<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER 20 </h2>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span><i>herein Nicholas at length encounters his Uncle, to whom he expresses his
Sentiments with much Candour. His Resolution.</i></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Little Miss La Creevy trotted briskly through divers streets at the west
end of the town, early on Monday morning—the day after the dinner—charged
with the important commission of acquainting Madame Mantalini that Miss
Nickleby was too unwell to attend that day, but hoped to be enabled to
resume her duties on the morrow. And as Miss La Creevy walked along,
revolving in her mind various genteel forms and elegant turns of
expression, with a view to the selection of the very best in which to
couch her communication, she cogitated a good deal upon the probable
causes of her young friend’s indisposition.</p>
<p>‘I don’t know what to make of it,’ said Miss La Creevy. ‘Her eyes were
decidedly red last night. She said she had a headache; headaches don’t
occasion red eyes. She must have been crying.’</p>
<p>Arriving at this conclusion, which, indeed, she had established to her
perfect satisfaction on the previous evening, Miss La Creevy went on to
consider—as she had done nearly all night—what new cause of
unhappiness her young friend could possibly have had.</p>
<p>‘I can’t think of anything,’ said the little portrait painter. ‘Nothing at
all, unless it was the behaviour of that old bear. Cross to her, I
suppose? Unpleasant brute!’</p>
<p>Relieved by this expression of opinion, albeit it was vented upon empty
air, Miss La Creevy trotted on to Madame Mantalini’s; and being informed
that the governing power was not yet out of bed, requested an interview
with the second in command; whereupon Miss Knag appeared.</p>
<p>‘So far as I am concerned,’ said Miss Knag, when the message had been
delivered, with many ornaments of speech; ‘I could spare Miss Nickleby for
evermore.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, indeed, ma’am!’ rejoined Miss La Creevy, highly offended. ‘But, you
see, you are not mistress of the business, and therefore it’s of no great
consequence.’</p>
<p>‘Very good, ma’am,’ said Miss Knag. ‘Have you any further commands for
me?’</p>
<p>‘No, I have not, ma’am,’ rejoined Miss La Creevy.</p>
<p>‘Then good-morning, ma’am,’ said Miss Knag.</p>
<p>‘Good-morning to you, ma’am; and many obligations for your extreme
politeness and good breeding,’ rejoined Miss La Creevy.</p>
<p>Thus terminating the interview, during which both ladies had trembled very
much, and been marvellously polite—certain indications that they
were within an inch of a very desperate quarrel—Miss La Creevy
bounced out of the room, and into the street.</p>
<p>‘I wonder who that is,’ said the queer little soul. ‘A nice person to
know, I should think! I wish I had the painting of her: I’D do her
justice.’ So, feeling quite satisfied that she had said a very cutting
thing at Miss Knag’s expense, Miss La Creevy had a hearty laugh, and went
home to breakfast in great good humour.</p>
<p>Here was one of the advantages of having lived alone so long! The little
bustling, active, cheerful creature existed entirely within herself,
talked to herself, made a confidante of herself, was as sarcastic as she
could be, on people who offended her, by herself; pleased herself, and did
no harm. If she indulged in scandal, nobody’s reputation suffered; and if
she enjoyed a little bit of revenge, no living soul was one atom the
worse. One of the many to whom, from straitened circumstances, a
consequent inability to form the associations they would wish, and a
disinclination to mix with the society they could obtain, London is as
complete a solitude as the plains of Syria, the humble artist had pursued
her lonely, but contented way for many years; and, until the peculiar
misfortunes of the Nickleby family attracted her attention, had made no
friends, though brimful of the friendliest feelings to all mankind. There
are many warm hearts in the same solitary guise as poor little Miss La
Creevy’s.</p>
<p>However, that’s neither here nor there, just now. She went home to
breakfast, and had scarcely caught the full flavour of her first sip of
tea, when the servant announced a gentleman, whereat Miss La Creevy, at
once imagining a new sitter transfixed by admiration at the street-door
case, was in unspeakable consternation at the presence of the tea-things.</p>
<p>‘Here, take ‘em away; run with ‘em into the bedroom; anywhere,’ said Miss
La Creevy. ‘Dear, dear; to think that I should be late on this particular
morning, of all others, after being ready for three weeks by half-past
eight o’clock, and not a soul coming near the place!’</p>
<p>‘Don’t let me put you out of the way,’ said a voice Miss La Creevy knew.
‘I told the servant not to mention my name, because I wished to surprise
you.’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Nicholas!’ cried Miss La Creevy, starting in great astonishment. ‘You
have not forgotten me, I see,’ replied Nicholas, extending his hand.</p>
<p>‘Why, I think I should even have known you if I had met you in the
street,’ said Miss La Creevy, with a smile. ‘Hannah, another cup and
saucer. Now, I’ll tell you what, young man; I’ll trouble you not to repeat
the impertinence you were guilty of, on the morning you went away.’</p>
<p>‘You would not be very angry, would you?’ asked Nicholas.</p>
<p>‘Wouldn’t I!’ said Miss La Creevy. ‘You had better try; that’s all!’</p>
<p>Nicholas, with becoming gallantry, immediately took Miss La Creevy at her
word, who uttered a faint scream and slapped his face; but it was not a
very hard slap, and that’s the truth.</p>
<p>‘I never saw such a rude creature!’ exclaimed Miss La Creevy.</p>
<p>‘You told me to try,’ said Nicholas.</p>
<p>‘Well; but I was speaking ironically,’ rejoined Miss La Creevy.</p>
<p>‘Oh! that’s another thing,’ said Nicholas; ‘you should have told me that,
too.’</p>
<p>‘I dare say you didn’t know, indeed!’ retorted Miss La Creevy. ‘But, now I
look at you again, you seem thinner than when I saw you last, and your
face is haggard and pale. And how come you to have left Yorkshire?’</p>
<p>She stopped here; for there was so much heart in her altered tone and
manner, that Nicholas was quite moved.</p>
<p>‘I need look somewhat changed,’ he said, after a short silence; ‘for I
have undergone some suffering, both of mind and body, since I left London.
I have been very poor, too, and have even suffered from want.’</p>
<p>‘Good Heaven, Mr. Nicholas!’ exclaimed Miss La Creevy, ‘what are you
telling me?’</p>
<p>‘Nothing which need distress you quite so much,’ answered Nicholas, with a
more sprightly air; ‘neither did I come here to bewail my lot, but on
matter more to the purpose. I wish to meet my uncle face to face. I should
tell you that first.’</p>
<p>‘Then all I have to say about that is,’ interposed Miss La Creevy, ‘that I
don’t envy you your taste; and that sitting in the same room with his very
boots, would put me out of humour for a fortnight.’</p>
<p>‘In the main,’ said Nicholas, ‘there may be no great difference of opinion
between you and me, so far; but you will understand, that I desire to
confront him, to justify myself, and to cast his duplicity and malice in
his throat.’</p>
<p>‘That’s quite another matter,’ rejoined Miss La Creevy. ‘Heaven forgive
me; but I shouldn’t cry my eyes quite out of my head, if they choked him.
Well?’</p>
<p>‘To this end, I called upon him this morning,’ said Nicholas. ‘He only
returned to town on Saturday, and I knew nothing of his arrival until late
last night.’</p>
<p>‘And did you see him?’ asked Miss La Creevy.</p>
<p>‘No,’ replied Nicholas. ‘He had gone out.’</p>
<p>‘Hah!’ said Miss La Creevy; ‘on some kind, charitable business, I dare
say.’</p>
<p>‘I have reason to believe,’ pursued Nicholas, ‘from what has been told me,
by a friend of mine who is acquainted with his movements, that he intends
seeing my mother and sister today, and giving them his version of the
occurrences that have befallen me. I will meet him there.’</p>
<p>‘That’s right,’ said Miss La Creevy, rubbing her hands. ‘And yet, I don’t
know,’ she added, ‘there is much to be thought of—others to be
considered.’</p>
<p>‘I have considered others,’ rejoined Nicholas; ‘but as honesty and honour
are both at issue, nothing shall deter me.’</p>
<p>‘You should know best,’ said Miss La Creevy.</p>
<p>‘In this case I hope so,’ answered Nicholas. ‘And all I want you to do for
me, is, to prepare them for my coming. They think me a long way off, and
if I went wholly unexpected, I should frighten them. If you can spare time
to tell them that you have seen me, and that I shall be with them in a
quarter of an hour afterwards, you will do me a great service.’</p>
<p>‘I wish I could do you, or any of you, a greater,’ said Miss La Creevy;
‘but the power to serve, is as seldom joined with the will, as the will is
with the power, I think.’</p>
<p>Talking on very fast and very much, Miss La Creevy finished her breakfast
with great expedition, put away the tea-caddy and hid the key under the
fender, resumed her bonnet, and, taking Nicholas’s arm, sallied forth at
once to the city. Nicholas left her near the door of his mother’s house,
and promised to return within a quarter of an hour.</p>
<p>It so chanced that Ralph Nickleby, at length seeing fit, for his own
purposes, to communicate the atrocities of which Nicholas had been guilty,
had (instead of first proceeding to another quarter of the town on
business, as Newman Noggs supposed he would) gone straight to his
sister-in-law. Hence, when Miss La Creevy, admitted by a girl who was
cleaning the house, made her way to the sitting-room, she found Mrs
Nickleby and Kate in tears, and Ralph just concluding his statement of his
nephew’s misdemeanours. Kate beckoned her not to retire, and Miss La
Creevy took a seat in silence.</p>
<p>‘You are here already, are you, my gentleman?’ thought the little woman.
‘Then he shall announce himself, and see what effect that has on you.’</p>
<p>‘This is pretty,’ said Ralph, folding up Miss Squeers’s note; ‘very
pretty. I recommend him—against all my previous conviction, for I
knew he would never do any good—to a man with whom, behaving himself
properly, he might have remained, in comfort, for years. What is the
result? Conduct for which he might hold up his hand at the Old Bailey.’</p>
<p>‘I never will believe it,’ said Kate, indignantly; ‘never. It is some base
conspiracy, which carries its own falsehood with it.’</p>
<p>‘My dear,’ said Ralph, ‘you wrong the worthy man. These are not
inventions. The man is assaulted, your brother is not to be found; this
boy, of whom they speak, goes with him—remember, remember.’</p>
<p>‘It is impossible,’ said Kate. ‘Nicholas!—and a thief too! Mama, how
can you sit and hear such statements?’</p>
<p>Poor Mrs. Nickleby, who had, at no time, been remarkable for the possession
of a very clear understanding, and who had been reduced by the late
changes in her affairs to a most complicated state of perplexity, made no
other reply to this earnest remonstrance than exclaiming from behind a
mass of pocket-handkerchief, that she never could have believed it—thereby
most ingeniously leaving her hearers to suppose that she did believe it.</p>
<p>‘It would be my duty, if he came in my way, to deliver him up to justice,’
said Ralph, ‘my bounden duty; I should have no other course, as a man of
the world and a man of business, to pursue. And yet,’ said Ralph, speaking
in a very marked manner, and looking furtively, but fixedly, at Kate, ‘and
yet I would not. I would spare the feelings of his—of his sister.
And his mother of course,’ added Ralph, as though by an afterthought, and
with far less emphasis.</p>
<p>Kate very well understood that this was held out as an additional
inducement to her to preserve the strictest silence regarding the events
of the preceding night. She looked involuntarily towards Ralph as he
ceased to speak, but he had turned his eyes another way, and seemed for
the moment quite unconscious of her presence.</p>
<p>‘Everything,’ said Ralph, after a long silence, broken only by Mrs
Nickleby’s sobs, ‘everything combines to prove the truth of this letter,
if indeed there were any possibility of disputing it. Do innocent men
steal away from the sight of honest folks, and skulk in hiding-places,
like outlaws? Do innocent men inveigle nameless vagabonds, and prowl with
them about the country as idle robbers do? Assault, riot, theft, what do
you call these?’</p>
<p>‘A lie!’ cried a voice, as the door was dashed open, and Nicholas came
into the room.</p>
<p>In the first moment of surprise, and possibly of alarm, Ralph rose from
his seat, and fell back a few paces, quite taken off his guard by this
unexpected apparition. In another moment, he stood, fixed and immovable
with folded arms, regarding his nephew with a scowl; while Kate and Miss
La Creevy threw themselves between the two, to prevent the personal
violence which the fierce excitement of Nicholas appeared to threaten.</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0287m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0287m " /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0287.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></SPAN>
</h5>
<p>‘Dear Nicholas,’ cried his sister, clinging to him. ‘Be calm, consider—’</p>
<p>‘Consider, Kate!’ cried Nicholas, clasping her hand so tight in the tumult
of his anger, that she could scarcely bear the pain. ‘When I consider all,
and think of what has passed, I need be made of iron to stand before him.’</p>
<p>‘Or bronze,’ said Ralph, quietly; ‘there is not hardihood enough in flesh
and blood to face it out.’</p>
<p>‘Oh dear, dear!’ cried Mrs. Nickleby, ‘that things should have come to such
a pass as this!’</p>
<p>‘Who speaks in a tone, as if I had done wrong, and brought disgrace on
them?’ said Nicholas, looking round.</p>
<p>‘Your mother, sir,’ replied Ralph, motioning towards her.</p>
<p>‘Whose ears have been poisoned by you,’ said Nicholas; ‘by you—who,
under pretence of deserving the thanks she poured upon you, heaped every
insult, wrong, and indignity upon my head. You, who sent me to a den where
sordid cruelty, worthy of yourself, runs wanton, and youthful misery
stalks precocious; where the lightness of childhood shrinks into the
heaviness of age, and its every promise blights, and withers as it grows.
I call Heaven to witness,’ said Nicholas, looking eagerly round, ‘that I
have seen all this, and that he knows it.’</p>
<p>‘Refute these calumnies,’ said Kate, ‘and be more patient, so that you may
give them no advantage. Tell us what you really did, and show that they
are untrue.’</p>
<p>‘Of what do they—or of what does he—accuse me?’ said Nicholas.</p>
<p>‘First, of attacking your master, and being within an ace of qualifying
yourself to be tried for murder,’ interposed Ralph. ‘I speak plainly,
young man, bluster as you will.’</p>
<p>‘I interfered,’ said Nicholas, ‘to save a miserable creature from the
vilest cruelty. In so doing, I inflicted such punishment upon a wretch as
he will not readily forget, though far less than he deserved from me. If
the same scene were renewed before me now, I would take the same part; but
I would strike harder and heavier, and brand him with such marks as he
should carry to his grave, go to it when he would.’</p>
<p>‘You hear?’ said Ralph, turning to Mrs. Nickleby. ‘Penitence, this!’</p>
<p>‘Oh dear me!’ cried Mrs. Nickleby, ‘I don’t know what to think, I really
don’t.’</p>
<p>‘Do not speak just now, mama, I entreat you,’ said Kate. ‘Dear Nicholas, I
only tell you, that you may know what wickedness can prompt, but they
accuse you of—a ring is missing, and they dare to say that—’</p>
<p>‘The woman,’ said Nicholas, haughtily, ‘the wife of the fellow from whom
these charges come, dropped—as I suppose—a worthless ring
among some clothes of mine, early in the morning on which I left the
house. At least, I know that she was in the bedroom where they lay,
struggling with an unhappy child, and that I found it when I opened my
bundle on the road. I returned it, at once, by coach, and they have it
now.’</p>
<p>‘I knew, I knew,’ said Kate, looking towards her uncle. ‘About this boy,
love, in whose company they say you left?’</p>
<p>‘The boy, a silly, helpless creature, from brutality and hard usage, is
with me now,’ rejoined Nicholas.</p>
<p>‘You hear?’ said Ralph, appealing to the mother again, ‘everything proved,
even upon his own confession. Do you choose to restore that boy, sir?’</p>
<p>‘No, I do not,’ replied Nicholas.</p>
<p>‘You do not?’ sneered Ralph.</p>
<p>‘No,’ repeated Nicholas, ‘not to the man with whom I found him. I would
that I knew on whom he has the claim of birth: I might wring something
from his sense of shame, if he were dead to every tie of nature.’</p>
<p>‘Indeed!’ said Ralph. ‘Now, sir, will you hear a word or two from me?’</p>
<p>‘You can speak when and what you please,’ replied Nicholas, embracing his
sister. ‘I take little heed of what you say or threaten.’</p>
<p>‘Mighty well, sir,’ retorted Ralph; ‘but perhaps it may concern others,
who may think it worth their while to listen, and consider what I tell
them. I will address your mother, sir, who knows the world.’</p>
<p>‘Ah! and I only too dearly wish I didn’t,’ sobbed Mrs. Nickleby.</p>
<p>There really was no necessity for the good lady to be much distressed upon
this particular head; the extent of her worldly knowledge being, to say
the least, very questionable; and so Ralph seemed to think, for he smiled
as she spoke. He then glanced steadily at her and Nicholas by turns, as he
delivered himself in these words:</p>
<p>‘Of what I have done, or what I meant to do, for you, ma’am, and my niece,
I say not one syllable. I held out no promise, and leave you to judge for
yourself. I hold out no threat now, but I say that this boy, headstrong,
wilful and disorderly as he is, should not have one penny of my money, or
one crust of my bread, or one grasp of my hand, to save him from the
loftiest gallows in all Europe. I will not meet him, come where he comes,
or hear his name. I will not help him, or those who help him. With a full
knowledge of what he brought upon you by so doing, he has come back in his
selfish sloth, to be an aggravation of your wants, and a burden upon his
sister’s scanty wages. I regret to leave you, and more to leave her, now,
but I will not encourage this compound of meanness and cruelty, and, as I
will not ask you to renounce him, I see you no more.’</p>
<p>If Ralph had not known and felt his power in wounding those he hated, his
glances at Nicholas would have shown it him, in all its force, as he
proceeded in the above address. Innocent as the young man was of all
wrong, every artful insinuation stung, every well-considered sarcasm cut
him to the quick; and when Ralph noted his pale face and quivering lip, he
hugged himself to mark how well he had chosen the taunts best calculated
to strike deep into a young and ardent spirit.</p>
<p>‘I can’t help it,’ cried Mrs. Nickleby. ‘I know you have been very good to
us, and meant to do a good deal for my dear daughter. I am quite sure of
that; I know you did, and it was very kind of you, having her at your
house and all—and of course it would have been a great thing for her
and for me too. But I can’t, you know, brother-in-law, I can’t renounce my
own son, even if he has done all you say he has—it’s not possible; I
couldn’t do it; so we must go to rack and ruin, Kate, my dear. I can bear
it, I dare say.’ Pouring forth these and a perfectly wonderful train of
other disjointed expressions of regret, which no mortal power but Mrs
Nickleby’s could ever have strung together, that lady wrung her hands, and
her tears fell faster.</p>
<p>‘Why do you say “<i>if</i> Nicholas has done what they say he has,” mama?’ asked
Kate, with honest anger. ‘You know he has not.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know what to think, one way or other, my dear,’ said Mrs
Nickleby; ‘Nicholas is so violent, and your uncle has so much composure,
that I can only hear what he says, and not what Nicholas does. Never mind,
don’t let us talk any more about it. We can go to the Workhouse, or the
Refuge for the Destitute, or the Magdalen Hospital, I dare say; and the
sooner we go the better.’ With this extraordinary jumble of charitable
institutions, Mrs. Nickleby again gave way to her tears.</p>
<p>‘Stay,’ said Nicholas, as Ralph turned to go. ‘You need not leave this
place, sir, for it will be relieved of my presence in one minute, and it
will be long, very long, before I darken these doors again.’</p>
<p>‘Nicholas,’ cried Kate, throwing herself on her brother’s shoulder, ‘do
not say so. My dear brother, you will break my heart. Mama, speak to him.
Do not mind her, Nicholas; she does not mean it, you should know her
better. Uncle, somebody, for Heaven’s sake speak to him.’</p>
<p>‘I never meant, Kate,’ said Nicholas, tenderly, ‘I never meant to stay
among you; think better of me than to suppose it possible. I may turn my
back on this town a few hours sooner than I intended, but what of that? We
shall not forget each other apart, and better days will come when we shall
part no more. Be a woman, Kate,’ he whispered, proudly, ‘and do not make
me one, while <i>he</i> looks on.’</p>
<p>‘No, no, I will not,’ said Kate, eagerly, ‘but you will not leave us. Oh!
think of all the happy days we have had together, before these terrible
misfortunes came upon us; of all the comfort and happiness of home, and
the trials we have to bear now; of our having no protector under all the
slights and wrongs that poverty so much favours, and you cannot leave us
to bear them alone, without one hand to help us.’</p>
<p>‘You will be helped when I am away,’ replied Nicholas hurriedly. ‘I am no
help to you, no protector; I should bring you nothing but sorrow, and
want, and suffering. My own mother sees it, and her fondness and fears for
you, point to the course that I should take. And so all good angels bless
you, Kate, till I can carry you to some home of mine, where we may revive
the happiness denied to us now, and talk of these trials as of things gone
by. Do not keep me here, but let me go at once. There. Dear girl—dear
girl.’</p>
<p>The grasp which had detained him relaxed, and Kate swooned in his arms.
Nicholas stooped over her for a few seconds, and placing her gently in a
chair, confided her to their honest friend.</p>
<p>‘I need not entreat your sympathy,’ he said, wringing her hand, ‘for I
know your nature. You will never forget them.’</p>
<p>He stepped up to Ralph, who remained in the same attitude which he had
preserved throughout the interview, and moved not a finger.</p>
<p>‘Whatever step you take, sir,’ he said, in a voice inaudible beyond
themselves, ‘I shall keep a strict account of. I leave them to you, at
your desire. There will be a day of reckoning sooner or later, and it will
be a heavy one for you if they are wronged.’</p>
<p>Ralph did not allow a muscle of his face to indicate that he heard one
word of this parting address. He hardly knew that it was concluded, and
Mrs. Nickleby had scarcely made up her mind to detain her son by force if
necessary, when Nicholas was gone.</p>
<p>As he hurried through the streets to his obscure lodging, seeking to keep
pace, as it were, with the rapidity of the thoughts which crowded upon
him, many doubts and hesitations arose in his mind, and almost tempted him
to return. But what would they gain by this? Supposing he were to put
Ralph Nickleby at defiance, and were even fortunate enough to obtain some
small employment, his being with them could only render their present
condition worse, and might greatly impair their future prospects; for his
mother had spoken of some new kindnesses towards Kate which she had not
denied. ‘No,’ thought Nicholas, ‘I have acted for the best.’</p>
<p>But, before he had gone five hundred yards, some other and different
feeling would come upon him, and then he would lag again, and pulling his
hat over his eyes, give way to the melancholy reflections which pressed
thickly upon him. To have committed no fault, and yet to be so entirely
alone in the world; to be separated from the only persons he loved, and to
be proscribed like a criminal, when six months ago he had been surrounded
by every comfort, and looked up to, as the chief hope of his family—this
was hard to bear. He had not deserved it either. Well, there was comfort
in that; and poor Nicholas would brighten up again, to be again depressed,
as his quickly shifting thoughts presented every variety of light and
shade before him.</p>
<p>Undergoing these alternations of hope and misgiving, which no one, placed
in a situation of ordinary trial, can fail to have experienced, Nicholas
at length reached his poor room, where, no longer borne up by the
excitement which had hitherto sustained him, but depressed by the
revulsion of feeling it left behind, he threw himself on the bed, and
turning his face to the wall, gave free vent to the emotions he had so
long stifled.</p>
<p>He had not heard anybody enter, and was unconscious of the presence of
Smike, until, happening to raise his head, he saw him, standing at the
upper end of the room, looking wistfully towards him. He withdrew his eyes
when he saw that he was observed, and affected to be busied with some
scanty preparations for dinner.</p>
<p>‘Well, Smike,’ said Nicholas, as cheerfully as he could speak, ‘let me
hear what new acquaintances you have made this morning, or what new wonder
you have found out, in the compass of this street and the next one.’</p>
<p>‘No,’ said Smike, shaking his head mournfully; ‘I must talk of something
else today.’</p>
<p>‘Of what you like,’ replied Nicholas, good-humouredly.</p>
<p>‘Of this,’ said Smike. ‘I know you are unhappy, and have got into great
trouble by bringing me away. I ought to have known that, and stopped
behind—I would, indeed, if I had thought it then. You—you—are
not rich; you have not enough for yourself, and I should not be here. You
grow,’ said the lad, laying his hand timidly on that of Nicholas, ‘you
grow thinner every day; your cheek is paler, and your eye more sunk.
Indeed I cannot bear to see you so, and think how I am burdening you. I
tried to go away today, but the thought of your kind face drew me back. I
could not leave you without a word.’ The poor fellow could say no more,
for his eyes filled with tears, and his voice was gone.</p>
<p>‘The word which separates us,’ said Nicholas, grasping him heartily by the
shoulder, ‘shall never be said by me, for you are my only comfort and
stay. I would not lose you now, Smike, for all the world could give. The
thought of you has upheld me through all I have endured today, and shall,
through fifty times such trouble. Give me your hand. My heart is linked to
yours. We will journey from this place together, before the week is out.
What, if I am steeped in poverty? You lighten it, and we will be poor
together.’</p>
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