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The Resurrection of Mr. Wiggett
by
The news of Mr. Wiggett’s departure went round the village at once, the landlord himself breaking the news to the next customer, and an overflow meeting assembled that evening to bid the emigrant farewell.
The landlord noted with pleasure that business was brisk. Several gentlemen stood drink to Mr. Wiggett, and in return he put his hand in his own pocket and ordered glasses round. Mr. Ketchmaid, in a state of some uneasiness, took the order, and then Mr. Wiggett, with the air of one conferring inestimable benefits, produced a lucky halfpenny, which had once belonged to Sam Jones, and insisted upon his keeping it.
“This is my last night, mates,” he said, mournfully, as he acknowledged the drinking of his health. “In many ports I’ve been, and many snug pubs I ‘ave visited, but I never in all my days come across a nicer, kinder-‘earted lot o’ men than wot you are.”
“Hear, hear,” said Mr. Clark.
Mr. Wiggett paused, and, taking a sip from his glass to hide his emotion, resumed.
“In my lonely pilgrimage through life, crippled and ‘aving to beg my bread,” he said, tearfully, “I shall think o’ this ‘appy bar and these friendly faces. When I am wrestlin’ with the pangs of ‘unger and being moved on by the ‘eartless police, I shall think of you as I last saw you.”
“But,” said Mr. Smith, voicing the general consternation, “you’re going to your niece in New Zealand?”
Mr. Wiggett shook his head and smiled a sad, sweet smile.
“I ‘ave no niece,” he said, simply; “I’m alone in the world.”
At these touching words his audience put their glasses down and stared in amaze at Mr. Ketchmaid, while that gentleman in his turn gazed at Mr. Wiggett as though he had suddenly developed horns and a tail.
“Ketchmaid told me hisself as he’d paid your passage to New Zealand,” said the shoemaker; “he said as ‘e’d pressed you to stay, but that you said as blood was thicker even than friendship.”
“All lies,” said Mr. Wiggett, sadly. “I’ll stay with pleasure if he’ll give the word. I’ll stay even now if ‘e wishes it.”
He paused a moment as though to give his bewildered victim time to accept this offer, and then addressed the scandalised Mr. Clark again.
“He don’t like my being ‘ere,” he said, in a low voice. “He grudges the little bit I eat, I s’pose. He told me I’d got to go, and that for the look o’ things ‘e was going to pretend I was going to New Zealand. I was too broke-‘earted at the time to care wot he said–I ‘ave no wish to sponge on no man–but, seeing your ‘onest faces round me, I couldn’t go with a lie on my lips–Sol Ketch-maid, old shipmate–good-bye.”
He turned to the speechless landlord, made as though to shake hands with him, thought better of it, and then, with a wave of his hand full of chastened dignity, withdrew. His stump rang with pathetic insistence upon the brick-paved passage, paused at the door, and then, tapping on the hard road, died slowly away in the distance. Inside the Ship the shoemaker gave an ominous order for lemonade.