SiHIAllLES PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF •-■--- • -w-^ -*- nr-i/^ -r^-r /-MT-r-r^iLTm^rH TVFl 1 "PvT"\T/^rN TTITH ILLUSTRATIONS. LONDON: TRUBNER & CO., 60 PATERNOSTER ROW. BOSTON, U. S.: JAMES R. OSGOOD AND COMPANY, Late Ticknor & Fields, and Fields, Osgood, & Co. 1871. NOTICE. This Work is published in the United Kingdom by permission of Messrs. CHAPMAN & Hall, the proprietors of the Copy- right of the late Charles Dickens's Works. *' • « • y • * f ' * • « a * CE^iAiLES iaB[^EP3Si PEN PHOTOGRAPHS • OF - ' • ■ » « • J 4 • « CHARLES DICKENS'S READINGS. ^akctt from %,iU By KATE FIELD, AN AMERICAN. TFITR ILLUSTRATIONS. LONDON: TRtJBNER & CO., 60 PATERNOSTER ROW. BOSTON, U. S. : JAMES R. OSCxOOD AND COMPANY, Late Ticknor & Fields, and Fields, Osgood, & Co. 1871. PREFACE. rpiO connect this book witli the art of Photography, by even the slight link of a title, may be considered presumptuous ; but when it is remembered that the best photographs fail to do justice to their originals, and that the most interesting subjects generally receive the worst treatment, I hope to be exonerated from so grave a charge. The following pages are the inspiration of gratitude. Owing to Cliarles Dickens twenty-five of the most de- lightful and most instructive evenings of my life, I have photographed them with the hope of clinching their recollection in the minds of many, and of giving to others some faint outline of a rare pleasure, the like of which will ne'er come to us a^'ain. ISTow that the great man has "vanished forevermore" from the " garish lights " of St. James Hall, the republication of this book, in an enlarged and more durable form, is deemed opportune, and that I have been unable to 802096 iv PREFACE. catch tlie fleeting power of Dickens's last and finest reading, "The Murder of Nancy Sykes," declared by the Axteran Macready to be " two Macbeths rolled into one," will ever remain a source of keen regret. " It being low water, lie went out with the tide." The joy of yesterday is the dead past of to-day, and I lay this offering at the feet of Charles Dickens, the actor, responsive to his prayer, " Lord, keep my memory green ! " THE AUTHOR. December 25, 1870. CONTENTS. Page The Welcome in Boston .1 The Welcome in New York 12 The Desk and the Reader ID A Christmas Carol . 23 David Copperfield ........ 37 Nicholas Nickleby at the Yorkshire School . . 60 The Story of Little Dombey ...... 63 Doctor Marigold .,,....• 75 Boots at the Holly-Tree Inn 85 Mr. Bob Sawyer's Party . 92 The Trial from Pickwick 100 Mrs. Gamp 114 Farewell .......... 138 The Verdict 143 THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. " A hundred thousand welcomes : I could weep, And I could laugh ; I am light, and heavy : welcome : A curse begin at very root of his heart That is not glad to see thee I ■' /^NCE in a generation all hearts throb in unison to ^-^ the music of some great master whose humanity is broad enough to embrace mankind. Charles Dickens is such a master. His hand has struck chords that scarce a loving Christian soul has not echoed, with a silent blessing upon Him who sent so humane a genius into the world. It is not strange, then, that on a raw, gray morning in December, 1867, Boston experienced a new sensation in watching a motley crowd, ranged in single file before the door of Messrs. Ticknor and Tields's pub- lishing house, pursuing its winding way thus along Hamilton Place, and dragging its slow length down Tremont Street, with the distance of an eighth 1 A 2 TKE WELCOME IN BOSTON. cf a mile bi3tw^e-ii''itii-liead and tail. So closely packed was tlie liuman file as to seem as if the Kving mass had been canght and skewered for some especial cannibalistic festival, preparatory to being roasted on a spit. Had such a fate been in reserve, it would have been hailed with delight, for the choice between freezing and roasting is easily made while undergoing either process. Those who roast prefer to freeze, and those who freeze prefer to roast. On this eventful morning, fire in any form would have been regarded as " a blessing in disguise " ; and if any clerical believer in the good old-fashioned hell had then and there improvised a revival, he would have made converts of them all. Truckmen, porters, clerks, "roughs," clergymen, mer- chants, gamblers, speculators, gentlemen, loafers, white men, black men, colored men, boys, and three women ! Broadcloth, no cloth ! Fine linen, doubtful linen, no linen ! The lion stood up with the lamb. The wild animals of Boston were merged into one unhappy family, and the great democratic principle on which our glorious institutions are founded was more practically illustrated than it will ever be again, if good republicans have a voice in the matter. " Here 's yer Boston aristocracy ! " screamed out a young gentleman bearing a striking likeness to Young Bailey, of "Mrs. Todgers's Commercial Board- ing-House." This pleasantry seemed to afford infinite delight to a " party " who replied with a wink of the eye and a grin that broke over his piebald countenance as THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. 3 the sun breaks upon the dawn, that " the people of Bos- ton had never before had an opportunity of seeing the eliglit of the city standing in a row." The purity of this " party's " French accent was only equalled by the purity of his breath, the architecture of which might have been attributed to the composite order, consisting as it did of bad whiskey and stale tobacco, injudiciously mingled. The Dickens fever set in as early as half past six o'clock. Victims whom the epidemic had marked for its own, and who in consequence had passed a sleepless night, rose before the sun got out of bed and, chewing the cud of fancy, on which substantial food several hundred of the Boston aristocracy breakfasted in honor of Charles Dickens, rushed to the scene of action. Among these enthusiastic Dickensites were two of the three heroines whose unexampled fortitude should be remembered in their e]3itaphs. Eeinforcements came thick and fast, until, at half past seven o'clock, seventy-five human be- ings were going through the various stages of congela- tion. One hour before noon the human sandwiches were counted by hundreds, and could they have eaten them- selves ^vould have done so with pleasure. To stand "a long way on the frosty side of cool" from half past six to nine o'clock at the earliest, — for not until then w^ere the doors of Messrs. Ticknor and Fields's establishment thrown open, — and several hours longer at the latest, w^as not conducive to a rapid circu- lation of the blood ; yet there never was a more good- THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. natured crowd. They looked their situation coolly in the face, and determined to secure their prize or perish in the attempt. They stamped their feet and sent forth their voices in song. Perhaps the singing was more boisterous than hilarious, for it requires a singularly idvid imagina- tion to be joyful when undergoing the experience of Sir John Franklin in his search for a northwestern passage ; nevertheless, the attempt denoted an amiable disposition, and this was significant. In compliment to the great man on whose altar they were sacrificing themselves, they sang " The Ivy Green," as appropriate to the season of the year. Then, making a diversion, they violently at- tacked " John Brown," in whose soul they seemed to take great satisfaction for the reason of its " marching on ! " " Bully for John Brown ! " exclaimed a " Pahdee." " I congratulate the gintlemun wid all me heart, I do. Shure an if he 'd say a good word for us, I 'd remember it next election time. By me sowl, it ud be a blissid thing now if OUT soles was marching on, gintlemin ! " " You 're right there, my friend," replied a voice at- tached to a genteel suit of clothes. "Old Milton may ^ have thought that ' they also serve that only stand and wait,' but I don't think he ever tried it when thp ther- mometer was below zero." " Milton ? an', faith, who 's Milton ? Is he a mimber of Congriss ? " " No, my friend, a poet." " A poet indade ! Be jabers, he must have took out THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. 5 a poetical license for siicli blathering stuff as that. I 'm a porter, an' if Milton wants to know tlie facts o' stand- in' an' waitin', I 'ni the man. John Brown 's the boy for my money." " Dr. Kane can't hold a candle to ns/' muttered another voice. "The o^en polar sea Avon't be discovered in a hurry, if it depends upon me." Stamping, singing, fun, and profanity ruled the long, cold hours, and when these staple articles failed, cigars and "pocket-pistols" came to the rescue. It was astonish- ing to see how many gentlemen were armed with this peculiar weapon, and how often they defended themselves with it. Substitutes were provided to relieve guard; many were visited by friends whose money they held, and who, acting in the professional capacity of bottle-hold- ers, exhorted them to stand firm. Some, however, were obliged to drop from the line from sheer exhaustion ; and others, having put too large a number of enemies into their mouths, were assisted to a neighboring station by the gentlemanly police. The Chinese article, " tea," seemed to be held in universal esteem, and it was quite remarka- ble to notice how- many persons stepped round the corner to get a cup of a beverage that is said to cheer but not in- ebriate. Strange to relate, however, the " tea " drunk on this occasion had so peculiar an aroma as to warrant the belief that it must have been drawn from Mrs. Gamp's favorite tea-pot. "When the crowd was densest and the humor at its 6 THE WELCOME IX BOSTON. height, a calm stranger, evidently from parts unknown, approached, and, animated by a sentiment of curiosity, asked a bystander the cause of so large and excited a Catherine:. " 'T ain't election-time down here, is it ? " " no, we 're buying tickets, sir." " Buying tickets ? — for what ? " " For Dickens's Headings." " Dickens ! Who the d — 1 is Dickens ? " " Why, don't you know ? — the great novelist." " jSTever heard of him in all my born days, hut if there is any critter on airth that can hccp such a croivcl together with the mercury clean luay out of sight, d — d if I dont see him ! " Whereupon the previously calm stranger took his place in the line and enthusiastically proposed three cheers for Dickens ! His ultimate opinion is robed in impenetrable mystery. Besieo'ed without, Ticknor and Fields's establishment was finally besieged within, and let it be recorded that when the sale of tickets did begin, one of the heroines who had held her position to the last was, by a common impulse of generosity, and by a unanimous vote, allowed to take the precedence. While the heroic woman within the building was re- ceiving the reward of virtue, — it is a great comfort to know that virtue does occasionally get rewarded, — a gentleman in the line outside took occasion to address his neighbors in the following eloquent and impressive THE WELCOME IN BOSTON". ^ 7 words. He had been consoling himself with a great deal of " tea." " Gen'lemen," said he, waving his right hand on high and contemplating the spire of Park Street Church with peculiar affection, — " gen'lemen, there are but three men who have stamped themselves upon the civilization of the Nineteenth Century. Those men, gen'lemen, are Charles Shakespeare, AYilliam Dickens, and — myself. Let any one deny it who dares ! " Here the peer of Charles Shakespeare and William Dickens looked so determined to stamp upon humanity particu- larly, as well as upon civilization generally, as to be unceremoniously removed by a guardian of the peace. Dickens, how much " tea " was that day drunk in thy name ! How many pairs of lungs had " damp door-steps settled on them " because of thee ! " Dickens ! " exclaims a young man of ardent tempera- ment, " if I did not love his genius I should wish he had never been born. To please the object of my affection and other less particular friends, I stood eight hours in ' the cold, cold blawst,' with a villanous tobacco-pipe be- fore me and a shocking bad hat immediately behind, the owner of which last-named article beguiled the time by poking me in the back, and asldng me whether I w^ould n't swap tiles and improve my personal appearance. After enduring several hours of puffing and poking, I rather wished that Charles Dickens had never crossed the Atlantic. AVlien I did reach the ticket-office, my patience w^as requited with reserved seats in a rear 8 THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. gallery ! The friends for whom I fought and froze failed to appreciate my valuable services, and assured me that it would have been better to have remained at home and saved their money. The object of my affections could only be appeased by my purchasing tickets of specu- lators, at ten dollars apiece. Upon going down town after my arctic ex]3edition, I discovered that I had lost an ojDportunity of making five thousand dollars in stocks ; but then, as an offset, I did gain, at considerable cost, a first-class influenza that terminated in acute rheu- matism, to which I am likely to be subject for the re- mainder of my life. The British government owes me a pension." Such was the excitement attending the sale of tickets for the first course of Dickens's Headings in Boston, and the second was like unto it ; yet, lest the seemingly Munchausen tale be received with incredulity, the report of a Boston journal is here given, vcrhatim et literatim: — "As early as half past seven o'clock in the evening the crowd commenced to gather, and a few persons sta- tioned themselves at the door of the Meionaon, deter- mined to secure good seats even at the cost of a night of waiting. From that time to the opening of the doors the numbers gradually increased. At ten o'clock p. M., about fifty persons had assembled ; at eleven, the number had increased to sixty ; at midnight, there were one hun- dred in line; and at two o'clock, from one hundred to two hundred were waiting. The line by this time ex- THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. 9 tended into Montgomery Place, and various were tlie means devised by those who composed it to make the time pass quickly and agreeably. " Some of those in waiting brought arm-chairs in which to rest their weary limbs, and one person, determined to be as comfortable as possible, rolled himself up in blankets and stretched out on a mattress which he had provided. The crowd were in good spirits, and every little incident was made the subject of a joke and laugh. As usual on such occasions the musical element was not wanting, and by the singing of popular airs — ' Johnny comes marching Home,' ' John Brown's Body,' ' We won't go home till Morning,' etc., etc. — the hours were beguiled, more to their own amusement, probably, than to the grati- fication of the residents on Montgomery Place, whose slumbers must have been somewhat disturbed by the noise without. The crowd was not altogether composed of representatives from the better portion of our com- munity, and ominous black bottles were frequently passed from one to the other, the contents of which seemed to add not a little to the hilarity of the occasion. " This morning the crowd was very great. IMany late comers not inclined to play fairly were assembled about the entrance, determined, if possible, when the doors were opened, to make a rush and obtain an early admis- sion. Others formed an additional line up Tremont Street as far as Montgomery Place. The ' genuine ' line extended down the north side of Montgomery Place, 1* 10 THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. across the end, and out to Tremont Street again. Citizens on their way to business were much amused at the bus- tling among the crowd of waiters, and the strife after a good position in line, and many stopped opposite to view the exciting spectacle. The steps and windows of the Tremont Plouse were crowded with spectators, and all teams stopping in the vicinity w^ere put into requisition for standing-places. " At about half past eight o'clock the outside door was opened. The rush towards it was for a while terrible, and it was only by the most strenuous efforts that the force of fifteen policemen who were present could hold them at bay. As it was, quite a number who had not a position in line succeeded in getting within the doors, to which so many were anxiously looking forward. In a few minutes, however, the police force rallied, and with a free use of their clubs, giving not a few an aching head, and one at least a wound from which the blood flowed freely, they succeeded in clearing the sidewalk of all but the original line. After this, the long procession moved steadily forward with little interruption until about five minutes of nine, when the checks which gave the right to purchase tickets, five hundred in number, having been all distributed, the doors were closed. The line, which even then was some two hundred feet long, was broken up, and many of the persons in waiting went away disappointed. Others remained to purchase tickets of those more fortunate. Several ladies were noticed in THE WELCOME IN BOSTON. 11 line among tliose who succeeded in obtaining admis- sion." With this chronicle we may well exclaim " Olie ! jam- satis^' and, turning to New York, mark the ravages made by the Dickens fever upon metropolitan constitutions. THE WELCOME IN NEW YORK. "XTOT being a bird, and consequently having no par- -^^ ticiilar fondness for worms as an article of diet, I never could be made to see the beauties of early rising. It is a poetical delusion. It means wet feet in summer and cold feet in winter. It means a total want of appre- ciation of those delightful day-dreams that possess the brain which refuses to wake up all over and emulate the lark in a very bad habit. It is satisfactory to look back upon my life and know that larks have received no moral support from me ; and yet I must confess that when I took up the Tribune on the 29th of November, 1867, at the respectable and civilized hour of ten o'clock A. M., my young blood froze and each particular hair stood on end as I read with terror and dismay that tickets for Charles Dickens's readings had been selling for two hours ! My first impulse was to drink a cup of cold poison and quietly retire from this vale of tears in a way becoming disap- pointed affections ; but I finally decided that before going to the Dickens by a process which would seriously in-/ terfere with my return to a mundane sphere, — a return THE WTELCOME IN NEW YOEK. ^ 13 whicli might be desirable should a change of base not prove all that fancy painted it, — I would follow the im- mortal Mrs. Chick's advice and " make an effort." It is an immutable law that " things " are never to be found when one's salvation depends upon their imme- diate possession. The agony I endured in collecting myself on that Friday morning no words can describe. INever in my life had I played such an aggravating game of hide-and-seek, and I finally rushed out of the house with a white glove on one hand and a black glove on the other. Perhaps I walked to Steinway Hall, but my private opinion is that I flew on the wings of that bird of which I so much disapprove. Whether I walked or flew, I know that at eleven o'clock I stood in front of Steinway Hall, hopelessly gazing at a queue of my fel- low-beings that extended far beyond the bounds of hu- man patience. Encountering the glance of a benevolent policeman, who seemed to feel for me, and having heard that there is safety in the law, I ventured to address this imposing guardian of the peace. " How long have these people been standing here ? " I asked. " Well, some on 'em two and some on 'em three hours." " And when did people hegin to stand here ? " "Nigh about seA^en o'clock, and they wriggled round Irving Place just like a snake." " I suppose all the good seats are gone." " Certain sure." 14 THE WELCOME IN NEW YORK. ' " What do you think my chances would be if I should take my place at the end of that file ? " " Well, I would n't give twenty-five cents for 'em. By the time you get to that 'ere ticket-office, there won't be standing-room for sale." I gazed at that ticket-office and thought of the touch- ing song, " Thou art so near, and yet so far." Once more the idea of cold poison suggested itself, but suddenly I was seized with a brilliant inspiration. "Have members of the press no privileges?" I in- quired, endeavoring to look like a distinguished indi- vidual. I am afraid I did not succeed in my attempt, for a man in the file, who, under the crushing influence of humanity before and behind him, was gradually being deprived of his breath, panted out in a shrill voice, " Eeckon we 're all members of the press to-day ! " I glanced reproachfully at that man, nor was I con- soled by the tender interest of the policeman, who evi- dently regarded members of the press as something lower than angels, — which they are. Many are a great deal lower. " The best thing for you to do is to see Mr. Dolby, and you '11 find him inside, — perhaps." I went inside. I wandered up and down that capa- cious building in vain. Nobody seemed to know that any one bearing the name of Dolby had ever been born. One Teutonic individual had the impertinence to ask me THE WELCOME IN NEW YORK 15 " liow I spell him, and what for I want him ? " This was too much. I was about to beat a hasty retreat when I encountered a person who looked as if he possessed con- siderable information, but had an inborn reluctance to part with any of it. ^N'evertheless, I ventured to address him in a persuasive voice. " Is Mr. Dolby here, sir ? " " No." (Spoken as if it had been bitten in two.) " Has he been here ? " " Yes." "Do you know where he is?" " No." " Can you tell me the name of his hotel ? " " Westminster." Delightful man ! " Conversational " man ! " What a noticing " man ! " What a " man " for repartee" ! At last I had a lever with which to work. I would employ strategy. The greatest battles had been won by it. Mr. Dolby was a scholar and a gentleman ; Mr. Dolby was handsome ; Mr. Dolby was good-natured. I would appeal to him as one human being to another. I would ap- peal to him as a son, as a brother, as a husband, as a fa- ther I He might not be a brother, nor a husband, nor a father, but he could not possibly escape being a son, and the reference to him in other domestic relations would be accepted as a tribute to his worth; it would signify Hhat, if he is not, he ought to be a brother, a husband, and a father. I would tell him of the tremendous influence 16 THE WELCOME IN NEW YOEK, of the press, and as an original peroration which could not fail to take his reason captive, I would tell liim that " the pen is mightier than the sword ! " I did. I wrote Mr. Dolby a letter which would have "drawn tears from even the manliest eye," and then retired to my native heath to recuperate my shattered forces. ISTeed I say that Mr. Dolby hearkened to my petition ? There stood beside him as he opened that letter a guardian angel in the garb of man, who said unto Dolby, "The press is a mighty organ; respect its or- ganists." The way in which I went about with those tickets in my pocket ; the way in which I exhibited them to those who had no tickets, and, what was more, never expected to get any, not being people who would encourage specu- lators, ought to make Mr. Dolby .feel that he has not lived in vain. I slept with those tickets under my pillow, " lest somebody should get over the wall of the back yard and steal them " ; and had I not lost confidence in banks, I should have deposited my treasures in a vault during the day. Such a crowd as assembled in front of Steinway Hall on the night of the first reading ! Carriage after car- riage deposited its burden on the sidewalk, while a throng of men and boys, who may be called the " outs," choked up the passage-way and gazed at the fortunate possessors of tickets witli about the same expression as that with which hungry children eye the contents THE ^^^ELCOME IN NEW YORK. 17 of pastry-cooks' windows. Speculators to right of us, speculators to left of us, speculators in front of us, vol- leyed and thundered. The very best seats in the house were held by these vampires. They knew it, and great was the profit thereof ; for it would have cost some people a great deal more — in feelings — to have remained away than to have paid ten or twenty dollars for a ticket. An American public is not to be held in check by gigantic swindling ; hence the breed of vampires. Past " outs " and speculators, we began the ascent of stairs that never were quite so long as on this occasion, but which, accomplished, we felt as Hercules must have felt after the termination of one of his labors. The en- trance into the hall was quite curious, the assemblage being one vast interrogation point. Everybody was on the qui vive to see who had been shrewd enough to secure seats, and apparently seemed astonished that anybody had been as clever as himself. The salutation between friends was not the ordinary " How are you ? " but, for this night only, " "Wliere did you get your ticket ? " Then followed a thrilling narration of hairbreadth 'scapes, lis- tened to with breathless attention. Once seated, it was a pleasure to look upon the mul- titude that completely filled the vast hall. If Charles Dickens was not to be tried by his peers — a good fortune that never yet befell genius — he had invoked the best audience that New York can produce. There were poets, authors, artists, actors, and managers ; there were women B 18 THE WELCOME IN NEW YORK. of culture, lawyers, doctors, bankers, and merchant- princes. The fourth estate shone with unusual lustre. " Dailies " and " Weeklies " were scattered in every direction, and the very air seemed redolent of printer's- ink. Then Charles Dickens came, and we saw and heard, and he conquered ; not all at once, but gradually, slowly, and surely. However, " let me not anticipate " ; yet must I say that *'A11 my reports go with the modest truth; No more, nor clipped, but so." 5 3 9 ' J J 3 * THE READING DESK. PEN PHOTOGRAPHS. I. THE DESK AM) THE READEE. /^NE glance at the platform is sufficient to convli e ^-^ the audience that Dickens thoroughly appr ■^.:^,:. "stasje effect." A lar^^e screen of maroon cloth {j:\~ pies the background; before it stands a light ta' le of peculiar design, on the inner left-hand corner of ^, xi Ji there peers forth a miniature desk, large enough to acco.u- modate the reader's book. On the rie^ht hand of the table, and somewhat below its level, is a shelf, where repose a carafe of w^ater and a tumbler. 'T is " a combi- nation and a form indeed," covered with velvet some- what lighter in color than the screen. No drapery conceals the table, w^hereby it is plain that Dickens believes in expression of figure as well as of face, and does not throw away everything but his head and arms, according to the ordinary habit of ordinary speakers. About twelve feet above the platform, and somewhat in advance of the table, is a horizontal row of gas-jets with a tin reflector; and midway in both perpendicular gas- 20 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. pipes there is one powerful jet with glass chimney. By this admirable arrangement, Dickens stands against a dark background in a frame of gaslight, which throws out his face and figure to the best advantage. With the book " Dickens " stranded on the little desk, the come- dian Dickens can transform a table into a stage ; and had the great novelist concluded, at the last moment, not to appear before us, this ingenious apparatus would have taught us a lesson in the art of reading. He comes ! A lithe, energetic man, of medium stature, crosses the platform at the brisk gait of five miles an hour, and takes his position behind the table. This is Charles Dickens, whose name has been a household word in England and America for thirty years ; Avhose books have been the joy and solace of many a weary heart and head. A first glance disappointed me. I thought I should prefer to have him entirely unlike himself ; but when I began to speculate on how Charles Dickens ought to look, I gave the matter up, and wisely concluded that Nature knew her own intentions better than any one else. Dickens has a broad, full brow, a fine head, — which, for a man of such power and energy, is singularly small at the base of the brain, — and a cleanly cut profile. There is a sli2:ht resemblance between him and Louis Napoleon in the latter respect, owing mainly to the nose ; but it is unnecessary to add that the faces of the two men are totally different. Dickens's eyes are light- THE DES'K and the READER. 21 blue, and his mouth and jaw, without having any claim to beauty, possess a strength that is not concealed by the veil of iron-gray mustache and generous imperial. His head is but slightly graced with iron-gray hair, and his complexion is florid. If any one thinks to obtain an accurate idea of Dickens from the photographs that flood the country, he is mis- taken. He will see Dickens's clothes, Dickens's feat- ures, as they appear when Nicholas Mckleby is in the act of knocking down Mr. AVackford Squeers ; but he will not see what makes Dickens's face attractive, the genial- ity and expression that his heart and brain put into it. In his photographs Dickens looks as if, previous to posing, he had been put under an exhausted receiver and had had his soul pumped out of him. Tliis process is no beauti- fier. Therefore let those who have not been able to judge for themselves believe that Dickens's face is capable of wonderfully varied expression. Hence it is the best sort of face. His eye is at times so keen as to cause whoever is within its range to feel morally certain that it has pene- trated to his boots ; at others it brims over with kindliness. " It is like looking forward to spring to think of seeing your beaming eye again," ^^rrote Lord Jeffrey to Charles Dickens years ago, and truly, for there is a twinkle in it that, like a promissory note, pledges itself to any amount of fun — within sixty minutes. After seeing this twinkle I was satisfied with Dickens's appearance, and became re- signed to the fact of his not resembling the Apollo Belve- 22 PEX PHOTOGEAPHS OF DICKENS'S HEADINGS. dere. One thing is certain, — if he did resemble this classical young gentleman, he never could have written his novels. Laying this flattering unction to my soul, I listen. A CHEISTilAS CAEOL. 23 II. A CHEISTMAS CAEOL. "FN December, 1843, all England was roused from selfish -^ slumbering by the sound of a carol. It was no carol by a bird ; it was sung by a man, and that man Charles Dickens. He called it "A Christmas Carol," but the Anglo-Saxon world has known it ever since as The Christ- mas Carol ; as if, since the birth of Him who made a holy day of the twenty-fifth of December, humanity had heard no song worthy of being likened unto it. How wonder- fully significant may so small a particle of speech be- come ! Twenty-seven years this Carol has been sung, yet every twelvemonth its pure melody receives as hearty a welcome as Christmas itself. Hungry ears have lis- tened to no better hymn of praise, hungry eyes have feasted on no truer or more loving counsel. Immediately after its first publication, and while the Carol was running through twenty editions, that master of English, and therefore most genial critic, William M. Thackeray, being then on the Continent, received a box of novels. It was a welcome box to Thackeray, notwith- standing it entailed the necessity of reviewing, for among those novels, off which he skimmed the cream, lay the Carol that originated a new field of literature, — Dickens's 24 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. holiday romance, — without which the world of to-day would be poor indeed. "Who can listen to objections regarding such a book as this ? " wrote big-hearted Thackeray in Eraser's Magazine. " It seems to me a national benefit, and to every man or woman who reads it a personal kindness. The last two people I heard speak of it were women; neither knew the other, or the author, and both said, by way of criti- cism, ' God bless him ! ' A Scotch philosopher, who nationally does not keep Christmas day, on reading the book, sent out for a turkey, and asked two friends to dine, — this is a fact ! Many men were known to sit down, after perusing it, and write off letters to their friends, not about business, but out of their fulness of heart, and to wish old acquaintances a happy Christmas. Had the book appeared a fortnight earher, all the prize cattle would have been gobbled up in pure love and friendship, Epping denuded of sausages, and not a turkey left in Norfolk. His royal highness's fat stock would have fetched unheard-of prices, and Alderman Bannister would have been tired of slaying " As for Tiny Tim, there is a certain passage m the book regarding that young gentleman, about which a man should hardly venture to speak in prmt or in public, any more than he would of any other affections of his private heart. There is not a reader in England but that little creature will be a bond of union between the author and him ; and he will say of Charles Dickens, as the woman A CHRISTMAS CAROL. 25 said just now, ' God bless him ! ' What a feeling is this for a writer to be able to inspire, and what a reward to reap ! " Well, on the 10th of January, 1853, Mr. Arthur Ey- land, a member of the Birmingham Philosophical Insti- tution, read a letter from Dickens, received the day after a Literary and Artistic Banquet, containing an offer to visit Birmingham the following Christmas, and read his Christmas Carol, in the Town Hall, for the benefit of an embryonic Scientific and Literary Society, to which Dickens insisted that as many as possible of the working class should be admitted free. " The reading," he said, " would take about two hours, with a pause of ten min- utes half-way through. There would be some novelty in the thing, as I have never done it in public, though I have in private, and (if I may say so) with a gTeat effect on the hearers. I was so inexpressibly gratified last night by the warmth and enthusiasm of my Birmingham friends, that I feel half ashamed this morning of so poor an offer. But as I had decided on making it to you before I came down yesterday, I propose it neverthe- less." A poor offer indeed ! Dickens had distinguished himself in private theatricals ; he had read selections from his works before delighted audiences of friends ; he had given evidence of such unusual dramatic abil- ity as to render it almost criminal for him to longer hide his light under a domestic bushel. To appear as a reader of his own writings would be of great pecu- 26 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS S EEADIXGS. niary benefit to the Birmingliam Association, besides adding one more link to tlie chain that bound Charles Dickens to the peoi^le of England. Bii'mingham ac- cepted the offer with delight, and Charles Dickens made a reality of his ideal Christmas Carol. So great a tri- umph was then and there achieved as to cause Dick- ens to discover that he had been living but half a life ; and from 1853 to 1869 Great Britain and Ireland hailed Dickens the actor with as much enthusiasm as Dick- ens the novelist. The amateur reader, however, did not visit Birmingham entirely ignorant of the effect he was likely to produce, having been coaxed and argued into giving an experimen- tal reading in the sleepy old city of Peterborough, for the purpose of helping the Mechanics' Institute out of debt. " Here is an opportunity," wrote Dickens's tempter, "for testing the matter without risk. An antediluvian country town, an audience of farmers' sons and daughters, rural shopkeepers, and a few country parsons, — if inter- est can be excited in the stolid minds of such a Boeotian assemblage, the success of the reader will be assured wherever the English language is spoken. On the other hand, if failure results, none will be the wiser outside this Sleepy-Hollow circle." The tempter triumphed, Dickens's sole stipulation being that the prices should range from a sixpence to two shillings, in order to meet the limitations of Avorking-men's incomes. He stipulated in vain. Every place was taken a fortnight- before the A CHEISTMAS CAEOL. 27 reading, and guineas and lialf-giiineas were paid for front seats 1 There was little in the paraphernalia of Dickens's first reading to remind the public of his last. At one end of the large Corn Exchange, where the entertainment was given, Dickens caused to be erected a tall pulpit of red baize, looking not unlike a Punch-and- Judy show with the top taken off. But as the tall red rostrum sug- gested a comical, lank oasis left blooming alone in a desert of space, it was supported on each side by two dummy pulpits of similar construction. Once mounted into the middle box, nothing of Dickens was visible but his head and shoulders, which perliaps was fortunate, if we are to believe a tell-tale supernumerary, who de- clares that the great author's legs shook from the begin- ning to the end of the reading. For the first time in his life, Dickens was reduced to extremities. How little he had to fear ! His " uneducated audience " was com- posed of the gentry of the country round about ; and the vote of thanks which closed the proceedings was moved by the senior INlarquis of Scotland, and seconded by the heir of the w^ealthiest peer in England. The verdict of Peterborough received " confirmation strong " in Paris, where Dickens won his most enviable laurels from Polyglot audiences, half English and half French . Yiardot-Garcia, sister of Malibran, and the greatest living lyric artist, journeyed from lier home 28 PEX PHOTOGRAPHS OF' DICKENS's EEADINGS. ill Baden to pay homage to a brotlier actor, whenever Dickens appeared in the French capital. He never had a finer criticism than this, and having had it can dispense with any other. Having thus, by way of preface, crossed the Atlantic and wandered into the past, I return to Dickens in America. " Ladies and Gentlemen, — I am to have the pleasure of reading to you first, to-night, ' A Christmas Carol ' in four staves. Stave One, Marley's Ghost. Marley was dead to begin with. There is no doubt whatever about that. The register of his burial was signed by the clergy- man, the clerk, the undertaker, and the chief mourner. Scrooge signed it. And Scrooge's name was good upon 'Change for anything he chose to put his hand -to. Old Marley was as dead as a door-nail." At the close of this paragraph the critic beside, me whispers, " Dickens's voice is limited in power, husky, and naturally monotonous. If he succeeds in overcoming these def(x;ts, it will be by dramatic genius." I begin to take a gloomy view of the situation, and wonder why Dickens constantly employs the rising inflection, and never comes to a full stop ; but we are so pleasantly and naturally introduced to Scrooge that my spirits revive. " Foul weather did n't know where to have him. Tlie heaviest rain and snow and hail and sleet could boast of the advantage over him in only one respect, — they often ' came down ' handsomely, and Scrooge never did!' Here A CHRISTMAS CAROL. 29 the magnetic current between reader and listener sets in, and when Scrooge's clerk " put on his white comforter and tried to warm himself at the candle, — in which ef- fort, not being a man of strong imagination, he failed," — the connection is tolerably w^ell established. I see old Scrooge, very plainly, growling and snarling at his pleasant nephew, and when that nephew invites that uncle to eat a Christmas dinner with him, and Dickens says that Scrooge said " that he would see him — yes, I am very sorry to say he did, — he went the whole length of the expression, and said he wonld see him in that extremity, first," — he makes one dive at our sense of humor and takes it captive. Dickens is Scrooge most decidedly, — just as we have seen him in the book. There are the old features, the pointed nose, the thin lips, the wiry chin, the frosty rime on head and eyebrows, and the shrewd, grating voice. He is the portly gentleman with the conciliatory voice on a mission of charity, — just the voice in which gentlemen-beggars deliver their errands of mercy ; he is twice Scrooge when, the portly gentleman remarking that many poor people had rather die than go to the workhouse, he replies, " 0, well, you know, uj^on the whole, if they 'd rather die, they had better do it and decrease the surplus population " ; and thrice Scrooge when, turning u]3on his clerk, he says, " You '11 want all day to-morrow, I suppose ? " It is the incarnation of a hard-hearted, hard-fisted, hard-voiced miser. 30 TEN rnOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. " If it 's — if it 's — quite convenient, sir." A few words, but they denote Bob Cratchit in three feet of comforter exclusive of fringe, in well-darned, threadbare clothes, with a mild, frightened, lisping voice, so thin that you can see through it ! Then there comes the change when Scrooge, upon going home, " saw in the knocker Marley's face ! " Of course Scrooge saw it, because the expression of Dick- ens's face, as he rubs his eyes and stares, makes me see it, " with a dismal light about it, like a bad lobster in a dark cellar." There is good acting in this scene, and there is fine acting when the dying flame leaps up as though it cried, " I know him ! Marley's ghost ! " Scrooge bites his fingers nervously as he peers at the ghost, and then with infinite gusto Dickens reads that description of Marley, how, "looking through this waistcoat, Scrooge could sec the two hit tons on his coat Ichincl" ; how Scrooge grew wondrously perplexed as to whether his old partner could sit down after under- going such atmospheric changes ; how Scrooge would persist in doubting his senses because Marley might l)e "an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of an underdone potato. There 's more of gravy than of grave about you, whatever you are " ; and how Scrooge finally listens to Marley, yet, believing that business habits of despatch are quite as good for the next world as for this, exclaims with comic earnestness, " For Heaven's sake, don't be flowery, Jacob, A CHRISTMAS CAROL. 31 whatever you are ! " It is excellent, and at the conclusion of Stave One, my friend, the critic, and I say, " Dickens is an actor." ^N'othing can be better than the rendering of the Fez- ziwig party in Stave Two. You behold Scrooge grad- ually melting into humanity; Scrooge as a joyous apprentice ; that model of employers, Fezziwig, with his comfortable, jovial voice; Mrs. Fezziwig, "one vast substantial smile " ; and all the Fezziwigs. Dickens's expression, as he relates how "in came the housemaid with her cousin tlie taker, and in came the cook with her hrother's 'particular friend the milkman^' is delightfully comic, while his complete rendering of that dance where " all were top couples at last, and not a bottom one to help them," is owing to the inimitable action of his hands. They actually perform upon the table, as if it were the floor of Fezziwig's room, and every finger were a leg belonging to one of the Fezziwig family. This feat is only surpassed by Dickens's illustration of Sir Eoger de Cov^rley, as interpreted by Mr. and Mrs. Fezziwig, when " a positive light appeared to issue from Fezziwig's calves," and he "cut so deftly that he appeared to wink with his legs ! " It is a maze of humor. Before the close of the stave, Scrooge's horror at sight of the young girl once loved by him and put aside for gold, shows that Dickens's power is not purely comic. Ah, but the best of all is Stave Three ! I distinctly see that Cratchit family. There are the potatoes that 32 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S HEADINGS. " knoclved loudly at the saucepan lid to be let out and peeled " ; there is Mrs, Cratchit, fluttering and cack- ling like a motherly hen with a young brood of chick- ens ; and there is everybody. The way those two young Cratchits hail Martha, and exclaim, " There 's such a goose, Martha ! " can never be forgotten. By some prestidigitation Dickens takes off his own head and puts on a Cratchit's ; and when those two young gentlemen cry out, " There 's father coming ! Hide, Martha, hide ! " they not only clap their hands, but they seem to be dancing round Dickens's table. Then Bob Cratchit and Tiny Tim come in, and Bob's thin voice pipes out, " Hullo ! I say ; why, where 's our Martha ? " accompanying the question with a perfect presentment of humble, simple-hearted disappointment; while Mrs. Cratchit shakes her head importantly, and replies, " ISTot coming ! " But murder will out ; and then Bob relates " how Tiny Tim " behaved ; " as good as gold, and better. Somehow he gets thoughtful, sitting by himself so much, and thinks the strangest things you ever heard. He told me, coming home, that he hoped the people saw him in the church, because he was a cripple, and it might be pleasant to them to rememberj upon Christmas day, who made lame beggars walk and blind men see." There is a volume of pathos in these words, which are the most delicate and artistic rendering of the whole reading. , Ah, that Christmas dinner ! I feel as if I were eating A CHRISTMAS CAROL. 33 every morsel of it. Peter maslies the potatoes with in- credible energy ; Belinda sweetens the apple-sauce, and smacks her lips so loudly in the tasting as to prove that it could not be better ; " the two young Cratchits/' " cram spoons into their mouths, lest they should shriek for goose before their turn " ; and Tiny Tim " beats on the table with the handle of his knife, as he feebly cries, 'Hoorray! Hoorray! Hoorray!'" in such a still, small voice. ]\Ioreover, there is that goose ! I see it with my naked eye. And 0, the pudding ! " A smell like a washing day ! That was the cloth. A smell like an eating-house and a pastry-cook's next door to each other, with a laundress's next door to that ! That was the pud- ding ! " Dickens's sniffing and smelling of that pudding would make a starving family believe that they had swallowed it, holly and all. It is infectious. . What Dickens docs is frequently infinitely better than anything he says, or the way he says it ; yet the doing is as delicate and intangible as the odor of violets, and can be no better indicated. Nothing of its kind can be more touchingly beautiful than the manner in which Bob Cratchit — previous to proposing "a merry Christ- mas to us all, my dears, God bless us " — stoops down, with tears in his eyes, and places Tiny Tim's withered little hand in his, " as if he loved the child, and wished to keep him by his side, and dreaded that he might be taken from him." It is pantomime worthy of the finest actor. 2* c 34 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S EEADINGS. Equally clever is Bob's attempt to pacify Mrs. Cratcliit, -^vhen, upon being desired to toast "Mr. Scrooge, the Founder of the Feast/' this amiable lady displays an amount of temper of which we never believed her capa- ble. " JMy dear ! " says Bob, in an expostulatory tone, " my dear ! the children ! Christmas day ! " pointing mys- teriously to each one with inimitable naimte. Bob's picture ought to be taken at this moment. Indeed, now I think of it, I am astonished that artists who illustrate such of Dickens's books as are read by him do not make him their model. They can never approach his conception, they can never equal his execution, and to the virtue of truth would be added the charm of resembling the author. Admirable is IMrs. Cratchit's ungracious drinking to Scrooge's health, and Martha's telling how she had seen a lord, and how he " was much about as tall as Peter!" It is a charming cabinet picture, and so likewise is the gj^mpse of Christmas at Scrooge's nephew's. The plump sister is " satisfactory, 0, perfectly satisfactory," and Topper is a magnificent fraud on the understand- ing, a side-splitting fraud. I see Fred get off the sofa and stamj) at his own fun, and I hear the plump sister's voice when she guesses'the wonderful riddle, " It 's your uncle Scro-o-o-o-o at a reading of Doctor Marigold, and wlio emphasized his words by thumping a soft felt hat, — " if that fellar hasn't a heart, may I be everlastingly skewered ! He 's made me make a fool of myself, and I swiney ! I wish Sal was here 1 " BOOTS AT THE HOLLY-TREE INN. 85 VII. BOOTS AT THE HOLLY-TEEE INK rriHEEE are some things that, once possessed, become -■- so inalienably portions of ourselves as to render it a marvel how any one ever lived without them. Paibber boots for women, horse-cars, and watches are among them. What rubber boots, horse-cars, and watches are to the outer man and woman, certain works of art are to the in- ner man and woman. The light of the world would grow dim to many were certain bits of music, of canvas, of sculpture, and of architecture annihilated. This feeling is especially excited by particular books. Some books we approach on state occasions with much dignity and cere- mony, knowing it to be highly literary and respectable to claim their acquaintance. We bind them in caK and give them the place of honor on our library shelves, where we permit them to remain undisturbed the greater part of the year. There are other books that we love just as we love intimate friends. We care not how they look, whether they are well or ill dressed, and in all prob- ability we never ask them into the library. But we do ask them into our private room, and insist upon their remaining, that we may enjoy their companionship at all times and seasons. These are the human books. They 86 PEN PHOTOGKAPHS OF DICKEXS'S EEADINGS. are not too good to speak to us in a language that we all understand, and confess to a sympathy with the frailty of our common nature. Such are the books of Charles Dickens. Occasionally we do permit his two-volume novels to go down stairs, and be imposing ; but when it comes to his shorter stories, particularly those inspired by the approach of Christmas, we oblige them to remain en deshabille up stairs, that we may be talked to whenever we are in a receptive mood. Unique, among these Christmas Stories, is " The Holly- Tree." That cold, heartless monster, the snow, never did a better deed than when it snowed up the bashful man, " Charley," at the Yorkshire wayside inn, in consequence of which the bashful man " began to associate the Christ- mas time of year with human interest, and with some in- quiry into, and some care for, the lives of those by whom he found himself surrounded." The snow, I repeat, never did a better deed, for otherwise, by the bashful man's own confession, we never should have been made the happier by his " Christmas Carols," and Boots never would have related the adventures of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Walmers, Junior. So for once the snow thawed when it was coldest. "But Boots's story is utterly impossible." Why, so much the better ! Are not some of the most delightful stories in the world as removed from fact as fancy can make them ? Was not fancy made for this purpose ? Are we always to sit on a Pre-Raphaelite stump and contem- etc BOOTS AT THE HOLLY-TREE IXN. 87 plate a Pre-Eaphaelite cabbage ? Do any of us believe in tlie possibility of '' The Tempest," or of '' Midsummer Night's Dream," and yet could we live as comfortably without them ? If no one ever dreamed, where would be the consolation of waking hours ? Fancy is the oil that keeps Eeality's wheels in motion. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Walmers, Junior, never thought of running away to Gretna Green. Of course not ; but the charmingly quaint story is as pure and fresh as mountain dew. I would not lose the recollection of that little creature in the sky- blue mantle tucked under the arm of her young lover, who walks off " much bolder than Brass " (with a capital B), for a wilderness of disagreeable facts. Truth is not necessarily a virtue. There are three branches on the original " Holly-Tree." Leaving untouclied the first and third branches, which are better on the tree than off it, Dickens cuts down the second and brings it into the lecture-room that we may enjoy its refreshing verdure. In Dickens's rendering of The Boots, criticism does not know "where to have him." Search as you may for a Aveak point, the search is in vain ; and after a first hearing you abandon yourself to unalloyed pleasure. Boots stands before you telling his story in his own naive way. And Boots is a captivating fellow. I am not sur- prised that Mr. and Mrs. Harry Walmers, Junior, were excessively fond of him, and decided to give him two thousand guineas a year as li6ad-gardener, — when the 88 PEN PHOTOGEAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. time sliould come for tliem to have a house in a forest, keep bees and a cow, and live entirely on milk and honey. Such a man deserves such a salary, particularly if con- demned to such a diet. You cannot avoid liking Boots when you read him; but when you see and hear him, the relationship is of a tenderer nature. Tor Boots is a diamond in • the rough. He is distantly related to Sam Weller. He is a Sam Weller whose natural keenness has received no polish from city life, and whose humor has been softened by sentiment and a contemplation of nature as seen in garden-bulbs. I am not quite sure, — it is very difficult to make up one's mind on such an imj)ortant point, — but I think that if I were in affliction, or even comfortably unhappy, I should prefer the services of Boots to those of Sam , Weller. Prosperity, and the prejudice Tony Weller entertained against poetry, rob Sam of the one attribute needed to make him an angel. This attri- bute Boots possesses. He is a poet in disguise. This is proved by his delicate appreciation of the loves of Mr. and Mrs. Harry AValmers, Junior. " On the whole, sir, the contemplation o' them two babbies had a ten- dency to make me feel as if I was in love myself, — only I did n't exactly know who with I don't know, sir, — perhaps you do, — why it made a man fit to make a fool of himself, to see them Wo pretty babbies a-lying there in the clear, still, sunny day, not dreaming' half so liard when they was asleep as they done when they was awake. B2U Lord ! ivhmi you come to think of BOOTS AT THE HOLLY-TEEE INN. 89 yourself, you Jcnotv, and ivliat a game you have been up to ever since you was in your own cradle , and ivliat a yoor sort of a chap you are, arter cdl, that 's ivhere it is ! Don't you see, sir ? " " Here 's wisdom for you ; chunks of it 1 " Boots's sum-total of life is as philosophical as his con- templation of youthful innocence is poetical. " What was the curious-es-est thing Boots had seen ? Well, he did n't know. He could n't momently guess what was the curious-es-est thing he had seen, — unless it was a Unicorn, — and he see him once in spirits at a fair." However clever we may be in the specialty for which we w^ere naturally designed, not one of us but desires to be considered as born for something else, and we are never so complacent as when attempting that un- attainable something. Even Boots betrays this amiable weakness. He approaches the word "curious-es-est," with a look of admiration, clings to every syllable with affection, and only lets go his hold because conversation would otherwise come to a dead lock. Tlierefore Boots goes on, and the richness, the flavor, the bouquet of his tone is as appetizing as transfigured bitters. When Master Harry says, " Cobbs, how should you spell Norah if you was asked ? " and when Cobbs gives him " his individucd views, sir, respectin' the spelling o' that name," one understands what is meant by the rare word "unction." The dialogue between Master Harry and Cobbs respecting Norah, is to the manner born, and child- hood never was more deliciously illustrated than in the 90 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. air and expression assumed by Master Harry when, stop- ping at " The Holly-Tree Inn " en route for Gretna Green, he gives his orders to Cobbs. "We should like some cakes after dinner, and two apples — and jam ! " If you have ever been a child and loved jam to distraction, — you never were a child unless you did love jam to dis- traction, — and remember how you gazed at it in her- metically sealed glass jars, with eyes as big as saucers, — wishing your eyes were saucers full of jam, — you know how Dickens treats this cabalistic word. It is your youth- ful aspiration, your eyes, your hermetically sealed jars reduced to sound. While Cobbs describes Master Harry sitting " behind his breakfast cup a-tearing away at the jelly, as if he had been his own father," you understand just how he is tearing. " Tlie way in which the women of that house," says Cobbs, "without exception, — every one of them, mar- ried and single, — took to that boy when they heard the story, is sa^erizing" (Cobbs is almost as devoted in his attentions to this word as to his former verbal Dulcinea.) "It was as much as could be done to keep 'em from dashing into the room and kissing him. They climbed up all sorts of places, at the risk of their lives, to look at him through a pane of glass, — and they was seven deep at the key-hole:' By means of this key-hole, Cobbs unlocks the door to such sense of humor as has not been ex- hausted by the previous drain upon it. Great as Master Harry is at the moment of his calling BOOTS AT THE HOLLY-TEEE INN. 91 for "/am," I think lie is equally so when, upon being asked whether Mrs. Hany Walmers, Junior, is fatigued, he replies, " Yes, she is tired, Cobbs ; but she is not used to be away from home, and she has been in low spirits again. Cobbs, do you think you could bring a baked apple, please ? IS'orah 's rather partial to baked apples, and I thi7ik one would rouse her" A father of a large family — John Eogers, for example — could not speak, with more confidence, or with greater knowledge of human nature. But the pretty story, perfect as it is, will come to an end, and when — Master Harry stooping down to kiss Norali for the last time — one of the many chamber- maids, peeping through the door, shrilly cries out, " It 's a shame to 'part 'em ! '' that chambermaid springs from Dickens's head as Minerva sprang from the head of Jove, and stands armed and equipped for the fray. Who, after listening to Cobbs, does not wish with him "that there was an impossible place where two such babies could make an impossible marriage, and live impossibly happy ever after ? " and who does not shudder at thought of the era when universal education will have made such inroads upon even " The Holly-Tree Inn " as to abolish all use of bad grammar, and proclaim Cobbs's occupation gone ! See Dickens in his Boots, and you wish universal education at the bottom of that well where truth is said to lie. 92 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S PtEADINGS. YIII. MR BOB SAWYEE'S PAETY. " rriHEEE 's a destiny in tliese things, gentlemen, we -^ can't help it," said Dickens's Bagman, upon re- counting the prowess of his uncle in absorbing the con- tents of quart measures. The Bagman was undoubtedly correct in his deduction. There must be a destiny in these things and in all things, else Dickens would have gone down to 'his grave before being able to decide upon what selections from " The Pickwick Papers " to make for his Headings. To the mind unillumined by destiny, there seems no good reason why " Mr. Bob Sawyer's Party " should have been preferred to a thousand and one equally good episodes. In reading the book, this particular party takes no more hold of our affections than many others. Hence it is safe to conclude that there is a destiny in these things, and that Dickens was as much born to read " IMr. Bob Sawyer's Party " as he was to create it. After seeing him at this party, the hypothesis becomes as self-evident as any axiom in Euclid. What has struck you heretofore as a diamond no better than its fellows is magically trans- formed into a Kohinoor. And Avhen I say "magically transformed," I mean it in all soberness of criticism. Who e^'er thought, in reading MR. BOB SAWYER AND MR. BEN ALLEN. ••.««• < •< « i < C MR. BOB SAWYEE'S PARTY. 93 Pickwick, of giving any special attention to Mrs. Eaddle's housemaid ? Her appearance and disappearance are al- most simultaneous. She is a dirty, slip-shod girl, in black cotton stockings. That is all. And what does she say ? " Please, Mr. Sawyer, Mssis Eaddle wants to speak to ?/0?i." Anything else ? Yes. "Does Mr. Sawyer live here?" mildly inquires Mr. Pickwick at Mrs. Piaddle's front door. " Sawyer ! " slowdy echoes the Black Stockings, whose mental circulation is almost as languid as Einaldo di Velasco's physical circulation, " yes. Sawyer ; he lives here. Sawyer 's the first floor. It 's the door straight afore you, when you gets to the top of the stairs." And is this all ? No ; there is one more scene. " You can't have no warm water." " ]N"o warm water ? " exclaims the horrified host. Bob. " No," continues Betsey. " Missis Eaddle said you warn't to have none." " Bring up the water instantly, — instantly ! " "No, I can't. Missis Eaddle raked out the kitchen fire afore she went to bed, and locked up the kittle." Here is the whole of Betsey. Prom tliis small side bone that any but a consummate artist would throw away as having very little meat upon it, Dickens creates an incomparably comic character. Tlie moment Betsey opens her mouth she is an accomplished fact. A dirtier. 94 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. more slip-shod, more stolid, more irretrievably stupid girl never lived. Dickens's list of her clothes includes noth- ing but a pair of black cotton stockings, but when he brings her on the stage she not only wears black stockings with slippers down at the heel that drop off on the stairs, but a short gown, the original color of which is cleverly concealed by clirt, and a check apron, one half of which is conspicuous by its absence. Her sleeves are rolled up, displaying very red arms, and that portion of her scrubby hair which is not standing on end is maliciously attemj)t- ing to put out Betsey's eyes. Betsey's legs look like sticks of black sealing-wax, as if in mourning for the rest of her neglected person, and are finished off at the knees with white strings. An owl in the brightest noonday sun never was more dazed or more incapable of an idea. A voice never expressed more thorough individuality, for Betsey has a cold in the head. She could not possibly fulfil her mission on earth if she had 7iot a cold in the head. It gives a muffled, sepulchral tone to her words absolutely necessary to make what she says produce tlie desired effect upon Bob Sawyer and his guests. Betsey, however, is not such a fool as to be unaware that some- thing must be amiss between Mr. Sawyer and his land- lady. Consequently, the air of mystery with which she idiotically glares at Mr. Sawyer, or darts her head for- ward, — like a turtle from beneath its shell, — or slowly shakes that head, is not without solemnity. The amiable landlady, Mrs. Eaddle, is quite as well portrayed; but MR. BOB sawyer's PARTY. 95 sometliing is expected of Mrs. Eaddle, whereas Betsey takes you entirely by surprise. If a donkey lisped in numbers you could not be more astonished. The former merely realizes fond hopes. The scene between Mrs. Eaddle, Mr. Sawyer, and Mr. Ben Allen is a farce in itself, while Mrs. Eaddle's final expose of Mr. Sawyer*s delinquencies, as she scolds over the balusters, the rum- bling of Mr. Eaddle's voice, proceeding from beneath distant bed-clothes, and the lady's parting compliments to inoffensive Mr. Pickwick, " Get along with you, you old wretch ! Old enough to be his grandfather, you villain ! You 're worse than any of 'em," — are rich in humor. Mr. Bob Sa^vyer is not every mch himself, for the reason that Mr. Sawyer labors under depressing influences throughout the entire evenincj. He is as much himself as he can be, considerincj the condition of his mind and pocket, and is really sublime in his impudence, when, seeing his guests ordered out of the house by Mrs. Ead- dle, he turns to Jack Hopkins with an injured look, and informs Jack that it is all his fault, " because he will sing chorus, — that he was born chorus-y, lives chorus-y, and will die chorus-y." This impudence is rather the more delightful for being an interpolation. The only time we hear dear Mr. Pickwick's voice is on this occasion. He says very little, merely putting a few leading questions that keep conversation afloat, yet we recoornize our old benefactor at once in the countenance that " glows with an expression of universal philanthropy," 96 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. and ill a blandness of speech that cannot belong to any one else. Several young gentlemen who attended the original party are not present at its repetition, Mr. Gun- ter, among others, being absent. His share in the quar- rel with Mr. Noddy is necessarily transferred to Jack Hopkins, and the quarrel is really so enlivening that you long to have it become general ; but at the most promis- ing moment Mr. Noddy " allows his feelings to over- power him/' and Mr. Hopkins prefers Mr. Noddy " to his oum mother!' whereupon the combatants shake hands with so much effusion as to strangle your blood-thirsty aspirations. Jack Hopkins is what Bob Sawyer would have been, had not Mrs. Eaddle's " malevolence " thrown cold water upon his ardent spirits. He is the ideal of all the medi- cal students that ever had a talent for lying combined with a tendency to black velvet waistcoats, thunder-and- lightning buttons, blue striped shirts, and false white col- lars. The general inflation of Jack Hopkins's person; the professional cast of countenance; the voice which makes its escape as best it can between closed teeth, and from a mouth apparently full of mush ; the hands that are thrust into pantaloon-pockets, as if to be carefully preserved for the next surgical operation, — an attitude that, when accompanied ^by an oscillation of the body, as in Jack Hopkins's case, always indicates superior wisdom, — are sui generis. . He represents a type in caricature. All Jack's medical stories are good, but all are obscured MR. BOB sawyer's PARTY. 97 by the boy that swallowed a necklace. Even Betsey is obKged to divide the honors with this infant phenom- enon. It may be doing Dickens great injustice, but it really seems as if he were as funny as he can be in this absurdest of burlesques. The law of self-preservation should prevent him from being any funnier, for, if he has no regard for his own feelings, he should consider those of others, and remember that people have been tickled to death. Peggotty would burst every button, hook-and- eye that ever approached her jovial person. Dickens makes the story ; the story does not make him. The in- flections of his voice are in themselves mirth-provoking, the mere pronunciation of the word '' necklace " inspiring as much laughter as is usually accorded to a low-comedy man's best " point." In one short sentence he rushes up and down the gamut most originally. Words can give no idea of the effect produced ; perhaps a wretched outline drawing may. For example : — "Child toys, being fond of lass, cribbed / neck "hid lass, neck 98 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. J>ass, neck of cut string lass neck of and bead swallowed Those who have heard Dickens will understand this illustration, and may perhaps thank me for it. Those who have not heard him will not understand it, and will not thank me. When, after hearing a noise " like a small hail-storm," the father exclaims, — %/" " DonH my do that, and the child replies, "I ain't a-doin' nothing," where- upon the father rejoins, — gain ! " a "WeU, do it donH — fun appears to have reached its perihelion, but when, after shaking the boy, the father cries out, — "Why, MR. BOB sawyer's PARTY. 99 God bless my soul. in it's the child! in the ^lace!" got the croup He's wrong — nothing is left for human nature but to laugh at every pore. If the public eye were not upon you, you would abandon yourself to an ecstasy of delight. Dreading that public eye, you swallow, not a necklace, but a pocket- handkerchief, and rather fear spontaneous combustion. Indeed, this story puts you in such good-humor that you are quite ready to shake hands with your worst enemy, quite ready to withdraw your former desire that he might write a book, and you go home from "Bob Sawyer's Party," wishing that all parties were equally select and equally entertaining. 100 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. IX. THE TEIAL FEOM PICKWICK. rr^HEEE have been many trials for breach of promise -"- of marriage, but none ever shook the world to its centre as that of " Bardell versus Pickwick " has shaken it. Building his reputation on a Pickwickian foundation, the corner-stone of which is this same renowned Trial, it was meet that Dickens should again bring this interesting case into court to be sat upon by an impartial jury of a New World. Dickens's manner of conducting The Trial is irreproach- able, saving in one respect. In other Eeadings he has displayed great art and sagacity in the selections made from his novels, and in the trimming down of these selec- tions ; but in depriving The Trial of its fair proportions he subjects us to the "most unkindest cut of all." Assuredly the reader should be the best judge of what is and what is not suited to his purpose, and yet there seems to be no good reason for the wholesale employment of a pruning- knife in this particular instance. What Dickens sup- presses would not materially add to the length of the Eead- ing, while the amount of effect lost is very considerable. Dickens is guilty of unjustifiable homicide. How he can wilfully cut the throat of Thomas Groffin, the chemist. THE TRIAL FROM PICKWICK. 101 thereby preventing liim from being swo:tn in as a^ yivp^; and indulging in an edifying conversation witli Mr. Jus- tice Stareleigii, passetli all understanding. Eobbing Ser- geant Buzfuz of one of the greatest points in his address to the jury is even more extraordinary. " Let me tell him " (Pickwick), "gentlemen, that any gestures of dissent or disapprobation in which he may indulge in this court will not go down with you ; that you will know how to value and how to appreciate them ; and let me tell him farther, as my lord will tell you, gentlemen, that a counsel, in the discharge of his duty to his client, is neither to be intimi- dated, nor bullied, nor put down ; and that any attempt to do either the one or the other, or the first or the last, will recoil on the head of the attempter, be he plaintiff or be he defendant, be his name Pickwick, or Noakes, or Stoakes, or Stiles, or Brown, or Thompson ! " That Dickens should ignore this sentence, which may be called the heart of the address, and is full of just such effects as he best knows how to produce, appears almost incredible. Less strange is the suppression of Mr. Winkle's cross-examination by Mr. Phunkey and Sergeant Buzfuz, although no one who has seen Dickens in his great character of Winkle will ever cease to sigh over its omission. The most unpardon- able sin of all, however, is Dickens's inhuman treatment of Sam Weller. He actually prevents Sam from making two of his best speeches. Said Sam, " I had a reg'lar fit out o' clothes that mornin', gen'l'men of the jury, and that was a wery particler and uncommon circumstance with 102 PEX PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS's EEADINGS. me ill those days." "The little judge, looking with an angry countenance over his desk, said, ' You had better be careful, sir.' " '' ' So Mr. Pickwick said at the time, my lord,' replied Sam, ' and I was wery careful o' that 'ere suit o' clothes ; wery careful indeed, my lord.' " Astounding though it be, the little judge does not give Sam his cue, " You had better be careful " ; consequently Sam cannot make the retort courteous. And what is worse, — so bad that if there were a degree beyond the superlative it should be expressed by it, — Sam's final interrogatory remark to the Court, " Would any other gen'l'man like to ask me anythin' ? " is treated witli as mncli silent contempt as if it had never been made. The friends of Sam Weller should protest as one man against this indignity, and demand satisfaction of Dickens. Is this indignity to be taken *' in a common sense " ? or is it to be regarded from " a Pickwickian point of view ? " It may be ungrateful to look a gift-horse in the mouth ; but when that horse has a beautiful mane and tail which are unnecessarily curtailed by too much *' Englishing," should we not demur, particularly when that horse is Dickens's cheval de hatailU ? Inner consciousness will accomplish miracles. It once evolved a camel ; and I thought, not long ago, that it had evolved this famous " Pickwick Trial " so completely as to contest the honors with reality. I was mistaken, and now confess that I never knew how great The Trial was THE TRIAL FROM PICKWICK. 103 until Dickens made a panorama of himself, turned a crank, and unwound the entire scene. The eight char- acters that figure in the court-room are matchlessly delineated, while the assumption of the court itself is truly w^onderful. Wlien Dickens appears as " the little judge," the theory of metempsychosis seems to be prac- tically carried out. Dickens steps out of his own skin which, for the time being, is occupied by Justice Stare- leigh. His little round eyes, wide open and blinking ; his elevated eyebrows that are in a constant state of interrogation ; his mouth, drawn down by the weight of the law; the expression of the ensemble, which clearly denotes that everybody is a rascal whether found guilty or not ; and the stern, iron-clad voice, apparently measur- ing out justice in as small quantities as possible, and never going faster than a dead march, — make up an impersonation that is extraordinary, even for Dickens. Court. " Who is with you. Brother Buzfuz ? . . . . Anybody with you, Brother Snubbin ? " " Mr. Phunkey, my lord." Court. " Go on!' This " go on " seals Justice Stare- leigh's fate. The door of the court seems to shut with a gruff click, and the satire is complete. Though a less original creation. Sergeant Buzfuz is truly admirable. He whispers to Dodson, confers briefly with Fogg, settles his wig, and proceeds to address the jury. The rising inflection — which, if not natural to Dickens, has been adopted by him to overcome the 104 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. defects of an imperfect voice — here produces most comical effects. ''J^ever, from the very first moment of his applying himseK to the study and practice law, the of had he approached a case with such a heavy re-spon-si- bi-h-ty imposed him, — upon a re-spon-si-bi-li-ty he could never have sup- ed, port were he not buoyed up and sustained by a conviction, so strong that it amounted to positive tain that the cause of truth and justice, or, in other words, the cause of his much-injured and most oppressed client, vail — must / "pre, must vail ! " pre THE TEIAL FEOM PICKWICK. 105 The intonation and action accompanying tlie repetition of these final words are delightfully burlesq^ue. Sergeant Buzfuz draws back his head and then throws it forward to add impressiveness to speech, while a muscular contor- tion going on at the back of his neck and rippling down his shoulders suggests memories of a heavy swell on the ocean. Truth and justice are evidently convulsed. The Sergeant thrills his auditors by suiting the action to the word, and bringing down his hand with a mighty bang on the " box " in which " the unimpeachable female," Mrs. Bardell, is to be placed. "Here one poor word a Imndred clinclies makes!" He is no less affecting when, speaking of his client as a widow, ''yes, gentlemen, a widow," he produces a pocket-handkerchief for appropriate application, and re- fers to the late Mr. Bardell's having "glided almost imperceptibly from the world to seek elsewhere for that repose and peace which a custom-house nemr ford ! " can y^ af Jioyr "Ut-tle If the on whom Mr. Bardell " stamped his likeness," was ever as funny as Sergeant Buzfuz's mention of him, he ought to 5* 106 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S HEADINGS. have fully compensated " the unimpeachable female " for the loss of her custom-house officer. The same learned gentleman's rendering of the inscription, "Apartments furnished for sin sjentleman. \ a gle Iri in I " quire with is such oratory as might move the most obdurate to tears. (I do not specify what kind of tears.) A single gentleman is no sooner invited to inquire within than a juror, with an anxious countenance, expres- sive of a profound sense of responsibility, starts up and inquires without, " There is no date to that ; is there, sir ? " If I were a court, I should always insist upon having that conscientious man impanelled. Mr. Pickwick merely writhes in silence, but when Sergeant Buzfuz directs attention to him, — " if he be in court as I am informed he and aims the forefinger of his right hand at the defendant's head, it becomes a query whetlier grotesque action is not as difficult to excel in as absolute grace. Dickens has learned its secret. THE TRIAL FROM PICKWICK. 107 The great points of Mr. Pickwick's having once patted Master Bardell " on the head," head ! " " on the and of his having made use of the remarkable expres- sion, " How should you like to have Mh ther?'* an er fa are brought out most effectively, while " Chops ! Gracious heavens ! and Tomato sauce ! " and that other very re- markable expression, "Don't trouble yourself about the warming-pan," together with the Sergeant's surprised inquiry, " Why, gentlemen, what lady trouble herself about does pan ? " a warming are received with all the approbation they so richly de- serve. When Sergeant Buzfuz appeals for damages "to an enlightened, a high-minded, a right-feeling, a conscien- tious, a dispassionate, a sympathizing, a contemplative, and I may say a higJily poetic jury of her civilized country- men," his peroration takes instant effect, and he retires behind a round of applause. Mrs. Cluppins is no sooner called than she appears, and in voice and physiognomy does ample justice to " Mrs. 108 PEN PHOTOGEAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. Bardell's bosom-friend, number one," She assures my lord and jury that she will not deceive them, whereupon the little judge almost entirely covers himseK with glory, by slowly shaking his profound head at her, and saying, " You had tetter not, ma'am!' The little of the little judge left unadorned by the before-mentioned enviable article of apparel is quickly covered, upon Mrs. Cluppins's remarking that she " see Mrs. Bardell's street door on the jar." " On the what ? " asks the judge in a state of owl-like astonishment. " Partly open, my lord, partly open." " She said on the jar " ; and the little judge is at this moment a parody on all the legal stupidity that ever or- namented England's bar. " Nathaniel Winkle," cries Mr. Skimpin. " He-ah, he-ah," replies an embarrassed voice, and we meet face to face our old friend of the green shooting- coat, plaid neckerchief, and closely-fitted drabs. This easily discomposed gentleman is surely he who was so brave at duelling ; who attempted to mount his horse on the wrong side, and when he got off the animal's back could not possibly get up again ; w^ho fired at rooks and brought down the left arm of his friend, Mr. Tupman. By the professional way in which Mr. Skimpin badgers our sporting friend and rolls the badgering as a sweet morsel under his tongue, — the expression of his countenance denoting positive delight m the work before him, — one > i > > 3 » O THE TRIAL FEOM PICKWICK. 109 miglit believe tliat Dickens liad passed the greater part of his life in trying the law, or being tried by it. The scene wherein the little judge browbeats Winkle on the subject of the latter's name ought to be handed down to posterity ; but alas ! it never can be, and tliis is the worst of acting — and of posterity. Court " Have — you — any — Christian — name, sir ? " " Nathaniel, sir ? " Court. " Dan-iQl. Have — you — any — other — name ? " " ^Sithaniel, sir, — my lord, I mean." Court. " 'Nsi-thaniel Ban-iel, — or Dan-iel 'Nsithan- iel ? " "]N"o, my lord, only 'Ns^thaniel ; not Dan-iel at all, my lord. 'NeithanieV Court. " What — did — you — tell — me — it — was — Daniel for, then, sir ? " " I did n't, my lord." Court. " You — did — sir. How — could — I — pos- sibly — have — got — Daniel — on — my — notes — un- less — you — told me so, sir ? " The contrast between the flustered stammering of poor Winkle and the impenetrable infallibility of Justice Stareleigh, delivered in a slow, authoritative tone, as if founded on the Eock of Ages, is remarkable. Then Mr. Skimpin resumes his pleasant pastime, — which may be likened to a mental bull-fight, Mr. Skimpin being the triumphant bull engaged in goring Winkle, the inexpe- rienced matadore. 110 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. "0, you don't hnoiu the plaintiff, but you liave seen her ? Now will you please to tell the gentlemen of the jury what you mean by that, Mr. Winkle ? " After hearing Mr. Winkle's reply to this aggravating question, it is possible to believe that " even a worm will turn." Our sporting friend, as we all know, is not very combative, but wherever his combativeness may be situ- ated, the goring has at last reached it. Mr. Winkle does not assault Mr. Skimpin, — for under greater provocation it would be contrary to our friend's constitution to assault anybody, — but he does all that may become a Winkle. He writhes in the witness-box ; he grows so red in the face as to render his plaid neckerchief pale by compari- son, and is only saved from strangulation by finding vent for his feelings in the words, " God hless my soul ! I mean that I am not intimate with her, but that I have seen her when I went to call on Mr. Pickwick in Goswell Street." At this crisis Mr. Winlde is immensely satisfactory to his friends, yet he is almost as delightful when he endeavors to gulp down the confession that he did see Mrs. Bardell in Mr. Pickwick's arms, and did hear him ask " the good creature to compose herself." Mr. Winkle's attempt to swallow several of the most impli- cative words, which attempt is finally overwhelmed by a stern devotion to truth that draws out the facts with a species of mental corkscrew, leaves nothing more to be desired. At the close of this incomparable examination, Su- THE TRIAL FROM PICKWICK. Ill sannali Saunders,- " bosom-friend number two," performs her small part with credit to lierself and Mr. Saunders, after which Sergeant Buzfuz rises to the occasion and cries out, " Call Samuel AVeller ! " If conclusions may be drawn from the applause that greets this announcement, there never was so universal a favorite as Samuel Weller. Everybody looks intensely pleased and everybody settles himself as if saying, " Now I shall enjoy myself more than I ever did in my life." Is it strange that many are disappointed ? Almost every- body has a pet theory with regard to Sam Weller, and no two of these innumerable theories agree. Surely, then, it is not astonishing that Dickens's interpretation fails to satisfy unreasonable expectations. People look upon Sam as neither fish, flesh, nor fowl ; as some lusus natiirm to be impossibly portrayed. Dickens's Sam Weller is a human being, very like other human beings belonging to the same profession. Sam has com- paratively little to do in court, yet he is expected to crowd his entire life into a few sentences, that, from the very nature of the case, must be delivered quietly and with sly rather than boisterous humor. Sam never is boisterous, however. If ever there was a cool, self-^Dos- sessed individual with a supreme contempt for people who, like Weller Senior, are given to explosions of mirth, it is Sam. It does not necessarily follow, because Dickens has created Sam, that he is therefore most competent to delineate him.- Shakespeare never soared higher than 112 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. the Gliost in " Hamlet," and the impression left upon posterity is that he was a better manager than actor. Lee read his dramatic works like an angel ; iDiit when he strode the stage, the angel became a walking-stick. Sheridan Knowles was a shocking bad actor. But Dickens is so saturated with dramatic ideas, and em- bodies these ideas so well, as to render it safe to declare him the best judge of Sam's nature. If Americans were Englishmen, they would see the truthfulness of this por- traiture. But nothing in the world can save Sam from being entirely eclipsed by Justice Stareleigh. "Little to do and plenty to get, I suppose," exclaims Sergeant Buzfuz, referring to Sam's situation with Mr. Pickwick. " 0, quite enough to get, sir, as the soldier said ven they ordered him three hundred and fifty lashes." Court- " You - must - not - tell-us-what-the-sol-dier-said. The-evi-dence-of-that-sol-clier-can-not-he-received-unless-tliat -soldieT-is-in-court,-and-is-ex-am-ined-in-the-usual-way'* The little judge covers himself with a second coat of glory, and the text furnishes Sam with no opportunity to establish his superiority over the most stupid and learned bigwig. As before intimated, Sam's best chance of being as slyly funny as he can be is in the expurgated ques- tion, " Would any other gen'l'man like to ask me any- thin' ? " By restoring it, and by illustrating how Sam retires from the witness-box, Dickens might add another green leaf to his laurels. THE TEIAL FROM PICKWICK. 113 No one is disappointed in Tony Weller, because Tony Weller's most remarkable characteristics are his " hoarse voice, like some strange effort of ventriloquism/' "the extreme tip of a very rubicund nose/' " an underdone roast-beef complexion/' and an .unbounded stomach. Con- sequently Tony Weller has but to open his mouth to stand before us in his full proportions ; that is, when Dickens assumes the role. His exclamation, " Quite right too, Samivel, quite right. Put it down a we, my lord, jput it dovjn a ive ! " takes the audience by storm, the author's identification with the character being com- plete. He not only talks like Tony, but, expanding under the influence of beer and countless wrappers, he suggests the immortal stage-driver's personnel ; and when the trial is over, and Tony Weller moralizes over it, saying, " I know'd what 'ud come o' this here way o' doin' bisniss. Samivel, Samivel, vy warnH there a alley hi ! " it seems hardly possible that the slight, energetic man, who, a moment later, walks briskly off the stage, can have pro- duced so perfect an illusion. 114 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S EEADINGS. MRS. GAMP. rriHERE still live Americans who, forgetting the con- dition of tliis country thirty years ago, insist upon taking their Dickens with a difference. But, young as we still are, — for we have not yet shed our sophomoric skin, — I do not believe there is an American " erect upon two legs " who is capable of writing a book as " a just retaliation" upon English criticism of these thoroughly pure and perfect United States. There once did live such a being. In 1837 one "Ml Admirari, Esq.," felt himself called upon to resent foreign insult in " a satire " entitled " The Trollopiad ; or. Travelling Gentleman in America." It is a sorry satire, yet it points a moral of such homely use as to be worthy of resuscitation to the extent of a few lines of " verse " that now pass for some- thing worse. ** Ingenious Trollope ! name forever dear, Well known at home, but quite notorious here ; To you, as first and foremost in the band, 1 bow my obsequious head and kiss ony hand ! 0, smoothly — softly, flows this verse of mine, So sweet a name should gi'ace a lay divine. Yield up the palm, ye scribblers great and small, Faux — Fearon — Fiddler — Stuart — Captain Hall, Behold your chief." MKS. GAMP. 115 Fanny Wright is vituperously annihilated as " brawling Fanny," and Fanny Kemble, the woman whom we are all pleased to honor, is impaled through pages of invec- tive. *' Since truth must out ; in vain the truth we fly, "We * can't be silent,' and *\ve will not lie.' When known Initials meet the public gaze, And Fanny's pointless chatter sues for praise, The rising voice of censure wherefore hush ? For cheeks no longer conscious of a blush." This is American susceptibility thirty years ago ; and although when, five years later, " American Notes " were put in circulation, and were succeeded by " Martin Chuz- zlewit," the indignation of no Nil Admirari, Esq., rose to the lofty height of a book, the press and people shrieked with rage, and Charles Dickens was more roundly rated than ever man or woman can be again, thank Heaven ! It was foolish, unnecessary rage, that reflected discredit upon this country without in any way injuring Dickens. It was foolish, because it was childish ; it was unneces- sary, because, under the most aggravated circumstances, such an exposition is beneath the dignity of a self-re- specting people. No impartial, clear-headed reader of the present gen- eration can lash himself into a fury over the "American Notes." He is amazed that anybody ever did become infuriated, and closes the book with a feeling of agreeable disappointment. For myself, I honor Dickens for speak- 116 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. ing the Triitli ! He did not come to America as a politi- cal economist, and therefore did not attempt to deal in profundities after the manner of De Tocqueville. He reported society as he saw it, knowing full well the con- sequences it entailed, yet knowing also, as he then said, " that what I have set down in these pages cannot cost me a single friend on the other side of the Atlantic who is in anything deserving of the name. For the rest, I put my trust implicitly in the spirit in which they have been conceived and penned ; and I can bide my time." That time has arrived, and when George William Curtis spoke for himself at the dinner given to Dickens by the New York Press, he spoke for the majority of his countrymen : — " Fidelity to his own observation is all that we can ask of any reporter. However grateful he may be for our hos- pitality, we cannot insist that he shall pour our cham- pagne into his eyes so that he cannot see, nor stuff our j)udding into his ears so that he cannot hear. Dickens was obliged to hear and see and report many things that were not pleasant nor flattering. It is the fate of all reporters. I do not remember that those very competent observers, Mr. Emerson and Mr. Hawthorne, whom we sent to England, represented that country as altogether a paradise and John Bull as a saint without blemish. They told a great "deal of truth about England, as it seems to me our friend told a great many wholesome and valuable truths about us. JSTaturally we did not find every part of his report very entertaining ; but neither, I suppose, did Lord MES. GAMP. 117 Dedlock find " Bleak House " very amusing, and I am sure tliat to tliis day neither Sergeant Buzfuz nor the Lord Chief-Justice Stareleigh have ever been able to find the least fun in Pickwick. For my undivided thirty-millionth part of the population, I thank the reporter with all • my heart ; and I do not forget that if his touch, like the ray of a detective's lantern, sparkled for a moment upon some of our defects, the full splendor of its light has been always turned upon the sins and follies of his own country." I honor Dickens most especially for daring to enter his solemn and indignant protest against the great wrong that in those distant days spread its virus over all the land, and made America a republic but in name. The wrong now righted, our flag is no longer a caricature on liberty. So to-day, conscious that we can look Europe in the face without danger of being upbraided for a na- tional sin, wiser in head, calmer in temper, and with more regard for the amenities of life, we accept the " American N"otes " as a record of a past to which we can never return, and agree with Lord Francis Jeffrey in the estimate which he made of the book in a letter that I cannot forego transplanting to American soil. "Craigcrook, 16tli October, 1842. " My dear Dickens, — " A thousand thanks to you for your charming book, and for all the pleasure, profit, and relief it has afforded me. You have been very tender to our sensitive friends beyond sea, and really said nothing which should give 118 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. serious offence to any moderately rational patriot among them. The slavers, of course, will give you no quarter; and I suppose you did not expect they should [sic\. But I do not think you could have said less ; and my whole heart goes along with every word you have writ- ten. Some people will be angry, too, that you have been so strict to observe their spitting, and neglect of ablutions, &c. And more, that you should have spoken with so little reverence of their courts of law and State legisla- ture, and even of their grand Congress itself But all this latter part is done in such a spirit of good-humored playfulness, and so mixed up with clear intimations, that you have quite as little veneration for things of the same sort at home, that it will not be easy to represent it as the fruit of English insolence and envy. "As to the rest, I think you have perfectly accom- plished all that you profess or undertake to do, and that the world has never yet seen a more faithful, graphic, amusing, kind-hearted narrative than you have now be- stowed on it. Always graceful and lively and sparkling and indulgent, and yet relieved, or rather (in the French sense of the word) exalted, by so many suggestions of deep thought, and so many touches of tender and generous sympathy (caught at once, and recognized like the signs of Freemasonry by all whose hearts have been instructed in these mysteries), that it must be our own fault if we are not as much improved as delighted by the perusal. Your account of the silent or solitary imprisonment MRS. GAMP. 119 system is as pathetic and powerful a piece of Avriting as I have ever seen ; and your sweet, airy little snatch of the happy little woman taking her new babe home to her young husband, and your manly and feeling appeal in behalf of the poor Irish (or rather of the affectionate poor of all races and tongues), who are patient and tender to their children mider circumstances which would make half the exemplary parents among the rich monsters of selfishness and discontent, remind us that we have still among us the creator of Nelly and Smike, and the school- master, and his dying pupil, &c., and must continue to win for you still more of that homage of the heart, that love and esteem of the just and the good, wdiich, though it should never be disjoined from them, I think you must already feel to be better than fortune or fame. "Well, I have no doubt your three thousand copies will be sold in a week, and I hope you will tell me that they have put £ 1,000 at least into your pocket. Many people will say that the work is a slight one, and say it, perhaps, truly ; but everybody will read it, and read it with pleasure to themselves and growing regard for the author. More — and perhaps with hetter reason, for I am myself in the number — will think there is rather too much of Laura Bridgman and penitentiaries, &c., in general But that, I believe, is chiefly because we grudge being so long parted from the personal presence of our entertainer, as we are by these interludes, and therefore we hope to be forgiven by him." 120 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. As for certain American portraits painted in " Martin Cliuzzlewit/' I sliould as soon think of objecting to them as I should think of objecting to any other discovery in natural history. To deny the existence of Elijah Pogram, Jefferson Brick, Colonel Diver, Mrs. Hominy, and Miss Codger, is to deny facts, somewhat exaggerated, that are potent to any keen observer who has ever travelled through the United States. The character of Elijah Pogram is so well known as to constantly figure in the world of illustration, and w^e can well afford to laugh at foibles of native growth when Dickens devotes the greater part of this same novel to the exposition of Eng- lish vice and selfishness. But if ever Americans thoudit they had reason to feel aggrieved, the night of the 18th of April, 1868, closed the old w^ound forever. Frank, gen- erous, and just, every inch the man we beheve him to be, he stood up before the Press of New York and pledged his manhood in these memorable words : " I henceforth charge myself, not only here but on every suitable occa- sion, whatsoever and wheresoever, to express my high and grateful sense of my second reception in America, and to bear my honest testimony to the national generosity and magnanimity. Also, to declare how astounded I have been by the amazing changes that I have seen around me on every side, — changes moral, changes physical, changes in the amount of land subdued and cultivated, changes in the rise of vast new cities, changes in the growth of older cities almost out of recognition, changes in the growth of MRS. GAMP. 121 the graces and amenities of life, changes in the press, without whose advancement no advancement can take place anywhere. 'Nov am I, belie^^e me, so arrogant as to suppose that in five-and- twenty years there have been no changes in me, and that I had nothing to learn and no extreme impressions to correct when I was here first. .... What I have intended, what I have resolved upon, is, on my return to England, in my o^vn Englisli journal, manfully, promptly, plainly, in my own person, to bear, for the behoof of my countrymen, such testimony to the gigantic changes in this country as I have hinted at to- night. Also, to record that wherever I have been, in the smallest places equally with tlie largest, I have been re- ceived with unsurpassable politeness, delicacy, sweet tem- per, hospitality, and consideration, and with unsurpass- able respect for the privacy daily enforced upon me by the nature of my avocation here and the state of my health. This testimony, so long as I live, and so long as my de- scendants have any legal right in my books, I shall cause to be republished, as an appendix, to every copy of those two books of mine in which I have referred to America. And this I will do and cause to be done, not in mere love and thankfulness, but because I regard it as an act of plain justice and honor." AAHiat more can the most ram- pant patriot demand of Dickens ? Who is there that can henceforth refuse to do justice to his manhood, if not to his art ? I may be accused of having wandered far away from the 6 122 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. heading of this chapter, and yet how can any of ns think of Mrs. Gamp without first recaUing Martin Chuzzlewit ? and how can the mind dwell upon Martin Chuzzlewit without reviving memories of the "American Notes"? It seems to me that at the present time such a digression is most pardonable, as it brings America and Charles Dick- ens face to face, and leaves them shaking hands in great good-humor. AVhen Sam Weller concluded the valentine which he ^vrote to the young lady whom he regarded with a favor- able eye, he remarked to his father, " She '11 vish there vos more, and that 's the great art o' letter-^\Titin'." In his reading of Mrs. Gamp, Dickens seems to act upon this Wellerian principle, for we most certainly wish there was more, and look upon it as an aggravation.' To be deprived of an introduction to Mrs. Todgers and her Com- mercial Boarding-House ; not to hear the sound of Mark Tai)ley's voice ; not to listen to Elijah Pogram as he ex- claims, "Our fellow-countrymen is a model of a man, quite fresh from N"ature's mould! He is a true-born child of this free hemisphere ! Verdant as the mountains of our country ; bright and flowing as our mineral Licks, unspiled by withering conventionalities as air our broad and boundless Perearers ! Hough he may be, so air our Barrs. AVild he may be, so air our Buffalers. But he is a child of ISTatur', and a child of Freedom ; and his boast- ful answer to the Despot and the Tyi\ant is, that his briglit home is in the Settin' Sun " ; — not to witness the presen- MRS. GAMP. 12 o tation of Miss Toppit and Miss Codger to the honorable Pogram, and hear tlieir eloquent outpourings on that thrilling occasion, — " To be presented to a Pogram by a Hominy, indeed, a thrilling moment is it in its impressive- ness on what we call our feelings. But why we call them so, or why impressed they are, or if impressed they are at all, or if at all we are, or if there really is, gasp- ing one ! a Pogram or a Hominy, or any active principle, to which we give those titles, is a topic, Spirit searching, light abandoned, much too vast to enter on at this un- looked-for crisis." "Mind and matter glide swift into tlie vortex of immensity. Howls the sublime, and softly sleeps the calm Ideal, in the whispering chambers of Imagination. To hear it, sweet it is. But then, out laughs the stern philosopher, and saith to the Grotesque, What ho ! arrest for me that Agencj. Go bring it here ! and so the vision fadeth." — To be deprived of all these inalienable rights, I repeat, is bad enough, but when Mrs. Gamp's identical self is presented to us in a mangled condition, we are impelled to expostulate seriously. Mrs. Gamp is seen in sections. Large slices having been taken out of her, she is put together again so deftly as to look like quite a good-sized individual, but those of us who " know her for our own " perceive that she has been " led a martlia to the stakes " of inexorable time's decrees, and that her garrulous tongue has been so reefed as to carry but half sail. Such liberties are " Bra- gian boldness," and quite sufiicient to draw tears from 124 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS's READINGS. Mrs. Harris's eyes ; l:)ut by Mrs. Gamp's own confession her " constitoosliun " is made of Bricks, and therefore is capable of untold endurance. Besides, Mrs. Gamp is re- ligiously submissive, as she herself confesses. " We gives no trust ourselves, and puts a deal o' trust elsevere ; these is our religious feelin's, and we finds 'em answer." And Mrs. Harris also will take comfort, for "seech is life. Vich like ways is the hend of all things ! " N"evertheless, even in the form of a pasticcio, Mrs. Gamp is exceedingly palatable, for no one knows better than Dickens what ingredients to put into a pasticcio, or how to cook it. Taking that portion of Mrs. Gamp which is to be found in the beginning of the nineteenth chapter of " Martin Chuzzlewit," where this celebrated lady is first brought before the public, the feast is not permitted to be a movable one, but, by extracting a speech here and a speech there, and by addressing con- versations to different characters from those in the novel, the entire scene is made to transpire at the house of Jonas Chuzzlewit. The episodes, the dialogues, are well chosen, — nothing could be better, — until the closing scene, when the human mind revolts at a gross injustice to Mrs. Gamp, and her great contemporary, Betsey Prig. It was not to be expected from the very nature of the case that the whole of the immortal forty-ninth chapter, " in which Mrs. Harris, assisted by a tea-pot, is the cause of a division between friends," should have been added to Mrs. Gamp's remains at the Chuzzlewit mansion ; but it MRS. GAMP. 125 was to be expected, in bringing Mrs. Gamp to a conclu- sion by the introduction of lier difference with Betsey Prig, that the finale of this difference would be given in its entirety. Wliat disappoints in Mrs. Gamp is the ab- sence of a climax. It is the only one of Dickens's Eead- ings that is not thoroughly worked up. Extreme length cannot be advanced as a plea, because Mrs. Gamp is provokingly short. Indeed, it may be truthfully claimed of her that she is as broad as she is long. *' Man needs but little here below," But *' needs that little " strong. "^0 one is better acquainted with this universal law than Dickens. Yet in the face of what Mrs. Gamp would call a " mortar," he concludes his Eeading with this brief extract from the Battle of the Tea-Pot : " ' Mrs. Harris, Betsey — ' "'Bother Mrs. Harris!' " Mrs. Gamp looked at Betsey with amazement, incre- dulity, and indignation. Mrs. Prig, winking her eye tighter, folded her arms and uttered these tremendous words : — " ' I don't believe there 's no sich a person ! ' " With these expressions, she snapped her fingers once, twice, thrice, each time nearer to the face of Mrs. Gamp, and then turned away as one who felt that there was now a gulf between them wliich nothing could ever bridge across." 126 PEX PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S EEADINGS. Fancy the liardness of a heart that can steel itself against the Gampian exclamation, "Who cleniges of it, Betsey ? Betsey, who deniges of it ? " when the tone of that exclamation might have been everlastingly em- balmed in our memories ! Think of the mental deprav- ity which ignores that solemn injunction, " E'o, Betsey ! Drink fair, wotever you do ! " — that turns its meta- phorical back upon the sage proverb, " We never knows wot 's hidden in each other's 'arts ; and if we had glass winders there, we 'd need to keep the shutters up, some on us, I do assure you." Finally, — and this is the rank offence, — think of the inhumanity of an author who puts aside so touching and recriminating a peroration as the following : " Tlie words Betsey Prig spoke of Mrs. Harris, lambs could not forgive. No, Betsey, nor worms forget ! .... Betsey Prig, wot wickedness you 've showed this niglit, but never shall you darken Sairey's doors agen, you twining serpiant 1 " With this pero- ration all the other reefs in the Gampian sails might have been overlooked ; without it, we *' will fight witli liim upon this theme TJntir our 'eyelids will no longer wag," " Her name was Gamp." What the philosophy of the fact may be I am not prepared to state under oath ; but it is a fact, that, of all the characters brought before the public by Dickens, at liis Headings in America, but two have had what, on the stage, is called a "reception." MRS. GAMP. 127 These are Sam Weller and Mrs. Gamp, the first mention of either name being sufficient to evoke a round of ap- plause. Why Sam Weller should be hailed with demon- strations of regard is obvious enough; but why Sairey Gamp should be honored above the good, the true, and the brave, is almost as great a mystery as the existence of Mrs. Harris herself. For Sairey Gamp is not beautiful to sight, or sound, or sense of smell. She takes snufip ex- ternally as well as internally ; she wears a rusty black gown and a red, swollen nose, and is irretrievably given over to cant and lying. What, then, is the secret of her immense popularity ? If I am not mistaken, the a23- plause that greets her name is the homage man pays to mother-wit as wit, regardless of its tenor. Man, in a sympathetic state of culture, can no more help appre- ciating humor than he can help being born. I^ow Sairey Gamp is a delightful old wretch because her mother-wit leads her into labyrinthine humor, the virtue of which lies in its unconsciousness, and the end of which is ar- rived at by means of a special providence. " // imrait qyCdU fait cU la ^jrose sans Ic savoir!' "Wlien Sairey Gamp once begins to talk, there seems to be no good reason why she should ever stop ; but she does stop, and always at the proper time. Some people who never wish to give credit where credit is due, insist that this is entirely owing to Dickens, who reports only so much of her conversation as suits his purpose ; but / believe that Mrs. Gamp is a spiritual medium, in more ways 128 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. than one, and speaks when the spirit moves. Hers, too, is satisfactory hypocrisy. It is no " huge translation," but, like her false curls, so visible to the naked eye as to " be innocent of deception." She is her own signboard, and points in the direction in which she is sure to go. And, after all, Mrs. Gamp is not without sympathies ; she does go down to see poor Mrs. Jonas Chuzzlewit off on that " Confusion steamer," the " Ankworks package," and de- livers a feeling oration. Human nature is very much according to circumstances, and, did we occupy Mrs. Gamp's position in life, it is quite possible that we might look upon death and disease from a purely com- mercial point of view, and heartily sympathize with the nurse as she wishes Betsey Prig "lots o' sickness, my darlin' creetur ; . . . . and may our next meetin' be at a large family's, where they takes it reg'lar, one from another, turn and turn about, and has it business-like." When Mr. Pecksniff applies himself to the knocker of Mrs. Gamp's front door in ELingsgate Street, High Hol- born, and the neighborhood becomes " alim with female heads," Dickens's eyes are so distended at the extraordi- nary spectacle as to remove all doubt as to the possibility of such a commotion. When these ladies cry out with one accord, in a peculiarly anxious and feminine voice, " Knock at tlie winder, sir, knock at the winder. Lord bless you, don't lose no more time than you can help, — - knock at the winder," the evidence is conclusive. The street is alive with married ladies, and they cry aloud MRS. GAMP. 129 " as one man." There is the lady of measured medium voice and scrutinizing eye, who mentally sketches Mr. Pecksniff, and observes, "He's as pale as a muffin." There is the lady of nervous-sanguine temperament, who quickly retorts with a toss of the head, " so he ought to be, if he 's the feelings of a man." There is the lady of a melancholy turn of mind and cast of countenance, the born victim of circumstances, who sees in Mr. Pecksniff her unrelenting Nemesis, and in a dejected but just-what- Avas-to-be-expected tone of voice remarks that " it always happened so with liery The three types of character are defined with photographic accuracy. The old motto " Life is short and Art is long " finds no exemplification in Dickens. He so fully appreciates human exigencies as, by a graphic short-hand of his own, to bring a vast deal of art within the boundaries of no time at all. Thus when Mrs. Gamp's dulcet voice is heard for the first time in answer to Mr. Pecksniff's raid upon the flower -pots, and she replies, " I 'm a-comin'," Mrs. Gamp is her " indi- wig'le " self. The recognition is immediate, and the ap- plause enthusiastic. Were Dickens nothing more than a voice, this most expressive she would still live, for it is such a voice ! Take a comb, cover it with tissue paper, and attempt to sing through it, and you have an admira- ble idea of the quality of Mrs. Gamp's vocal organ, pro- vided you make the proper allowance for an inordinate use of snuff. Mrs. Gamp in the distance behind her flower-pots is — 6* I 130 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. Mrs. Gamp ; but when she throws open the window and exclaims, " Is it Mrs. Perkins ? " eye as well as ear ac- knowledges an unswerving faith in her identity. Mr. Pecksniff repudiates the Perkinsian theory, whereupon Mrs. Gamp again draws upon her imagination in the ex- clamation, " What, Mr. Whilks I Don't say it 's you, Mr. Whilks, and that poor creetur Mrs. Whilks with not even a pincushion ready. Don't say it 's you, Mr. Whilks ! " I have said that Mrs. Gamp exclaims. It is a mistake. This pride of her sex never exclaims. There is an intel- lectual ponderosity about her that renders an exclamation impossible. She carries too much ballast in the guise of that ale known as " Brighton old tipper," likewise of " gin- and- water, ?/j«:rm," to give way to anything like impulse. The exclamation of ordinary mortality is with her a good solid period. She scorns staccato passages, and her vocal- ization may be said to be confined to the use of semi- breves, on which she lingers as if desirous of developing her voice by what is technically known as " swelling." She holds all notions of light and shade in contempt, and with monotonous cadence produces effects upon her hear- ers undreamed of by her readers. " It is n't Mr. Whilks. It 's nothing, of Mr. Whilks's sort," responds Mr. Pecksniff, somewhat testily. It is very funny, but Dickens is not Mr. Pecksniff. We do not " behold the moral Pecksniff." Dickens's throat is not moral, nor does his collar say, " There is no deception, ladies and gentlemen, all is peace ; a holy calm pervades ]VIES. GAIUP. 131 me." His hair does not stand bolt upriglit, nor are his eyelids heavy, nor is his person sleek, nor is his manner soft and oily. .It must be allowed that Mr. Pecksniff is hardly more than a supernumerary in this serio-comic afterpiece, but Dickens always treats supernumeraries with distinguished consideration, and with him we are nothing if not critical. The old bookkeeper Cliuffey, on the contrary, who is seen and heard but once, stands out vividly. " My old master died at threescore and ten, — ought and carry seven. Some men are so strong that they live to fourscore — four times ought 's an ought, four times two 's an eight — eighty. Oh ! why — why — why — did n't he live to four times ought 's an ought, and four times two 's an eight — eighty ? Why did he die before his poor old crazy servant ! Take him from me, and what remains ? I loved him. He was good to me. I took him down once, eight boys in the arithmetic class at school. 0, God forgive me ! Had I the heart to take him doAvn ! " The fine " points " of this short mono- logue are seized by Dickens. The picture of the meek, heart-broken, maundering, faithful servant, with decrepit figure, quavering voice, and trembling hands,'^ whose rul- ing passion is strong even in the presence of death, and who can only calculate gTief as an arithmetical problem, is painted in natural colors; nor is there exaggeration in the drawing. No less clever is the suggestive sketch of Jonas Chuzzlewit. " There is n't any one you 'd like to ask to the funeral, is there, Pecksniff ? . . , . Because if 132 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. there is, you know, ash him. "We don't want to make a secret of it We 'II have the doctor, Pecksniff, because he knows what was the matter with my father, and that it could n't be helped." With nervous manner, twitching fingers, and with terror written upon his face, the bully- ing coward, now bullied by his own conscience, gasps rather than speaks in a hoarse voice, laying his hand to his throat as if ready to choke down tell-tale words, should any inadvertently escape his lips. Dickens may not be able to look like a Pecksniffian hypocrite, but he certainly can look like a murderer. Dickens is not as successful in the slight character of Mr. Mould, because of Mr. Mould's strong resemblance to Mr. Micawber. The little bald undertaker is very highly tinctured with the essence of the incomparable Wilkins, and although the essence is in itself good, nevertheless, when employed as a flavoi:ing extract, it fails to perform its earthly mission. There is undoubtedly something Micawberish in the vast importance of Mr. Mould's manner, but Mr. Mould is too excellent a character not to be originally delineated. Dickens's Mr. Mould is a very amusing person, — especially when, turning to Mr. Peck- sniff, he says in an aside, " Very shrewd woman, Mr. Pecksniff, sir," referring to Mrs. Gamp. " Woman whose intellect is immensely superior to her station in life ; sort of woman one would really almost feel disposed to bury for nothing, and do it neatly, too," — but Mr. Mould can > i i o • 4 » 3 » 5« ' SAIREY GAMP AND BETSEY PRIG. MRS. GAMP. 133 never hang in the Dickens Portrait Gallery. " C'est magni- fique, mais ce nest ]pas la guerre!' IS'or, alas ! can we ever see there the classic features of Betsey Prig. The outline drawn by Dickens is not the " counterfeit presentment/' but a hasty limning, executed apparently without any careful study of the original. This is the only theory upon which the absence of a speaking likeness can be accounted for. Mrs. Prig has " a gruff voice and a beard/' — a mannish voice, if you like, — but is not " a man for a' that " ; and as the author of her being depicts this " interesting lady," she is superlatively a man. It does not for an instant occur to us that Dickens is anybody but Dickens in a demoralized con- dition of mind and countenance. There is no illusion, and notwithstanding that " the best of creeturs " bothers Mrs. Harris, assumes an attitude of defiance, winks her eye, declares ''there's no sich a person," and snaps her fingers in Mrs. Gamp's face, it is not the Mrs. Prig we have known these many years. With Beau Brummel's unaccomplished neckties, this present portrait must be recorded as among " our failures," — a failure that were easily retrieved did the artist pose his model carefully ahcl begin on a new canvas. Should he do so, may he not forget to introduce a " cowcumber." " Nous revenoiis tou jours a nos premiers amours" and Mrs. Gamp so generously overflows the measure of our content as to soften the heart toward her professional partner. " And so the gentleman 's dead, sir ! Ah ! The 134 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. more's the pity. But it's what we must all come to. It 's as certain as being born, except that we can't make our calkilations as exact. Ah I Poor clear ! " Mrs. Gamp's "All's," like Mr. Mould's coffins, are ready- made to suit all customers, and are as long or as short as circumstances require. Sighs become the lady's sta- tion in life. ""When time shall serve, there shall be smiles," and whenever Mrs. Gamp sighs, she smiles in obedience to Shakespeare's text. The expression of her glowing face at this juncture defies language, however live, par- ticularly as she remarks to Mrs. Harris, with a pendulum wag to her head in the teinpo of a funeral march, " If I could possible afford to lay all my feller-creieturs out for notJmik, I would gladly do it, sich is the love I hears 'em." Dore in his best manner, which was years ago, could not have been more grotesque than Dickens is, when Mrs. Gamp's " half a pint o' porter fully satisfies ; perwisin', Mrs. Harris, which I makes confession, that it is brought regular, and dravhl mild." Like the warrior's charger, she smells, not the battle, but the bottle afar off, and her whole spiritual nature expands under the genial influence. " She would infect the north-star." But there are chords in Mrs. Gamp's heart that porter cannot reach. Those chords are only touched when Mrs. Gamp a2:)pears in the beautiful character of wife and m.other. " The blessings of a daughter was deniged me," MES. GAM?. 135 slie informs IMr. ]\Ioiild witli a maternal tremolo in her voice, " which if we had had one, Gamp would certainly have drunk its little shoes right off its feet, as with our pregious boy he did, and aterwards send the child a errand, to sell his wooden leg for any liquor it would fedge as matches in the rough ; which was truly done be- yond his years, for ev'ry individgle penny that child lost at tossing for kidney-pies, and come home aterwards quite sweet and bold, to break the news, and offering to drown himself if sech would be a satisfagion to his parents." Mrs. Gamp may not speak the Queen's Eng- lish in obedience to royal commands ; but the sublimity of her ignorance raises . her so far above the rules regu- lating ordinary humanity as to render her conversation infinitely superior to that of the schools. A little learn- ing is not only dangerous but stupid ; whereas a great deal of human nature " in the rough," carries a force that bigwigs confess while they condemn. What flight of rhetoric, for example, can equal Mrs. Gamp's reply to Mrs. Harris's " awful " question, " Sairey, tell me wot is my individgle number ? " referring to family extension. " No, Mrs. Harris, e^^-cuge me, if you please. My own family has fallen out of three-pair backs, and has had damp doorsteps settled on their lungs, and one ivas turned wp smilivJ in a bedstead iinheknoiun!' (Here Mrs. Gamp suits the action to the word and smiles the smile of confiding youth and innocence. Its appeal is irresisti- ble, and we rather wish Vesuvius were conveniently 136 PEN PHOTOGRAPHS OF DICKENS'S READINGS. near, and would repeat, in a small way, its dramatic per- formance entitled " Pompeii," that we might possess a cast in lava of an extraordinary countenance.) " There- fore, ma'am, seek not to protigipate, but take 'em as they come and as they go. Mine is all gone, my dear young chick. And as to husbands, tlierc 's a loooden leg gone likewise home to its account, which in its constangy of vxdh- ing into iniblic- ouses, and never coming out again till f edged hy forge, ivas quite as lucak as flesh, if not tueake7\" (Could a constant stream of molten lava play over Mrs. Gamp's features, and by this peculiar form of douche- bath obtain her lasting impression, it would be better still.) As that wooden leg goes home to its account, the bereaved widow follows its translation with moist up- turned eyes, while her reference to its superiority in weakness over flesh, is made in tones that carry enthusi- astic conviction"* to the greatest sceptics. After this insight into Mrs. Gamp's domestic relations, it does not seem strange that the thrifty relict should have " dis- posed of her husband's remains " — particularly the wooden leg — " for the benefit of science." Lastly, Mrs. Gamp is a philosopher, and shines as brightly in tliis capacity as in all others. She is a pro- verbial philosoj)her and brings wisdom to a focus in fewer words than many another of greater repute. There is a sibylline tendency in her look as she ecstatically gazes toward heaven and speaks of " this Pilgian's Progiss of a mortal wale," giving as her text for the sermon of life. MRS. GAMP. 137 " You ought to know that you was born in a wale, and that you live in a wale, and that you must take the con- sequences of sich a sitivation." Thus is the whole ground of existence covered. Misery can find no greater consolation unless it hug itself with the equally incon- trovertible Gampian proverb that " Eich folks may ride on camels, but it ain't so easy for them to see out of a needle's eye. That 's my comfort, and I hope I knows it." Soothed by these reflections, we take the conse- quences of our situation, and depart in peace as Mrs. Gamp withdraws from view. FAREWELL. " Should we be taking leave As long a term as yet we have to live, The loathness to depart would grow." " /^THELLO'S occupation's gone." The last reading ^^ has been heard ; the last photograph lias been taken, and the camera-obscnra, which has done its work so im- perfectly, is put aside. There is nothing left, alas ! but leave-taking, and for the last time we sit in Boston's Tremont Temple to listen to the voice that has swayed ns to smiles and tears so many, many nights. Crowded to its utmost capacity, the brilliant hall might be called, in honor of Mrs. Fezziwig, " one vast substantial smile," were it not for the clouds flitting over sunny faces at thought of the fleeting pleasure. There is a cordial warmth in the atmosphere, for the audience has been mag- netized into perfect sympathy and feels how good it is to be bound together by a common interest. The Eeading- Stand wears an unaccustomed look, concealed as it is by a Florentine mosaic of nature's making. Eoses, full blown, blossoming, and of every hue, — roses without thorns, — breathe their silent language of love ; the he- FAEEWELL. 139 liotrope proclaims devoted attacliment ; " violets dim " grow bold to catch a glimpse of the hero of the night ; imperial lilies bow their graceful heads in homage ; the palm-leaf, flower-laden, tells the story of a hundred vic- tories ; " And there are pansies, that 's for thoughts," which rear their little smiling heads that they may whis- per in genial Boz's ear the words, " Forget me not." We shall not forget the hearty welcome that greets the entrance of Charles Dickens, nor will he forget this red-letter night, the 8th of April, 1868. The reception, so full of tenderness and regard, steals away the art- ist's self-possession, and lays bare the emotion of the man. Looking at his new friends, that do not applaud and yet dare encroach upon his stand, Charles Dickens says : " Before allowing Doctor Marigold to tell his story in his own peculiar way, I kiss the kind, fair hands un- known, which have so beautifully decorated my table this evening." This graceful, characteristic acknowledgment brings speaker and audience still nearer, and the " hands unknown " wish the path, as well as the table, Avere strewn with flowers. Then follaws the story of " Doctor Marigold," never better told, never heard with more re- sponsive appreciation. The story is well chosen, for the marigold is "the flower of the calends" that blossoms the whole year and symbolizes grief, yet turns towards the sun as it speeds from east to west. However, the good Doctor's grief merges itself in joy, and so does ours 140 FAEEWELL. while Mrs. Gamp discourses ; but Mrs. Gamp is a fleeting shadow, and we stand at last in the presence of that grim skeleton, Farewell. It is in vain for- Charles Dickens to attempt to retire. Persistent hands demand " one word more." Eeturning to his desk, pale, with a tear in his eye, that finds its way to his voice, Charles Dickens speaks. "Ladies and Gentlemen, — My gracious and gener- ous welcome in America, which can never be obliterated from my remembrance, began here. My departure be- gins here too ; for I assure you that I have never until this moment really felt that I am going away. In this brief life of ours it is sad to do almost anything for the last time, and I cannot conceal from you, although my face will so soon be turned towards my native land and to all that makes it dear, that it is a sad consideration with me that in a very few moments from this time this brilliant hall and all that it contains will fade from my view forevermore. But it is my consolation that the spirit of the bright faces, the quick perception, the ready response, the generous and the cheering sounds that have made this place delightful to me, will remain ; and you may rely upon it that that spirit will abide with me as long as I have sense and sentiment left. " I do not say this with any limited reference to private friendships that have for years upon years made Boston a memorable and beloved spot to me, for sucli private refer- ences have no business in this public place. I say it purely in remembrance of, and in homage to, the great public heart before me. FAEEWELL. 141 "Ladies and Gentlemen, I beg most earnestly, most gratefully, and most affectionately to bid you eacli and all farewell." " Forevermore!' We seem to hear a funeral knell. The sad, earnest words, so exquisitely spoken that they are set aside as never to be equalled, go straight to every heart, and when " farewell " is said, there 's not an eye in the vast assemblao^e that does not o'listen, there 's not a face that does not reflect the hour's solemnity. Yet cheer after cheer resounds through the hall, hats go up_, and fluttering handkerchiefs wave in the air, until Charles Dickens, fearing " the little more " that is too much for fortitude, passes out of Boston's sight. The good, true Commonwealth has taken Charles Dickens to its good, true heart, and there will his memory abide /crevermore. We follow Boz to !N"ew York, and on the 20th of April witness the " last scene of all." Suffering physically, sit- ting, not standing, Charles Dickens goes through the final ordeal, reading " The Christmas Carol," and " The Pick- wick Trial " well, although but half himself, ^N^ew York pays floral tribute as well as Boston ; ]^ew York applauds, and then comes the second leave-taking : — " Ladies and Gentlemen, — The shadow of one word has impended over me all this evening, and the time has come at last when the shadow must fall. It is but a very short one, but the weight of such things is not measured by their length; and two much shorter words express 142 FAREWELL. the whole realm of our human existence. "When I was reading ^ David Copperfield ' here last Thursday night I felt that there was more than usual significance for me in Mr. Peggotty's declaration : ' My future life lies over the sea.' And when I closed this book just now I felt keenly that I was shortly to establish such an alibi as would have satisfied even the elder Mr. Weller himself. The relations that have been set up between us in this place, — relations sustained on my side at least by the most earnest devotion of myself to my task ; sustained by yourselves, on your side, by the readiest sympathy and kindliest acknowledgment, — must now be broken forever. But I entreat you to believe that in passing from my sight you will not pass from my memory. I shall often, often recall you as I see you now, equally by my winter fire and in the green, English summer weather. I shall never , recall you as a mere public audience, but rather as a host of personal friends, and ever with the greatest gratitude, tenderness, and consideration. Ladies and gentlemen, I beg to bid you farewell. And I pray God bless you, and God bless the land in which I have met you." Else, one and all ; follow him with your clieers, and let silvery-tongued George William Curtis speak for America as he exclaims, " Old ocean, bear him safely over ! Eng- lish hedges, welcome him with flowers of the May ! Eng- lish hearts, he is ours as he is yours ! We stand upon the shore ; we say farewell ; and as he sails away we pray, with love and gratitude, may God bless him !" THE YEKDICT nn HE curtain has fallen, and nothing remains but to -*- hear the final verdict passed upon Charles Dickens. The impanelled jury pronounce him guilty of all tlie charges brought against him, and now, as in duty bound, sum them up. FIRST CHARGE. That as an author Charles Dickens is without a peer. William Makepeace Thackeray, foreman of the jury, claims that he is the master of all the English humor- ists now alive. SECOND CHARGE. That Dickens is one of the best of actors, and, as an interpreter of himself, stands unrivalled. Our indebted- ness to him is vastly increased by his visit to this country' for he has demonstrated by personal illustration the meaning of the long-neglected art of reading. He has shown us that it means a perfectly easy, unaffected manner, a thoroughly colloquial tone, and entire ab- sence of the stilted elocution that has heretofore passed" 144 THE VERDICT. current for good reading, tlie virus of wliicli has well- nigh ruined our school of public sj^eaking. Dickens has done more : he has proved that the very best reading is such as approaches the very best acting, and in adopting the actor's profession he has paid the highest tribute to a noble art, — one to which he has always been an earnest and devoted friend. Charles Dickens is now twice Charles Dickens. He is author and actor, as only Shakespeare has been before him ; and the balance be- tween the two may be considered almost even, for Avhile Shakespeare is, of course, the greater author, it is safe to regard Charles Dickens as the finer actor! Herein the latter resembles the magician who pours out numberless wines and liquors from one small black bottle. He " costumes his mind," as Carlyle once declared, and with- out change of scene presents a repertoire of eighty-six characters ! This is but a small percentage of his Fancy's children, — the dramatis personce of his fourteen principal works numbering no less than seven hundred and ninety- two, — yet it is enough. Nevertheless, were we the jury omnipotent, we would have Dickens luxuriously incarce- rated until he had made a dramatic study of all his books, and was prepared to read them by instalments. Perhaps in another world, where time is of no conse- quence, Dickens may give his mind to a like occupa- tion. With such audiences as he can there draw around him, it will indeed be " a feast of reason and a flow of soul." THE VERDICT. 145 THIED CHAEGE. That, gladly borrowing the language of Horace Greeley, we regard him as '" the most thoroughly successful literary man of our time " whose success " is an encouragement to every one of us." All reporters, all editors, cannot be Charles Dickens, but did all reporters report, did all editors edit, as their great example reported and edited, then mio^ht their lifijht shine as it is not wont to shine. Let those who would know the secret of this success turn to "David Copperfield," wherein there is undoubtedly more of the author's personality than can be found else- where. " I have been very fortunate in worldly matters. Many men have worked much harder and not suc- ceeded half so well ; but I never could have done what I have done without the habits of punctuality, order, and diligence ; without the determination to concentrate my- self on one object at a time, no matter hoAV quickly its successor should come upon its heels, which I then formed. Heaven knows I write this in no spirit of self- laudation. The man who reviews his own life, as I do mine, in going on here, from page to page, had need to have been a good man indeed, if he would be spared the sharp consciousness of many talents neglected, many opportunities wasted, many erratic and perverted feel- ings constantly at war within his breast, and defeating him. I do not hold one natural gift, I dare say, that I 7 J 146 THE VERDICT. Lave not abused. My meaning simply is, that whatever I have tried to do in life, I have tried with all my heart to do well; that whatever I have devoted myself to, I have devoted myself to completely; that in great aims and in small, I have always been thoroughly in earnest. I have never believed it possible that any natural or improved ability can claim immunity from the compan- ionship of the steady, plain, hard-AVorking qualities, and hope to gain its end. There is no such thing as such fulfilment on this earth. Some happy talent and some fortunate opportunity may form the two sides of the ladder on which some men mount, but the rounds of that ladder must be made of stuff to stand wear and tear ; and there is no substitute for thorough-going, ardent, and sincere earnestness. N"ever to put one hand to anything on which I could throw my whole self, and never to affect depreciation of my work, whatever it Avas, I find now to have been my golden rules." FOURTH CHARGE. That Charles Dickens has ever been faithful to the profession of letters ; that his career, as George William Curtis says so admirably, " illustrates wliat Charles Lamb called the sanity of genius. He has never debased it to nnwortliy ends. He has shown us that he is not a deni- zen of Bohemia only, but a citizen of the world. He lias always honored his profession by asserting its dignity in THE VERDICT. 147 his name." Asserted by tlie man, it has been maintained by the author. The preface of the first book piibhshed by Boz — " The Pickwick Papers," — is a grateful dedica- tion to Thomas Noon Talfourd, in acknowledgment of his efforts in behalf of an author's copyright. Never has this subject, so vital to writers, been out of his thoughts. "With regard to such questions as are not political/' remarks Mr. Gregsbury, the member of Parliament to whom Nicholas Nickleby applies for the situation of secretary, " and which one can't be expected to care a damn about, beyond the natural care of not allowing inferior people to be as well off as ourselves, else where are our privileges ? I should wish my secretary to get together a few little flourishing speeches of a patriotic sort. For instance, if any preposterous bill were brought forward for giving poor grubbing devils of authors a right to their own property, I should like to say, that I, for one, would never consent to opposing an insurmountable bar to the diffusion of literature among the people, — you understand ? that the creations of the pocket, being man's, might belong to one man, or one family; but that the creations of the brain, being God's, ought, as a matter of course, to belong to the people at large; and if I was pleasantly disposed, I should like to make a joke about posterity, and say that those who wrote for posterity should be content to be rewarded by the approbation of posterity. It might take with the House, and could never do me any harm, because posterity can't be ex- 148 THE VERDICT. pectecl to know anything about me or my jokes either, — don't you see ? ... . You must always bear in mind, in such cases as this, where our interests are not affected, to put it very strong about the people, because it comes out very well at election-time ; and you could be as funny as you liked about the authors, because I believe the greater part of them live in lodgings and are not voters." Some years after the publication of " Nicholas Nickle- by," at that memorable dinner given to Charles Dickens by the young men of Boston, in 1842, the subject of international copyright found expression in words that, be it said to our shame, still remain unheeded. " Before I sit down," said the honored guest, "^ there is one topic on which I am desirous to lay particular stress. It has, or should have, a strong interest for us all, since to its literature every country must look for one great means of refining and improving its people, and one great source of national pride and honor. You have in America great writers — great writers — who will live in all time, and are as familiar to our lips as household words. Deriving (which they all do in a greater or less degree, in their several walks) their inspiration from the stupendous country that gave them birth, they diffuse a better knowl- edge of it, and a higher love for it, over the civilized world. I take leave to say, in the presence of some of those gentlemen, that I hope the time is not far distant when tliey, in America, will receive of right some sub- stantial profit and return in England from their labors ; THE VERDICT. 149 and when we, in England, shall receive some substantial profit and return in America from ours. Pray, do not misunderstand me. Securing to myself from day to day the means of an honorable subsistence, I would rather have the aftectionate regard of my fellow-men than I w^ould have heaps and mines of gold. But the two things do not seem to me incompatible. They cannot be, for nothing good is incompatible with justice. There must be an international arrangement in this respect ; England has done her part ; and I am confident that the time is not far distant when America will do hers. It becomes the character of a great country, firstly, because it is justice ; secondly, because without it you never can have, and keep, a literature of your own." With this noble record Charles Dickens may rightly claim " that the cause of art generally has been safe in his keeping, and that it has never been falsely dealt with by him ; that he has always been true to his calling; that never unduly to assert it on the one hand, and never, on any pretence or consideration, to permit it to be patronized in his person, has been the steady endeavor of his life, and that he will leave its social position in England better than he found it." Thank God that " morals have something to do with art," and that the genius of Dickens has realized this solemn fact. 150 ' THE VERDICT. FIFTH AND LAST CHAEGE. That by his second visit to America Charles Dickens has fulfilled the prophecy that he would "lay down a third cable of intercommunication and alliance between the Old World and the New." Twelve years ago he wrote of the American nation : " I know full well, Avhat- ever little motes my beamy eyes may have descried in theirs, that they are a kind, large-hearted, generous, and great people." In that faith he came to see us, in that faith he is more fully confirmed than ever ; in that faith he, on the 18th of April, 1868, pledged himself in the presence of the New York Press, " to be in England as faithful to America as to England herself." " Points of difference there have been," he said, " points of differ- ence there are, points of difference there probably always will be, between the two great peoples. But broadcast in England is sown the sentiment that those two peoples are essentially one, and that it rests with them jointly to nphold the great Anglo-Saxon race, to which our presi- dent has referred, and all its great achievements before the Avorld. If I know anything of my countrymen, and they give me credit for knowing something, — if I know anything of my countrymen, gentlemen, the Eng- lish heart is stirred by the fluttering of those stars and stripes as it is stirred by no other flag that flies except its own. If I know my countrymen, in any and every relation toward America, they begin, not as Sir Anthony THE VERDICT. 151 Absolute recommended lovers to begin, with ''a little aversion/' but with a great liking and a profound re- spect ; and whatever the little sensitiveness of the mo- ment, or the little ofiicial passion, or the little official policy, Sow, or then, or here, or there, may be, take my word for it, that the first, enduring, great popular consideration in England is a generous construction of justice. Finally, gentlemen, and I say this subject to your correction, I do believe that from the great majority of honest minds on both sides there cannot be absent the conviction that it would be better for this globe to be riven by an earthquake, fired by a comet, overrun by an iceberg, and abandoned to the arctic fox and bear, than tliat it should present the spectacle of these two great nations, each of which has, in its own way and hour, striven so hard and so successfully for freedom, ever again being arrayed the one against the other." Amen, amen, amen ! AVith Landor of old, we of to-day are ready to exclaim, — ^^ Here comes the minister! Yes, thou art he, although not sent By cabinet or parliament : Yes, thou art he." Charles Dickens is a minister of peace and light, and the toast once given by him in Boston is the fitting con- chision to a manly, generous speech : " America and England; may they never have any division but the Atlantic between them ! " 152 THE VERDICT. Ill Charles Dickens, author and actor, man and minis- ter, the N'ew World bids the Old World welcome, and thus "putting a girdle round the earth," we say, as tlie new " minister " has often said, " God bless us, every one!" THE END. Cambridge : Electrotyped and Printed by Welch, Bigelow, & Co, 5 7*7*^ RETURN CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT T0>»-#^ 202 Main Library ALL BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAYS 1 •month loans may be renewed by calling 642-3405 6-month loans may be recharged by bringing books to Circulation Desk Renewals and recharges may be made 4 days prior to due dote DUE AS STAMPED BELOW jgt nij? <:rp p 1 • . II IN 9 8 2Q03 JUlt O ^ LWXJ ftie 121934 -*.!» SK^^mm RECm?>1 995 JAN 3 ' 1995 Rniil ATION DEPT 'SB-JT ON iLL SPP 1 G t996 U. C. BERKCLGY JUL 3 2001 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY FORM NO. DD6, 60m, 12/80 BERKELEY, CA 94720 ®s .U-C, BERKELEY LIBRARIES CD311DbETS h\