<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 30. The Word of a Gentleman </h2>
<p>When Mr and Mrs Flintwinch panted up to the door of the old house in the
twilight, Jeremiah within a second of Affery, the stranger started back.
'Death of my soul!' he exclaimed. 'Why, how did you get here?'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch, to whom these words were spoken, repaid the stranger's
wonder in full. He gazed at him with blank astonishment; he looked over
his own shoulder, as expecting to see some one he had not been aware of
standing behind him; he gazed at the stranger again, speechlessly, at a
loss to know what he meant; he looked to his wife for explanation;
receiving none, he pounced upon her, and shook her with such heartiness
that he shook her cap off her head, saying between his teeth, with grim
raillery, as he did it, 'Affery, my woman, you must have a dose, my woman!
This is some of your tricks! You have been dreaming again, mistress.
What's it about? Who is it? What does it mean! Speak out or be choked!
It's the only choice I'll give you.'</p>
<p>Supposing Mistress Affery to have any power of election at the moment, her
choice was decidedly to be choked; for she answered not a syllable to this
adjuration, but, with her bare head wagging violently backwards and
forwards, resigned herself to her punishment. The stranger, however,
picking up her cap with an air of gallantry, interposed.</p>
<p>'Permit me,' said he, laying his hand on the shoulder of Jeremiah, who
stopped and released his victim. 'Thank you. Excuse me. Husband and wife I
know, from this playfulness. Haha! Always agreeable to see that relation
playfully maintained. Listen! May I suggest that somebody up-stairs, in
the dark, is becoming energetically curious to know what is going on
here?'</p>
<p>This reference to Mrs Clennam's voice reminded Mr Flintwinch to step into
the hall and call up the staircase. 'It's all right, I am here, Affery is
coming with your light.' Then he said to the latter flustered woman, who
was putting her cap on, 'Get out with you, and get up-stairs!' and then
turned to the stranger and said to him, 'Now, sir, what might you please
to want?'</p>
<p>'I am afraid,' said the stranger, 'I must be so troublesome as to propose
a candle.'</p>
<p>'True,' assented Jeremiah. 'I was going to do so. Please to stand where
you are while I get one.'</p>
<p>The visitor was standing in the doorway, but turned a little into the
gloom of the house as Mr Flintwinch turned, and pursued him with his eyes
into the little room, where he groped about for a phosphorus box. When he
found it, it was damp, or otherwise out of order; and match after match
that he struck into it lighted sufficiently to throw a dull glare about
his groping face, and to sprinkle his hands with pale little spots of
fire, but not sufficiently to light the candle. The stranger, taking
advantage of this fitful illumination of his visage, looked intently and
wonderingly at him. Jeremiah, when he at last lighted the candle, knew he
had been doing this, by seeing the last shade of a lowering watchfulness
clear away from his face, as it broke into the doubtful smile that was a
large ingredient in its expression.</p>
<p>'Be so good,' said Jeremiah, closing the house door, and taking a pretty
sharp survey of the smiling visitor in his turn, 'as to step into my
counting-house.—It's all right, I tell you!' petulantly breaking off
to answer the voice up-stairs, still unsatisfied, though Affery was there,
speaking in persuasive tones. 'Don't I tell you it's all right? Preserve
the woman, has she no reason at all in her!'</p>
<p>'Timorous,' remarked the stranger.</p>
<p>'Timorous?' said Mr Flintwinch, turning his head to retort, as he went
before with the candle. 'More courageous than ninety men in a hundred,
sir, let me tell you.'</p>
<p>'Though an invalid?'</p>
<p>'Many years an invalid. Mrs Clennam. The only one of that name left in the
House now. My partner.' Saying something apologetically as he crossed the
hall, to the effect that at that time of night they were not in the habit
of receiving any one, and were always shut up, Mr Flintwinch led the way
into his own office, which presented a sufficiently business-like
appearance. Here he put the light on his desk, and said to the stranger,
with his wryest twist upon him, 'Your commands.'</p>
<p>'MY name is Blandois.'</p>
<p>'Blandois. I don't know it,' said Jeremiah.</p>
<p>'I thought it possible,' resumed the other, 'that you might have been
advised from Paris—'</p>
<p>'We have had no advice from Paris respecting anybody of the name of
Blandois,' said Jeremiah.</p>
<p>'No?'</p>
<p>'No.'</p>
<p>Jeremiah stood in his favourite attitude. The smiling Mr Blandois, opening
his cloak to get his hand to a breast-pocket, paused to say, with a laugh
in his glittering eyes, which it occurred to Mr Flintwinch were too near
together:</p>
<p>'You are so like a friend of mine! Not so identically the same as I
supposed when I really did for the moment take you to be the same in the
dusk—for which I ought to apologise; permit me to do so; a readiness
to confess my errors is, I hope, a part of the frankness of my character—still,
however, uncommonly like.'</p>
<p>'Indeed?' said Jeremiah, perversely. 'But I have not received any letter
of advice from anywhere respecting anybody of the name of Blandois.'</p>
<p>'Just so,' said the stranger.</p>
<p>'JUST so,' said Jeremiah.</p>
<p>Mr Blandois, not at all put out by this omission on the part of the
correspondents of the house of Clennam and Co., took his pocket-book from
his breast-pocket, selected a letter from that receptacle, and handed it
to Mr Flintwinch. 'No doubt you are well acquainted with the writing.
Perhaps the letter speaks for itself, and requires no advice. You are a
far more competent judge of such affairs than I am. It is my misfortune to
be, not so much a man of business, as what the world calls (arbitrarily) a
gentleman.'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch took the letter, and read, under date of Paris, 'We have to
present to you, on behalf of a highly esteemed correspondent of our Firm,
M. Blandois, of this city,' &c. &c. 'Such facilities as he may
require and such attentions as may lie in your power,' &c. &c.
'Also have to add that if you will honour M. Blandois' drafts at sight to
the extent of, say Fifty Pounds sterling (150),' &c. &c.</p>
<p>'Very good, sir,' said Mr Flintwinch. 'Take a chair. To the extent of
anything that our House can do—we are in a retired, old-fashioned,
steady way of business, sir—we shall be happy to render you our best
assistance. I observe, from the date of this, that we could not yet be
advised of it. Probably you came over with the delayed mail that brings
the advice.'</p>
<p>'That I came over with the delayed mail, sir,' returned Mr Blandois,
passing his white hand down his high-hooked nose, 'I know to the cost of
my head and stomach: the detestable and intolerable weather having racked
them both. You see me in the plight in which I came out of the packet
within this half-hour. I ought to have been here hours ago, and then I
should not have to apologise—permit me to apologise—for
presenting myself so unreasonably, and frightening—no, by-the-bye,
you said not frightening; permit me to apologise again—the esteemed
lady, Mrs Clennam, in her invalid chamber above stairs.'</p>
<p>Swagger and an air of authorised condescension do so much, that Mr
Flintwinch had already begun to think this a highly gentlemanly personage.
Not the less unyielding with him on that account, he scraped his chin and
said, what could he have the honour of doing for Mr Blandois to-night, out
of business hours?</p>
<p>'Faith!' returned that gentleman, shrugging his cloaked shoulders, 'I must
change, and eat and drink, and be lodged somewhere. Have the kindness to
advise me, a total stranger, where, and money is a matter of perfect
indifference until to-morrow. The nearer the place, the better. Next door,
if that's all.'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch was slowly beginning, 'For a gentleman of your habits, there
is not in this immediate neighbourhood any hotel—' when Mr Blandois
took him up.</p>
<p>'So much for my habits! my dear sir,' snapping his fingers. 'A citizen of
the world has no habits. That I am, in my poor way, a gentleman, by
Heaven! I will not deny, but I have no unaccommodating prejudiced habits.
A clean room, a hot dish for dinner, and a bottle of not absolutely
poisonous wine, are all I want tonight. But I want that much without the
trouble of going one unnecessary inch to get it.'</p>
<p>'There is,' said Mr Flintwinch, with more than his usual deliberation, as
he met, for a moment, Mr Blandois' shining eyes, which were restless;
'there is a coffee-house and tavern close here, which, so far, I can
recommend; but there's no style about it.'</p>
<p>'I dispense with style!' said Mr Blandois, waving his hand. 'Do me the
honour to show me the house, and introduce me there (if I am not too
troublesome), and I shall be infinitely obliged.' Mr Flintwinch, upon
this, looked up his hat, and lighted Mr Blandois across the hall again. As
he put the candle on a bracket, where the dark old panelling almost served
as an extinguisher for it, he bethought himself of going up to tell the
invalid that he would not be absent five minutes. 'Oblige me,' said the
visitor, on his saying so, 'by presenting my card of visit. Do me the
favour to add that I shall be happy to wait on Mrs Clennam, to offer my
personal compliments, and to apologise for having occasioned any agitation
in this tranquil corner, if it should suit her convenience to endure the
presence of a stranger for a few minutes, after he shall have changed his
wet clothes and fortified himself with something to eat and drink.'</p>
<p>Jeremiah made all despatch, and said, on his return, 'She'll be glad to
see you, sir; but, being conscious that her sick room has no attractions,
wishes me to say that she won't hold you to your offer, in case you should
think better of it.'</p>
<p>'To think better of it,' returned the gallant Blandois, 'would be to
slight a lady; to slight a lady would be to be deficient in chivalry
towards the sex; and chivalry towards the sex is a part of my character!'
Thus expressing himself, he threw the draggled skirt of his cloak over his
shoulder, and accompanied Mr Flintwinch to the tavern; taking up on the
road a porter who was waiting with his portmanteau on the outer side of
the gateway.</p>
<p>The house was kept in a homely manner, and the condescension of Mr
Blandois was infinite. It seemed to fill to inconvenience the little bar
in which the widow landlady and her two daughters received him; it was
much too big for the narrow wainscoted room with a bagatelle-board in it,
that was first proposed for his reception; it perfectly swamped the little
private holiday sitting-room of the family, which was finally given up to
him. Here, in dry clothes and scented linen, with sleeked hair, a great
ring on each forefinger and a massive show of watch-chain, Mr Blandois
waiting for his dinner, lolling on a window-seat with his knees drawn up,
looked (for all the difference in the setting of the jewel) fearfully and
wonderfully like a certain Monsieur Rigaud who had once so waited for his
breakfast, lying on the stone ledge of the iron grating of a cell in a
villainous dungeon at Marseilles.</p>
<p>His greed at dinner, too, was closely in keeping with the greed of
Monsieur Rigaud at breakfast. His avaricious manner of collecting all the
eatables about him, and devouring some with his eyes while devouring
others with his jaws, was the same manner. His utter disregard of other
people, as shown in his way of tossing the little womanly toys of
furniture about, flinging favourite cushions under his boots for a softer
rest, and crushing delicate coverings with his big body and his great
black head, had the same brute selfishness at the bottom of it. The softly
moving hands that were so busy among the dishes had the old wicked
facility of the hands that had clung to the bars. And when he could eat no
more, and sat sucking his delicate fingers one by one and wiping them on a
cloth, there wanted nothing but the substitution of vine-leaves to finish
the picture.</p>
<p>On this man, with his moustache going up and his nose coming down in that
most evil of smiles, and with his surface eyes looking as if they belonged
to his dyed hair, and had had their natural power of reflecting light
stopped by some similar process, Nature, always true, and never working in
vain, had set the mark, Beware! It was not her fault, if the warning were
fruitless. She is never to blame in any such instance.</p>
<p>Mr Blandois, having finished his repast and cleaned his fingers, took a
cigar from his pocket, and, lying on the window-seat again, smoked it out
at his leisure, occasionally apostrophising the smoke as it parted from
his thin lips in a thin stream:</p>
<p>'Blandois, you shall turn the tables on society, my little child. Haha!
Holy blue, you have begun well, Blandois! At a pinch, an excellent master
in English or French; a man for the bosom of families! You have a quick
perception, you have humour, you have ease, you have insinuating manners,
you have a good appearance; in effect, you are a gentleman! A gentleman
you shall live, my small boy, and a gentleman you shall die. You shall
win, however the game goes. They shall all confess your merit, Blandois.
You shall subdue the society which has grievously wronged you, to your own
high spirit. Death of my soul! You are high spirited by right and by
nature, my Blandois!'</p>
<p>To such soothing murmurs did this gentleman smoke out his cigar and drink
out his bottle of wine. Both being finished, he shook himself into a
sitting attitude; and with the concluding serious apostrophe, 'Hold, then!
Blandois, you ingenious one, have all your wits about you!' arose and went
back to the house of Clennam and Co.</p>
<p>He was received at the door by Mistress Affery, who, under instructions
from her lord, had lighted up two candles in the hall and a third on the
staircase, and who conducted him to Mrs Clennam's room. Tea was prepared
there, and such little company arrangements had been made as usually
attended the reception of expected visitors. They were slight on the
greatest occasion, never extending beyond the production of the China
tea-service, and the covering of the bed with a sober and sad drapery. For
the rest, there was the bier-like sofa with the block upon it, and the
figure in the widow's dress, as if attired for execution; the fire topped
by the mound of damped ashes; the grate with its second little mound of
ashes; the kettle and the smell of black dye; all as they had been for
fifteen years.</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch presented the gentleman commended to the consideration of
Clennam and Co. Mrs Clennam, who had the letter lying before her, bent her
head and requested him to sit. They looked very closely at one another.
That was but natural curiosity. 'I thank you, sir, for thinking of a
disabled woman like me. Few who come here on business have any remembrance
to bestow on one so removed from observation. It would be idle to expect
that they should have. Out of sight, out of mind. While I am grateful for
the exception, I don't complain of the rule.'</p>
<p>Mr Blandois, in his most gentlemanly manner, was afraid he had disturbed
her by unhappily presenting himself at such an unconscionable time. For
which he had already offered his best apologies to Mr—he begged
pardon—but by name had not the distinguished honour—'Mr
Flintwinch has been connected with the House many years.'</p>
<p>Mr Blandois was Mr Flintwinch's most obedient humble servant. He entreated
Mr Flintwinch to receive the assurance of his profoundest consideration.</p>
<p>'My husband being dead,' said Mrs Clennam, 'and my son preferring another
pursuit, our old House has no other representative in these days than Mr
Flintwinch.'</p>
<p>'What do you call yourself?' was the surly demand of that gentleman. 'You
have the head of two men.'</p>
<p>'My sex disqualifies me,' she proceeded with merely a slight turn of her
eyes in jeremiah's direction, 'from taking a responsible part in the
business, even if I had the ability; and therefore Mr Flintwinch combines
my interest with his own, and conducts it. It is not what it used to be;
but some of our old friends (principally the writers of this letter) have
the kindness not to forget us, and we retain the power of doing what they
entrust to us as efficiently as we ever did. This however is not
interesting to you. You are English, sir?'</p>
<p>'Faith, madam, no; I am neither born nor bred in England. In effect, I am
of no country,' said Mr Blandois, stretching out his leg and smiting it:
'I descend from half-a-dozen countries.'</p>
<p>'You have been much about the world?'</p>
<p>'It is true. By Heaven, madam, I have been here and there and everywhere!'</p>
<p>'You have no ties, probably. Are not married?'</p>
<p>'Madam,' said Mr Blandois, with an ugly fall of his eyebrows, 'I adore
your sex, but I am not married—never was.'</p>
<p>Mistress Affery, who stood at the table near him, pouring out the tea,
happened in her dreamy state to look at him as he said these words, and to
fancy that she caught an expression in his eyes which attracted her own
eyes so that she could not get them away. The effect of this fancy was to
keep her staring at him with the tea-pot in her hand, not only to her own
great uneasiness, but manifestly to his, too; and, through them both, to
Mrs Clennam's and Mr Flintwinch's. Thus a few ghostly moments supervened,
when they were all confusedly staring without knowing why.</p>
<p>'Affery,' her mistress was the first to say, 'what is the matter with
you?'</p>
<p>'I don't know,' said Mistress Affery, with her disengaged left hand
extended towards the visitor. 'It ain't me. It's him!'</p>
<p>'What does this good woman mean?' cried Mr Blandois, turning white, hot,
and slowly rising with a look of such deadly wrath that it contrasted
surprisingly with the slight force of his words. 'How is it possible to
understand this good creature?'</p>
<p>'It's NOT possible,' said Mr Flintwinch, screwing himself rapidly in that
direction. 'She don't know what she means. She's an idiot, a wanderer in
her mind. She shall have a dose, she shall have such a dose! Get along
with you, my woman,' he added in her ear, 'get along with you, while you
know you're Affery, and before you're shaken to yeast.'</p>
<p>Mistress Affery, sensible of the danger in which her identity stood,
relinquished the tea-pot as her husband seized it, put her apron over her
head, and in a twinkling vanished. The visitor gradually broke into a
smile, and sat down again.</p>
<p>'You'll excuse her, Mr Blandois,' said Jeremiah, pouring out the tea
himself, 'she's failing and breaking up; that's what she's about. Do you
take sugar, sir?'</p>
<p>'Thank you, no tea for me.—Pardon my observing it, but that's a very
remarkable watch!'</p>
<p>The tea-table was drawn up near the sofa, with a small interval between it
and Mrs Clennam's own particular table. Mr Blandois in his gallantry had
risen to hand that lady her tea (her dish of toast was already there), and
it was in placing the cup conveniently within her reach that the watch,
lying before her as it always did, attracted his attention. Mrs Clennam
looked suddenly up at him.</p>
<p>'May I be permitted? Thank you. A fine old-fashioned watch,' he said,
taking it in his hand. 'Heavy for use, but massive and genuine. I have a
partiality for everything genuine. Such as I am, I am genuine myself. Hah!
A gentleman's watch with two cases in the old fashion. May I remove it
from the outer case? Thank you. Aye? An old silk watch-lining, worked with
beads! I have often seen these among old Dutch people and Belgians. Quaint
things!'</p>
<p>'They are old-fashioned, too,' said Mrs Clennam. 'Very. But this is not so
old as the watch, I think?'</p>
<p>'I think not.'</p>
<p>'Extraordinary how they used to complicate these cyphers!' remarked Mr
Blandois, glancing up with his own smile again. 'Now is this D. N. F.? It
might be almost anything.'</p>
<p>'Those are the letters.'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch, who had been observantly pausing all this time with a cup
of tea in his hand, and his mouth open ready to swallow the contents,
began to do so: always entirely filling his mouth before he emptied it at
a gulp; and always deliberating again before he refilled it.</p>
<p>'D. N. F. was some tender, lovely, fascinating fair-creature, I make no
doubt,' observed Mr Blandois, as he snapped on the case again. 'I adore
her memory on the assumption. Unfortunately for my peace of mind, I adore
but too readily. It may be a vice, it may be a virtue, but adoration of
female beauty and merit constitutes three parts of my character, madam.'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch had by this time poured himself out another cup of tea,
which he was swallowing in gulps as before, with his eyes directed to the
invalid.</p>
<p>'You may be heart-free here, sir,' she returned to Mr Blandois. 'Those
letters are not intended, I believe, for the initials of any name.'</p>
<p>'Of a motto, perhaps,' said Mr Blandois, casually.</p>
<p>'Of a sentence. They have always stood, I believe, for Do Not Forget!'</p>
<p>'And naturally,' said Mr Blandois, replacing the watch and stepping
backward to his former chair, 'you do not forget.'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch, finishing his tea, not only took a longer gulp than he had
taken yet, but made his succeeding pause under new circumstances: that is
to say, with his head thrown back and his cup held still at his lips,
while his eyes were still directed at the invalid. She had that force of
face, and that concentrated air of collecting her firmness or obstinacy,
which represented in her case what would have been gesture and action in
another, as she replied with her deliberate strength of speech: 'No, sir,
I do not forget. To lead a life as monotonous as mine has been during many
years, is not the way to forget. To lead a life of self-correction is not
the way to forget. To be sensible of having (as we all have, every one of
us, all the children of Adam!) offences to expiate and peace to make, does
not justify the desire to forget. Therefore I have long dismissed it, and
I neither forget nor wish to forget.'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch, who had latterly been shaking the sediment at the bottom of
his tea-cup, round and round, here gulped it down, and putting the cup in
the tea-tray, as done with, turned his eyes upon Mr Blandois as if to ask
him what he thought of that?</p>
<p>'All expressed, madam,' said Mr Blandois, with his smoothest bow and his
white hand on his breast, 'by the word "naturally," which I am proud to
have had sufficient apprehension and appreciation (but without
appreciation I could not be Blandois) to employ.'</p>
<p>'Pardon me, sir,' she returned, 'if I doubt the likelihood of a gentleman
of pleasure, and change, and politeness, accustomed to court and to be
courted—'</p>
<p>'Oh madam! By Heaven!'</p>
<p>'—If I doubt the likelihood of such a character quite comprehending
what belongs to mine in my circumstances. Not to obtrude doctrine upon
you,' she looked at the rigid pile of hard pale books before her, '(for
you go your own way, and the consequences are on your own head), I will
say this much: that I shape my course by pilots, strictly by proved and
tried pilots, under whom I cannot be shipwrecked—can not be—and
that if I were unmindful of the admonition conveyed in those three
letters, I should not be half as chastened as I am.'</p>
<p>It was curious how she seized the occasion to argue with some invisible
opponent. Perhaps with her own better sense, always turning upon herself
and her own deception.</p>
<p>'If I forgot my ignorances in my life of health and freedom, I might
complain of the life to which I am now condemned. I never do; I never have
done. If I forgot that this scene, the Earth, is expressly meant to be a
scene of gloom, and hardship, and dark trial, for the creatures who are
made out of its dust, I might have some tenderness for its vanities. But I
have no such tenderness. If I did not know that we are, every one, the
subject (most justly the subject) of a wrath that must be satisfied, and
against which mere actions are nothing, I might repine at the difference
between me, imprisoned here, and the people who pass that gateway yonder.
But I take it as a grace and favour to be elected to make the satisfaction
I am making here, to know what I know for certain here, and to work out
what I have worked out here. My affliction might otherwise have had no
meaning to me. Hence I would forget, and I do forget, nothing. Hence I am
contented, and say it is better with me than with millions.' As she spoke
these words, she put her hand upon the watch, and restored it to the
precise spot on her little table which it always occupied. With her touch
lingering upon it, she sat for some moments afterwards, looking at it
steadily and half-defiantly.</p>
<p>Mr Blandois, during this exposition, had been strictly attentive, keeping
his eyes fastened on the lady, and thoughtfully stroking his moustache
with his two hands. Mr Flintwinch had been a little fidgety, and now
struck in.</p>
<p>'There, there, there!' said he. 'That is quite understood, Mrs Clennam,
and you have spoken piously and well. Mr Blandois, I suspect, is not of a
pious cast.' 'On the contrary, sir!' that gentleman protested, snapping
his fingers. 'Your pardon! It's a part of my character. I am sensitive,
ardent, conscientious, and imaginative. A sensitive, ardent,
conscientious, and imaginative man, Mr Flintwinch, must be that, or
nothing!'</p>
<p>There was an inkling of suspicion in Mr Flintwinch's face that he might be
nothing, as he swaggered out of his chair (it was characteristic of this
man, as it is of all men similarly marked, that whatever he did, he
overdid, though it were sometimes by only a hairsbreadth), and approached
to take his leave of Mrs Clennam.</p>
<p>'With what will appear to you the egotism of a sick old woman, sir,' she
then said, 'though really through your accidental allusion, I have been
led away into the subject of myself and my infirmities. Being so
considerate as to visit me, I hope you will be likewise so considerate as
to overlook that. Don't compliment me, if you please.' For he was
evidently going to do it. 'Mr Flintwinch will be happy to render you any
service, and I hope your stay in this city may prove agreeable.'</p>
<p>Mr Blandois thanked her, and kissed his hand several times. 'This is an
old room,' he remarked, with a sudden sprightliness of manner, looking
round when he got near the door, 'I have been so interested that I have
not observed it. But it's a genuine old room.'</p>
<p>'It is a genuine old house,' said Mrs Clennam, with her frozen smile. 'A
place of no pretensions, but a piece of antiquity.'</p>
<p>'Faith!' cried the visitor. 'If Mr Flintwinch would do me the favour to
take me through the rooms on my way out, he could hardly oblige me more.
An old house is a weakness with me. I have many weaknesses, but none
greater. I love and study the picturesque in all its varieties. I have
been called picturesque myself. It is no merit to be picturesque—I
have greater merits, perhaps—but I may be, by an accident. Sympathy,
sympathy!'</p>
<p>'I tell you beforehand, Mr Blandois, that you'll find it very dingy and
very bare,' said Jeremiah, taking up the candle. 'It's not worth your
looking at.'But Mr Blandois, smiting him in a friendly manner on the back,
only laughed; so the said Blandois kissed his hand again to Mrs Clennam,
and they went out of the room together.</p>
<p>'You don't care to go up-stairs?' said Jeremiah, on the landing. 'On the
contrary, Mr Flintwinch; if not tiresome to you, I shall be ravished!'</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch, therefore, wormed himself up the staircase, and Mr Blandois
followed close. They ascended to the great garret bed-room which Arthur
had occupied on the night of his return. 'There, Mr Blandois!' said
Jeremiah, showing it, 'I hope you may think that worth coming so high to
see. I confess I don't.'</p>
<p>Mr Blandois being enraptured, they walked through other garrets and
passages, and came down the staircase again. By this time Mr Flintwinch
had remarked that he never found the visitor looking at any room, after
throwing one quick glance around, but always found the visitor looking at
him, Mr Flintwinch. With this discovery in his thoughts, he turned about
on the staircase for another experiment. He met his eyes directly; and on
the instant of their fixing one another, the visitor, with that ugly play
of nose and moustache, laughed (as he had done at every similar moment
since they left Mrs Clennam's chamber) a diabolically silent laugh.</p>
<p>As a much shorter man than the visitor, Mr Flintwinch was at the physical
disadvantage of being thus disagreeably leered at from a height; and as he
went first down the staircase, and was usually a step or two lower than
the other, this disadvantage was at the time increased. He postponed
looking at Mr Blandois again until this accidental inequality was removed
by their having entered the late Mr Clennam's room. But, then twisting
himself suddenly round upon him, he found his look unchanged.</p>
<p>'A most admirable old house,' smiled Mr Blandois. 'So mysterious. Do you
never hear any haunted noises here?'</p>
<p>'Noises,' returned Mr Flintwinch. 'No.'</p>
<p>'Nor see any devils?'</p>
<p>'Not,' said Mr Flintwinch, grimly screwing himself at his questioner, 'not
any that introduce themselves under that name and in that capacity.'</p>
<p>'Haha! A portrait here, I see.'</p>
<p>(Still looking at Mr Flintwinch, as if he were the portrait.)</p>
<p>'It's a portrait, sir, as you observe.'</p>
<p>'May I ask the subject, Mr Flintwinch?'</p>
<p>'Mr Clennam, deceased. Her husband.' 'Former owner of the remarkable
watch, perhaps?' said the visitor.</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch, who had cast his eyes towards the portrait, twisted himself
about again, and again found himself the subject of the same look and
smile. 'Yes, Mr Blandois,' he replied tartly. 'It was his, and his uncle's
before him, and Lord knows who before him; and that's all I can tell you
of its pedigree.'</p>
<p>'That's a strongly marked character, Mr Flintwinch, our friend up-stairs.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir,' said Jeremiah, twisting himself at the visitor again, as he
did during the whole of this dialogue, like some screw-machine that fell
short of its grip; for the other never changed, and he always felt obliged
to retreat a little. 'She is a remarkable woman. Great fortitude—great
strength of mind.'</p>
<p>'They must have been very happy,' said Blandois.</p>
<p>'Who?' demanded Mr Flintwinch, with another screw at him.</p>
<p>Mr Blandois shook his right forefinger towards the sick room, and his left
forefinger towards the portrait, and then, putting his arms akimbo and
striding his legs wide apart, stood smiling down at Mr Flintwinch with the
advancing nose and the retreating moustache.</p>
<p>'As happy as most other married people, I suppose,' returned Mr
Flintwinch. 'I can't say. I don't know. There are secrets in all
families.'</p>
<p>'Secrets!' cried Mr Blandois, quickly. 'Say it again, my son.'</p>
<p>'I say,' replied Mr Flintwinch, upon whom he had swelled himself so
suddenly that Mr Flintwinch found his face almost brushed by the dilated
chest. 'I say there are secrets in all families.'</p>
<p>'So there are,' cried the other, clapping him on both shoulders, and
rolling him backwards and forwards. 'Haha! you are right. So there are!
Secrets! Holy Blue! There are the devil's own secrets in some families, Mr
Flintwinch!' With that, after clapping Mr Flintwinch on both shoulders
several times, as if in a friendly and humorous way he were rallying him
on a joke he had made, he threw up his arms, threw back his head, hooked
his hands together behind it, and burst into a roar of laughter. It was in
vain for Mr Flintwinch to try another screw at him. He had his laugh out.</p>
<p>'But, favour me with the candle a moment,' he said, when he had done. 'Let
us have a look at the husband of the remarkable lady. Hah!' holding up the
light at arm's length. 'A decided expression of face here too, though not
of the same character. Looks as if he were saying, what is it—Do Not
Forget—does he not, Mr Flintwinch?</p>
<p>By Heaven, sir, he does!'</p>
<p>As he returned the candle, he looked at him once more; and then, leisurely
strolling out with him into the hall, declared it to be a charming old
house indeed, and one which had so greatly pleased him that he would not
have missed inspecting it for a hundred pounds. Throughout these singular
freedoms on the part of Mr Blandois, which involved a general alteration
in his demeanour, making it much coarser and rougher, much more violent
and audacious than before, Mr Flintwinch, whose leathern face was not
liable to many changes, preserved its immobility intact. Beyond now
appearing perhaps, to have been left hanging a trifle too long before that
friendly operation of cutting down, he outwardly maintained an equable
composure. They had brought their survey to a close in the little room at
the side of the hall, and he stood there, eyeing Mr Blandois.</p>
<p>'I am glad you are so well satisfied, sir,' was his calm remark. 'I didn't
expect it. You seem to be quite in good spirits.'</p>
<p>'In admirable spirits,' returned Blandois. 'Word of honour! never more
refreshed in spirits. Do you ever have presentiments, Mr Flintwinch?'</p>
<p>'I am not sure that I know what you mean by the term, sir,' replied that
gentleman.</p>
<p>'Say, in this case, Mr Flintwinch, undefined anticipations of pleasure to
come.'</p>
<p>'I can't say I'm sensible of such a sensation at present,' returned Mr
Flintwinch with the utmost gravity. 'If I should find it coming on, I'll
mention it.'</p>
<p>'Now I,' said Blandois, 'I, my son, have a presentiment to-night that we
shall be well acquainted. Do you find it coming on?'</p>
<p>'N-no,' returned Mr Flintwinch, deliberately inquiring of himself. 'I
can't say I do.'</p>
<p>'I have a strong presentiment that we shall become intimately acquainted.—You
have no feeling of that sort yet?'</p>
<p>'Not yet,' said Mr Flintwinch.</p>
<p>Mr Blandois, taking him by both shoulders again, rolled him about a little
in his former merry way, then drew his arm through his own, and invited
him to come off and drink a bottle of wine like a dear deep old dog as he
was.</p>
<p>Without a moment's indecision, Mr Flintwinch accepted the invitation, and
they went out to the quarters where the traveller was lodged, through a
heavy rain which had rattled on the windows, roofs, and pavements, ever
since nightfall. The thunder and lightning had long ago passed over, but
the rain was furious. On their arrival at Mr Blandois' room, a bottle of
port wine was ordered by that gallant gentleman; who (crushing every
pretty thing he could collect, in the soft disposition of his dainty
figure) coiled himself upon the window-seat, while Mr Flintwinch took a
chair opposite to him, with the table between them. Mr Blandois proposed
having the largest glasses in the house, to which Mr Flintwinch assented.
The bumpers filled, Mr Blandois, with a roystering gaiety, clinked the top
of his glass against the bottom of Mr Flintwinch's, and the bottom of his
glass against the top of Mr Flintwinch's, and drank to the intimate
acquaintance he foresaw.</p>
<p>Mr Flintwinch gravely pledged him, and drank all the wine he could get,
and said nothing. As often as Mr Blandois clinked glasses (which was at
every replenishment), Mr Flintwinch stolidly did his part of the clinking,
and would have stolidly done his companion's part of the wine as well as
his own: being, except in the article of palate, a mere cask.</p>
<p>In short, Mr Blandois found that to pour port wine into the reticent
Flintwinch was, not to open him but to shut him up. Moreover, he had the
appearance of a perfect ability to go on all night; or, if occasion were,
all next day and all next night; whereas Mr Blandois soon grew
indistinctly conscious of swaggering too fiercely and boastfully. He
therefore terminated the entertainment at the end of the third bottle.</p>
<p>'You will draw upon us to-morrow, sir,' said Mr Flintwinch, with a
business-like face at parting.</p>
<p>'My Cabbage,' returned the other, taking him by the collar with both
hands, 'I'll draw upon you; have no fear. Adieu, my Flintwinch. Receive at
parting;' here he gave him a southern embrace, and kissed him soundly on
both cheeks; 'the word of a gentleman! By a thousand Thunders, you shall
see me again!'</p>
<p>He did not present himself next day, though the letter of advice came duly
to hand. Inquiring after him at night, Mr Flintwinch found, with surprise,
that he had paid his bill and gone back to the Continent by way of Calais.
Nevertheless, Jeremiah scraped out of his cogitating face a lively
conviction that Mr Blandois would keep his word on this occasion, and
would be seen again.</p>
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