Master Humphrey's Clock by Charles Dickens (good inspirational books .TXT) đ
- Author: Charles Dickens
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Having uttered this friendly caution, the President settled himself in his chair with great dignity, and requested that Mr. Samuel would relate an anecdote.
âIâve told one,â said Sam.
âWery good, sir; tell another,â returned the chair.
âWe wos a talking jist now, sir,â said Sam, turning to Slithers, âabout barbers. Pursuing that âere fruitful theme, sir, Iâll tell you in a wery few words a romantic little story about another barber as pârâaps you may never have heerd.â
âSamivel!â said Mr. Weller, again bringing his watch and the table into smart collision, âaddress your obserwations to the cheer, sir, and not to priwate indiwiduals!â
âAnd if I might rise to order,â said the barber in a soft voice, and looking round him with a conciliatory smile as he leant over the table, with the knuckles of his left hand resting upon it, - âif I MIGHT rise to order, I would suggest that âbarbersâ is not exactly the kind of language which is agreeable and soothing to our feelings. You, sir, will correct me if Iâm wrong, but I believe there IS such a word in the dictionary as hairdressers.â
âWell, but suppose he wasnât a hairdresser,â suggested Sam.
âWy then, sir, be parliamentary and call him vun all the more,â returned his father. âIn the same vay as evâry genâlman in another place is a Honourable, evâry barber in this place is a hairdresser. Ven you read the speeches in the papers, and see as vun genâlman says of another, âthe Honourable member, if he vill allow me to call him so,â you vill understand, sir, that that means, âif he vill allow me to keep up that âere pleasant and uniwersal fiction.ââ
It is a common remark, confirmed by history and experience, that great men rise with the circumstances in which they are placed. Mr. Weller came out so strong in his capacity of chairman, that Sam was for some time prevented from speaking by a grin of surprise, which held his faculties enchained, and at last subsided in a long whistle of a single note. Nay, the old gentleman appeared even to have astonished himself, and that to no small extent, as was demonstrated by the vast amount of chuckling in which he indulged, after the utterance of these lucid remarks.
âHereâs the story,â said Sam. âVunce upon a time there wos a young hairdresser as opened a wery smart little shop vith four wax dummies in the winder, two genâlmen and two ladies - the genâlmen vith blue dots for their beards, wery large viskers, oudacious heads of hair, uncommon clear eyes, and nostrils of amazinâ pinkness; the ladies vith their heads oâ one side, their right forefingers on their lips, and their forms deweloped beautiful, in vich last respect they had the adwantage over the genâlmen, as wasnât allowed but wery little shoulder, and terminated rayther abrupt in fancy drapery. He had also a many hair-brushes and tooth-brushes bottled up in the winder, neat glass-cases on the counter, a floor-clothed cuttinâ-room up-stairs, and a weighinâ- macheen in the shop, right opposite the door. But the great attraction and ornament wos the dummies, which this here young hairdresser wos constantly a runninâ out in the road to look at, and constantly a runninâ in again to touch up and polish; in short, he wos so proud on âem, that ven Sunday come, he wos always wretched and misârable to think they wos behind the shutters, and looked anxiously for Monday on that account. Vun oâ these dummies wos a favrite vith him beyond the others; and ven any of his acquaintance asked him wy he didnât get married - as the young ladies he knowâd, in partickler, often did - he used to say, âNever! I never vill enter into the bonds of vedlock,â he says, âuntil I meet vith a young âooman as realises my idea oâ that âere fairest dummy vith the light hair. Then, and not till then,â he says, âI vill approach the altar.â All the young ladies he knowâd as had got dark hair told him this wos wery sinful, and that he wos wurshippinâ a idle; but them as wos at all near the same shade as the dummy coloured up wery much, and wos observed to think him a wery nice young man.â
âSamivel,â said Mr. Weller, gravely, âa member oâ this associashun beinâ one oâ that âere tender sex which is now immedetly referred to, I have to rekvest that you vill make no reflections.â
âI ainât a makinâ any, am I?â inquired Sam.
âOrder, sir!â rejoined Mr. Weller, with severe dignity. Then, sinking the chairman in the father, he added, in his usual tone of voice: âSamivel, drive on!â
Sam interchanged a smile with the housekeeper, and proceeded:
âThe young hairdresser hadnât been in the habit oâ makinâ this avowal above six months, ven he encountered a young lady as wos the wery picter oâ the fairest dummy. âNow,â he says, âitâs all up. I am a slave!â The young lady wos not only the picter oâ the fairest dummy, but she was wery romantic, as the young hairdresser was, too, and he says, âO!â he says, âhereâs a community oâ feelinâ, hereâs a flow oâ soul!â he says, âhereâs a interchange oâ sentiment!â The young lady didnât say much, oâ course, but she expressed herself agreeable, and shortly artervards vent to see him vith a mutual friend. The hairdresser rushes out to meet her, but dârectly she sees the dummies she changes colour and falls a tremblinâ wiolently. âLook up, my love,â says the hairdresser, âbehold your imige in my winder, but not correcter than in my art!â âMy imige!â she says. âYourn!â replies the hairdresser. âBut whose imige is THAT?â she says, a pinting at vun oâ the genâlmen. âNo vunâs, my love,â he says, âit is but a idea.â âA idea! â she cries: âit is a portrait, I feel it is a portrait, and that âere noble face must be in the millingtary!â âWot do I hear!â says he, a crumplinâ his curls. âVilliam Gibbs,â she says, quite firm, ânever renoo the subject. I respect you as a friend,â she says, âbut my affections is set upon that manly brow.â âThis,â says the hairdresser, âis a regâlar blight, and in it I perceive the hand of Fate. Farevell!â Vith these vords he rushes into the shop, breaks the dummyâs nose vith a blow of his curlinâ-irons, melts him down at the parlour fire, and never smiles artervards.â
âThe young lady, Mr. Weller?â said the housekeeper.
âWhy, maâam,â said Sam, âfinding that Fate had a spite agin her, and everybody she come into contact vith, she never smiled neither, but read a deal oâ poetry and pined avay, - by rayther slow degrees, for she ainât dead yet. It took a deal oâ poetry to kill the hairdresser, and some people say arter all that it was more the gin and water as caused him to be run over; pârâaps it was a little oâ both, and came oâ mixing the two.â
The barber declared that Mr. Weller had related one of the most interesting stories that had ever come within his knowledge, in which opinion the housekeeper entirely concurred.
âAre you a married man, sir?â inquired Sam.
The barber replied that he had not that honour.
âI sâpose you mean to be?â said Sam.
âWell,â replied the barber, rubbing his hands smirkingly, âI donât know, I donât think itâs very likely.â
âThatâs a bad sign,â said Sam; âif youâd said you meant to be vun oâ these days, I should haâ looked upon you as beinâ safe. Youâre in a wery precarious state.â
âI am not conscious of any danger, at all events,â returned the barber.
âNo more wos I, sir,â said the elder Mr. Weller, interposing; âthose vere my symptoms, exactly. Iâve been took that vay twice. Keep your vether eye open, my friend, or youâre gone.â
There was something so very solemn about this admonition, both in its matter and manner, and also in the way in which Mr. Weller still kept his eye fixed upon the unsuspecting victim, that nobody cared to speak for some little time, and might not have cared to do so for some time longer, if the housekeeper had not happened to sigh, which called off the old gentlemanâs attention and gave rise to a gallant inquiry whether âthere wos anythinâ wery piercinâ in that âere little heart?â
âDear me, Mr. Weller!â said the housekeeper, laughing.
âNo, but is there anythinâ as agitates it?â pursued the old gentleman. âHas it always been obderrate, always opposed to the happiness oâ human creeturs? Eh? Has it?â
At this critical juncture for her blushes and confusion, the housekeeper discovered that more ale was wanted, and hastily withdrew into the cellar to draw the same, followed by the barber, who insisted on carrying the candle. Having looked after her with a very complacent expression of face, and after him with some disdain, Mr. Weller caused his glance to travel slowly round the kitchen, until at length it rested on his son.
âSammy,â said Mr. Weller, âI mistrust that barber.â
âWot for?â returned Sam; âwotâs he got to do with you? Youâre a nice man, you are, arter pretendinâ all kinds oâ terror, to go a payinâ compliments and talkinâ about hearts and piercers.â
The imputation of gallantry appeared to afford Mr. Weller the utmost delight, for he replied in a voice choked by suppressed laughter, and with the tears in his eyes,
âWos I a talkinâ about hearts and piercers, - wos I though, Sammy, eh?â
âWos you? of course you wos.â
âShe donât know no better, Sammy, there ainât no harm in it, - no danger, Sammy; sheâs only a punster. She seemed pleased, though, didnât she? Oâ course, she wos pleased, itâs natâral she should be, wery natâral.â
âHeâs wain of it!â exclaimed Sam, joining in his fatherâs mirth. âHeâs actually wain!â
âHush!â replied Mr. Weller, composing his features, âtheyâre a cominâ back, - the little heartâs a cominâ back. But mark these wurds oâ mine once more, and remember âem ven your father says he said âem. Samivel, I mistrust that âere deceitful barber.â
CHAPTER VI - MASTER HUMPHREY, FROM HIS CLOCK-SIDE IN THE CHIMNEY CORNER
TWO or three evenings after the institution of Mr. Wellerâs Watch, I thought I heard, as I walked in the garden, the voice of Mr. Weller himself at no great distance; and stopping once or twice to listen more attentively, I found that the sounds proceeded from my housekeeperâs little sitting-room, which is at the back of the house. I took no further notice of the circumstance at that time, but it formed the subject of a conversation between me and my friend Jack Redburn next morning, when I found that I had not been deceived in my impression. Jack furnished me with the following particulars; and as he appeared to take extraordinary pleasure in relating them, I have begged him in future to jot down any such domestic scenes or occurrences that may please his humour, in order that they may be told in his own way. I must confess that, as Mr. Pickwick and he are constantly together, I have been influenced, in making this request, by a secret desire to know something of their proceedings.
On the evening in question, the housekeeperâs room was arranged with particular care, and the housekeeper herself was very smartly dressed. The preparations, however, were not confined to mere showy demonstrations, as tea was prepared for three persons, with a small display of preserves and
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