<h2>LECTURE XXXIII - MRS. CAUDLE HAS DISCOVERED THAT CAUDLE IS A RAILWAY DIRECTOR</h2>
<br/>
<p>“When I took up the paper to-day, Caudle, you might have knocked
me down with a feather! Now, don’t be a hypocrite - you
know what’s the matter. And when you haven’t a bed
to lie upon, and are brought to sleep upon coal sacks - and then I can
tell you, Mr. Caudle, you may sleep by yourself - then you’ll
know what’s the matter. Now, I’ve seen your name,
and don’t deny it. Yes, - the Eel-Pie Island Railway - and
among the Directors, Job Caudle, Esq., of the Turtle-Dovery, and - no,
I won’t be quiet. It isn’t often - goodness knows!
- that I speak; but seeing what I do, I won’t be silent.</p>
<p>“<i>What do I see</i>?</p>
<p>“Why, there, Mr. Caudle, at the foot of the bed, I see all
the blessed children in tatters - I see you in a gaol, and the carpets
hung out of the windows.</p>
<p>“And now I know why you talk in your sleep about a broad and
narrow gauge! I couldn’t think what was on your mind - but
now it’s out. Ha! Mr. Caudle, there’s something
about a broad and narrow way that I wish you’d remember - but
you’re turned quite a heathen: yes, you think of nothing but money
now.</p>
<p>“<i>Don’t I like money</i>?</p>
<p>“To be sure I do; but then I like it when I’m certain
of it; no risks for me. Yes, it’s all very well to talk
about fortunes made in no time: they’re like shirts made in no
time - it’s ten to one if they hang long together.</p>
<p>“And now it’s plain enough why you can’t eat or
drink, or sleep, or do anything. All your mind’s allotted
into railways; for you shan’t make me believe that Eel-Pie Island’s
the only one. Oh, no! I can see by the looks of you.
Why, in a little time, if you haven’t as many lines in your face
as there are lines laid down! Every one of your features seems
cut up - and all seem travelling from one another. Six months
ago, Caudle, you hadn’t a wrinkle; yes, you’d a cheek as
smooth as any china, and now your face is like the Map of England.</p>
<p>“At your time of life, too! You, who were for always
going small and sure! You to make heads-and-tails of your money
in this way! It’s that stock-broker’s dog at Flam
Cottage - he’s bitten you, I’m sure of it. You’re
not fit to manage your own property now; and I should only be acting
the part of a good wife if I were to call in the mad-doctors.</p>
<p>“Well, I shall never know rest any more now. There won’t
be a soul knock at the door after this that I sha’n’t think
it’s the man coming to take possession. ’Twill be
something for the Chalkpits to laugh at when we’re sold up.
I think I see ’em here, bidding for all our little articles of
bigotry and virtue, and - what are you laughing at?</p>
<p>“<i>They’re not bigotry and virtue; but bijouterie and
vertu</i>?</p>
<p>“It’s all the same: only you’re never so happy
as when you’re taking me up.</p>
<p>“If I can tell what’s coming to the world, I’m
a sinner! Everybody’s for turning their farthings into double
sovereigns and cheating their neighbours of the balance. And you,
too - you’re beside yourself, Caudle - I’m sure of it.
I’ve watched you when you thought me fast asleep. And then
you’ve lain, and whispered and whispered, and then hugged yourself,
and laughed at the bed-posts, as if you’d seen ’em turned
to sovereign gold. I do believe that you sometimes think the patchwork
quilt is made of thousand-pound bank-notes.</p>
<p>“Well, when we’re brought to the Union, then you’ll
find out your mistake. But it will be a poor satisfaction for
me every night to tell you of it. What, Mr. Caudle?</p>
<p>“<i>They won’t let me tell you of it</i>?</p>
<p>“And you call that ‘some comfort’? And after
the wife I’ve been to you! But now I recollect. I
think I’ve heard you praise that Union before; though, like a
fond fool as I’ve always been, I never once suspected the reason
of it.</p>
<p>“And now, of course, day and night, you’ll never be at
home. No, you’ll live and sleep at Eel-Pie Island!
I shall be left alone with nothing but my thoughts, thinking when the
broker will come, and you’ll be with your brother directors.
I may slave and I toil to save sixpences; and you’ll be throwing
away hundreds. And then the expensive tastes you’ve got!
Nothing good enough for you now. I’m sure you sometimes
think yourself King Solomon. But that comes of making money -
if, indeed, you have made any - without earning it. No; I don’t
talk nonsense: people <i>can</i> make money without earning it.
And when they do, why it’s like taking a lot of spirits at one
draught; it gets into their head, and they don’t know what they’re
about. And you’re in that state now, Mr. Caudle: I’m
sure of it, by the way of you. There’s a tipsiness of the
pocket as well as of the stomach - and you’re in that condition
at this very moment.</p>
<p>“Not that I should so much mind - that is, if you <i>have</i>
made money - if you’d stop at the Eel-Pie line. But I know
what these things are: they’re like treacle to flies: when men
are well in ’em, they can’t get out of ’em: or, if
they do, it’s often without a feather to fly with. No: if
you’ve really made money by the Eel-Pie line, and will give it
to me to take care of for the dear children, why, perhaps, love, I’ll
say no more of the matter. What?</p>
<p>“<i>Nonsense</i>?</p>
<p>“Yes, of course: I never ask you for money, but that’s
the word.</p>
<p>“And now, catch you stopping at the Eel-Pie line! Oh
no; I know your aggravating spirit. In a day or two I shall see
another fine flourish in the paper, with a proposal for a branch from
Eel-Pie Island to the Chelsea Bun-house. Give you a mile of rail,
and - I know you men - you’ll take a hundred. Well, if it
didn’t make me quiver to read that stuff in the paper, - and your
name to it! But I suppose it was Mr. Prettyman’s work; for
his precious name’s among ’em. How you tell the people
‘that eel-pies are now become an essential element of civilisation’
- I learnt all the words by heart, that I might say ’em to you
- ‘that the Eastern population of London are cut off from the
blessings of such a necessary - and that by means of the projected line
eel-pies will be brought home to the business and bosoms of Ratcliff
Highway and the adjacent dependencies.’ Well, when you men
- lords of the creation, as you call yourselves - do get together to
make up a company, or anything of the sort - is there any story-book
can come up to you? And so you look solemnly in one another’s
faces, and, never so much as moving the corners of your mouths, pick
one another’s pockets. No, I’m not using hard words,
Mr. Caudle - but only the words that’s proper.</p>
<p>“And this I <i>must</i> say. Whatever you’ve got,
I’m none the better for it. You never give me any of your
Eel-Pie shares. What do you say?</p>
<p>“<i>You will give me some</i>?</p>
<p>“Not I - I’ll have nothing to do with any wickedness
of the kind. If, like any other husband, you choose to throw a
heap of money into my lap - what?</p>
<p>“<i>You’ll think of it</i>?<i> When the Eel-Pies
go up</i>?</p>
<p>“Then I know what they’re worth - they’ll never
fetch a farthing.”</p>
<br/>
<p>“<i>She was suddenly silent</i>” - writes Caudle - “<i>and
I was sinking into sleep, when she elbowed me, and cried</i>, ‘<i>Caudle,
do you think they’ll be up to-morrow</i>?’”</p>
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