merely the stranger who noticed
this, because there was a native organization in Coketown itself,
whose members were to be heard of in the House of Commons every
session, indignantly petitioning for acts of parliament that should
make these people religious by main force. Then came the
Teetotal Society, who complained that these same peoplewouldget drunk, and showed in tabular
statements that they did get drunk, and proved at tea parties that
no inducement, human or Divine (except a medal), would induce them
to forego their custom of getting drunk. Then came the
chemist and druggist, with other tabular statements, showing that
when they didn’t get drunk, they took opium. Then came the
experienced chaplain of the jail, with more tabular statements,
outdoing all the previous tabular statements, and showing that the
same peoplewouldresort to low
haunts, hidden from the public eye, where they heard low singing
and saw low dancing, and mayhap joined in it; and where A. B., aged
twenty-four next birthday, and committed for eighteen months’
solitary, had himself said (not that he had ever shown himself
particularly worthy of belief) his ruin began, as he was perfectly
sure and confident that otherwise he would have been a tip-top
moral specimen. Then came Mr. Gradgrind and Mr. Bounderby,
the two gentlemen at this present moment walking through Coketown,
and both eminently practical, who could, on occasion, furnish more
tabular statements derived from their own personal experience, and
illustrated by cases they had known and seen, from which it clearly
appeared—in short, it was the only clear thing in the case—that
these same people were a bad lot altogether, gentlemen; that do
what you would for them they were never thankful for it, gentlemen;
that they were restless, gentlemen; that they never knew what they
wanted; that they lived upon the best, and bought fresh butter; and
insisted on Mocha coffee, and rejected all but prime parts of meat,
and yet were eternally dissatisfied and unmanageable. In
short, it was the moral of the old nursery fable:There was an old woman, and what do you think?She lived upon nothing but victuals and drink;Victuals and drink were the whole of her diet,And yet this old woman would NEVER be quiet.Is it possible, I wonder, that there was any analogy between
the case of the Coketown population and the case of the little
Gradgrinds? Surely, none of us in our sober senses and
acquainted with figures, are to be told at this time of day, that
one of the foremost elements in the existence of the Coketown
working-people had been for scores of years, deliberately set at
nought? That there was any Fancy in them demanding to be
brought into healthy existence instead of struggling on in
convulsions? That exactly in the ratio as they worked long
and monotonously, the craving grew within them for some physical
relief—some relaxation, encouraging good humour and good spirits,
and giving them a vent—some recognized holiday, though it were but
for an honest dance to a stirring band of music—some occasional
light pie in which even M’Choakumchild had no finger—which craving
must and would be satisfied aright, or must and would inevitably go
wrong, until the laws of the Creation were repealed?
‘This man lives at Pod’s End, and I don’t quite know Pod’s
End,’ said Mr. Gradgrind. ‘Which is it,
Bounderby?’Mr. Bounderby knew it was somewhere down town, but knew no
more respecting it. So they stopped for a moment, looking
about.Almost as they did so, there came running round the corner of
the street at a quick pace and with a frightened look, a girl whom
Mr. Gradgrind recognized. ‘Halloa!’ said he.
‘Stop! Where are you going! Stop!’ Girl number twenty
stopped then, palpitating, and made him a curtsey.
‘Why are you tearing about the streets,’ said Mr. Gradgrind,
‘in this improper manner?’
‘I was—I was run after, sir,’ the girl panted, ‘and I wanted
to get away.’
‘Run after?’ repeated Mr. Gradgrind. ‘Who would run
afteryou?’The question was unexpectedly and suddenly answered for her,
by the colourless boy, Bitzer, who came round the corner with such
blind speed and so little anticipating a stoppage on the pavement,
that he brought himself up against Mr. Gradgrind’s waistcoat and
rebounded into the road.
‘What do you mean, boy?’ said Mr. Gradgrind. ‘What are
you doing? How dare you dash against—everybody—in this
manner?’ Bitzer picked up his cap, which the concussion had
knocked off; and backing, and knuckling his forehead, pleaded that
it was an accident.
‘Was this boy running after you, Jupe?’ asked Mr.
Gradgrind.
‘Yes, sir,’ said the girl reluctantly.
‘No, I wasn’t, sir!’ cried Bitzer. ‘Not till she run
away from me. But the horse-riders never mind what they say,
sir; they’re famous for it. You know the horse-riders are
famous for never minding what they say,’ addressing Sissy.
‘It’s as well known in the town as—please, sir, as the
multiplication table isn’t known to the horse-riders.’ Bitzer
tried Mr. Bounderby with this.
‘He frightened me so,’ said the girl, ‘with his cruel
faces!’
‘Oh!’ cried Bitzer. ‘Oh! An’t you one of the
rest! An’t you a horse-rider! I never looked at her,
sir. I asked her if she would know how to define a horse
to-morrow, and offered to tell her again, and she ran away, and I
ran after her, sir, that she might know how to answer when she was
asked. You wouldn’t have thought of saying such mischief if
you hadn’t been a horse-rider?’
‘Her calling seems to be pretty well known among ’em,’
observed Mr. Bounderby. ‘You’d have had the whole school
peeping in a row, in a week.’
‘Truly, I think so,’ returned his friend. ‘Bitzer, turn
you about and take yourself home. Jupe, stay here a moment.
Let me hear of your running in this manner any more, boy, and you
will hear of me through the master of the school. You
understand what I mean. Go along.’The boy stopped in his rapid blinking, knuckled his forehead
again, glanced at Sissy, turned about, and retreated.
‘Now, girl,’ said Mr. Gradgrind, ‘take this gentleman and me
to your father’s; we are going there. What have you got in
that bottle you are carrying?’
‘Gin,’ said Mr. Bounderby.
‘Dear, no, sir! It’s the nine oils.’
‘The what?’ cried Mr. Bounderby.
‘The nine oils, sir, to rub father with.’
‘Then,’ said Mr. Bounderby, with a loud short laugh, ‘what
the devil do you rub your father with nine oils for?’
‘It’s what our people aways use, sir, when they get any hurts
in the ring,’ replied the girl, looking over her shoulder, to
assure herself that her pursuer was gone. ‘They bruise
themselves very bad sometimes.’
‘Serve ’em right,’ said Mr. Bounderby, ‘for being
idle.’ She glanced up at his face, with mingled astonishment
and dread.
‘By George!’ said Mr. Bounderby, ‘when I was four or five
years younger than you, I had worse bruises upon me than ten oils,
twenty oils, forty oils, would have rubbed off. I didn’t get
’em by posture-making, but by being banged about. There was
no rope-dancing for me; I danced on the bare ground and was
larruped with the rope.’Mr. Gradgrind, though hard enough, was by no means so rough a
man as Mr. Bounderby. His character was not unkind, all
things considered; it might have been a very kind one indeed, if he
had only made some round mistake in the arithmetic that balanced
it, years ago. He said, in what he meant for a reassuring
tone, as they turned down a narrow road, ‘And this is Pod’s End; is
it, Jupe?’
‘This is it, sir, and—if you wouldn’t mind, sir—this is the
house.’She stopped, at twilight, at the door of a mean little
public-house, with dim red lights in it. As haggard and as
shabby, as if, for want of custom, it had itself taken to drinking,
and had gone the way all drunkards go, and was very near the end of
it.
‘It’s only crossing the bar, sir, and up the stairs, if you
wouldn’t mind, and waiting there for a moment till I get a
candle. If you should hear a dog, sir, it’s only Merrylegs,
and he only barks.’
‘Merrylegs and nine oils, eh!’ said Mr. Bounderby, entering
last with his metallic laugh. ‘Pretty well this, for a
self-made man!’
CHAPTER VI SLEARY’S HORSEMANSHIP
The name of the public-house was the Pegasus’s Arms.
The Pegasus’s legs might have been more to the purpose; but,
underneath the winged horse upon the sign-board, the Pegasus’s Arms
was inscribed in Roman letters. Beneath that inscription
again, in a flowing scroll, the painter had touched off the
lines:Good malt makes good beer,Walk in, and they’ll draw it here;Good wine makes good brandy,Give us a call, and you’ll find it handy.Framed and glazed upon the wall behind the dingy little bar,
was another Pegasus—a theatrical one—with real gauze let in for his
wings, golden stars stuck on all over him, and his ethereal harness
made of red silk.As it had grown too dusky without, to see the sign, and as it
had not grown light enough within to see the picture, Mr. Gradgrind
and Mr. Bounderby received no offence from these idealities.
They followed the girl up some steep corner-stairs without meeting
any one, and stopped in the dark while she went on for a
candle. They expected every moment to hear Merrylegs give
tongue, but the highly trained performing dog had not barked when
the girl and the candle appeared together.
‘Father is not in our room, sir,’ she said, with a face of
great surprise. ‘If you wouldn’t mind walking in, I’ll find
him directly.’ They walked in; and Sissy, having set two
chairs for them, sped away with a quick light step. It was a
mean, shabbily furnished room, with a bed in it. The white
night-cap, embellished with two peacock’s feathers and a pigtail
bolt upright, in which Signor Jupe had that very afternoon
enlivened the varied performances with his chaste Shaksperean quips
and retorts, hung upon a nail; but no other portion of his
wardrobe, or other token of himself or his pursuits, was to be seen
anywhere. As to Merrylegs, that respectable ancestor of the
highly trained animal who went aboard the ark, might have been
accidentally shut out of it, for any sign of a dog that was
manifest to eye or ear in the Pegasus’s Arms.They heard the doors of rooms above, opening and shutting as
Sissy went from one to another in quest of her father; and
presently they heard voices expressing surprise. She came
bounding down again in a great hurry, opened a battered and mangy
old hair trunk, found it empty, and looked round with her hands
clasped and her face full of terror.
‘Father must have gone down to the Booth, sir. I don’t
know why he should go there, but he must be there; I’ll bring him
in a minute!’ She was gone directly, without her bonnet; with
her long, dark, childish hair streaming behind her.
‘What does she mean!’ said Mr. Gradgrind. ‘Back in a
minute? It’s more than a mile off.’Before Mr. Bounderby could reply, a young man appeared at the
door, and introducing himself with the words, ‘By your leaves,
gentlemen!’ walked in with his hands in his pockets. His
face, close-shaven, thin, and sallow, was shaded by a great
quantity of dark hair, brushed into a roll all round his head, and
parted up the centre. His legs were very robust, but shorter
than legs of good proportions should have been. His chest and
back were as much too broad, as his legs were too short. He
was dressed in a Newmarket coat and tight-fitting trousers; wore a
shawl round his neck; smelt of lamp-oil, straw, orange-peel,
horses’ provender, and sawdust; and looked a most remarkable sort
of Centaur, compounded of the stable and the play-house.
Where the one began, and the other ended, nobody could have told
with any precision. This gentleman was mentioned in the bills
of the day as Mr. E. W. B. Childers, so justly celebrated for his
daring vaulting act as the Wild Huntsman of the North American
Prairies; in which popular performance, a diminutive boy with an
old face, who now accompanied him, assisted as his infant son:
being carried upside down over his father’s shoulder, by one foot,
and held by the crown of his head, heels upwards, in the palm of
his father’s hand, according to the violent paternal manner in
which wild huntsmen may be observed to fondle their
offspring. Made up with curls, wreaths, wings, white bismuth,
and carmine, this hopeful young person soared into so pleasing a
Cupid as to constitute the chief delight of the maternal part of
the spectators; but in private, where his characteristics were a
precocious cutaway coat and an extremely gruff voice, he became of
the Turf, turfy.
‘By your leaves, gentlemen,’ said Mr. E. W. B. Childers,
glancing round the room. ‘It was you, I believe, that were
wishing to see Jupe!’
‘It was,’ said Mr. Gradgrind. ‘His daughter has gone to
fetch him, but I can’t wait; therefore, if you please, I will leave
a message for him with you.’
‘You see, my friend,’ Mr. Bounderby put in, ‘we are the kind
of people who know the value of time, and you are the kind of
people who don’t know the value of time.’
‘I have not,’ retorted Mr. Childers, after surveying him from
head to foot, ‘the honour of knowingyou,—but if you mean that you can make
more money of your time than I can of mine, I should judge from
your appearance, that you are about right.’
‘And when you have made it, you can keep it too, I should
think,’ said Cupid.
‘Kidderminster, stow that!’ said Mr. Childers. (Master
Kidderminster was Cupid’s mortal name.)
‘What does he come here cheeking us for, then?’ cried Master
Kidderminster, showing a very irascible temperament. ‘If you
want to cheek us, pay your ochre at the doors and take it
out.’
‘Kidderminster,’ said Mr. Childers, raising his voice, ‘stow
that!—Sir,’ to Mr. Gradgrind, ‘I was addressing myself to
you. You may or you may not be aware (for perhaps you have
not been much in the audience), that Jupe has missed his tip very
often, lately.’
‘Has—what has he missed?’ asked Mr. Gradgrind, glancing at
the potent Bounderby for assistance.
‘Missed his tip.’
‘Offered at the Garters four times last night, and never done
’em once,’ said Master Kidderminster. ‘Missed his tip at the
banners, too, and was loose in his ponging.’
‘Didn’t do what he ought to do. Was short in his leaps
and bad in his tumbling,’ Mr. Childers interpreted.
‘Oh!’ said Mr. Gradgrind, ‘that is tip, is it?’
‘In a general way that’s missing his tip,’ Mr. E. W. B.
Childers answered.
‘Nine oils, Merrylegs, missing tips, garters, banners, and
Ponging, eh!’ ejaculated Bounderby, with his laugh of laughs.
‘Queer sort of company, too, for a man who has raised
himself!’
‘Lower yourself, then,’ retorted Cupid. ‘Oh Lord! if
you’ve raised yourself so high as all that comes to, let yourself
down a bit.’
‘This is a very obtrusive lad!’ said Mr. Gradgrind, turning,
and knitting his brows on him.
‘We’d have had a young gentleman to meet you, if we had known
you were coming,’ retorted Master Kidderminster, nothing
abashed. ‘It’s a pity you don’t have a bespeak, being so
particular. You’re on the Tight-Jeff, ain’t
you?’
‘What does this unmannerly boy mean,’ asked Mr. Gradgrind,
eyeing him in a sort of desperation, ‘by Tight-Jeff?’
‘There! Get out, get out!’ said Mr. Childers, thrusting
his young friend from the room, rather in the prairie manner.
‘Tight-Jeff or Slack-Jeff, it don’t much signify: it’s only
tight-rope and slack-rope. You were going to give me a
message for Jupe?’
‘Yes, I was.’
‘Then,’ continued Mr. Childers, quickly, ‘my opinion is, he
will never receive it. Do you know much of him?’
‘I never saw the man in my life.’
‘I doubt if you everwillsee him now. It’s pretty plain to me, he’s
off.’
‘Do you mean that he has deserted his daughter?’
‘Ay! I mean,’ said Mr. Childers, with a nod, ‘that he
has cut. He was goosed last night, he was goosed the night
before last, he was goosed to-day. He has lately got in the
way of being always goosed, and he can’t stand it.’
‘Why has he been—so very much—Goosed?’ asked Mr. Gradgrind,
forcing the word out of himself, with great solemnity and
reluctance.
‘His joints are turning stiff, and he is getting used up,’
said Childers. ‘He has his points as a Cackler still, but he
can’t get a living out ofthem.’
‘A Cackler!’ Bounderby repeated. ‘Here we go
again!’
‘