It was at that moment that Mr. Pickwick made that immortal discovery,
which has been the pride and boast of his friends, and the envy of every
antiquarian in this or any other country. They had passed the door of their
inn, and walked a little way down the village, before they recollected the
precise spot in which it stood. As they turned back, Mr. Pickwick's eye fell
upon a small broken stone, partially buried in the ground, in front of a
cottage door. He paused.
"This is very strange", said Mr. Pickwick.
"What is strange?" inquired Mr. Tupman, staring eagerly at
every object near him, but the right one. "God bless me, what's the
matter?"
This last was an ejaculation of irrepressible astonishment, occasioned
by seeing Mr. Pickwick, in his enthusiasm for discovery, fall upon his knees
before the little stone, and commence wiping the dust off it with his
pocket-handkerchief.
"There is an inscription here", said Mr. Pickwick.
"Is it possible?" said Mr. Tupman.
"I can discern," continued Mr. Pickwick, rubbing away with
all his might, and gazing intently through his spectacles: "I can discern
a cross, and a B, and then a T. This is important", continued Mr.
Pickwick, starting up. "This is some very old inscription, existing
perhaps long before the ancient alms-houses in this place. It must not be
lost."
He tapped at the cottage door. A laboring man opened it.
"Do you know how this stone came here, my friend?" inquired
the benevolent Mr. Pickwick.
"No, I doan't, sir", replied the man civilly. "It was
here long afore I war born, or any on us."
Mr. Pickwick glanced triumphantly at his companion.
"You -- you -- are not particularly attached to it, I dare
say", said Mr. Pickwick, trembling with anxiety. "You wouldn't mind
selling it, now?"
"Ah! But who'd buy it?" inquired the man, with an expression
of face which he probably meant to be very cunning.
"I'll give you ten shillings for it, at once", said Mr.
Pickwick, "if you would take it up for me".
The astonishment of the village may be easily imagined, when (the
little stone having been raised with one wrench of a spade), Mr. Pickwick, by
dint of great personal exertion, bore it with his own hands to the inn, and
after having carefully washed it, deposited it on the table.
The exultation and joy of the Pickwickians knew no bounds, when their
patience and assiduity, their washing and scraping, were crowned with success.
The stone was uneven and broken, and the letters were straggling and irregular,
but the following fragment of an inscription was clearly to be deciphered:
+
B I L S T
U M
P S H I
S. M.
A R K
Mr. Pickwick's eyes sparkled with delight, as he sat and gloated over
the treasure he had discovered. He had attained one of the greatest objects of
his ambition. In a country known to abound in remains of the early ages; in a
village in which there still existed some memorials of the olden time, he --
he, the Chairman of the Pickwick Club -- had discovered a strange and curious
inscription of unquestionable antiquity, which had wholly escaped the
observation of the many learned men who had preceded him. He could hardly
believe the evidence of his senses.
[deletion]
Mr. Pickwick lectured upon the discovery at a General Club meeting,
convened on the night succeeding their return, and entered into a variety of
ingenious and erudite speculations on the meaning of the inscription. It also
appears that a skilful artist executed a faithful delineation of the curiosity,
which was engraven on stone, and presented it to the Royal Antiquarian Society,
and other learned bodies -- that heart-burnings and jealousies without number,
were created by rival controversies which were penned upon the subject -- and
that Mr. Pickwick wrote a pamphlet, containing ninety-six pages of very small
print, and twenty-seven different readings of the inscription. That three old
gentlemen cut off their eldest sons with a shilling a-piece for presuming to
doubt the antiquity of the fragment -- and that one enthusiastic individual cut
himself off prematurely, in despair at being unable to fathom its meaning. That
Mr. Pickwick was elected an honorary member of seventeen native and foreign
societies, for making the discovery; that one of the seventeen could make anything
of it; but that all the seventeen agreed it was very extraordinary.
Mr. Blotton, indeed -- and the name will be doomed to the undying
contempt of those who cultivate the mysterious and the sublime -- Mr. Blotton,
we say, with the doubt and cavilling peculiar to vulgar minds, presumed to
state a view of the case, as degrading as ridiculous. Mr. Blotton, with a mean
desire to tarnish the lustre of the immortal name of Pickwick, actually
undertook a journey to Cobham in person, and on his return, sarcastically
observed in an oration at the club, that he had seen the man from whom the
stone was purchased; that the man presumed the stone to be ancient, but
solemnly denied the antiquity of the inscription -- inasmuch as he represented
it to have been rudely carved by himself in an idle mood, and to display
letters intended to bear neither more nor less than the simple construction of
-- BILL STUMPS, HIS MARK"; and that Mr. Stumps, being little in the habit
of original composition, and more accustomed to be guided by the sound of words
than by the strict rules of orthography, had omitted the concluding
"L", of his Christian name.
The Pickwick Club (as might have been expected from so enlightened an
Institution) received this statement with the contempt it deserved, expelled
the presumptuous and ill-conditioned Blotten, and voted Mr. Pickwick a pair of
gold spectacles, in token of their confidence and approbation; in return for
which, Mr. Pickwick caused a portrait of himself to be painted, and hung up in
the club room.
Mr. Blotton, though ejected, was not conquered. He also wrote a
pamphlet, addressed to the seventeen learned societies, native and foreign,
containing a repetition of the statement he had already made, and rather more
than half intimating his opinion that the seventeen learned societies were so
many "humbugs". Hereupon the virtuous indignation of the seventeen
learned societies, native and foreign, being roused, several fresh pamphlets
appeared; the foreign learned societies corresponded with the native learned
societies; the native learned societies translated the pamphlets of the foreign
learned societies into English; the foreign learned societies translated the
pamphlets of the native learned societies into all sorts of languages; and thus
commenced the celebrated scientific discussion so well known to all men, as the
Pickwick controversy.
But this attempt to injure Mr. Pickwick, recoiled upon the head of its
calumnious author. The seventeen learned societies unanimously voted the
presumptuous Blotten an ignorant meddler, and forthwith set to work upon more
treatises than ever. And to this day the stone remains, an illegible monument
of Mr. Pickwick's greatness, and a lasting trophy to the littleness of his
enemies.
From chapter 11 of "Pickwick Papers" by Charles Dickens
Return to ARTICLES PAGE
Return to CONTENTS PAGE