<h2>LECTURE XII - MR. CAUDLE HAVING COME HOME A LITTLE LATE, DECLARES THAT HENCEFORTH “HE WILL HAVE A KEY.”</h2>
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<p>“’Pon my word, Mr. Caudle, I think it a waste of time
to come to bed at all now! The cocks will be crowing in a minute.
Keeping people up till past twelve. Oh yes! you’re thought
a man of very fine feelings out of doors, I dare say! It’s
a pity you haven’t a little feeling for those belonging to you
at home. A nice hour to keep people out of their beds!</p>
<p>“<i>Why did I sit up</i>,<i> then</i>?</p>
<p>“Because I chose to sit up - but that’s my thanks.
No, it’s no use your talking, Caudle; I never <i>will</i> let
the girl sit up for you, and there’s an end. What do you
say?</p>
<p>“<i>Why does she sit up with me</i>,<i> then</i>?</p>
<p>“That’s quite a different matter: you don’t suppose
I’m going to sit up alone, do you? What do you say?</p>
<p>“<i>What’s the use of two sitting up</i>?</p>
<p>“That’s my business. No, Caudle, it’s no
such thing. I <i>don’t</i> sit up because I may have the
pleasure of talking about it; and you’re an ungrateful, unfeeling
creature to say so. I sit up because I choose it; and if you don’t
come home all the night long - and ’twill soon come to that, I’ve
no doubt - still, I’ll never go to bed, so don’t think it.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes! the time runs away very pleasantly with you men at
your clubs - selfish creatures! You can laugh and sing, and tell
stories, and never think of the clock; never think there’s such
a person as a wife belonging to you. It’s nothing to you
that a poor woman’s sitting up, and telling the minutes, and seeing
all sorts of things in the fire - and sometimes thinking something dreadful
has happened to you - more fool she to care a straw about you! - This
is all nothing. Oh no; when a woman’s once married she’s
a slave - worse than a slave - and must bear it all!</p>
<p>“And what you men can find to talk about I can’t think!
Instead of a man sitting every night at home with his wife, and going
to bed at a Christian hour, - going to a club, to meet a set of people
who don’t care a button for him - it’s monstrous!
What do you say?</p>
<p>“<i>You only go once a week</i>?</p>
<p>“That’s nothing at all to do with it: you might as well
go every night; and I daresay you will soon. But if you do, you
may get in as you can: <i>I</i> won’t sit up for you, I can tell
you.</p>
<p>“My health’s being destroyed night after night, and -
oh, don’t say it’s only once a week; I tell you that’s
nothing to do with it - if you had any eyes, you would see how ill I
am; but you’ve no eyes for anybody belonging to you: oh no! your
eyes are for people out of doors. It’s very well for you
to call me a foolish, aggravating woman! I should like to see
the woman who’d sit up for you as I do.</p>
<p>“<i>You didn’t want me to sit up</i>?</p>
<p>“Yes, yes; that’s your thanks - that’s your gratitude:
I’m to ruin my health, and to be abused for it. Nice principles
you’ve got at that club, Mr. Caudle!</p>
<p>“But there’s one comfort - one great comfort; it can’t
last long: I’m sinking - I feel it, though I never say anything
about it - but I know my own feelings, and I say it can’t last
long. And then I should like to know who will sit up for you!
Then I should like to know how your second wife - what do you say?</p>
<p>“<i>You’ll never be troubled with another</i>?</p>
<p>“Troubled, indeed! I never troubled you, Caudle.
No; it’s you who’ve troubled me; and you know it; though
like a foolish woman I’ve borne it all, and never said a word
about it. But it <i>can’t</i> last - that’s one blessing!</p>
<p>“Oh, if a woman could only know what she’d have to suffer
before she was married - Don’t tell me you want to go to sleep!
If you want to go to sleep, you should come home at proper hours!
It’s time to get up, for what I know, now. Shouldn’t
wonder if you hear the milk in five minutes - there’s the sparrows
up already; yes, I say the sparrows; and, Caudle, you ought to blush
to hear ’em.</p>
<p>“<i>You don’t hear ’em</i>?</p>
<p>“Ha! you won’t hear ’em, you mean: <i>I</i> hear
’em. No, Mr. Caudle; it <i>isn’t</i> the wind whistling
in the keyhole; I’m not quite foolish, though you may think so.
I hope I know wind from a sparrow!</p>
<p>“Ha! when I think what a man you were before we were married!
But you’re now another person - quite an altered creature.
But I suppose you’re all alike - I dare say, every poor woman’s
troubled and put upon, though I should hope not so much as I am.
Indeed, I should hope not! Going and staying out, and -</p>
<p>“What!</p>
<p>“<i>You’ll have a key</i>?</p>
<p>“Will you? Not while I’m alive, Mr Caudle.
I’m not going to bed with the door upon the latch for you or the
best man breathing.</p>
<p>“<i>You won’t have a latch - you’ll have a Chubb’s
lock</i>?</p>
<p>“Will you? I’ll have no Chubb here, I can tell
you. What do you say?</p>
<p>“<i>You’ll have the lock put on to-morrow</i>?</p>
<p>“Well, try it; that’s all I say, Caudle; try it.
I won’t let you put me in a passion; but all I say is, - try it.</p>
<p>“A respectable thing, that, for a married man to carry about
with him, - a street-door key! That tells a tale I think.
A nice thing for the father of a family! A key! What, to
let yourself in and out when you please! To come in, like a thief
in the middle of the night, instead of knocking at the door like a decent
person! Oh, don’t tell me that you only want to prevent
me sitting up - if I choose to sit up what’s that to you?
Some wives, indeed, would make a noise about sitting up, but <i>you’ve</i>
no reason to complain - goodness knows!</p>
<p>“Well, upon my word, I’ve lived to hear something.
Carry the street-door key about with you! I’ve heard of
such things with young good-for-nothing bachelors, with nobody to care
what became of ’em; but for a married man to leave his wife and
children in a house with a door upon the latch - don’t talk to
me about Chubb, it’s all the same - a great deal you must care
for us. Yes, it’s very well for you to say that you only
want the key for peace and quietness - what’s it to you, if I
like to sit up? You’ve no business to complain; it can’t
distress you. Now, it’s no use your talking; all I say is
this, Caudle: if you send a man to put on any lock here, I’ll
call in a policeman; as I’m your married wife, I will.</p>
<p>“No, I think when a man comes to have the street-door key,
the sooner he turns bachelor altogether the better. I’m
sure, Caudle, I don’t want to be any clog upon you. Now,
it’s no use your telling me to hold my tongue, for I - What?</p>
<p>“<i>I give you the headache</i>,<i> do I</i>?</p>
<p>“No, I don’t, Caudle; it’s your club that gives
you the headache; it’s your smoke, and your - well! if ever I
knew such a man in all my life! there’s no saying a word to you!
You go out, and treat yourself like an emperor - and come home at twelve
at night, or any hour for what I know, and then you threaten to have
a key, and - and - and - ”</p>
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<p>“<i>I did</i> <i>get to sleep at last</i>,” says Caudle,
“<i>amidst the falling sentences of</i> ‘<i>take children
into a lodging</i>’ - ‘<i>separate maintenance</i>’
- ‘<i>won’t be made a slave of</i>’ - <i>and so forth</i>.”</p>
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