Pickwickian Studies | Page 7

Percy Hethrington Fitzgerald
not
until it was ten minutes past did he rise.

IV.--Had Mr. Pickwick ever Loved?
Mr. Pickwick's early history is obscure enough, and we know no details
save that he had been "in business." But had he ever an affair of the
heart? Just as in real life, when a stray allusion will occasionally escape

from a person betraying something of his past history, so once or twice
a casual remark of Mr. Pickwick's furnishes a hint. Thus Mr. Magnus,
pressing him for his advice in this delicate matter of proposing, asked
him had he ever done this sort of thing in his time. "You mean
proposing?" said the great man. "Yes." "Never," said Mr. Pickwick,
with great energy, and then repeated the word "Never." His friend then
assumed that he did not know how it was best to begin. "Why," said the
other, cautiously, "I may have formed some ideas on the subject," but
then added that he had "never submitted them to the test of experience."
This is distinct enough, but it does all the same hint at some affaire de
coeur, else why would he "have formed some ideas upon the subject."
Of course, it may be that he was thinking of Mrs. Bardell and her cruel
charges. Still, it was strange that a man should have reached to fifty,
have grown round and stout, without ever offering his hand. The first
picture in the book, however, helps us to speculate a little. Over his
head in the room at Dulwich hangs the portrait of an old lady in
spectacles, the image of the great Samuel; his mother certainly. He
evidently regarded her with deep affection, he had brought the picture
to Dulwich and placed it where it should always be before his eyes.
Could it not be, and is it not natural that in addition to his other
amiabilities he was the best of sons--that she "ruled the roast"--that in
the old Mrs. Wardle, to whom he so filially attended, he saw his
mother's image, that she was with him to the day of her death, and that
while she lived, he resolved that no one else should be mistress there!
After her death he found himself a confirmed old bachelor. There's a
speculation for you on the German lines.
We might go on. This self denial must have been the more meritorious
as he was by nature of an affectionate, even amorous, cast. He seized
every opportunity of kissing the young ladies. He would certainly have
liked to have had some fair being at home whom he could thus
distinguish. How good this description of the rogue--
"Mr. Pickwick kissed the young ladies--we were going to say as if they
were his own daughters, only, as he might possibly have infused a little
more warmth into the salutation, the comparison would not be quite
appropriate."

He never lost a chance. In the same spirit, when the blushing Arabella
came to tell of her marriage, "can you forgive my imprudence?" He
returned "no verbal response"--not he--"but took off his spectacles in
great haste, and seizing both the young lady's hands in his, kissed her a
great many times--perhaps a greater number of times than was
absolutely necessary." Observe the artfulness of all this--the
deliberation--taking off the spectacles so that they should not be in the
way--seizing her hands--and then setting to work! Oh, he knew more of
"this sort of thing" than he had credit for. He had never
proposed--true--but he had been near it a precious sight more than he
said.
Miss Witherfield is a rather mysterious personage, yet we take an
interest in her and speculate on her history. She lived some twenty
miles from Ipswich--no doubt at a family place of her own. She had
come in to stay at the White Horse for the night and the morning. She
was, no doubt, a person of property--otherwise Mr. Magnus would not
have been so eager, and he must have been a fortune hunter, for he
confided to Mr. Pickwick, that he had been jilted "three or four times."
What a quaint notion by the way that of his: "I think an Inn is a good
sort of place to propose to a single woman in, Mr. Pickwick. She is
more likely to feel the loneliness of her situation in travelling, perhaps
than she would be, at home."
We find here some of the always amusing bits of confusion that recur
in the book. Here might be a Calverley question, "When was it, and
where was it, that the Pickwickians had two dinners in the one day?"
Answer: At the Great White Horse on this very visit. When Mr.
Nupkins retired to lunch, after his interview with Miss Witherfield, the
Pickwickians sat down to their
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