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<h2> CHAPTER 9. In which the Wooden Midshipman gets into Trouble </h2>
<p>That spice of romance and love of the marvellous, of which there was a
pretty strong infusion in the nature of young Walter Gay, and which the
guardianship of his Uncle, old Solomon Gills, had not very much weakened
by the waters of stern practical experience, was the occasion of his
attaching an uncommon and delightful interest to the adventure of Florence
with Good Mrs Brown. He pampered and cherished it in his memory,
especially that part of it with which he had been associated: until it
became the spoiled child of his fancy, and took its own way, and did what
it liked with it.</p>
<p>The recollection of those incidents, and his own share in them, may have
been made the more captivating, perhaps, by the weekly dreamings of old
Sol and Captain Cuttle on Sundays. Hardly a Sunday passed, without
mysterious references being made by one or other of those worthy chums to
Richard Whittington; and the latter gentleman had even gone so far as to
purchase a ballad of considerable antiquity, that had long fluttered among
many others, chiefly expressive of maritime sentiments, on a dead wall in
the Commercial Road: which poetical performance set forth the courtship
and nuptials of a promising young coal-whipper with a certain 'lovely
Peg,' the accomplished daughter of the master and part-owner of a
Newcastle collier. In this stirring legend, Captain Cuttle descried a
profound metaphysical bearing on the case of Walter and Florence; and it
excited him so much, that on very festive occasions, as birthdays and a
few other non-Dominical holidays, he would roar through the whole song in
the little back parlour; making an amazing shake on the word Pe-e-eg, with
which every verse concluded, in compliment to the heroine of the piece.</p>
<p>But a frank, free-spirited, open-hearted boy, is not much given to
analysing the nature of his own feelings, however strong their hold upon
him: and Walter would have found it difficult to decide this point. He had
a great affection for the wharf where he had encountered Florence, and for
the streets (albeit not enchanting in themselves) by which they had come
home. The shoes that had so often tumbled off by the way, he preserved in
his own room; and, sitting in the little back parlour of an evening, he
had drawn a whole gallery of fancy portraits of Good Mrs Brown. It may be
that he became a little smarter in his dress after that memorable
occasion; and he certainly liked in his leisure time to walk towards that
quarter of the town where Mr Dombey's house was situated, on the vague
chance of passing little Florence in the street. But the sentiment of all
this was as boyish and innocent as could be. Florence was very pretty, and
it is pleasant to admire a pretty face. Florence was defenceless and weak,
and it was a proud thought that he had been able to render her any
protection and assistance. Florence was the most grateful little creature
in the world, and it was delightful to see her bright gratitude beaming in
her face. Florence was neglected and coldly looked upon, and his breast
was full of youthful interest for the slighted child in her dull, stately
home.</p>
<p>Thus it came about that, perhaps some half-a-dozen times in the course of
the year, Walter pulled off his hat to Florence in the street, and
Florence would stop to shake hands. Mrs Wickam (who, with a characteristic
alteration of his name, invariably spoke of him as 'Young Graves') was so
well used to this, knowing the story of their acquaintance, that she took
no heed of it at all. Miss Nipper, on the other hand, rather looked out
for these occasions: her sensitive young heart being secretly propitiated
by Walter's good looks, and inclining to the belief that its sentiments
were responded to.</p>
<p>In this way, Walter, so far from forgetting or losing sight of his
acquaintance with Florence, only remembered it better and better. As to
its adventurous beginning, and all those little circumstances which gave
it a distinctive character and relish, he took them into account, more as
a pleasant story very agreeable to his imagination, and not to be
dismissed from it, than as a part of any matter of fact with which he was
concerned. They set off Florence very much, to his fancy; but not himself.
Sometimes he thought (and then he walked very fast) what a grand thing it
would have been for him to have been going to sea on the day after that
first meeting, and to have gone, and to have done wonders there, and to
have stopped away a long time, and to have come back an Admiral of all the
colours of the dolphin, or at least a Post-Captain with epaulettes of
insupportable brightness, and have married Florence (then a beautiful
young woman) in spite of Mr Dombey's teeth, cravat, and watch-chain, and
borne her away to the blue shores of somewhere or other, triumphantly. But
these flights of fancy seldom burnished the brass plate of Dombey and
Son's Offices into a tablet of golden hope, or shed a brilliant lustre on
their dirty skylights; and when the Captain and Uncle Sol talked about
Richard Whittington and masters' daughters, Walter felt that he understood
his true position at Dombey and Son's, much better than they did.</p>
<p>So it was that he went on doing what he had to do from day to day, in a
cheerful, pains-taking, merry spirit; and saw through the sanguine
complexion of Uncle Sol and Captain Cuttle; and yet entertained a thousand
indistinct and visionary fancies of his own, to which theirs were
work-a-day probabilities. Such was his condition at the Pipchin period,
when he looked a little older than of yore, but not much; and was the same
light-footed, light-hearted, light-headed lad, as when he charged into the
parlour at the head of Uncle Sol and the imaginary boarders, and lighted
him to bring up the Madeira.</p>
<p>'Uncle Sol,' said Walter, 'I don't think you're well. You haven't eaten
any breakfast. I shall bring a doctor to you, if you go on like this.'</p>
<p>'He can't give me what I want, my boy,' said Uncle Sol. 'At least he is in
good practice if he can—and then he wouldn't.'</p>
<p>'What is it, Uncle? Customers?'</p>
<p>'Ay,' returned Solomon, with a sigh. 'Customers would do.'</p>
<p>'Confound it, Uncle!' said Walter, putting down his breakfast cup with a
clatter, and striking his hand on the table: 'when I see the people going
up and down the street in shoals all day, and passing and re-passing the
shop every minute, by scores, I feel half tempted to rush out, collar
somebody, bring him in, and make him buy fifty pounds' worth of
instruments for ready money. What are you looking in at the door for?—'
continued Walter, apostrophizing an old gentleman with a powdered head
(inaudibly to him of course), who was staring at a ship's telescope with
all his might and main. 'That's no use. I could do that. Come in and buy
it!'</p>
<p>The old gentleman, however, having satiated his curiosity, walked calmly
away.</p>
<p>'There he goes!' said Walter. 'That's the way with 'em all. But, Uncle—I
say, Uncle Sol'—for the old man was meditating and had not responded
to his first appeal. 'Don't be cast down. Don't be out of spirits, Uncle.
When orders do come, they'll come in such a crowd, you won't be able to
execute 'em.'</p>
<p>'I shall be past executing 'em, whenever they come, my boy,' returned
Solomon Gills. 'They'll never come to this shop again, till I am out of
t.'</p>
<p>'I say, Uncle! You musn't really, you know!' urged Walter. 'Don't!'</p>
<p>Old Sol endeavoured to assume a cheery look, and smiled across the little
table at him as pleasantly as he could.</p>
<p>'There's nothing more than usual the matter; is there, Uncle?' said
Walter, leaning his elbows on the tea tray, and bending over, to speak the
more confidentially and kindly. 'Be open with me, Uncle, if there is, and
tell me all about it.'</p>
<p>'No, no, no,' returned Old Sol. 'More than usual? No, no. What should
there be the matter more than usual?'</p>
<p>Walter answered with an incredulous shake of his head. 'That's what I want
to know,' he said, 'and you ask me! I'll tell you what, Uncle, when I see
you like this, I am quite sorry that I live with you.'</p>
<p>Old Sol opened his eyes involuntarily.</p>
<p>'Yes. Though nobody ever was happier than I am and always have been with
you, I am quite sorry that I live with you, when I see you with anything
in your mind.'</p>
<p>'I am a little dull at such times, I know,' observed Solomon, meekly
rubbing his hands.</p>
<p>'What I mean, Uncle Sol,' pursued Walter, bending over a little more to
pat him on the shoulder, 'is, that then I feel you ought to have, sitting
here and pouring out the tea instead of me, a nice little dumpling of a
wife, you know,—a comfortable, capital, cosy old lady, who was just
a match for you, and knew how to manage you, and keep you in good heart.
Here am I, as loving a nephew as ever was (I am sure I ought to be!) but I
am only a nephew, and I can't be such a companion to you when you're low
and out of sorts as she would have made herself, years ago, though I'm
sure I'd give any money if I could cheer you up. And so I say, when I see
you with anything on your mind, that I feel quite sorry you haven't got
somebody better about you than a blundering young rough-and-tough boy like
me, who has got the will to console you, Uncle, but hasn't got the way—hasn't
got the way,' repeated Walter, reaching over further yet, to shake his
Uncle by the hand.</p>
<p>'Wally, my dear boy,' said Solomon, 'if the cosy little old lady had taken
her place in this parlour five and forty years ago, I never could have
been fonder of her than I am of you.'</p>
<p>'I know that, Uncle Sol,' returned Walter. 'Lord bless you, I know that.
But you wouldn't have had the whole weight of any uncomfortable secrets if
she had been with you, because she would have known how to relieve you of
'em, and I don't.'</p>
<p>'Yes, yes, you do,' returned the Instrument-maker.</p>
<p>'Well then, what's the matter, Uncle Sol?' said Walter, coaxingly. 'Come!
What's the matter?'</p>
<p>Solomon Gills persisted that there was nothing the matter; and maintained
it so resolutely, that his nephew had no resource but to make a very
indifferent imitation of believing him.</p>
<p>'All I can say is, Uncle Sol, that if there is—'</p>
<p>'But there isn't,' said Solomon.</p>
<p>'Very well,' said Walter. 'Then I've no more to say; and that's lucky, for
my time's up for going to business. I shall look in by-and-by when I'm
out, to see how you get on, Uncle. And mind, Uncle! I'll never believe you
again, and never tell you anything more about Mr Carker the Junior, if I
find out that you have been deceiving me!'</p>
<p>Solomon Gills laughingly defied him to find out anything of the kind; and
Walter, revolving in his thoughts all sorts of impracticable ways of
making fortunes and placing the wooden Midshipman in a position of
independence, betook himself to the offices of Dombey and Son with a
heavier countenance than he usually carried there.</p>
<p>There lived in those days, round the corner—in Bishopsgate Street
Without—one Brogley, sworn broker and appraiser, who kept a shop
where every description of second-hand furniture was exhibited in the most
uncomfortable aspect, and under circumstances and in combinations the most
completely foreign to its purpose. Dozens of chairs hooked on to
washing-stands, which with difficulty poised themselves on the shoulders
of sideboards, which in their turn stood upon the wrong side of
dining-tables, gymnastic with their legs upward on the tops of other
dining-tables, were among its most reasonable arrangements. A banquet
array of dish-covers, wine-glasses, and decanters was generally to be
seen, spread forth upon the bosom of a four- post bedstead, for the
entertainment of such genial company as half-a-dozen pokers, and a hall
lamp. A set of window curtains with no windows belonging to them, would be
seen gracefully draping a barricade of chests of drawers, loaded with
little jars from chemists' shops; while a homeless hearthrug severed from
its natural companion the fireside, braved the shrewd east wind in its
adversity, and trembled in melancholy accord with the shrill complainings
of a cabinet piano, wasting away, a string a day, and faintly resounding
to the noises of the street in its jangling and distracted brain. Of
motionless clocks that never stirred a finger, and seemed as incapable of
being successfully wound up, as the pecuniary affairs of their former
owners, there was always great choice in Mr Brogley's shop; and various
looking-glasses, accidentally placed at compound interest of reflection
and refraction, presented to the eye an eternal perspective of bankruptcy
and ruin.</p>
<p>Mr Brogley himself was a moist-eyed, pink-complexioned, crisp-haired man,
of a bulky figure and an easy temper—for that class of Caius Marius
who sits upon the ruins of other people's Carthages, can keep up his
spirits well enough. He had looked in at Solomon's shop sometimes, to ask
a question about articles in Solomon's way of business; and Walter knew
him sufficiently to give him good day when they met in the street. But as
that was the extent of the broker's acquaintance with Solomon Gills also,
Walter was not a little surprised when he came back in the course of the
forenoon, agreeably to his promise, to find Mr Brogley sitting in the back
parlour with his hands in his pockets, and his hat hanging up behind the
door.</p>
<p>'Well, Uncle Sol!' said Walter. The old man was sitting ruefully on the
opposite side of the table, with his spectacles over his eyes, for a
wonder, instead of on his forehead. 'How are you now?'</p>
<p>Solomon shook his head, and waved one hand towards the broker, as
introducing him.</p>
<p>'Is there anything the matter?' asked Walter, with a catching in his
breath.</p>
<p>'No, no. There's nothing the matter, said Mr Brogley. 'Don't let it put
you out of the way.' Walter looked from the broker to his Uncle in mute
amazement. 'The fact is,' said Mr Brogley, 'there's a little payment on a
bond debt—three hundred and seventy odd, overdue: and I'm in
possession.'</p>
<p>'In possession!' cried Walter, looking round at the shop.</p>
<p>'Ah!' said Mr Brogley, in confidential assent, and nodding his head as if
he would urge the advisability of their all being comfortable together.
'It's an execution. That's what it is. Don't let it put you out of the
way. I come myself, because of keeping it quiet and sociable. You know me.
It's quite private.'</p>
<p>'Uncle Sol!' faltered Walter.</p>
<p>'Wally, my boy,' returned his uncle. 'It's the first time. Such a calamity
never happened to me before. I'm an old man to begin.' Pushing up his
spectacles again (for they were useless any longer to conceal his
emotion), he covered his face with his hand, and sobbed aloud, and his
tears fell down upon his coffee-coloured waistcoat.</p>
<p>'Uncle Sol! Pray! oh don't!' exclaimed Walter, who really felt a thrill of
terror in seeing the old man weep. 'For God's sake don't do that. Mr
Brogley, what shall I do?'</p>
<p>'I should recommend you looking up a friend or so,' said Mr Brogley, 'and
talking it over.'</p>
<p>'To be sure!' cried Walter, catching at anything. 'Certainly! Thankee.
Captain Cuttle's the man, Uncle. Wait till I run to Captain Cuttle. Keep
your eye upon my Uncle, will you, Mr Brogley, and make him as comfortable
as you can while I am gone? Don't despair, Uncle Sol. Try and keep a good
heart, there's a dear fellow!'</p>
<p>Saying this with great fervour, and disregarding the old man's broken
remonstrances, Walter dashed out of the shop again as hard as he could go;
and, having hurried round to the office to excuse himself on the plea of
his Uncle's sudden illness, set off, full speed, for Captain Cuttle's
residence.</p>
<p>Everything seemed altered as he ran along the streets. There were the
usual entanglement and noise of carts, drays, omnibuses, waggons, and foot
passengers, but the misfortune that had fallen on the wooden Midshipman
made it strange and new. Houses and shops were different from what they
used to be, and bore Mr Brogley's warrant on their fronts in large
characters. The broker seemed to have got hold of the very churches; for
their spires rose into the sky with an unwonted air. Even the sky itself
was changed, and had an execution in it plainly.</p>
<p>Captain Cuttle lived on the brink of a little canal near the India Docks,
where there was a swivel bridge which opened now and then to let some
wandering monster of a ship come roaming up the street like a stranded
leviathan. The gradual change from land to water, on the approach to
Captain Cuttle's lodgings, was curious. It began with the erection of
flagstaffs, as appurtenances to public-houses; then came slop-sellers'
shops, with Guernsey shirts, sou'wester hats, and canvas pantaloons, at
once the tightest and the loosest of their order, hanging up outside.
These were succeeded by anchor and chain-cable forges, where sledgehammers
were dinging upon iron all day long. Then came rows of houses, with little
vane-surmounted masts uprearing themselves from among the scarlet beans.
Then, ditches. Then, pollard willows. Then, more ditches. Then,
unaccountable patches of dirty water, hardly to be descried, for the ships
that covered them. Then, the air was perfumed with chips; and all other
trades were swallowed up in mast, oar, and block-making, and boatbuilding.
Then, the ground grew marshy and unsettled. Then, there was nothing to be
smelt but rum and sugar. Then, Captain Cuttle's lodgings—at once a
first floor and a top storey, in Brig Place—were close before you.</p>
<p>The Captain was one of those timber-looking men, suits of oak as well as
hearts, whom it is almost impossible for the liveliest imagination to
separate from any part of their dress, however insignificant. Accordingly,
when Walter knocked at the door, and the Captain instantly poked his head
out of one of his little front windows, and hailed him, with the hard
glared hat already on it, and the shirt-collar like a sail, and the wide
suit of blue, all standing as usual, Walter was as fully persuaded that he
was always in that state, as if the Captain had been a bird and those had
been his feathers.</p>
<p>'Wal'r, my lad!'said Captain Cuttle. 'Stand by and knock again. Hard! It's
washing day.'</p>
<p>Walter, in his impatience, gave a prodigious thump with the knocker.</p>
<p>'Hard it is!' said Captain Cuttle, and immediately drew in his head, as if
he expected a squall.</p>
<p>Nor was he mistaken: for a widow lady, with her sleeves rolled up to her
shoulders, and her arms frothy with soap-suds and smoking with hot water,
replied to the summons with startling rapidity. Before she looked at
Walter she looked at the knocker, and then, measuring him with her eyes
from head to foot, said she wondered he had left any of it.</p>
<p>'Captain Cuttle's at home, I know,' said Walter with a conciliatory smile.</p>
<p>'Is he?' replied the widow lady. 'In-deed!'</p>
<p>'He has just been speaking to me,' said Walter, in breathless explanation.</p>
<p>'Has he?' replied the widow lady. 'Then p'raps you'll give him Mrs
MacStinger's respects, and say that the next time he lowers himself and
his lodgings by talking out of the winder she'll thank him to come down
and open the door too.' Mrs MacStinger spoke loud, and listened for any
observations that might be offered from the first floor.</p>
<p>'I'll mention it,' said Walter, 'if you'll have the goodness to let me in,
Ma'am.'</p>
<p>For he was repelled by a wooden fortification extending across the
doorway, and put there to prevent the little MacStingers in their moments
of recreation from tumbling down the steps.</p>
<p>'A boy that can knock my door down,' said Mrs MacStinger, contemptuously,
'can get over that, I should hope!' But Walter, taking this as a
permission to enter, and getting over it, Mrs MacStinger immediately
demanded whether an Englishwoman's house was her castle or not; and
whether she was to be broke in upon by 'raff.' On these subjects her
thirst for information was still very importunate, when Walter, having
made his way up the little staircase through an artificial fog occasioned
by the washing, which covered the banisters with a clammy perspiration,
entered Captain Cuttle's room, and found that gentleman in ambush behind
the door.</p>
<p>'Never owed her a penny, Wal'r,' said Captain Cuttle, in a low voice, and
with visible marks of trepidation on his countenance. 'Done her a world of
good turns, and the children too. Vixen at times, though. Whew!'</p>
<p>'I should go away, Captain Cuttle,' said Walter.</p>
<p>'Dursn't do it, Wal'r,' returned the Captain. 'She'd find me out, wherever
I went. Sit down. How's Gills?'</p>
<p>The Captain was dining (in his hat) off cold loin of mutton, porter, and
some smoking hot potatoes, which he had cooked himself, and took out of a
little saucepan before the fire as he wanted them. He unscrewed his hook
at dinner-time, and screwed a knife into its wooden socket instead, with
which he had already begun to peel one of these potatoes for Walter. His
rooms were very small, and strongly impregnated with tobacco-smoke, but
snug enough: everything being stowed away, as if there were an earthquake
regularly every half-hour.</p>
<p>'How's Gills?' inquired the Captain.</p>
<p>Walter, who had by this time recovered his breath, and lost his spirits—or
such temporary spirits as his rapid journey had given him—looked at
his questioner for a moment, said 'Oh, Captain Cuttle!' and burst into
tears.</p>
<p>No words can describe the Captain's consternation at this sight Mrs
MacStinger faded into nothing before it. He dropped the potato and the
fork—and would have dropped the knife too if he could—and sat
gazing at the boy, as if he expected to hear next moment that a gulf had
opened in the City, which had swallowed up his old friend, coffee-coloured
suit, buttons, chronometer, spectacles, and all.</p>
<p>But when Walter told him what was really the matter, Captain Cuttle, after
a moment's reflection, started up into full activity. He emptied out of a
little tin canister on the top shelf of the cupboard, his whole stock of
ready money (amounting to thirteen pounds and half-a-crown), which he
transferred to one of the pockets of his square blue coat; further
enriched that repository with the contents of his plate chest, consisting
of two withered atomies of tea-spoons, and an obsolete pair of
knock-knee'd sugar-tongs; pulled up his immense double-cased silver watch
from the depths in which it reposed, to assure himself that that valuable
was sound and whole; re-attached the hook to his right wrist; and seizing
the stick covered over with knobs, bade Walter come along.</p>
<p>Remembering, however, in the midst of his virtuous excitement, that Mrs
MacStinger might be lying in wait below, Captain Cuttle hesitated at last,
not without glancing at the window, as if he had some thoughts of escaping
by that unusual means of egress, rather than encounter his terrible enemy.
He decided, however, in favour of stratagem.</p>
<p>'Wal'r,' said the Captain, with a timid wink, 'go afore, my lad. Sing out,
"good-bye, Captain Cuttle," when you're in the passage, and shut the door.
Then wait at the corner of the street 'till you see me.</p>
<p>These directions were not issued without a previous knowledge of the
enemy's tactics, for when Walter got downstairs, Mrs MacStinger glided out
of the little back kitchen, like an avenging spirit. But not gliding out
upon the Captain, as she had expected, she merely made a further allusion
to the knocker, and glided in again.</p>
<p>Some five minutes elapsed before Captain Cuttle could summon courage to
attempt his escape; for Walter waited so long at the street corner,
looking back at the house, before there were any symptoms of the hard
glazed hat. At length the Captain burst out of the door with the
suddenness of an explosion, and coming towards him at a great pace, and
never once looking over his shoulder, pretended, as soon as they were well
out of the street, to whistle a tune.</p>
<p>'Uncle much hove down, Wal'r?' inquired the Captain, as they were walking
along.</p>
<p>'I am afraid so. If you had seen him this morning, you would never have
forgotten it.'</p>
<p>'Walk fast, Wal'r, my lad,' returned the Captain, mending his pace; 'and
walk the same all the days of your life. Overhaul the catechism for that
advice, and keep it!'</p>
<p>The Captain was too busy with his own thoughts of Solomon Gills, mingled
perhaps with some reflections on his late escape from Mrs MacStinger, to
offer any further quotations on the way for Walter's moral improvement
They interchanged no other word until they arrived at old Sol's door,
where the unfortunate wooden Midshipman, with his instrument at his eye,
seemed to be surveying the whole horizon in search of some friend to help
him out of his difficulty.</p>
<p>'Gills!' said the Captain, hurrying into the back parlour, and taking him
by the hand quite tenderly. 'Lay your head well to the wind, and we'll
fight through it. All you've got to do,' said the Captain, with the
solemnity of a man who was delivering himself of one of the most precious
practical tenets ever discovered by human wisdom, 'is to lay your head
well to the wind, and we'll fight through it!'</p>
<p>Old Sol returned the pressure of his hand, and thanked him.</p>
<p>Captain Cuttle, then, with a gravity suitable to the nature of the
occasion, put down upon the table the two tea-spoons and the sugar-tongs,
the silver watch, and the ready money; and asked Mr Brogley, the broker,
what the damage was.</p>
<p>'Come! What do you make of it?' said Captain Cuttle.</p>
<p>'Why, Lord help you!' returned the broker; 'you don't suppose that
property's of any use, do you?'</p>
<p>'Why not?' inquired the Captain.</p>
<p>'Why? The amount's three hundred and seventy, odd,' replied the broker.</p>
<p>'Never mind,' returned the Captain, though he was evidently dismayed by
the figures: 'all's fish that comes to your net, I suppose?'</p>
<p>'Certainly,' said Mr Brogley. 'But sprats ain't whales, you know.'</p>
<p>The philosophy of this observation seemed to strike the Captain. He
ruminated for a minute; eyeing the broker, meanwhile, as a deep genius;
and then called the Instrument-maker aside.</p>
<p>'Gills,' said Captain Cuttle, 'what's the bearings of this business? Who's
the creditor?'</p>
<p>'Hush!' returned the old man. 'Come away. Don't speak before Wally. It's a
matter of security for Wally's father—an old bond. I've paid a good
deal of it, Ned, but the times are so bad with me that I can't do more
just now. I've foreseen it, but I couldn't help it. Not a word before
Wally, for all the world.'</p>
<p>'You've got some money, haven't you?' whispered the Captain.</p>
<p>'Yes, yes—oh yes—I've got some,' returned old Sol, first
putting his hands into his empty pockets, and then squeezing his Welsh wig
between them, as if he thought he might wring some gold out of it; 'but I—the
little I have got, isn't convertible, Ned; it can't be got at. I have been
trying to do something with it for Wally, and I'm old fashioned, and
behind the time. It's here and there, and—and, in short, it's as
good as nowhere,' said the old man, looking in bewilderment about him.</p>
<p>He had so much the air of a half-witted person who had been hiding his
money in a variety of places, and had forgotten where, that the Captain
followed his eyes, not without a faint hope that he might remember some
few hundred pounds concealed up the chimney, or down in the cellar. But
Solomon Gills knew better than that.</p>
<p>'I'm behind the time altogether, my dear Ned,' said Sol, in resigned
despair, 'a long way. It's no use my lagging on so far behind it. The
stock had better be sold—it's worth more than this debt—and I
had better go and die somewhere, on the balance. I haven't any energy
left. I don't understand things. This had better be the end of it. Let 'em
sell the stock and take him down,' said the old man, pointing feebly to
the wooden Midshipman, 'and let us both be broken up together.'</p>
<p>'And what d'ye mean to do with Wal'r?'said the Captain. 'There, there! Sit
ye down, Gills, sit ye down, and let me think o' this. If I warn't a man
on a small annuity, that was large enough till to-day, I hadn't need to
think of it. But you only lay your head well to the wind,' said the
Captain, again administering that unanswerable piece of consolation, 'and
you're all right!'</p>
<p>Old Sol thanked him from his heart, and went and laid it against the back
parlour fire-place instead.</p>
<p>Captain Cuttle walked up and down the shop for some time, cogitating
profoundly, and bringing his bushy black eyebrows to bear so heavily on
his nose, like clouds setting on a mountain, that Walter was afraid to
offer any interruption to the current of his reflections. Mr Brogley, who
was averse to being any constraint upon the party, and who had an
ingenious cast of mind, went, softly whistling, among the stock; rattling
weather-glasses, shaking compasses as if they were physic, catching up
keys with loadstones, looking through telescopes, endeavouring to make
himself acquainted with the use of the globes, setting parallel rulers
astride on to his nose, and amusing himself with other philosophical
transactions.</p>
<p>'Wal'r!' said the Captain at last. 'I've got it.'</p>
<p>'Have you, Captain Cuttle?' cried Walter, with great animation.</p>
<p>'Come this way, my lad,' said the Captain. 'The stock's the security. I'm
another. Your governor's the man to advance money.'</p>
<p>'Mr Dombey!' faltered Walter.</p>
<p>The Captain nodded gravely. 'Look at him,' he said. 'Look at Gills. If
they was to sell off these things now, he'd die of it. You know he would.
We mustn't leave a stone unturned—and there's a stone for you.'</p>
<p>'A stone!—Mr Dombey!' faltered Walter.</p>
<p>'You run round to the office, first of all, and see if he's there,' said
Captain Cuttle, clapping him on the back. 'Quick!'</p>
<p>Walter felt he must not dispute the command—a glance at his Uncle
would have determined him if he had felt otherwise—and disappeared
to execute it. He soon returned, out of breath, to say that Mr Dombey was
not there. It was Saturday, and he had gone to Brighton.</p>
<p>'I tell you what, Wal'r!' said the Captain, who seemed to have prepared
himself for this contingency in his absence. 'We'll go to Brighton. I'll
back you, my boy. I'll back you, Wal'r. We'll go to Brighton by the
afternoon's coach.'</p>
<p>If the application must be made to Mr Dombey at all, which was awful to
think of, Walter felt that he would rather prefer it alone and unassisted,
than backed by the personal influence of Captain Cuttle, to which he
hardly thought Mr Dombey would attach much weight. But as the Captain
appeared to be of quite another opinion, and was bent upon it, and as his
friendship was too zealous and serious to be trifled with by one so much
younger than himself, he forbore to hint the least objection. Cuttle,
therefore, taking a hurried leave of Solomon Gills, and returning the
ready money, the teaspoons, the sugar-tongs, and the silver watch, to his
pocket—with a view, as Walter thought, with horror, to making a
gorgeous impression on Mr Dombey—bore him off to the coach-office,
with—out a minute's delay, and repeatedly assured him, on the road,
that he would stick by him to the last.</p>
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