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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Newcomes, by William Makepeace Thackeray
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Newcomes
+
+Author: William Makepeace Thackeray
+
+Release Date: February, 2005 [EBook #7467]
+Posting Date: July 28, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NEWCOMES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Tapio Riikonen
+
+
+
+
+
+THE NEWCOMES
+
+MEMOIRS OF A MOST RESPECTABLE FAMILY
+
+Edited by Arthur Pendennis, Esq.
+
+
+By William Makepeace Thackeray
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER
+ I The Overture--After which the Curtain rises upon a Drinking
+ Chorus
+ II Colonel Newcome's Wild Oats
+ III Colonel Newcome's Letter-box
+ IV In which the Author and the Hero resume their Acquaintance
+ V Clive's Uncles
+ VI Newcome Brothers
+ VII In which Mr. Clive's School-days are over
+ VIII Mrs. Newcome at Home (a Small Early Party)
+ IX Miss Honeyman's
+ X Ethel and her Relations
+ XI At Mrs. Ridley's
+ XII In which Everybody is asked to Dinner
+ XIII In which Thomas Newcome sings his last Song
+ XIV Park Lane
+ XV The Old Ladies
+ XVI In which Mr. Sherrick lets his House in Fitzroy Square
+ XVII A School of Art
+ XVIII New Companions
+ XIX The colonel at Home
+ XX Contains more Particulars of the Colonel and his Brethren
+ XXI Is Sentimental, but Short
+ XXII Describes a Visit to Paris; with Accidents and Incidents
+ in London
+ XXIII In which we hear a Soprano and a Contralto
+ XXIV In which the Newcome Brothers once more meet together in Unity
+ XXV Is passed in a Public-house
+ XXVI In which Colonel Newcome's Horses are sold
+ XXVII Youth and Sunshine
+ XXVIII In which Clive begins to see the World
+ XXIX In which Barnes comes a-Wooing
+ XXX A Retreat
+ XXXI Madame la Duchesse
+ XXXII Barnes's Courtship
+ XXXIII Lady Kew at the Congress
+ XXXIV The End of the Congress of Baden
+ XXXV Across the Alps
+ XXXVI In which M. de Florac is promoted
+ XXXVII Returns to Lord Kew
+ XXXVIII In which Lady Kew leaves his Lordship quite Convalescent
+ XXXIX Amongst the Painters
+ XL Returns from Rome to Pall Mall
+ XLI An Old Story
+ XLII Injured Innocence
+ XLIII Returns to some Old Friends
+ XLIV In which Mr. Charles Honeyman appears in an amiable light
+ XLV A Stag of Ten
+ XLVI The Hotel de Florac
+ XLVII Contains two or three Acts of a little Comedy
+ XLVIII In which Benedick is a Married Man
+ XLIX Contains at least Six more Courses and Two Desserts
+ L Clive in New Quarters
+ LI An Old Friend
+ LII Family Secrets
+ LIII In which Kinsmen fall out
+ LIV Has a Tragical Ending
+ LV Barnes's Skeleton Closet
+ LVI Rosa quo locorum sera moratur
+ LVII Rosebury and Newcome
+ LVIII "One more Unfortunate"
+ LIX In which Achilles loses Briseis
+ LX In which we write to the Colonel
+ LXI In which we are introduced to a new Newcome
+ LXII Mr. and Mrs. Clive Newcome
+ LXIII Mrs. Clive at Home
+ LXIV Absit Omen
+ LXV In which Mrs. Clive comes into her Fortune
+ LXVI In which the Colonel and the Newcome Athenaeum are both Lectured
+ LXVII Newcome and Liberty
+ LXVIII A Letter and a Reconciliation
+ LXIX The Election
+ LXX Chiltern Hundreds
+ LXXI In which Mrs. Clive Newcome's Carriage is ordered
+ LXXII Belisarius
+ LXXIII In which Belisarius returns from Exile
+ LXXIV In which Clive begins the World
+ LXXV Founder's Day at Grey Friars
+ LXXVI Christmas at Rosebury
+ LXXVII The Shortest and Happiest in the whole History
+ LXXVIII In which the Author goes on a Pleasant Errand
+ LXII In which Old Friends come together
+ LXXX In which the Colonel says "Adsum" when his Name is called
+
+
+
+
+THE NEWCOMES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. The Overture--After which the Curtain rises upon a Drinking Chorus
+
+
+A crow, who had flown away with a cheese from a dairy-window, sate
+perched on a tree looking down at a great big frog in a pool underneath
+him. The frog's hideous large eyes were goggling out of his head in
+a manner which appeared quite ridiculous to the old blackamoor, who
+watched the splay-footed slimy wretch with that peculiar grim humour
+belonging to crows. Not far from the frog a fat ox was browsing;
+whilst a few lambs frisked about the meadow, or nibbled the grass and
+buttercups there.
+
+Who should come in to the farther end of the field but a wolf? He was
+so cunningly dressed up in sheep's clothing, that the very lambs did not
+know Master Wolf; nay, one of them, whose dam the wolf had just eaten,
+after which he had thrown her skin over his shoulders, ran up innocently
+towards the devouring monster, mistaking him for her mamma.
+
+"He, he!" says a fox, sneaking round the hedge-paling, over which the
+tree grew, whereupon the crow was perched looking down on the frog, who
+was staring with his goggle eyes fit to burst with envy, and croaking
+abuse at the ox. "How absurd those lambs are! Yonder silly little
+knock-kneed baah-ling does not know the old wolf dressed in the sheep's
+fleece. He is the same old rogue who gobbled up little Red Riding Hood's
+grandmother for lunch, and swallowed little Red Riding Hood for supper.
+Tirez la bobinette et la chevillette cherra. He, he!"
+
+An owl that was hidden in the hollow of the tree woke up. "Oho, Master
+Fox," says she, "I cannot see you, but I smell you! If some folks like
+lambs, other folks like geese," says the owl.
+
+"And your ladyship is fond of mice," says the fox.
+
+"The Chinese eat them," says the owl, "and I have read that they are
+very fond of dogs," continued the old lady.
+
+"I wish they would exterminate every cur of them off the face of the
+earth," said the fox.
+
+"And I have also read, in works of travel, that the French eat frogs,"
+continued the owl. "Aha, my friend Crapaud! are you there? That was a
+very pretty concert we sang together last night!"
+
+"If the French devour my brethren, the English eat beef," croaked out
+the frog,--"great, big, brutal, bellowing oxen."
+
+"Ho, whoo!" says the owl, "I have heard that the English are toad-eaters
+too!"
+
+"But who ever heard of them eating an owl or a fox, madam?" says
+Reynard, "or their sitting down and taking a crow to pick?" adds the
+polite rogue, with a bow to the old crow who was perched above them
+with the cheese in his mouth. "We are privileged animals, all of us; at
+least, we never furnish dishes for the odious orgies of man."
+
+"I am the bird of wisdom," says the owl; "I was the companion of Pallas
+Minerva: I am frequently represented in the Egyptian monuments."
+
+"I have seen you over the British barn-doors," said the fox, with a
+grin. "You have a deal of scholarship, Mrs. Owl. I know a thing or two
+myself; but am, I confess it, no scholar--a mere man of the world--a
+fellow that lives by his wits--a mere country gentleman."
+
+"You sneer at scholarship," continues the owl, with a sneer on her
+venerable face. "I read a good deal of a night."
+
+"When I am engaged deciphering the cocks and hens at roost," says the
+fox.
+
+"It's a pity for all that you can't read; that board nailed over my head
+would give you some information."
+
+"What does it say?" says the fox.
+
+"I can't spell in the daylight," answered the owl; and, giving a yawn,
+went back to sleep till evening in the hollow of her tree.
+
+"A fig for her hieroglyphics!" said the fox, looking up at the crow in
+the tree. "What airs our slow neighbour gives herself! She pretends to
+all the wisdom; whereas, your reverences, the crows, are endowed with
+gifts far superior to these benighted old big-wigs of owls, who blink in
+the darkness, and call their hooting singing. How noble it is to hear
+a chorus of crows! There are twenty-four brethren of the Order of St.
+Corvinus, who have builded themselves a convent near a wood which I
+frequent; what a droning and a chanting they keep up! I protest their
+reverences' singing is nothing to yours! You sing so deliciously in
+parts, do for the love of harmony favour me with a solo!"
+
+While this conversation was going on, the ox was thumping the grass; the
+frog was eyeing him in such a rage at his superior proportions, that
+he would have spurted venom at him if he could, and that he would have
+burst, only that is impossible, from sheer envy; the little lambkin was
+lying unsuspiciously at the side of the wolf in fleecy hosiery, who did
+not as yet molest her, being replenished with the mutton her mamma. But
+now the wolf's eyes began to glare, and his sharp white teeth to show,
+and he rose up with a growl, and began to think he should like lamb for
+supper.
+
+"What large eyes you have got!" bleated out the lamb, with rather a
+timid look.
+
+"The better to see you with, my dear."
+
+"What large teeth you have got!"
+
+"The better to----"
+
+At this moment such a terrific yell filled the field, that all its
+inhabitants started with terror. It was from a donkey, who had somehow
+got a lion's skin, and now came in at the hedge, pursued by some men and
+boys with sticks and guns.
+
+When the wolf in sheep's clothing heard the bellow of the ass in the
+lion's skin, fancying that the monarch of the forest was near, he ran
+away as fast as his disguise would let him. When the ox heard the noise
+he dashed round the meadow-ditch, and with one trample of his hoof
+squashed the frog who had been abusing him. When the crow saw the people
+with guns coming, he instantly dropped the cheese out of his mouth, and
+took to wing. When the fox saw the cheese drop, he immediately made a
+jump at it (for he knew the donkey's voice, and that his asinine bray
+was not a bit like his royal master's roar), and making for the cheese,
+fell into a steel trap, which snapped off his tail; without which he
+was obliged to go into the world, pretending, forsooth, that it was the
+fashion not to wear tails any more; and that the fox-party were better
+without 'em.
+
+Meanwhile, a boy with a stick came up, and belaboured Master Donkey
+until he roared louder than ever. The wolf, with the sheep's clothing
+draggling about his legs, could not run fast, and was detected and shot
+by one of the men. The blind old owl, whirring out of the hollow tree,
+quite amazed at the disturbance, flounced into the face of a ploughboy,
+who knocked her down with a pitchfork. The butcher came and quietly led
+off the ox and the lamb; and the farmer, finding the fox's brush in the
+trap, hung it up over his mantelpiece, and always bragged that he had
+been in at his death.
+
+"What a farrago of old fables is this! What a dressing up in old
+clothes!" says the critic. (I think I see such a one--a Solomon that
+sits in judgment over us authors and chops up our children.) "As sure
+as I am just and wise, modest, learned, and religious, so surely I have
+read something very like this stuff and nonsense about jackasses and
+foxes before. That wolf in sheep's clothing?--do I not know him? That
+fox discoursing with the crow?--have I not previously heard of him? Yes,
+in Lafontaine's fables: let us get the Dictionary and the Fable and the
+Biographie Universelle, article Lafontaine, and confound the impostor."
+
+"Then in what a contemptuous way," may Solomon go on to remark,
+"does this author speak of human nature! There is scarce one of these
+characters he represents but is a villain. The fox is a flatterer; the
+frog is an emblem of impotence and envy; the wolf in sheep's clothing
+a bloodthirsty hypocrite, wearing the garb of innocence; the ass in the
+lion's skin a quack trying to terrify, by assuming the appearance of
+a forest monarch (does the writer, writhing under merited castigation,
+mean to sneer at critics in this character? We laugh at the impertinent
+comparison); the ox, a stupid commonplace; the only innocent being in
+the writer's (stolen) apologue is a fool--the idiotic lamb, who does not
+know his own mother!" And then the critic, if in a virtuous mood,
+may indulge in some fine writing regarding the holy beauteousness of
+maternal affection.
+
+Why not? If authors sneer, it is the critic's business to sneer at them
+for sneering. He must pretend to be their superior, or who would care
+about his opinion? And his livelihood is to find fault. Besides, he is
+right sometimes; and the stories he reads, and the characters drawn
+in them, are old, sure enough. What stories are new? All types of all
+characters march through all fables: tremblers and boasters; victims and
+bullies; dupes and knaves; long-eared Neddies, giving themselves leonine
+airs; Tartuffes wearing virtuous clothing; lovers and their trials,
+their blindness, their folly and constancy. With the very first page of
+the human story do not love and lies too begin? So the tales were told
+ages before Aesop; and asses under lions' manes roared in Hebrew; and
+sly foxes flattered in Etruscan; and wolves in sheep's clothing gnashed
+their teeth in Sanskrit, no doubt. The sun shines to-day as he did when
+he first began shining; and the birds in the tree overhead, while I am
+writing, sing very much the same note they have sung ever since there
+were finches. Nay, since last he besought good-natured friends to listen
+once a month to his talking, a friend of the writer has seen the New
+World, and found the (featherless) birds there exceedingly like their
+brethren of Europe. There may be nothing new under and including the
+sun; but it looks fresh every morning, and we rise with it to toil,
+hope, scheme, laugh, struggle, love, suffer, until the night comes and
+quiet. And then will wake Morrow and the eyes that look on it; and so da
+capo.
+
+This, then, is to be a story, may it please you, in which jackdaws will
+wear peacocks' feathers, and awaken the just ridicule of the peacocks;
+in which, while every justice is done to the peacocks themselves, the
+splendour of their plumage, the gorgeousness of their dazzling necks,
+and the magnificence of their tails, exception will yet be taken to the
+absurdity of their rickety strut, and the foolish discord of their pert
+squeaking; in which lions in love will have their claws pared by sly
+virgins; in which rogues will sometimes triumph, and honest folks, let
+us hope, come by their own; in which there will be black crape and white
+favours; in which there will be tears under orange-flower wreaths, and
+jokes in mourning-coaches; in which there will be dinners of herbs with
+contentment and without, and banquets of stalled oxen where there is
+care and hatred--ay, and kindness and friendship too, along with the
+feast. It does not follow that all men are honest because they are poor;
+and I have known some who were friendly and generous, although they had
+plenty of money. There are some great landlords who do not grind down
+their tenants; there are actually bishops who are not hypocrites; there
+are liberal men even among the Whigs, and the Radicals themselves are
+not all aristocrats at heart. But who ever heard of giving the Moral
+before the Fable? Children are only led to accept the one after their
+delectation over the other: let us take care lest our readers skip both;
+and so let us bring them on quickly--our wolves and lambs, our foxes
+and lions, our roaring donkeys, our billing ringdoves, our motherly
+partlets, and crowing chanticleers.
+
+
+There was once a time when the sun used to shine brighter than it
+appears to do in this latter half of the nineteenth century; when
+the zest of life was certainly keener; when tavern wines seemed to
+be delicious, and tavern dinners the perfection of cookery; when the
+perusal of novels was productive of immense delight, and the monthly
+advent of magazine-day was hailed as an exciting holiday; when to
+know Thompson, who had written a magazine-article, was an honour and
+a privilege; and to see Brown, the author of the last romance, in the
+flesh, and actually walking in the Park with his umbrella and Mrs.
+Brown, was an event remarkable, and to the end of life to be perfectly
+well remembered; when the women of this world were a thousand times more
+beautiful than those of the present time; and the houris of the theatres
+especially so ravishing and angelic, that to see them was to set the
+heart in motion, and to see them again was to struggle for half an
+hour previously at the door of the pit; when tailors called at a man's
+lodgings to dazzle him with cards of fancy waistcoats; when it seemed
+necessary to purchase a grand silver dressing-case, so as to be ready
+for the beard which was not yet born (as yearling brides provide lace
+caps, and work rich clothes, for the expected darling); when to ride in
+the Park on a ten-shilling hack seemed to be the height of fashionable
+enjoyment, and to splash your college tutor as you were driving down
+Regent Street in a hired cab the triumph of satire; when the acme of
+pleasure seemed to be to meet Jones of Trinity at the Bedford, and to
+make an arrangement with him, and with King of Corpus (who was staying
+at the Colonnade), and Martin of Trinity Hall (who was with his family
+in Bloomsbury Square), to dine at the Piazza, go to the play and see
+Braham in Fra Diavolo, and end the frolic evening by partaking of supper
+and a song at the "Cave of Harmony."--It was in the days of my own
+youth, then, that I met one or two of the characters who are to figure
+in this history, and whom I must ask leave to accompany for a short
+while, and until, familiarised with the public, they can make their own
+way. As I recall them the roses bloom again, and the nightingales sing
+by the calm Bendemeer.
+
+Going to the play, then, and to the pit, as was the fashion in those
+honest days, with some young fellows of my own age, having listened
+delighted to the most cheerful and brilliant of operas, and laughed
+enthusiastically at the farce, we became naturally hungry at twelve
+o'clock at night, and a desire for welsh-rabbits and good old
+glee-singing led us to the "Cave of Harmony," then kept by the
+celebrated Hoskins, among whose friends we were proud to count.
+
+We enjoyed such intimacy with Mr. Hoskins that he never failed to
+greet us with a kind nod; and John the waiter made room for us near
+the President of the convivial meeting. We knew the three admirable
+glee-singers, and many a time they partook of brandy-and-water at our
+expense. One of us gave his call dinner at Hoskins's, and a merry time
+we had of it. Where are you, O Hoskins, bird of the night? Do you warble
+your songs by Acheron, or troll your choruses by the banks of black
+Avernus?
+
+The goes of stout, the "Chough and Crow," the welsh-rabbit, the
+"Red-Cross Knight," the hot brandy-and-water (the brown, the strong!),
+the "Bloom is on the Rye" (the bloom isn't on the rye any more!)--the
+song and the cup, in a word, passed round merrily; and, I daresay, the
+songs and bumpers were encored. It happened that there was a very small
+attendance at the "Cave" that night, and we were all more sociable and
+friendly because the company was select. The songs were chiefly of the
+sentimental class; such ditties were much in vogue at the time of which
+I speak.
+
+There came into the "Cave" a gentleman with a lean brown face and
+long black mustachios, dressed in very loose clothes, and evidently a
+stranger to the place. At least he had not visited it for a long time.
+He was pointing out changes to a lad who was in his company; and,
+calling for sherry-and-water, he listened to the music, and twirled his
+mustachios with great enthusiasm.
+
+At the very first glimpse of me the boy jumped up from the table,
+bounded across the room, ran to me with his hands out, and, blushing,
+said, "Don't you know me?"
+
+It was little Newcome, my school-fellow, whom I had not seen for six
+years, grown a fine tall young stripling now, with the same bright blue
+eyes which I remembered when he was quite a little boy.
+
+"What the deuce brings you here?" said I.
+
+He laughed and looked roguish. "My father--that's my father--would
+come. He's just come back from India. He says all the wits used to come
+here,--Mr. Sheridan, Captain Morris, Colonel Hanger, Professor Porson. I
+told him your name, and that you used to be very kind to me when I first
+went to Smithfield. I've left now; I'm to have a private tutor. I say,
+I've got such a jolly pony. It's better fun than old Smile."
+
+Here the whiskered gentleman, Newcome's father, pointing to a waiter to
+follow him with his glass of sherry-and-water, strode across the room
+twirling his mustachios, and came up to the table where we sate, making
+a salutation with his hat in a very stately and polite manner, so
+that Hoskins himself was, as it were, obliged to bow; the glee-singers
+murmured among themselves (their eyes rolling over their glasses towards
+one another as they sucked brandy-and water), and that mischievous
+little wag, little Nadab the Improvisatore (who had just come in), began
+to mimic him, feeling his imaginary whiskers, after the manner of
+the stranger, and flapping about his pocket-handkerchief in the most
+ludicrous manner. Hoskins checked this ribaldry by sternly looking
+towards Nadab, and at the same time called upon the gents to give their
+orders, the waiter being in the room, and Mr. Bellew about to sing a
+song.
+
+Newcome's father came up and held out his hand to me. I dare say I
+blushed, for I had been comparing him to the admirable Harley in the
+Critic, and had christened him Don Ferolo Whiskerandos.
+
+He spoke in a voice exceedingly soft and pleasant, and with a cordiality
+so simple and sincere, that my laughter shrank away ashamed, and gave
+place to a feeling much more respectful and friendly. In youth, you
+see, one is touched by kindness. A man of the world may, of course, be
+grateful or not as he chooses.
+
+"I have heard of your kindness, sir," says he, "to my boy. And whoever
+is kind to him is kind to me. Will you allow me to sit down by you? and
+may I beg you to try my cheroots?" We were friends in a minute--young
+Newcome snuggling by my side, his father opposite, to whom, after a
+minute or two of conversation, I presented my three college friends.
+
+"You have come here, gentlemen, to see the wits," says the Colonel. "Are
+there any celebrated persons in the room? I have been five-and-thirty
+years from home, and want to see all that is to be seen."
+
+King of Corpus (who was an incorrigible wag) was on the point of pulling
+some dreadful long-bow, and pointing out a halfdozen of people in the
+room, as R. and H. and L., etc., the most celebrated wits of that day;
+but I cut King's shins under the table, and got the fellow to hold his
+tongue.
+
+"Maxima debetur pueris," says Jones (a fellow of very kind feeling, who
+has gone into the Church since), and, writing on his card to Hoskins,
+hinted to him that a boy was in the room, and a gentleman, who was quite
+a greenhorn: hence that the songs had better be carefully selected.
+
+And so they were. A ladies' school might have come in, and, but for the
+smell of the cigars and brandy-and-water, have taken no harm by what
+happened. Why should it not always be so? If there are any "Caves of
+Harmony" now, I warrant Messieurs the landlords, their interests would
+be better consulted by keeping their singers within bounds. The very
+greatest scamps like pretty songs, and are melted by them; so are honest
+people. It was worth a guinea to see the simple Colonel, and his delight
+at the music. He forgot all about the distinguished wits whom he had
+expected to see in his ravishment over the glees.
+
+"I say, Clive, this is delightful. This is better than your aunt's
+concert with all the Squallinis, hey? I shall come here often. Landlord,
+may I venture to ask those gentlemen if they will take any refreshment?
+What are their names?" (to one of his neighbours). "I was scarcely
+allowed to hear any singing before I went out, except an oratorio, where
+I fell asleep; but this, by George, is as fine as Incledon!" He
+became quite excited over his sherry-and-water-("I'm sorry to see you,
+gentlemen, drinking brandy-pawnee," says he; "it plays the deuce
+with our young men in India.") He joined in all the choruses with an
+exceedingly sweet voice. He laughed at "The Derby Ram" so that it did
+you good to hear him; and when Hoskins sang (as he did admirably) "The
+Old English Gentleman," and described, in measured cadence, the death
+of that venerable aristocrat, tears trickled down the honest warrior's
+cheek, while he held out his hand to Hoskins and said, "Thank you, sir,
+for that song; it is an honour to human nature." On which Hoskins began
+to cry too.
+
+And now young Nadab, having been cautioned, commenced one of those
+surprising feats of improvisation with which he used to charm audiences.
+He took us all off, and had rhymes pat about all the principal persons
+in the room: King's pins (which he wore very splendid), Martin's red
+waistcoat, etc. The Colonel was charmed with each feat, and joined
+delighted with the chorus--"Ritolderol ritolderol ritolderolderay"
+(bis). And when, coming to the Colonel himself, he burst out--
+
+ "A military gent I see--And while his face I scan,
+ I think you'll all agree with me--He came from Hindostan.
+ And by his side sits laughing free--A youth with curly head,
+ I think you'll all agree with me--That he was best in bed.
+ Ritolderol," etc.
+--the Colonel laughed immensely at this sally, and clapped his son,
+young Clive, on the shoulder. "Hear what he says of you, sir? Clive,
+best be off to bed, my boy--ho, ho! No, no. We know a trick worth two
+of that. 'We won't go home till morning, till daylight does appear.' Why
+should we? Why shouldn't my boy have innocent pleasure? I was allowed
+none when I was a young chap, and the severity was nearly the ruin of
+me. I must go and speak with that young man--the most astonishing thing
+I ever heard in my life. What's his name? Mr. Nadab? Mr. Nadab, sir,
+you have delighted me. May I make so free as to ask you to come and dine
+with me to-morrow at six? Colonel Newcome, if you please, Nerot's Hotel,
+Clifford Street. I am always proud to make the acquaintance of men of
+genius, and you are one, or my name is not Newcome!"
+
+"Sir, you do me hhonour," says Mr. Nadab, pulling up his shirt-collar,
+"and perhaps the day will come when the world will do me justice,--may I
+put down your hhonoured name for my book of poems?"
+
+"Of course, my dear sir," says the enthusiastic Colonel; "I'll send
+them all over India. Put me down for six copies, and do me the favour to
+bring them to-morrow when you come to dinner."
+
+And now Mr. Hoskins asking if any gentleman would volunteer a song, what
+was our amazement when the simple Colonel offered to sing himself,
+at which the room applauded vociferously; whilst methought poor Clive
+Newcome hung down his head, and blushed as red as a peony. I felt for
+the young lad, and thought what my own sensations would have been if,
+in that place, my own uncle, Major Pendennis, had suddenly proposed to
+exert his lyrical powers.
+
+The Colonel selected the ditty of "Wapping Old Stairs" (a ballad so
+sweet and touching that surely any English poet might be proud to be
+the father of it), and he sang this quaint and charming old song in
+an exceedingly pleasant voice, with flourishes and roulades in the old
+Incledon manner, which has pretty nearly passed away. The singer gave
+his heart and soul to the simple ballad, and delivered Molly's gentle
+appeal so pathetically that even the professional gentlemen hummed and
+buzzed--a sincere applause; and some wags who were inclined to jeer at
+the beginning of the performance, clinked their glasses and rapped their
+sticks with quite a respectful enthusiasm. When the song was over, Clive
+held up his head too; after the shock of the first verse, looked round
+with surprise and pleasure in his eyes; and we, I need not say, backed
+our friend, delighted to see him come out of his queer scrape
+so triumphantly. The Colonel bowed and smiled with very pleasant
+good-nature at our plaudits. It was like Dr. Primrose preaching his
+sermon in the prison. There was something touching in the naivete and
+kindness of the placid and simple gentleman.
+
+Great Hoskins, placed on high, amidst the tuneful choir, was pleased
+to signify his approbation, and gave his guest's health in his usual
+dignified manner. "I am much obliged to you, sir," says Mr. Hoskins;
+"the room ought to be much obliged to you: I drink your 'ealth and
+song, sir;" and he bowed to the Colonel politely over his glass of
+brandy-and-water, of which he absorbed a little in his customer's
+honour. "I have not heard that song," he was kind enough to say, "better
+performed since Mr. Incledon sung it. He was a great singer, sir, and I
+may say, in the words of our immortal Shakspeare, that, take him for all
+in all, we shall not look upon his like again."
+
+The Colonel blushed in his turn, and turning round to his boy with an
+arch smile, said, "I learnt it from Incledon. I used to slip out from
+Grey Friars to hear him, Heaven bless me, forty years ago; and I used to
+be flogged afterwards, and serve me right too. Lord! Lord! how the time
+passes!" He drank off his sherry-and-water, and fell back in his chair;
+we could see he was thinking about his youth--the golden time--the
+happy, the bright, the unforgotten. I was myself nearly two-and-twenty
+years of age at that period, and felt as old as, ay, older than the
+Colonel.
+
+Whilst he was singing his ballad, there had walked, or rather reeled,
+into the room, a gentleman in a military frock-coat and duck trousers of
+dubious hue, with whose name and person some of my readers are perhaps
+already acquainted. In fact it was my friend Captain Costigan, in his
+usual condition at this hour of the night.
+
+Holding on by various tables, the Captain had sidled up, without
+accident to himself or any of the jugs and glasses round about him, to
+the table where we sat, and had taken his place near the writer, his
+old acquaintance. He warbled the refrain of the Colonel's song, not
+inharmoniously; and saluted its pathetic conclusion with a subdued
+hiccup and a plentiful effusion of tears. "Bedad, it is a beautiful
+song," says he, "and many a time I heard poor Harry Incledon sing it."
+
+"He's a great character," whispered that unlucky King of Corpus to
+his neighbour the Colonel; "was a Captain in the army. We call him the
+General. Captain Costigan, will you take something to drink?"
+
+"Bedad, I will," says the Captain, "and I'll sing ye a song tu."
+
+And, having procured a glass of whisky-and-water from the passing
+waiter, the poor old man, settling his face into a horrid grin, and
+leering, as he was wont when he gave what he called one of his prime
+songs, began his music.
+
+The unlucky wretch, who scarcely knew what he was doing or saying,
+selected one of the most outrageous performances of his repertoire,
+fired off a tipsy howl by way of overture, and away he went. At the end
+of the second verse the Colonel started up, clapping on his hat, seizing
+his stick, and looking as ferocious as though he had been going to do
+battle with a Pindaree.
+
+"Silence!" he roared out.
+
+"Hear, hear!" cried certain wags at a farther table. "Go on, Costigan!"
+said others.
+
+"Go on!" cries the Colonel, in his high voice trembling with anger.
+"Does any gentleman say 'Go On?' Does any man who has a wife and
+sisters, or children at home, say 'Go on' to such disgusting ribaldry
+as this? Do you dare, sir, to call yourself a gentleman, and to say that
+you hold the King's commission, and to sit down amongst Christians
+and men of honour, and defile the ears of young boys with this wicked
+balderdash?"
+
+"Why do you bring young boys here, old boy?" cries a voice of the
+malcontents.
+
+"Why? Because I thought I was coming to a society of gentlemen," cried
+out the indignant Colonel. "Because I never could have believed that
+Englishmen could meet together and allow a man, and an old man, so to
+disgrace himself. For shame, you old wretch! Go home to your bed, you
+hoary old sinner! And for my part, I'm not sorry that my son should
+see, for once in his life, to what shame and degradation and dishonour,
+drunkenness and whisky may bring a man. Never mind the change,
+sir!--Curse the change!" says the Colonel, facing the amazed waiter.
+"Keep it till you see me in this place again; which will be never--by
+George, never!" And shouldering his stick, and scowling round at the
+company of scared bacchanalians, the indignant gentleman stalked away,
+his boy after him.
+
+Clive seemed rather shamefaced; but I fear the rest of the company
+looked still more foolish.
+
+"Aussi que diable venait--il faire dans cette galere?" says King of
+Corpus to Jones of Trinity; and Jones gave a shrug of his shoulders,
+which were smarting, perhaps; for that uplifted cane of the Colonel's
+had somehow fallen on the back of every man in the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. Colonel Newcome's Wild Oats
+
+
+As the young gentleman who has just gone to bed is to be the hero of the
+following pages, we had best begin our account of him with his family
+history, which luckily is not very long.
+
+When pigtails still grew on the backs of the British gentry, and their
+wives wore cushions on their heads, over which they tied their own hair,
+and disguised it with powder and pomatum: when Ministers went in
+their stars and orders to the House of Commons, and the orators of the
+Opposition attacked nightly the noble lord in the blue ribbon: when Mr.
+Washington was heading the American rebels with a courage, it must be
+confessed, worthy of a better cause: there came up to London, out of a
+northern county, Mr. Thomas Newcome, afterwards Thomas Newcome, Esq.,
+and sheriff of London, afterwards Mr. Alderman Newcome, the founder of
+the family whose name has given the title to this history. It was but in
+the reign of George III. that Mr. Newcome first made his appearance in
+Cheapside; having made his entry into London on a waggon, which landed
+him and some bales of cloth, all his fortune, in Bishopsgate Street;
+though if it could be proved that the Normans wore pigtails under
+William the Conqueror, and Mr. Washington fought against the English
+under King Richard in Palestine, I am sure some of the present Newcomes
+would pay the Heralds' Office handsomely, living, as they do, amongst
+the noblest of the land, and giving entertainments to none but the very
+highest nobility and elite of the fashionable and diplomatic world, as
+you may read any day in the newspapers. For though these Newcomes have
+got a pedigree from the College, which is printed in Budge's Landed
+Aristocracy of Great Britain, and which proves that the Newcome of
+Cromwell's army, the Newcome who was among the last six who were hanged
+by Queen Mary for Protestantism, were ancestors of this house; of which
+a member distinguished himself at Bosworth Field; and the founder,
+slain by King Harold's side at Hastings, had been surgeon-barber to King
+Edward the Confessor; yet, between ourselves, I think that Sir Brian
+Newcome, of Newcome, does not believe a word of the story, any more than
+the rest of the world does, although a number of his children bear names
+out of the Saxon Calendar.
+
+Was Thomas Newcome a foundling--a workhouse child out of that village
+which has now become a great manufacturing town, and which bears his
+name? Such was the report set about at the last election, when Sir
+Brian, in the Conservative interest contested the borough; and Mr. Yapp,
+the out-and-out Liberal candidate, had a picture of the old workhouse
+placarded over the town as the birthplace of the Newcomes; with placards
+ironically exciting freemen to vote for Newcome and union--Newcome
+and the parish interests, etc. Who cares for these local scandals? It
+matters very little to those who have the good fortune to be invited
+to Lady Ann Newcome's parties whether her beautiful daughters can trace
+their pedigrees no higher than to the alderman their grandfather; or
+whether, through the mythic ancestral barber-surgeon, they hang on to
+the chin of Edward, Confessor and King.
+
+Thomas Newcome, who had been a weaver in his native village, brought
+the very best character for honesty, thrift, and ingenuity with him
+to London, where he was taken into the house of Hobson Brothers,
+cloth-factors; afterwards Hobson and Newcome. This fact may suffice to
+indicate Thomas Newcome's story. Like Whittington and many other London
+apprentices, he began poor and ended by marrying his master's daughter,
+and becoming sheriff and alderman of the City of London.
+
+But it was only en secondes noces that he espoused the wealthy, and
+religious, and eminent (such was the word applied to certain professing
+Christians in those days) Sophia Alethea Hobson--a woman who,
+considerably older than Mr. Newcome, had the advantage of surviving
+him many years. Her mansion at Clapham was long the resort of the most
+favoured amongst the religious world. The most eloquent expounders; the
+most gifted missionaries, the most interesting converts from foreign
+islands, were to be found at her sumptuous table, spread with the
+produce of her magnificent gardens. Heaven indeed blessed those gardens
+with plenty, as many reverend gentlemen remarked; there were no finer
+grapes, peaches, or pineapples in all England. Mr. Whitfield himself
+christened her; and it was said generally in the City, and by her
+friends, that Miss Hobson's two Christian names, Sophia and Alethea,
+were two Greek words, which, being interpreted, meant wisdom and truth.
+She, her villa and gardens, are now no more; but Sophia Terrace, Upper
+and Lower Alethea Road, and Hobson's Buildings, Square, etc., show every
+quarter-day that the ground sacred to her (and freehold) still bears
+plenteous fruit for the descendants of this eminent woman.
+
+We are, however, advancing matters. When Thomas Newcome had been some
+time in London, he quitted the house of Hobson, finding an opening,
+though in a much smaller way, for himself. And no sooner did his
+business prosper, than he went down into the north, like a man, to a
+pretty girl whom he had left there, and whom he had promised to marry.
+What seemed an imprudent match (for his wife had nothing but a pale
+face, that had grown older and paler with long waiting) turned out a
+very lucky one for Newcome. The whole countryside was pleased to think
+of the prosperous London tradesman returning to keep his promise to the
+penniless girl whom he had loved in the days of his own poverty; the
+great country clothiers, who knew his prudence and honesty, gave him
+much of their business when he went back to London. Susan Newcome would
+have lived to be a rich woman had not fate ended her career within a
+year after her marriage, when she died giving birth to a son.
+
+Newcome had a nurse for the child, and a cottage at Clapham, hard by Mr.
+Hobson's house, where he had often walked in the garden of a Sunday,
+and been invited to sit down to take a glass of wine. Since he had left
+their service, the house had added a banking business, which was greatly
+helped by the Quakers and their religious connection; and Newcome,
+keeping his account there, and gradually increasing his business, was
+held in very good esteem by his former employers, and invited sometimes
+to tea at the Hermitage; for which entertainments he did not, in
+truth, much care at first, being a City man, a good deal tired with
+his business during the day, and apt to go to sleep over the sermons,
+expoundings, and hymns, with which the gifted preachers, missionaries,
+etc., who were always at the Hermitage, used to wind up the evening,
+before supper. Nor was he a supping man (in which case he would have
+found the parties pleasanter, for in Egypt itself there were not more
+savoury fleshpots than at Clapham); he was very moderate in his meals,
+of a bilious temperament, and, besides, obliged to be in town early in
+the morning, always setting off to walk an hour before the first coach.
+
+But when his poor Susan died, Miss Hobson, by her father's demise,
+having now become a partner in the house, as well as heiress to the
+pious and childless Zachariah Hobson, her uncle Mr. Newcome, with his
+little boy in his hand, met Miss Hobson as she was coming out of
+meeting one Sunday; and the child looked so pretty (Mr. N. was a very
+personable, fresh-coloured man himself; he wore powder to the end,
+and top-boots and brass buttons, in his later days, after he had been
+sheriff indeed, one of the finest specimens of the old London merchant);
+Miss Hobson, I say, invited him and little Tommy into the grounds of the
+Hermitage; did not quarrel with the innocent child for frisking about in
+the hay on the lawn, which lay basking in the Sabbath sunshine, and at
+the end of the visit gave him a large piece of pound-cake, a quantity of
+the finest hothouse grapes, and a tract in one syllable. Tommy was ill
+the next day; but on the next Sunday his father was at meeting.
+
+He became very soon after this an awakened man; and the tittling and
+tattling, and the sneering and gossiping, all over Clapham, and the talk
+on 'Change, and the pokes in the waistcoat administered by the wags
+to Newcome,--"Newcome, give you joy, my boy;" "Newcome, new partner in
+Hobson's;" "Newcome, just take in this paper to Hobson's, they'll do it,
+I warrant," etc. etc.; and the groans of the Rev. Gideon Bawls, of
+the Rev. Athanasius O'Grady, that eminent convert from Popery, who,
+quarrelling with each other, yea, striving one against another, had yet
+two sentiments in common, their love for Miss Hobson, their dread,
+their hatred of the worldly Newcome; all these squabbles and jokes, and
+pribbles and prabbles, look you, may be omitted. As gallantly as he had
+married a woman without a penny, as gallantly as he had conquered his
+poverty and achieved his own independence, so bravely he went in and won
+the great City prize with a fortune of a quarter of a million. And every
+one of his old friends, and every honest-hearted fellow who likes to
+see shrewdness, and honesty, and courage succeed, was glad of his good
+fortune, and said, "Newcome, my boy" (or "Newcome, my buck," if they
+were old City cronies, and very familiar), "I give you joy."
+
+Of course Mr. Newcome might have gone into Parliament: of course before
+the close of his life he might have been made a baronet: but he eschewed
+honours senatorial or blood-red hands. "It wouldn't do," with his good
+sense he said; "the Quaker connection wouldn't like it." His wife never
+cared about being called Lady Newcome. To manage the great house of
+Hobson Brothers and Newcome; to attend to the interests of the enslaved
+negro; to awaken the benighted Hottentot to a sense of the truth; to
+convert Jews, Turks, Infidels, and Papists; to arouse the indifferent
+and often blasphemous mariner; to guide the washerwoman in the right
+way; to head all the public charities of her sect, and do a thousand
+secret kindnesses that none knew of; to answer myriads of letters,
+pension endless ministers, and supply their teeming wives with
+continuous baby-linen; to hear preachers daily bawling for hours, and
+listen untired on her knees after a long day's labour, while florid
+rhapsodists belaboured cushions above her with wearisome benedictions;
+all these things had this woman to do, and for near fourscore years she
+fought her fight womanfully: imperious but deserving to rule, hard but
+doing her duty, severe but charitable, and untiring in generosity as
+in labour; unforgiving in one instance--in that of her husband's eldest
+son, Thomas Newcome; the little boy who had played on the hay, and whom
+at first she had loved very sternly and fondly.
+
+Mr. Thomas Newcome, the father of his wife's twin boys, the junior
+partner of the house of Hobson Brothers and Co., lived several
+years after winning the great prize about which all his friends so
+congratulated him. But he was, after all, only the junior partner of the
+house. His wife was manager in Threadneedle Street and at home--when the
+clerical gentlemen prayed they importuned Heaven for that sainted woman
+a long time before they thought of asking any favour for her husband.
+The gardeners touched their hats, the clerks at the bank brought him
+the books, but they took their orders from her, not from him. I think he
+grew weary of the prayer-meetings, he yawned over the sufferings of the
+negroes, and wished the converted Jews at Jericho. About the time the
+French Emperor was meeting with his Russian reverses Mr. Newcome died:
+his mausoleum is in Clapham Churchyard, near the modest grave where his
+first wife reposes.
+
+When his father married, Mr. Thomas Newcome, jun., and Sarah his nurse
+were transported from the cottage where they had lived in great comfort
+to the palace hard by, surrounded by lawns and gardens, pineries,
+graperies, aviaries, luxuries of all kinds. This paradise, five miles
+from the Standard at Cornhill, was separated from the outer world by
+a thick hedge of tall trees, and an ivy-covered porter's-gate, through
+which they who travelled to London on the top of the Clapham coach could
+only get a glimpse of the bliss within. It was a serious paradise. As
+you entered at the gate, gravity fell on you; and decorum wrapped you
+in a garment of starch. The butcher-boy who galloped his horse and
+cart madly about the adjoining lanes and common, whistled wild melodies
+(caught up in abominable playhouse galleries), and joked with a hundred
+cook-maids, on passing that lodge fell into an undertaker's pace, and
+delivered his joints and sweetbreads silently at the servants' entrance.
+The rooks in the elms cawed sermons at morning and evening; the
+peacocks walked demurely on the terraces; the guinea-fowls looked more
+Quaker-like than those savoury birds usually do. The lodge-keeper was
+serious, and a clerk at a neighbouring chapel. The pastors who entered
+at the gate, and greeted his comely wife and children, fed the little
+lambkins with tracts. The head-gardener was a Scotch Calvinist, after
+the strictest order, only occupying himself with the melons and pines
+provisionally, and until the end of the world, which event, he could
+prove by infallible calculations, was to come off in two or three years
+at farthest. Wherefore, he asked, should the butler brew strong ale to
+be drunken three years hence; or the housekeeper (a follower of Joanna
+Southcote) make provisions of fine linen and lay up stores of jams? On
+a Sunday (which good old Saxon word was scarcely known at the Hermitage)
+the household marched away in separate couples or groups to at least
+half a dozen of religious edifices, each to sit under his or her
+favourite minister, the only man who went to church being Thomas
+Newcome, accompanied by Tommy his little son, and Sarah his nurse, who
+was, I believe, also his aunt, or at least his mother's first cousin.
+Tommy was taught hymns, very soon after he could speak, appropriate
+to his tender age, pointing out to him the inevitable fate of wicked
+children, and giving him the earliest possible warning and description
+of the punishment of little sinners. He repeated these poems to his
+stepmother after dinner, before a great shining mahogany table,
+covered with grapes, pineapples, plum-cake, port wine, and Madeira, and
+surrounded by stout men in black, with baggy white neckcloths, who took
+the little man between their knees, and questioned him as to his right
+understanding of the place whither naughty boys were bound. They patted
+his head with their fat hands if he said well, or rebuked him if he was
+bold, as he often was.
+
+Nurse Sarah or Aunt Sarah would have died had she remained many years in
+that stifling garden of Eden. She could not bear to part from the child
+whom her mistress and kinswoman had confided to her (the women had
+worked in the same room at Newcome's, and loved each other always, when
+Susan became a merchant's lady, and Sarah her servant). She was nobody
+in the pompous new household but Master Tommy's nurse. The honest soul
+never mentioned her relationship to the boy's mother, nor indeed did Mr.
+Newcome acquaint his new family with that circumstance. The housekeeper
+called her an Erastian: Mrs. Newcome's own serious maid informed against
+her for telling Tommy stories of Lancashire witches, and believing in
+the same. The black footman (madam's maid and the butler were of course
+privately united) persecuted her with his addresses, and was even
+encouraged by his mistress, who thought of sending him as a missionary
+to the Niger. No little love, and fidelity, and constancy did honest
+Sarah show and use during the years she passed at the Hermitage, and
+until Tommy went to school. Her master, with many private prayers and
+entreaties, in which he passionately recalled his former wife's memory
+and affection, implored his friend to stay with him; and Tommy's
+fondness for her and artless caresses, and the scrapes he got into, and
+the howls he uttered over the hymns and catechisms which he was bidden
+to learn (by Rev. T. Clack,, of Highbury College, his daily tutor, who
+was commissioned to spare not the rod, neither to spoil the child), all
+these causes induced Sarah to remain with her young master until such
+time as he was sent to school.
+
+Meanwhile an event of prodigious importance, a wonderment, a blessing
+and a delight, had happened at the Hermitage. About two years after Mrs.
+Newcome's marriage, the lady being then forty-three years of age, no
+less than two little cherubs appeared in the Clapham Paradise--the
+twins, Hobson Newcome and Brian Newcome, called after their uncle and
+late grandfather, whose name and rank they were destined to perpetuate.
+And now there was no reason why young Newcome should not go to school.
+Old Mr. Hobson and his brother had been educated at that school of
+Grey Friars, of which mention has been made in former works and to Grey
+Friars Thomas Newcome was accordingly sent, exchanging--O ye Gods! with
+what delight!--the splendour of Clapham for the rough, plentiful fare of
+the place, blacking his master's shoes with perfect readiness, till he
+rose in the school, and the time came when he should have a fag of his
+own: tibbing out and receiving the penalty therefore: bartering a
+black eye, per bearer, against a bloody nose drawn at sight, with
+a schoolfellow, and shaking hands the next day; playing at cricket,
+hockey, prisoners' base, and football, according to the season; and
+gorging himself and friends with tarts when he had money (and of this
+he had plenty) to spend. I have seen his name carved upon the Gown Boys'
+arch: but he was at school long before my time; his son showed me the
+name when we were boys together, in some year when George the Fourth was
+king.
+
+The pleasures of this school-life were such to Tommy Newcome, that he
+did not care to go home for a holiday: and indeed, by insubordination
+and boisterousness; by playing tricks and breaking windows; by marauding
+upon the gardener's peaches and the housekeeper's jam; by upsetting his
+two little brothers in a go-cart (of which wanton and careless injury
+the present Baronet's nose bears marks to this very day); by going to
+sleep during the sermons, and treating reverend gentlemen with levity,
+he drew down on himself the merited wrath of his stepmother; and many
+punishments in this present life, besides those of a future and much
+more durable kind, which the good lady did not fail to point out that
+he must undoubtedly inherit. His father, at Mrs. Newcome's instigation,
+certainly whipped Tommy for upsetting his little brothers in the
+go-cart; but upon being pressed to repeat the whipping for some other
+peccadillo performed soon after, Mr. Newcome refused at once, using a
+wicked, worldly expression, which well might shock any serious lady;
+saying, in fact, that he would be deed if he beat the boy any more, and
+that he got flogging enough at school, in which opinion Master Tommy
+fully coincided.
+
+The undaunted woman, his stepmother, was not to be made to forgo her
+plans for the boy's reform by any such vulgar ribaldries; and Mr.
+Newcome being absent in the City on his business, and Tommy refractory
+as usual, she summoned the serious butler and the black footman (for
+the lashings of whose brethren she felt an unaffected pity) to operate
+together in the chastisement of this young criminal. But he dashed so
+furiously against the butler's shins as to draw blood from his comely
+limbs, and to cause that serious and overfed menial to limp and suffer
+for many days after; and, seizing the decanter, he swore he would
+demolish blacky's ugly face with it: nay, he threatened to discharge it
+at Mrs. Newcome's own head before he would submit to the coercion which
+she desired her agents to administer.
+
+High words took place between Mr. and Mrs. Newcome that night on the
+gentleman's return home from the City, and on his learning the events
+of the morning. It is to be feared he made use of further oaths, which
+hasty ejaculations need not be set down in this place; at any rate, he
+behaved with spirit and manliness as master of the house, vowed that if
+any servant laid a hand on the child, he would thrash him first and
+then discharge him; and I dare say expressed himself with bitterness
+and regret that he had married a wife who would not be obedient to her
+husband, and had entered a house of which he was not suffered to be the
+master. Friends were called in--the interference, the supplications,
+of the Clapham clergy, some of whom dined constantly at the Hermitage,
+prevailed to allay this domestic quarrel; and no doubt the good sense
+of Mrs. Newcome--who, though imperious, was yet not unkind; and who,
+excellent as she was, yet could be brought to own that she was sometimes
+in fault--induced her to make at least a temporary submission to the
+man whom she had placed at the head of her house, and whom it must be
+confessed she had vowed to love and honour. When Tommy fell ill of the
+scarlet fever, which afflicting event occurred presently after the
+above dispute, his own nurse, Sarah, could not have been more tender,
+watchful, and affectionate than his stepmother showed herself to be.
+She nursed him through his illness; allowed his food and medicine to be
+administered by no other hand; sat up with the boy through a night
+of his fever, and uttered not one single reproach to her husband (who
+watched with her) when the twins took the disease (from which we
+need not say they happily recovered); and though young Tommy, in his
+temporary delirium, mistaking her for Nurse Sarah, addressed her as his
+dear Fat Sally--whereas no whipping-post to which she ever would have
+tied him could have been leaner than Mrs. Newcome--and, under this
+feverish delusion, actually abused her to her face; calling her an old
+cat, an old Methodist, and, jumping up in his little bed, forgetful of
+his previous fancy, vowing that he would put on his clothes and run away
+to Sally. Sally was at her northern home by this time, with a liberal
+pension which Mr. Newcome gave her, and which his son and his son's son
+after him, through all their difficulties and distresses, always found
+means to pay.
+
+What the boy threatened in his delirium he had thought of, no doubt,
+more than once in his solitary and unhappy holidays. A year after he
+actually ran away, not from school, but from home; and appeared one
+morning, gaunt and hungry, at Sarah's cottage two hundred miles away
+from Clapham, who housed the poor prodigal, and killed her calf for
+him--washed him, with many tears and kisses, and put him to bed and
+to sleep; from which slumber he was aroused by the appearance of
+his father, whose sure instinct, backed by Mrs. Newcome's own quick
+intelligence, had made him at once aware whither the young runaway had
+fled. The poor father came horsewhip in hand--he knew of no other law
+or means to maintain his authority; many and many a time had his own
+father, the old weaver, whose memory he loved and honoured, strapped and
+beaten him. Seeing this instrument in the parent's hand, as Mr. Newcome
+thrust out the weeping trembling Sarah and closed the door upon her,
+Tommy, scared out of a sweet sleep and a delightful dream of cricket,
+knew his fate; and, getting up out of bed, received his punishment
+without a word. Very likely the father suffered more than the child;
+for when the punishment was over, the little man, yet trembling and
+quivering with the pain, held out his little bleeding hand and said, "I
+can--I can take it from you, sir;" saying which his face flushed, and
+his eyes filled, for the first time; whereupon the father burst into
+a passion of tears, and embraced the boy and kissed him, besought and
+prayed him to be rebellious no more--flung the whip away from him and
+swore, come what would, he would never strike him again. The quarrel was
+the means of a great and happy reconciliation. The three dined together
+in Sarah's cottage. Perhaps the father would have liked to walk that
+evening in the lanes and fields where he had wandered as a young
+fellow: where he had first courted and first kissed the young girl he
+loved--poor child--who had waited for him so faithfully and fondly,
+who had passed so many a day of patient want and meek expectance, to be
+repaid by such a scant holiday and brief fruition.
+
+Mrs. Newcome never made the slightest allusion to Tom's absence after
+his return, but was quite gentle and affectionate with him, and that
+night read the parable of the Prodigal in a very low and quiet voice.
+
+This, however, was only a temporary truce. War very soon broke out again
+between the impetuous lad and his rigid domineering mother-in-law.
+It was not that he was very bad, or she perhaps more stern than other
+ladies, but the two could not agree. The boy sulked and was miserable
+at home. He fell to drinking with the grooms in the stables. I think
+he went to Epsom races, and was discovered after that act of rebellion.
+Driving from a most interesting breakfast at Roehampton (where a
+delightful Hebrew convert had spoken, oh! so graciously!), Mrs.
+Newcome--in her state-carriage, with her bay horses--met Tom, her
+son-in-law, in a tax-cart, excited by drink, and accompanied by all
+sorts of friends, male and female. John the black man was bidden to
+descend from the carriage and bring him to Mrs. Newcome. He came; his
+voice was thick with drink. He laughed wildly: he described a fight at
+which he had been present. It was not possible that such a castaway
+as this should continue in a house where her two little cherubs were
+growing up in innocence and grace.
+
+The boy had a great fancy for India; and Orme's History, containing the
+exploits of Clive and Lawrence, was his favourite book of all in his
+father's library. Being offered a writership, he scouted the idea of a
+civil appointment, and would be contented with nothing but a uniform. A
+cavalry cadetship was procured for Thomas Newcome; and the young man's
+future career being thus determined, and his stepmother's unwilling
+consent procured, Mr. Newcome thought fit to send his son to a tutor for
+military instruction, and removed him from the London school, where in
+truth he had made but very little progress in the humaner letters. The
+lad was placed with a professor who prepared young men for the army, and
+received rather a better professional education than fell to the lot
+of most young soldiers of his day. He cultivated the mathematics and
+fortification with more assiduity than he had ever bestowed on Greek and
+Latin, and especially made such a progress in the French tongue as was
+very uncommon among the British youth his contemporaries.
+
+In the study of this agreeable language, over which young Newcome spent
+a great deal of his time, he unluckily had some instructors who were
+destined to bring the poor lad into yet further trouble at home. His
+tutor, an easy gentleman, lived at Blackheath, and, not far from thence,
+on the road to Woolwich, dwelt the little Chevalier de Blois, at whose
+house the young man much preferred to take his French lessons rather
+than to receive them under his tutor's own roof.
+
+For the fact was that the little Chevalier de Blois had two pretty young
+daughters, with whom he had fled from his country along with thousands
+of French gentlemen at the period of revolution and emigration. He was
+a cadet of a very ancient family, and his brother, the Marquis de Blois,
+was a fugitive like himself, but with the army of the princes on the
+Rhine, or with his exiled sovereign at Mittau. The Chevalier had seen
+the wars of the great Frederick: what man could be found better to
+teach young Newcome the French language and the art military? It was
+surprising with what assiduity he pursued his studies. Mademoiselle
+Leonore, the Chevalier's daughter, would carry on her little industry
+very undisturbedly in the same parlour with her father and his pupil.
+She painted card-racks: laboured at embroidery; was ready to employ her
+quick little brain or fingers in any way by which she could find means
+to add a few shillings to the scanty store on which this exiled family
+supported themselves in their day of misfortune. I suppose the Chevalier
+was not in the least unquiet about her, because she was promised in
+marriage to the Comte de Florac, also of the emigration--a distinguished
+officer like the Chevalier, than whom he was a year older--and, at the
+time of which we speak, engaged in London in giving private lessons on
+the fiddle. Sometimes on a Sunday he would walk to Blackheath with that
+instrument in his hand, and pay his court to his young fiancee, and talk
+over happier days with his old companion-in-arms. Tom Newcome took no
+French lessons on a Sunday. He passed that day at Clapham generally,
+where, strange to say, he never said a word about Mademoiselle de Blois.
+
+What happens when two young folks of eighteen, handsome and ardent,
+generous and impetuous, alone in the world, or without strong affections
+to bind them elsewhere,--what happens when they meet daily over French
+dictionaries, embroidery frames, or indeed upon any business whatever?
+No doubt Mademoiselle Leonore was a young lady perfectly bien elevee,
+and ready, as every well-elevated young Frenchwoman should be, to accept
+a husband of her parents' choosing; but while the elderly M. de Florac
+was fiddling in London, there was that handsome young Tom Newcome ever
+present at Blackheath. To make a long matter short, Tom declared his
+passion, and was for marrying Leonore off hand, if she would but come
+with him to the little Catholic chapel at Woolwich. Why should they not
+go out to India together and be happy ever after?
+
+The innocent little amour may have been several months in transaction,
+and was discovered by Mrs. Newcome, whose keen spectacles nothing could
+escape. It chanced that she drove to Blackheath to Tom's tutor's. Tom
+was absent taking his French and drawing lesson of M. de Blois. Thither
+Tom's stepmother followed him, and found the young man sure enough with
+his instructor over his books and plans of fortification. Mademoiselle
+and her card-screens were in the room, but behind those screens she
+could not hide her blushes and confusion from Mrs. Newcome's sharp
+glances. In one moment the banker's wife saw the whole affair--the whole
+mystery which had been passing for months under poor M. de Blois' nose,
+without his having the least notion of the truth.
+
+Mrs. Newcome said she wanted her son to return home with her upon
+private affairs; and before they had reached the Hermitage a fine battle
+had ensued between them. His mother had charged him with being a wretch
+and a monster, and he had replied fiercely, denying the accusation with
+scorn, and announcing his wish instantly to marry the most virtuous,
+the most beautiful of her sex. To marry a Papist! This was all that was
+wanted to make poor Tom's cup of bitterness run over. Mr. Newcome was
+called in, and the two elders passed a great part of the night in an
+assault upon the lad. He was grown too tall for the cane; but Mrs.
+Newcome thonged him with the lash of her indignation for many an hour
+that evening.
+
+He was forbidden to enter, M. de Blois' house, a prohibition at which
+the spirited young fellow snapped his fingers, and laughed in scorn.
+Nothing, he swore, but death should part him from the young lady. On the
+next day his father came to him alone and plied him with entreaties, but
+he was as obdurate as before. He would have her; nothing should prevent
+him. He cocked his hat and walked out of the lodge-gate, as his father,
+quite beaten by the young man's obstinacy, with haggard face and tearful
+eyes, went his own way into town. He was not very angry himself: in the
+course of their talk overnight the boy had spoken bravely and honestly,
+and Newcome could remember how, in his own early life, he too had
+courted and loved a young lass. It was Mrs. Newcome the father was
+afraid of. Who shall depict her wrath at the idea that a child of her
+house was about to marry a Popish girl?
+
+So young Newcome went his way to Blackheath, bent upon falling
+straightway down upon his knees before Leonore, and having the
+Chevalier's blessing. That old fiddler in London scarcely seemed to him
+to be an obstacle: it seemed monstrous that a young creature should be
+given away to a man older than her own father. He did not know the law
+of honour, as it obtained amongst French gentlemen of those days, or how
+religiously their daughters were bound by it.
+
+But Mrs. Newcome had been beforehand with him, and had visited the
+Chevalier de Blois almost at cockcrow. She charged him insolently with
+being privy to the attachment between the young people; pursued him
+with vulgar rebukes about beggary, Popery, and French adventurers. Her
+husband had to make a very contrite apology afterwards for the language
+which his wife had thought fit to employ. "You forbid me," said the
+Chevalier, "you forbid Mademoiselle de Blois to marry your son, Mr.
+Thomas! No, madam, she comes of a race which is not accustomed to ally
+itself with persons of your class; and is promised to a gentleman whose
+ancestors were dukes and peers when Mr. Newcome's were blacking shoes!"
+Instead of finding his pretty blushing girl on arriving at Woolwich,
+poor Tom only found his French master, livid with rage and quivering
+under his ailes de pigeon. We pass over the scenes that followed; the
+young man's passionate entreaties, and fury and despair. In his own
+defence, and to prove his honour to the world, M. de Blois determined
+that his daughter should instantly marry the Count. The poor girl
+yielded without a word, as became her; and it was with this marriage
+effected almost before his eyes, and frantic with wrath and despair,
+that young Newcome embarked for India, and quitted the parents whom he
+was never more to see.
+
+Tom's name was no more mentioned at Clapham. His letters to his father
+were written to the City; very pleasant they were, and comforting to the
+father's heart. He sent Tom liberal private remittances to India, until
+the boy wrote to say that he wanted no more. Mr. Newcome would have
+liked to leave Tom all his private fortune, for the twins were only
+too well cared for; but he dared not on account of his terror of Sophia
+Alethea, his wife; and he died, and poor Tom was only secretly forgiven.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. Colonel Newcome's Letter-box
+
+
+I. "With the most heartfelt joy, my dear Major, I take up my pen to
+announce to you the happy arrival of the Ramchunder, and the dearest and
+handsomest little boy who, I am sure, ever came from India. Little Clive
+is in perfect health. He speaks English wonderfully well. He cried when
+he parted from Mr. Sneid, the supercargo, who most kindly brought him
+from Southampton in a postchaise, but these tears in childhood are of
+very brief duration! The voyage, Mr. Sneid states, was most favourable,
+occupying only four months and eleven days. How different from that more
+lengthened and dangerous passage of eight months, and almost perpetual
+sea-sickness, in which my poor dear sister Emma went to Bengal, to
+become the wife of the best of husbands and the mother of the dearest
+of little boys, and to enjoy these inestimable blessings for so brief an
+interval! She has quitted this wicked and wretched world for one where
+all is peace. The misery and ill-treatment which she endured from
+Captain Case her first odious husband, were, I am sure, amply repaid,
+my dear Colonel, by your subsequent affection. If the most sumptuous
+dresses which London, even Paris, could supply, jewellery the most
+costly, and elegant lace, and everything lovely and fashionable, could
+content a woman, these, I am sure, during the last four years of her
+life, the poor girl had. Of what avail are they when this scene of
+vanity is closed?
+
+"Mr. Sneid announces that the passage was most favourable. They stayed
+a week at the Cape, and three days at St. Helena, where they visited
+Bonaparte's tomb (another instance of the vanity of all things!), and
+their voyage was enlivened off Ascension by the taking of some delicious
+turtle!
+
+"You may be sure that the most liberal sum which you have placed to my
+credit with the Messrs. Hobson and Co. shall be faithfully expended
+on my dear little charge. Mrs. Newcome can scarcely be called his
+grandmamma, I suppose; and I daresay her Methodistical ladyship will not
+care to see the daughter and grandson of a clergyman of the Church
+of England! My brother Charles took leave to wait upon her when he
+presented your last most generous bill at the bank. She received him
+most rudely, and said a fool and his money are soon parted; and when
+Charles said, 'Madam, I am the brother of the late Mrs. Major Newcome,'
+'Sir,' says she, 'I judge nobody; but from all accounts, you are the
+brother of a very vain, idle, thoughtless, extravagant woman; and Thomas
+Newcome was as foolish about his wife as about his money.' Of course,
+unless Mrs. N. writes to invite dear Clive, I shall not think of sending
+him to Clapham.
+
+"It is such hot weather that I cannot wear the beautiful shawl you have
+sent me, and shall keep it in lavender till next winter! My brother, who
+thanks you for your continuous bounty, will write next month, and report
+progress as to his dear pupil. Clive will add a postscript of his own,
+and I am, my dear Major, with a thousand thanks for your kindness to
+me,--Your grateful and affectionate Martha Honeyman."
+
+In a round hand and on lines ruled with pencil:--
+
+"Dearest Papa i am very well i hope you are Very Well. M Sneed brought
+me in a postchaise i like Mr. Sneed very much. i like Aunt Martha i
+like Hannah. There are no ships here i am your affectionate son Clive
+Newcome."
+
+
+II. Rue St. Dominique, St. Germain, Paris,
+
+Nov. 15, 1820,
+
+"Long separated from the country which was the home of my youth, I
+carried from her tender recollections, and bear her always a lively
+gratitude. The Heaven has placed me in a position very different from
+that in which I knew you. I have been the mother of many children. My
+husband has recovered a portion of the property which the Revolution
+tore from us; and France, in returning to its legitimate sovereign,
+received once more the nobility which accompanied his august house into
+exile. We, however, preceded His Majesty, more happy than many of
+our companions. Believing further resistance to be useless; dazzled,
+perhaps, by the brilliancy of that genius which restored order,
+submitted Europe, and governed France; M. de Florac, in the first days,
+was reconciled to the Conqueror of Marengo and Austerlitz, and held a
+position in his Imperial Court. This submission, at first attributed to
+infidelity, has subsequently been pardoned to my husband. His sufferings
+during the Hundred Days made to pardon his adhesion to him who was
+Emperor. My husband is now an old man. He was of the disastrous campaign
+of Moscow, as one of the chamberlains of Napoleon. Withdrawn from the
+world, he gives his time to his feeble health--to his family--to Heaven.
+
+"I have not forgotten a time before those days, when, according
+to promises given by my father, I became the wife of M. de Florac.
+Sometimes I have heard of your career. One of my parents, M. de F.,
+who took service in the English India, has entertained me of you; he
+informed me how yet a young man you won laurels at Argom and Bhartpour;
+how you escaped to death at Laswari. I have followed them, sir, on the
+map. I have taken part in your victories and your glory. Ah! I am not
+so cold, but my heart has trembled for your dangers; not so aged, but I
+remember the young man who learned from the pupil of Frederick the first
+rudiments of war. Your great heart, your love of truth, your courage
+were your own. None had to teach you those qualities, of which a good
+God had endowed you, My good father is dead since many years. He, too,
+was permitted to see France before to die.
+
+"I have read in the English journals not only that you are married,
+but that you have a son. Permit me to send to your wife, to your
+child, these accompanying tokens of an old friendship. I have seen that
+Mistress Newcome was widow, and am not sorry of it. My friend, I hope
+there was not that difference of age between your wife and you that I
+have known in other unions. I pray the good God to bless yours. I hold
+you always in my memory. As I write, the past comes back to me. I see a
+noble young man, who has a soft voice, and brown eyes. I see the
+Thames, and the smiling plains of Blackheath. I listen and pray at my
+chamber-door as my father talks to you in our little cabinet of studies.
+I look from my window, and see you depart.
+
+"My son's are men: one follows the profession of arms, one has embraced
+the ecclesiastical state; my daughter is herself a mother. I remember
+this was your birthday; I have made myself a little fete in celebrating
+it, after how many years of absence, of silence! Comtesse De Florac.
+(Nee L. de Blois.)"
+
+
+III. "My Dear Thomas,--Mr. Sneid, supercargo of the Ramchunder, East
+Indiaman, handed over to us yesterday your letter, and, to-day, I have
+purchased three thousand three hundred and twenty-three pounds 6 and 8d.
+three per cent Consols, in our joint names (H. and B. Newcome), held for
+your little boy. Mr. S. gives a very favourable account of the little
+man, and left him in perfect health two days since, at the house of his
+aunt, Miss Honeyman. We have placed 200 pounds to that lady's credit, at
+your desire.
+
+"Lady Anne is charmed with the present which she received yesterday,
+and says the white shawl is a great deal too handsome. My mother is also
+greatly pleased with hers, and has forwarded, by the coach to Brighton,
+to-day, a packet of books, tracts, etc., suited for his tender age, for
+your little boy. She heard of you lately from the Rev. T. Sweatenham on
+his return from India. He spoke of your kindness,--and of the hospitable
+manner in which you had received him at your house, and alluded to you
+in a very handsome way in the course of the thanksgiving that evening.
+I dare say my mother will ask your little boy to the Hermitage; and when
+we have a house of our own, I am sure Anne and I will be very happy to
+see him. Yours affectionately, Major Newcome. B. Newcome."
+
+
+IV. "My Dear Colonel,--Did I not know the generosity of your heart, and
+the bountiful means which Heaven has put at your disposal in order to
+gratify that noble disposition; were I not certain that the small sum I
+required will permanently place me beyond the reach of the difficulties
+of life, and will infallibly be repaid before six months are over,
+believe me I never would have ventured upon that bold step which our
+friendship (carried on epistolarily as it has been), our relationship,
+and your admirable disposition, have induced me to venture to take.
+
+"That elegant and commodious chapel, known as Lady Whittlesea's, Denmark
+Street, Mayfair, being for sale, I have determined on venturing my
+all in its acquisition, and in laying, as I hope, the foundation of a
+competence for myself and excellent sister. What is a lodging-house at
+Brighton but an uncertain maintenance? The mariner on the sea before
+those cliffs is no more sure of wind and wave, or of fish to his
+laborious net, than the Brighton house-owner (bred in affluence she may
+have been, and used to unremitting plenty) to the support of the casual
+travellers who visit the city. On one day they come in shoals, it is
+true, but where are they on the next? For many months my poor sister's
+first floor was a desert, until occupied by your noble little boy, my
+nephew and pupil. Clive is everything that a father's, an uncle's (who
+loves him as a father), a pastor's, a teacher's affections could desire.
+He is not one of those premature geniuses whose much-vaunted infantine
+talents disappear along with adolescence; he is not, I frankly own, more
+advanced in his classical and mathematical studies than some children
+even younger than himself; but he has acquired the rudiments of health;
+he has laid in a store of honesty and good-humour, which are not less
+likely to advance him in life than mere science and language, than the
+as in praesenti, or the pons asinorum.
+
+"But I forget, in thinking of my dear little friend and pupil, the
+subject of this letter--namely, the acquisition of the proprietary
+chapel to which I have alluded, and the hopes, nay, certainty of a
+fortune, if aught below is certain, which that acquisition holds
+out. What is a curacy, but a synonym for starvation? If we accuse the
+Eremites of old of wasting their lives in unprofitable wildernesses,
+what shall we say to many a hermit of Protestant, and so-called
+civilised times, who hides his head in a solitude in Yorkshire, and
+buries his probably fine talents in a Lincolnshire fen? Have I genius?
+Am I blessed with gifts of eloquence to thrill and soothe, to arouse
+the sluggish, to terrify the sinful, to cheer and convince the timid, to
+lead the blind groping in darkness, and to trample the audacious sceptic
+in the dust? My own conscience, besides a hundred testimonials from
+places of popular, most popular worship, from reverend prelates, from
+distinguished clergy, tells me I have these gifts. A voice within me
+cries, 'Go forth, Charles Honeyman, fight the good fight; wipe the tears
+of the repentant sinner; sing of hope to the agonised criminal; whisper
+courage, brother, courage, at the ghastly deathbed, and strike down
+the infidel with the lance of evidence and the shield of reason!' In
+a pecuniary point of view I am confident, nay, the calculations may
+be established as irresistibly as an algebraic equation, that I can
+realise, as incumbent of Lady Whittlesea's chapel, the sum of not
+less than one thousand pounds per annum. Such a sum, with economy (and
+without it what sum were sufficient?), will enable me to provide amply
+for my wants, to discharge my obligations to you, to my sister, and some
+other creditors, very, very unlike you, and to place Miss Honeyman in a
+home more worthy of her than that which she now occupies, only to vacate
+it at the beck of every passing stranger!
+
+"My sister does not disapprove of my plan, into which enter some
+modifications which I have not, as yet, submitted to her, being anxious
+at first that they should be sanctioned by you. From the income of
+the Whittlesea chapel I propose to allow Miss Honeyman the sum of
+two hundred pounds per annum, paid quarterly. This, with her private
+property, which she has kept more thriftily than her unfortunate and
+confiding brother guarded his (for whenever I had a guinea a tale of
+distress would melt it into half a sovereign), will enable Miss Honeyman
+to live in a way becoming my father's daughter.
+
+"Comforted with this provision as my sister will be, I would suggest
+that our dearest young Clive should be transferred from her petticoat
+government, and given up to the care of his affectionate uncle and
+tutor. His present allowance will most liberally suffice for his
+expenses, board, lodging, and education while under my roof, and I shall
+be able to exert a paternal, a pastoral influence over his studies,
+his conduct, and his highest welfare, which I cannot so conveniently
+exercise at Brighton, where I am but Miss Honeyman's stipendiary, and
+where I often have to submit in cases where I know, for dearest Clive's
+own welfare, it is I, and not my sister, should be paramount.
+
+"I have given then to a friend, the Rev. Marcus Flather a draft for two
+hundred and fifty pounds sterling, drawn upon you at your agent's in
+Calcutta, which sum will go in liquidation of dear Clive's first year's
+board with me, or, upon my word of honour as a gentleman and clergyman,
+shall be paid back at three months after sight, if you will draw upon
+me. As I never--no, were it my last penny in the world--would dishonour
+your draft, I implore you, my dear Colonel, not to refuse mine. My
+credit in this city, where credit is everything, and the awful future
+so little thought of, my engagements to Mr. Flather, my own prospects
+in life, and the comfort of my dear sister's declining years, all--all
+depend upon this bold, this eventful measure. My ruin or my earthly
+happiness lies entirely in your hands. Can I doubt which way your
+kind heart will lead you, and that you will come to the aid of your
+affectionate brother-in-law? Charles Honeyman."
+
+"Our little Clive has been to London on a visit to his uncles and to the
+Hermitage, Clapham, to pay his duty to his step-grandmother, the wealthy
+Mrs. Newcome. I pass over words disparaging of myself which the child
+in his artless prattles subsequently narrated. She was very gracious to
+him, and presented him with a five-pound note, a copy of Kirk White's
+Poems, and a work called Little Henry and his Bearer, relating to India,
+and the excellent Catechism of our Church. Clive is full of humour, and
+I enclose you a rude scrap representing the Bishopess of Clapham, as
+she is called,--the other figure is a rude though entertaining sketch of
+some other droll personage.
+
+"Lieutenant-Colonel Newcome, etc."
+
+
+V. "My Dear Colonel;--The Rev. Marcus Flather has just written me a
+letter at which I am greatly shocked and perplexed, informing me that my
+brother Charles has given him a draft upon you for two hundred and fifty
+pounds, when goodness knows it is not you but we who are many, many
+hundred pounds debtors to you. Charles has explained that he drew the
+bill at your desire, that you wrote to say you would be glad to serve
+him in any way, and that the money is wanted to make his fortune. Yet
+I don't know--poor Charles is always going to make his fortune and has
+never done it. That school which he bought, and for which you and me
+between us paid the purchase-money, turned out no good, and the only
+pupils left at the end of the first half-year were two woolly-headed
+poor little mulattos, whose father was in gaol at St. Kitt's, and whom
+I kept actually in my own second-floor back room whilst the lawyers were
+settling things, and Charles was away in France, and until my dearest
+little Clive came to live with me.
+
+"Then, as he was too small for a great school, I thought Clive could not
+do better than stay with his old aunt and have his Uncle Charles for a
+tutor, who is one of the finest scholars in the world. I wish you could
+hear him in the pulpit. His delivery is grander and more impressive
+than any divine now in England. His sermons you have subscribed for,
+and likewise his book of elegant poems, which are pronounced to be very
+fine.
+
+"When he returned from Calais, and those horrid lawyers had left off
+worriting him, I thought as his frame was much shattered and he was too
+weak to take a curacy, that he could not do better than become Clive's
+tutor, and agreed to pay him out of your handsome donation of 250 pounds
+for Clive, a sum of one hundred pounds per year, so that, when the board
+of the two and Clive's clothing are taken into consideration, I think
+you will see that no great profit is left to Miss Martha Honeyman.
+
+"Charles talks to me of his new church in London, and of making me some
+grand allowance. The poor boy is very affectionate, and always building
+castles in the air, and of having Clive to live with him in London. Now
+this mustn't be, and I won't hear of it. Charles is too kind to be a
+schoolmaster, and Master Clive laughs at him. It was only the other day,
+after his return from his grandmamma's, regarding which I wrote you, per
+Burrampooter, the 23rd ult., that I found a picture of Mrs. Newcome and
+Charles too, and of both their spectacles, quite like. I put it away,
+but some rogue, I suppose, has stolen it. He has done me and Hannah too.
+Mr. Speck, the artist, laughed and took it home, and says he is a wonder
+at drawing.
+
+"Instead, then, of allowing Clive to go with Charles to London next
+month, where my brother is bent on going, I shall send Clivey to Dr.
+Timpany's school, Marine Parade, of which I hear the best account, but
+I hope you will think of soon sending him to a great school. My father
+always said it was the best place for boys, and I have a brother to whom
+my poor mother spared the rod, and who, I fear, has turned out but a
+spoilt child.
+
+"I am, dear Colonel, your most faithful servant, Martha Honeyman."
+
+"Lieutenant-Colonel Newcome, C. B."
+
+
+VI. "My Dear Brother,--I hasten to inform you of a calamity which,
+though it might be looked for in the course of nature, has occasioned
+deep grief not only in our family but in this city. This morning, at
+half-past four o'clock, our beloved and respected mother, Sophia Alethea
+Newcome, expired, at the advanced age of eighty-three years. On the
+night of Tuesday-Wednesday, the 12-13th, having been engaged reading
+and writing in her library until a late hour, and having dismissed the
+servants, whom she never would allow to sit up for her, as well as my
+brother and his wife, who always are in the habit of retiring early,
+Mrs. Newcome extinguished the lamps, took a bedchamber candle to
+return to her room, and must have fallen on the landing, where she was
+discovered by the maids, sitting with her head reclining against the
+balustrades, and endeavouring to staunch a wound in her forehead, which
+was bleeding profusely, having struck in a fall against the stone step
+of the stair.
+
+"When Mrs. Newcome was found she was speechless, but still sensible, and
+medical aid being sent for, she was carried to bed. Mr. Newcome and
+Lady Anne both hurried to her apartment, and she knew them, and took the
+hands of each, but paralysis had probably ensued in consequence of the
+shock of the fall; nor was her voice ever heard, except in inarticulate
+moanings, since the hour on the previous evening when she gave them her
+blessing and bade them good-night. Thus perished this good and excellent
+woman, the truest Christian, the most charitable friend to the poor and
+needful, the head of this great house of business, the best and most
+affectionate of mothers.
+
+"The contents of her will have long been known to us, and that document
+was dated one month after our lamented father's death. Mr. Thomas
+Newcome's property being divided equally amongst his three sons, the
+property of his second wife naturally devolves upon her own issue, my
+brother Brian and myself. There are very heavy legacies to servants and
+to charitable and religious institutions, of which, in life, she was the
+munificent patroness; and I regret, my dear brother, that no memorial to
+you should have been left by my mother, because she often spoke of you
+latterly in terms of affection, and on the very day on which she died,
+commenced a letter to your little boy, which was left unfinished on the
+library table. My brother said that on that same day, at breakfast, she
+pointed to a volume of Orme's Hindostan, the book, she said, which set
+poor dear Tom wild to go to India, I know you will be pleased to hear of
+these proofs of returning goodwill and affection in one who often spoke
+latterly of her early regard for you. I have no more time, under the
+weight of business which this present affliction entails, than to say
+that I am yours, dear brother, very sincerely, H. Newcome."
+
+"Lieutenant-Colonel Newcome, etc."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. In which the Author and the Hero resume their Acquaintance
+
+
+If we are to narrate the youthful history not only of the hero of this
+tale, but of the hero's father, we shall never have done with nursery
+biography. A gentleman's grandmother may delight in fond recapitulation
+of her darling's boyish frolics and early genius; but shall we weary our
+kind readers by this infantile prattle, and set down the revered British
+public for an old woman? Only to two or three persons in all the world
+are the reminiscences of a man's early youth interesting: to the parent
+who nursed him; to the fond wife or child mayhap afterwards who loves
+him; to himself always and supremely--whatever may be his actual
+prosperity or ill-fortune, his present age, illness, difficulties,
+renown, or disappointments, the dawn of his life still shines brightly
+for him, the early griefs and delights and attachments remain with him
+ever faithful and dear. I shall ask leave to say, regarding the juvenile
+biography of Mr. Clive Newcome, of whose history I am the chronicler,
+only so much as is sufficient to account for some peculiarities of his
+character, and for his subsequent career in the world.
+
+Although we were schoolfellows, my acquaintance with young Newcome at
+the seat of learning where we first met was very brief and casual.
+He had the advantage of being six years the junior of his present
+biographer, and such a difference of age between lads at a public
+school puts intimacy out of the question--a junior ensign being no more
+familiar with the Commander-in-Chief at the Horse Guards, or a barrister
+on his first circuit with my Lord Chief Justice on the bench, than the
+newly breeched infant in the Petties with a senior boy in a tailed
+coat. As we "knew each other at home," as our school phrase was, and our
+families being somewhat acquainted, Newcome's maternal uncle, the Rev.
+Charles Honeyman (the highly gifted preacher, and incumbent of Lady
+Whittlesea's Chapel, Denmark Street, Mayfair), when he brought the
+child, after the Christmas vacation of 182-, to the Grey Friars' school,
+recommended him in a neat complimentary speech to my superintendence
+and protection. My uncle, Major Pendennis, had for a while a seat in
+the chapel of this sweet and popular preacher, and professed, as a
+great number of persons of fashion did, a great admiration for him--an
+admiration which I shared in my early youth, but which has been modified
+by maturer judgment.
+
+Mr. Honeyman told me, with an air of deep respect, that his young
+nephew's father, Colonel Thomas Newcome, C.B., was a most gallant and
+distinguished officer in the Bengal establishment of the Honourable East
+India Company;--and that his uncles, the Colonel's half-brothers, were
+the eminent bankers, heads of the firm of Hobson Brothers and Newcome,
+Hobson Newcome, Esquire, Bryanstone Square, and Marblehead, Sussex, and
+Sir Brian Newcome, of Newcome and Park Lane, "whom to name," says
+Mr. Honeyman, with the fluent eloquence with which he decorated the
+commonest circumstances of life, "is to designate two of the merchant
+princes of the wealthiest city the world has ever known; and one, if not
+two, of the leaders of that aristocracy which rallies round the throne
+of the most elegant and refined of European sovereigns." I promised Mr.
+Honeyman to do what I could for the boy; and he proceeded to take leave
+of his little nephew in my presence in terms equally eloquent, pulling
+out a long and very slender green purse, from which he extracted the sum
+of two-and-sixpence, which he presented to the child, who received the
+money with rather a queer twinkle in his blue eyes.
+
+After that day's school, I met my little protege in the neighbourhood of
+the pastrycook's, regaling himself with raspberry-tarts. "You must not
+spend all that money, sir, which your uncle gave you," said I (having
+perhaps even at that early age a slightly satirical turn), "in tarts and
+ginger-beer."
+
+The urchin rubbed the raspberry-jam off his mouth, and said, "It don't
+matter, sir, for I've got lots more."
+
+"How much?" says the Grand Inquisitor: for the formula of interrogation
+used to be, when a new boy came to the school, "What's your name? Who's
+your father? and how much money have you got?"
+
+The little fellow pulled such a handful of sovereigns out of his pocket
+as might have made the tallest scholar feel a pang of envy. "Uncle
+Hobson," says he, "gave me two; Aunt Hobson gave me one--no, Aunt Hobson
+gave me thirty shillings; Uncle Newcome gave me three pound; and Aunt
+Anne gave me one pound five; and Aunt Honeyman sent me ten shillings in
+a letter. And Ethel wanted to give me a pound, only I wouldn't have it,
+you know; because Ethel's younger than me, and I have plenty."
+
+"And who is Ethel?" asks the senior boy, smiling at the artless youth's
+confessions.
+
+"Ethel is my cousin," replies little Newcome; "Aunt Anne's daughter.
+There's Ethel and Alice, and Aunt Anne wanted the baby to be called
+Boadicea, only uncle wouldn't; and there's Barnes and Egbert and little
+Alfred; only he don't count, he's quite a baby you know. Egbert and me
+was at school at Timpany's; he's going to Eton next half. He's older
+than me, but I can lick him."
+
+"And how old is Egbert?" asks the smiling senior.
+
+"Egbert's ten, and I'm nine, and Ethel's seven," replies the little
+chubby-faced hero, digging his hands deep into his trousers' pockets,
+and jingling all the sovereigns there. I advised him to let me be his
+banker; and, keeping one out of his many gold pieces, he handed over the
+others, on which he drew with great liberality till his whole stock was
+expended. The school hours of the upper and under boys were different
+at that time; the little fellows coming out of their hall half an hour
+before the Fifth and Sixth Forms; and many a time I used to find my
+little blue jacket in waiting, with his honest square face, and white
+hair, and bright blue eyes, and I knew that he was come to draw on his
+bank. Ere long one of the pretty blue eyes was shut up, and a fine black
+one substituted in its place. He had been engaged, it appeared, in a
+pugilistic encounter with a giant of his own Form, whom he had worsted
+in the combat. "Didn't I pitch into him, that's all?" says he in the
+elation of victory; and when I asked whence the quarrel arose, he
+stoutly informed me that "Wolf minor, his opponent, had been bullying a
+little boy, and that he (the gigantic Newcome) wouldn't stand it."
+
+So, being called away from the school, I said farewell and God bless you
+to the brave little man, who remained a while at the Grey Friars, where
+his career and troubles had only just begun.
+
+Nor did we meet again until I was myself a young man occupying chambers
+in the Temple, when our rencontre took place in the manner already
+described.
+
+Poor Costigan's outrageous behaviour had caused my meeting with my
+schoolfellow of early days to terminate so abruptly and unpleasantly,
+that I scarce expected to see Clive again, or at any rate to renew my
+acquaintance with the indignant East Indian warrior who had quitted
+our company in such a huff. Breakfast, however, was scarcely over in my
+chambers the next morning, when there came a knock at the outer door,
+and my clerk introduced "Colonel Newcome and Mr. Newcome."
+
+Perhaps the (joint) occupant of the chambers in Lamb Court, Temple, felt
+a little pang of shame at hearing the name of the visitors; for, if the
+truth must be told, I was engaged pretty much as I had been occupied on
+the night previous, and was smoking a cigar over the Times newspaper.
+How many young men in the Temple smoke a cigar after breakfast as they
+read the Times? My friend and companion of those days, and all days, Mr.
+George Warrington, was employed with his short pipe, and was not in the
+least disconcerted at the appearance of the visitors, as he would not
+have been had the Archbishop of Canterbury stepped in.
+
+Little Clive looked curiously about our queer premises, while the
+Colonel shook me cordially by the hand. No traces of yesterday's wrath
+were visible on his face, but a friendly smile lighted his bronzed
+countenance, as he too looked round the old room with its dingy
+curtains and prints and bookcases, its litter of proof-sheets,
+blotted manuscripts, and books for review, empty soda-water bottles,
+cigar-boxes, and what not.
+
+"I went off in a flame of fire last night," says the Colonel, "and being
+cooled this morning, thought it but my duty to call on Mr. Pendennis
+and apologise for my abrupt behaviour. The conduct of that tipsy old
+Captain--what is his name?--was so abominable, that I could not bear
+that Clive should be any longer in the same room with him, and I went
+off without saying a word of thanks or good-night to my son's old
+friend. I owe you a shake of the hand for last night, Mr. Pendennis."
+And, so saying, he was kind enough to give me his hand a second time.
+
+"And this is the abode of the Muses, is it, sir?" our guest went on. "I
+know your writings very well. Clive here used to send me the Pall Mall
+Gazette every month."
+
+"We took it at Smiffle, regular," says Clive. "Always patronise Grey
+Friars men." "Smiffle," it must be explained, is a fond abbreviation for
+Smithfield, near to which great mart of mutton and oxen our school is
+situated, and old Cistercians often playfully designate their place of
+education by the name of the neighbouring market.
+
+"Clive sent me the Gazette every month; and I read your romance of
+Walter Lorraine in my boat as I was coming down the river to Calcutta."
+
+"Have Pen's immortal productions made their appearance on board Bengalee
+budgerows; and are their leaves floating on the yellow banks of Jumna?"
+asks Warrington, that sceptic, who respects no work of modern genius.
+
+"I gave your book to Mrs. Timmins, at Calcutta," says the Colonel
+simply. "I daresay you have heard of her. She is one of the most dashing
+women in all India. She was delighted with your work; and I can tell
+you it is not with every man's writing that Mrs. Timmins is pleased," he
+added, with a knowing air.
+
+"It's capital," broke in Clive. "I say, that part, you know, where
+Walter runs away with Neaera, and the General can't pursue them, though
+he has got the postchaise at the door, because Tim O'Toole has hidden
+his wooden leg! By Jove, it's capital!--All the funny part--I don't like
+the sentimental stuff, and suicide, and that; and as for poetry, I hate
+poetry."
+
+"Pen's is not first chop," says Warrington. "I am obliged to take the
+young man down from time to time, Colonel Newcome. Otherwise he would
+grow so conceited there would be no bearing him."
+
+"I say," says Clive.
+
+"What were you about to remark?" asks Mr. Warrington, with an air of
+great interest.
+
+"I say, Pendennis," continued the artless youth, "I thought you were a
+great swell. When we used to read about the grand parties in the Pall
+Mall Gazette, the fellows used to say you were at every one of them,
+and you see, I thought you must have chambers in the Albany, and lots of
+horses to ride, and a valet and a groom, and a cab at the very least."
+
+"Sir," says the Colonel, "I hope it is not your practice to measure and
+estimate gentlemen by such paltry standards as those. A man of letters
+follows the noblest calling which any man can pursue. I would rather
+be the author of a work of genius, than be Governor-General of India. I
+admire genius. I salute it wherever I meet it. I like my own profession
+better than any in the world, but then it is because I am suited to
+it. I couldn't write four lines in verse, no, not to save me from being
+shot. A man cannot have all the advantages of life. Who would not be
+poor if he could be sure of possessing genius, and winning fame and
+immortality, sir? Think of Dr. Johnson, what a genius he had, and where
+did he live? In apartments that, I daresay, were no better than these,
+which, I am sure, gentlemen, are most cheerful and pleasant," says the
+Colonel, thinking he had offended us. "One of the great pleasures and
+delights which I had proposed to myself on coming home was to be allowed
+to have the honour of meeting with men of learning and genius, with
+wits, poets, and historians, if I may be so fortunate; and of benefiting
+by their conversation. I left England too young to have that privilege.
+In my father's house money was thought of, I fear, rather than
+intellect; neither he nor I had the opportunities which I wish you
+to have; and I am surprised you should think of reflecting upon Mr.
+Pendennis's poverty, or of feeling any sentiment but respect and
+admiration when you enter the apartments of the poet and the literary
+man. I have never been in the rooms of a literary man before," the
+Colonel said, turning away from his son to us: "excuse me, is that--that
+paper really a proof-sheet?" We handed over to him that curiosity,
+smiling at the enthusiasm of the honest gentleman who could admire what
+to us was as unpalatable as a tart to a pastrycook.
+
+Being with men of letters, he thought proper to make his conversation
+entirely literary; and in the course of my subsequent more intimate
+acquaintance with him, though I knew he had distinguished himself in
+twenty actions, he never could be brought to talk of his military feats
+or experience, but passed them by, as if they were subjects utterly
+unworthy of notice.
+
+I found he believed Dr. Johnson to be the greatest of men: the Doctor's
+words were constantly in his mouth; and he never travelled without
+Boswell's Life. Besides these, he read Caesar and Tacitus, "with
+translations, sir, with translations--I'm thankful that I kept some
+of my Latin from Grey Friars;" and he quoted sentences from the Latin
+Grammar, apropos of a hundred events of common life, and with perfect
+simplicity and satisfaction to himself. Besides the above-named books,
+the Spectator, Don Quixote, and Sir Charles Grandison formed a part of
+his travelling library. "I read these, sir," he used to say, "because I
+like to be in the company of gentlemen; and Sir Roger de Coverley, and
+Sir Charles Grandison, and Don Quixote are the finest gentlemen in the
+world." And when we asked him his opinion of Fielding,--
+
+"Tom Jones, sir; Joseph Andrews, sir!" he cried, twirling his
+mustachios. "I read them when I was a boy, when I kept other bad
+company, and did other low and disgraceful things, of which I'm ashamed
+now. Sir, in my father's library I happened to fall in with those books;
+and I read them in secret, just as I used to go in private and drink
+beer, and fight cocks, and smoke pipes with Jack and Tom, the grooms
+in the stables. Mrs. Newcome found me, I recollect, with one of those
+books; and thinking it might be by Mrs. Hannah More, or some of that
+sort, for it was a grave-looking volume: and though I wouldn't lie about
+that or anything else--never did, sir; never, before heaven, have I told
+more than three lies in my life--I kept my own counsel; I say, she took
+it herself to read one evening; and read on gravely--for she had no more
+idea of a joke than I have of Hebrew--until she came to the part about
+Lady B---- and Joseph Andrews; and then she shut the book, sir; and you
+should have seen the look she gave me! I own I burst out a-laughing, for
+I was a wild young rebel, sir. But she was in the right, sir, and I was
+in the wrong. A book, sir, that tells the story of a parcel of servants,
+of a pack of footmen and ladies'-maids fuddling in alehouses! Do you
+suppose I want to know what my kitmutgars and cousomahs are doing? I am
+as little proud as any man in the world: but there must be distinction,
+sir; and as it is my lot and Clive's lot to be a gentleman, I won't
+sit in the kitchen and boose in the servants'-hall. As for that Tom
+Jones--that fellow that sells himself, sir--by heavens, my blood boils
+when I think of him! I wouldn't sit down in the same room with such a
+fellow, sir. If he came in at that door, I would say, 'How dare you,
+you hireling ruffian, to sully with your presence an apartment where my
+young friend and I are conversing together? where two gentlemen, I say,
+are taking their wine after dinner? How dare you, you degraded villain?'
+I don't mean you, sir. I--I--I beg your pardon."
+
+The Colonel was striding about the room in his loose garments, puffing
+his cigar fiercely anon, and then waving his yellow bandana; and it was
+by the arrival of Larkins, my clerk, that his apostrophe to Tom Jones
+was interrupted; he, Larkins, taking care not to show his amazement,
+having been schooled not to show or feel surprise at anything he might
+see or hear in our chambers.
+
+"What is it, Larkins?" said I. Larkins' other master had taken his leave
+some time before, having business which called him away, and leaving me
+with the honest Colonel, quite happy with his talk and cigar.
+
+"It's Brett's man," says Larkins.
+
+I confounded Brett's man, and told the boy to bid him call again. Young
+Larkins came grinning back in a moment, and said:
+
+"Please, sir, he says his orders is not to go away without the money."
+
+"Confound him again," I cried. "Tell him I have no money in the house.
+He must come to-morrow."
+
+As I spoke, Clive was looking in wonder, and the Colonel's countenance
+assumed an appearance of the most dolorous sympathy. Nevertheless,
+as with a great effort, he fell to talking about Tom Jones again, and
+continued:
+
+"No, sir, I have no words to express my indignation against such a
+fellow as Tom Jones. But I forgot that I need not speak. The great and
+good Dr. Johnson has settled that question. You remember what he said to
+Mr. Boswell about Fielding?"
+
+"And yet Gibbon praises him, Colonel," said the Colonel's interlocutor,
+"and that is no small praise. He says that Mr. Fielding was of the
+family that drew its origin from the Counts of Hapsburg; but----"
+
+"Gibbon! Gibbon was an infidel, and I would not give the end of this
+cigar for such a man's opinion. If Mr. Fielding was a gentleman by
+birth, he ought to have known better; and so much the worse for him that
+he did not. But what am I talking of, wasting your valuable time? No
+more smoke, thank you. I must away into the City, but would not pass the
+Temple without calling on you, and thanking my boy's old protector. You
+will have the kindness to come and dine with us--to-morrow, the next
+day, your own day? Your friend is going out of town? I hope, on his
+return, to have the pleasure of making his further acquaintance. Come,
+Clive."
+
+Clive, who had been deep in a volume of Hogarth's engravings during the
+above discussion, or rather oration of his father's, started up and took
+leave, beseeching me, at the same time, to come soon and see his pony;
+and so, with renewed greetings, we parted.
+
+I was scarcely returned to my newspaper again, when the knocker of our
+door was again agitated, and the Colonel ran back, looking very much
+agitated and confused.
+
+"I beg pardon," says he; "I think I left my--my----" Larkins had quitted
+the room by this time, and then he began more unreservedly. "My dear
+young friend," says he, "a thousand pardons for what I am going to say,
+but, as Clive's friend, I know I may take that liberty. I have left the
+boy in the court. I know the fate of men of letters and genius: when we
+were here just now, there came a single knock--a demand--that, that
+you did not seem to be momentarily able to meet. Now do, do pardon the
+liberty, and let me be your banker. You said you were engaged in a new
+work: it will be a masterpiece, I am sure, if it's like the last. Put
+me down for twenty copies, and allow me to settle with you in advance. I
+may be off, you know. I'm a bird of passage--a restless old soldier."
+
+"My dear Colonel," said I, quite touched and pleased by this extreme
+kindness, "my dun was but the washerwoman's boy, and Mrs. Brett is in
+my debt, if I am not mistaken. Besides, I already have a banker in your
+family."
+
+"In my family, my dear Sir?"
+
+"Messrs. Newcome, in Threadneedle Street, are good enough to keep my
+money for me when I have any, and I am happy to say they have some of
+mine in hand now. I am almost sorry that I am not in want, in order
+that I might have the pleasure of receiving a kindness from you." And
+we shook hands for the fourth time that morning, and the kind gentleman
+left me to rejoin his son.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. Clive's Uncles
+
+
+The dinner so hospitably offered by the Colonel was gladly accepted, and
+followed by many more entertainments at the cost of that good-natured
+friend. He and an Indian chum of his lived at this time at Nerot's
+Hotel, in Clifford Street, where Mr. Clive, too, found the good cheer a
+great deal more to his taste than the homely, though plentiful, fare at
+Grey Friars, at which, of course, when boys, we all turned up our noses,
+though many a poor fellow, in the struggles of after-life, has looked
+back with regret very likely to that well-spread youthful table. Thus
+my intimacy with the father and the son grew to be considerable, and a
+great deal more to my liking than my relations with Clive's City uncles,
+which have been mentioned in the last chapter, and which were, in truth,
+exceedingly distant and awful.
+
+If all the private accounts kept by those worthy bankers were like
+mine, where would have been Newcome Hall and Park Lane, Marblehead and
+Bryanstone Square? I used, by strong efforts of self-denial, to maintain
+a balance of two or three guineas untouched at the bank, so that my
+account might still remain open; and fancied the clerks and cashiers
+grinned when I went to draw for money. Rather than face that awful
+counter, I would send Larkins, the clerk, or Mrs. Flanagan, the
+laundress. As for entering the private parlour at the back, wherein
+behind the glazed partition I could see the bald heads of Newcome
+Brothers engaged with other capitalists or peering over the newspaper,
+I would as soon have thought of walking into the Doctor's own library
+at Grey Friars, or of volunteering to take an armchair in a dentist's
+studio, and have a tooth out, as of entering into that awful precinct.
+My good uncle, on the other hand, the late Major Pendennis, who kept
+naturally but a very small account with Hobsons', would walk into the
+parlour and salute the two magnates who governed there with the ease and
+gravity of a Rothschild. "My good fellow," the kind old gentleman would
+say to his nephew and pupil, "il faut se faire valoir. I tell you, sir,
+your bankers like to keep every gentleman's account. And it's a mistake
+to suppose they are only civil to their great moneyed clients. Look at
+me. I go in to them and talk to them whenever I am in the City. I hear
+the news of 'Change, and carry it to our end of the town. It looks well,
+sir, to be well with your banker; and at our end of London, perhaps, I
+can do a good turn for the Newcomes."
+
+It is certain that in his own kingdom of Mayfair and St. James's my
+revered uncle was at least the bankers' equal. On my coming to London,
+he was kind enough to procure me invitations to some of Lady Anne
+Newcome's evening parties in Park Lane, as likewise to Mrs. Newcome's
+entertainments in Bryanstone Square; though, I confess, of these latter,
+after a while, I was a lax and negligent attendant. "Between ourselves,
+my good fellow," the shrewd old Mentor of those days would say, "Mrs.
+Newcome's parties are not altogether select; nor is she a lady of the
+very highest breeding; but it gives a man a good air to be seen at his
+banker's house. I recommend you to go for a few minutes whenever you
+are asked." And go I accordingly did sometimes, though I always fancied,
+rightly or wrongly, from Mrs. Newcome's manner to me, that she knew I
+had but thirty shillings left at the bank. Once and again, in two or
+three years, Mr. Hobson Newcome would meet me, and ask me to fill a
+vacant place that day or the next evening at his table; which invitation
+I might accept or otherwise. But one does not eat a man's salt, as it
+were, at these dinners. There is nothing sacred in this kind of London
+hospitality. Your white waistcoat fills a gap in a man's table, and
+retires filled for its service of the evening. "Gad," the dear old Major
+used to say, "if we were not to talk freely of those we dine with, how
+mum London would be! Some of the pleasantest evenings I have ever spent
+have been when we have sate after a great dinner, en petit comite, and
+abused the people who are gone. You have your turn, mon cher; but why
+not? Do you suppose I fancy my friends haven't found out my little
+faults and peculiarities? And as I can't help it, I let myself be
+executed, and offer up my oddities de bonne grace. Entre nous, Brother
+Hobson Newcome is a good fellow, but a vulgar fellow; and his wife--his
+wife exactly suits him."
+
+Once a year Lady Anne Newcome (about whom my Mentor was much more
+circumspect; for I somehow used to remark that as the rank of persons
+grew higher, Major Pendennis spoke of them with more caution and
+respect)--once or twice in a year Lady Anne Newcome opened her saloons
+for a concert and a ball, at both of which the whole street was crowded
+with carriages, and all the great world, and some of the small, were
+present. Mrs. Newcome had her ball too, and her concert of English
+music, in opposition to the Italian singers of her sister-in-law. The
+music of her country, Mrs. N. said, was good enough for her.
+
+The truth must be told, that there was no love lost between the two
+ladies. Bryanstone Square could not forget the superiority of Park
+Lane's rank; and the catalogue of grandees at dear Anne's parties
+filled dear Maria's heart with envy. There are people upon whom rank and
+worldly goods make such an impression, that they naturally fall down on
+their knees and worship the owners; there are others to whom the sight
+of Prosperity is offensive, and who never see Dives' chariot but to
+growl and hoot at it. Mrs. Newcome, as far as my humble experience would
+lead me to suppose, is not only envious, but proud of her envy. She
+mistakes it for honesty and public spirit. She will not bow down to
+kiss the hand of a haughty aristocracy. She is a merchant's wife and an
+attorney's daughter. There is no pride about her. Her brother-in-law,
+poor dear Brian--considering everybody knows everything in London, was
+there ever such a delusion as his?--was welcome, after banking-hours,
+to forsake his own friends for his wife's fine relations, and to dangle
+after lords and ladies in Mayfair. She had no such absurd vanity--not
+she. She imparted these opinions pretty liberally to all her
+acquaintances in almost all her conversations. It was clear that the two
+ladies were best apart. There are some folks who will see insolence in
+persons of rank, as there are others who will insist; that all clergymen
+are hypocrites, all reformers villains, all placemen plunderers, and
+so forth; and Mrs. Newcome never, I am sure, imagined that she had
+a prejudice, or that she was other than an honest, independent,
+high-spirited woman. Both of the ladies had command over their husbands,
+who were of soft natures easily led by woman, as, in truth, are all the
+males of this family. Accordingly, when Sir Brian Newcome voted for the
+Tory candidate in the City, Mr. Hobson Newcome plumped for the Reformer.
+While Brian, in the House of Commons, sat among the mild Conservatives,
+Hobson unmasked traitors and thundered at aristocratic corruption, so
+as to make the Marylebone Vestry thrill with enthusiasm. When Lady Anne,
+her husband, and her flock of children fasted in Lent, and declared for
+the High Church doctrines, Mrs. Hobson had paroxysms of alarm regarding
+the progress of Popery, and shuddered out of the chapel where she had a
+pew, because the clergyman there, for a very brief season, appeared to
+preach in a surplice.
+
+Poor bewildered Honeyman! it was a sad day for you, when you appeared in
+your neat pulpit with your fragrant pocket-handkerchief (and your sermon
+likewise all millefleurs), in a trim, prim, freshly mangled surplice,
+which you thought became you! How did you look aghast, and pass your
+jewelled hand through your curls, as you saw Mrs. Newcome, who had been
+as good as five-and-twenty pounds a year to you, look up from her pew,
+seize hold of Mr. Newcome, fling open the pew-door, drive out with her
+parasol her little flock of children, bewildered but not ill-pleased to
+get away from the sermon, and summon John from the back seats to bring
+away the bag of prayer-books! Many a good dinner did Charles Honeyman
+lose by assuming that unlucky ephod. Why did the high-priest of
+his diocese order him to put it on? It was delightful to view him
+afterwards, and the airs of martyrdom which he assumed. Had they been
+going to tear him to pieces with wild beasts next day, he could scarcely
+have looked more meek, or resigned himself more pathetically to the
+persecutors. But I am advancing matters. At this early time of which I
+write, a period not twenty years since, surplices were not even thought
+of in conjunction with sermons: clerical gentlemen have appeared in
+them, and under the heavy hand of persecution have sunk down in their
+pulpits again, as Jack pops back into his box. Charles Honeyman's
+elegant discourses were at this time preached in a rich silk Master of
+Arts' gown, presented to him, along with a teapot full of sovereigns, by
+his affectionate congregation at Leatherhead.
+
+But that I may not be accused of prejudice in describing Mrs. Newcome
+and her family, and lest the reader should suppose that some slight
+offered to the writer by this wealthy and virtuous banker's lady was the
+secret reason for this unfavourable sketch of her character, let me be
+allowed to report, as accurately as I can remember them, the words of
+a kinsman of her own, ---- Giles, Esquire, whom I had the honour of
+meeting at her table, and who, as we walked away from Bryanstone Square,
+was kind enough to discourse very freely about the relatives whom he had
+just left.
+
+"That was a good dinner, sir," said Mr. Giles, puffing the cigar which
+I offered to him, and disposed to be very social and communicative.
+"Hobson Newcome's table is about as good a one as any I ever put my legs
+under. You didn't have twice of turtle, sir, I remarked that--I always
+do, at that house especially, for I know where Newcome gets it. We
+belong to the same livery in the City, Hobson and I, the Oystermongers'
+Company, sir, and we like our turtle good, I can tell you--good, and a
+great deal of it, you say. Hay, hay, not so bad!
+
+"I suppose you're a young barrister, sucking lawyer, or that sort of
+thing. Because you was put at the end of the table and nobody took
+notice of you. That's my place too; I'm a relative and Newcome asks me
+if he has got a place to spare. He met me in the City to-day, and says,
+'Tom,' says he, 'there's some dinner in the Square at half-past seven:
+I wish you would go and fetch Louisa, whom we haven't seen this ever so
+long.' Louisa is my wife, sir--Maria's sister--Newcome married that
+gal from my house. 'No, no,' says I, 'Hobson; Louisa's engaged nursing
+number eight'--that's our number, sir. The truth is, between you and me,
+sir, my missis won't come any more at no price. She can't stand it; Mrs.
+Newcome's dam patronising airs is enough to choke off anybody. 'Well,
+Hobson, my boy,' says I, 'a good dinner's a good dinner; and I'll come
+though Louisa won't, that is, can't.'"
+
+While Mr. Giles, who was considerably enlivened by claret, was
+discoursing thus candidly, his companion was thinking how he, Mr.
+Arthur Pendennis, had been met that very afternoon on the steps of the
+Megatherium Club by Mr. Newcome, and had accepted that dinner which Mrs.
+Giles, with more spirit, had declined. Giles continued talking--"I'm
+an old stager, I am. I don't mind the rows between the women. I believe
+Mrs. Newcome and Lady Newcome's just as bad too; I know Maria is
+always driving at her one way or the other, and calling her proud and
+aristocratic, and that; and yet my wife says Maria, who pretends to be
+such a Radical, never asks us to meet the Baronet and his lady. 'And why
+should she, Loo, my dear?' says I. 'I don't want to meet Lady Newcome,
+nor Lord Kew, nor any of 'em.' Lord Kew, ain't it an odd name? Tearing
+young swell, that Lord Kew: tremendous wild fellow."
+
+"I was a clerk in that house, sir, as a young man; I was there in the
+old woman's time, and Mr. Newcome's--the father of these young men--as
+good a man as ever stood on 'Change." And then Mr. Giles, warming with
+his subject, enters at large into the history of the house. "You
+see, sir," says he, "the banking-house of Hobson Brothers, or Newcome
+Brothers, as the partners of the firm really are, is not one of the
+leading banking firms of the City of London, but a most respectable
+house of many years' standing, and doing a most respectable business,
+especially in the Dissenting connection." After the business came into
+the hands of the Newcome Brothers, Hobson Newcome, Esq., and Sir Brian
+Newcome, Bart., M.P., Mr. Giles shows how a considerable West End
+connection was likewise established, chiefly through the aristocratic
+friends and connections of the above-named Bart.
+
+But the best man of business, according to Mr. Giles, whom the firm of
+Hobson Brothers ever knew, better than her father and uncle, better than
+her husband Sir T. Newcome, better than her sons and successors above
+mentioned, was the famous Sophia Alethea Hobson, afterwards Newcome--of
+whom might be said what Frederick the Great said of his sister, that she
+was sexu foemina, vir ingenio--in sex a woman, and in mind a man.
+Nor was she, my informant told me, without even manly personal
+characteristics: she had a very deep and gruff voice, and in her old age
+a beard which many a young man might envy; and as she came into the bank
+out of her carriage from Clapham, in her dark green pelisse with
+fur trimmings, in her grey beaver hat, beaver gloves, and great gold
+spectacles, not a clerk in that house did not tremble before her, and
+it was said she only wanted a pipe in her mouth considerably to resemble
+the late Field-Marshal Prince Blucher.
+
+Her funeral was one of the most imposing sights ever witnessed in
+Clapham. There was such a crowd you might have thought it was a
+Derby-day. The carriages of some of the greatest City firms, and the
+wealthiest Dissenting houses; several coaches full of ministers of all
+denominations, including the Established Church; the carriage of the
+Right Honourable the Earl of Kew, and that of his daughter, Lady
+Anne Newcome, attended that revered lady's remains to their final
+resting-place. No less than nine sermons were preached at various
+places of public worship regarding her end. She fell upstairs at a
+very advanced age, going from the library to the bedroom, after all the
+household was gone to rest, and was found by the maids in the morning,
+inarticulate, but still alive, her head being cut frightfully with the
+bedroom candle with which she was retiring to her apartment. "And,"
+said Mr. Giles with great energy, "besides the empty carriages at that
+funeral, and the parson in black, and the mutes and feathers and that,
+there were hundreds and hundreds of people who wore no black, and who
+weren't present; and who wept for their benefactress, I can tell you.
+She had her faults, and many of 'em; but the amount of that woman's
+charities are unheard of, sir--unheard of,--and they are put to the
+credit side of her account up yonder.
+
+"The old lady had a will of her own," my companion continued. "She would
+try and know about everybody's business out of business hours: got
+to know from the young clerks what chapels they went to, and from the
+clergymen whether they attended regular; kept her sons, years after
+they were grown men, as if they were boys at school--and what was the
+consequence? They had a quarrel with Sir Thomas Newcome's own son, a
+harum-scarum lad, who ran away, and then was sent to India; and, between
+ourselves, Mr. Hobson and Mr. Brian both, the present Baronet, though
+at home they were as mum as Quakers at a meeting, used to go out on the
+sly, sir, and be off to the play, sir, and sowed their wild oats like
+any other young men, sir, like any other young men. Law bless me, once,
+as I was going away from the Haymarket, if I didn't see Mr. Hobson
+coming out of the Opera, in tights and an opera-hat, sir, like 'Froggy
+would wooing go,' of a Saturday-night, too, when his ma thought him safe
+in bed in the City! I warrant he hadn't his opera-hat on when he went to
+chapel with her ladyship the next morning--that very morning, as sure as
+my name's John Giles.
+
+"When the old lady was gone, Mr. Hobson had no need of any more
+humbugging, but took his pleasure freely. Fighting, tandems,
+four-in-hand, anything. He and his brother--his elder brother by a
+quarter of an hour--were always very good friends; but after Mr.
+Brian married, and there was only court-cards at his table, Mr. Hobson
+couldn't stand it. They weren't of his suit, he said; and for some time
+he said he wasn't a marrying man--quite the contrary; but we all come to
+our fate, you know, and his time came as mine did. You know we married
+sisters? It was thought a fine match for Polly Smith, when she married
+the great Mr. Newcome; but I doubt whether my old woman at home hasn't
+had the best of it, after all; and if ever you come Bernard Street way
+on a Sunday, about six o'clock, and would like a slice of beef and a
+glass of port, I hope you'll come and see us."
+
+Do not let us be too angry with Colonel Newcome's two most respectable
+brothers, if for some years they neglected their Indian relative, or
+held him in slight esteem. Their mother never pardoned him, or at least
+by any actual words admitted his restoration to favour. For many years,
+as far as they knew, poor Tom was an unrepentant prodigal, wallowing in
+bad company, and cut off from all respectable sympathy. Their father had
+never had the courage to acquaint them with his more true, and kind, and
+charitable version of Tom's story. So he passed at home for no better
+than a black sheep; his marriage with a penniless young lady did not
+tend to raise him in the esteem of his relatives at Clapham; it was not
+until he was a widower, until he had been mentioned several times in the
+Gazette for distinguished military service, until they began to speak
+very well of him in Leadenhall Street, where the representatives of
+Hobson Brothers were of course East India proprietors, and until he
+remitted considerable sums of money to England, that the bankers his
+brethren began to be reconciled to him.
+
+I say, do not let us be hard upon them. No people are so ready to give
+a man a bad name as his own kinsfolk; and having made him that present,
+they are ever most unwilling to take it back again. If they give him
+nothing else in the days of his difficulty, he may be sure of their
+pity, and that he is held up as an example to his young cousins to
+avoid. If he loses his money they call him poor fellow, and point morals
+out of him. If he falls among thieves, the respectable Pharisees of his
+race turn their heads aside and leave him penniless and bleeding. They
+clap him on the back kindly enough when he returns, after shipwreck,
+with money in his pocket. How naturally Joseph's brothers made salaams
+to him, and admired him, and did him honour, when they found the poor
+outcast a prime minister, and worth ever so much money! Surely human
+nature is not much altered since the days of those primeval Jews.
+We would not thrust brother Joseph down a well and sell him bodily,
+but--but if he has scrambled out of a well of his own digging, and got
+out of his early bondage into renown and credit, at least we applaud him
+and respect him, and are proud of Joseph as a member of the family.
+
+Little Clive was the innocent and lucky object upon whom the increasing
+affection of the Newcomes for their Indian brother was exhibited. When
+he was first brought home a sickly child, consigned to his maternal
+aunt, the kind old maiden lady at Brighton, Hobson Brothers scarce took
+any notice of the little man, but left him to the entire superintendence
+of his own family. Then there came a large remittance from his father,
+and the child was asked by Uncle Newcome at Christmas. Then his father's
+name was mentioned in general orders, and Uncle Hobson asked little
+Clive at Midsummer. Then Lord H., a late Governor-General, coming home,
+and meeting the brothers at a grand dinner at the Albion, given by the
+Court of Directors to his late Excellency, spoke to the bankers about
+that most distinguished officer their relative; and Mrs. Hobson drove
+over to see his aunt, where the boy was; gave him a sovereign out of her
+purse, and advised strongly that he should be sent to Timpany's along
+wit her own boy. Then Clive went from one uncle's house to another; and
+was liked at both; and much preferred ponies to ride, going out after
+rabbits with the keeper, money in his pocket (charge to the debit of
+Lieut.-Col. T. Newcome), and clothes from the London tailor, to the
+homely quarters and conversation of poor kind old Aunt Honeyman at
+Brighton. Clive's uncles were not unkind; they liked each other; their
+wives, who hated each other, united in liking Clive when they knew him,
+and petting the wayward handsome boy: they were only pursuing the way of
+the world, which huzzas all prosperity, and turns away from misfortune
+as from some contagious disease. Indeed, how can we see a man's
+brilliant qualities if he is what we call in the shade?
+
+The gentlemen, Clive's uncles, who had their affairs to mind during the
+day, society and the family to occupy them of evenings and holidays,
+treated their young kinsman, the Indian Colonel's son, as other wealthy
+British uncles treat other young kinsmen. They received him in his
+vacations kindly enough. They tipped him when he went to school; when he
+had the hooping-cough, a confidential young clerk went round by way of
+Grey Friars Square to ask after him; the sea being recommended to him,
+Mrs. Newcome gave him change of air in Sussex, and transferred him to
+his maternal aunt at Brighton. Then it was bonjour. As the lodge-gates
+closed upon him, Mrs. Newcome's heart shut up too and confined itself
+within the firs, laurels, and palings which bound the home precincts.
+Had not she her own children and affairs? her brood of fowls, her
+Sunday-school, her melon-beds, her rose-garden, her quarrel with the
+parson, etc., to attend to? Mr. Newcome, arriving on a Saturday night;
+hears he is gone, says "Oh!" and begins to ask about the new gravel-walk
+along the cliff, and whether it is completed, and if the China pig
+fattens kindly upon the new feed.
+
+Clive, in the avuncular gig, is driven over the downs to Brighton to his
+maternal aunt there; and there he is a king. He has the best bedroom,
+Uncle Honeyman turning out for him sweetbreads for dinner; no end of jam
+for breakfast; excuses from church on the plea of delicate health; his
+aunt's maid to see him to bed; his aunt to come smiling in when he rings
+his bell of a morning. He is made much of, and coaxed, and dandled and
+fondled, as if he were a young duke. So he is to Miss Honeyman. He is
+the son of Colonel Newcome, C.B., who sends her shawls, ivory chessmen,
+scented sandalwood workboxes and kincob scarfs; who, as she tells
+Martha the maid, has fifty servants in India; at which Martha constantly
+exclaims, "Lor', mum, what can he do with 'em, mum?" who, when in
+consequence of her misfortunes she resolved on taking a house at
+Brighton, and letting part of the same furnished, sent her an order for
+a hundred pounds towards the expenses thereof; who gave Mr. Honeyman,
+her brother, a much larger sum of money at the period of his calamity.
+Is it gratitude for past favours? is it desire for more? is it vanity of
+relationship? is it love for the dead sister--or tender regard for her
+offspring which makes Mrs. Martha Honeyman so fond of her nephew? I
+never could count how many causes went to produce any given effect or
+action in a person's life, and have been for my own part many a time
+quite misled in my own case, fancying some grand, some magnanimous, some
+virtuous reason, for an act of which I was proud, when lo! some pert
+little satirical monitor springs up inwardly, upsetting the fond humbug
+which I was cherishing--the peacock's tail wherein my absurd vanity had
+clad itself--and says, "Away with this boasting! I am the cause of your
+virtue, my lad. You are pleased that yesterday at dinner you refrained
+from the dry champagne? My name is Worldly Prudence, not Self-denial,
+and I caused you to refrain. You are pleased because you gave a guinea
+to Diddler? I am Laziness, not Generosity, which inspired you. You hug
+yourself because you resisted other temptation? Coward! it was because
+you dared not run the risk of the wrong. Out with your peacock's
+plumage! walk off in the feathers which Nature gave you, and thank
+Heaven they are not altogether black." In a word, Aunt Honeyman was a
+kind soul, and such was the splendour of Clive's father, of his gifts,
+his generosity, his military services, and companionship of the battles,
+that the lad did really appear a young duke to her. And Mrs. Newcome
+was not unkind: and if Clive had been really a young duke, I am sure
+he would have had the best bedroom at Marble Hill, and not one of the
+far-off little rooms in the boys' wing; I am sure he would have had
+jellies and Charlottes Russes, instead of mere broth, chicken, and
+batter-pudding, as fell to his lot; and when he was gone (in the
+carriage, mind you, not in the gig driven by a groom), I am sure Mrs.
+Newcome would have written a letter that night to Her Grace the Duchess
+Dowager his mamma, full of praise of the dear child, his graciousness,
+his beauty, and his wit, and declaring that she must love him henceforth
+and for ever after as a son of her own. You toss down the page with
+scorn, and say, "It is not true. Human nature is not so bad as this
+cynic would have it to be. You would make no difference between the
+rich and the poor." Be it so. You would not. But own that your next-door
+neighbour would. Nor is this, dear madam, addressed to you; no, no, we
+are not so rude as to talk about you to your face; but if we may not
+speak of the lady who has just left the room, what is to become of
+conversation and society?
+
+We forbear to describe the meeting between the Colonel and his son--the
+pretty boy from whom he had parted more than seven years before with
+such pangs of heart; and of whom he had thought ever since with such a
+constant longing affection. Half an hour after the father left the boy,
+and in his grief and loneliness was rowing back to shore, Clive was at
+play with a dozen of other children on the sunny deck of the ship. When
+two bells rang for their dinner, they were all hurrying to the cuddy
+table, and busy over their meal. What a sad repast their parents had
+that day! How their hearts followed the careless young ones home across
+the great ocean! Mothers' prayers go with them. Strong men, alone on
+their knees, with streaming eyes and broken accents, implore Heaven for
+those little ones, who were prattling at their sides but a few hours
+since. Long after they are gone, careless and happy, recollections of
+the sweet past rise up and smite those who remain: the flowers they had
+planted in their little gardens, the toys they played with, the little
+vacant cribs they slept in as fathers' eyes looked blessings down on
+them. Most of us who have passed a couple of score of years in the
+world, have had such sights as these to move us. And those who have will
+think none the worse of my worthy Colonel for his tender and faithful
+heart.
+
+With that fidelity which was an instinct of his nature, this brave man
+thought ever of his absent child, and longed after him. He never forsook
+the native servants and nurses who had had charge of the child, but
+endowed them with money sufficient (and indeed little was wanted by
+people of that frugal race) to make all their future lives comfortable.
+No friends went to Europe, nor ship departed, but Newcome sent presents
+and remembrances to the boy, and costly tokens of his love and thanks
+to all who were kind to his son. What a strange pathos seems to me to
+accompany all our Indian story! Besides that official history which
+fills Gazettes, and embroiders banners with names of victory; which
+gives moralists and enemies cause to cry out at English rapine; and
+enables patriots to boast of invincible British valour--besides the
+splendour and conquest, the wealth and glory, the crowned ambition, the
+conquered danger, the vast prize, and the blood freely shed in winning
+it--should not one remember the tears, too? Besides the lives of myriads
+of British men, conquering on a hundred fields, from Plassey to Meanee,
+and bathing them cruore nostro: think of the women, and the tribute
+which they perforce must pay to those victorious achievements. Scarce a
+soldier goes to yonder shores but leaves a home and grief in it behind
+him. The lords of the subject province find wives there; but their
+children cannot live on the soil. The parents bring their children to
+the shore, and part from them. The family must be broken up--keep the
+flowers of your home beyond a certain time, and the sickening buds
+wither and die. In America it is from the breast of a poor slave that a
+child is taken. In India it is from the wife, and from under the palace,
+of a splendid proconsul.
+
+The experience of this grief made Newcome's naturally kind heart only
+the more tender, and hence he had a weakness for children which made him
+the laughing-stock of old maids, old bachelors, and sensible persons;
+but the darling of all nurseries, to whose little inhabitants he was
+uniformly kind: were they the collectors' progeny in their palanquins,
+or the sergeants' children tumbling about the cantonment, or the dusky
+little heathens in the huts of his servants round his gate.
+
+It is known that there is no part of the world where ladies are more
+fascinating than in British India. Perhaps the warmth of the sun kindles
+flames in the hearts of both sexes, which would probably beat quite
+coolly in their native air: else why should Miss Brown be engaged ten
+days after her landing at Calcutta? or why should Miss Smith have half a
+dozen proposals before she has been a week at the station? And it is not
+only bachelors on whom the young ladies confer their affections; they
+will take widowers without any difficulty; and a man so generally liked
+as Major Newcome, with such a good character, with a private fortune of
+his own, so chivalrous, generous, good-looking, eligible in a word, you
+may be sure would have found a wife easily enough, had he any mind for
+replacing the late Mrs. Casey.
+
+The Colonel, as has been stated, had an Indian chum or companion, with
+whom he shared his lodgings; and from many jocular remarks of this
+latter gentleman (who loved good jokes, and uttered not a few) I could
+gather that the honest widower Colonel Newcome had been often tempted
+to alter his condition, and that the Indian ladies had tried numberless
+attacks upon his bereaved heart, and devised endless schemes of carrying
+it by assault, treason, or other mode of capture. Mrs. Casey (his
+defunct wife) had overcome it by sheer pity and helplessness. He had
+found her so friendless, that he took her into the vacant place, and
+installed her there as he would have received a traveller into his
+bungalow. He divided his meal with her, and made her welcome to his
+best. "I believe Tom Newcome married her," sly Mr. Binnie used to say,
+"in order that he might have permission to pay her milliner's bills;"
+and in this way he was amply gratified until the day of her death. A
+feeble miniature of the lady, with yellow ringlets and a guitar, hung
+over the mantelpiece of the Colonel's bedchamber, where I have often
+seen that work of art; and subsequently, when he and Mr. Binnie took a
+house, there was hung up in the spare bedroom a companion portrait to
+the miniature--that of the Colonel's predecessor, Jack Casey, who in
+life used to fling plates at his Emma's head, and who perished from
+a fatal attachment to the bottle. I am inclined to think that Colonel
+Newcome was not much cast down by the loss of his wife, and that they
+lived but indifferently together. Clive used to say in his artless way
+that his father scarcely ever mentioned his mother's name; and no
+doubt the union was not happy, although Newcome continued piously to
+acknowledge it, long after death had brought it to a termination, by
+constant benefactions and remembrances to the departed lady's kindred.
+
+Those widows or virgins who endeavoured to fill Emma's place found the
+door of Newcombe's heart fast and barred, and assailed it in vain. Miss
+Billing sat down before it with her piano, and, as the Colonel was a
+practitioner on the flute, hoped to make all life one harmonious duet
+with him; but she played her most brilliant sonatas and variations in
+vain; and, as everybody knows, subsequently carried her grand piano to
+Lieutenant and Adjutant Hodgkin's house, whose name she now bears.
+The lovely widow Wilkins, with two darling little children, stopped at
+Newcome's hospitable house, on her way to Calcutta; and it was thought
+she might never leave it; but her kind host, as was his wont, crammed
+her children with presents and good things, consoled and entertained the
+fair widow, and one morning, after she had remained three months at the
+station, the Colonel's palanquins and bearers made their appearance, and
+Elvira Wilkins went away weeping as a widow should. Why did she abuse
+Newcome ever after at Calcutta, Bath, Cheltenham, and wherever she went,
+calling him selfish, pompous, Quixotic, and a Bahawder? I could
+mention half a dozen other names of ladies of most respectable families
+connected with Leadenhall Street, who, according to Colonel Newcome's
+chum--that wicked Mr. Binnie--had all conspired more or less to give
+Clive Newcome a stepmother.
+
+But he had had an unlucky experience in his own case; and thought within
+himself, "No, I won't give Clive a stepmother. As Heaven has taken his
+own mother from him, why, I must try to be father and mother too to the
+lad." He kept the child as long as ever the climate would allow of his
+remaining, and then sent him home. Then his aim was to save money for
+the youngster. He was of a nature so uncontrollably generous, that to be
+sure he spent five rupees where another would save them, and make a
+fine show besides; but it is not a man's gifts or hospitalities that
+generally injure his fortune. It is on themselves that prodigals spend
+most. And as Newcome had no personal extravagances, and the smallest
+selfish wants; could live almost as frugally as a Hindoo; kept his
+horses not to race but to ride; wore his old clothes and uniforms until
+they were the laughter of his regiment; did not care for show, and had
+no longer an extravagant wife; he managed to lay by considerably out
+of his liberal allowances, and to find himself and Clive growing richer
+every year.
+
+"When Clive has had five or six years at school"--that was his
+scheme--"he will be a fine scholar, and have at least as much classical
+learning as a gentleman in the world need possess. Then I will go to
+England, and we will pass three or four years together, in which he will
+learn to be intimate with me, and, I hope, to like me. I shall be his
+pupil for Latin and Greek, and try and make up for lost time. I know
+there is nothing like a knowledge of the classics to give a man good
+breeding--Ingenuas didicisse fideliter artes emollunt mores, nec
+sinuisse feros. I shall be able to help him with my knowledge of the
+world, and to keep him out of the way of sharpers and a pack of rogues
+who commonly infest young men. I will make myself his companion, and
+pretend to no superiority; for, indeed, isn't he my superior? Of course
+he is, with his advantages. He hasn't been an idle young scamp as I
+was. And we will travel together, first through England, Scotland, and
+Ireland, for every man should know his own country, and then we will
+make the grand tour. Then, by the time he is eighteen, he will be able
+to choose his profession. He can go into the army, and emulate the
+glorious man after whom I named him; or if he prefers the church, or the
+law, they are open to him; and when he goes to the university, by which
+time I shall be in all probability a major-general, I can come back to
+India for a few years, and return by the time he has a wife and a home
+for his old father; or if I die I shall have done the best for him, and
+my boy will be left with the best education, a tolerable small fortune,
+and the blessing of his old father."
+
+Such were the plans of our kind schemer. How fondly he dwelt on them,
+how affectionately he wrote of them to his boy! How he read books
+of travels and looked over the maps of Europe! and said, "Rome, sir,
+glorious Rome; it won't be very long, Major, before my boy and I see
+the Colosseum, and kiss the Pope's toe. We shall go up the Rhine to
+Switzerland, and over the Simplon, the work of the great Napoleon.
+By Jove, sir, think of the Turks before Vienna, and Sobieski clearing
+eighty thousand of 'em off the face of the earth! How my boy will
+rejoice in the picture-galleries there, and in Prince Eugene's prints!
+You know, I suppose, that Prince Eugene, one of the greatest generals
+in the world, was also one of the greatest lovers of the fine arts.
+Ingenuas didicisse, hey, Doctor! you know the rest,--emollunt mores
+nec----"
+
+"Emollunt mores! Colonel," says Doctor McTaggart, who perhaps was too
+canny to correct the commanding officer's Latin. "Don't ye noo that
+Prence Eugene was about as savage a Turrk as iver was? Have ye niver rad
+the mimores of the Prants de Leen?"
+
+"Well, he was a great cavalry officer," answers the Colonel, "and he
+left a great collection of prints--that you know. How Clive will delight
+in them! The boy's talent for drawing is wonderful, sir, wonderful. He
+sent me a picture of our old school--the very actual thing, sir; the
+cloisters, the school, the head gown-boy going in with the rods, and the
+Doctor himself. It would make you die of laughing!"
+
+He regaled the ladies of the regiment with Clive's letters, and those of
+Miss Honeyman, which contained an account of the boy. He even bored some
+of his bearers with this prattle; and sporting young men would give or
+take odds that the Colonel would mention Clive's name, once before five
+minutes, three times in ten minutes, twenty-five times in the course
+of dinner, and so on. But they who laughed at the Colonel laughed very
+kindly; and everybody who knew him, loved him; everybody, that is, who
+loved modesty, and generosity, and honour.
+
+At last the happy time came for which the kind father had been longing
+more passionately than any prisoner for liberty, or schoolboy for
+holiday. Colonel Newcome has taken leave of his regiment, leaving Major
+Tomkinson, nothing loth, in command. He has travelled to Calcutta; and
+the Commander-in-Chief, in general orders, has announced that in giving
+to Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Newcome, C.B., of the Bengal Cavalry, leave
+for the first time, after no less than thirty-four years' absence from
+home, "he (Sir George Hustler) cannot refrain from expressing his
+sense of the great and meritorious services of this most distinguished
+officer, who has left his regiment in a state of the highest discipline
+and efficiency." And now the ship has sailed, the voyage is over, and
+once more, after so many long years, the honest soldier's foot is on his
+native shore.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. Newcome Brothers
+
+
+Besides his own boy, whom he worshipped, this kind Colonel had a score,
+at least, of adopted children, to whom he chose to stand in the light
+of a father. He was for ever whirling away in postchaises to this school
+and that, to see Jack Brown's boys, of the Cavalry; or Mrs. Smith's
+girls, of the Civil Service; or poor Tom Hicks's orphan, who had nobody
+to look after him now that the cholera had carried off Tom, and his wife
+too. On board the ship in which he returned from Calcutta were a dozen
+of little children, of both sexes, some of whom he actually escorted
+to their friends before he visited his own; and though his heart was
+longing for his boy at Grey Friars. The children at the schools seen,
+and largely rewarded out of his bounty (his loose white trousers had
+great pockets, always heavy with gold and silver, which he jingled when
+he was not pulling his mustachios--to see the way in which he tipped
+children made one almost long to be a boy again); and when he had
+visited Miss Pinkerton's establishment, or Doctor Ramshorn's adjoining
+academy at Chiswick, and seen little Tom Davis or little Fanny Holmes
+the honest fellow would come home and write off straightway a long
+letter to Tom's or Fanny's parents, far away in the Indian country,
+whose hearts he made happy by his accounts of their children, as he had
+delighted the children themselves by his affection and bounty. All
+the apple- and orange-women (especially such as had babies as well as
+lollipops at their stalls), all the street-sweepers on the road between
+Nerot's and the Oriental, knew him, and were his pensioners. His
+brothers in Threadneedle Street cast up their eyes at the cheques which
+he drew.
+
+One of the little people of whom the kind Newcome had taken charge
+luckily dwelt near Portsmouth; and when the faithful Colonel consigned
+Miss Fipps to her grandmother, Mrs. Admiral Fipps, at Southampton, Miss
+Fipps clung to her guardian, and with tears and howls was torn away
+from him. Not until her maiden aunts had consoled her with strawberries,
+which she never before had tasted, was the little Indian comforted for
+the departure of her dear Colonel. Master Cox, Tom Cox's boy, of the
+Native Infantry, had to be carried asleep from the "George" to the
+mail that night. Master Cox woke up at the dawn wondering, as the coach
+passed through the pleasant green roads of Bromley. The good gentleman
+consigned the little chap to his uncle, Dr. Cox, Bloomsbury Square,
+before he went to his own quarters, and then on the errand on which his
+fond heart was bent.
+
+He had written to his brothers from Portsmouth, announcing his arrival,
+and three words to Clive, conveying the same intelligence. The letter
+was served to the boy along with one bowl of tea and one buttered roll,
+of eighty such which were distributed to fourscore other boys, boarders
+of the same house with our young friend. How the lad's face must have
+flushed, and his eyes brightened, when he read the news! When the master
+of the house, the Rev. Mr. Popkinson, came into the long-room, with a
+good-natured face, and said, "Newcome, you're wanted," he knows who is
+come. He does not heed that notorious bruiser, Old Hodge, who roars out,
+"Confound you, Newcome: I'll give it you for upsetting your tea over
+my new trousers." He runs to the room where the stranger is waiting for
+him. We will shut the door, if you please, upon that scene.
+
+If Clive had not been as fine and handsome a young lad as any in that
+school or country, no doubt his fond father would have been just as well
+pleased, and endowed him with a hundred fanciful graces; but in truth,
+in looks and manners he was every thing which his parent could desire;
+and I hope the artist who illustrates this work will take care to do
+justice to his portrait. Mr. Clive himself, let that painter be assured,
+will not be too well pleased if his countenance and figure do not
+receive proper attention. He is not yet endowed with those splendid
+mustachios and whiskers which he has himself subsequently depicted, but
+he is the picture of health, strength, activity, and good-humour. He
+has a good forehead, shaded with a quantity of waving light hair; a
+complexion which ladies might envy; a mouth which seems accustomed to
+laughing; and a pair of blue eyes that sparkle with intelligence and
+frank kindness. No wonder the pleased father cannot refrain from looking
+at him. He is, in a word, just such a youth as has a right to be the
+hero of a novel.
+
+The bell rings for second school, and Mr. Popkinson, arrayed in cap
+and gown, comes in to shake Colonel Newcome by the hand, and to say he
+supposes it's to be a holiday for Newcome that day. He does not say a
+word about Clive's scrape of the day before, and that awful row in the
+bedrooms, where the lad and three others were discovered making a
+supper off a pork-pie and two bottles of prime old port from the Red Cow
+public-house in Grey Friars Lane. When the bell has done ringing, and
+all these busy little bees have swarmed into their hive, there is a
+solitude in the place. The Colonel and his son walked the playground
+together, that gravelly flat, as destitute of herbage as the Arabian
+desert, but, nevertheless, in the language of the place called the
+green. They walk the green, and they pace the cloisters, and Clive shows
+his father his own name of Thomas Newcome carved upon one of the arches
+forty years ago. As they talk, the boy gives sidelong glances at his new
+friend, and wonders at the Colonel's loose trousers, long mustachios,
+and yellow face. He looks very odd, Clive thinks, very odd and very
+kind, and he looks like a gentleman, every inch of him:--not like
+Martin's father, who came to see his son lately in high-lows, and a
+shocking bad hat, and actually flung coppers amongst the boys for a
+scramble. He bursts out a-laughing at the exquisitely ludicrous idea of
+a gentleman of his fashion scrambling for coppers.
+
+And now, enjoining the boy to be ready against his return (and you may
+be sure Mr. Clive was on the look-out long before his sire appeared),
+the Colonel whirled away in his cab to the City to shake hands with his
+brothers, whom he had not seen since they were demure little men in blue
+jackets, under charge of a serious tutor.
+
+He rushed through the clerks and the banking-house, he broke into the
+parlour where the lords of the establishment were seated. He astonished
+those trim quiet gentlemen by the warmth of his greeting, by the
+vigour of his hand-shake, and the loud high tones of his voice, which
+penetrated the glass walls of the parlour, and might actually be heard
+by the busy clerks in the hall without. He knew Brian from Hobson at
+once--that unlucky little accident in the go-cart having left its mark
+for ever on the nose of Sir Brian Newcome, the elder of the twins. Sir
+Brian had a bald head and light hair, a short whisker cut to his
+cheek, a buff waistcoat, very neat boots and hands. He looked like
+the "Portrait of a Gentleman" at the Exhibition, as the worthy is
+represented: dignified in attitude, bland, smiling, and statesmanlike,
+sitting at a table unsealing letters, with a despatch-box and a silver
+inkstand before him, a column and a scarlet curtain behind, and a park
+in the distance, with a great thunderstorm lowering in the sky. Such
+a portrait, in fact, hangs over the great sideboard at Newcome to this
+day, and above the three great silver waiters, which the gratitude of as
+many Companies has presented to their respected director and chairman.
+
+In face, Hobson Newcome, Esq., was like his elder brother, but was more
+portly in person. He allowed his red whiskers to grow wherever nature
+had planted them, on his cheeks and under his chin. He wore thick shoes
+with nails in them, or natty round-toed boots, with tight trousers and
+a single strap. He affected the country gentleman in his appearance. His
+hat had a broad brim, and the ample pockets of his cut-away coat were
+never destitute of agricultural produce, samples of beans or corn, which
+he used to bite and chew even on 'Change, or a whip-lash, or balls for
+horses: in fine, he was a good old country gentleman. If it was fine in
+Threadneedle Street, he would say it was good weather for the hay; if it
+rained, the country wanted rain; if it was frosty, "No hunting to-day,
+Tomkins, my boy," and so forth. As he rode from Bryanstone Square to the
+City you would take him--and he was pleased to be so taken--for a jolly
+country squire. He was a better man of business than his more solemn
+and stately brother, at whom he laughed in his jocular way; and he said
+rightly, that a gentleman must get up very early in the morning who
+wanted to take him in.
+
+The Colonel breaks into the sanctum of these worthy gentlemen; and each
+receives him in a manner consonant with his peculiar nature. Sir Brian
+regretted that Lady Anne was away from London, being at Brighton with
+the children, who were all ill of the measles. Hobson said, "Maria can't
+treat you to such good company as my lady could give you, but when will
+you take a day and come and dine with us? Let's see, to-day's Wednesday;
+to-morrow we've a party. No, we're engaged." He meant that his table
+was full, and that he did not care to crowd it; but there was no use in
+imparting this circumstance to the Colonel. "Friday, we dine at Judge
+Budge's--queer name, Judge Budge, ain't it? Saturday, I'm going down
+to Marblehead, to look after the hay. Come on Monday, Tom, and I'll
+introduce you to the missus and the young 'uns."
+
+"I will bring Clive," says Colonel Newcome, rather disturbed at this
+reception. "After his illness my sister-in-law was very kind to him."
+
+"No, hang it, don't bring boys; there's no good in boys; they stop the
+talk downstairs, and the ladies don't want 'em in the drawing-room. Send
+him to dine with the children on Sunday, if you like, and come along
+down with me to Marblehead, and I'll show you such a crop of hay as will
+make your eyes open. Are you fond of farming?"
+
+"I have not seen my boy for years," says the Colonel; "I had rather pass
+Saturday and Sunday with him, if you please, and some day we will go to
+Marblehead together."
+
+"Well, an offer's an offer. I don't know any pleasanter thing than
+getting out of this confounded City and smelling the hedges, and looking
+at the crops coming up, and passing the Sunday in quiet." And his
+own tastes being thus agricultural, the honest gentleman thought that
+everybody else must delight in the same recreation.
+
+"In the winter, I hope we shall see you at Newcome," says the elder
+brother, blandly smiling. "I can't give you any tiger-shooting, but I'll
+promise you that you shall find plenty of pheasants in our jungle," and
+he laughed very gently at this mild sally.
+
+The Colonel gave him a queer look. "I shall be at Newcome before the
+winter. I shall be there, please God, before many days are over."
+
+"Indeed!" says the Baronet, with an air of great surprise. "You are
+going down to look at the cradle of our race. I believe the Newcomes
+were there before the Conqueror. It was but a village in our
+grandfather's time, and it is an immense flourishing town now, for which
+I hope to get--I expect to get--a charter."
+
+"Do you?" says the Colonel. "I am going down there to see a relation."
+
+"A relation! What relatives have we there?" cries the Baronet. "My
+children, with the exception of Barnes. Barnes, this is your uncle
+Colonel Thomas Newcome. I have great pleasure, brother, in introducing
+you to my eldest son."
+
+A fair-haired young gentleman, languid and pale, and arrayed in the very
+height of fashion, made his appearance at this juncture in the parlour,
+and returned Colonel Newcome's greeting with a smiling acknowledgment
+of his own. "Very happy to see you, I'm sure," said the young man. "You
+find London very much changed since you were here? Very good time to
+come--the very full of the season."
+
+Poor Thomas Newcome was quite abashed by this strange reception. Here
+was a man, hungry for affection, and one relation asked him to dinner
+next Monday, and another invited him to shoot pheasants at Christmas.
+Here was a beardless young sprig, who patronised him, and vouchsafed to
+ask him whether he found London was changed.
+
+"I don't know whether it's changed," says the Colonel, biting his nails;
+"I know it's not what I expected to find it."
+
+"To-day it's really as hot as I should thing it must be in India," says
+young Mr. Barnes Newcome.
+
+"Hot!" says the Colonel, with a grin. "It seems to me you are all cool
+enough here."
+
+"Just what Sir Thomas de Boots said, sir," says Barnes, turning round
+to his father. "Don't you remember when he came home from Bombay? I
+recollect his saying, at Lady Featherstone's, one dooced hot night, as
+it seemed to us; I recklect his saying that he felt quite cold. Did you
+know him in India, Colonel Newcome? He's liked at the Horse Guards, but
+he's hated in his regiment."
+
+Colonel Newcome here growled a wish regarding the ultimate fate of
+Sir Thomas de Boots, which we trust may never be realised by that
+distinguished cavalry officer.
+
+"My brother says he's going to Newcome, Barnes, next week," said the
+Baronet, wishing to make the conversation more interesting to the newly
+arrived Colonel. "He was saying so just when you came in, and I was
+asking him what took him there?"
+
+"Did you ever hear of Sarah Mason?" says the Colonel.
+
+"Really, I never did," the Baronet answered.
+
+"Sarah Mason? No, upon my word, I don't think I ever did, said the young
+man.
+
+"Well, that's a pity too," the Colonel said, with a sneer. "Mrs.
+Mason is a relation of yours--at least by marriage. She is my aunt or
+cousin--I used to call her aunt, and she and my father and mother all
+worked in the same mill at Newcome together."
+
+"I remember--God bless my soul--I remember now!" cried the Baronet. "We
+pay her forty pound a year on your account--don't you know, brother?
+Look to Colonel Newcome's account--I recollect the name quite well.
+But I thought she had been your nurse, and--and an old servant of my
+father's."
+
+"So she was my nurse, and an old servant of my father's," answered
+the Colonel. "But she was my mother's cousin too and very lucky was my
+mother to have such a servant, or to have a servant at all. There is not
+in the whole world a more faithful creature or a better woman."
+
+Mr. Hobson rather enjoyed his brother's perplexity, and to see when the
+Baronet rode the high horse, how he came down sometimes, "I am sure it
+does you very great credit," gasped the courtly head of the firm, "to
+remember a--a humble friend and connexion of our father's so well."
+
+"I think, brother, you might have recollected her too," the Colonel
+growled out. His face was blushing; he was quite angry and hurt at what
+seemed to him Sir Brian's hardness of heart.
+
+"Pardon me if I don't see the necessity," said Sir Brian. "I have no
+relationship with Mrs. Mason, and do not remember ever having seen her.
+Can I do anything for you, brother? Can I be useful to you in any way?
+Pray command me and Barnes here, who after City hours will be delighted
+if he can be serviceable to you--I am nailed to this counter all the
+morning, and to the House of Commons all night;--I will be with you in
+one moment, Mr. Quilter. Good-bye, my dear Colonel. How well India has
+agreed with you! how young you look! the hot winds are nothing to what
+we endure in Parliament.--Hobson," in a low voice, "you saw about that
+h'm, that power of attorney--and h'm and h'm will call here at twelve
+about that h'm.--I am sorry I must say good-bye--it seems so hard after
+not meeting for so many years."
+
+"Very," says the Colonel.
+
+"Mind and send for me whenever you want me, now."
+
+"Oh, of course," said the elder brother, and thought when will that ever
+be!
+
+"Lady Anne will be too delighted at hearing of your arrival. Give my
+love to Clive--a remarkable fine boy, Clive--good morning:" and the
+Baronet was gone, and his bald head might presently be seen alongside of
+Mr. Quilter's confidential grey poll, both of their faces turned into an
+immense ledger.
+
+Mr. Hobson accompanied the Colonel to the door, and shook him cordially
+by the hand as he got into his cab. The man asked whither he should
+drive? and poor Newcome hardly knew where he was or whither he should
+go. "Drive! a--oh--ah--damme, drive me anywhere away from this place!"
+was all he could say; and very likely the cabman thought he was a
+disappointed debtor who had asked in vain to renew a bill. In fact,
+Thomas Newcome had overdrawn his little account. There was no such
+balance of affection in that bank of his brothers, as the simple
+creature had expected to find there.
+
+When he was gone, Sir Brian went back to his parlour, where sate young
+Barnes perusing the paper. "My revered uncle seems to have brought back
+a quantity of cayenne pepper from India, sir," he said to his father.
+
+"He seems a very kind-hearted simple man," the Baronet said "eccentric,
+but he has been more than thirty years away from home. Of course you
+will call upon him to-morrow morning. Do everything you can to make him
+comfortable. Whom would he like to meet at dinner? I will ask some of
+the Direction. Ask him, Barnes, for next Wednesday or Saturday--no;
+Saturday I dine with the Speaker. But see that every attention is paid
+him."
+
+"Does he intend to have our relation up to town, sir? I should like to
+meet Mrs. Mason of all things. A venerable washerwoman, I daresay, or
+perhaps keeps a public-house," simpered out young Barnes.
+
+"Silence, Barnes; you jest at everything, you young men do--you do.
+Colonel Newcome's affection for his old nurse does him the greatest
+honour," said the Baronet, who really meant what he said.
+
+"And I hope my mother will have her to stay a good deal at Newcome. I'm
+sure she must have been a washerwoman, and mangled my uncle in early
+life. His costume struck me with respectful astonishment. He disdains
+the use of straps to his trousers, and is seemingly unacquainted with
+gloves. If he had died in India, would my late aunt have had to perish
+on a funeral pile?" Here Mr. Quilter, entering with a heap of bills, put
+an end to these sarcastic remarks, and young Newcome, applying himself
+to his business (of which he was a perfect master), forgot about his
+uncle till after City hours, when he entertained some young gentlemen of
+Bays's Club with an account of his newly arrived relative.
+
+Towards the City, whither he wended his way whatever had been the ball
+or the dissipation of the night before, young Barnes Newcome might
+be seen walking every morning, resolutely and swiftly, with his neat
+umbrella. As he passed Charing Cross on his way westwards, his little
+boots trailed slowly over the pavement, his head hung languid (bending
+lower still, and smiling with faded sweetness as he doffed his hat and
+saluted a passing carriage), his umbrella trailed after him. Not a dandy
+on all the Pall Mall pavement seemed to have less to do than he.
+
+Heavyside, a large young officer of the household troops--old Sir Thomas
+de Boots--and Horace Fogey, whom every one knows--are in the window of
+Bays's, yawning as widely as that window itself. Horses under the charge
+of men in red jackets are pacing up and down St. James's Street. Cabmen
+on the stand are regaling with beer. Gentlemen with grooms behind them
+pass towards the Park. Great dowager barouches roll along emblazoned
+with coronets, and driven by coachmen in silvery wigs. Wistful
+provincials gaze in at the clubs. Foreigners chatter and show their
+teeth, and look at the ladies in the carriages, and smoke and spit
+refreshingly round about. Policeman X slouches along the pavement. It is
+five o'clock, the noon in Pall Mall.
+
+"Here's little Newcome coming," says Mr. Horace Fogey. "He and the
+muffin-man generally make their appearance in public together."
+
+"Dashed little prig," says Sir Thomas de Boots, "why the dash did they
+ever let him in here? If I hadn't been in India, by dash--he should have
+been blackballed twenty times over, by dash." Only Sir Thomas used words
+far more terrific than dash, for this distinguished cavalry officer
+swore very freely.
+
+"He amuses me; he's such a mischievous little devil," says good-natured
+Charley Heavyside.
+
+"It takes very little to amuse you," remarks Fogey.
+
+"You don't, Fogey," answers Charley. "I know every one of your demd old
+stories, that are as old as my grandmother. How-dy-do, Barney?" (Enter
+Barnes Newcome.) "How are the Three per Cents, you little beggar? I wish
+you'd do me a bit of stiff; and just tell your father, if I may overdraw
+my account I'll vote with him--hanged if I don't."
+
+Barnes orders absinthe-and-water, and drinks: Heavyside resuming his
+elegant raillery. "I say, Barney, your name's Barney, and you're a
+banker. You must be a little Jew, hey? Vell, how mosh vill you to my
+little pill for?"
+
+"Do hee-haw in the House of Commons, Heavyside," says the young man with
+a languid air. "That's your place: you're returned for it." (Captain the
+Honourable Charles Heavyside is a member of the legislature, and eminent
+in the House for asinine imitations which delight his own, and confuse
+the other party.) "Don't bray here. I hate the shop out of shop hours."
+
+"Dash the little puppy," growls Sir de Boots, swelling in his waistband.
+
+"What do they say about the Russians in the City?" says Horace Fogey,
+who has been in the diplomatic service. "Has the fleet left Cronstadt,
+or has it not?"
+
+"How should I know?" asks Barney. "Ain't it all in the evening paper?"
+
+"That is very uncomfortable news from India, General," resumes
+Fogey--"there's Lady Doddington's carriage, how well she looks--that
+movement of Runjeet-Singh on Peshawur: that fleet on the Irrawaddy. It
+looks doocid queer, let me tell you, and Penguin is not the man to be
+Governor-General of India in a time of difficulty."
+
+"And Hustler's not the man to be Commander-in-Chief: dashder old fool
+never lived: a dashed old psalm-singing, blundering old woman," says Sir
+Thomas, who wanted the command himself.
+
+"You ain't in the psalm-singing line, Sir Thomas," says Mr. Barnes;
+"quite the contrary." In fact, Sir de Boots in his youth used to sing
+with the Duke of York, and even against Captain Costigan, but was beaten
+by that superior bacchanalian artist.
+
+Sir Thomas looks as if to ask what the dash is that to you? but wanting
+still to go to India again, and knowing how strong the Newcomes are in
+Leadenhall Street, he thinks it necessary to be civil to the young cub,
+and swallows his wrath once more into his waistband.
+
+"I've got an uncle come home from India--upon my word I have," says
+Barnes Newcome. "That is why I am so exhausted. I am going to buy him
+a pair of gloves, number fourteen--and I want a tailor for him--not a
+young man's tailor. Fogey's tailor rather. I'd take my father's; but
+he has all his things made in the country--all--in the borough, you
+know--he's a public man."
+
+"Is Colonel Newcome, of the Bengal Cavalry, your uncle?" asks Sir Thomas
+de Boots.
+
+"Yes; will you come and meet him at dinner next Wednesday week, Sir
+Thomas? and, Fogey, you come; you know you like a good dinner. You
+don't know anything against my uncle, do you, Sir Thomas? Have I any
+Brahminical cousins? Need we be ashamed of him?"
+
+"I tell you what, young man, if you were more like him it wouldn't hurt
+you. He's an odd man; they call him Don Quixote in India; I suppose
+you've read Don Quixote?"
+
+"Never heard of it, upon my word; and why do you wish I should be more
+like him? I don't wish to be like him at all, thank you."
+
+"Why, because he is one of the bravest officers that ever lived," roared
+out the old soldier. "Because he's one of the kindest fellows; because
+he gives himself no dashed airs, although he has reason to be proud if
+he chose. That's why, Mr. Newcome."
+
+"A topper for you, Barney, my boy," remarks Charles Heavyside, as the
+indignant General walks away gobbling and red. Barney calmly drinks the
+remains of his absinthe.
+
+"I don't know what that old muff means," he says innocently, when he
+has finished his bitter draught. "He's always flying out at me, the old
+turkey-cock. He quarrels with my play at whist, the old idiot, and can
+no more play than an old baby. He pretends to teach me billiards, and
+I'll give him fifteen in twenty and beat his old head off. Why do they
+let such fellows into clubs? Let's have a game at piquet till dinner,
+Heavyside. Hallo! That's my uncle, that tall man with the mustachios and
+the short trousers, walking with that boy of his. I dare say they
+are going to dine in Covent Garden, and going to the play. How-dy-do,
+Nunky?"--and so the worthy pair went up to the card-room, where they
+sate at piquet until the hour of sunset and dinner arrived.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. In which Mr. Clive's School-days are over
+
+
+Our good Colonel had luckily to look forward to a more pleasant meeting
+with his son, than that unfortunate interview with his other near
+relatives. He dismissed his cab at Ludgate Hill, and walked thence
+by the dismal precincts of Newgate, and across the muddy pavement of
+Smithfield, on his way back to the old school where his son was, a
+way which he had trodden many a time in his own early days. There was
+Cistercian Street, and the Red Cow of his youth: there was the quaint
+old Grey Friars Square, with its blackened trees and garden, surrounded
+by ancient houses of the build of the last century, now slumbering like
+pensioners in the sunshine.
+
+Under the great archway of the hospital he could look at the old Gothic
+building: and a black-gowned pensioner or two crawling over the quiet
+square, or passing from one dark arch to another. The boarding-houses
+of the school were situated in the square, hard by the more ancient
+buildings of the hospital. A great noise of shouting, crying, clapping
+forms and cupboards, treble voices, bass voices, poured out of the
+schoolboys' windows: their life, bustle, and gaiety contrasted strangely
+with the quiet of those old men creeping along in their black gowns
+under the ancient arches yonder, whose struggle of life was over, whose
+hope and noise and bustle had sunk into that grey calm. There was Thomas
+Newcome arrived at the middle of life, standing between the shouting
+boys and the tottering seniors, and in a situation to moralise upon
+both, had not his son Clive, who has espied him from within Mr.
+Hopkinson's, or let us say at once Hopkey's house, come jumping down the
+steps to greet his sire. Clive was dressed in his very best; not one of
+those four hundred young gentlemen had a better figure, a better tailor,
+or a neater boot. Schoolfellows, grinning through the bars, envied him
+as he walked away; senior boys made remarks on Colonel Newcome's loose
+clothes and long mustachios, his brown hands and unbrushed hat. The
+Colonel was smoking a cheroot as he walked; and the gigantic Smith,
+the cock of the school, who happened to be looking majestically out of
+window, was pleased to say that he thought Newcome's governor was a fine
+manly-looking fellow.
+
+"Tell me about your uncles, Clive," said the Colonel, as they walked on
+arm in arm.
+
+"What about them, sir?" asks the boy. "I don't think I know much."
+
+"You have been to stay with them. You wrote about them. Were they kind
+to you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I suppose they are very kind. They always tipped me: only you
+know when I go there I scarcely ever see them. Mr. Newcome asks me the
+oftenest--two or three times a quarter when he's in town, and gives me a
+sovereign regular."
+
+"Well, he must see you to give you the sovereign," says Clive's father,
+laughing.
+
+The boy blushed rather.
+
+"Yes. When it's time to go back to Smithfield on a Sunday night, I go
+into the dining-room to shake hands, and he gives it me; but he don't
+speak to me much, you know, and I don't care about going to Bryanstone
+Square, except for the tip, of course that's important, because I am
+made to dine with the children, and they are quite little ones; and a
+great cross French governess, who is always crying and shrieking
+after them, and finding fault with them. My uncle generally has his
+dinner-parties on Saturday, or goes out; and aunt gives me ten shillings
+and sends me to the play; that's better fun than a dinner-party." Here
+the lad blushed again. "I used," says he, "when I was younger, to stand
+on the stairs and prig things out of the dishes when they came out from
+dinner, but I'm past that now. Maria (that's my cousin) used to take the
+sweet things and give 'em to the governess. Fancy! she used to put lumps
+of sugar into her pocket and eat them in the schoolroom! Uncle Hobson
+don't live in such good society as Uncle Newcome. You see, Aunt Hobson,
+she's very kind, you know, and all that, but I don't think she's what
+you call comme il faut."
+
+"Why, how are you to judge?" asks the father, amused at the lad's candid
+prattle, "and where does the difference lie?"
+
+"I can't tell you what it is, or how it is," the boy answered, "only one
+can't help seeing the difference. It isn't rank and that; only somehow
+there are some men gentlemen and some not, and some women ladies and
+some not. There's Jones now, the fifth form master, every man sees he's
+a gentleman, though he wears ever so old clothes; and there's Mr. Brown,
+who oils his hair, and wears rings, and white chokers--my eyes! such
+white chokers!--and yet we call him the handsome snob! And so about Aunt
+Maria, she's very handsome and she's very finely dressed, only somehow
+she's not--she's not the ticket, you see."
+
+"Oh, she's not the ticket," says the Colonel, much amused.
+
+"Well, what I mean is--but never mind," says the boy. "I can't tell you
+what I mean. I don't like to make fun of her, you know, for after all,
+she is very kind to me; but Aunt Anne is different, and it seems as if
+what she says is more natural; and though she has funny ways of her own
+too, yet somehow she looks grander,"--and here the lad laughed again.
+"And do you know, I often think that as good a lady as Aunt Anne
+herself, is old Aunt Honeyman at Brighton--that is, in all essentials,
+you know. For she is not proud, and she is not vain, and she never says
+an unkind word behind anybody's back, and she does a deal of kindness to
+the poor without appearing to crow over them, you know; and she is not
+a bit ashamed of letting lodgings, or being poor herself, as sometimes I
+think some of our family----"
+
+"I thought we were going to speak no ill of them?" says the Colonel,
+smiling.
+
+"Well, it only slipped out unawares," says Clive, laughing; "but at
+Newcome when they go on about the Newcomes, and that great ass, Barnes
+Newcome, gives himself his airs, it makes me die of laughing. That time
+I went down to Newcome, I went to see old Aunt Sarah, and she told me
+everything, and showed me the room where my grandfather--you know; and
+do you know I was a little hurt at first, for I thought we were swells
+till then. And when I came back to school, where perhaps I had been
+giving myself airs, and bragging about Newcome, why, you know, I thought
+it was right to tell the fellows."
+
+"That's a man," said the Colonel, with delight; though had he said,
+"That's a boy," he had spoken more correctly. Indeed, how many men do we
+know in the world without caring to know who their fathers were? and how
+many more who wisely do not care to tell us? "That's a man," cries the
+Colonel; "never be ashamed of your father, Clive."
+
+"Ashamed of my father!" says Clive, looking up to him, and walking on as
+proud as a peacock. "I say," the lad resumed, after a pause--
+
+"Say what you say," said the father.
+
+"Is that all true what's in the Peerage--in the Baronetage, about Uncle
+Newcome and Newcome; about the Newcome who was burned at Smithfield;
+about the one that was at the battle of Bosworth; and the old old
+Newcome who was bar--that is, who was surgeon to Edward the Confessor,
+and was killed at Hastings? I am afraid it isn't; and yet I should like
+it to be true."
+
+"I think every man would like to come of an ancient and honourable
+race," said the Colonel, in his honest way. "As you like your father to
+be an honourable man, why not your grandfather, and his ancestors before
+him? But if we can't inherit a good name, at least we can do our best to
+leave one, my boy; and that is an ambition which, please God, you and I
+will both hold by."
+
+With this simple talk the old and young gentleman beguiled their way,
+until they came into the western quarter of the town, where the junior
+member of the firm of Newcome Brothers had his house--a handsome and
+roomy mansion in Bryanstone Square. Colonel Newcome was bent on paying
+a visit to his sister-in-law, and as he knocked at the door, where the
+pair were kept waiting some little time, he could remark through the
+opened windows of the dining-room, that a great table was laid and every
+preparation made for a feast.
+
+"My brother said he was engaged to dinner to-day," said the Colonel.
+"Does Mrs. Newcome give parties when he is away?"
+
+"She invites all the company," answered Clive. "My uncle never asks any
+one without aunt's leave."
+
+The Colonel's countenance fell. He has a great dinner, and does not ask
+his own brother! Newcome thought. Why, if he had come to me in India
+with all his family, he might have stayed for a year, and I should have
+been offended if he had gone elsewhere.
+
+A hot menial, in a red waistcoat, came and opened the door; and without
+waiting for preparatory queries, said, "Not at home."
+
+"It's my father, John," said Clive; "my aunt will see Colonel Newcome."
+
+"Missis not at home," said the man. "Missis is gone in carriage--Not at
+this door!-Take them things down the area steps, young man!" bawls out
+the domestic. This latter speech was addressed to a pastrycook's boy,
+with a large sugar temple and many conical papers containing delicacies
+for dessert. "Mind the hice is here in time; or there'll be a blow-up
+with your governor,"--and John struggled back, closing the door on the
+astonished Colonel.
+
+"Upon my life, they actually shut the door in our faces," said the poor
+gentleman.
+
+"The man is very busy, sir. There's a great dinner. I'm sure my aunt
+would not refuse you," Clive interposed. "She is very kind. I suppose
+it's different here to what it is in India, here are the children in the
+square,--those are the girls in blue,--that's the French governess, the
+one with the mustachios and the yellow parasol. How d'ye do, Mary? How
+d'ye do, Fanny? This is my father,--this is your uncle."
+
+"Mesdemoiselles! Je vous ddfends de parler a qui que ce soit hors du
+squar!" screams out the lady of the mustachios; and she strode forward
+to call back her young charges.
+
+The Colonel addressed her in very good French. "I hope you will permit
+me to make acquaintance with my nieces," he said, "and with their
+instructress, of whom my son has given me such a favourable account."
+
+"Hem!" said Mademoiselle Lebrun, remembering the last fight she and
+Clive had had together, and a portrait of herself (with enormous
+whiskers) which the young scapegrace had drawn. "Monsieur is very good.
+But one cannot too early inculcate retenue and decorum to young ladies
+in a country where demoiselles seem for ever to forget that they are
+young ladies of condition. I am forced to keep the eyes of lynx upon
+these young persons, otherwise heaven knows what would come to them.
+Only yesterday, my back is turned for a moment, I cast my eyes on a
+book, having but little time for literature, monsieur--for literature,
+which I adore--when a cry makes itself to hear. I turn myself, and what
+do I see? Mesdemoiselles, your nieces, playing at criquette, with the
+Messieurs Smees--sons of Doctor Smees--young galopins, monsieur!" All
+this was shrieked with immense volubility and many actions of the hand
+and parasol across the square-railings to the amused Colonel, at whom
+the little girls peered through the bars.
+
+"Well, my dears, I should like to have a game at cricket with you, too,"
+says the kind gentleman, reaching them each a brown hand.
+
+"You, monsieur, c'est different--a man of your age! Salute monsieur,
+your uncle, mesdemoiselles. You conceive, monsieur, that I also must be
+cautious when I speak to a man so distinguished in a public squar."
+And she cast down her great eyes and hid those radiant orbs from the
+Colonel.
+
+Meanwhile, Colonel Newcome, indifferent to the direction which Miss
+Lebrun's eyes took, whether towards his hat or his boots, was surveying
+his little nieces with that kind expression which his face always wore
+when it was turned towards children. "Have you heard of your uncle in
+India?" he asked them.
+
+"No," says Maria.
+
+"Yes," says Fanny. "You know mademoiselle said" (mademoiselle at this
+moment was twittering her fingers, and, as it were, kissing them in the
+direction of a grand barouche that was advancing along the Square)--"you
+know mademoiselle said that if we were mechantes we should be sent to
+our uncle in India. I think I should like to go with you."
+
+"O you silly child!" cries Maria.
+
+"Yes I should, if Clive went too," says little Fanny.
+
+"Behold madam, who arrives from her promenade!" Miss Lebrun exclaimed;
+and, turning round, Colonel Newcome had the satisfaction of beholding,
+for the first time, his sister-in-law.
+
+A stout lady, with fair hair and a fine bonnet and pelisse (who
+knows what were the fine bonnets and pelisses of the year 183-?),
+was reclining in the barouche, the scarlet-plush integuments of her
+domestics blazing before and behind her. A pretty little foot was on the
+cushion opposite to her; feathers waved in her bonnet; a book was in her
+lap; an oval portrait of a gentleman reposed on her voluminous bosom.
+She wore another picture of two darling heads, with pink cheeks and
+golden hair, on one of her wrists, with many more chains, bracelets,
+bangles, and knick-knacks. A pair of dirty gloves marred the splendour
+of this appearance; a heap of books from the library strewed the
+back seat of the carriage, and showed that her habits were literary.
+Springing down from his station behind his mistress, the youth clad in
+the nether garments of red sammit discharged thunderclaps on the door of
+Mrs. Newcome's house, announcing to the whole Square that his mistress
+had returned to her abode. Since the fort saluted the Governor-General
+at ------, Colonel Newcome had never heard such a cannonading.
+
+Clive, with a queer twinkle of his eyes, ran towards his aunt.
+
+She bent over the carriage languidly towards him. She liked him. "What,
+you, Clive?" she said. "How come you away from school of a Thursday,
+sir?"
+
+"It is a holiday," says he. "My father is come; and he is come to see
+you."
+
+She bowed her head with an expression of affable surprise and majestic
+satisfaction. "Indeed, Clive!" she was good enough to exclaim and with
+an air which seemed to say, "Let him come up and be presented to me."
+The honest gentleman stepped forward and took off his hat and bowed, and
+stood bareheaded. She surveyed him blandly, and with infinite grace put
+forward one of the pudgy little hands in one of the dirty gloves.
+Can you fancy a twopenny-halfpenny baroness of King Francis's time
+patronising Bayard? Can you imagine Queen Guinever's lady's-maid's
+lady's maid being affable to Sir Lancelot? I protest there is nothing
+like the virtue of English women.
+
+"You have only arrived to-day, and you came to see me? That was
+very kind. N'est-ce pas que c'etoit bong de Mouseer le Collonel,
+mademoiselle? Madamaselle Lebrun, le Collonel Newcome, mong frere."
+(In a whisper, "My children's governess and my friend, a most superior
+woman.") "Was it not kind of Colonel Newcome to come to see me? Have you
+had a pleasant voyage? Did you come by St. Helena? Oh, how I envy
+you seeing the tomb of that great man! Nous parlong de Napolleong,
+mademoiselle, dong voter pere a ete le General favvory."
+
+"O Dieu! que n'ai je pu le voir," interjaculates mademoiselle. "Lui dont
+parle l'univers, dont mon pere m'a si souvent parle!" but this remark
+passes quite unnoticed by mademoiselle's friend, who continues:
+
+"Clive, donnez-moi voter bras. These are two of my girls. My boys are
+at school. I shall be so glad to introduce them to their uncle. This
+naughty boy might never have seen you, but that we took him home to
+Marblehead, after the scarlet fever, and made him well, didn't we,
+Clive? And we are all very fond of him, and you must not be jealous of
+his love for his aunt. We feel that we quite know you through him, and
+we know that you know us, and we hope you will like us. Do you think
+your pa will like us, Clive? Or perhaps you will like Lady Anne best?
+Yes; you have been to her first, of course? Not been? Oh! because she is
+not in town." Leaning fondly on the arm of Clive, mademoiselle standing
+grouped with the children hard by while John, with his hat off, stood at
+the opened door, Mr Newcome slowly uttered the above remarkable remarks
+to the Colonel, on the threshold of her house, which she never asked him
+to pass.
+
+"If you will come in to us at about ten this evening," she then said,
+"you will find some men, not undistinguished, who honour me of an
+evening. Perhaps they will be interesting to you, Colonel Newcome, as
+you are newly arrived in Europe. Not men of worldly rank, necessarily,
+although some of them are amongst the noblest of Europe. But my maxim
+is, that genius is an illustration, and merit is better than any
+pedigree. You have heard of Professor Bodgers? Count Poski? Doctor
+McGuffog, who is called in his native country the Ezekiel of
+Clackmannan? Mr. Shaloony, the great Irish patriot? our papers have told
+you of him. These and some more I have been good enough to promise me a
+visit to-night. A stranger coming to London could scarcely have a better
+opportunity of seeing some of our great illustrations of science and
+literature. And you will meet our own family--not Sir Brian's, who--who
+have other society and amusements--but mine. I hope Mr. Newcome and
+myself will never forget them. We have a few friends at dinner, and now
+I must go in and consult with Mrs. Hubbard, my housekeeper. Good-bye for
+the present. Mind, not later than ten, as Mr. Newcome must be up betimes
+in the morning, and our parties break up early. When Clive is a little
+older, I dare say we shall see him, too. Good-bye!" And again the
+Colonel was favoured with a shake of the glove, and the lady and her
+suite sailed up the stair, and passed in at the door.
+
+She had not the faintest idea but that the hospitality which she was
+offering to her kinsman was of the most cordial and pleasant kind. She
+fancied everything she did was perfectly right and graceful. She invited
+her husband's clerks to come through the rain at ten o'clock from
+Kentish Town; she asked artists to bring their sketch-books from
+Kensington, or luckless pianists to trudge with their music from
+Brompton. She rewarded them with a smile and a cup of tea, and thought
+they were made happy by her condescension. If, after two or three of
+these delightful evenings, they ceased to attend her receptions, she
+shook her little flaxen head, and sadly intimated that Mr. A.
+was getting into bad courses, or feared that Mr. B. found merely
+intellectual parties too quiet for him. Else, what young man in his
+senses could refuse such entertainment and instruction?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. Mrs. Newcome at Home (a Small Early Party)
+
+
+To push on in the crowd, every male or female struggler must use his
+shoulders. If a better place than yours presents itself just beyond your
+neighbour, elbow him and take it. Look how a steadily purposed man
+or woman at court, at a ball, or exhibition, wherever there is a
+competition and a squeeze, gets the best place; the nearest the
+sovereign, if bent on kissing the royal hand; the closest to the grand
+stand, if minded to go to Ascot; the best view and hearing of the Rev.
+Mr. Thumpington, when all the town is rushing to hear that exciting
+divine; the largest quantity of ice, champagne, and seltzer, cold pate,
+or other his or her favourite flesh-pot, if gluttonously minded, at a
+supper whence hundreds of people come empty away. A woman of the world
+will marry her daughter and have done with her; get her carriage and be
+at home and asleep in bed; whilst a timid mamma has still her girl in
+the nursery, or is beseeching the servants in the cloakroom to look for
+her shawls, with which some one else has whisked away an hour ago. What
+a man has to do in society is to assert himself. Is there a good place
+at table? Take it. At the Treasury or the Home Office? Ask for it. Do
+you want to go to a party to which you are not invited? Ask to be asked.
+Ask A., ask B., ask Mrs. C., ask everybody you know: you will be thought
+a bore; but you will have your way. What matters if you are considered
+obtrusive, provided that you obtrude? By pushing steadily, nine hundred
+and ninety-nine people in a thousand will yield to you. Only command
+persons, and you may be pretty sure that a good number will obey. How
+well your money will have been laid out, O gentle reader, who purchase
+this; and, taking the maxim to heart, follow it through life! You may
+be sure of success. If your neighbour's foot obstructs you, stamp on it;
+and do you suppose he won't take it away?
+
+The proofs of the correctness of the above remarks I show in various
+members of the Newcome family. Here was a vulgar little woman, not
+clever nor pretty, especially; meeting Mr. Newcome casually, she ordered
+him to marry her, and he obeyed; as he obeyed her in everything else
+which she chose to order through life. Meeting Colonel Newcome on the
+steps of her house, she orders him to come to her evening party;
+and though he has not been to an evening party for five-and-thirty
+years--though he has not been to bed the night before--though he has
+no mufti-coat except one sent him out by Messrs. Stultz to India in the
+year 1821--he never once thinks of disobeying Mrs. Newcome's order, but
+is actually at her door at five minutes past ten, having arrayed himself
+to the wonderment of Clive, and left the boy to talk with his friend and
+fellow-passenger, Mr. Binnie, who has just arrived from Portsmouth, who
+has dined with him, and who, by previous arrangement, has taken up his
+quarters at the same hotel.
+
+This Stultz coat, a blue swallow-tail, with yellow buttons, now wearing
+a tinge of their native copper, a very high velvet collar on a level
+with the tips of the Captain's ears, with a high waist, indicated by two
+lapelles, and a pair of buttons high up in the wearer's back, a white
+waistcoat and scarlet under-waistcoat, and a pair of the never-failing
+duck trousers, complete Thomas Newcome's costume, along with the white
+hat in which we have seen him in the morning, and which was one of two
+dozen purchased by him some years since at public outcry, Burrumtollah.
+We have called him Captain purposely, while speaking of his coat, for he
+held that rank when the garment came out to him; and having been in the
+habit of considering it a splendid coat for twelve years past, he has
+not the least idea of changing his opinion.
+
+The Doctor McGuffog, Professor Bodgers, Count Poski, and all the lions
+present at Mrs. Newcome's reunion that evening, were completely eclipsed
+by Colonel Newcome. The worthy soul, who cared not the least about
+adorning himself, had a handsome diamond brooch of the year 1801--given
+him by poor Jack Cutler, who was knocked over by his side at Argaum--and
+wore this ornament in his desk for a thousand days and nights at a
+time; in his shirt-frill, on such parade evenings as he considered
+Mrs. Newcome's to be. The splendour of this jewel, and of his flashing
+buttons, caused all eyes to turn to him. There were many pairs of
+mustachios present, those of Professor Schnurr, a very corpulent martyr,
+just escaped from Spandau, and of Maximilien Tranchard, French exile and
+apostle of liberty, were the only whiskers in the room capable of vying
+in interest with Colonel Newcome's. Polish chieftains were at this
+time so common in London, that nobody (except one noble Member for
+Marylebone, once a year, the Lord Mayor) took any interest in them. The
+general opinion was, that the stranger was the Wallachian Boyar, whose
+arrival at Mivart's the Morning Post had just announced. Mrs. Miles,
+whose delicious every other Wednesdays in Montague Square are supposed
+by some to be rival entertainments to Mrs. Newcome's alternate Thursdays
+in Bryanstone Square, pinched her daughter Mira, engaged in a polyglot
+conversation with Herr Schnurr, nor Carabossi, the guitarist, and
+Monsieur Pivier, the celebrated French chess-player, to point out the
+Boyar. Mira Miles wished she knew a little Moldavian, not so much that
+she might speak it, but that she might be heard to speak it. Mrs. Miles,
+who had not had the educational advantages of her daughter, simpered
+up with "Madame Newcome pas ici--votre excellence nouvellement
+arrive--avez-vous fait ung bong voyage? Je recois chez moi Mercredi
+prochaing; lonnure de vous voir--Madamasel Miles ma fille;" and, Mira,
+now reinforcing her mamma, poured in a glib little oration in French,
+somewhat to the astonishment of the Colonel, who began to think,
+however, that perhaps French was the language of the polite world, into
+which he was now making his very first entree.
+
+Mrs. Newcome had left her place at the door of her drawing-room, to
+walk through her rooms with Rummun Loll, the celebrated Indian merchant,
+otherwise His Excellency Rummun Loll, otherwise his Highness Rummun
+Loll, the chief proprietor of the diamond-mines in Golconda, with a
+claim of three millions and a-half upon the East India Company--who
+smoked his hookah after dinner when the ladies were gone, and in whose
+honour (for his servants always brought a couple or more of hookahs
+with them) many English gentlemen made themselves sick, while trying
+to emulate the same practice. Mr. Newcome had been obliged to go to
+bed himself in consequence of the uncontrollable nausea produced by the
+chillum; and Doctor McGuffog, in hopes of converting His Highness,
+had puffed his till he was as black in the face as the interesting
+Indian--and now, having hung on his arm--always in the dirty
+gloves--flirting a fan whilst His Excellency consumed betel out of a
+silver box; and having promenaded him and his turban, and his shawls,
+and his kincab pelisse, and his lacquered moustache, and keen brown
+face; and opal eyeballs, through her rooms, the hostess came back to her
+station at the drawing-room door.
+
+As soon as His Excellency saw the Colonel, whom he perfectly well
+knew, His Highness's princely air was exchanged for one of the deepest
+humility. He bowed his head and put his two hands before his eyes, and
+came creeping towards him submissively, to the wonderment of Mrs. Miles;
+who was yet more astonished when the Moldavian magnate exclaimed in
+perfectly good English, "What, Rummun, you here?"
+
+The Rummun, still bending and holding his hands before him, uttered
+a number of rapid sentences in the Hindustani language, which Colonel
+Newcome received twirling his mustachios with much hauteur. He turned on
+his heel rather abruptly and began to speak to Mrs. Newcome, who smiled
+and thanked him for coming on his first night after his return.
+
+The Colonel said, "To whose house should he first come but to his
+brother's?" How Mrs. Newcome wished she could have had room for him at
+dinner! And there was room after all, for Mr. Shaloony was detained at
+the House. The most interesting conversation. The Indian Prince was so
+intelligent!
+
+"The Indian what?" asks Colonel Newcome. The heathen gentleman had gone
+off, and was seated by one of the handsomest young women in the room,
+whose fair face was turned towards him, whose blond ringlets touched his
+shoulder, and who was listening to him as eagerly as Desdemona listened
+to Othello.
+
+The Colonel's rage was excited as he saw the Indian's behaviour. He
+curled his mustachios up to his eyes in his wrath. "You don't mean that
+that man calls himself a Prince? That a fellow who wouldn't sit down in
+an officer's presence is----"
+
+"How do you do, Mr. Honeyman?--Eh, bong soir, Monsieur--You are very
+late, Mr. Pressly.--What, Barnes! is it possible that you do me the
+honour to come all the way from Mayfair to Marylebone? I thought you
+young men of fashion never crossed Oxford Street. Colonel Newcome, this
+is your nephew."
+
+"How do you do, sir?" says Barnes, surveying the Colonel's costume with
+inward wonder, but without the least outward manifestation of surprise.
+"I suppose you dined here to meet the black Prince. I came to ask him
+and my uncle to meet you at dinner on Wednesday. Where's my uncle,
+ma'am?"
+
+"Your uncle is gone to bed ill. He smoked one of those hookahs which the
+Prince brings, and it has made him very unwell indeed, Barnes. How is
+Lady Anne? Is Lord Kew in London? Is your sister better for Brighton
+air? I see your cousin is appointed Secretary of Legation. Have you good
+accounts of your aunt Lady Fanny?"
+
+"Lady Fanny is as well as can be expected, and the baby is going on
+perfectly well, thank you," Barnes said drily; and his aunt, obstinately
+gracious with him, turned away to some other new comet.
+
+"It's interesting, isn't it, sir," says Barnes, turning to the Colonel,
+"to see such union in families? Whenever I come here, my aunt trots out
+all my relations; and I send a man round in the mornin to ask how they
+all are. So Uncle Hobson is gone to bed sick with a hookah? I know there
+was a deuce of a row made when I smoked at Marblehead. You are promised
+to us for Wednesday, please. Is there anybody you would like to meet?
+Not our friend the Rummun? How the girls crowd round him! By Gad, a
+fellow who's rich in London may have the pick of any gal--not here--not
+in this sort of thing; I mean in society, you know," says Barnes
+confidentially, "I've seen the old dowagers crowdin round that fellow,
+and the girls snugglin up to his india-rubber face. He's known to have
+two wives already in India; but, by Gad, for a settlement, I believe
+some of 'em here would marry--I mean of the girls in society."
+
+"But isn't this society?" asked the Colonel.
+
+"Oh, of course. It's very good society and that sort of thing--but it's
+not, you know--you understand. I give you my honour there are not three
+people in the room one meets anywhere, except the Rummun. What is he at
+home, sir? I know he ain't a Prince, you know, any more than I am."
+
+"I believe he is a rich man now," said the Colonel. "He began from
+very low beginnings, and odd stories are told about the origin of his
+fortune."
+
+"That may be," says the young man; "of course, as businessmen, that's
+not our affair. But has he got the fortune? He keeps a large account
+with us; and, I think, wants to have larger dealings with us still. As
+one of the family we may ask you to stand by us, and tell us anything
+you know. My father has asked him down to Newcome, and we've taken him
+up; wisely or not I can't say. I think otherwise; but I'm quite young in
+the house, and of course the elders have the chief superintendence."
+The young man of business had dropped his drawl or his languor, and
+was speaking quite unaffectedly; good-naturedly, and selfishly. Had you
+talked to him for a week, you could not have made him understand the
+scorn and loathing with which the Colonel regarded him. Here was a young
+fellow as keen as the oldest curmudgeon; a lad with scarce a beard to
+his chin, that would pursue his bond as rigidly as Shylock. "If he is
+like this at twenty, what will he be at fifty?" groaned the Colonel.
+"I'd rather Clive were dead than have him such a heartless woriding as
+this." And yet the young man was not ungenerous, not untruth-telling,
+not unserviceable. He thought his life was good enough. It was as good
+as that of other folks he lived with. You don't suppose he had any
+misgivings, provided he was in the City early enough in the morning;
+or slept badly, unless he indulged too freely over-night; or twinges of
+conscience that his life was misspent? He thought his life a most lucky
+and reputable one. He had a share in a good business, and felt that he
+could increase it. Some day he would marry a good match, with a good
+fortune; meanwhile he could take his pleasure decorously, and sow his
+wild oats as some of the young Londoners sow them, not broadcast after
+the fashion of careless scatter-brained youth, but trimly and neatly,
+in quiet places, where the crop can come up unobserved, and be taken in
+without bustle or scandal. Barnes Newcome never missed going to church,
+or dressing for dinner. He never kept a tradesman waiting for his money.
+He never drank too much, except when other fellows did, and in good
+company. He never was late for business, or huddled over his toilet,
+however brief had been his sleep, or severe his headache. In a word,
+he was as scrupulously whited as any sepulchre in the whole bills of
+mortality.
+
+Whilst young Barnes and his uncle were thus holding parley, a slim
+gentleman of bland aspect, with a roomy forehead, or what his female
+admirers called "a noble brow," and a neat white neckcloth tied with
+clerical skill, was surveying Colonel Newcome through his shining
+spectacles, and waiting for an opportunity to address him. The Colonel
+remarked the eagerness with which the gentleman in black regarded him,
+and asked Mr. Barnes who was the padre? Mr. Barnes turned his eyeglass
+towards the spectacles, and said "he didn't know any more than the dead;
+he didn't know two people in the room." The spectacles nevertheless made
+the eyeglass a bow, of which the latter took no sort of cognisance. The
+spectacles advanced; Mr. Newcome fell back with a peevish exclamation of
+"Confound the fellow, what is he coming to speak to me for?" He did not
+choose to be addressed by all sorts of persons in all houses.
+
+But he of the spectacles, with an expression of delight in his pale
+blue eyes, and smiles dimpling his countenance, pressed onwards with
+outstretched hands, and it was towards the Colonel he turned these
+smiles and friendly salutations. "Did I hear aright, sir, from Mrs.
+Miles," he said, "and have I the honour of speaking to Colonel Newcome?"
+
+"The same, sir," says the Colonel; at which the other, tearing off a
+glove of lavender-coloured kid, uttered the words, "Charles Honeyman,"
+and seized the hand of his brother-in-law. "My poor sister's husband,"
+he continued; "my own benefactor; Clive's father. How strange are these
+meetings in the mighty world! How I rejoice to see you, and know you!"
+
+"You are Charles, are you?" cries the other. "I am very glad, indeed,
+to shake you by the hand, Honeyman. Clive and I should have beat up your
+quarters to-day, but we were busy until dinnertime. You put me in mind
+of poor Emma, Charles," he added, sadly. Emma had not been a good wife
+to him; a flighty silly little woman, who had caused him when alive many
+a night of pain and day of anxiety.
+
+"Poor, poor Emma!" exclaimed the ecclesiastic, casting his eyes
+towards the chandelier, and passing a white cambric pocket-handkerchief
+gracefully before them. No man in London understood the ring business or
+the pocket-handkerchief business better, or smothered his emotion more
+beautifully. "In the gayest moments, in the giddiest throng of fashion,
+the thoughts of the past will rise; the departed will be among us still.
+But this is not the strain wherewith to greet the friend newly arrived
+on our shores. How it rejoices me to behold you in old England! How you
+must have joyed to see Clive!"
+
+"D---- the humbug," muttered Barnes, who knew him perfectly well. "The
+fellow is always in the pulpit."
+
+The incumbent of Lady Whittlesea's chapel smiled and bowed to him. "You
+do not recognise me, sir; I have had the honour of seeing you in your
+public capacity in the City, when I have called at the bank, the bearer
+of my brother-in-law's generous----"
+
+"Never mind that, Honeyman!" cried the Colonel.
+
+"But I do mind, my dear Colonel," answers Mr. Honeyman. "I should be
+a very bad man, and a very ungrateful brother, if I ever forgot your
+kindness."
+
+"For God's sake leave my kindness alone."
+
+"He'll never leave it alone as long as he can use it," muttered Mr.
+Barnes in his teeth; and turning to his uncle, "May I take you home,
+sir? my cab is at the door, and I shall be glad to drive you." But the
+Colonel said he must talk to his brother-in-law for a while, and Mr.
+Barnes, bowing very respectfully to him, slipped under a dowager's arm
+in the doorway, and retreated silently downstairs.
+
+Newcome was now thrown entirely upon the clergyman, and the latter
+described the personages present to the stranger, who was curious to
+know how the party was composed. Mrs. Newcome herself would have been
+pleased had she heard Honeyman's discourse regarding her guests and
+herself. Charles Honeyman so spoke of most persons that you might fancy
+they were listening over his shoulder. Such an assemblage of learning,
+genius, and virtue, might well delight and astonish a stranger. "That
+lady in the red turban, with the handsome daughters, is Lady Budge, wife
+of the eminent judge of that name--everybody was astonished that he was
+not made Chief Justice, and elevated to the Peerage--the only objection
+(as I have heard confidentially) was on the part of a late sovereign,
+who said he never could consent to have a peer of the name of Budge. Her
+ladyship was of humble, I have heard even menial, station originally,
+but becomes her present rank, dispenses the most elegant hospitality
+at her mansion in Connaught Terrace, and is a pattern as a wife and
+a mother. The young man talking to her daughter is a young barrister,
+already becoming celebrated as a contributor to some of our principal
+reviews."
+
+"Who is that cavalry officer in a white waistcoat talking to the Jew
+with the beard?" asks the Colonel.
+
+"He, he! That cavalry officer is another literary man of celebrity, and
+by profession an attorney. But he has quitted the law for the Muses, and
+it would appear that the Nine are never wooed except by gentlemen with
+mustachios."
+
+"Never wrote a verse in my life," says the Colonel, laughing, and
+stroking his own.
+
+"For I remark so many literary gentlemen with that decoration. The
+Jew with the beard, as you call him, is Herr von Lungen, the eminent
+hautboy-player. The three next gentlemen are Mr. Smee, of the Royal
+Academy (who is shaved as you perceive), and Mr. Moyes and Mr.
+Cropper, who are both very hairy about the chin. At the piano, singing,
+accompanied by Mademoiselle Lebrun, is Signor Mezzocaldo, the great
+barytone from Rome. Professor Quartz and Baron Hammerstein, celebrated
+geologists from Germany, are talking with their illustrious confrere,
+Sir Robert Craxton, in the door. Do you see yonder that stout gentleman
+with stuff on his shirt? the eloquent Dr. McGuffog, of Edinburgh,
+talking to Dr. Ettore, who lately escaped from the Inquisition at Rome
+in the disguise of a washerwoman, after undergoing the question several
+times, the rack and the thumbscrew. They say that he was to have been
+burned in the Grand Square the next morning; but between ourselves, my
+dear Colonel, I mistrust these stories of converts and martyrs. Did you
+ever see a more jolly-looking man than Professor Schnurr, who was locked
+up in Spielberg, and got out up a chimney, and through a window? Had
+he waited a few months there are very few windows he could have passed
+through. That splendid man in the red fez is Kurbash Pasha--another
+renegade, I deeply lament to say--a hairdresser from Marseilles, by name
+Monsieur Ferehaud, who passed into Egypt, and laid aside the tongs for a
+turban. He is talking with Mr. Palmer, one of our most delightful
+young poets, and with Desmond O'Tara, son of the late revered Bishop of
+Ballinafad, who has lately quitted ours for the errors of the Church
+of Rome. Let me whisper to you that your kinswoman is rather a searcher
+after what we call here notabilities. I heard talk of one I knew in
+better days--of one who was the comrade of my youth, and the delight of
+Oxford--poor Pidge of Brasenose, who got the Newdigate in my third year,
+and who, under his present name of Father Bartolo, was to have been
+here in his capuchin dress, with a beard and bare feet; but I presume
+he could not get permission from his Superior. That is Mr. Huff, the
+political economist, talking with Mr. Macduff, the Member for Glenlivat.
+That is the coroner for Middlesex conversing with the great surgeon
+Sir Cutler Sharp, and that pretty laughing girl talking with them is
+no other than the celebrated Miss Pinnnifer, whose novel of Ralph the
+Resurrectionist created such a sensation after it was abused in the
+Trimestrial Review. It was a little bold certainly--I just looked at it
+at my club--after hours devoted to parish duty a clergyman is sometimes
+allowed, you know, desipere in loco--there are descriptions in it
+certainly startling--ideas about marriage not exactly orthodox; but the
+poor child wrote the book actually in the nursery, and all England
+was ringing with it before Dr. Pinnifer, her father, knew who was the
+author. That is the Doctor asleep in the corner by Miss Rudge, the
+American authoress, who I dare say is explaining to him the difference
+between the two Governments. My dear Mrs. Newcome, I am giving my
+brother-in-law a little sketch of some of the celebrities who are
+crowding your salon to-night. What a delightful evening you have given
+us!"
+
+"I try to do my best, Colonel Newcome," said the lady of the house.
+"I hope many a night we may see you here; and, as I said this morning,
+Clive, when he is of an age to appreciate this kind of entertainment.
+Fashion I do not worship. You may meet that amongst other branches of
+our family; but genius and talent I do reverence. And if I can be
+the means--the humble means--to bring men of genius together--mind to
+associate with mind--men of all nations to mingle in friendly unison--I
+shall not have lived altogether in vain. They call us women of the world
+frivolous, Colonel Newcome. So some may be; I do not say there are not
+in our own family persons who worship mere worldly rank, and think but
+of fashion and gaiety; but such, I trust, will never be the objects in
+life of me and my children. We are but merchants; we seek to be no more.
+If I can look around me and see as I do"-(she waves her fan round, and
+points to the illustrations scintillating round the room)--"and see as
+I do now--a Poski, whose name is ever connected with Polish history--an
+Ettore, who has exchanged a tonsure and a rack for our own free
+country--a Hammerstein, and a Quartz, a Miss Rudge, our Transatlantic
+sister (who I trust will not mention this modest salon in her
+forthcoming work on Europe), and Miss Pinnifer, whose genius I
+acknowledge, though I deplore her opinions; if I can gather together
+travellers, poets, and painters, princes and distinguished soldiers from
+the East, and clergymen remarkable for their eloquence, my humble aim is
+attained, and Maria Newcome is not altogether useless in her generation.
+Will you take a little refreshment? Allow your sister to go down to
+the dining-room supported by your gallant arm." She looked round to the
+admiring congregation, whereof Honeyman, as it were acted as clerk, and
+flirting her fan, and flinging up her little head. Consummate Virtue
+walked down on the arm of the Colonel.
+
+The refreshment was rather meagre. The foreign artists generally dashed
+downstairs, and absorbed all the ices, creams, etc. To those coming late
+there were chicken-bones, table-cloths puddled with melted ice, glasses
+hazy with sherry, and broken bits of bread. The Colonel said he never
+supped; and he and Honeyman walked away together, the former to bed, the
+latter, I am sorry to say, to his club; for he was a dainty feeder, and
+loved lobster, and talk late at night, and a comfortable little glass of
+something wherewith to conclude the day.
+
+He agreed to come to breakfast with the Colonel, who named eight or nine
+for the meal. Nine Mr. Honeyman agreed to with a sigh. The incumbent
+of Lady Whittlesea's chapel seldom rose before eleven. For, to tell the
+truth, no French abbot of Louis XV. was more lazy and luxurious, and
+effeminate, than our polite bachelor preacher.
+
+One of Colonel Newcome's fellow-passengers from India was Mr. James
+Binnie of the Civil Service, a jolly young bachelor of two- or
+three-and-forty, who, having spent half of his past life in Bengal, was
+bent upon enjoying the remainder in Britain or in Europe, if a residence
+at home should prove agreeable to him. The Nabob of books and tradition
+is a personage no longer to be found among us. He is neither as wealthy
+nor as wicked as the jaundiced monster of romances and comedies, who
+purchases the estates of broken-down English gentlemen, with rupees
+tortured out of bleeding rajahs, who smokes a hookah in public, and in
+private carries about a guilty conscience, diamonds of untold value,
+and a diseased liver; who has a vulgar wife, with a retinue of black
+servants whom she maltreats, and a gentle son and daughter with good
+impulses and an imperfect education, desirous to amend their own and
+their parents' lives, and thoroughly ashamed of the follies of the old
+people. If you go to the house of an Indian gentleman now, he does not
+say, "Bring more curricles," like the famous Nabob of Stanstead Park.
+He goes to Leadenhall Street in an omnibus, and walks back from the City
+for exercise. I have known some who have had maid-servants to wait on
+them at dinner. I have met scores who look as florid and rosy as any
+British squire who has never left his paternal beef and acres. They do
+not wear nankeen jackets in summer. Their livers are not out of order
+any more; and as for hookahs, I dare swear there are not two now kept
+alight within the bills of mortality; and that retired Indians would as
+soon think of smoking them, as their wives would of burning themselves
+on their husbands' bodies at the cemetery, Kensal Green, near to
+the Tyburnian quarter of the city which the Indian world at present
+inhabits. It used to be Baker Street and Harley Street; it used to be
+Portland Place, and in more early days Bedford Square, where the Indian
+magnates flourished; districts which have fallen from their pristine
+state of splendour now, even as Agra, and Benares, and Lucknow, and
+Tippoo Sultan's city are fallen.
+
+After two-and-twenty years' absence from London, Mr. Binnie returned
+to it on the top of the Gosport coach with a hatbox and a little
+portmanteau, a pink fresh-shaven face, a perfect appetite, a suit of
+clothes like everybody else's, and not the shadow of a black servant.
+He called a cab at the White Horse Cellar, and drove to Nerot's Hotel,
+Clifford Street; and he gave the cabman eightpence, making the fellow,
+who grumbled, understand that Clifford Street was not two hundred yards
+from Bond Street, and that he was paid at the rate of five shillings and
+fourpence per mile--calculating the mile at only sixteen hundred yards.
+He asked the waiter at what time Colonel Newcome had ordered dinner, and
+finding there was an hour on his hands before the meal, walked out to
+examine the neighbourhood for a lodging where he could live more quietly
+than in a hotel. He called it a hotel. Mr. Binnie was a North Briton,
+his father having been a Writer to the Signet, in Edinburgh, who had
+procured his son a writership in return for electioneering services
+done to an East Indian Director. Binnie had his retiring pension, and,
+besides, had saved half his allowances ever since he had been in
+India. He was a man of great reading, no small ability, considerable
+accomplishment, excellent good sense and good humour. The ostentatious
+said he was a screw; but he gave away more money than far more
+extravagant people: he was a disciple of David Hume (whom he admired
+more than any other mortal), and the serious denounced him as a man of
+dangerous principles, though there were, among the serious, men much
+more dangerous than James Binnie.
+
+On returning to his hotel, Colonel Newcome found this worthy gentleman
+installed in his room in the best arm-chair sleeping cosily; the evening
+paper laid decently over his plump waistcoat, and his little legs
+placed on an opposite chair. Mr. Binnie woke up briskly when the Colonel
+entered. "It is you, you gad-about, is it?" cried the civilian. "How
+has the beau monde of London treated the Indian Adonis? Have you made a
+sensation, Newcome? Gad, Tom, I remember you a buck of bucks when that
+coat first came out to Calcutta--just a Barrackpore Brummell--in Lord
+Minto's reign, was it, or when Lord Hastings was satrap over us?"
+
+"A man must have one good coat," says the Colonel; "I don't profess to
+be a dandy; but get a coat from a good tailor, and then have done with
+it." He still thought his garment was as handsome as need be.
+
+"Done with it--ye're never done with it!" cries the civilian.
+
+"An old coat is an old friend, old Binnie. I don't want to be rid of one
+or the other. How long did you and my boy sit up together--isn't he a
+fine lad, Binnie? I expect you are going to put him down for something
+handsome in your will."
+
+"See what it is to have a real friend now, Colonel! I sate up for ye,
+or let us say more correctly, I waited for you--because I knew you would
+want to talk about that scapegrace of yours. And if I had gone to bed, I
+should have had you walking up to No. 28, and waking me out of my first
+rosy slumber. Well, now confess; avoid not. Haven't ye fallen in love
+with some young beauty on the very first night of your arrival in your
+sister's salong, and selected a mother-in-law for young Scapegrace?"
+
+"Isn't he a fine fellow, James?" says the Colonel, lighting a cheroot
+as he sits on the table. Was it joy, or the bedroom candle with which
+he lighted his cigar, which illuminated his honest features so, and made
+them so to shine?
+
+"I have been occupied, sir, in taking the lad's moral measurement: and
+have pumped him as successfully as ever I cross-examined a rogue in
+my court. I place his qualities thus:--Love of approbation sixteen.
+Benevolence fourteen. Combativeness fourteen. Adhesiveness two.
+Amativeness is not yet of course fully developed, but I expect will be
+prodeegiously strong. The imaginative and reflective organs are very
+large--those, of calculation weak. He may make a poet or a painter, or
+you may make a sojer of him, though worse men than him's good enough for
+that--but a bad merchant, a lazy lawyer, and a miserable mathematician.
+He has wit and conscientiousness, so ye mustn't think of making a
+clergyman of him."
+
+"Binnie!" says the Colonel gravely, "you are always sneering at the
+cloth."
+
+"When I think that, but for my appointment to India, I should have been
+a luminary of the faith and a pillar of the church! grappling with the
+ghostly enemy in the pulpit, and giving out the psawm. Eh, sir, what
+a loss Scottish Divinity has had in James Binnie!" cries the little
+civilian with his most comical face. "But that is not the question.
+My opinion, Colonel, is, that young Scapegrace will give you a deal of
+trouble; or would, only you are so absurdly proud of him that you think
+everything he does is perfaction. He'll spend your money for you: he'll
+do as little work as need be. He'll get into scrapes with the sax. He's
+almost as simple as his father, and that is to say that any rogue
+will cheat him; and he seems to me to have got your obstinate habit
+of telling the truth, Colonel, which may prevet his getting on in the
+world, but on the other hand will keep him from going very wrong. So
+that, though there is every fear for him, there's some hope and some
+consolation."
+
+"What do you think of his Latin and Greek?" asks the Colonel. Before
+going out to his party, Newcome had laid a deep scheme with Binnie, and
+it had been agreed that the latter should examine the young fellow in
+his humanities.
+
+"Wall," cries the Scot, "I find that the lad knows as much about Greek
+and Latin as I knew myself when I was eighteen years of age."
+
+"My dear Binnie, is it possible? You, the best scholar in all India!"
+
+"And which amounted to exactly nothing. He has acquired in five years,
+and by the admirable seestem purshood at your public schools, just about
+as much knowledge of the ancient languages as he could get by three
+months' application at home. Mind ye, I don't say he would apply; it is
+most probable he would do no such thing. But at the cost of--how much?
+two hundred pounds annually--for five years--he has acquired about
+five-and-twenty guineas' worth of classical leeterature--enough, I dare
+say, to enable him to quote Horace respectably through life, and what
+more do ye want from a young man of his expectations? I think I should
+send him into the army, that's the best place for him--there's the least
+to do, and the handsomest clothes to wear. Acce segnum!" says the little
+wag, daintily taking up the tail of his friend's coat.
+
+"There's never any knowing whether you are in jest or in earnest,
+Binnie," the puzzled Colonel said.
+
+"How should you know, when I don't know myself?" answered the Scotchman.
+"In earnest now, Tom Newcome, I think your boy is as fine a lad as I
+ever set eyes on. He seems to have intelligence and good temper. He
+carries his letter of recommendation in his countenance; and with the
+honesty--and the rupees, mind ye--which he inherits from his father, the
+deuce is in it if he can't make his way. What time's the breakfast? Eh,
+but it was a comfort this morning not to hear the holystoning on the
+deck. We ought to go into lodgings, and not fling our money out of the
+window of this hotel. We must make the young chap take us about and
+show us the town in the morning, Tom. I had but three days of it
+five-and-twenty years ago, and I propose to reshoome my observations
+to-morrow after breakfast. We'll just go on deck and see how's her
+head before we turn in, eh, Colonel?" and with this the jolly gentleman
+nodded over his candle to his friend, and trotted off to bed.
+
+The Colonel and his friend were light sleepers and early risers, like
+most men that come from the country where they had both been so long
+sojourning, and were awake and dressed long before the London waiters
+had thought of quitting their beds. The housemaid was the only being
+stirring in the morning when little Mr. Binnie blundered over her pail
+as she was washing the deck. Early as he was, his fellow-traveller had
+preceded him. Binnie found the Colonel in his sitting-room arrayed
+in what are called in Scotland his stocking-feet, already puffing the
+cigar, which in truth was seldom out of his mouth at any hour of the
+day.
+
+He had a couple of bedrooms adjacent to this sitting-room, and when
+Binnie, as brisk and rosy about the gills as chanticleer, broke out in
+a morning salutation, "Hush," says the Colonel, putting a long finger up
+to his mouth, and advancing towards him as noiselessly as a ghost.
+
+"What's in the wind now?" asks the little Scot; "and what for have ye
+not got your shoes on?"
+
+"Clive's asleep," says the Colonel, with a countenance full of extreme
+anxiety.
+
+"The darling boy slumbers, does he?" said the wag; "mayn't I just step
+in and look at his beautiful countenance whilst he's asleep, Colonel?"
+
+"You may if you take off those confounded creaking shoes," the other
+answered, quite gravely; and Binnie turned away to hide his jolly round
+face, which was screwed up with laughter.
+
+"Have ye been breathing a prayer over your rosy infant's slumbers, Tom?"
+asks Mr. Binnie.
+
+"And if I have, James Binnie," the Colonel said gravely, and his sallow
+face blushing somewhat, "if I have, I hope I've done no harm. The last
+time I saw him asleep was nine years ago, a sickly little pale-faced
+boy in his little cot, and now, sir, that I see him again, strong and
+handsome, and all that a fond father can wish to see a boy, I should be
+an ungrateful villain, James, if I didn't--if I didn't do what you said
+just now, and thank God Almighty for restoring him to me."
+
+Binnie did not laugh any more. "By George, Tom Newcome," said he,
+"you're just one of the saints of the earth. If all men were like you
+there'd be an end of both our trades; there would be no fighting and
+no soldiering, no rogues and no magistrates to catch them." The
+Colonel wondered at his friend's enthusiasm, who was not used to be
+complimentary; indeed what so usual with him as that simple act of
+gratitude and devotion about which his comrade spoke to him? To ask a
+blessing for his boy was as natural to him as to wake with the sunrise,
+or to go to rest when the day was over. His first and his last thought
+was always the child.
+
+The two gentlemen were home in time enough to find Clive dressed, and
+his uncle arrived for breakfast. The Colonel said a grace over that
+meal: the life was begun which he had longed and prayed for, and the son
+smiling before his eyes who had been in his thoughts for so many fond
+years.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. Miss Honeyman's
+
+
+In Steyne Gardens, Brighton, the lodging-houses are among the most
+frequented in that city of lodging-houses. These mansions have
+bow-windows in front, bulging out with gentle prominences, and
+ornamented with neat verandahs, from which you can behold the tide of
+humankind as it flows up and down the Steyne, and that blue ocean over
+which Britannia is said to rule, stretching brightly away eastward and
+westward. The chain-pier, as every body knows, runs intrepidly into the
+sea, which sometimes, in fine weather, bathes its feet with laughing
+wavelets, and anon, on stormy days, dashes over its sides with roaring
+foam. Here, for the sum of twopence, you can go out to sea and pace this
+vast deck without need of a steward with a basin. You can watch the
+sun setting in splendour over Worthing, or illuminating with its rising
+glories the ups and downs of Rottingdean. You see the citizen with his
+family inveigled into the shallops of the mercenary native mariner, and
+fancy that the motion cannot be pleasant; and how the hirer of the
+boat, otium et oppidi laudat rura sui, haply sighs for ease, and prefers
+Richmond or Hampstead. You behold a hundred bathing-machines put to sea;
+and your naughty fancy depicts the beauties splashing under their
+white awnings. Along the rippled sands (stay, are they rippled sands
+or shingly beach?) the prawn-boy seeks the delicious material of your
+breakfast. Breakfast-meal in London almost unknown, greedily devoured in
+Brighton! In yon vessels now nearing the shore the sleepless mariner
+has ventured forth to seize the delicate whiting, the greedy and foolish
+mackerel, and the homely sole. Hark to the twanging horn! it is the
+early coach going out to London. Your eye follows it, and rests on the
+pinnacles built by the beloved GEORGE. See the worn-out London roue
+pacing the pier, inhaling the sea air, and casting furtive glances under
+the bonnets of the pretty girls who trot here before lessons! Mark the
+bilious lawyer, escaped for a day from Pump Court, and sniffing the
+fresh breezes before he goes back to breakfast and a bag full of briefs
+at the Albion! See that pretty string of prattling schoolgirls, from the
+chubby-cheeked, flaxen-headed little maiden just toddling by the side
+of the second teacher, to the arch damsel of fifteen, giggling and
+conscious of her beauty, whom Miss Griffin, the stern head-governess,
+awfully reproves! See Tomkins with a telescope and marine jacket; young
+Nathan and young Abrams, already bedizened in jewellery, and rivalling
+the sun in oriental splendour; yonder poor invalid crawling along in her
+chair; yonder jolly fat lady examining the Brighton pebbles (I
+actually once saw a lady buy one), and her children wondering at
+the sticking-plaister portraits with gold hair, and gold stocks,
+and prodigious high-heeled boots, miracles of art, and cheap at
+seven-and-sixpence! It is the fashion to run down George IV., but what
+myriads of Londoners ought to thank him for inventing Brighton! One of
+the best of physicians our city has ever known, is kind, cheerful, merry
+Doctor Brighton. Hail, thou purveyor of shrimps and honest prescriber of
+Southdown mutton! There is no mutton so good as Brighton mutton; no flys
+so pleasant as Brighton flys; nor any cliff so pleasant to ride on; no
+shops so beautiful to look at as the Brighton gimcrack shops, and the
+fruit shops, and the market. I fancy myself in Mrs. Honeyman's lodgings
+in Steyne Gardens, and in enjoyment of all these things.
+
+If the gracious reader has had losses in life, losses not so bad as to
+cause absolute want, or inflict upon him or her the bodily injury of
+starvation, let him confess that the evils of this poverty are by no
+means so great as his timorous fancy depicted. Say your money has been
+invested in West Diddlesex bonds, or other luckless speculations--the
+news of the smash comes; you pay your outlying bills with the balance at
+the banker's; you assemble your family and make them a fine speech;
+the wife of your bosom goes round and embraces the sons and daughters
+seriatim; nestling in your own waistcoat finally, in possession of
+which, she says (with tender tears and fond quotations from Holy Writ,
+God bless her!), and of the darlings round about, lies all her worldly
+treasure: the weeping servants are dismissed, their wages paid in full,
+and with a present of prayer- and hymn-books from their mistress; your
+elegant house in Harley Street is to let, and you subside into lodgings
+in Pentonville, or Kensington, or Brompton. How unlike the mansion where
+you paid taxes and distributed elegant hospitality for so many years!
+
+You subside into lodgings, I say, and you find yourself very tolerably
+comfortable. I am not sure that in her heart your wife is not happier
+than in what she calls her happy days. She will be somebody hereafter:
+she was nobody in Harley Street: that is, everybody else in her
+visiting-book, take the names all round, was as good as she. They had
+the very same entrees, plated ware, men to wait, etc., at all the houses
+where you visited in the street. Your candlesticks might be handsomer
+(and indeed they had a very fine effect upon the dinner-table), but then
+Mr. Jones's silver (or electro-plated) dishes were much finer. You had
+more carriages at your door on the evening of your delightful soirees
+than Mrs. Brown (there is no phrase more elegant, and to my taste, than
+that in which people are described as "seeing a great deal of carriage
+company"); but yet Mrs. Brown, from the circumstance of her being a
+baronet's niece, took precedence of your dear wife at most tables. Hence
+the latter charming woman's scorn at the British baronetcy, and her
+many jokes at the order. In a word, and in the height of your social
+prosperity, there was always a lurking dissatisfaction, and a something
+bitter, in the midst of the fountain of delights at which you were
+permitted to drink.
+
+There is no good (unless your taste is that way) in living in a society
+where you are merely the equal of everybody else. Many people give
+themselves extreme pains to frequent company where all around them are
+their superiors, and where, do what you will, you must be subject to
+continual mortification--(as, for instance, when Marchioness X. forgets
+you, and you can't help thinking that she cuts you on purpose; when
+Duchess Z. passes by in her diamonds, etc.). The true pleasure of life
+is to live with your inferiors. Be the cock of your village; the queen
+of your coterie; and, besides very great persons, the people whom Fate
+has specially endowed with this kindly consolation are those who have
+seen what are called better days--those who have had losses. I am like
+Caesar, and of a noble mind: if I cannot be first in Piccadilly, let
+me try Hatton Garden, and see whether I cannot lead the ton there. If I
+cannot take the lead at White's or the Travellers', let me be president
+of the Jolly Bandboys at the Bag of Nails, and blackball everybody
+who does not pay me honour. If my darling Bessy cannot go out of
+a drawing-room until a baronet's niece (ha! ha! a baronet's niece,
+forsooth!) has walked before her, let us frequent company where we shall
+be the first; and how can we be the first unless we select our inferiors
+for our associates? This kind of pleasure is to be had by almost
+everybody, and at scarce any cost. With a shilling's-worth of tea and
+muffins you can get as much adulation and respect as many people cannot
+purchase with a thousand pounds' worth of plate and profusion, hired
+footmen, turning their houses topsy-turvy, and suppers from Gunter's.
+Adulation!--why, the people who come to you give as good parties as
+you do. Respect!--the very menials, who wait behind your supper-table,
+waited at a duke's yesterday, and actually patronise you! O you silly
+spendthrift! you can buy flattery for twopence, and you spend ever so
+much money in entertaining your equals and betters, and nobody admires
+you!
+
+Now Aunt Honeyman was a woman of a thousand virtues; cheerful, frugal,
+honest, laborious, charitable, good-humoured, truth-telling, devoted to
+her family, capable of any sacrifice for those she loved; and when she
+came to have losses of money, Fortune straightway compensated her by
+many kindnesses which no income can supply. The good old lady admired
+the word gentlewoman of all others in the English vocabulary, and made
+all around her feel that such was her rank. Her mother's father was a
+naval captain; her father had taken pupils, got a living, sent his son
+to college, dined with the squire, published his volume of sermons,
+was liked in his parish, where Miss Honeyman kept house for him, was
+respected for his kindness and famous for his port wine; and so died,
+leaving about two hundred pounds a year to his two children, nothing to
+Clive Newcome's mother who had displeased him by her first marriage
+(an elopement with Ensign Casey) and subsequent light courses. Charles
+Honeyman spent his money elegantly in wine-parties at Oxford, and
+afterwards in foreign travel;--spent his money and as much of Miss
+Honeyman's as that worthy soul would give him. She was a woman of spirit
+and resolution. She brought her furniture to Brighton (believing that
+the whole place still fondly remembered her grandfather, Captain Nokes,
+who had resided there and his gallantry in Lord Rodney's action with the
+Count de Grasse), took a house, and let the upper floors to lodgers.
+
+The little brisk old lady brought a maid-servant out of the country with
+her, who was daughter to her father's clerk, and had learned her letters
+and worked her first sampler under Miss Honeyman's own eye, whom she
+adored all through her life. No Indian begum rolling in wealth, no
+countess mistress of castles and townhouses, ever had such a faithful
+toady as Hannah Hicks was to her mistress. Under Hannah was a young lady
+from the workhouse, who called Hannah "Mrs. Hicks, mum," and who bowed
+in awe as much before that domestic as Hannah did before Miss Honeyman.
+At five o'clock in summer, at seven in winter (for Miss Honeyman, a good
+economist, was chary of candlelight), Hannah woke up little Sally, and
+these three women rose. I leave you to imagine what a row there was in
+the establishment if Sally appeared with flowers under her bonnet, gave
+signs of levity or insubordination, prolonged her absence when sent
+forth for the beer, or was discovered in flirtation with the baker's boy
+or the grocer's young man. Sally was frequently renewed. Miss Honeyman
+called all her young persons Sally; and a great number of Sallies were
+consumed in her house. The qualities of the Sally for the time-being
+formed a constant and delightful subject of conversation between Hannah
+and her mistress. The few friends who visited Miss Honeyman in her
+back-parlour had their Sallies, in discussing whose peculiarities of
+disposition these good ladies passed the hours agreeably over their tea.
+
+Many persons who let lodgings in Brighton have been servants
+themselves--are retired housekeepers, tradesfolk, and the like. With
+these surrounding individuals Hannah treated on a footing of equality,
+bringing to her mistress accounts of their various goings on; "how No.
+6 was let; how No. 9 had not paid his rent again; how the first floor
+at 27 had game almost every day, and made-dishes from Mutton's; how
+the family who had taken Mrs. Bugsby's had left as usual after the very
+first night, the poor little infant blistered all over with bites on its
+little dear face; how the Miss Learys was going on shameful with the
+two young men, actially in their setting-room, mum, where one of them
+offered Miss Laura Leary a cigar; how Mrs. Cribb still went cuttin'
+pounds and pounds of meat off the lodgers' jints, emptying their
+tea-caddies, actially reading their letters. Sally had been told so
+by Polly the Cribb's maid, who was kep, how that poor child was kep,
+hearing language perfectly hawful!" These tales and anecdotes, not
+altogether redounding to their neighbours' credit, Hannah copiously
+collected and brought to her mistress's tea-table, or served at her
+frugal little supper when Miss Honeyman, the labours of the day over,
+partook of that cheerful meal. I need not say that such horrors as
+occurred at Mrs. Bugsby's never befell in Mrs. Honeyman's establishment.
+Every room was fiercely swept and sprinkled, and watched by cunning
+eyes which nothing could escape; curtains were taken down, mattresses
+explored, every bone in bed dislocated and washed as soon as a lodger
+took his departure. And as for cribbing meat or sugar, Sally might
+occasionally abstract a lump or two, or pop a veal-cutlet into her mouth
+while bringing the dishes downstairs:--Sallies would--giddy creatures
+bred in workhouses; but Hannah might be entrusted with untold gold and
+uncorked brandy; and Miss Honeyman would as soon think of cutting a
+slice off Hannah's nose and devouring it, as of poaching on her lodgers'
+mutton. The best mutton-broth, the best veal-cutlets, the best necks of
+mutton and French beans, the best fried fish and plumpest partridges, in
+all Brighton, were to be had at Miss Honeyman's--and for her favourites
+the best Indian curry and rice, coming from a distinguished relative, at
+present an officer in Bengal. But very few were admitted to this mark of
+Miss Honeyman's confidence. If a family did not go to church they were
+not in favour: if they went to a Dissenting meeting she had no opinion
+of them at all. Once there came to her house a quiet Staffordshire
+family who ate no meat on Fridays, and whom Miss Honeyman pitied as
+belonging to the Romish superstition; but when they were visited by two
+corpulent gentlemen in black, one of whom wore a purple underwaistcoat,
+before whom the Staffordshire lady absolutely sank down on her knees as
+he went into the drawing-room,--Miss Honeyman sternly gave warning to
+these idolaters. She would have no Jesuits in her premises. She showed
+Hannah the picture in Howell's Medulla of the martyrs burning at
+Smithfield: who said, "Lord bless you, mum," and hoped it was a long
+time ago. She called on the curate: and many and many a time, for years
+after, pointed out to her friends, and sometimes to her lodgers, the
+spot on the carpet where the poor benighted creature had knelt down.
+So she went on, respected by all her friends, by all her tradesmen, by
+herself not a little, talking of her previous "misfortunes" with amusing
+equanimity; as if her father's parsonage-house had been a palace of
+splendour, and the one-horse chaise (with the lamps for evenings) from
+which she had descended, a noble equipage. "But I know it is for the
+best, Clive," she would say to her nephew in describing those grandeurs,
+"and, thank heaven, can be resigned in that station in life to which it
+has pleased God to call me."
+
+The good lady was called the Duchess by her fellow-tradesfolk in the
+square in which she lived. (I don't know what would have come to her
+had she been told she was a tradeswoman!) Her butchers, bakers,
+and market-people paid her as much respect as though she had been a
+grandee's housekeeper out of Kemp Town. Knowing her station, she yet was
+kind to those inferior beings. She held affable conversations with
+them, she patronised Mr. Rogers, who was said to be worth a hundred
+thousand--two-hundred-thousand pounds (or lbs. was it?), and who said,
+"Law bless the old Duchess, she do make as much of a pound of veal
+cutlet as some would of a score of bullocks, but you see she's a lady
+born and a lady bred: she'd die before she'd owe a farden, and she's
+seen better days, you know." She went to see the grocer's wife on an
+interesting occasion, and won the heart of the family by tasting their
+candle. Her fishmonger (it was fine to hear her talk of "my fishmonger")
+would sell her a whiting as respectfully as if she had called for a
+dozen turbots and lobsters. It was believed by those good folks that her
+father had been a Bishop at the very least; and the better days which
+she had known were supposed to signify some almost unearthly prosperity.
+"I have always found, Hannah," the simple soul would say, "that people
+know their place, or can be very very easily made to find it if they
+lose it; and if a gentlewoman does not forget herself, her inferiors
+will not forget that she is a gentlewoman." "No indeed, mum, and I'm
+sure they would do no such thing, mum," says Hannah, who carries away
+the teapot for her own breakfast (to be transmitted to Sally for her
+subsequent refection), whilst her mistress washes her cup and saucer, as
+her mother had washed her own china many scores of years ago.
+
+If some of the surrounding lodging-house keepers, as I have no doubt
+they did, disliked the little Duchess for the airs which she gave
+herself, as they averred; they must have envied her too her superior
+prosperity, for there was scarcely ever a card in her window, whilst
+those ensigns in her neighbours' houses would remain exposed to
+the flies and the weather, and disregarded by passers-by for months
+together. She had many regular customers, or what should be rather
+called constant friends. Deaf old Mr. Cricklade came every winter for
+fourteen years, and stopped until the hunting was over; an invaluable
+man, giving little trouble, passing all day on horseback, and all night
+over his rubber at the club. The Misses Barkham, Barkhambury, Tunbridge
+Wells, whose father had been at college with Mr. Honeyman, came
+regularly in June for sea air, letting Barkhambury for the summer
+season. Then, for many years, she had her nephew, as we have seen; and
+kind recommendations from the clergymen of Brighton, and a constant
+friend in the celebrated Dr. Goodenough of London, who had been her
+father's private pupil, and of his college afterwards, who sent his
+patients from time to time down to her, and his fellow-physician, Dr.
+H----, who on his part would never take any fee from Miss Honeyman,
+except a packet of India curry-powder, a ham cured as she only knew how
+to cure them, and once a year, or so, a dish of her tea.
+
+"Was there ever such luck as that confounded old Duchess's?" says Mr.
+Gawler, coal-merchant and lodging-house keeper, next door but two, whose
+apartments were more odious in some respects than Mrs. Bugsby's own.
+"Was there ever such devil's own luck, Mrs. G.? It's only a fortnight
+ago as I read in the Sussex Advertiser the death of Miss Barkham, of
+Barkhambury, Tunbridge Wells, and thinks I, there's a spoke in your
+wheel, you stuck-up little old Duchess, with your cussed airs and
+impudence. And she ain't put her card up three days; and look yere,
+yere's two carriages, two maids, three children, one of them wrapped
+up in a Hinjar shawl--man hout a livery,--looks like a foring cove I
+think--lady in satin pelisse, and of course they go to the Duchess, be
+hanged to her! Of course it's our luck, nothing ever was like our luck.
+I'm blowed if I don't put a pistol to my 'ead, and end it, Mrs. G. There
+they go in--three, four, six, seven on 'em, and the man. That's the
+precious child's physic I suppose he's a-carryin' in the basket. Just
+look at the luggage. I say! There's a bloody hand on the first carriage.
+It's a baronet, is it? I 'ope your ladyship's very well; and I 'ope
+Sir John will soon be down yere to join his family." Mr. Gawler makes
+sarcastic bows over the card in his bow-window whilst making this
+speech. The little Gawlers rush on to the drawing-room verandah
+themselves to examine the new arrivals.
+
+"This is Mrs. Honeyman's?" asks the gentleman designated by Mr. Gawler
+as "the foring cove," and hands in a card on which the words, "Miss
+Honeyman, 110, Steyne Gardens. J. Goodenough," are written in that
+celebrated physician's handwriting. "We want five bet-rooms, six bets,
+two or dree sitting-rooms. Have you got dese?"
+
+"Will you speak to my mistress?" says Hannah. And if it is a fact that
+Miss Honeyman does happen to be in the front parlour looking at the
+carriages, what harm is there in the circumstance, pray? Is not Gawler
+looking, and the people next door? Are not half a dozen little boys
+already gathered in the street (as if they started up out of the
+trap-doors for the coals), and the nursery maids in the stunted little
+garden, are not they looking through the bars of the square? "Please to
+speak to mistress," says Hannah, opening the parlour-door, and with a
+curtsey, "A gentleman about the apartments, mum."
+
+"Five bet-rooms," says the man, entering. "Six bets, two or dree
+sitting-rooms? We gome from Dr. Goodenough."
+
+"Are the apartments for you, sir?" says the little Duchess, looking up
+at the large gentleman.
+
+"For my lady," answers the man.
+
+"Had you not better take off your hat?" asks the Duchess, pointing out
+of one of her little mittens to "the foring cove's" beaver, which he has
+neglected to remove.
+
+The man grins, and takes off the hat. "I beck your bardon, ma'am," says
+he. "Have you fife bet-rooms?" etc. The doctor has cured the German of
+an illness, as well as his employers, and especially recommended Miss
+Honeyman to Mr. Kuhn.
+
+"I have such a number of apartments. My servant will show them to you."
+And she walks back with great state to her chair by the window, and
+resumes her station and work there.
+
+Mr. Kuhn reports to his mistress, who descends to inspect the
+apartments, accompanied through them by Hannah. The rooms are pronounced
+to be exceedingly neat and pleasant, and exactly what are wanted for
+the family. The baggage is forthwith ordered to be brought from the
+carriages. The little invalid wrapped in his shawl is brought upstairs
+by the affectionate Mr. Kuhn, who carries him as gently as if he had
+been bred all his life to nurse babies. The smiling Sally (the Sally
+for the time-being happens to be a very fresh pink-cheeked pretty little
+Sally) emerges from the kitchen and introduces the young ladies,
+the governess, the maids, to their apartments. The eldest, a slim
+black-haired young lass of thirteen, frisks about the rooms, looks at
+all the pictures, runs in and out of the verandah, tries the piano, and
+bursts out laughing at its wheezy jingle (it had been poor Emma's piano,
+bought for her on her seventeenth birthday, three weeks before she ran
+away with the ensign; her music is still in the stand by it: the Rev.
+Charles Honeyman has warbled sacred melodies over it, and Miss Honeyman
+considers it a delightful instrument), kisses her languid little brother
+laid on the sofa, and performs a hundred gay and agile motions suited to
+her age.
+
+"Oh, what a piano! Why, it is as cracked as Miss Quigley's voice!"
+
+"My dear!" says mamma. The little languid boy bursts out into a jolly
+laugh.
+
+"What funny pictures, mamma! Action with Count de Grasse; the death of
+General Wolfe; a portrait of an officer, an old officer in blue, like
+grandpapa; Brazen Nose College, Oxford: what a funny name!"
+
+At the idea of Brazen Nose College, another laugh comes from the
+invalid. "I suppose they've all got brass noses there," he says; and
+explodes at this joke. The poor little laugh ends in a cough, and
+mamma's travelling-basket, which contains everything, produces a bottle
+of syrup, labelled "Master A. Newcome. A teaspoonful to be taken when
+the cough is troublesome."
+
+"'Oh, the delightful sea! the blue, the fresh, the ever free,'" sings
+the young lady, with a shake. (I suppose the maritime song from which
+she quoted was just written at this time.) "How much better this is than
+going home and seeing those horrid factories and chimneys! I love Doctor
+Goodenough for sending us here. What a sweet house it is! Everybody is
+happy in it, even Miss Quigley is happy, mamma. What nice rooms! What
+pretty chintz! What a--oh, what a--comfortable sofa!" and she falls
+down on the sofa, which, truth to say, was the Rev. Charles Honeyman's
+luxurious sofa from Oxford, presented to him by young Cibber Wright
+of Christchurch, when that gentleman-commoner was eliminated from the
+University.
+
+"The person of the house," mamma says, "hardly comes up to Dr.
+Goodenough's description of her. He says he remembers her a pretty
+little woman when her father was his private tutor."
+
+"She has grown very much since," says the girl. And an explosion takes
+place from the sofa, where the little man is always ready to laugh at
+any joke, or anything like a joke, uttered by himself or by any of his
+family or friends. As for Doctor Goodenough, he says laughing has saved
+that boy's life.
+
+"She looks quite like a maid," continues the lady. "She has hard hands,
+and she called me mum always. I was quite disappointed in her." And she
+subsides into a novel, with many of which kind of works, and with other
+volumes, and with workboxes, and with wonderful inkstands, portfolios,
+portable days of the month, scent-bottles, scissor-cases, gilt miniature
+easels displaying portraits, and countless gimcracks of travel, the
+rapid Kuhn has covered the tables in the twinkling of an eye.
+
+The person supposed to be the landlady enters the room at this juncture,
+and the lady rises to receive her. The little wag on the sofa puts his
+arm round his sister's neck, and whispers, "I say, Eth, isn't she a
+pretty girl? I shall write to Doctor Goodenough and tell him how much
+she's grown." Convulsions follow this sally, to the surprise of Hannah,
+who says, "Pooty little dear!--what time will he have his dinner, mum?"
+
+"Thank you, Mrs. Honeyman, at two o'clock," says the lady with a bow
+of her head. "There is a clergyman of your name in London; is he a
+relation?" The lady in her turn is astonished, for the tall person
+breaks out into a grin, and says, "Law, mum, you're speakin' of Master
+Charles. He's in London."
+
+"Indeed!--of Master Charles?"
+
+"And you take me for missis, mum. I beg your pardon, mum," cries Hannah.
+The invalid hits his sister in the side with a weak little fist. If
+laughter can cure, salva est res. Doctor Goodenough's patient is
+safe. "Master Charles is missis's brother, mum. I've got no brother,
+mum--never had no brother. Only one son, who's in the police, mum, thank
+you. And law bless me, I was going to forget! If you please, mum, missis
+says, if you are quite rested, she will pay her duty to you, mum."
+
+"Oh, indeed," says the lady, rather stiffly; and, taking this for an
+acceptance of her mistress's visit, Hannah retires.
+
+"This Miss Honeyman seems to be a great personage," says the lady. "If
+people let lodgings, why do they give themselves such airs?"
+
+"We never saw Monsieur de Boigne at Boulogne, mamma," interposes the
+girl.
+
+"Monsieur de Boigne, my dear Ethel! Monsieur de Boigne is very well.
+But--" here the door opens, and in a large cap bristling with ribbons,
+with her best chestnut front, and her best black silk gown, on which
+her gold watch shines very splendidly, little Miss Honeyman makes her
+appearance, and a dignified curtsey to her lodger.
+
+That lady vouchsafes a very slight inclination of the head indeed, which
+she repeats when Miss Honeyman says, "I am glad to hear your ladyship is
+pleased with the apartments."
+
+"Yes, they will do very well, thank you," answers the latter person,
+gravely.
+
+"And they have such a beautiful view of the sea!" cries Ethel.
+
+"As if all the houses hadn't a view of the sea, Ethel! The price has
+been arranged, I think? My servants will require a comfortable room
+to dine in--by themselves, ma'am, if you please. My governess and the
+younger children will dine together. My daughter dines with me--and
+my little boy's dinner will be ready at two o'clock precisely, if you
+please. It is now near one."
+
+"Am I to understand----" interposed Miss Honeyman.
+
+"Oh! I have no doubt we shall understand each other, ma'am," cried Lady
+Anne Newcome (whose noble presence the acute reader has no doubt ere
+this divined and saluted). "Doctor Goodenough has given me a most
+satisfactory account of you--more satisfactory perhaps than--than you
+are aware of." Perhaps Lady Anne's sentence was not going to end in a
+very satisfactory way for Miss Honeyman; but, awed by a peculiar look of
+resolution in the little lady, her lodger of an hour paused in whatever
+offensive remark she might have been about to make. "It is as well that
+I at last have the pleasure of seeing you, that I may state what I want,
+and that we may, as you say, understand each other. Breakfast and tea,
+if you please, will be served in the same manner as dinner. And you
+will have the kindness to order fresh milk every morning for my little
+boy--ass's milk--Doctor Goodenough has ordered ass's milk. Anything
+further I want I will communicate through the person who spoke to
+you--Kuhn, Mr. Kuhn; and that will do."
+
+A heavy shower of rain was descending at this moment, and little Mrs.
+Honeyman looking at her lodger, who had sate down and taken up her book,
+said, "Have your ladyship's servants unpacked your trunks?"
+
+"What on earth, madam, have you--has that to do with the question?"
+
+"They will be put to the trouble of packing again, I fear. I cannot
+provide--three times five are fifteen--fifteen separate meals for seven
+persons--besides those of my own family. If your servants cannot eat
+with mine, or in my kitchen, they and their mistress must go elsewhere.
+And the sooner the better, madam, the sooner the better!" says Mrs.
+Honeyman, trembling with indignation, and sitting down in a chair
+spreading her silks.
+
+"Do you know who I am?" asks Lady Anne, rising.
+
+"Perfectly well, madam," says the other. "And had I known, you should
+never have come into my house, that's more."
+
+"Madam!" cries the lady, on which the poor little invalid, scared and
+nervous, and hungry for his dinner, began to cry from his sofa.
+
+"It will be a pity that the dear little boy should be disturbed. Dear
+little child, I have often heard of him, and of you, miss," says the
+little householder, rising. "I will get you some dinner, my dear, for
+Clive's sake. And meanwhile your ladyship will have the kindness to seek
+for some other apartments--for not a bit shall my fire cook for any
+one else of your company." And with this the indignant little landlady
+sailed out of the room.
+
+"Gracious goodness! Who is the woman?" cries Lady Anne. "I never was so
+insulted in my life."
+
+"Oh, mamma, it was you began!" says downright Ethel. "That is--Hush,
+Alfred dear!--Hush, my darling!"
+
+"Oh, it was mamma began! I'm so hungry! I'm so hungry!" howled the
+little man on the sofa--or off it rather--for he was now down on the
+ground, kicking away the shawls which enveloped him.
+
+"What is it, my boy? What is it, my blessed darling? You shall have your
+dinner! Give her all, Ethel. There are the keys of my desk--there's my
+watch--there are my rings. Let her take my all. The monster! the child
+must live! It can't go away in such a storm as this. Give me a cloak,
+a parasol, anything--I'll go forth and get a lodging. I'll beg my bread
+from house to house--if this fiend refuses me. Eat the biscuits, dear!
+A little of the syrup, Alfred darling; it's very nice, love! and come to
+your old mother--your poor old mother."
+
+Alfred roared out, "No--it's not n-ice: it's n-a-a-asty! I won't
+have syrup. I will have dinner." The mother, whose embraces the child
+repelled with infantine kicks, plunged madly at the bells, rang them
+all four vehemently, and ran downstairs towards the parlour, whence Miss
+Honeyman was issuing.
+
+The good lady had not at first known the names of her lodgers, but had
+taken them in willingly enough on Dr. Goodenough's recommendation. And
+it was not until one of the nurses entrusted with the care of Master
+Alfred's dinner informed Miss Honeyman of the name of her guest, that
+she knew she was entertaining Lady Anne Newcome; and that the pretty
+girl was the fair Miss Ethel; the little sick boy, the little Alfred
+of whom his cousin spoke, and of whom Clive had made a hundred little
+drawings in his rude way, as he drew everybody. Then bidding Sally run
+off to St. James's Street for a chicken--she saw it put on the spit, and
+prepared a bread sauce, and composed a batter-pudding as she only knew
+how to make batter-puddings. Then she went to array herself in her best
+clothes, as we have seen,--as we have heard rather (Goodness forbid that
+we should see Miss Honeyman arraying herself, or penetrate that chaste
+mystery, her toilette!)--then she came to wait upon Lady Anne, not
+a little flurried as to the result of that queer interview; then she
+whisked out of the drawing-room as before has been shown; and, finding
+the chicken roasted to a turn, the napkin and tray ready spread by
+Hannah the neat-handed, she was bearing them up to the little patient
+when the frantic parent met her on the stair.
+
+"Is it--is it for my child?" cried Lady Anne, reeling against the
+bannister.
+
+"Yes, it's for the child," says Miss Honeyman, tossing up her head. "But
+nobody else has anything in the house."
+
+"God bless you--God bless you! A mother's bl-l-essings go with you,"
+gurgled the lady, who was not, it must be confessed, a woman of strong
+moral character.
+
+It was good to see the little man eating the fowl. Ethel, who had never
+cut anything in her young existence, except her fingers now and then
+with her brother's and her governess's penknives, bethought her of
+asking Miss Honeyman to carve the chicken. Lady Anne, with clasped hands
+and streaming eyes, sate looking on at the ravishing scene.
+
+"Why did you not let us know you were Clive's aunt?" Ethel asked,
+putting out her hand. The old lady took hers very kindly, and said,
+"Because you didn't give me time. And do you love Clive, my dear?"
+
+The reconciliation between Miss Honeyman and her lodger was perfect.
+Lady Anne wrote a quire of notepaper off to Sir Brian for that day's
+post--only she was too late, as she always was. Mr. Kuhn perfectly
+delighted Miss Honeyman that evening by his droll sayings, jokes, and
+pronunciation, and by his praises of Master Glife, as he called him. He
+lived out of the house, did everything for everybody, was never out of
+the way when wanted, and never in the way when not wanted. Ere long Miss
+Honeyman got out a bottle of the famous Madeira which her Colonel sent
+her, and treated him to a glass in her own room. Kuhn smacked his lips
+and held out the glass again. The honest rogue knew good wine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. Ethel and her Relations
+
+
+For four-and-twenty successive hours Lady Anne Newcome was perfectly in
+raptures with her new lodgings, and every person and thing which they
+contained. The drawing-rooms were fitted with the greatest taste; the
+dinner was exquisite. Were there ever such delicious veal-cutlets, such
+verdant French beans? "Why do we have those odious French cooks, my
+dear, with their shocking principles--the principles of all Frenchmen
+are shocking--and the dreadful bills they bring us in; and their
+consequential airs and graces? I am determined to part with Brignol. I
+have written to your father this evening to give Brignol warning. When
+did he ever give us veal-cutlets? What can be nicer?"
+
+"Indeed they were very good," said Miss Ethel, who had mutton five times
+a week at one o'clock. "I am so glad you like the house, and Clive, and
+Mrs. Honeyman."
+
+"Like her! the dear little old woman. I feel as if she had been my
+friend all my life! I feel quite drawn towards her. What a wonderful
+coincidence that Dr. Goodenough should direct us to this very house! I
+have written to your father about it. And to think that I should have
+written to Clive at this very house, and quite forgotten Mrs. Honeyman's
+name--and such an odd name too. I forget everything, everything!
+You know I forgot your Aunt Louisa's husband's name; and when I was
+godmother to her baby, and the clergyman said, 'What is the infant's
+name?' I said, 'Really I forget.' And so I did. He was a London
+clergyman, but I forget at what church. Suppose it should be this very
+Mr. Honeyman! It may have been, you know, and then the coincidence would
+be still more droll. That tall, old, nice-looking, respectable person,
+with a mark on her nose, the housekeeper--what is her name?--seems a
+most invaluable person. I think I shall ask her to come to us. I am
+sure she would save me I don't know how much money every week; and I am
+certain Mrs. Trotter is making a fortune by us. I shall write to your
+papa, and ask him permission to ask this person." Ethel's mother
+was constantly falling in love with her new acquaintances; their
+man-servants and their maid-servants, their horses and ponies, and the
+visitor within their gates. She would ask strangers to Newcome, hug
+and embrace them on Sunday; not speak to them on Monday; and on Tuesday
+behave so rudely to them, that they were gone before Wednesday. Her
+daughter had had so many governesses--all darlings during the first
+week, and monsters afterwards--that the poor child possessed none of the
+accomplishments of her age. She could not play on the piano; she
+could not speak French well; she could not tell you when gunpowder
+was invented: she had not the faintest idea of the date of the Norman
+Conquest, or whether the earth went round the sun, or vice versa. She
+did not know the number of counties in England, Scotland, and Wales,
+let alone Ireland; she did not know the difference between latitude and
+longitude. She had had so many governesses: their accounts differed:
+poor Ethel was bewildered by a multiplicity of teachers, and thought
+herself a monster of ignorance. They gave her a book at a Sunday School,
+and little girls of eight years old answered questions of which she knew
+nothing. The place swam before her. She could not see the sun shining
+on their fair flaxen heads and pretty faces. The rosy little children
+holding up their eager hands, and crying the answer to this question and
+that, seemed mocking her. She seemed to read in the book, "O Ethel, you
+dunce, dunce, dunce!" She went home silent in the carriage, and burst
+into bitter tears on her bed. Naturally a haughty girl of the highest
+spirit, resolute and imperious, this little visit to the parish school
+taught Ethel lessons more valuable than ever so much arithmetic and
+geography. Clive has told me a story of her in her youth, which,
+perhaps, may apply to some others of the youthful female aristocracy.
+She used to walk, with other select young ladies and gentlemen, their
+nurses and governesses, in a certain reserved plot of ground railed off
+from Hyde Park, whereof some of the lucky dwellers in the neighbourhood
+of Apsley House have a key. In this garden, at the age of nine or
+thereabout, she had contracted an intimate friendship with the Lord
+Hercules O'Ryan.--as every one of my gentle readers knows, one of
+the sons of the Marquis of Ballyshannon. The Lord Hercules was a year
+younger than Miss Ethel Newcome, which may account for the passion which
+grew up between these young persons; it being a provision in nature that
+a boy always falls in love with a girl older than himself, or rather,
+perhaps, that a girl bestows her affections on a little boy, who submits
+to receive them.
+
+One day Sir Brian Newcome announced his intention to go to Newcome that
+very morning, taking his family, and of course Ethel, with him. She was
+inconsolable. "What will Lord Hercules do when he finds I am gone?" she
+asked of her nurse.
+
+The nurse endeavouring to soothe her, said, "Perhaps his lordship would
+know nothing about the circumstance." "He will," said Miss Ethel--"he'll
+read it in the newspaper." My Lord Hercules, it is to be hoped,
+strangled this infant passion in the cradle; having long since married
+Isabella, only daughter of ------ Grains, Esq., of Drayton Windsor, a
+partner in the great brewery of Foker and Co.
+
+When Ethel was thirteen years old, she had grown to be such a tall
+girl, that she overtopped her companions by a head or more, and morally
+perhaps, also, felt herself too tall for their society. "Fancy myself,"
+she thought, "dressing a doll like Lily Putland or wearing a pinafore
+like Lucy Tucker!" She did not care for their sports. She could not walk
+with them: it seemed as if every one stared; nor dance with them at the
+academy, nor attend the Cours de Litterature Universelle et de Science
+Comprehensive of the professor then the mode--the smallest girls took
+her up in the class. She was bewildered by the multitude of things they
+bade her learn. At the youthful little assemblies of her sex, when,
+under the guide of their respected governesses, the girls came to tea at
+six o'clock, dancing, charades, and so forth, Ethel herded not with
+the children of her own age, nor yet with the teachers who sit apart at
+these assemblies, imparting to each other their little wrongs; but Ethel
+romped with the little children--the rosy little trots--and took them
+on her knees, and told them a thousand stories. By these she was adored,
+and loved like a mother almost, for as such the hearty kindly girl
+showed herself to them; but at home she was alone, farouche and
+intractable, and did battle with the governesses, and overcame them one
+after another. I break the promise of a former page, and am obliged
+to describe the youthful days of more than one person who is to take a
+share in this story. Not always doth the writer know whither the divine
+Muse leadeth him. But of this be sure--she is as inexorable as Truth. We
+must tell our tale as she imparts it to us, and go on or turn aside at
+her bidding.
+
+Here she ordains that we should speak of other members of the family,
+whose history we chronicle, and it behoves us to say a word regarding
+the Earl of Kew, the head of the noble house into which Sir Brian
+Newcome had married.
+
+When we read in the fairy stories that the King and Queen, who lived
+once upon a time, build a castle of steel, defended by moats and
+sentinels innumerable, in which they place their darling only child, the
+Prince or Princess, whose birth has blessed them after so many years
+of marriage, and whose christening feast has been interrupted by the
+cantankerous humour of that notorious old fairy who always persists in
+coming, although she has not received any invitation to the baptismal
+ceremony: when Prince Prettyman is locked up in the steel tower,
+provided only with the most wholesome food, the most edifying
+educational works, and the most venerable old tutor to instruct and
+to bore him, we know, as a matter of course, that the steel bolts and
+brazen bars one day will be of no avail, the old tutor will go off in a
+doze, and the moats and drawbridges will either be passed by His Royal
+Highness's implacable enemies, or crossed by the young scapegrace
+himself, who is determined to outwit his guardians, and see the wicked
+world. The old King and Queen always come in and find the chambers
+empty, the saucy heir-apparent flown, the porter and sentinels drunk,
+the ancient tutor asleep; they tear their venerable wigs in anguish,
+they kick the major-domo downstairs, they turn the duenna out of
+doors--the toothless old dragon! There is no resisting fate. The
+Princess will slip out of window by the rope-ladder; the Prince will
+be off to pursue his pleasures, and sow his wild oats at the appointed
+season. How many of our English princes have been coddled at home by
+their fond papas and mammas, walled up in inaccessible castles, with
+a tutor and a library, guarded by cordons of sentinels, sermoners, old
+aunts, old women from the world without, and have nevertheless escaped
+from all these guardians, and astonished the world by their extravagance
+and their frolics? What a wild rogue was that Prince Harry, son of the
+austere sovereign who robbed Richard the Second of his crown,--the youth
+who took purses on Gadshill, frequented Eastcheap taverns with Colonel
+Falstaff and worse company, and boxed Chief Justice Gascoigne's ears!
+What must have been the venerable Queen Charlotte's state of mind when
+she heard of the courses of her beautiful young Prince; of his punting
+at gambling-tables; of his dealings with horse-jockeys; of his awful
+doings with Perdita? Besides instances taken from our Royal Family,
+could we not draw examples from our respected nobility? There was that
+young Lord Warwick, Mr. Addison's stepson. We know that his mother
+was severe, and his stepfather a most eloquent moralist, yet the young
+gentleman's career was shocking, positively shocking. He boxed the
+watch; he fuddled himself at taverns; he was no better than a Mohock.
+The chronicles of that day contain accounts of many a mad prank which he
+played, as we have legends of a still earlier date of the lawless freaks
+of the wild Prince and Poins. Our people has never looked very unkindly
+on these frolics. A young nobleman, full of life and spirits, generous
+of his money, jovial in his humour, ready with his sword, frank,
+handsome, prodigal, courageous, always finds favour. Young Scapegrace
+rides a steeplechase or beats a bargeman, and the crowd applauds him.
+Sages and seniors shake their heads, and look at him not unkindly;
+even stern old female moralists are disarmed at the sight of youth and
+gallantry, and beauty. I know very well that Charles Surface is a sad
+dog, and Tom Jones no better than he should be; but, in spite of such
+critics as Dr. Johnson and Colonel Newcome, most of us have a sneaking
+regard for honest Tom, and hope Sophia will be happy, and Tom will end
+well at last.
+
+Five-and-twenty years ago the young Earl of Kew came upon the town,
+which speedily rang with the feats of his lordship. He began life time
+enough to enjoy certain pleasures from which our young aristocracy of
+the present day seem, alas! to be cut off. So much more peaceable
+and polished do we grow, so much does the spirit of the age appear to
+equalise all ranks; so strongly has the good sense of society, to which
+in the end gentlemen of the very highest fashion must bow, put its veto
+upon practices and amusements with which our fathers were familiar. At
+that time the Sunday newspapers contained many and many exciting reports
+of boxing-matches. Bruising was considered a fine manly old English
+custom. Boys at public schools fondly perused histories of the noble
+science, from the redoubtable days of Broughton and Slack, to the heroic
+times of Dutch Sam and the Game Chicken. Young gentlemen went eagerly to
+Moulsey to see the Slasher punch the Pet's head, or the Negro beat the
+Jew's nose to a jelly. The island rang as yet with the tooting horns
+and rattling teams of mail-coaches; a gay sight was the road in merry
+England in those days, before steam-engines arose and flung its hostelry
+and chivalry over. To travel in coaches, to drive coaches, to know
+coachmen and guards, to be familiar with inns along the road, to laugh
+with the jolly hostess in the bar, to chuck the pretty chambermaid under
+the chin, were the delight of men who were young not very long ago. Who
+ever thought of writing to the Times then? "Biffin," I warrant, did not
+grudge his money, and "A Thirsty Soul" paid cheerfully for his drink.
+The road was an institution, the ring was an institution. Men rallied
+round them; and, not without a kind conservatism, expatiated upon the
+benefits with which they endowed the country, and the evils which would
+occur when they should be no more:--decay of English spirit, decay of
+manly pluck, ruin of the breed of horses, and so forth, and so forth. To
+give and take a black eye was not unusual nor derogatory in a gentleman;
+to drive a stage-coach the enjoyment, the emulation of generous youth.
+Is there any young fellow of the present time who aspires to take the
+place of a stoker? You see occasionally in Hyde Park one dismal old
+drag with a lonely driver. Where are you, charioteers? Where are you,
+O rattling Quicksilver, O swift Defiance? You are passed by racers
+stronger and swifter than you. Your lamps are out, and the music of your
+horns has died away.
+
+Just at the ending of that old time, Lord Kew's life began. That kindly
+middle-aged gentleman whom his county knows that good landlord, and
+friend of all his tenantry round about; that builder of churches, and
+indefatigable visitor of schools; that writer of letters to the farmers
+of his shire, so full of sense and benevolence; who wins prizes at
+agricultural shows, and even lectures at county town institutes in his
+modest, pleasant way, was the wild young Lord Kew of a quarter of a
+century back; who kept racehorses, patronised boxers, fought a duel,
+thrashed a Life Guardsman, gambled furiously at Crockford's, and did who
+knows what besides?
+
+His mother, a devout lady, nursed her son and his property carefully
+during the young gentleman's minority: keeping him and his younger
+brother away from all mischief, under the eyes of the most careful
+pastors and masters. She learnt Latin with the boys, she taught them to
+play on the piano: she enraged old Lady Kew, the children's grandmother,
+who prophesied that her daughter-in-law would make milksops of her sons,
+to whom the old lady was never reconciled until after my lord's entry at
+Christchurch, where he began to distinguish himself very soon after his
+first term. He drove tandems, kept hunters, gave dinners, scandalised
+the Dean, screwed up the tutor's door, and agonised his mother at home
+by his lawless proceedings. He quitted the University after a very
+brief sojourn at that seat of learning. It may be the Oxford authorities
+requested his lordship to retire; let bygones be bygones. His youthful
+son, the present Lord Walham, is now at Christchurch, reading with
+the greatest assiduity. Let us not be too particular in narrating his
+father's unedifying frolics of a quarter of a century ago.
+
+Old Lady Kew, who, in conjunction with Mrs. Newcome, had made the
+marriage between Mr. Brian Newcome and her daughter, always despised her
+son-in-law; and being a frank, open person, uttering her mind always,
+took little pains to conceal her opinion regarding him or any other
+individual. "Sir Brian Newcome," she would say, "is one of the most
+stupid and respectable of men; Anne is clever, but has not a grain of
+common sense. They make a very well assorted couple. Her flightiness
+would have driven any man crazy who had an opinion of his own. She would
+have ruined any poor man of her own rank; as it is, I have given her
+a husband exactly suited for her. He pays the bills, does not see how
+absurd she is, keeps order in the establishment, and checks her follies.
+She wanted to marry her cousin, Tom Poyntz, when they were both very
+young, and proposed to die of a broken heart when I arranged her match
+with Mr. Newcome. A broken fiddlestick! she would have ruined Tom Poyntz
+in a year; and has no more idea of the cost of a leg of mutton, than I
+have of algebra."
+
+The Countess of Kew loved Brighton, and preferred living there even at
+the season when Londoners find such especial charms in their own city.
+"London after Easter," the old lady said, "was intolerable. Pleasure
+becomes a business, then so oppressive, that all good company is
+destroyed by it. Half the men are sick with the feasts which they eat
+day after day. The women are thinking of the half-dozen parties they
+have to go to in the course of the night. The young girls are thinking
+of their partners and their toilettes. Intimacy becomes impossible, and
+quiet enjoyment of life. On the other hand, the crowd of bourgeois
+has not invaded Brighton. The drive is not blocked up by flys full of
+stockbrokers' wives and children; and you can take the air in your chair
+upon the chain-pier, without being stifled by the cigars of the odious
+shop-boys from London." So Lady Kew's name was usually amongst the
+earliest which the Brighton newspapers recorded amongst the arrivals.
+
+Her only unmarried daughter, Lady Julia, lived with her ladyship. Poor
+Lady Julia had suffered early from a spine disease, which had kept
+her for many years to her couch. Being always at home, and under her
+mother's eyes, she was the old lady's victim, her pincushion, into which
+Lady Kew plunged a hundred little points of sarcasm daily. As children
+are sometimes brought before magistrates, and their poor little backs
+and shoulders laid bare, covered with bruises and lashes which brutal
+parents have inflicted, so, I dare say, if there had been any tribunal
+or judge, before whom this poor patient lady's heart could have been
+exposed, it would have been found scarred all over with numberless
+ancient wounds, and bleeding from yesterday's castigation. Old Lady
+Kew's tongue was a dreadful thong which made numbers of people wince.
+She was not altogether cruel, but she knew the dexterity with which she
+wielded her lash, and liked to exercise it. Poor Lady Julia was always
+at hand, when her mother was minded to try her powers.
+
+Lady Kew had just made herself comfortable at Brighton, when her little
+grandson's illness brought Lady Anne Newcome and her family down to the
+sea. Lady Kew was almost scared back to London again, or blown over the
+water to Dieppe. She had never had the measles. "Why did not Anne carry
+the child to some other place? Julia, you will on no account go and see
+that little pestiferous swarm of Newcomes, unless you want to send me
+out of the world--which I dare say you do, for I am a dreadful plague to
+you, I know, and my death would be a release to you."
+
+"You see Doctor H., who visits the child every day," cries poor
+Pincushion; "you are not afraid when he comes."
+
+"Doctor H.? Doctor H. comes to cure me, or to tell me the news, or to
+flatter me, or to feel my pulse and to pretend to prescribe, or to take
+his guinea; of course Dr. H. must go to see all sorts of people in all
+sorts of diseases. You would not have me be such a brute as to order him
+not to attend my own grandson? I forbid you to go to Anne's house. You
+will send one of the men every day to inquire. Let the groom go--yes,
+Charles--he will not go into the house. He will ring the bell and wait
+outside. He had better ring the bell at the area--I suppose there is an
+area--and speak to the servants through the bars, and bring us word how
+Alfred is." Poor Pincushion felt fresh compunctions; she had met the
+children, and kissed the baby, and held kind Ethel's hand in hers, that
+day, as she was out in her chair. There was no use, however, to make
+this confession. Is she the only good woman or man of whom domestic
+tyranny has made a hypocrite?
+
+Charles, the groom, brings back perfectly favourable reports of Master
+Alfred's health that day, which Doctor H., in the course of his visit,
+confirms. The child is getting well rapidly; eating like a little ogre.
+His cousin Lord Kew has been to see him. He is the kindest of men, Lord
+Kew; he brought the little man Tom and Jerry with the pictures. The boy
+is delighted with the pictures.
+
+"Why has not Kew come to see me? When did he come? Write him a note, and
+send for him instantly, Julia. Did you know he was here?"
+
+Julia says, that she had but that moment read in the Brighton papers the
+arrival of the Earl of Kew and the Honourable J. Belsize at the Albion.
+
+"I am sure they are here for some mischief," cries the old lady,
+delighted. "Whenever George and John Belsize are together, I know there
+is some wickedness planning. What do you know, Doctor? I see by your
+face you know something. Do tell it me, that I may write it to his
+odious psalm-singing mother."
+
+Doctor H.'s face does indeed wear a knowing look. He simpers and says,
+"I did see Lord Kew driving this morning, first with the Honourable Mr.
+Belsize, and afterwards"--here he glances towards Lady Julia, as if to
+say, "Before an unmarried lady, I do not like to tell your ladyship
+with whom I saw Lord Kew driving, after he had left the Honourable Mr.
+Belsize, who went to play a match with Captain Huxtable at tennis."
+
+"Are you afraid to speak before Julia?" cries the elder lady. "Why,
+bless my soul, she is forty years old, and has heard everything that can
+be heard. Tell me about Kew this instant, Doctor H."
+
+The Doctor blandly acknowledges that Lord Kew had been driving Madame
+Pozzoprofondo, the famous contralto of the Italian Opera, in his
+phaeton, for two hours, in the face of all Brighton.
+
+"Yes, Doctor," interposes Lady Julia, blushing; "but Signor
+Pozzoprofondo was in the carriage too--a-a-sitting behind with the
+groom. He was indeed, mamma."
+
+"Julia, vous n'etes qu'une panache," says Lady Kew, shrugging her
+shoulders, and looking at her daughter from under her bushy black
+eyebrows. Her ladyship, a sister of the late lamented Marquis of Steyne,
+possessed no small share of the wit and intelligence, and a considerable
+resemblance to the features, of that distinguished nobleman.
+
+Lady Kew bids her daughter take a pen and write:--"Monsieur le Mauvais
+Sujet,--Gentlemen who wish to take the sea air in private, or to avoid
+their relations, had best go to other places than Brighton, where
+their names are printed in the newspapers. If you are not drowned in a
+pozzo--"
+
+"Mamma!" interposes the secretary.
+
+"--in a pozzo-profondo, you will please come to dine with two old
+women, at half-past seven. You may bring Mr. Belsize, and must tell us a
+hundred stories.--Yours, etc., L. Kew."
+
+Julia wrote all the letter as her mother dictated it, save only one
+sentence, and the note was sealed and despatched to my Lord Kew, who
+came to dinner with Jack Belsize. Jack Belsize liked to dine with Lady
+Kew. He said, "she was an old dear, and the wickedest old woman in
+all England;" and he liked to dine with Lady Julia, who was "a poor
+suffering dear, and the best woman in all England." Jack Belsize liked
+every one, and every one liked him.
+
+Two evenings afterwards the young men repeated their visit to Lady Kew,
+and this time Lord Kew was loud in praises of his cousins of the house
+of Newcome.
+
+"Not of the eldest, Barnes, surely, my dear?" cries Lady Kew.
+
+"No, confound him! not Barnes."
+
+"No, d---- it, not Barnes. I beg your pardon, Lady Julia," broke in
+Jack Belsize. "I can get on with most men; but that little Barney is too
+odious a little snob."
+
+"A little what--Mr. Belsize?"
+
+"A little snob, ma'am. I have no other word, though he is your grandson.
+I never heard him say a good word of any mortal soul, or do a kind
+action."
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Belsize," says the lady.
+
+"But the others are capital. There is that little chap who has just had
+the measles--he's a clear little brick. And as for Miss Ethel----"
+
+"Ethel is a trump, ma'am," says Lord Kew, slapping his hand on his knee.
+
+"Ethel is a brick, and Alfred is a trump, I think you say," remarks Lady
+Kew, nodding approval; "and Barnes is a snob. This is very satisfactory
+to know."
+
+"We met the children out to-day," cries the enthusiastic Kew, "as I was
+driving Jack in the drag, and I got out and talked to 'em."
+
+"Governess an uncommonly nice woman--oldish, but--I beg your pardon,
+Lady Julia," cries the inopportune Jack Belsize--"I'm always putting my
+foot in it."
+
+"Putting your foot into what? Go on, Kew."
+
+"Well, we met the whole posse of children; and the little fellow wanted
+a drive, and I said I would drive him and Ethel too, if she would come.
+Upon my word she is as pretty a girl as you can see on a summer's day.
+And the governess said 'No,' of course. Governesses always do. But I
+said I was her uncle, and Jack paid her such a fine compliment, that the
+young woman was mollified, and the children took their seats beside me,
+and Jack went behind."
+
+"Where Monsieur Pozzoprofondo sits, bon."
+
+"We drove on to the Downs, and we were nearly coming to grief. My horses
+are young, and when they get on the grass they are as if they were mad.
+It was very wrong; I know it was."
+
+"D----d rash," interposes Jack. "He had nearly broken all our necks."
+
+"And my brother Frank would have been Lord Kew," continued the young
+Earl, with a quiet smile. "What an escape for him! The horses ran
+away--ever so far--and I thought the carriage must upset. The poor
+little boy, who has lost his pluck in the fever, began to cry; but that
+young girl, though she was as white as a sheet, never gave up for a
+moment, and sate in her place like a man. We met nothing, luckily; and I
+pulled the horses in after a mile or two, and I drove 'em into Brighton
+as quiet as if I had been driving a hearse. And that little trump of an
+Ethel, what do you think she said? She said, 'I was not frightened,
+but you must not tell mamma.' My aunt, it appears, was in a dreadful
+commotion--I ought to have thought of that."
+
+"Lady Anne is a ridiculous old dear. I beg your pardon, Lady Kew," here
+breaks in Jack the apologiser.
+
+"There is a brother of Sir Brian Newcome's staying with them," Lord Kew
+proceeds; "an East India Colonel--a very fine-looking old boy."
+
+"Smokes awfully, row about it in the hotel. Go on, Kew; beg your----"
+
+"This gentleman was on the look-out for us, it appears, for when we
+came in sight he despatched a boy who was with him, running like a
+lamplighter back to my aunt, to say all was well. And he took little
+Alfred out of the carriage, and then helped out Ethel, and said, 'My
+dear, you are too pretty to scold; but you have given us all a belle
+peur.' And then he made me and Jack a low bow, and stalked into the
+lodgings."
+
+"I think you do deserve to be whipped, both of you," cries Lady Kew.
+
+"We went up and made our peace with my aunt, and were presented in form
+to the Colonel and his youthful cub."
+
+"As fine a fellow as ever I saw: and as fine a boy as ever I saw," cries
+Jack Belsize. "The young chap is a great hand at drawing--upon my life
+the best drawings I ever saw. And he was making a picture for little
+What-d'you-call-'em. And Miss Newcome was looking over them. And Lady
+Anne pointed out the group to me, and said how pretty it was. She is
+uncommonly sentimental, you know, Lady Anne."
+
+"My daughter Anne is the greatest fool in the three kingdoms," cried
+Lady Kew, looking fiercely over her spectacles. And Julia was instructed
+to write that night to her sister, and desire that Ethel should be sent
+to see her grandmother:--Ethel, who rebelled against her grandmother,
+and always fought on her Aunt Julia's side, when the weaker was
+oppressed by the older and stronger lady.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. At Mrs. Ridley's
+
+
+Saint Peter of Alcantara, as I have read in a life of St. Theresa,
+informed that devout lady that he had passed forty years of his life
+sleeping only an hour and a half each day; his cell was but four feet
+and a half long, so that he never lay down: his pillow was a wooden log
+in the stone wall: he ate but once in three days: he was for three years
+in a convent of his order without knowing any one of his brethren except
+by the sound of their voices, for he never during this period took his
+eyes off the ground: he always walked barefoot, and was but skin and
+bone when he died. The eating only once in three days, so he told his
+sister Saint, was by no means impossible, if you began the regimen in
+your youth. To conquer sleep was the hardest of all austerities which
+he practised:--I fancy the pious individual so employed, day after day,
+night after night, on his knees, or standing up in devout meditation
+in the cupboard--his dwelling-place; bareheaded and barefooted, walking
+over rocks, briars, mud, sharp stones (picking out the very worst
+places, let us trust, with his downcast eyes), under the bitter snow,
+or the drifting rain, or the scorching sunshine--I fancy Saint Peter of
+Alcantara, and contrast him with such a personage as the Incumbent of
+Lady Whittlesea's Chapel, Mayfair.
+
+His hermitage is situated in Walpole Street, let us say, on the second
+floor of a quiet mansion, let out to hermits by a nobleman's butler,
+whose wife takes care of the lodgings. His cells consist of a refectory,
+a dormitory, and an adjacent oratory where he keeps his shower-bath and
+boots--the pretty boots trimly stretched on boot-trees and blacked to
+a nicety (not varnished) by the boy who waits on him. The barefooted
+business may suit superstitious ages and gentlemen of Alcantara, but
+does not become Mayfair and the nineteenth century. If St. Pedro walked
+the earth now with his eyes to the ground he would know fashionable
+divines by the way in which they were shod. Charles Honeyman's is a
+sweet foot. I have no doubt as delicate and plump and rosy as the white
+hand with its two rings, which he passes in impassioned moments through
+his slender flaxen hair.
+
+A sweet odour pervades his sleeping apartment--not that peculiar and
+delicious fragrance with which the Saints of the Roman Church are said
+to gratify the neighbourhood where they repose--but oils, redolent
+of the richest perfumes of Macassar, essences (from Truefitt's or
+Delcroix's) into which a thousand flowers have expressed their
+sweetest breath, await his meek head on rising; and infuse the
+pocket-handkerchief with which he dries and draws so many tears. For
+he cries a good deal in his sermons, to which the ladies about him
+contribute showers of sympathy.
+
+By his bedside are slippers lined with blue silk and worked of an
+ecclesiastical pattern, by some of the faithful who sit at his feet.
+They come to him in anonymous parcels: they come to him in silver paper:
+boys in buttons (pages who minister to female grace!) leave them at the
+door for the Rev. C. Honeyman, and slip away without a word. Purses are
+sent to him--penwipers--a portfolio with the Honeyman arms; yea, braces
+have been known to reach him by the post (in his days of popularity);
+and flowers, and grapes, and jelly when he was ill, and throat
+comforters, and lozenges for his dear bronchitis. In one of his drawers
+is the rich silk cassock presented to him by his congregation at
+Leatherhead (when the young curate quitted that parish for London
+duty), and on his breakfast-table the silver teapot, once filled with
+sovereigns and presented by the same devotees. The devo-teapot he has,
+but the sovereigns, where are they?
+
+What a different life this is from our honest friend of Alcantara, who
+eats once in three days! At one time if Honeyman could have drunk
+tea three times in an evening, he might have had it. The glass on his
+chimneypiece is crowded with invitations, not merely cards of ceremony
+(of which there are plenty), but dear little confidential notes from
+sweet friends of his congregation. "Ob, dear Mr. Honeyman," writes
+Blanche, "what a sermon that was! I cannot go to bed to-night without
+thanking you for it." "Do, do, dear Mr. Honeyman," writes Beatrice,
+"lend me that delightful sermon. And can you come and drink tea with
+me and Selina, and my aunt? Papa and mamma dine out, but you know I am
+always your faithful Chesterfield Street." And so on. He has all the
+domestic accomplishments; he plays on the violoncello: he sings a
+delicious second, not only in sacred but in secular music. He has a
+thousand anecdotes, laughable riddles, droll stories (of the utmost
+correctness, you understand) with which he entertains females of all
+ages; suiting his conversation to stately matrons, deaf old dowagers
+(who can hear his clear voice better than the loudest roar of their
+stupid sons-in-law), mature spinsters, young beauties dancing through
+the season, even rosy little slips out of the nursery, who cluster
+round his beloved feet. Societies fight for him to preach their charity
+sermon. You read in the papers, "The Wapping Hospital for Wooden-legged
+Seamen.--On Sunday the 23rd, Sermons will be preached in behalf of this
+charity, by the Lord Bishop of Tobago in the morning, in the afternoon
+by the Rev. C. Honeyman, A.M., Incumbent of," etc. "Clergymen's
+Grandmothers' Fund.--Sermons in aid of this admirable institution will
+be preached on Sunday, 4th May, by the Very Rev. the Dean of Pimlico,
+and the Rev. C. Honeyman, A.M." When the Dean of Pimlico has his
+illness, many people think Honeyman will have the Deanery; that he ought
+to have it, a hundred female voices vow and declare: though it is said
+that a right reverend head at headquarters shakes dubiously when his
+name is mentioned for preferment. His name is spread wide, and not only
+women but men come to hear him. Members of Parliament, even Cabinet
+Ministers, sit under him. Lord Dozeley of course is seen in a front pew:
+where was a public meeting without Lord Dozeley? The men come away from
+his sermons and say, "It's very pleasant, but I don't know what the
+deuce makes all you women crowd so to hear the man." "Oh, Charles! if
+you would but go oftener!" sighs Lady Anna Maria. "Can't you speak to
+the Home Secretary? Can't you do something for him?" "We can ask him
+to dinner next Wednesday if you like," Says Charles. "They say he's
+a pleasant fellow out of the wood. Besides there is no use in doing
+anything for him," Charles goes on. "He can't make less than a thousand
+a year out of his chapel, and that is better than anything any one can
+give him. A thousand a year, besides the rent of the wine-vaults below
+the chapel."
+
+"Don't, Charles!" says his wife, with a solemn look. "Don't ridicule
+things in that way.
+
+"Confound it! there are wine-vaults under the chapel!" answers downright
+Charles. "I saw the name, Sherrick and Co.; offices, a green door, and
+a brass plate. It's better to sit over vaults with wine in them than
+coffins. I wonder whether it's the Sherrick with whom Kew and Jack
+Belsize had that ugly row?"
+
+"What ugly row?--don't say ugly row. It is not a nice word to hear the
+children use. Go on, my darlings. What was the dispute of Lord Kew and
+Mr. Belsize, and this Mr. Sherrick?"
+
+"It was all about pictures, and about horses, and about money, and about
+one other subject which enters into every row that I ever heard of."
+
+"And what is that, dear?" asks the innocent lady, hanging on her
+husband's arm, and quite pleased to have led him to church and brought
+him thence. "And what is it, that enters into every row, as you call it,
+Charles?"
+
+"A woman, my love," answers the gentleman, behind whom we have been in
+imagination walking out from Charles Honeyman's church on a Sunday in
+June: as the whole pavement blooms with artificial flowers and fresh
+bonnets; as there is a buzz and cackle all around regarding the sermon;
+as carriages drive off; as lady-dowagers walk home; as prayer-books and
+footmen's sticks gleam in the sun; as little boys with baked mutton and
+potatoes pass from the courts; as children issue from the public-houses
+with pots of beer; as the Reverend Charles Honeyman, who has been
+drawing tears in the sermon, and has seen, not without complacent
+throbs, a Secretary of State in the pew beneath him, divests himself
+of his rich silk cassock in the vestry, before he walks away to his
+neighbouring hermitage--where have we placed it?--in Walpole Street. I
+wish St. Pedro of Alcantara could have some of that shoulder of mutton
+with the baked potatoes, and a drink of that frothing beer. See, yonder
+trots little Lord Dozeley, who has been asleep for an hour with his head
+against the wood, like St. Pedro of Alcantara.
+
+An East Indian gentleman and his son wait until the whole chapel is
+clear, and survey Lady Whittlesea's monument at their leisure, and other
+hideous slabs erected in memory of defunct frequenters of the chapel.
+Whose was that face which Colonel Newcome thought he recognised--that of
+a stout man who came down from the organ-gallery? Could it be Broff the
+bass singer, who delivered the "Red Cross Knight" with such applause at
+the Cave of Melody, and who has been singing in this place? There are
+some chapels in London, where, the function over, one almost expects to
+see the sextons put brown hollands over the pews and galleries, as they
+do at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden.
+
+The writer of these veracious pages was once walking through a splendid
+English palace, standing amidst parks and gardens, than which none more
+magnificent has been seen since the days of Aladdin, in company with a
+melancholy friend, who viewed all things darkly through his gloomy eyes.
+The housekeeper, pattering on before us from chamber to chamber, was
+expatiating upon the magnificence of this picture; the beauty of that
+statue; the marvellous richness of these hangings and carpets; the
+admirable likeness of the late Marquis by Sir Thomas; of his father, the
+fifth Earl, by Sir Joshua, and so on; when, in the very richest room
+of the whole castle, Hicks--such was my melancholy companion's
+name--stopped the cicerone in her prattle, saying in a hollow voice,
+"And now, madam, will you show us the closet where the skeleton is?" The
+seared functionary paused in the midst of her harangue; that article
+was not inserted in the catalogue which she daily utters to visitors for
+their half-crown. Hicks's question brought a darkness down upon the hall
+where we were standing. We did not see the room: and yet I have no
+doubt there is such an one; and ever after, when I have thought of the
+splendid castle towering in the midst of shady trees, under which the
+dappled deer are browsing; of the terraces gleaming with statues, and
+bright with a hundred thousand flowers; of the bridges and shining
+fountains and rivers wherein the castle windows reflect their festive
+gleams, when the halls are filled with happy feasters, and over the
+darkling woods comes the sound of music;--always, I say, when I think
+of Castle Bluebeard:--it is to think of that dark little closet, which
+I know is there, and which the lordly owner opens shuddering--after
+midnight--when he is sleepless and must go unlock it, when the palace is
+hushed, when beauties are sleeping around him unconscious, and revellers
+are at rest. O Mrs. Housekeeper: all the other keys hast thou: but that
+key thou hast not!
+
+Have we not all such closets, my jolly friend, as well as the noble
+Marquis of Carabas? At night, when all the house is asleep but you,
+don't you get up and peep into yours? When you in your turn are
+slumbering, up gets Mrs. Brown from your side, steals downstairs like
+Amina to her ghoul, clicks open the secret door, and looks into her
+dark depository. Did she tell you of that little affair with Smith long
+before she knew you? Psha! who knows any one save himself alone? Who, in
+showing his house to the closest and dearest, doesn't keep back the key
+of a closet or two? I think of a lovely reader laying down the page and
+looking over at her unconscious husband, asleep, perhaps, after dinner.
+Yes, madam, a closet he hath: and you, who pry into everything, shall
+never have the key of it. I think of some honest Othello pausing over
+this very sentence in a railroad carriage, and stealthily gazing at
+Desdemona opposite to him, innocently administering sandwiches to their
+little boy--I am trying to turn off the sentence with a joke, you see--I
+feel it is growing too dreadful, too serious.
+
+And to what, pray, do these serious, these disagreeable, these almost
+personal observations tend? To this simply, that Charles Honeyman, the
+beloved and popular preacher, the elegant divine to whom Miss Blanche
+writes sonnets, and whom Miss Beatrice invites to tea; who comes with
+smiles on his lip, gentle sympathy in his tones, innocent gaiety in his
+accent; who melts, rouses, terrifies in the pulpit; who charms over the
+tea-urn and the bland bread-and-butter: Charles Honeyman has one or two
+skeleton closets in his lodgings, Walpole Street, Mayfair; and many a
+wakeful night, whilst Mrs. Ridley, his landlady, and her tired husband,
+the nobleman's major-domo, whilst the lodger on the first floor, whilst
+the cook and housemaid and weary little bootboy are at rest (mind
+you, they have all got their closets, which they open with their
+skeleton-keys); he wakes up, and looks at the ghastly occupant of that
+receptacle. One of the Reverend Charles Honeyman's grisly night-haunters
+is--but stop; let us give a little account of the lodgings, and of some
+of the people frequenting the same.
+
+First floor, Mr. Bagshot, Member for a Norfolk borough. Stout jolly
+gentleman;--dines at the Carlton Club; greatly addicted to Greenwich
+and Richmond, in the season: bets in a moderate way: does not go into
+society, except now and again to the chiefs of his party, when they give
+great entertainments; and once or twice to the houses of great country
+dons who dwell near him in the country. Is not of very good family;
+was, in fact, an apothecary: married a woman with money, much older than
+himself, who does not like London, and stops at home at Hummingham, not
+much to the displeasure of Bagshot; gives every now and then nice little
+quiet dinners, which Mrs. Ridley cooks admirably, to exceedingly stupid
+jolly old Parliamentary fogies, who absorb, with much silence and
+cheerfulness, a vast quantity of wine. They have just begun to drink '24
+claret now, that of '15 being scarce, and almost drunk up. Writes daily,
+and hears every morning from Mrs. Bagshot; does not read her letters
+always: does not rise till long past eleven o'clock of a Sunday, and has
+John Bull and Bell's Life, in bed: frequents the Blue Posts sometimes;
+rides a stout cob out of his county, and pays like the Bank of England.
+
+The house is a Norfolk house. Mrs. Ridley was housekeeper to the great
+Squire Bayham, who had the estate before the Conqueror, and who came to
+such a dreadful crash in the year 1825, the year of the panic. Bayhams
+still belongs to the family, but in what a state, as those can say who
+recollect it in its palmy days! Fifteen hundred acres of the best
+land in England were sold off: all the timber cut down as level as a
+billiard-board. Mr. Bayham now lives up in one corner of the house,
+which used to be filled with the finest company in Europe. Law bless
+you! the Bayhams have seen almost all the nobility of England come in
+and go out, and were gentlefolks when many a fine lord's father of the
+present day was sweeping a counting-house.
+
+The house will hold genteelly no more than these two inmates; but in the
+season it manages to accommodate Miss Cann, who too was from Bayhams,
+having been a governess there to the young lady who is dead, and who now
+makes such a livelihood as she can best raise, by going out as a daily
+teacher. Miss Cann dines with Mrs. Ridley in the adjoining little
+back-parlour. Ridley but seldom can be spared to partake of the
+family dinner, his duties in the house and about the person of my Lord
+Todmorden keeping him constantly near that nobleman. How little Miss
+Cann can go on and keep alive on the crumb she eats for breakfast, and
+the scrap she picks at dinner, du astonish Mrs. Ridley, that it du! She
+declares that the two canary-birds encaged in her window (whence is a
+cheerful prospect of the back of Lady Whittlesea's Chapel) eat more than
+Miss Cann. The two birds set up a tremendous singing and chorussing
+when Miss Cann, spying the occasion of the first-floor lodger's
+absence, begins practising her music-pieces. Such trills, roulades, and
+flourishes go on from the birds and the lodger! it is a wonder how any
+fingers can move over the jingling ivory so quickly as Miss Cann's.
+Excellent a woman as she is, admirably virtuous, frugal, brisk, honest,
+and cheerful, I would not like to live in lodgings where there was a
+lady so addicted to playing variations. No more does Honeyman. On a
+Saturday, when he is composing his valuable sermons (the rogue, you may
+be sure, leaves his work to the last day, and there are, I am given to
+understand, among the clergy many better men than Honeyman, who are as
+dilatory as he), he begs, he entreats with tears in his eyes, that
+Miss Cann's music may cease. I would back little Cann to write a sermon
+against him, for all his reputation as a popular preacher.
+
+Old and weazened as that piano is, feeble and cracked her voice, it
+is wonderful what a pleasant concert she can give in that parlour of a
+Saturday evening, to Mrs. Ridley, who generally dozes a good deal, and
+to a lad, who listens with all his soul, with tears sometimes in his
+great eyes, with crowding fancies filling his brain and throbbing at his
+heart, as the artist plies her humble instrument. She plays old music of
+Handel and Haydn, and the little chamber anon swells into a cathedral,
+and he who listens beholds altars lighted, priests ministering, fair
+children swinging censers, great oriel windows gleaming in sunset, and
+seen through arched columns and avenues of twilight marble. The young
+fellow who hears her has been often and often to the opera and the
+theatres. As she plays Don Juan, Zerlina comes tripping over the
+meadows, and Masetto after her, with a crowd of peasants and maidens:
+and they sing the sweetest of all music, and the heart beats with
+happiness, and kindness, and pleasure. Piano, pianissimo! the city is
+hushed. The towers of the great cathedral rise in the distance, its
+spires lighted by the broad moon. The statues in the moonlit place cast
+long shadows athwart the pavement: but the fountain in the midst is
+dressed out like Cinderella for the night, and sings and wears a crest
+of diamonds. That great sombre street all in shade, can it be the famous
+Toledo?--or is it the Corso?--or is it the great street in Madrid, the
+one which leads to the Escurial where the Rubens and Velasquez are? It
+is Fancy Street--Poetry Street--Imagination Street--the street where
+lovely ladies look from balconies, where cavaliers strike mandolins
+and draw swords and engage, where long processions pass, and venerable
+hermits, with long beards, bless the kneeling people: where the rude
+soldiery, swaggering through the place with flags and halberts, and fife
+and dance, seize the slim waists of the daughters of the people, and bid
+the pifferari play to their dancing. Blow, bagpipes, a storm of harmony!
+become trumpets, trombones, ophicleides, fiddles, and bassoons! Fire,
+guns sound, tocsins! Shout, people! Louder, shriller and sweeter than
+all, sing thou, ravishing heroine! And see, on his cream-coloured
+charger Massaniello prances in, and Fra Diavolo leaps down the balcony,
+carabine in hand; and Sir Huon of Bordeaux sails up to the quay with the
+Sultan's daughter of Babylon. All these delights and sights, and joys
+and glories, these thrills of sympathy, movements of unknown longing,
+and visions of beauty, a young sickly lad of eighteen enjoys in a little
+dark room where there is a bed disguised in the shape of a wardrobe, and
+a little old woman is playing under a gas-lamp on the jingling keys of
+an old piano.
+
+For a long time Mr. Samuel Ridley, butler and confidential valet to
+the Right Honourable John James Baron Todmorden, was in a state of the
+greatest despair and gloom about his only son, the little John James,--a
+sickly and almost deformed child "of whom there was no making nothink,"
+as Mr. Ridley said. His figure precluded him from following his father's
+profession, and waiting upon the British nobility, who naturally require
+large and handsome men to skip up behind their rolling carriages, and
+hand their plates at dinner. When John James was six years old his
+father remarked, with tears in his eyes, he wasn't higher than a
+plate-basket. The boys jeered at him in the streets--some whopped him,
+spite of his diminutive size. At school he made but little progress.
+He was always sickly and dirty, and timid and crying, whimpering in
+the kitchen away from his mother; who, though she loved him, took Mr.
+Ridley's view of his character, and thought him little better than an
+idiot until such time as little Miss Cann took him in hand, when at
+length there was some hope of him.
+
+"Half-witted, you great stupid big man," says Miss Cann, who had a fine
+spirit of her own. "That boy half-witted! He has got more wit in his
+little finger than you have in all your great person! You are a very
+good man, Ridley, very good-natured I'm sure, and bear with the teasing
+of a waspish old woman: but you are not the wisest of mankind. Tut,
+tut, don't tell me. You know you spell out the words when you read the
+newspaper still, and what would your bills look like if I did not write
+them in my nice little hand? I tell you that boy is a genius. I tell you
+that one day the world will hear of him. His heart is made of pure gold.
+You think that all the wit belongs to the big people. Look at me, you
+great tall man! Am I not a hundred times cleverer than you are? Yes, and
+John James is worth a thousand such insignificant little chits as I
+am; and he is as tall as me too, sir. Do you hear that! One day I am
+determined he shall dine at Lord Todmorden's table, and he shall get the
+prize at the Royal Academy, and be famous, sir--famous!"
+
+"Well, Miss C., I wish he may get it; that's all I say," answers Mr.
+Ridley. "The poor fellow does no harm, that I acknowledge; but I never
+see the good he was up to yet. I wish he'd begin it; I du wish he would
+now." And the honest gentleman relapses into the study of his paper.
+
+All those beautiful sounds and thoughts which Miss Cann conveys to him
+out of her charmed piano, the young artist straightway translates into
+forms; and knights in armour, with plume, and shield, and battle-axe;
+and splendid young noblemen with flowing ringlets, and bounteous plumes
+of feathers, and rapiers, and russet boots; and fierce banditti with
+crimson tights, doublets profusely illustrated with large brass buttons,
+and the dumpy basket-hilted claymores known to be the favourite weapon
+with which these whiskered ruffians do battle; wasp-waisted peasant
+girls, and young countesses with oh, such large eyes and the lips!--all
+these splendid forms of war and beauty crowd to the young draughtsman's
+pencil, and cover letter-backs, copybooks, without end. If his hand
+strikes off some face peculiarly lovely, and to his taste, some fair
+vision that has shone on his imagination, some houri of a dancer, some
+bright young lady of fashion in an opera-box, whom he has seen, or
+fancied he has seen (for the youth is short-sighted, though he hardly
+as yet knows his misfortune)--if he has made some effort extraordinarily
+successful, our young Pygmalion hides away the masterpiece, and he
+paints the beauty with all his skill; the lips a bright carmine, the
+eyes a deep, deep cobalt, the cheeks a dazzling vermilion, the ringlets
+of a golden hue; and he worships this sweet creature of his in secret,
+fancies a history for her; a castle to storm, a tyrant usurper who keeps
+her imprisoned, and a prince in black ringlets and a spangled cloak, who
+scales the tower, who slays the tyrant, and then kneels gracefully at
+the princess's feet, and says, "Lady, wilt thou be mine?"
+
+There is a kind lady in the neighbourhood, who takes in dressmaking
+for the neighbouring maid-servants, and has a small establishment of
+lollipops, theatrical characters, and ginger-beer for the boys in Little
+Craggs Buildings, hard by the Running Footman public-house, where father
+and other gentlemen's gentlemen have their club: this good soul also
+sells Sunday newspapers to the footmen of the neighbouring gentry; and
+besides, has a stock of novels for the ladies of the upper servants'
+table. Next to Miss Cann, Miss Flinders is John James's greatest friend
+and benefactor. She has remarked him when he was quite a little man, and
+used to bring his father's beer of a Sunday. Out of her novels he has
+taught himself to read, dull boy at the day-school though he was, and
+always the last in his class, there. Hours, happy hours, has he spent
+cowering behind her counter, or hugging her books under his pinafore
+when he had leave to carry them home. The whole library has passed
+through his hands, his long, lean, tremulous hands, and under his eager
+eyes. He has made illustrations to every one of those books, and been
+frightened at his own pictures of Manfroni or the One-handed Monk,
+Abellino the Terrific Bravo of Venice, and Rinaldo Rinaldini Captain
+of Robbers. How he has blistered Thaddeus of Warsaw with his tears, and
+drawn him in his Polish cap, and tights, and Hessians! William Wallace,
+the Hero of Scotland, how nobly he has depicted him! With what whiskers
+and bushy ostrich plumes!--in a tight kilt, and with what magnificent
+calves to his legs, laying about him with his battle-axe, and bestriding
+the bodies of King Edward's prostrate cavaliers! At this time Mr.
+Honeyman comes to lodge in Walpole Street, and brings a set of Scott's
+novels, for which he subscribed when at Oxford; and young John James,
+who at first waits upon him and does little odd jobs for the reverend
+gentleman, lights upon the volumes, and reads them with such a delight
+and passion of pleasure as all the delights of future days will scarce
+equal. A fool, is he?--an idle feller, out of whom no good will ever
+come, as his father says. There was a time when, in despair of any
+better chance for him, his parents thought of apprenticing him to a
+tailor, and John James was waked up from a dream of Rebecca and informed
+of the cruelty meditated against him. I forbear to describe the tears
+and terror, and frantic desperation in which the poor boy was plunged.
+Little Miss Cann rescued him from that awful board, and Honeyman
+likewise interceded for him, and Mr. Bagshot promised that, as soon as
+his party came in, he would ask the Minister for a tide-waitership for
+him; for everybody liked the solemn, soft-hearted, willing little lad,
+and no one knew him less than his pompous and stupid and respectable
+father.
+
+Miss Cann painted flowers and card-screens elegantly, and "finished"
+pencil-drawings most elaborately for her pupils. She could copy prints,
+so that at a little distance you would scarcely know that the copy in
+stumped chalk was not a bad mezzotinto engraving. She even had a little
+old paint-box, and showed you one or two ivory miniatures out of the
+drawer. She gave John James what little knowledge of drawing she
+had, and handed him over her invaluable recipes for mixing
+water-colours--"for trees in foregrounds, burnt sienna and indigo"--"for
+very dark foliage, ivory black and gamboge"--"for flesh-colour,"
+etc. etc. John James went through her poor little course, but not so
+brilliantly as she expected. She was forced to own that several of
+her pupils' "pieces" were executed much more dexterously than Johnny
+Ridley's. Honeyman looked at the boy's drawings from time to time,
+and said, "Hm, ha!--very clever--a great deal of fancy, really." But
+Honeyman knew no more of the subject than a deaf and dumb man knows of
+music. He could talk the art cant very glibly, and had a set of Morghens
+and Madonnas as became a clergyman and a man of taste; but he saw not
+with eyes such as those wherewith Heaven had endowed the humble little
+butler's boy, to whom splendours of Nature were revealed to vulgar
+sights invisible, and beauties manifest in forms, colours, shadows of
+common objects, where most of the world saw only what was dull, and
+gross, and familiar. One reads in the magic story-books of a charm or a
+flower which the wizard gives, and which enables the bearer to see the
+fairies. O enchanting boon of Nature, which reveals to the possessor the
+hidden spirits of beauty round about him! spirits which the strongest
+and most gifted masters compel into painting or song. To others it
+is granted but to have fleeting glimpses of that fair Art-world; and
+tempted by ambition, or barred by faint-heartedness, or driven by
+necessity, to turn away thence to the vulgar life-track, and the light
+of common day.
+
+The reader who has passed through Walpole Street scores of times, knows
+the discomfortable architecture of all, save the great houses built
+in Queen Anne's and George the First's time; and while some of the
+neighbouring streets, to wit, Great Craggs Street, Bolingbroke Street,
+and others, contain mansions fairly coped with stone, with little
+obelisks before the doors, and great extinguishers wherein the torches
+of the nobility's running footmen were put out a hundred and thirty or
+forty years ago:--houses which still remain abodes of the quality,
+and where you shall see a hundred carriages gather of a public night;
+Walpole Street has quite faded away into lodgings, private hotels,
+doctors' houses, and the like; nor is No. 23 (Ridley's) by any means the
+best house in the street. The parlour, furnished and tenanted by Miss
+Cann as has been described; the first floor, Bagshot, Esq., M.P.; the
+second floor, Honeyman; what remains but the garrets, and the ample
+staircase and the kitchens? and the family being all put to bed, how can
+you imagine there is room for any more inhabitants?
+
+And yet there is one lodger more, and one who, like almost all the other
+personages mentioned up to the present time (and some of whom you have
+no idea yet), will play a definite part in the ensuing history. At
+night, when Honeyman comes in, he finds on the hall-table three wax
+bedroom candles--his own, Bagshot's, and another. As for Miss Cann,
+she is locked into the parlour in bed long ago, her stout little
+walking-shoes being on the mat at the door. At 12 o'clock at noon,
+sometimes at 1, nay at 2 and 3--long after Bagshot is gone to his
+committees, and little Cann to her pupils--a voice issues from the very
+topmost floor, from a room where there is no bell; a voice of thunder
+calling out "Slavey! Julia! Julia, my love! Mrs. Ridley!" And this
+summons not being obeyed, it will not unfrequently happen that a pair
+of trousers enclosing a pair of boots with iron heels, and known by the
+name of the celebrated Prussian General who came up to help the other
+christener of boots at Waterloo, will be flung down from the topmost
+story, even to the marble floor of the resounding hall. Then the boy
+Thomas, otherwise called Slavey, may say, "There he goes again;" or Mrs.
+Ridley's own back-parlour bell rings vehemently, and Julia the cook will
+exclaim, "Lor, it's Mr. Frederick."
+
+If the breeches and boots are not understood, the owner himself appears
+in great wrath dancing on the upper story; dancing down to the lower
+floor; and loosely enveloped in a ragged and flowing robe de chambre.
+In this costume and condition he will dance into Honeyman's apartment,
+where that meek divine may be sitting with a headache or over a novel or
+a newspaper; dance up to the fire flapping his robe-tails, poke it, and
+warm himself there; dance up to the cupboard where his reverence keeps
+his sherry, and help himself to a glass.
+
+"Salve, spes fidei, lumen ecclesiae," he will say; "here's towards you,
+my buck. I knows the tap. Sherrick's Marsala bottled three months after
+date, at two hundred and forty-six shillings the dozen."
+
+"Indeed, indeed it's not" (and now we are coming to an idea of the
+skeleton in poor Honeyman's closet--not that this huge handsome jolly
+Fred Bayham is the skeleton, far from it. Mr. Frederick weighs fourteen
+stone). "Indeed, indeed it isn't, Fred, I'm sure," sighs the other. "You
+exaggerate, indeed you do. The wine is not dear, not by any means so
+expensive as you say."
+
+"How much a glass, think you?" says Fred, filling another bumper. "A
+half-crown, think ye?--a half-crown, Honeyman? By cock and pye, it is
+not worth a bender." He says this in the manner of the most celebrated
+tragedian of the day. He can imitate any actor, tragic or comic; any
+known Parliamentary orator or clergyman; any saw, cock, cloop of a
+cork wrenched from a bottle and guggling of wine into the decanter
+afterwards, bee buzzing, little boy up a chimney, etc. He imitates
+people being ill on board a steam-packet so well that he makes you
+die of laughing: his uncle the Bishop could not resist this comic
+exhibition, and gave Fred a cheque for a comfortable sum of money; and
+Fred, getting cash for the cheque at the Cave of Harmony, imitated his
+uncle the Bishop and his Chaplain, winding up with his Lordship and
+Chaplain being unwell at sea--the Chaplain and Bishop quite natural and
+distinct.
+
+"How much does a glass of this sack cost thee, Charley?" resumes Fred,
+after this parenthesis. "You say it is not dear. Charles Honeyman, you
+had, even from your youth up, a villainous habit. And I perfectly well
+remember, sir, in boyhood's breezy hour, when I was the delight of his
+school, that you used to tell lies to your venerable father. You did,
+Charles. Excuse the frankness of an early friend, it's my belief you'd
+rather lie than not. Hm"--he looks at the cards in the chimney-glass
+"Invitations to dinner, proffers of muffins. Do lend me your sermon. Oh,
+you old impostor! you hoary old Ananias! I say, Charley, why haven't you
+picked out some nice girl for yours truly? One with lauds and beeves,
+with rents and consols, mark you? I have no money, 'tis true, but then
+I don't owe as much as you. I am a handsomer man than you are. Look at
+this chest" (he slaps it), "these limbs; they are manly, sir, manly."
+
+"For Heaven's sake, Bayham," cries Mr. Honeyman, white with terror; "if
+anybody were to come----"
+
+"What did I say anon, sir? that I was manly, ay, manly. Let any ruffian,
+save a bailiff, come and meet the doughty arm of Frederick Bayham."
+
+"Oh, Lord, Lord, here's somebody coming into the room!" cries Charles,
+sinking back on the sofa, as the door opens.
+
+"Ha! dost thou come with murderous intent?" and he now advances in an
+approved offensive attitude. "Caitiff, come on, come on!" and he walks
+off with a tragic laugh, crying, "Ha, ha, ha, 'tis but the slavey!"
+
+The slavey has Mr. Frederick's hot water, and a bottle of sodawater on
+the same tray. He has been instructed to bring soda whenever he
+hears the word slavey pronounced from above. The bottle explodes, and
+Frederick drinks, and hisses after his drink as though he had been all
+hot within.
+
+"What's o'clock now, slavey--half-past three? Let me see, I breakfasted
+exactly ten hours ago, in the rosy morning, off a modest cup of coffee
+in Covent Garden Market. Coffee, a penny; bread, a simple halfpenny.
+What has Mrs. Ridley for dinner?"
+
+"Please, sir, roast pork."
+
+"Get me some. Bring it into my room, unless, Honeyman, you insist upon
+my having it here, kind fellow!"
+
+At the moment a smart knock comes to the door, and Fred says, "Well,
+Charles, it may be a friend or a lady come to confess, and I'm off;
+I knew you'd be sorry I was going. Tom, bring up my things; brush 'em
+gently, you scoundrel, and don't take the nap off. Bring up the roast
+pork, and plenty of apple-sauce, tell Mrs. Ridley, with my love; and one
+of Mr. Honeyman's shirts, and one of his razors. Adieu, Charles! Amend!
+Remember me." And he vanishes into the upper chambers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. In which everybody is asked to Dinner
+
+
+John James had opened the door hastening to welcome a friend and patron,
+the sight of whom always gladdened the youth's eyes; no other than
+Clive Newcome--in young Ridley's opinion, the most splendid, fortunate,
+beautiful, high-born, and gifted youth this island contained. What
+generous boy in his time has not worshipped somebody? Before the female
+enslaver makes her appearance, every lad has a friend of friends, a
+crony of cronies, to whom he writes immense letters in vacation, whom he
+cherishes in his heart of hearts; whose sister he proposes to marry in
+after life; whose purse he shares; for whom he will take a thrashing if
+need be: who is his hero. Clive was John James's youthful divinity: when
+he wanted to draw Thaddeus of Warsaw, a Prince, Ivanhoe, or some one
+splendid and egregious, it was Clive he took for a model. His heart
+leapt when he saw the young fellow. He would walk cheerfully to Grey
+Friars, with a letter or message for Clive, on the chance of seeing him,
+and getting a kind word from him, or a shake of the hand. An ex-butler
+of Lord Todmorden was a pensioner in the Grey Friars Hospital (it has
+been said that at that ancient establishment is a college for old men
+as well as for boys), and this old man would come sometimes to his
+successor's Sunday dinner, and grumble from the hour of that meal until
+nine o'clock, when he was forced to depart, so as to be within Grey
+Friars' gates before ten; grumble about his dinner--grumble about his
+beer--grumble about the number of chapels he had to attend, about the
+gown he wore, about the master's treatment of him, about the want
+of plums in the pudding, as old men and schoolboys grumble. It was
+wonderful what a liking John James took to this odious, querulous,
+graceless, stupid, and snuffy old man, and how he would find pretexts
+for visiting him at his lodging in the old hospital. He actually took
+that journey that he might have a chance of seeing Clive. He sent Clive
+notes and packets of drawings; thanked him for books lent, asked advice
+about future reading--anything, so that he might have a sight of his
+pride, his patron, his paragon.
+
+I am afraid Clive Newcome employed him to smuggle rum-shrub and cigars
+into the premises; giving him appointments in the school precincts,
+where young Clive would come and stealthily receive the forbidden goods.
+The poor lad was known by the boys, and called Newcome's Punch. He was
+all but hunchbacked; long and lean in the arm; sallow, with a great
+forehead, and waving black hair, and large melancholy eyes.
+
+"What, is it you, J. J.?" cries Clive gaily, when his humble friend
+appears at the door. "Father, this is my friend Ridley. This is the
+fellow what can draw."
+
+"I know who I will back against any young man of his size at that," says
+the Colonel, looking at Clive fondly. He considered there was not such
+a genius in the world; and had already thought of having some of Clive's
+drawings published by M'Lean of the Haymarket.
+
+"This is my father just come from India--and Mr. Pendennis, an old Grey
+Friars' man. Is my uncle at home?" Both these gentlemen bestow rather
+patronising nods of the head on the lad introduced to them as J. J.
+His exterior is but mean-looking. Colonel Newcome, one of the
+humblest-minded men alive, has yet his old-fashioned military notions;
+and speaks to a butler's son as to a private soldier, kindly, but not
+familiarly.
+
+"Mr Honeyman is at home, gentlemen," the young lad says, humbly. "Shall
+I show you up to his room?" And we walk up the stairs after our guide.
+We find Mr. Honeyman deep in study on his sofa, with Pearson on the
+Creed before him. The novel has been whipped under the pillow. Clive
+found it there some short time afterwards, during his uncle's temporary
+absence in his dressing-room. He has agreed to suspend his theological
+studies, and go out with his brother-in-law to dine.
+
+As Clive and his friends were at Honeyman's door, and just as we were
+entering to see the divine seated in state before his folio, Clive
+whispers, "J. J., come along, old fellow, and show us some drawings.
+What are you doing?"
+
+"I was doing some Arabian Nights," says J. J., "up in my room; and
+hearing a knock which I thought was yours, I came down."
+
+"Show us the pictures. Let's go up into your room," cries Clive.
+"What--will you?" says the other. "It is but a very small place."
+
+"Never mind, come along," says Clive; and the two lads disappear
+together, leaving the three grown gentlemen to discourse together, or
+rather two of us to listen to Honeyman, who expatiates upon the beauty
+of the weather, the difficulties of the clerical calling, the honour
+Colonel Newcome does him by a visit, etc., with his usual eloquence.
+
+After a while Clive comes down without J. J., from the upper regions. He
+is greatly excited. "Oh, sir," he says to his father, "you talk about my
+drawings--you should see J. J.'s! By Jove, that fellow is a genius. They
+are beautiful, sir. You seem actually to read the Arabian Nights, you
+know, only in pictures. There is Scheherazade telling the stories,
+and--what do you call her?--Dinarzade and the Sultan sitting in bed and
+listening. Such a grim old cove! You see he has cut off ever so many of
+his wives' heads. I can't think where that chap gets his ideas from. I
+can beat him in drawing horses, I know, and dogs; but I can only draw
+what I see. Somehow he seems to see things we don't, don't you know? Oh,
+father, I'm determined I'd rather be a painter than anything." And he
+falls to drawing horses and dogs at his uncle's table, round which the
+elders are seated.
+
+"I've settled it upstairs with J. J.," says Clive, working away with
+his pen. "We shall take a studio together; perhaps we will go abroad
+together. Won't that be fun, father?"
+
+"My dear Clive," remarks Mr. Honeyman, with bland dignity, "there are
+degrees in society which we must respect. You surely cannot think of
+being a professional artist. Such a profession is very well for your
+young protege; but for you----"
+
+"What for me?" cries Clive. "We are no such great folks that I know of;
+and if we were, I say a painter is as good as a lawyer, or a doctor,
+or even a soldier. In Dr. Johnston's Life--which my father is always
+reading--I like to read about Sir Joshua Reynolds best: I think he is
+the best gentleman of all in the book. My! wouldn't I like to paint a
+picture like Lord Heathfield in the National Gallery! Wouldn't I just! I
+think I would sooner have done that, than have fought at Gibraltar. And
+those Three Graces--oh, aren't they graceful! And that Cardinal Beaufort
+at Dulwich!--it frightens me so, I daren't look at it. Wasn't Reynolds
+a clipper, that's all! and wasn't Rubens a brick! He was an ambassador,
+and Knight of the Bath; so was Vandyck. And Titian, and Raphael, and
+Velasquez?--I'll just trouble you to show me better gentlemen than them,
+Uncle Charles."
+
+"Far be it from me to say that the pictorial calling is not honourable,"
+says Uncle Charles; "but as the world goes there are other professions
+in greater repute; and I should have thought Colonel Newcome's son----"
+
+"He shall follow his own bent," said the Colonel; "as long as his
+calling is honest it becomes a gentleman; and if he were to take a fancy
+to play on the fiddle--actually on the fiddle--I shouldn't object."
+
+"Such a rum chap there was upstairs!" Clive resumes, looking up from
+his scribbling. "He was walking up and down on the landing in a
+dressing-gown, with scarcely any other clothes on, holding a plate in
+one hand, and a pork-chop he was munching with the other. Like this"
+(and Clive draws a figure). "What do you think, sir? He was in the Cave
+of Harmony, he says, that night you flared up about Captain Costigan. He
+knew me at once; and he says, 'Sir, your father acted like a gentleman,
+a Christian, and a man of honour. Maxima debetur puero reverentia.
+Give him my compliments. I don't know his highly respectable name.' His
+highly respectable name," says Clive, cracking with laughter--"those
+were his very words. 'And inform him that I am an orphan myself--in
+needy circumstances'--he said he was in needy circumstances; 'and I
+heartily wish he'd adopt me.'"
+
+The lad puffed out his face, made his voice as loud and as deep as he
+could; and from his imitation and the picture he had drawn, I knew at
+once that Fred Bayham was the man he mimicked.
+
+"And does the Red Rover live here," cried Mr. Pendennis, "and have we
+earthed him at last?"
+
+"He sometimes comes here," Mr. Honeyman said with a careless manner. "My
+landlord and landlady were butler and housekeeper to his father, Bayham
+of Bayham, one of the oldest families in Europe. And Mr. Frederick
+Bayham, the exceedingly eccentric person of whom you speak, was a
+private pupil of my own dear father in our happy days at Borehambury."
+
+He had scarcely spoken when a knock was heard at the door, and before
+the occupant of the lodgings could say "Come in!" Mr. Frederick Bayham
+made his appearance, arrayed in that peculiar costume which he affected.
+In those days we wore very tall stocks, only a very few poetic and
+eccentric persons venturing on the Byron collar; but Fred Bayham
+confined his neck by a simple ribbon, which allowed his great red
+whiskers to curl freely round his capacious jowl. He wore a black frock
+and a large broad-brimmed hat, and looked somewhat like a Dissenting
+preacher. At other periods you would see him in a green coat and a blue
+neckcloth, as if the turf or the driving of coaches was his occupation.
+
+"I have heard from the young man of the house who you were, Colonel
+Newcome," he said with the greatest gravity, "and happened to be
+present, sir, the other night; for I was aweary, having been toiling all
+the day in literary labour, and needed some refreshment. I happened to
+be present, sir, at a scene which did you the greatest honour, and of
+which I spoke, not knowing you, with something like levity to your son.
+He is an ingenui vultus puer ingenuique pudoris--Pendennis, how are you?
+And I thought, sir, I would come down and tender an apology if I had
+said any words that might savour of offence to a gentleman who was in
+the right, as I told the room when you quitted it, as Mr. Pendennis, I
+am sure, will remember."
+
+Mr. Pendennis looked surprise and perhaps negation.
+
+"You forget, Pendennis? Those who quit that room, sir, often forget on
+the morrow what occurred during the revelry of the night. You did right
+in refusing to return to that scene. We public men are obliged often
+to seek our refreshment at hours when luckier individuals are lapt in
+slumber."
+
+"And what may be your occupation, Mr. Bayham?" asks the Colonel, rather
+gloomily, for he had an idea that Bayham was adopting a strain of
+persiflage which the Indian gentleman by no means relished. Never saying
+aught but a kind word to any one, he was on fire at the notion that any
+should take a liberty with him.
+
+"A barrister, sir, but without business--a literary man, who can but
+seldom find an opportunity to sell the works of his brains--a gentleman,
+sir, who has met with neglect, perhaps merited, perhaps undeserved, from
+his family. I get my bread as best I may. On that evening I had
+been lecturing on the genius of some of our comic writers, at the
+Parthenopoeon, Hackney. My audience was scanty, perhaps equal to
+my deserts. I came home on foot to an egg and a glass of beer after
+midnight, and witnessed the scene which did you so much honour. What is
+this? I fancy a ludicrous picture of myself"--he had taken up the sketch
+which Clive had been drawing--"I like fun, even at my own expense;
+and can afford to laugh at a joke which is meant in good-humour." This
+speech quite reconciled the honest Colonel. "I am sure the author of
+that, Mr. Bayham, means you or any man no harm. Why! the rascal, sir,
+has drawn me, his own father; and I have sent the drawing to Major
+Hobbs, who is in command of my regiment. Chinnery himself, sir, couldn't
+hit off a likeness better; he has drawn me on horseback, and he has
+drawn me on foot, and he has drawn my friend, Mr. Binnie, who lives
+with me. We have scores of his drawings at my lodgings; and if you will
+favour us by dining with us to-day, and these gentlemen, you shall see
+that you are not the only person caricatured by Clive here."
+
+"I just took some little dinner upstairs, sir. I am a moderate man, and
+can live, if need be, like a Spartan; but to join such good company
+I will gladly use the knife and fork again. You will excuse the
+traveller's dress? I keep a room here, which I use only occasionally,
+and am at present lodging--in the country."
+
+When Honeyman was ready, the Colonel, who had the greatest respect
+for the Church, would not hear of going out of the room before the
+clergyman, and took his arm to walk. Bayham then fell to Mr. Pendennis's
+lot, and they went together. Through Hill Street and Berkeley Square
+their course was straight enough; but at Hay Hill, Mr. Bayham made an
+abrupt tack larboard, engaging in a labyrinth of stables, and walking a
+long way round from Clifford Street, whither we were bound. He hinted
+at a cab, but Pendennis refused to ride, being, in truth, anxious to
+see which way his eccentric companion would steer. "There are reasons,"
+growled Bayham, "which need not be explained to one of your experience,
+why Bond Street must be avoided by some men peculiarly situated. The
+smell of Truefitt's pomatum makes me ill. Tell me, Pendennis, is
+this Indian warrior a rajah of large wealth? Could he, do you think,
+recommend me to a situation in the East India Company? I would gladly
+take any honest post in which fidelity might be useful, genius might
+be appreciated, and courage rewarded. Here we are. The hotel seems
+comfortable. I never was in it before."
+
+When we entered the Colonel's sitting-room at Nerot's, we found the
+waiter engaged in extending the table. "We are a larger party than I
+expected," our host said. "I met my brother Brian on horseback leaving
+cards at that great house in ------ Street."
+
+"The Russian Embassy," says Mr. Honeyman, who knew the town quite well.
+
+"And he said he was disengaged, and would dine with us," continues the
+Colonel.
+
+"Am I to understand, Colonel Newcome," says Mr. Frederick Bayham, "that
+you are related to the eminent banker, Sir Brian Newcome, who gives such
+uncommonly swell parties in Park Lane?"
+
+"What is a swell party?" asks the Colonel, laughing. "I dined with my
+brother last Wednesday; and it was a very grand dinner certainly. The
+Governor-General himself could not give a more splendid entertainment.
+But, do you know, I scarcely had enough to eat? I don't eat side dishes;
+and as for the roast beef of Old England, why, the meat was put on the
+table and whisked away like Sancho's inauguration feast at Barataria.
+We did not dine till nine o'clock. I like a few glasses of claret and a
+cosy talk after dinner; but--well, well"--(no doubt the worthy gentleman
+was accusing himself of telling tales out of school and had come to a
+timely repentance). "Our dinner, I hope, will be different. Jack Binnie
+will take care of that. That fellow is full of anecdote and fun. You
+will meet one or two more of our service; Sir Thomas de Boots, who
+is not a bad chap over a glass of wine; Mr. Pendennis's chum, Mr.
+Warrington, and my nephew, Barnes Newcome--a dry fellow at first, but I
+dare say he has good about him when you know him; almost every man
+has," said the good-natured philosopher. "Clive, you rogue, mind and be
+moderate with the champagne, sir!"
+
+"Champagne's for women," says Clive. "I stick to claret."
+
+"I say, Pendennis," here Bayham remarked, "it is my deliberate opinion
+that F. B. has got into a good thing."
+
+Mr. Pendennis seeing there was a great party was for going home to his
+chambers to dress. "Hm!" says Mr. Bayham, "don't see the necessity. What
+right-minded man looks at the exterior of his neighbour? He looks here,
+sir, and examines there," and Bayham tapped his forehead, which was
+expansive, and then his heart, which he considered to be in the right
+place.
+
+"What is this I hear about dressing?" asks our host. "Dine in your
+frock, my good friend, and welcome, if your dress-coat is in the
+country."
+
+"It is at present at an uncle's," Mr. Bayham said, with great gravity,
+"and I take your hospitality as you offer it, Colonel Newcome, cordially
+and frankly."
+
+Honest Mr. Binnie made his appearance a short time before the appointed
+hour for receiving the guests, arrayed in a tight little pair of
+trousers, and white silk stockings and pumps, his bald head shining like
+a billiard-ball, his jolly gills rosy with good-humour. He was bent
+on pleasure. "Hey, lads!" says he; "but we'll make a night of it. We
+haven't had a night since the farewell dinner off Plymouth."
+
+"And a jolly night it was, James," ejaculates the Colonel.
+
+"Egad, what a song that Tom Norris sings!"
+
+"And your 'Jock o' Hazeldean' is as good as a play, Jack."
+
+"And I think you beat iny one I iver hard in 'Tom Bowling,' yourself,
+Tom!" cries the Colonel's delighted chum. Mr. Pendennis opened the
+eyes of astonishment at the idea of the possibility of renewing these
+festivities, but he kept the lips of prudence closed. And now the
+carriages began to drive up, and the guests of Colonel Newcome to
+arrive.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. In which Thomas Newcome sings his Last Song
+
+
+The earliest comers were the first mate and the medical officer of the
+ship in which the two gentlemen had come to England. The mate was
+a Scotchman: the doctor was a Scotchman; of the gentlemen from the
+Oriental Club, three were Scotchmen.
+
+The Southrons, with one exception, were the last to arrive, and for a
+while we stood looking out of the windows awaiting their coming. The
+first mate pulled out a penknife and arranged his nails. The doctor and
+Mr. Binnie talked of the progress of medicine. Binnie had walked the
+hospitals of Edinburgh before getting his civil appointment to India.
+The three gentlemen from Hanover Square and the Colonel had plenty to
+say about Tom Smith of the Cavalry, and Harry Hall of the Engineers: how
+Topham was going to marry poor little Bob Wallis's widow; how many lakhs
+Barber had brought home, and the like. The tall grey-headed Englishman,
+who had been in the East too, in the King's service, joined for a while
+in this conversation, but presently left it, and came and talked with
+Clive; "I knew your father in India," said the gentleman to the lad;
+"there is not a more gallant or respected officer in that service. I
+have a boy too, a stepson, who has just gone into the army; he is older
+than you, he was born at the end of the Waterloo year, and so was
+a great friend of his and mine, who was at your school, Sir Rawdon
+Crawley."
+
+"He was in Gown Boys, I know," says the boy; "succeeded his uncle Pitt,
+fourth Baronet. I don't know how his mother--her who wrote the hymns,
+you know, and goes to Mr. Honeyman's chapel--comes to be Rebecca, Lady
+Crawley. His father, Colonel Rawdon Crawley, died at Coventry Island,
+in August, 182-, and his uncle, Sir Pitt, not till September here. I
+remember, we used to talk about it at Grey Friars, when I was quite a
+little chap; and there were bets whether Crawley, I mean the young one,
+was a Baronet or not."
+
+"When I sailed to Rigy, Cornel," the first mate was speaking--nor can
+any spelling nor combination of letters of which I am master, reproduce
+this gentleman's accent when he was talking his best--"I racklackt they
+used always to sairve us a drem before denner. And as your frinds are
+kipping the denner, and as I've no watch to-night, I'll jist do as we
+used to do at Rigy. James, my fine fellow, jist look alive and breng
+me a small glass of brandy, will ye? Did ye iver try a brandy cocktail,
+Cornel? Whin I sailed on the New York line, we used jest to make bits
+before denner and--thank ye, James:" and he tossed off a glass of
+brandy.
+
+Here a waiter announces, in a loud voice, "Sir Thomas de Boots," and the
+General enters, scowling round the room according to his fashion, very
+red in the face, very tight in the girth, splendidly attired with a
+choking white neckcloth, a voluminous waistcoat, and his orders on.
+
+"Stars and garters, by jingo!" cries Mr. Frederick Bayham; "I say,
+Pendennis, have you any idea, is the Duke coming? I wouldn't have come
+in these Bluchers if I had known it. Confound it, no--Hoby himself, my
+own bootmaker, wouldn't have allowed poor F. B. to appear in Bluchers,
+if he had known that I was going to meet the Duke. My linen's all right,
+anyhow."
+
+F. B. breathed a thankful prayer for that. Indeed, who but the
+very curious could tell that not F. B.'s, but C. H.'s--Charles
+Honeyman's--was the mark upon that decorous linen?
+
+Colonel Newcome introduced Sir Thomas to every one in the room, as he
+had introduced us all to each other previously, and as Sir Thomas looked
+at one after another, his face was kind enough to assume an expression
+which seemed to ask, "And who the devil are you, sir?" as clearly as
+though the General himself had given utterance to the words. With
+the gentleman in the window talking to Clive he seemed to have some
+acquaintance, and said not unkindly, "How d'you do, Dobbin?"
+
+The carriage of Sir Brian Newcome now drove up, from which the Baronet
+descended in state, leaning upon the arm of the Apollo in plush and
+powder, who closed the shutters of the great coach, and mounted by the
+side of the coachman, laced and periwigged. The Bench of Bishops has
+given up its wigs; cannot the box, too, be made to resign that insane
+decoration? Is it necessary for our comfort, that the men who do our
+work in stable or household should be dressed like Merry-Andrews?
+Enter Sir Brian Newcome, smiling blandly: he greets his brother
+affectionately, Sir Thomas gaily; he nods and smiles to Clive, and
+graciously permits Mr. Pendennis to take hold of two fingers of his
+extended right hand. That gentleman is charmed, of course, with the
+condescension. What man could be otherwise than happy to be allowed
+a momentary embrace of two such precious fingers? When a gentleman so
+favours me, I always ask, mentally, why he has taken the trouble at all,
+and regret that I have not had the presence of mind to poke one finger
+against his two. If I were worth ten thousand a year, I cannot help
+inwardly reflecting, and kept a large account in Threadneedle Street, I
+cannot help thinking he would have favoured me with the whole palm.
+
+The arrival of these two grandees has somehow cast a solemnity over the
+company. The weather is talked about: brilliant in itself, it does not
+occasion very brilliant remarks among Colonel Newcome's guests. Sir
+Brian really thinks it must be as hot as it is in India. Sir Thomas de
+Boots, swelling in his white waistcoat, in the armholes of which his
+thumbs are engaged, smiles scornfully, and wishes Sir Brian had
+ever felt a good sweltering day in the hot winds in India. Sir Brian
+withdraws the untenable proposition that London is as hot as Calcutta.
+Mr. Binnie looks at his watch, and at the Colonel. "We have only your
+nephew, Tom, to wait for," he says; "I think we may make so bold as
+to order the dinner,"--a proposal heartily seconded by Mr. Frederick
+Bayham.
+
+The dinner appears steaming, borne by steaming waiters. The grandees
+take their places, one on each side of the Colonel. He begs Mr. Honeyman
+to say grace, and stands reverentially during that brief ceremony, while
+de Boots looks queerly at him from over his napkin. All the young men
+take their places at the farther end of the table, round about Mr.
+Binnie; and at the end of the second course Mr. Barnes Newcome makes his
+appearance.
+
+Mr. Barnes does not show the slightest degree of disturbance, although
+he disturbs all the company. Soup and fish are brought for him, and
+meat, which he leisurely eats, while twelve other gentlemen are kept
+waiting. We mark Mr. Binnie's twinkling eyes, as they watch the young
+man. "Eh," he seems to say, "but that's just about as free-and-easy a
+young chap as ever I set eyes on." And so Mr. Barnes was a cool young
+chap. That dish is so good, he must really have some more. He discusses
+the second supply leisurely; and turning round simpering to his
+neighbour, says, "I really hope I'm not keeping everybody waiting."
+
+"Hem!" grunts the neighbour, Mr. Bayham; "it doesn't much matter, for
+we had all pretty well done dinner." Barnes takes a note of Mr. Bayham's
+dress--his long frock-coat, the ribbon round his neck; and surveys him
+with an admirable impudence. "Who are these people," thinks he, "my
+uncle has got together?" He bows graciously to the honest Colonel, who
+asks him to take wine. He is so insufferably affable, that every man
+near him would like to give him a beating.
+
+All the time of the dinner the host was challenging everybody to drink
+wine, in his honest old-fashioned way, and Mr. Binnie seconding the
+chief entertainer. Such was the way in England and Scotland when they
+were young men. And when Binnie, asking Sir Brian, receives for reply
+from the Baronet--"Thank you, no, my dear sir. I have exceeded already,
+positively exceeded," the poor discomfited gentleman hardly knows
+whither to apply: but, luckily, Tom Norris, the first mate, comes to his
+rescue, and cries out, "Mr. Binnie, I've not had enough, and I'll drink
+a glass of anything ye like with ye." The fact is, that Mr. Norris has
+had enough. He has drunk bumpers to the health of every member of the
+company; his glass has been filled scores of times by watchful waiters.
+So has Mr. Bayham absorbed great quantities of drink; but without any
+visible effect on that veteran toper. So has young Clive taken more than
+is good for him. His cheeks are flushed and burning; he is chattering
+and laughing loudly at his end of the table. Mr. Warrington eyes the lad
+with some curiosity; and then regards Mr. Barnes with a look of scorn,
+which does not scorch that affable young person.
+
+I am obliged to confess that the mate of the Indiaman, at an early
+period of the dessert, and when nobody had asked him for any such public
+expression of his opinion, insisted on rising and proposing the health
+of Colonel Newcome, whose virtues he lauded outrageously, and whom he
+pronounced to be one of the best of mortal men. Sir Brian looked
+very much alarmed at the commencement of this speech, which the mate
+delivered with immense shrieks and gesticulation: but the Baronet
+recovered during the course of the rambling oration, and at its
+conclusion gracefully tapped the table with one of those patronising
+fingers; and lifting up a glass containing at least a thimbleful of
+claret, said, "My dear brother, I drink your health with all my heart,
+I'm su-ah." The youthful Barnes had uttered many "Hear, hears!" during
+the discourse, with an irony which, with every fresh glass of wine he
+drank, he cared less to conceal. And though Barnes had come late he had
+drunk largely, making up for lost time.
+
+Those ironical cheers, and all his cousin's behaviour during dinner, had
+struck young Clive, who was growing very angry. He growled out remarks
+uncomplimentary to Barnes. His eyes, as he looked towards his kinsman,
+flashed out challenges, of which we who were watching him could see the
+warlike purport. Warrington looked at Bayham and Pendennis with glances
+of apprehension. We saw that danger was brooding, unless the one young
+man could be restrained from his impertinence, and the other from his
+wine.
+
+Colonel Newcome said a very few words in reply to his honest friend the
+chief mate, and there the matter might have ended: but I am sorry to say
+Mr. Binnie now thought it necessary to rise and deliver himself of
+some remarks regarding the King's service, coupled with the name of
+Major-General Sir Thomas de Boots, K.C.B., etc.--the receipt of which
+that gallant officer was obliged to acknowledge in a confusion amounting
+almost to apoplexy. The glasses went whack whack upon the hospitable
+board; the evening set in for public speaking. Encouraged by his last
+effort, Mr. Binnie now proposed Sir Brian Newcome's health; and that
+Baronet rose and uttered an exceedingly lengthy speech, delivered with
+his wine-glass on his bosom.
+
+Then that sad rogue Bayham must get up, and call earnestly and
+respectfully for silence and the chairman's hearty sympathy, for the few
+observations which he had to propose. "Our armies had been drunk
+with proper enthusiasm--such men as he beheld around him deserved the
+applause of all honest hearts, and merited the cheers with which
+their names had been received. ('Hear, hear!' from Barnes Newcome
+sarcastically. 'Hear, hear, HEAR!' fiercely from Clive.) But whilst we
+applauded our army, should we forget a profession still more exalted?
+Yes, still more exalted, I say in the face of the gallant General
+opposite; and that profession, I need not say, is the Church.
+(Applause.) Gentlemen, we have among us one who, while partaking largely
+of the dainties on this festive board, drinking freely of the sparkling
+wine-cup which our gallant hospitality administers to us, sanctifies
+by his presence the feast of which he partakes, inaugurates with
+appropriate benedictions, and graces it, I may say, both before and
+after meat. Gentlemen, Charles Honeyman was the friend of my childhood,
+his father the instructor of my early days. If Frederick Bayham's latter
+life has been chequered by misfortune, it may be that I have forgotten
+the precepts which the venerable parent of Charles Honeyman poured into
+an inattentive ear. He too, as a child, was not exempt from faults; as a
+young man, I am told, not quite free from youthful indiscretions. But in
+this present Anno Domini, we hail Charles Honeyman as a precept and an
+example, as a decus fidei and a lumen ecclesiae (as I told him in the
+confidence of the private circle this morning, and ere I ever thought to
+publish my opinion in this distinguished company). Colonel Newcome and
+Mr. Binnie! I drink to the health of the Reverend Charles Honeyman, A.M.
+May we listen to many more of his sermons, as well as to that admirable
+discourse with which I am sure he is about to electrify us now. May we
+profit by his eloquence; and cherish in our memories the truths which
+come mended from his tongue!" He ceased; poor Honeyman had to rise on
+his legs, and gasp out a few incoherent remarks in reply. Without a book
+before him, the Incumbent of Lady Whittlesea's Chapel was no prophet,
+and the truth is he made poor work of his oration.
+
+At the end of it, he, Sir Brian, Colonel Dobbin, and one of the Indian
+gentlemen quitted the room, in spite of the loud outcries of our
+generous host, who insisted that the party should not break up. "Close
+up, gentlemen," called out honest Newcome, "we are not going to part
+just yet. Let me fill your glass, General. You used to have no objection
+to a glass of wine." And he poured out a bumper for his friend, which
+the old campaigner sucked in with fitting gusto. "Who will give us a
+song? Binnie, give us the 'Laird of Cockpen.' It's capital, my dear
+General. Capital," the Colonel whispered to his neighbour.
+
+Mr. Binnie struck up the "Laird of Cockpen," without, I am bound to say,
+the least reluctance. He bobbed to one man, and he winked to another,
+and he tossed his glass, and gave all the points of his song in a
+manner which did credit to his simplicity and his humour. You haughty
+Southerners little know how a jolly Scotch gentleman can desipere in
+loco, and how he chirrups over his honest cups. I do not say whether it
+was with the song or with Mr. Binnie that we were most amused. It was
+a good commonty, as Christopher Sly says; nor were we sorry when it was
+done.
+
+Him the first mate succeeded; after which came a song from the redoubted
+F. Bayham, which he sang with a bass voice which Lablache might envy,
+and of which the chorus was frantically sung by the whole company. The
+cry was then for the Colonel; on which Barnes Newcome, who had been
+drinking much, started up with something like an oath, crying, "Oh, I
+can't stand this."
+
+"Then leave it, confound you!" said young Clive, with fury in his face.
+"If our company is not good for you, why do you come into it?"
+
+"What's that?" asks Barnes, who was evidently affected by wine. Bayham
+roared "Silence!" and Barnes Newcome, looking round with a tipsy toss of
+the head, finally sate down.
+
+The Colonel sang, as we have said, with a very high voice, using freely
+the falsetto, after the manner of the tenor singers of his day. He chose
+one of his maritime songs, and got through the first verse very well,
+Barnes wagging his head at the chorus, with a "Bravo!" so offensive that
+Fred Bayham, his neighbour, gripped the young man's arm, and told him to
+hold his confounded tongue.
+
+The Colonel began his second verse: and here, as will often happen
+to amateur singers, his falsetto broke down. He was not in the least
+annoyed, for I saw him smile very good-naturedly; and he was going
+to try the verse again, when that unlucky Barnes first gave a sort of
+crowing imitation of the song, and then burst into a yell of laughter.
+Clive dashed a glass of wine in his face at the next minute, glass and
+all; and no one who had watched the young man's behaviour was sorry for
+the insult.
+
+I never saw a kind face express more terror than Colonel Newcome's.
+He started back as if he had himself received the blow from his son.
+"Gracious God!" he cried out. "My boy insult a gentleman at my table!"
+
+"I'd like to do it again," says Clive, whose whole body was trembling
+with anger.
+
+"Are you drunk, sir?" shouted his father.
+
+"The boy served the young fellow right, sir," growled Fred Bayham in
+his deepest voice. "Come along, young man. Stand up straight, and keep
+a civil tongue in your head next time, mind you, when you dine with
+gentlemen. It's easy to see," says Fred, looking round with a knowing
+air, "that this young man hasn't got the usages of society--he's not
+been accustomed to it:" and he led the dandy out.
+
+Others had meanwhile explained the state of the case to the
+Colonel--including Sir Thomas de Boots, who was highly energetic and
+delighted with Clive's spirit; and some were for having the song to
+continue; but the Colonel, puffing his cigar, said, "No. My pipe is out.
+I will never sing again." So this history will record no more of Thomas
+Newcome's musical performances.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. Park Lane
+
+
+Clive woke up the next morning to be aware of a racking headache, and,
+by the dim light of his throbbing eyes, to behold his father with solemn
+face at his bed-foot--a reproving conscience to greet his waking.
+
+"You drank too much wine last night, and disgraced yourself, sir," the
+old soldier said. "You must get up and eat humble pie this morning, my
+boy."
+
+"Humble what, father?" asked the lad, hardly aware of his words, or the
+scene before him. "Oh, I've got such a headache!"
+
+"Serve you right, sir. Many a young fellow has had to go on parade in
+the morning, with a headache earned overnight. Drink this water. Now,
+jump up. Now, dash the water well over your head. There you come! Make
+your toilette quickly; and let us be off, and find cousin Barnes before
+he has left home."
+
+Clive obeyed the paternal orders; dressed himself quickly; and
+descending, found his father smoking his morning cigar in the apartment
+where they had dined the night before, and where the tables still were
+covered with the relics of yesterday's feast--the emptied bottles, the
+blank lamps, the scattered ashes and fruits, the wretched heel-taps
+that have been lying exposed all night to the air. Who does not know the
+aspect of an expired feast?
+
+"The field of action strewed with the dead, my boy," says Clive's
+father. "See, here's the glass on the floor yet, and a great stain of
+claret on the carpet."
+
+"Oh, father!" says Clive, hanging his head down, "I know I shouldn't
+have done it. But Barnes Newcome would provoke the patience of Job; and
+I couldn't bear to have my father insulted."
+
+"I am big enough to fight my own battles, my boy," the Colonel said
+good-naturedly, putting his hand on the lad's damp head. "How your head
+throbs! If Barnes laughed at my singing, depend upon it, sir, there was
+something ridiculous in it, and he laughed because he could not help it.
+If he behaved ill, we should not; and to a man who is eating our salt
+too, and is of our blood."
+
+"He is ashamed of our blood, father," cries Clive, still indignant.
+
+"We ought to be ashamed of doing wrong. We must go and ask his pardon.
+Once when I was a young man in India," the father continued very
+gravely, "some hot words passed at mess--not such an insult as that
+of last night; I don't think I could have quite borne that--and people
+found fault with me for forgiving the youngster who had uttered the
+offensive expressions over his wine. Some of my acquaintance sneered at
+my courage, and that is a hard imputation for a young fellow of spirit
+to bear. But providentially, you see, it was war-time, and very soon
+after I had the good luck to show that I was not a poule mouillee, as
+the French call it; and the man who insulted me, and whom I forgave,
+became my fastest friend, and died by my side--it was poor Jack
+Cutler--at Argaum. We must go and ask Barnes Newcome's pardon, sir, and
+forgive other people's trespasses, my boy, if we hope forgiveness of
+our own." His voice sank down as he spoke, and he bowed his honest head
+reverently. I have heard his son tell the simple story years afterwards,
+with tears in his eyes.
+
+Piccadilly was hardly yet awake the next morning, and the sparkling dews
+and the poor homeless vagabonds still had possession of the grass of
+Hyde Park, as the pair walked up to Sir Brian Newcome's house, where
+the shutters were just opening to let in the day. The housemaid, who was
+scrubbing the steps of the house, and washing its trim feet in a manner
+which became such a polite mansion's morning toilet, knew Master Clive,
+and smiled at him from under her blousy curl-papers, admitting the two
+gentlemen into Sir Brian's dining-room, where they proposed to wait
+until Mr. Barnes should appear. There they sate for an hour looking at
+Lawrence's picture of Lady Anne, leaning over a harp, attired in
+white muslin; at Harlowe's portrait of Mrs. Newcome, with her two sons
+simpering at her knees, painted at a time when the Newcome Brothers
+were not the bald-headed, red-whiskered British merchants with whom the
+reader has made acquaintance, but chubby children with hair flowing
+down their backs, and quaint little swallow-tailed jackets and nankeen
+trousers. A splendid portrait of the late Earl of Kew in his peer's
+robes hangs opposite his daughter and her harp. We are writing of George
+the Fourth's reign; I dare say there hung in the room a fine framed
+print of that great sovereign. The chandelier is in a canvas bag; the
+vast sideboard, whereon are erected open frames for the support of Sir
+Brian Newcome's grand silver trays, which on dinner days gleam on that
+festive board, now groans under the weight of Sir Brian's bluebooks.
+An immense receptacle for wine, shaped like a Roman sarcophagus, lurks
+under the sideboard. Two people sitting at that large dining-table must
+talk very loud so as to make themselves heard across those great slabs
+of mahogany covered with damask. The butler and servants who attend at
+the table take a long time walking round it. I picture to myself two
+persons of ordinary size sitting in that great room at that great table,
+far apart, in neat evening costume, sipping a little sherry, silent,
+genteel, and glum; and think the great and wealthy are not always to
+be envied, and that there may be more comfort and happiness in a snug
+parlour, where you are served by a brisk little maid, than in a great
+dark, dreary dining-hall, where a funereal major-domo and a couple of
+stealthy footmen minister to you your mutton-chops. They come and lay
+the cloth presently, wide as the main-sheet of some tall ammiral. A
+pile of newspapers and letters for the master of the house; the Newcome
+Sentinel, old county paper, moderate conservative, in which our worthy
+townsman and member is praised, his benefactions are recorded, and his
+speeches given at full length; the Newcome Independent, in which our
+precious member is weekly described as a ninny, and informed almost
+every Thursday morning that he is a bloated aristocrat, as he munches
+his dry toast. Heaps of letters, county papers, Times and Morning Herald
+for Sir Brian Newcome; little heaps of letters (dinner and soiree cards
+most of these) and Morning Post for Mr. Barnes. Punctually as eight
+o'clock strikes, that young gentleman comes to breakfast; his father
+will lie yet for another hour; the Baronet's prodigious labours in the
+House of Commons keeping him frequently out of bed till sunrise.
+
+As his cousin entered the room, Clive turned very red, and perhaps a
+faint blush might appear on Barnes's pallid countenance. He came in, a
+handkerchief in one hand, a pamphlet in the other, and both hands being
+thus engaged, he could offer neither to his kinsmen.
+
+"You are come to breakfast, I hope," he said--calling it "weakfast," and
+pronouncing the words with a most languid drawl--"or, perhaps, you
+want to see my father? He is never out of his room till half-past nine.
+Harper, did Sir Brian come in last night before or after me?" Harper,
+the butler, thinks Sir Brian came in after Mr. Barnes.
+
+When that functionary had quitted the room, Barnes turned round to his
+uncle in a candid, smiling way, and said, "The fact is, sir, I don't
+know when I came home myself very distinctly, and can't, of course, tell
+about my father. Generally, you know, there are two candles left in the
+hall, you know; and if there are two, you know, I know of course that
+my father is still at the House. But last night, after that capital song
+you sang, hang me if I know what happened to me. I beg your pardon, sir,
+I'm shocked at having been so overtaken. Such a confounded thing doesn't
+happen to me once in ten years. I do trust I didn't do anything rude to
+anybody, for I thought some of your friends the pleasantest fellows I
+ever met in my life; and as for the claret, 'gad, as if I hadn't had
+enough after dinner, I brought a quantity of it away with me on my
+shirt-front and waistcoat!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, Barnes," Clive said, blushing deeply, "and I'm very
+sorry indeed for what passed; I threw it."
+
+The Colonel, who had been listening with a queer expression of wonder
+and doubt on his face, here interrupted Mr. Barnes. "It was Clive
+that--that spilled the wine over you last night," Thomas Newcome said;
+"the young rascal had drunk a great deal too much wine, and had neither
+the use of his head nor his hands, and this morning I have given him a
+lecture, and he has come to ask your pardon for his clumsiness; and if
+you have forgotten your share in the night's transaction, I hope you
+have forgotten his, and will accept his hand and his apology."
+
+"Apology: There's no apology," cries Barnes, holding out a couple of
+fingers of his hand, but looking towards the Colonel. "I don't know
+what happened any more than the dead. Did we have a row? Were there any
+glasses broken? The best way in such cases is to sweep 'em up. We can't
+mend them."
+
+The Colonel said gravely--"that he was thankful to find that the
+disturbance of the night before had no worse result." He pulled the tail
+of Clive's coat, when that unlucky young blunderer was about to trouble
+his cousin with indiscreet questions or explanations, and checked his
+talk. "The other night you saw an old man in drink, my boy," he said,
+"and to what shame and degradation the old wretch had brought himself.
+Wine has given you a warning too, which I hope you will remember all
+your life; no one has seen me the worse for drink these forty years, and
+I hope both you young gentlemen will take counsel by an old soldier,
+who fully preaches what he practises, and beseeches you to beware of the
+bottle."
+
+After quitting their kinsman, the kind Colonel further improved the
+occasion with his son; and told him out of his own experience many
+stories of quarrels, and duels, and wine;--how the wine had occasioned
+the brawls, and the foolish speech overnight the bloody meeting at
+morning; how he had known widows and orphans made by hot words uttered
+in idle orgies: how the truest honour was the manly confession of wrong;
+and the best courage the courage to avoid temptation. The humble-minded
+speaker, whose advice contained the best of all wisdom, that which comes
+from a gentle and reverent spirit, and a pure and generous heart, never
+for once thought of the effect which he might be producing, but uttered
+his simple say according to the truth within him. Indeed, he spoke out
+his mind pretty resolutely on all subjects which moved or interested
+him; and Clive, his son, and his honest chum, Mr. Binnie, who had a
+great deal more reading and much keener intelligence than the Colonel,
+were amused often at his naive opinion about men, or books, or morals.
+Mr. Clive had a very fine natural sense of humour, which played
+perpetually round his father's simple philosophy with kind and smiling
+comments. Between this pair of friends the superiority of wit lay,
+almost from the very first, on the younger man's side; but, on the other
+hand, Clive felt a tender admiration for his father's goodness, a loving
+delight in contemplating his elder's character, which he has never lost,
+and which in the trials of their future life inexpressibly cheered and
+consoled both of them! Beati illi! O man of the world, whose wearied
+eyes may glance over this page, may those who come after you so regard
+you! O generous boy, who read in it, may you have such a friend to trust
+and cherish in youth, and in future days fondly and proudly to remember!
+
+Some four or five weeks after the quasi-reconciliation between Clive and
+his kinsman, the chief part of Sir Brian Newcome's family were assembled
+at the breakfast-table together, where the meal was taken in common, and
+at the early hour of eight (unless the senator was kept too late in
+the House of Commons overnight); and Lady Anne and her nursery were
+now returned to London again, little Alfred being perfectly set up by
+a month of Brighton air. It was a Thursday morning; on which day of the
+week, it has been said, the Newcome Independent and the Newcome Sentinel
+both made their appearance upon the Baronet's table. The household
+from above and from below; the maids and footmen from the basement; the
+nurses, children, and governesses from the attics; all poured into the
+room at the sound of a certain bell.
+
+I do not sneer at the purpose for which, at that chiming eight-o'clock
+bell, the household is called together. The urns are hissing, the plate
+is shining; the father of the house, standing up, reads from a gilt
+book for three or four minutes in a measured cadence. The members of
+the family are around the table in an attitude of decent reverence;
+the younger children whisper responses at their mother's knees; the
+governess worships a little apart; the maids and the large footmen are
+in a cluster before their chairs, the upper servants performing their
+devotion on the other side of the sideboard; the nurse whisks about the
+unconscious last-born, and tosses it up and down during the ceremony.
+I do not sneer at that--at the act at which all these people are
+assembled--it is at the rest of the day I marvel; at the rest of the
+day, and what it brings. At the very instant when the voice has ceased
+speaking and the gilded book is shut, the world begins again, and for
+the next twenty-three hours and fifty-seven minutes all that household
+is given up to it. The servile squad rises up and marches away to
+its basement, whence, should it happen to be a gala-day, those tall
+gentlemen at present attired in Oxford mixture will issue forth with
+flour plastered on their heads, yellow coats, pink breeches, sky-blue
+waistcoats, silver lace, buckles in their shoes, black silk bags on
+their backs, and I don't know what insane emblems of servility and
+absurd bedizenments of folly. Their very manner of speaking to what we
+call their masters and mistresses will be a like monstrous masquerade.
+You know no more of that race which inhabits the basement floor, than
+of the men and brethren of Timbuctoo, to whom some among us send
+missionaries. If you met some of your servants in the streets (I
+respectfully suppose for a moment that the reader is a person of high
+fashion and a great establishment), you would not know their faces.
+You might sleep under the same roof for half a century and know nothing
+about them. If they were ill, you would not visit them, though you
+would send them an apothecary and of course order that they lacked for
+nothing. You are not unkind, you are not worse than your neighbours.
+Nay, perhaps, if you did go into the kitchen, or to take the tea in
+the servants'-hall, you would do little good, and only bore the folks
+assembled there. But so it is. With those fellow-Christians who have
+been just saying Amen to your prayers, you have scarcely the community
+of Charity. They come, you don't know whence; they think and talk,
+you don't know what; they die, and you don't care, or vice versa. They
+answer the bell for prayers as they answer the bell for coals:
+for exactly three minutes in the day you all kneel together on one
+carpet--and, the desires and petitions of the servants and masters over,
+the rite called family worship is ended.
+
+Exeunt servants, save those two who warm the newspaper, administer the
+muffins, and serve out the tea. Sir Brian reads his letters, and chumps
+his dry toast. Ethel whispers to her mother, she thinks Eliza is looking
+very ill. Lady Anne asks, which is Eliza? Is it the woman that was ill
+before they left town? If she is ill, Mrs. Trotter had better send her
+away. Mrs. Trotter is only a great deal too good-natured. She is always
+keeping people who are ill. Then her ladyship begins to read the Morning
+Post, and glances over the names of the persons who were present at
+Baroness Bosco's ball, and Mrs. Toddle Tompkyns's soiree dansante in
+Belgrave Square.
+
+"Everybody was there," says Barnes, looking over from his paper.
+
+"But who is Mrs. Toddle Tompkyns?" asks mamma. "Who ever heard of a Mrs.
+Toddle Tompkyns? What do people mean by going to such a person?"
+
+"Lady Popinjoy asked the people," Barnes says gravely. "The thing was
+really doosed well done. The woman looked frightened; but she's pretty,
+and I am told the daughter will have a great lot of money."
+
+"Is she pretty, and did you dance with her?" asks Ethel.
+
+"Me dance!" says Mr. Barnes. We are speaking of a time before casinos
+were, and when the British youth were by no means so active in dancing
+practice as at this present period. Barnes resumed the reading of his
+county paper, but presently laid it down, with an execration so brisk
+and loud, that his mother gave a little outcry, and even his father
+looked up from his letters to ask the meaning of an oath so unexpected
+and ungenteel.
+
+"My uncle, the Colonel of sepoys, and his amiable son have been paying a
+visit to Newcome--that's the news which I have the pleasure to announce
+to you," says Mr. Barnes.
+
+"You are always sneering about our uncle," breaks in Ethel, with
+impetuous voice, "and saying unkind things about Clive. Our uncle is a
+dear, good, kind man, and I love him. He came to Brighton to see us, and
+went out every day for hours and hours with Alfred; and Clive, too, drew
+pictures for him. And he is good, and kind, and generous, and honest as
+his father. And Barnes is always speaking ill of him behind his back."
+
+"And his aunt lets very nice lodgings, and is altogether a most
+desirable acquaintance," says Mr. Barnes. "What a shame it is that we
+have not cultivated that branch of the family!"
+
+"My dear fellow," cries Sir Brian, "I have no doubt Miss Honeyman is
+a most respectable person. Nothing is so ungenerous as to rebuke a
+gentleman or a lady on account of their poverty, and I coincide with
+Ethel in thinking that you speak of your uncle and his son in terms
+which, to say the least, are disrespectful."
+
+"Miss Honeyman is a dear little old woman," breaks in Ethel. "Was not
+she kind to Alfred, mamma, and did not she make him nice jelly? And
+a Doctor of Divinity--you know Clive's grandfather was a Doctor of
+Divinity, mamma, there's a picture of him in a wig--is just as good as a
+banker, you know he is."
+
+"Did you bring some of Miss Honeyman's lodging-house cards with you,
+Ethel?" says her brother, "and had we not better hang up one or two in
+Lombard Street; hers and our other relation's, Mrs. Mason?"
+
+"My darling love, who is Mrs. Mason?" asks Lady Anne.
+
+"Another member of the family, ma'am. She was cousin----"
+
+"She was no such thing, sir," roars Sir Brian.
+
+"She was relative and housemaid of my grandfather during his first
+marriage. She acted, I believe, as dry nurse to the distinguished
+Colonel of sepoys, my uncle. She has retired into private life in her
+native town of Newcome, and occupies her latter days by the management
+of a mangle. The Colonel and young pothouse have gone down to spend a
+few days with their elderly relative. It's all here in the paper, by
+Jove!" Mr. Barnes clenched his fist, and stamped upon the newspaper with
+much energy.
+
+"And so they should go down and see her, and so the Colonel should love
+his nurse, and not forget his relations if they are old and poor," cries
+Ethel, with a flush on her face, and tears starting into her eyes.
+
+"Hear what the Newcome papers say about it," shrieks out Mr. Barnes, his
+voice quivering, his little eyes flashing out scorn. "It's in both the
+papers, I dare say. It will be in the Times to-morrow. By ---- it's
+delightful. Our paper only mentions the gratifying circumstance; here is
+the paragraph. 'Lieutenant-Colonel Newcome, C.B., a distinguished
+Indian officer, and younger brother of our respected townsman and
+representative Sir Brian Newcome, Bart., has been staying for the
+last week at the King's Arms, in our city. He has been visited by the
+principal inhabitants and leading gentlemen of Newcome, and has come
+among us, as we understand, in order to pass a few days with an elderly
+relative, who has been living for many years past in great retirement in
+this place.'"
+
+"Well, I see no great harm in that paragraph," says Sir Brian. "I wish
+my brother had gone to the Roebuck, and not to the King's Arms, as the
+Roebuck is our house: but he could not be expected to know much about
+the Newcome inns, as he is a new comer himself. And I think it was very
+right of the people to call on him."
+
+"Now hear what the Independent says, and see if you like that, sir,"
+cries Barnes, grinning fiercely; and he began to read as follows:--
+
+"'Mr. Independent--I was born and bred a Screwcomite, and am naturally
+proud of everybody and everything which bears the revered name of
+Screwcome. I am a Briton and a man, though I have not the honour of a
+vote for my native borough; if I had, you may be sure I would give it
+to our admired and talented representative, Don Pomposo Lickspittle
+Grindpauper, Poor House Agincourt, Screwcome, whose ancestors fought
+with Julius Caesar against William the Conqueror, and whose father
+certainly wielded a cloth yard shaft in London not fifty years ago.
+
+"' Don Pomposo, as you know, seldom favours the town o Screwcome with
+a visit.--Our gentry are not of ancient birth enough to be welcome to a
+Lady Screwcome. Our manufacturers make their money by trade. Oh, fie
+I how can it be supposed that such vulgarians should be received among
+the, aristocratic society of Screwcome House? Two balls in the season,
+and ten dozen o gooseberry, are enough for them.'"
+
+"It's that scoundrel Parrot," burst out Sir Brian; "because I wouldn't
+have any more wine of him--No, it's Vidler, the apothecary. By heavens!
+Lady Anne, I told you it would be so. Why didn't you ask the Miss
+Vidlers to your ball?"
+
+"They were on the list," cries Lady Anne, "three of them; I did
+everything I could; I consulted Mr. Vidler for poor Alfred, and he
+actually stopped and saw the dear child take the physic. Why were they
+not asked to the ball?" cries her ladyship bewildered; "I declare to
+gracious goodness I don't know."
+
+"Barnes scratched their names," cries Ethel, "out of the list, mamma.
+You know you did, Barnes; you said you had gallipots enough."
+
+"I don't think it is like Vidler's writing," said Mr. Barnes, perhaps
+willing to turn the conversation. "I think it must be that villain Duff
+the baker, who made the song about us at the last election;--but hear
+the rest of the paragraph," and he continued to read:--
+
+"'The Screwcomites are at this moment favoured with a visit from a
+gentleman of the Screwcome family, who, having passed all his life
+abroad, is somewhat different from his relatives, whom we all so love
+and honour! This distinguished gentleman, this gallant soldier, has come
+among us, not merely to see our manufactures--in which Screwcome can
+vie with any city in the North--but an old servant and relation of his
+family, whom he is not above recognising; who nursed him in his early
+days; who has been living in her native place for many years, supported
+by the generous bounty of Colonel N------. The gallant officer,
+accompanied by his son, a fine youth, has taken repeated drives round
+our beautiful environs in one of friend Taplow's (of the King's Arms)
+open drags, and accompanied by Mrs. ------, now an aged lady, who
+speaks, with tears in her eyes, of the goodness and gratitude of her
+gallant soldier!
+
+"'One day last week they drove to Screwcome House. Will it be believed
+that, though the house is only four miles distant from our city--though
+Don Pomposo's family have inhabited it these twelve years for four or
+five months every year--Mrs. M------ saw her cousin's house for the
+first time; has never set eyes upon those grandees, except in public
+places, since the day when they honoured the county by purchasing the
+estate which they own?
+
+"'I have, as I repeat, no vote for the borough; but if I had, oh,
+wouldn't I show my respectful gratitude at the next election, and
+plump for Pomposo! I shall keep my eye upon him, and am, Mr.
+Independent,--Your Constant Reader, Peeping Tom.'"
+
+"The spirit of radicalism abroad in this country," said Sir Brian
+Newcome, crushing his egg-shell desperately, "is dreadful, really
+dreadful. We are on the edge of a positive volcano." Down went the
+egg-spoon into its crater. "The worst sentiments are everywhere publicly
+advocated; the licentiousness of the press has reached a pinnacle which
+menaces us with ruin; there is no law which these shameless newspapers
+respect; no rank which is safe from their attacks; no ancient landmark
+which the lava-flood of democracy does not threaten to overwhelm and
+destroy."
+
+"When I was at Spielburg," Barnes Newcome remarked kindly, "I saw
+three long-bearded, putty-faced blaguards pacin up and down a little
+courtyard, and Count Keppenheimer told me they were three damned editors
+of Milanese newspapers, who had had seven years of imprisonment already;
+and last year when Keppenheimer came to shoot at Newcome, I showed him
+that old thief, old Batters, the proprietor of the Independent, and
+Potts, his infernal ally, driving in a dogcart; and I said to him,
+Keppenheimer, I wish we had a place where we could lock up some of our
+infernal radicals of the press, or that you could take off those two
+villains to Spielburg; and as we were passin, that infernal Potts burst
+out laughin in my face, and cut one of my pointers over the head with
+his whip. We must do something with that Independent, sir."
+
+"We must," says the father, solemnly, "we must put it down, Barnes, we
+must put it down."
+
+"I think," says Barnes, "we had best give the railway advertisements to
+Batters."
+
+"But that makes the man of the Sentinel so angry," says the elder
+persecutor of the press.
+
+"Then let us give Tom Potts some shootin at any rate; the ruffian is
+always poachin about our covers as it is. Speers should be written to,
+sir, to keep a look-out upon Batters and that villain his accomplice,
+and to be civil to them, and that sort of thing; and, damn it, to be
+down upon them whenever he sees the opportunity."
+
+During the above conspiracy for bribing or crushing the independence of
+a great organ of British opinion, Miss Ethel Newcome held her tongue;
+but when her papa closed the conversation by announcing solemnly that he
+would communicate with Speers, Ethel turning to her mother said, "Mamma,
+is it true that grandpapa has a relation living at Newcome who is old
+and poor?"
+
+"My darling child, how on earth should I know?" says Lady Anne. "I
+daresay Mr. Newcome had plenty of poor relations."
+
+"I am sure some on your side, Anne, have been good enough to visit me
+at the bank," said Sir Brian, who thought his wife's ejaculation was
+a reflection upon his family, whereas it was the statement of a simple
+fact in natural history. "This person was no relation of my father's
+at all. She was remotely connected with his first wife, I believe. She
+acted as servant to him, and has been most handsomely pensioned by the
+Colonel."
+
+"Who went to her, like a kind, dear, good, brave uncle as he is," cried
+Ethel; "the very day I go to Newcome I'll go to see her." She caught a
+look of negation in her father's eye--"I will go--that is, if papa will
+give me leave," says Miss Ethel.
+
+"By Gad, sir," says Barnes, "I think it is the very best thing she could
+do; and the best way of doing it, Ethel can go with one of the boys
+and take Mrs. What-do-you-call'em a gown, or a tract, or that sort of
+thing, and stop that infernal Independent's mouth."
+
+"If we had gone sooner," said Miss Ethel, simply, "there would not have
+been all this abuse of us in the paper." To which statement her worldly
+father and brother perforce agreeing, we may congratulate good old Mrs.
+Mason upon the new and polite acquaintances she is about to make.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. The Old Ladies
+
+
+The above letter and conversation will show what our active Colonel's
+movements and history had been since the last chapter in which they
+were recorded. He and Clive took the Liverpool mail, and travelled from
+Liverpool to Newcome with a post-chaise and a pair of horses,
+which landed them at the King's Arms. The Colonel delighted in
+post-chaising--the rapid transit through the country amused him and
+cheered his spirits. Besides, had he not Dr. Johnson's word for it, that
+a swift journey in a post-chaise was one of the greatest enjoyments in
+life, and a sojourn in a comfortable inn one of its chief pleasures? In
+travelling he was as happy and noisy as a boy. He talked to the waiters,
+and made friends with the landlord; got all the information which he
+could gather regarding the towns into which he came; and drove about
+from one sight or curiosity to another with indefatigable good-humour
+and interest. It was good for Clive to see men and cities; to visit
+mills, manufactories, country seats, cathedrals. He asked a hundred
+questions regarding all things round about him; and any one caring to
+know who Thomas Newcome was, and what his rank and business, found no
+difficulty in having his questions answered by the simple and kindly
+traveller.
+
+Mine host of the King's Arms, Mr. Taplow aforesaid, knew in five minutes
+who his guest was, and the errand on which he came. Was not Colonel
+Newcome's name painted on all his trunks and boxes? Was not his servant
+ready to answer all questions regarding the Colonel and his son? Newcome
+pretty generally introduced Clive to my landlord, when the latter
+brought his guest his bottle of wine. With old-fashioned cordiality,
+the Colonel would bid the landlord drink a glass of his own liquor, and
+seldom failed to say to him, "This is my son, sir. We are travelling
+together to see the country. Every English gentleman should see his own
+country first, before he goes abroad, as we intend to do afterwards--to
+make the Grand Tour. And I will thank you to tell me what there
+is remarkable in your town, and what we ought to see--antiquities,
+manufactures, and seats in the neighbourhood. We wish to see everything,
+sir--everything. Elaborate diaries of these home tours are still
+extant, in Clive's boyish manuscript and the Colonel's dashing
+handwriting--quaint records of places visited, and alarming accounts of
+inn bills paid."
+
+So Mr. Taplow knew in five minutes that his guest was a brother of Sir
+Brian, their member; and saw the note despatched by an ostler to "Mrs.
+Sarah Mason, Jubilee Row," announcing that the Colonel had arrived, and
+would be with her after his dinner. Mr. Taplow did not think fit to
+tell his guest that the house Sir Brian used--the Blue house--was the
+Roebuck, not the King's Arms. Might not the gentlemen be of different
+politics? Mr. Taplow's wine knew none.
+
+Some of the jolliest fellows in all Newcome use the Boscawen Room at the
+King's Arms as their club, and pass numberless merry evenings and crack
+countless jokes there.
+
+Duff, the baker; old Mr. Vidler, when he can get away from his medical
+labours (and his hand shakes, it must be owned, very much now, and his
+nose is very red); Parrot, the auctioneer; and that amusing dog, Tom
+Potts, the talented reporter of the Independent--were pretty constant
+attendants at the King's Arms; and Colonel Newcome's dinner was not over
+before some of these gentlemen knew what dishes he had had; how he had
+called for a bottle of sherry and a bottle of claret, like a gentleman;
+how he had paid the postboys, and travelled with a servant like a
+top-sawyer; that he was come to shake hands with an old nurse and
+relative of his family. Every one of those jolly Britons thought well of
+the Colonel for his affectionateness and liberality, and contrasted it
+with the behaviour of the Tory Baronet--their representative.
+
+His arrival made a sensation in the place. The Blue Club at the Roebuck
+discussed it, as well as the uncompromising Liberals at the King's Arms.
+Mr. Speers, Sir Brian's agent, did not know how to act, and advised Sir
+Brian by the next night's mail, The Reverend Dr. Bulders, the rector,
+left his card.
+
+Meanwhile it was not gain or business, but only love and gratitude,
+which brought Thomas Newcome to his father's native town. Their dinner
+over, away went the Colonel and Clive, guided by the ostler, their
+previous messenger, to the humble little tenement which Thomas Newcome's
+earliest friend inhabited. The good old woman put her spectacles into
+her Bible, and flung herself into her boy's arms--her boy who was
+more than fifty years old. She embraced Clive still more eagerly and
+frequently than she kissed his father. She did not know her Colonel with
+them whiskers. Clive was the very picture of the dear boy as he had left
+her almost twoscore years ago. And as fondly as she hung on the boy, her
+memory had ever clung round that early time when they were together. The
+good soul told endless tales of her darling's childhood, his frolics and
+beauty. To-day was uncertain to her, but the past was still bright
+and clear. As they sat prattling together over the bright tea-table,
+attended by the trim little maid, whose services the Colonel's bounty
+secured for his old nurse, the kind old creature insisted on having
+Clive by her side. Again and again she would think he was actually her
+own boy, forgetting, in that sweet and pious hallucination, that the
+bronzed face, and thinned hair, and melancholy eyes of the veteran
+before her, were those of her nursling of old days. So for near half the
+space of man's allotted life he had been absent from her, and day and
+night wherever he was, in sickness or health, in sorrow or danger, her
+innocent love and prayers had attended the absent darling. Not in vain,
+not in vain, does he live whose course is so befriended. Let us be
+thankful for our race, as we think of the love that blesses some of
+us. Surely it has something of Heaven in it, and angels celestial may
+rejoice in it, and admire it.
+
+Having nothing whatever to do, our Colonel's movements are of course
+exceedingly rapid, and he has the very shortest time to spend in any
+single place. That evening, Saturday, and the next day, Sunday, when
+he will faithfully accompany his dear old nurse to church. And what
+a festival is that day for her, when she has her Colonel and that
+beautiful brilliant boy of his by her side, and Mr. Hicks, the curate,
+looking at him, and the venerable Dr. Bulders himself eyeing him from
+the pulpit, and all the neighbours fluttering and whispering, to be
+sure, who can be that fine military gentleman, and that splendid young
+man sitting by old Mrs. Mason, and leading her so affectionately out
+of church? That Saturday and Sunday the Colonel will pass with good old
+Mason, but on Monday he must be off; on Tuesday he must be in London,
+he has important business in London,--in fact, Tom Hamilton, of his
+regiment, comes up for election at the Oriental on that day, and on
+such an occasion could Thomas Newcome be absent? He drives away from the
+King's Arms through a row of smirking chambermaids, smiling waiters,
+and thankful ostlers, accompanied to the post-chaise, of which the
+obsequious Taplow shuts the door; and the Boscawen Room pronounces him
+that night to be a trump; and the whole of the busy town, ere the
+next day is over, has heard of his coming and departure, praised his
+kindliness and generosity, and no doubt contrasted it with the different
+behaviour of the Baronet, his brother, who has gone for some time by
+the ignominious sobriquet of Screwcome, in the neighbourhood of his
+ancestral hall.
+
+Dear old nurse Mason will have a score of visits to make and to receive,
+at all of which you may be sure that triumphal advent of the Colonel's
+will be discussed and admired. Mrs. Mason will show her beautiful
+new India shawl, and her splendid Bible with the large print, and the
+affectionate inscription, from Thomas Newcome to his dearest old friend;
+her little maid will exhibit her new gown; the curate will see the
+Bible, and Mrs. Bulders will admire the shawl; and the old friends and
+humble companions of the good old lady, as they take their Sunday
+walks by the pompous lodge-gates of Newcome Park, which stand with the
+Baronet's new-fangled arms over them, gilded, and filagreed, and barred,
+will tell their stories, too, about the kind Colonel and his hard
+brother. When did Sir Brian ever visit a poor old woman's cottage, or
+his bailiff exempt from the rent? What good action, except a few thin
+blankets and beggarly coal and soup tickets, did Newcome Park ever do
+for the poor? And as for the Colonel's wealth, Lord bless you, he's been
+in India these five-and-thirty years; the Baronet's money is a drop in
+the sea to his. The Colonel is the kindest, the best, the richest of
+men. These facts and opinions, doubtless, inspired the eloquent pen
+of "Peeping Tom," when he indited the sarcastic epistle to the Newcome
+Independent, which we perused over Sir Brian Newcome's shoulder in the
+last chapter.
+
+And you may be sure Thomas Newcome had not been many weeks in England
+before good little Miss Honeyman, at Brighton, was favoured with a
+visit from her dear Colonel. The envious Gawler scowling out of his
+bow-window, where the fly-blown card still proclaimed that his lodgings
+were unoccupied, had the mortification to behold a yellow post-chaise
+drive up to Miss Honeyman's door, and having discharged two gentlemen
+from within, trot away with servant and baggage to some house of
+entertainment other than Gawler's. Whilst this wretch was cursing his
+own ill fate, and execrating yet more deeply Miss Honeyman's better
+fortune, the worthy little lady was treating her Colonel to a sisterly
+embrace and a solemn reception. Hannah, the faithful housekeeper, was
+presented, and had a shake of the hand. The Colonel knew all about
+Hannah: ere he had been in England a week, a basket containing pots of
+jam of her confection, and a tongue of Hannah's curing, had arrived
+for the Colonel. That very night when his servant had lodged Colonel
+Newcome's effects at the neighbouring hotel, Hannah was in possession
+of one of the Colonel's shirts, she and her mistress having previously
+conspired to make a dozen of those garments for the family benefactor.
+
+All the presents which Newcome had ever transmitted to his sister-in-law
+from India had been taken out of the cotton and lavender in which
+the faithful creature kept them. It was a fine hot day in June, but I
+promise you Miss Honeyman wore her blazing scarlet Cashmere shawl; her
+great brooch, representing the Taj of Agra, was in her collar; and her
+bracelets (she used to say, I am given to understand they are called
+bangles, my dear, by the natives) decorated the sleeves round her lean
+old hands, which trembled with pleasure as they received the kind grasp
+of the Colonel of colonels. How busy those hands had been that morning!
+What custards they had whipped!--what a triumph of pie-crusts they had
+achieved! Before Colonel Newcome had been ten minutes in the house, the
+celebrated veal-cutlets made their appearance. Was not the whole house
+adorned in expectation of his coming? Had not Mr. Kuhn, the affable
+foreign gentleman of the first-floor lodgers, prepared a French dish?
+Was not Betty on the look-out, and instructed to put the cutlets on
+the fire at the very moment when the Colonel's carriage drove up to her
+mistress's door? The good woman's eyes twinkled, the kind old hand and
+voice shook, as, holding up a bright glass of Madeira, Miss Honeyman
+drank the Colonel's health. "I promise you, my dear Colonel," says she,
+nodding her head, adorned with a bristling superstructure of lace and
+ribbons, "I promise you, that I can drink your health in good wine!" The
+wine was of his own sending, and so were the China fire-screens, and the
+sandalwood workbox, and the ivory cardcase, and those magnificent pink
+and white chessmen, carved like little sepoys and mandarins, with the
+castles on elephants' backs, George the Third and his queen in pink
+ivory, against the Emperor of China and lady in white--the delight
+of Clive's childhood, the chief ornament of the old spinster's
+sitting-room.
+
+Miss Honeyman's little feast was pronounced to be the perfection of
+cookery; and when the meal was over, came a noise of little feet at the
+parlour door, which being opened, there appeared, first, a tall nurse
+with a dancing baby; second and third, two little girls with little
+frocks, little trousers, long ringlets, blue eyes, and blue ribbons to
+match; fourth, Master Alfred, now quite recovered from his illness, and
+holding by the hand, fifth, Miss Ethel Newcome, blushing like a rose.
+
+Hannah, grinning, acted as mistress of the ceremonies, calling out the
+names of "Miss Newcomes, Master Newcomes, to see the Colonel, if you
+please, ma'am," bobbing a curtsey, and giving a knowing nod to Master
+Clive, as she smoothed her new silk apron. Hannah, too, was in new
+attire, all crisp and rustling, in the Colonel's honour. Miss Ethel did
+not cease blushing as she advanced towards her uncle; and the honest
+campaigner started up, blushing too. Mr. Clive rose also, as little
+Alfred, of whom he was a great friend, ran towards him. Clive rose,
+laughed, nodded at Ethel, and ate gingerbread nuts all at the same time.
+As for Colonel Thomas Newcome and his niece, they fell in love with
+each other instantaneously, like Prince Camaralzaman and the Princess of
+China.
+
+I have turned away one artist: the poor creature was utterly incompetent
+to depict the sublime, graceful, and pathetic personages and events with
+which this history will most assuredly abound, and I doubt whether even
+the designer engaged in his place can make such a portrait of Miss Ethel
+Newcome as shall satisfy her friends and her own sense of justice. That
+blush which we have indicated, he cannot render. How are you to copy
+it with a steel point and a ball of printer's ink? That kindness which
+lights up the Colonel's eyes; gives an expression to the very wrinkles
+round about them; shines as a halo round his face;--what artist can
+paint it? The painters of old, when they portrayed sainted personages,
+were fain to have recourse to compasses and gold leaf--as if celestial
+splendour could be represented by Dutch metal! As our artist cannot come
+up to this task, the reader will be pleased to let his fancy paint for
+itself the look of courtesy for a woman, admiration for a young beauty,
+protection for an innocent child, all of which are expressed upon the
+Colonel's kind face, as his eyes are set upon Ethel Newcome.
+
+"Mamma has sent us to bid you welcome to England, uncle," says Miss
+Ethel, advancing, and never thinking for a moment of laying aside that
+fine blush which she brought into the room, and which is her pretty
+symbol of youth, and modesty, and beauty.
+
+He took a little slim white hand and laid it down on his brown palm,
+where it looked all the whiter: he cleared the grizzled mustachio from
+his mouth, and stooping down he kissed the little white hand with a
+great deal of grace and dignity. There was no point of resemblance, and
+yet a something in the girl's look, voice, and movements, which caused
+his heart to thrill, and an image out of the past to rise up and salute
+him. The eyes which had brightened his youth (and which he saw in his
+dreams and thoughts for faithful years afterwards, as though they looked
+at him out of heaven) seemed to shine upon him after five-and-thirty
+years. He remembered such a fair bending neck and clustering hair, such
+a light foot and airy figure, such a slim hand lying in his own--and now
+parted from it with a gap of ten thousand long days between. It is an
+old saying, that we forget nothing; as people in fever begin suddenly to
+talk the language of their infancy we are stricken by memory sometimes,
+and old affections rush back on us as vivid as in the time when they
+were our daily talk, when their presence gladdened our eyes, when their
+accents thrilled in our ears, when with passionate tears and grief we
+flung ourselves upon their hopeless corpses. Parting is death, at least
+as far as life is concerned. A passion comes to an end; it is carried
+off in a coffin, or weeping in a post-chaise; it drops out of life one
+way or other, and the earthclods close over it, and we see it no more.
+But it has been part of our souls, and it is eternal. Does a mother
+not love her dead infant? a man his lost mistress? with the fond wife
+nestling at his side,--yes, with twenty children smiling round her knee.
+No doubt, as the old soldier held the girl's hand in his, the little
+talisman led him back to Hades, and he saw Leonora.----
+
+"How do you do, uncle?" say girls Nos. 2 and 3 in a pretty little
+infantile chorus. He drops the talisman, he is back in common life
+again--the dancing baby in the arms of the bobbing nurse babbles a
+welcome. Alfred looks up for a while at his uncle in the white trousers,
+and then instantly proposes that Clive should make him some drawings;
+and is on his knees at the next moment. He is always climbing on
+somebody or something, or winding over chairs, curling through
+banisters, standing on somebody's head, or his own head,--as his
+convalescence advances, his breakages are fearful. Miss Honeyman and
+Hannah will talk about his dilapidations for years after the little chap
+has left them. When he is a jolly young officer in the Guards, and comes
+to see them at Brighton, they will show him the blue-dragon Chayny jar,
+on which he would sit, and which he cried so fearfully upon breaking.
+
+When this little party has gone out smiling to take its walk on the
+sea-shore, the Colonel sits down and resumes the interrupted dessert.
+Miss Honeyman talks of the children and their mother, and the merits of
+Mr. Kuhn, and the beauty of Miss Ethel, glancing significantly towards
+Clive, who has had enough of gingerbread nuts and dessert and wine, and
+whose youthful nose is by this time at the window. What kind-hearted
+woman, young or old, does not love match-making?
+
+The Colonel, without lifting his eyes from the table, says "she reminds
+him of--of somebody he knew once."
+
+"Indeed?" cries Miss Honeyman, and thinks Emma must have altered very
+much after going to India, for she had fair hair, and white eyelashes,
+and not a pretty foot certainly--but, my dear good lady, the Colonel is
+not thinking of the late Mrs. Casey.
+
+He has taken a fitting quantity of the Madeira, the artless greeting
+of the people here, young and old, has warmed his heart, and he goes
+upstairs to pay a visit to his sister-in-law, to whom he makes his most
+courteous bow as becomes a lady of her rank. Ethel takes her place quite
+naturally beside him during his visit. Where did he learn those fine
+manners which all of us who knew him admired in him? He had a natural
+simplicity, an habitual practice of kind and generous thoughts; a pure
+mind, and therefore above hypocrisy and affectation--perhaps those
+French people with whom he had been intimate in early life had imparted
+to him some of the traditional graces of their vieille tour--certainly
+his half-brothers had inherited none such. "What is this that Barnes has
+written about his uncle, that the Colonel is ridiculous?" Lady Anne said
+to her daughter that night. "Your uncle is adorable. I have never seen
+a more perfect grand Seigneur. He puts me in mind of my grandfather,
+though grandpapa's grand manner was more artificial, and his voice
+spoiled by snuff. See the Colonel. He smokes round the garden, but with
+what perfect grace! This is the man Uncle Hobson, and your poor dear
+papa, have represented to us as a species of bear! Mr. Newcome, who has
+himself the ton of a waiter! The Colonel is perfect. What can Barnes
+mean by ridiculing him? I wish Barnes had such a distinguished air; but
+he is like his poor dear papa. Que voulez-vous, my love? The Newcomes
+are honourable: the Newcomes are wealthy: but distinguished--no. I never
+deluded myself with that notion when I married your poor dear papa.
+At once I pronounce Colonel Newcome a person to be in every way
+distinguished by us. On our return to London I shall present him to
+all our family: poor good man! let him see that his family have some
+presentable relations besides those whom he will meet at Mrs. Newcome's,
+in Bryanstone Square. You must go to Bryanstone Square immediately we
+return to London. You must ask your cousins and their governess, and
+we will give them a little party. Mrs. Newcome is insupportable, but we
+must never forsake our relatives, Ethel. When you come out you will have
+to dine there, and to go to her ball. Every young lady in your position
+in the world has sacrifices to make, and duties to her family to
+perform. Look at me. Why did I marry your poor dear papa? From duty. Has
+your Aunt Fanny, who ran away with Captain Canonbury, been happy? They
+have eleven children, and are starving at Boulogne. Think of three of
+Fanny's boys in yellow stockings at the Bluecoat School. Your papa got
+them appointed. I am sure my papa would have gone mad if he had seen
+that day! She came with one of the poor wretches to Park Lane: but I
+could not see them. My feelings would not allow me. When my maid,--I had
+a French maid then, Louise, you remember; her conduct was abominable: so
+was Preville's--when she came and said that my Lady Fanny was below
+with a young gentleman, qui portait des bas jaunes, I could not see the
+child. I begged her to come up in my room: and, absolutely that I might
+not offend her, I went to bed. That wretch Louise met her at Boulogne
+and told her afterwards. Good night, we must not stand chattering here
+any more. Heaven bless you, my darling! Those are the Colonel's windows!
+Look, he is smoking on his balcony--that must be Clive's room. Clive is
+a good kind boy. It was very kind of him to draw so many pictures for
+Alfred. Put the drawings away, Ethel. Mr. Smee saw some in Park Lane,
+and said they showed remarkable genius. What a genius your Aunt Emily
+had for drawing; but it was flowers! I had no genius in particular, so
+mamma used to say--and Doctor Belper said, 'My dear Lady Walham' (it was
+before my grandpapa's death), 'has Miss Anne a genius for sewing buttons
+and making puddens?'--puddens he pronounced it. Goodnight, my own love.
+Blessings, blessings, on my Ethel!"
+
+The Colonel from his balcony saw the slim figure of the retreating girl,
+and looked fondly after her: and as the smoke of his cigar floated in
+the air, he formed a fine castle in it, whereof Clive was lord, and that
+pretty Ethel, lady. "What a frank, generous, bright young creature
+is yonder!" thought he. "How cheery and gay she is; how good to Miss
+Honeyman, to whom she behaved with just the respect that was the old
+lady's due--how affectionate with her brothers and sisters! What a sweet
+voice she has! What a pretty little white hand it is! When she gave
+it me, it looked like a little white bird lying in mine. I must wear
+gloves, by Jove I must, and my coat is old-fashioned, as Binnie says;
+what a fine match might be made between that child and Clive! She
+reminds me of a pair of eyes I haven't seen these forty years. I would
+like to have Clive married to her; to see him out of the scrapes and
+dangers that young fellows encounter, and safe with such a sweet girl as
+that. If God had so willed it, I might have been happy myself, and could
+have made a woman happy. But the Fates were against me. I should like to
+see Clive happy, and then say Nunc dimittis. I shan't want anything more
+to-night, Kean, and you can go to bed."
+
+"Thank you, Colonel," says Kean, who enters, having prepared his
+master's bedchamber, and is retiring when the Colonel calls after him:
+
+"I say, Kean, is that blue coat of mine very old?"
+
+"Uncommon white about the seams, Colonel," says the man.
+
+"Is it older than other people's coats?"--Kean is obliged gravely to
+confess that the Colonel's coat is very queer.
+
+"Get me another coat, then--see that I don't do anything or wear
+anything unusual. I have been so long out of Europe, that I don't know
+the customs here, and am not above learning."
+
+Kean retires, vowing that his master is an old trump; which opinion
+he had already expressed to Mr. Kuhn, Lady Hanne's man, over a long
+potation which those two gentlemen had taken together. And, as all of
+us, in one way or another, are subject to this domestic criticism, from
+which not the most exalted can escape, I say, lucky is the man whose
+servants speak well of him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. In which Mr. Sherrick lets his House in Fitzroy Square
+
+
+In spite of the sneers of the Newcome Independent, and the Colonel's
+unlucky visit to his nurse's native place, he still remained in high
+favour in Park Lane; where the worthy gentleman paid almost daily
+visits, and was received with welcome and almost affection, at least
+by the ladies and the children of the house. Who was it that took the
+children to Astley's but Uncle Newcome? I saw him there in the midst
+of a cluster of these little people, all children together. He laughed
+delighted at Mr. Merryman's jokes in the ring. He beheld the Battle
+of Waterloo with breathless interest, and was amazed--amazed, by Jove,
+sir--at the prodigious likeness of the principal actor to the Emperor
+Napoleon; whose tomb he had visited on his return from India, as it
+pleased him to tell his little audience who sat clustering round him:
+the little girls, Sir Brian's daughters, holding each by a finger of his
+honest hands; young Masters Alfred and Edward clapping and hurrahing
+by his side; while Mr. Clive and Miss Ethel sat in the back of the
+box enjoying the scene, but with that decorum which belonged to their
+superior age and gravity. As for Clive, he was in these matters much
+older than the grizzled old warrior his father. It did one good to hear
+the Colonel's honest laughs at clown's jokes, and to see the tenderness
+and simplicity with which he watched over this happy brood of young
+ones. How lavishly did he supply them with sweetmeats between the
+acts! There he sat in the midst of them, and ate an orange himself with
+perfect satisfaction. I wonder what sum of money Mr. Barnes Newcome
+would have taken to sit for five hours with his young brothers and
+sisters in a public box at the theatre and eat an orange in the face of
+the audience? When little Alfred went to Harrow, you may be sure Colonel
+Newcome and Clive galloped over to see the little man, and tipped him
+royally. What money is better bestowed than that of a schoolboy's tip?
+How the kindness is recalled by the recipient in after days! It blesses
+him that gives and him that takes. Remember how happy such benefactions
+made you in your own early time, and go off on the very first fine day
+and tip your nephew at school!
+
+The Colonel's organ of benevolence was so large, that he would have
+liked to administer bounties to the young folks his nephews and nieces
+in Bryanstone Square, as well as to their cousins in Park Lane; but
+Mrs. Newcome was a great deal too virtuous to admit of such spoiling of
+children. She took the poor gentleman to task for an attempt upon her
+boys when those lads came home for their holidays, and caused them
+ruefully to give back the shining gold sovereign with which their uncle
+had thought to give them a treat.
+
+"I do not quarrel with other families," says she; "I do not allude to
+other families;" meaning, of course, that she did not allude to Park
+Lane. "There may be children who are allowed to receive money from their
+father's grown-up friends. There may be children who hold out their
+hands for presents, and thus become mercenary in early life. I make no
+reflections with regard to other households. I only look, and think,
+and pray for the welfare of my own beloved ones. They want for nothing.
+Heaven has bounteously furnished us with every comfort, with every
+elegance, with every luxury. Why need we be bounden to others, who have
+been ourselves so amply provided? I should consider it ingratitude,
+Colonel Newcome, want of proper spirit, to allow my boys to accept
+money. Mind, I make no allusions. When they go to school they receive
+a sovereign a-piece from their father, and a shilling a week, which is
+ample pocket-money. When they are at home, I desire that they may have
+rational amusements: I send them to the Polytechnic with Professor
+Hickson, who kindly explains to them some of the marvels of science and
+the wonders of machinery. I send them to the picture-galleries and the
+British Museum. I go with them myself to the delightful lectures at the
+institution in Albemarle Street. I do not desire that they should attend
+theatrical exhibitions. I do not quarrel with those who go to plays; far
+from it! Who am I that I should venture to judge the conduct of others?
+When you wrote from India, expressing a wish that your boy should be
+made acquainted with the works of Shakspeare, I gave up my own opinion
+at once. Should I interpose between a child and his father? I encouraged
+the boy to go to the play, and sent him to the pit with one of our
+footmen."
+
+"And you tipped him very handsomely, my dear Maria, too," said the
+good-natured Colonel, breaking in upon her sermon; but Virtue was not to
+be put off in that way.
+
+"And why, Colonel Newcome," Virtue exclaimed, laying a pudgy little hand
+on its heart; "why did I treat Clive so? Because I stood towards him
+in loco parentis; because he was as a child to me, and I to him as
+a mother. I indulged him more than my own. I loved him with a true
+maternal tenderness. Then he was happy to come to our house: then
+perhaps Park Lane was not so often open to him as Bryanstone Square: but
+I make no allusions. Then he did not go six times to another house for
+once that he came to mine. He was a simple, confiding, generous boy, was
+not dazzled by worldly rank or titles of splendour. He could not find
+these in Bryanstone Square. A merchant's wife, a country lawyer's
+daughter--I could not be expected to have my humble board surrounded
+by titled aristocracy; I would not if I could. I love my own family
+too well; I am too honest, too simple,--let me own it at once, Colonel
+Newcome, too proud! And now, now his father has come to England, and I
+have resigned him, and he meets with no titled aristocrats at my house,
+and he does not come here any more."
+
+Tears rolled out of her little eyes as she spoke, and she covered her
+round face with her pocket-handkerchief.
+
+Had Colonel Newcome read the paper that morning, he might have seen
+amongst what are called the fashionable announcements, the cause,
+perhaps, why his sister-in-law had exhibited so much anger and virtue.
+The Morning Post stated, that yesterday Sir Brian and Lady Newcome
+entertained at dinner His Excellency the Persian Ambassador and
+Bucksheesh Bey; the Right Honourable Cannon Rowe, President of the Board
+of Control, and Lady Louisa Rowe; the Earl of H------, the Countess
+of Kew, the Earl of Kew, Sir Currey Baughton, Major-General and Mrs.
+Hooker, Colonel Newcome, and Mr. Horace Fogey. Afterwards her ladyship
+had an assembly, which was attended by, etc. etc.
+
+This catalogue of illustrious names had been read by Mr. Newcome to
+her spouse at breakfast, with such comments as she was in the habit of
+making.
+
+"The President of the Board of Control, the Chairman of the Court of
+Directors, and Ex-Governor-General of India, and a whole regiment
+of Kews. By Jove, Maria, the Colonel is in good company," cries Mr.
+Newcome, with a laugh. "That's the sort of dinner you should have given
+him. Some people to talk about India. When he dined with us he was put
+between old Lady Wormely and Professor Roots. I don't wonder at his
+going to sleep after dinner. I was off myself once or twice during that
+confounded long argument between Professor Roots and Dr. Windus. That
+Windus is the deuce to talk."
+
+"Dr. Windus is a man of science, and his name is of European celebrity!"
+says Maria solemnly. "Any intellectual person would prefer such company
+to the titled nobodies into whose family your brother has married."
+
+"There you go, Polly; you are always having a shy at Lady Anne and her
+relations," says Mr. Newcome, good-naturedly.
+
+"A shy! How can you use such vulgar words, Mr. Newcome? What have I to
+do with Sir Brian's titled relations? I do not value nobility. I prefer
+people of science--people of intellect--to all the rank in the world."
+
+"So you do," says Hobson her spouse. "You have your party--Lady Anne
+has her party. You take your line--Lady Anne takes her line. You are a
+superior woman, my dear Polly; every one knows that. I'm a plain country
+farmer, I am. As long as you are happy, I am happy too. The people you
+get to dine here may talk Greek or algebra for what I care. By Jove, my
+dear, I think you can hold your own with the best of them."
+
+"I have endeavoured by assiduity to make up for time lost, and an early
+imperfect education," says Mrs. Newcome. "You married a poor country
+lawyer's daughter. You did not seek a partner in the Peerage, Mr.
+Newcome."
+
+"No, no. Not such a confounded flat as that," cries Mr. Newcome,
+surveying his plump partner behind her silver teapot, with eyes of
+admiration.
+
+"I had an imperfect education, but I knew its blessings, and have, I
+trust, endeavoured to cultivate the humble talents which Heaven has
+given me, Mr. Newcome."
+
+"Humble, by Jove!" exclaims the husband. "No gammon of that sort, Polly.
+You know well enough that you are a superior woman. I ain't a superior
+man. I know that: one is enough in a family. I leave the reading to you,
+my dear. Here comes my horses. I say, I wish you'd call on Lady Anne
+to-day. Do go and see her, now that's a good girl. I know she is
+flighty, and that; and Brian's back is up a little. But he ain't a bad
+fellow; and I wish I could see you and his wife better friends."
+
+On his way to the City, Mr. Newcome rode to look at the new house,
+No. 120 Fitzroy Square, which his brother, the Colonel, had taken in
+conjunction with that Indian friend of his, Mr. Binnie. Shrewd old cock,
+Mr. Binnie. Has brought home a good bit of money from India. Is looking
+out for safe investments. Has been introduced to Newcome Brothers. Mr.
+Newcome thinks very well of the Colonel's friend.
+
+The house is vast, but, it must be owned, melancholy. Not long since
+it was a ladies' school, in an unprosperous condition. The scar left by
+Madame Latour's brass plate may still be seen on the tall black door,
+cheerfully ornamented in the style of the end of the last century, with
+a funereal urn in the centre of the entry, and garlands, and the skulls
+of rams at each corner. Madame Latour, who at one time actually kept a
+large yellow coach, and drove her parlour young ladies in the
+Regent's Park, was an exile from her native country (Islington was her
+birthplace, and Grigson her paternal name), and an outlaw at the suit
+of Samuel Sherrick: that Mr. Sherrick whose wine-vaults undermine Lady
+Whittlesea's Chapel where the eloquent Honeyman preaches.
+
+The house is Mr. Sherrick's house. Some say his name is Shadrach,
+and pretend to have known him as an orange-boy, afterwards as a
+chorus-singer in the theatres, afterwards as secretary to a great
+tragedian. I know nothing of these stories. He may or he may not be
+a partner of Mr. Campion, of Shepherd's Inn: he has a handsome villa,
+Abbey Road, St. John's Wood, entertains good company, rather loud, of
+the sporting sort, rides and drives very showy horses, has boxes at the
+Opera whenever he likes, and free access behind the scenes: is handsome,
+dark, bright-eyed, with a quantity of jewellery, and a tuft to his chin;
+sings sweetly sentimental songs after dinner. Who cares a fig what was
+the religion of Mr. Sherrick's ancestry, or what the occupation of his
+youth? Mr. Honeyman, a most respectable man surely, introduced Sherrick
+to the Colonel and Binnie.
+
+Mr. Sherrick stocked their cellar with some of the wine over which
+Honeyman preached such lovely sermons. It was not dear; it was not bad
+when you dealt with Mr. Sherrick for wine alone. Going into his market
+with ready money in your hand, as our simple friends did, you were
+pretty fairly treated by Mr. Sherrick.
+
+The house being taken, we may be certain there was fine amusement for
+Clive, Mr. Binnie, and the Colonel, in frequenting the sales, in the
+inspection of upholsterers' shops, and the purchase of furniture for the
+new mansion. It was like nobody else's house. There were three masters
+with four or five servants over them. Kean for the Colonel and his son;
+a smart boy with boots for Mr. Binnie; Mrs. Kean to cook and keep house,
+with a couple of maids under her. The Colonel, himself, was great at
+making hash mutton, hot-pot, curry, and pillau. What cosy pipes did we
+not smoke in the dining-room, in the drawing-room, or where we would!
+What pleasant evenings did we not have with Mr Binnie's books and
+Schiedam! Then there were the solemn state dinners, at most of which the
+writer of this biography had a corner.
+
+Clive had a tutor--Cirindey of Corpus--whom we recommended to him, and
+with whom the young gentleman did not fatigue his brains very much; but
+his great forte decidedly lay in drawing. He sketched the horses, he
+sketched the dogs; all the servants from the blear-eyed boot-boy to the
+rosy-cheeked lass, Mrs. Kean's niece, whom that virtuous housekeeper
+was always calling to come downstairs. He drew his father in all
+postures--asleep, on foot, on horseback; and jolly little Mr. Binnie,
+with his plump legs on a chair, or jumping briskly on the back of the
+cob which he rode. He should have drawn the pictures for this book, but
+that he no longer condescends to make sketches. Young Ridley was his
+daily friend now; and Grindley, his classics and mathematics over in
+the morning, and the ride with father over, this pair of young men would
+constantly attend Gandish's Drawing Academy, where, to be sure, Ridley
+passed many hours at work on his art, before his young friend and patron
+could be spared from his books to his pencil.
+
+"Oh," says Clive, "if you talk to him now about those early days, it was
+a jolly time! I do not believe there was any young fellow in London so
+happy." And there hangs up in his painting-room now, a head, painted at
+one sitting, of a man rather bald, with hair touched with grey, with
+a large moustache, and a sweet mouth half smiling beneath it, and
+melancholy eyes; and Clive shows that portrait of their grandfather to
+his children, and tells them that the whole world never saw a nobler
+gentleman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. A School of Art
+
+
+British art either finds her peculiar nourishment in melancholy, and
+loves to fix her abode in desert places; or it may be her purse is but
+slenderly furnished, and she is forced to put up with accommodations
+rejected by more prosperous callings. Some of the most dismal quarters
+of the town are colonised by her disciples and professors. In walking
+through streets which may have been gay and polite when ladies' chairmen
+jostled each other on the pavement, and linkboys with their torches
+lighted the beaux over the mud, who has not remarked the artist's
+invasion of those regions once devoted to fashion and gaiety?
+Centre windows of drawing-rooms are enlarged so as to reach up into
+bedrooms--bedrooms where Lady Betty has had her hair powdered, and where
+the painter's north-light now takes possession of the place which
+her toilet-table occupied a hundred years ago. There are degrees in
+decadence: after the Fashion chooses to emigrate, and retreats from
+Soho or Bloomsbury, let us say, to Cavendish Square, physicians come
+and occupy the vacant houses, which still have a respectable look, the
+windows being cleaned, and the knockers and plates kept bright, and
+the doctor's carriage rolling round the square, almost as fine as the
+countess's, which has whisked away her ladyship to other regions. A
+boarding-house mayhap succeeds the physician, who has followed after
+his sick folks into the new country; and then Dick Tinto comes with
+his dingy brass plate, and breaks in his north window, and sets up his
+sitters' throne. I love his honest moustache, and jaunty velvet jacket;
+his queer figure, his queer vanities, and his kind heart. Why should he
+not suffer his ruddy ringlets to fall over his shirt-collar? Why should
+he deny himself his velvet? it is but a kind of fustian which costs him
+eighteenpence a yard. He is naturally what he is, and breaks out into
+costume as spontaneously as a bird sings, or a bulb bears a tulip. And
+as Dick, under yonder terrific appearance of waving cloak, bristling
+beard, and shadowy sombrero, is a good kindly simple creature, got up
+at a very cheap rate, his life is so consistent with his dress; he gives
+his genius a darkling swagger, and a romantic envelope, which, being
+removed, you find, not a bravo, but a kind chirping soul; not a moody
+poet avoiding mankind for the better company of his own great thoughts,
+but a jolly little chap who has an aptitude for painting brocade gowns,
+a bit of armour (with figures inside them), or trees and cattle, or
+gondolas and buildings, or what not; an instinct for the picturesque,
+which exhibits itself in his works, and outwardly on his person;
+beyond this, a gentle creature loving his friends, his cups, feasts,
+merrymakings, and all good things. The kindest folks alive I have
+found among those scowling whiskeradoes. They open oysters with their
+yataghans, toast muffins on their rapiers, and fill their Venice glasses
+with half-and-half. If they have money in their lean purses, be sure
+they have a friend to share it. What innocent gaiety, what jovial
+suppers on threadbare cloths, and wonderful songs after; what pathos,
+merriment, humour does not a man enjoy who frequents their company! Mr.
+Clive Newcome, who has long since shaved his beard, who has become a
+family man, and has seen the world in a thousand different phases, avers
+that his life as an art-student at home and abroad was the pleasantest
+part of his whole existence. It may not be more amusing in the telling
+than the chronicle of a feast, or the accurate report of two lovers'
+conversation; but the biographer, having brought his hero to the period
+of his life, is bound to relate it, before passing to other occurrences
+which are to be narrated in their turn.
+
+We may be sure the boy had many conversations with his affectionate
+guardian as to the profession which he should follow. As regarded
+mathematical and classical learning, the elder Newcome was forced to
+admit, that out of every hundred boys, there were fifty as clever as
+his own, and at least fifty more industrious; the army in time of peace
+Colonel Newcome thought a bad trade for a young fellow so fond of ease
+and pleasure as his son: his delight in the pencil was manifest to all.
+Were not his school-books full of caricatures of the masters? Whilst
+his tutor, Grindley, was lecturing him, did he not draw Grindley
+instinctively under his very nose? A painter Clive was determined to be,
+and nothing else; and Clive, being then some sixteen years of age, began
+to study the art, en regle, under the eminent Mr. Gandish, of Soho.
+
+It was that well-known portrait-painter, Alfred Smee, Esq., R.A., who
+recommended Gandish to Colonel Newcome, one day when the two gentlemen
+met at dinner at Lady Anne Newcome's table. Mr. Smee happened to examine
+some of Clive's drawings, which the young fellow had executed for his
+cousins. Clive found no better amusement than in making pictures for
+them, and would cheerfully pass evening after evening in that diversion.
+He had made a thousand sketches of Ethel before a year was over; a year,
+every day of which seemed to increase the attractions of the fair young
+creature, develop her nymph-like form, and give her figure fresh graces.
+He also of course drew Alfred and the nursery in general, Aunt Anne and
+the Blenheim spaniels, and Mr. Kuhn and his earrings, the majestic
+John bringing in the coal-scuttle, and all persons or objects in that
+establishment with which he was familiar. "What a genius the lad has,"
+the complimentary Mr. Smee averred; "what a force and individuality
+there is in all his drawings! Look at his horses! capital, by Jove,
+capital! and Alfred on his pony, and Miss Ethel in her Spanish hat, with
+her hair flowing in the wind! I must take this sketch, I positively must
+now, and show it to Landseer." And the courtly artist daintily enveloped
+the drawing in a sheet of paper, put it away in his hat, and vowed
+subsequently that the great painter had been delighted with the young
+man's performance. Smee was not only charmed with Clive's skill as an
+artist, but thought his head would be an admirable one to paint. Such
+a rich complexion, such fine turns in his hair! such eyes! to see real
+blue eyes was so rare nowadays! And the Colonel too, if the Colonel
+would but give him a few sittings, the grey uniform of the Bengal
+Cavalry, the silver lace, the little bit of red ribbon just to warm up
+the picture! it was seldom, Mr. Smee declared, that an artist could
+get such an opportunity for colour. With our hideous vermilion uniforms
+there was no chance of doing anything; Rubens himself could scarcely
+manage scarlet. Look at the horseman in Cuyp's famous picture at the
+Louvre: the red was a positive blot upon the whole picture. There was
+nothing like French grey and silver! All which did not prevent Mr. Smee
+from painting Sir Brian in a flaring deputy-lieutenant's uniform, and
+entreating all military men whom he met to sit to him in scarlet.
+Clive Newcome the Academician succeeded in painting, of course for mere
+friendship's sake, and because he liked the subject, though he could
+not refuse the cheque which Colonel Newcome sent him for the frame and
+picture; but no cajoleries could induce the old campaigner to sit to any
+artist save one. He said he should be ashamed to pay fifty guineas for
+the likeness of his homely face; he jocularly proposed to James Binnie
+to have his head put on the canvas, and Mr. Smee enthusiastically caught
+at the idea; but honest James winked his droll eyes, saying his was a
+beauty that did not want any paint; and when Mr. Smee took his leave
+after dinner in Fitzroy Square, where this conversation was held, James
+Binnie hinted that the Academician was no better than an old humbug, in
+which surmise he was probably not altogether incorrect. Certain young
+men who frequented the kind Colonel's house were also somewhat of this
+opinion; and made endless jokes at the painter's expense. Smee plastered
+his sitters with adulation as methodically as he covered his canvas. He
+waylaid gentlemen at dinner; he inveigled unsuspecting folks into his
+studio, and had their heads off their shoulders before they were aware.
+One day, on our way from the Temple, through Howland Street, to the
+Colonel's house, we beheld Major-General Sir Thomas de Boots, in full
+uniform, rushing from Smee's door to his brougham. The coachman was
+absent refreshing himself at a neighbouring tap: the little street-boys
+cheered and hurrayed Sir Thomas, as, arrayed in gold and scarlet, he
+sate in his chariot. He blushed purple when he beheld us. No artist
+would have dared to imitate those purple tones: he was one of the
+numerous victims of Mr. Smee.
+
+One day, then, day to be noted with a white stone, Colonel Newcome,
+with his son and Mr. Smee, R.A., walked from the Colonel's house to
+Gandish's, which was not far removed thence; and young Clive, who was
+a perfect mimic, described to his friends, and illustrated, as was his
+wont, by diagrams, the interview which he had with that professor. "By
+Jove, you must see Gandish, pa!" cries Clive: "Gandish is worth the
+whole world. Come and be an art-student. You'll find such jolly fellows
+there! Gandish calls it hart-student, and says, 'Hars est celare
+Hartem'--by Jove he does! He treated us to a little Latin, as he brought
+out a cake and a bottle of wine, you know."
+
+"The governor was splendid, sir. He wore gloves: you know he only puts
+them on on parade days; and turned out for the occasion spick and span.
+He ought to be a general officer. He looks like a field-marshal--don't
+he? You should have seen him bowing to Mrs. Gandish and the Miss
+Gandishes, dressed all in their best, round the cake-tray! He takes
+his glass of wine, and sweeps them all round with a bow. 'I hope, young
+ladies,' says he, 'you don't often go to the students' room. I'm afraid
+the young gentlemen would leave off looking at the statues if you came
+in.' And so they would: for you never saw such guys; but the dear old
+boy fancies every woman is a beauty.
+
+"'Mr. Smee, you are looking at my picture of 'Boadishia?'' says Gandish.
+Wouldn't he have caught it for his quantities at Grey Friars, that's
+all.
+
+"'Yes--ah--yes,' says Mr. Smee, putting his hand over his eyes, and
+standing before it, looking steady, you know, as if he was going to see
+whereabouts he should hit Boadishia.
+
+"'It was painted when you were a young man, four years before you were
+an associate, Smee. Had some success in its time, and there's good pints
+about that picture,' Gandish goes on. 'But I never could get my price
+for it; and here it hangs in my own room. Igh art won't do in this
+country, Colonel--it's a melancholy fact.'
+
+"'High art! I should think it is high art!' whispers old Smee; 'fourteen
+feet high, at least!" And then out loud he says 'The picture has very
+fine points in it, Gandish, as you say. Foreshortening of that arm,
+capital! That red drapery carried off into the right of the picture very
+skilfully managed!'
+
+"'It's not like portrait-painting, Smee--Igh art,' says Gandish. 'The
+models of the hancient Britons in that pictur alone cost me thirty
+pound--when I was a struggling man, and had just married my Betsey here.
+You reckonise Boadishia, Colonel, with the Roman elmet, cuirass, and
+javeling of the period--all studied from the hantique, sir, the glorious
+hantique.'
+
+"'All but Boadicea,' says father. 'She remains always young.' And he
+began to speak the lines out of Cowper, he did--waving his stick like an
+old trump--and famous they are," cries the lad:
+
+ "When the British warrior queen,
+ Bleeding from the Roman rods"--
+
+"Jolly verses! Haven't I translated them into alcaics?" says Clive, with
+a merry laugh, and resumes his history.
+
+"'Oh, I must have those verses in my album,' cries one of the young
+ladies. 'Did you compose them, Colonel Newcome?' But Gandish, you see,
+is never thinking about any works but his own, and goes on, 'Study of my
+eldest daughter, exhibited 1816.'
+
+"'No, pa, not '16,' cries Miss Gandish. She don't look like a chicken, I
+can tell you.
+
+"'Admired,' Gandish goes on, never heeding her,--'I can show you what
+the papers said of it at the time--Morning Chronicle and Examiner--spoke
+most ighly of it. My son as an infant Ercules, stranglin the serpent
+over the piano. Fust conception of my picture of 'Non Hangli said
+Hangeli.''
+
+"'For which I can guess who were the angels that sat,' says father. Upon
+my word, that old governor! He is a little too strong. But Mr. Gandish
+listened no more to him than to Mr. Smee, and went on, buttering himself
+all over, as I have read the Hottentots do. 'Myself at thirty-three
+years of age!' says he, pointing to a portrait of a gentleman in leather
+breeches and mahogany boots; 'I could have been a portrait-painter, Mr.
+Smee.'
+
+"'Indeed it was lucky for some of us you devoted yourself to high art,
+Gandish,' Mr. Smee says, and sips the wine and puts it down again,
+making a face. It was not first-rate tipple, you see.
+
+"'Two girls,' continues that indomitable Mr. Gandish. 'Hidea for 'Babes
+in the Wood.' 'View of Paestum,' taken on the spot by myself, when
+travelling with the late lamented Earl of Kew. 'Beauty, Valour,
+Commerce, and Liberty, condoling with Britannia on the death of Admiral
+Viscount Nelson,'--allegorical piece drawn at a very early age after
+Trafalgar. Mr. Fuseli saw that piece, sir, when I was a student of
+the Academy, and said to me, 'Young man, stick to the antique. There's
+nothing like it.' Those were 'is very words. If you do me the favour to
+walk into the Hatrium, you'll remark my great pictures also from English
+istry. An English historical painter, sir, should be employed chiefly
+in English istry. That's what I would have done. Why ain't there temples
+for us, where the people might read their history at a glance, and
+without knowing how to read? Why is my 'Alfred' 'anging up in this 'all?
+Because there is no patronage for a man who devotes himself to Igh art.
+You know the anecdote, Colonel? King Alfred flying from the Danes, took
+refuge in a neaterd's 'ut. The rustic's wife told him to bake a cake,
+and the fugitive sovering set down to his ignoble task, and forgetting
+it in the cares of state, let the cake burn, on which the woman struck
+him. The moment chose is when she is lifting her 'and to deliver the
+blow. The king receives it with majesty mingled with meekness. In the
+background the door of the 'ut is open, letting in the royal officers to
+announce the Danes are defeated. The daylight breaks in at the aperture,
+signifying the dawning of 'Ope. That story, sir, which I found in my
+researches in istry, has since become so popular, sir, that hundreds of
+artists have painted it, hundreds! I who discovered the legend, have my
+picture--here!'
+
+"'Now, Colonel,' says the showman, 'let me--let me lead you through the
+statue gallery. 'Apollo,' you see. The 'Venus Hanadyomene,' the glorious
+Venus of the Louvre, which I saw in 1814, Colonel, in its glory--the
+'Laocoon'--my friend Gibson's 'Nymth,' you see, is the only figure I
+admit among the antiques. Now up this stair to the students' room, where
+I trust my young friend, Mr. Newcome, will labour assiduously. Ars longa
+est, Mr. Newcome. Vita----'"
+
+"I trembled," Clive said, "lest my father should introduce a certain
+favourite quotation, beginning 'ingenuas didicisse'--but he refrained,
+and we went into the room, where a score of students were assembled, who
+all looked away from their drawing-boards as we entered.
+
+"'Here will be your place, Mr. Newcome,' says the Professor, 'and here
+that of your young friend--what did you say was his name?' I told him
+Rigby, for my dear old governor has promised to pay for J. J. too, you
+know. 'Mr. Chivers is the senior pupil and custos of the room in the
+absence of my son. Mr. Chivers, Mr. Newcome; gentlemen, Mr. Newcome, a
+new pupil. My son, Charles Gandish, Mr. Newcome. Assiduity, gentlemen,
+assiduity. Ars longa. Vita brevis, et linea recta brevissima est. This
+way, Colonel, down these steps, across the courtyard, to my own studio.
+There, gentlemen,'--and pulling aside a curtain, Gandish says 'There!'"
+
+"And what was the masterpiece behind it?" we ask of Clive, after we have
+done laughing at his imitation.
+
+"Hand round the hat, J. J.!" cries Clive. "Now, ladies and gentlemen,
+pay your money. Now walk in, for the performance is 'just a-going to
+begin.'" Nor would the rogue ever tell us what Gandish's curtained
+picture was.
+
+Not a successful painter, Mr. Gandish was an excellent master, and
+regarding all artists save one perhaps a good critic. Clive and his
+friend J. J. came soon after and commenced their studies under him. The
+one took his humble seat at the drawing-board, a poor mean-looking lad,
+with worn clothes, downcast features, and a figure almost deformed;
+the other adorned by good health, good looks, and the best of
+tailors; ushered into the studio with his father and Mr. Smee as his
+aides-de-camp on his entry; and previously announced there with all the
+eloquence of honest Gandish. "I bet he's 'ad cake and wine," says one
+youthful student, of an epicurean and satirical turn. "I bet he might
+have it every day if he liked." In fact Gandish was always handing
+him sweetmeats of compliments and cordials of approbation. He had
+coat-sleeves with silk linings--he had studs in his shirt. How different
+was the texture and colour of that garment, to the sleeves Bob Grimes
+displayed when he took his coat off to put on his working jacket! Horses
+used actually to come for him to Gandish's door (which was situated in a
+certain lofty street in Soho). The Miss G.'s would smile at him from
+the parlour window as he mounted and rode splendidly off; and those
+opposition beauties, the Miss Levisons, daughters of the professor of
+dancing over the way, seldom failed to greet the young gentleman with an
+admiring ogle from their great black eyes. Master Clive was pronounced
+an 'out-and-outer,' a 'swell and no mistake,' and complimented with
+scarce one dissentient voice by the simple academy at Gandish's.
+Besides, he drew very well. There could be no doubt about that.
+Caricatures of the students of course were passing constantly among
+them, and in revenge for one which a huge red-haired Scotch student, Mr.
+Sandy M'Collop, had made of John James, Clive perpetrated a picture of
+Sandy which set the whole room in a roar; and when the Caledonian giant
+uttered satirical remarks against the assembled company, averring that
+they were a parcel of sneaks, a set of lick-spittles, and using epithets
+still more vulgar, Clive slipped off his fine silk-sleeved coat in an
+instant, invited Mr. M'Collop into the back-yard, instructed him in
+a science which the lad himself had acquired at Grey Friars, and
+administered two black eyes to Sandy, which prevented the young artist
+from seeing for some days after the head of the 'Laocoon' which he was
+copying. The Scotchman's superior weight and age might have given
+the combat a different conclusion, had it endured long after Clive's
+brilliant opening attack with his right and left; but Professor Gandish
+came out of his painting-room at the sound of battle, and could scarcely
+credit his own eyes when he saw those of poor M'Collop so darkened. To
+do the Scotchman justice, he bore Clive no rancour. They became friends
+there, and afterwards at Rome, whither they subsequently went to pursue
+their studies. The fame of Mr. M'Collop as an artist has long since
+been established. His pictures of 'Lord Lovat in Prison,' and 'Hogarth
+painting him,' of the 'Blowing up of the Kirk of Field' (painted for
+M'Collop of M'Collop), of the 'Torture of the Covenanters,' the 'Murder
+of the Regent,' the 'Murder of Rizzio,' and other historical pieces, all
+of course from Scotch history, have established his reputation in
+South as well as in North Britain. No one would suppose from the gloomy
+character of his works that Sandy M'Collop is one of the most jovial
+souls alive. Within six months after their little difference, Clive and
+he were the greatest of friends, and it was by the former's suggestion
+that Mr. James Binnie gave Sandy his first commission, who selected the
+cheerful subject of 'The Young Duke of Rothsay starving in Prison.'
+
+During this period, Mr. Clive assumed the toga virilis, and beheld with
+inexpressible satisfaction the first growth of those mustachios which
+have since given him such a marked appearance.
+
+Being at Gandish's, and so near the dancing academy, what must he do but
+take lessons in the terpsichorean art too?--making himself as popular
+with the dancing folks as with the drawing folks, and the jolly king of
+his company everywhere. He gave entertainments to his fellow-students
+in the upper chambers in Fitzroy Square, which were devoted to his use,
+inviting his father and Mr. Binnie to those parties now and then. And
+songs were sung, and pipes were smoked, and many a pleasant supper
+eaten. There was no stint: but no excess. No young man was ever seen
+to quit those apartments the worse, as it is called, for liquor. Fred
+Bayham's uncle the Bishop could not be more decorous than F. B. as
+he left the Colonel's house, for the Colonel made that one of the
+conditions of his son's hospitality, that nothing like intoxication
+should ensue from it. The good gentleman did not frequent the parties of
+the juniors. He saw that his presence rather silenced the young men; and
+left them to themselves, confiding in Clive's parole, and went away to
+play his honest rubber of whist at the Club. And many a time he heard
+the young fellows' steps tramping by his bedchamber door, as he lay
+wakeful within, happy to think his son was happy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. New Companions
+
+
+Clive used to give droll accounts of the young disciples at Gandish's,
+who were of various ages and conditions, and in whose company the young
+fellow took his place with that good temper and gaiety which have seldom
+deserted him in life, and have put him at ease wherever his fate has
+led him. He is, in truth, as much at home in a fine drawing-room as in a
+public-house parlour; and can talk as pleasantly to the polite mistress
+of the mansion, as to the jolly landlady dispensing her drinks from her
+bar. Not one of the Gandishites but was after a while well inclined to
+the young fellow; from Mr. Chivers, the senior pupil, down to the little
+imp Harry Hooker, who knew as much mischief at twelve years old, and
+could draw as cleverly as many a student of five-and-twenty; and Bob
+Trotter, the diminutive fag of the studio, who ran on all the young
+men's errands, and fetched them in apples, oranges, and walnuts. Clive
+opened his eyes with wonder when he first beheld these simple feasts,
+and the pleasure with which some of the young men partook of them. They
+were addicted to polonies; they did not disguise their love for Banbury
+cakes; they made bets in ginger-beer, and gave and took the odds in that
+frothing liquor. There was a young Hebrew amongst the pupils, upon
+whom his brother-students used playfully to press ham sandwiches, pork
+sausages, and the like. This young man (who has risen to great wealth
+subsequently, and was bankrupt only three months since) actually bought
+cocoa-nuts, and sold them at a profit amongst the lads. His pockets were
+never without pencil-cases, French chalk, garnet brooches, for which he
+was willing to bargain. He behaved very rudely to Gandish, who seemed
+to be afraid before him. It was whispered that the Professor was not
+altogether easy in his circumstances, and that the elder Moss had some
+mysterious hold over him. Honeyman and Bayham, who once came to see
+Clive at the studio, seemed each disturbed at beholding young Moss
+seated there (making a copy of the Marsyas). "Pa knows both those
+gents," he informed Clive afterwards, with a wicked twinkle of his
+Oriental eyes. "Step in, Mr. Newcome, any day you are passing down
+Wardour Street, and see if you don't want anything in our way." (He
+pronounced the words in his own way, saying: "Step id, Bister Doocob,
+ady day idto Vordor Street," etc.) This young gentleman could get
+tickets for almost all the theatres, which he gave or sold, and gave
+splendid accounts at Cavendish's of the brilliant masquerades. Clive was
+greatly diverted at beholding Mr. Moss at one of these entertainments,
+dressed in a scarlet coat and top-boots, and calling out, "Yoicks! Hark
+forward!" fitfully to another Orientalist, his younger brother, attired
+like a midshipman. Once Clive bought a half-dozen of theatre tickets
+from Mr. Moss, which he distributed to the young fellows of the studio.
+But, when this nice young man tried further to tempt him on the next
+day, "Mr. Moss," Clive said to him with much dignity, "I am very much
+obliged to you for your offer, but when I go to the play, I prefer
+paying at the doors."
+
+Mr. Chivers used to sit in one corner of the room, occupied over a
+lithographic stone. He was an uncouth and peevish young man; for ever
+finding fault with the younger pupils, whose butt he was. Next in rank
+and age was M'Collop, before named: and these two were at first more
+than usually harsh and captious with Clive, whose prosperity offended
+them, and whose dandified manners, free-and-easy ways, and evident
+influence over the younger scholars, gave umbrage to these elderly
+apprentices. Clive at first returned Mr. Chivers war for war,
+controlment for controlment; but when he found Chivers was the son of a
+helpless widow; that he maintained her by his lithographic vignettes for
+the music-sellers, and by the scanty remuneration of some lessons which
+he gave at a school at Highgate;--when Clive saw, or fancied he saw, the
+lonely senior eyeing with hungry eyes the luncheons of cheese and bread,
+and sweetstuff, which the young lads of the studio enjoyed, I promise
+you Mr. Clive's wrath against Chivers was speedily turned into
+compassion and kindness, and he sought, and no doubt found, means of
+feeding Chivers without offending his testy independence.
+
+Nigh to Gandish's was, and perhaps is, another establishment for
+teaching the art of design--Barker's, which had the additional dignity
+of a life academy and costume; frequented by a class of students more
+advanced than those of Gandish's. Between these and the Barkerites there
+was a constant rivalry and emulation, in and out of doors. Gandish
+sent more pupils to the Royal Academy; Gandish had brought up three
+medallists; and the last R.A. student sent to Rome was a Gandishite.
+Barker, on the contrary, scorned and loathed Trafalgar Square, and
+laughed at its art. Barker exhibited in Pall Mall and Suffolk Street:
+he laughed at old Gandish and his pictures, made mincemeat of his "Angli
+and Angeli," and tore "King Alfred" and his muffins to pieces. The young
+men of the respective schools used to meet at Lundy's coffee-house and
+billiard-room, and smoke there, and do battle. Before Clive and his
+friend J. J. came to Gandish's, the Barkerites were having the best of
+that constant match which the two academies were playing. Fred Bayham,
+who knew every coffee-house in town, and whose initials were scored on
+a thousand tavern doors, was for a while a constant visitor at Lundy's,
+played pool with the young men, and did not disdain to dip his beard
+into their porter-pots, when invited to partake of their drink; treated
+them handsomely when he was in cash himself; and was an honorary member
+of Barker's academy. Nay, when the guardsman was not forthcoming, who
+was standing for one of Barker's heroic pictures, Bayham bared his
+immense arms and brawny shoulders, and stood as Prince Edward, with
+Philippa sucking the poisoned wound. He would take his friends up to
+the picture in the Exhibition, and proudly point to it. "Look at that
+biceps, sir, and now look at this--that's Barker's masterpiece, sir, and
+that's the muscle of F. B., sir." In no company was F. B. greater than
+in the society of the artists, in whose smoky haunts and airy parlours
+he might often be found. It was from F. B. that Clive heard of Mr.
+Chivers' struggles and honest industry. A great deal of shrewd advice
+could F. B. give on occasion, and many a kind action and gentle office
+of charity was this jolly outlaw known to do and cause to be done. His
+advice to Clive was most edifying at this time of our young gentleman's
+life, and he owns that he was kept from much mischief by this queer
+counsellor.
+
+A few months after Clive and J. J. had entered at Gandish's, that
+academy began to hold its own against its rival. The silent young
+disciple was pronounced to be a genius. His copies were beautiful in
+delicacy and finish. His designs were for exquisite grace and richness
+of fancy. Mr. Gandish took to himself the credit for J. J.'s genius;
+Clive ever and fondly acknowledged the benefit he got from his friend's
+taste and bright enthusiasm and sure skill. As for Clive, if he was
+successful in the academy he was doubly victorious out of it. His person
+was handsome, his courage high, his gaiety and frankness delightful
+and winning. His money was plenty and he spent it like a young king.
+He could speedily beat all the club at Lundy's at billiards, and give
+points to the redoubted F. B. himself. He sang a famous song at their
+jolly supper-parties: and J. J. had no greater delight than to listen
+to his fresh voice, and watch the young conqueror at the billiard-table,
+where the balls seemed to obey him.
+
+Clive was not the most docile of Mr. Gandish's pupils. If he had not
+come to the studio on horseback, several of the young students averred,
+Gandish would not always have been praising him and quoting him as that
+professor certainly did. It must be confessed that the young ladies read
+the history of Clive's uncle in the Book of Baronets, and that Gandish
+jun., probably with an eye to business, made a design of a picture,
+in which, according to that veracious volume, one of the Newcomes was
+represented as going cheerfully to the stake at Smithfield, surrounded
+by some very ill-favoured Dominicans, whose arguments did not appear to
+make the least impression upon the martyr of the Newcome family. Sandy
+M'Collop devised a counter picture, wherein the barber-surgeon of
+King Edward the Confessor was drawn, operating upon the beard of that
+monarch. To which piece of satire Clive gallantly replied by a design,
+representing Sawney Bean M'Collop, chief of the clan of that name,
+descending from his mountains into Edinburgh, and his astonishment at
+beholding a pair of breeches for the first time. These playful jokes
+passed constantly amongst the young men of Gandish's studio. There was
+no one there who was not caricatured in one way or another. He whose
+eyes looked not very straight was depicted with a most awful squint. The
+youth whom nature had endowed with somewhat lengthy nose was drawn by
+the caricaturists with a prodigious proboscis. Little Bobby Moss, the
+young Hebrew artist from Wardour Street, was delineated with three hats
+and an old-clothes bag. Nor were poor J. J.'s round shoulders spared,
+until Clive indignantly remonstrated at the hideous hunchback pictures
+which the boys made of his friend, and vowed it was a shame to make
+jokes at such a deformity.
+
+Our friend, if the truth must be told regarding him, though one of the
+most frank, generous, and kind-hearted persons, is of a nature somewhat
+haughty and imperious, and very likely the course of life which he now
+led and the society which he was compelled to keep, served to increase
+some original defects in his character, and to fortify a certain
+disposition to think well of himself, with which his enemies not
+unjustly reproach him. He has been known very pathetically to lament
+that he was withdrawn from school too early, where a couple of years'
+further course of thrashings from his tyrant, old Hodge, he avers, would
+have done him good. He laments that he was not sent to college, where if
+a young man receives no other discipline, at least he acquires that of
+meeting with his equals in society and of assuredly finding his betters:
+whereas in poor Mr. Gandish's studio of art, our young gentleman
+scarcely found a comrade that was not in one way or other his flatterer,
+his inferior, his honest or dishonest admirer. The influence of his
+family's rank and wealth acted more or less on all those simple folks,
+who would run on his errands and vied with each other in winning the
+young nabob's favour. His very goodness of heart rendered him a more
+easy prey to their flattery, and his kind and jovial disposition led him
+into company from which he had been much better away. I am afraid
+that artful young Moss, whose parents dealt in pictures, furniture,
+gimcracks, and jewellery, victimised Clive sadly with rings and chains,
+shirt-studs and flaming shirt-pins, and such vanities, which the poor
+young rogue locked up in his desk generally, only venturing to wear them
+when he was out of his father's sight or of Mr. Binnie's, whose shrewd
+eyes watched him very keenly.
+
+Mr. Clive used to leave home every day shortly after noon, when he
+was supposed to betake himself to Gandish's studio. But was the young
+gentleman always at the drawing-board copying from the antique when his
+father supposed him to be so devotedly engaged? I fear his place was
+sometimes vacant. His friend J. J. worked every day and all day. Many
+a time the steady little student remarked his patron's absence, and no
+doubt gently remonstrated with him, but when Clive did come to his work
+he executed it with remarkable skill and rapidity; and Ridley was too
+fond of him to say a word at home regarding the shortcomings of the
+youthful scapegrace. Candid readers may sometimes have heard their
+friend Jones's mother lament that her darling was working too hard at
+college: or Harry's sisters express their anxiety lest his too rigorous
+attendance in chambers (after which he will persist in sitting up all
+night reading those dreary law books which cost such an immense sum of
+money) should undermine dear Henry's health; and to such acute persons
+a word is sufficient to indicate young Mr. Clive Newcome's proceedings.
+Meanwhile his father, who knew no more of the world than Harry's simple
+sisters or Jones's fond mother, never doubted that all Clive's doings
+were right, and that his boy was the best of boys.
+
+"If that young man goes on as charmingly as he has begun," Clive's
+cousin, Barnes Newcome, said of his kinsman, "he will be a paragon. I
+saw him last night at Vauxhall in company with young Moss, whose father
+does bills and keeps the bric-a-brac shop in Wardour Street. Two or
+three other gentlemen, probably young old-clothes-men, who had concluded
+for the day the labours of the bag, joined Mr. Newcome and his friend,
+and they partook of rack-punch in an arbour. He is a delightful youth,
+cousin Clive, and I feel sure he is about to be an honour to our
+family."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. The Colonel at Home
+
+
+Our good Colonel's house had received a coat of paint, which, like
+Madame Latour's rouge in her latter days, only served to make her
+careworn face look more ghastly. The kitchens were gloomy. The stables
+were gloomy. Great black passages; cracked conservatory; dilapidated
+bathroom, with melancholy waters moaning and fizzing from the cistern;
+the great large blank stone staircase--were all so many melancholy
+features in the general countenance of the house; but the Colonel
+thought it perfectly, cheerful and pleasant, and furnished it in his
+rough-and-ready way. One day a cartload of chairs; the next a waggonful
+of fenders, fire-irons, and glass and crockery--a quantity of supplies,
+in a word, he poured into the place. There were a yellow curtain in the
+back drawing-room, and green curtains in the front. The carpet was an
+immense bargain, bought dirt cheap, sir, at a sale in Euston Square. He
+was against the purchase of a carpet for the stairs. What was the good
+of it? What did men want with stair-carpets? His own apartment contained
+a wonderful assortment of lumber. Shelves which he nailed himself, old
+Indian garments, camphor trunks. What did he want with gewgaws? anything
+was good enough for an old soldier. But the spare bedroom was endowed
+with all sorts of splendour: a bed as big as a general's tent, a cheval
+glass--whereas the Colonel shaved in a little cracked mirror, which cost
+him no more than King Stephen's breeches--and a handsome new carpet;
+while the boards of the Colonel's bedchamber were as bare--as bare as
+old Miss Scragg's shoulders, which would be so much more comfortable
+were they covered up. Mr. Binnie's bedchamber was neat, snug, and
+appropriate. And Clive had a study and bedroom at the top of the house,
+which he was allowed to furnish entirely according to his own taste.
+How he and Ridley revelled in Wardour Street! What delightful coloured
+prints of hunting, racing, and beautiful ladies, did they not purchase,
+mount with their own hands, cut out for screens, frame and glaze, and
+hang up on the walls. When the rooms were ready they gave a party,
+inviting the Colonel and Mr. Binnie by note of hand, two gentlemen from
+Lamb Court, Temple, Mr. Honeyman, and Fred Bayham. We must have Fred
+Bayham. Fred Bayham frankly asked, "Is Mr. Sherrick, with whom you
+have become rather intimate lately--and mind you I say nothing, but I
+recommend strangers in London to be cautious about their friends--is
+Mr. Sherrick coming to you, young 'un? because if he is, F. B. must
+respectfully decline."
+
+Mr. Sherrick was not invited, and accordingly F. B. came. But Sherrick
+was invited on other days, and a very queer society did our honest
+Colonel gather together in that queer house, so dreary, so dingy, so
+comfortless, so pleasant. He, who was one of the most hospitable men
+alive, loved to have his friends around him; and it must be confessed
+that the evening parties now occasionally given in Fitzroy Square were
+of the oddest assemblage of people. The correct East India gentlemen
+from Hanover Square: the artists, Clive's friends, gentlemen of all ages
+with all sorts of beards, in every variety of costume. Now and again a
+stray schoolfellow from Grey Friars, who stared, as well he might,
+at the company in which he found himself. Sometimes a few ladies were
+brought to these entertainments. The immense politeness of the good host
+compensated some of them for the strangeness of his company. They had
+never seen such odd-looking hairy men as those young artists, nor such
+wonderful women as Colonel Newcome assembled together. He was good to
+all old maids and poor widows. Retired captains with large families of
+daughters found in him their best friend. He sent carriages to fetch
+them and bring them back from the suburbs where they dwelt. Gandish,
+Mrs. Gandish, and the four Miss Gandishes in scarlet robes, were
+constant attendants at the Colonel's soirees.
+
+"I delight, sir, in the 'ospitality of my distinguished military
+friend," Mr. Gandish would say. "The harmy has always been my
+passion.--I served in the Soho Volunteers three years myself, till the
+conclusion of the war, sir, till the conclusion of the war."
+
+It was a great sight to see Mr. Frederick Bayham engaged in the waltz or
+the quadrille with some of the elderly houris at the Colonel's parties.
+F. B., like a good-natured F. B. as he was, always chose the plainest
+women as partners, and entertained them with profound compliments and
+sumptuous conversation. The Colonel likewise danced quadrilles with the
+utmost gravity. Waltzing had been invented long since his time: but he
+practised quadrilles when they first came in, about 1817, in Calcutta.
+To see him leading up a little old maid, and bowing to her when the
+dance was ended, and performing cavalier seul with stately simplicity,
+was a sight indeed to remember. If Clive Newcome had not such a fine
+sense of humour, he would have blushed for his father's simplicity.--As
+it was, the elder's guileless goodness and childlike trustfulness
+endeared him immensely to his son. "Look at the old boy, Pendennis," he
+would say, "look at him leading up that old Miss Tidswell to the piano.
+Doesn't he do it like an old duke? I lay a wager she thinks she is going
+to be my mother-in-law; all the women are in love with him, young and
+old. 'Should he upbraid?' There she goes. 'I'll own that he'll prevail,
+and sing as sweetly as a nigh-tin-gale!' Oh, you old warbler! Look at
+father's old head bobbing up and down! Wouldn't he do for Sir Roger de
+Coverley? How do you do, Uncle Charles?--I say, M'Collop, how gets on
+the Duke of What-d'ye-call-'em starving in the castle?--Gandish says
+it's very good." The lad retires to a group of artists. Mr. Honeyman
+comes up with a faint smile playing on his features, like moonlight on
+the facade of Lady Whittlesea's Chapel.
+
+"These parties are the most singular I have ever seen," whispers
+Honeyman. "In entering one of these assemblies, one is struck with the
+immensity of London: and with the sense of one's own insignificance.
+Without, I trust, departing from my clerical character, nay, from my
+very avocation as incumbent of a London chapel,--I have seen a good deal
+of the world, and here is an assemblage no doubt of most respectable
+persons, on scarce one of whom I ever set eyes till this evening. Where
+does my good brother find such characters?"
+
+"That," says Mr. Honeyman's interlocutor, "is the celebrated, though
+neglected artist, Professor Gandish, whom nothing but jealousy has kept
+out of the Royal Academy. Surely you have heard of the great Gandish?"
+
+"Indeed I am ashamed to confess my ignorance, but a clergyman busy with
+his duties knows little, perhaps too little, of the fine arts."
+
+"Gandish, sir, is one of the greatest geniuses on whom our ungrateful
+country ever trampled; he exhibited his first celebrated picture of
+'Alfred in the Neatherd's Hut' (he says he is the first who ever
+touched that subject) in 180-; but Lord Nelson's death, and victory of
+Trafalgar, occupied the public attention at that time, and Gandish's
+work went unnoticed. In the year 1816, he painted his great work of
+'Boadicea.' You see her before you. That lady in yellow, with a light
+front and a turban. Boadicea became Mrs. Gandish in that year. So late
+as '27, he brought before the world his 'Non Angli sed Angeli.' Two
+of the angels are yonder in sea-green dresses--the Misses Gandish. The
+youth in Berlin gloves was the little male angelus of that piece."
+
+"How came you to know all this, you strange man?" says Mr. Honeyman.
+
+"Simply because Gandish has told me twenty times. He tells the story
+to everybody, every time he sees them. He told it to-day at dinner.
+Boadicea and the angels came afterwards."
+
+"Satire! satire! Mr. Pendennis," says the divine, holding up a reproving
+finger of lavender kid, "beware of a wicked wit!--But when a man has
+that tendency, I know how difficult it is to restrain. My dear Colonel,
+good evening! You have a great reception to-night. That gentleman's bass
+voice is very fine; Mr. Pendennis and I were admiring it. 'The Wolf' is
+a song admirably adapted to show its capabilities."
+
+Mr. Gandish's autobiography had occupied the whole time of the
+retirement of the ladies from Colonel Newcome's dinner-table. Mr. Hobson
+Newcome had been asleep during the performance; Sir Curry Baughton and
+one or two of the Colonel's professional and military guests, silent and
+puzzled. Honest Mr. Binnie, with his shrewd good-humoured face, sipping
+his claret as usual, and delivering a sly joke now and again to the
+gentlemen at his end of the table. Mrs. Newcome had sat by him in
+sulky dignity; was it that Lady Baughton's diamonds offended her?--her
+ladyship and her daughters being attired in great splendour for a Court
+ball, which they were to attend that evening. Was she hurt because she
+was not invited to that Royal Entertainment? As the festivities were to
+take place at an early hour, the ladies bidden were obliged to quit the
+Colonel's house before the evening part commenced, from which Lady Anne
+declared she was quite vexed to be obliged to run away.
+
+Lady Anne Newcome had been as gracious on this occasion as her
+sister-in-law had been out of humour. Everything pleased her in the
+house. She had no idea that there were such fine houses in that quarter
+of the town. She thought the dinner so very nice,--that Mr Binnie such
+a good-humoured-looking gentleman. That stout gentleman with his
+collars turned down like Lord Byron, so exceedingly clever and full of
+information. A celebrated artist was he? (courtly Mr. Smee had his own
+opinion upon that point, but did not utter it). All those artists are so
+eccentric and amusing and clever. Before dinner she insisted upon seeing
+Clive's den with its pictures and casts and pipes. "You horrid young
+wicked creature, have you begun to smoke already?" she asks, as she
+admires his room. She admired everything. Nothing could exceed her
+satisfaction.
+
+The sisters-in-law kissed on meeting, with that cordiality so delightful
+to witness in sisters who dwell together in unity. It was, "My
+dear Maria, what an age since I have seen you!" "My dear Anne, our
+occupations are so engrossing, our circles are so different," in a
+languid response from the other. "Sir Brian is not coming, I suppose?
+Now, Colonel," she turns in a frisky manner towards him, and taps her
+fan, "did I not tell you Sir Brian would not come?"
+
+"He is kept at the House of Commons, my dear. Those dreadful committees.
+He was quite vexed at not being able to come."
+
+"I know, I know, dear Anne, there are always excuses to gentlemen in
+Parliament; I have received many such. Mr. Shaloo and Mr. M'Sheny, the
+leaders of our party, often and often disappoint me. I knew Brian would
+not come. My husband came down from Marble Head on purpose this morning.
+Nothing would have induced us to give up our brother's party."
+
+"I believe you. I did come down from Marble Head this morning, and I
+was four hours in the hay-field before I came away, and in the City till
+five, and I've been to look at a horse afterwards at Tattersall's, and
+I'm as hungry as a hunter, and as tired as a hodman," says Mr. Newcome,
+with his hands in his pockets. "How do you do, Mr. Pendennis? Maria, you
+remember Mr. Pendennis--don't you?"
+
+"Perfectly," replies the languid Maria. Mrs. Gandish, Colonel Topham,
+Major M'Cracken, are announced, and then, in diamonds, feathers, and
+splendour, Lady Baughton and Miss Baughton, who are going to the Queen's
+ball, and Sir Curry Baughton, not quite in his deputy-lieutenant's
+uniform as yet, looking very shy in a pair of blue trousers, with a
+glittering stripe of silver down the seams. Clive looks with wonder
+and delight at these ravishing ladies, rustling in fresh brocades, with
+feathers, diamonds, and every magnificence. Aunt Anne has not her Court
+dress on as yet; and Aunt Maria blushes as she beholds the new comers,
+having thought fit to attire herself in a high dress, with a Quaker-like
+simplicity, and a pair of gloves more than ordinarily dingy. The pretty
+little foot she has, it is true, and sticks it out from habit; but what
+is Mrs. Newcome's foot compared with that sweet little chaussure which
+Miss Baughton exhibits and withdraws? The shiny white satin slipper, the
+pink stocking which ever and anon peeps from the rustling folds of her
+robe, and timidly retires into its covert--that foot, light as it is,
+crushes Mrs. Newcome.
+
+No wonder she winces, and is angry; there are some mischievous persons
+who rather like to witness that discomfiture. All Mr. Smee's flatteries
+that day failed to soothe her. She was in the state in which his
+canvasses sometimes are, when he cannot paint on them.
+
+What happened to her alone in the drawing-room, when the ladies invited
+to the dinner had departed, and those convoked to the soiree began to
+arrive,--what happened to her or to them I do not like to think. The
+Gandishes arrived first. Boadicea and the angels. We judged from the
+fact that young Mr. Gandish came blushing in to the dessert. Name after
+name was announced of persons of whom Mrs. Newcome knew nothing. The
+young and the old, the pretty and homely, they were all in their best
+dresses, and no doubt stared at Mrs. Newcome, so obstinately plain
+in her attire. When we came upstairs from dinner, we found her seated
+entirely by herself, tapping her fan at the fireplace. Timid groups of
+persons were round about, waiting for the irruption of the gentlemen,
+until the pleasure should begin. Mr. Newcome, who came upstairs yawning,
+was heard to say to his wife, "Oh, dam, let's cut!" And they went
+downstairs, and waited until their carriage had arrived, when they
+quitted Fitzroy Square.
+
+Mr. Barnes Newcome presently arrived, looking particularly smart and
+lively, with a large flower in his button-hole, and leaning on the arm
+of a friend. "How do you do, Pendennis?" he says, with a peculiarly
+dandified air. "Did you dine here? You look as if you dined here" (and
+Barnes, certainly, as if he had dined elsewhere). "I was only asked to
+the cold soiree. Who did you have for dinner? You had my mamma and the
+Baughtons, and my uncle and aunt, I know, for they are down below in the
+library, waiting for the carriage: he is asleep, and she is as sulky as
+a bear."
+
+"Why did Mrs. Newcome say I should find nobody I knew up here?" asks
+Barnes's companion. "On the contrary, there are lots of fellows I know.
+There's Fred Bayham, dancing like a harlequin. There's old Gandish, who
+used to be my drawing-master; and my Brighton friends, your uncle and
+cousin, Barnes. What relations are they to me? must be some relations.
+Fine fellow your cousin."
+
+"Hm," growls Barnes. "Very fine boy,--not spirited at all,--not fond of
+flattery,--not surrounded by toadies,--not fond of drink,--delightful
+boy! See yonder, the young fellow is in conversation with his most
+intimate friend, a little crooked fellow, with long hair. Do you know
+who he is? he is the son of old Todmoreton's butler. Upon my life it's
+true."
+
+"And suppose it is; what the deuce do I care!" cries Lord Kew. "Who can
+be more respectable than a butler? A man must be somebody's son. When I
+am a middle-aged man, I hope humbly I shall look like a butler myself.
+Suppose you were to put ten of Gunter's men into the House of Lords,
+do you mean to say that they would not look as well as any average ten
+peers in the house? Look at Lord Westcot; he is exactly like a butler
+that's why the country has such confidence in him. I never dine with
+him but I fancy he ought to be at the sideboard. Here comes that
+insufferable little old Smee. How do you do, Mr. Smee?"
+
+Mr. Smee smiles his sweetest smile. With his rings, diamond shirt-studs,
+and red velvet waistcoat, there are few more elaborate middle-aged bucks
+than Alfred Smee. "How do you do, my dear lord?" cries the bland one.
+"Who would ever have thought of seeing your lordship here?"
+
+"Why the deuce not, Mr. Smee?" asks Lord Kew, abruptly. "Is it wrong to
+come here? I have been in the house only five minutes, and three people
+have said the same thing to me--Mrs. Newcome, who is sitting downstairs
+in a rage waiting for her carriage, the condescending Barnes, and
+yourself. Why do you come here, Since? How are you, Mr. Gandish? How do
+the fine arts go?"
+
+"Your lordship's kindness in asking for them will cheer them if anything
+will," says Mr. Gandish. "Your noble family has always patronised them.
+I am proud to be reckonised by your lordship in this house, where the
+distinguished father of one of my pupils entertains us this evening.
+A most promising young man is young Mr. Clive--talents for a hamateur
+really most remarkable."
+
+"Excellent, upon my word--excellent," cries Mr. Smee. "I'm not an animal
+painter myself, and perhaps don't think much of that branch of the
+profession; but it seems to me the young fellow draws horses with the
+most wonderful spirit. I hope Lady Walham is very well, and that she was
+satisfied with her son's portrait. Stockholm, I think, your brother is
+appointed to? I wish I might be allowed to paint the elder as well as
+the younger brother, my lord."
+
+"I am an historical painter; but whenever Lord Kew is painted I hope his
+lordship will think of the old servant of his lordship's family, Charles
+Gandish," cries the Professor.
+
+"I am like Susannah between the two Elders," says Lord Kew. "Let my
+innocence alone, Smee. Mr. Gandish, don't persecute my modesty with your
+addresses. I won't be painted. I am not a fit subject for a historical
+painter, Mr. Gandish."
+
+"Halcibiades sat to Praxiteles, and Pericles to Phridjas," remarks
+Gandish.
+
+"The cases are not quite similar," says Lord Kew, languidly. "You are no
+doubt fully equal to Praxiteles; but I don't see my resemblance to the
+other party. I should not look well as a hero, and Smee could not paint
+me handsome enough."
+
+"I would try, my dear lord," cries Mr. Smee.
+
+"I know you would, my dear fellow," Lord Kew answered, looking at the
+painter with a lazy scorn in his eyes. "Where is Colonel Newcome,
+Mr. Gandish?" Mr. Gandish replied that our gallant host was dancing a
+quadrille in the next room; and the young gentleman walked on towards
+that apartment to pay his respects to the giver of the evening's
+entertainment.
+
+Newcome's behaviour to the young peer was ceremonious, but not in the
+least servile. He saluted the other's superior rank, not his person, as
+he turned the guard out for a general officer. He never could be brought
+to be otherwise than cold and grave in his behaviour to John James; nor
+was it without difficulty, when young Ridley and his son became pupils
+at Gandish's, he could be induced to invite the former to his parties.
+"An artist is any man's equal," he said. "I have no prejudice of that
+sort; and think that Sir Joshua Reynolds and Doctor Johnson were fit
+company for any person, of whatever rank. But a young man whose father
+may have had to wait behind me at dinner, should not be brought into my
+company." Clive compromises the dispute with a laugh. "First," says he,
+"I will wait till I am asked; and then I promise I will not go to dine
+with Lord Todmoreton."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. Contains more Particulars of the Colonel and his Brethren
+
+
+Clive's amusements, studies, or occupations, such as they were, filled
+his day pretty completely, and caused the young gentleman's time to
+pass rapidly and pleasantly, his father, it must be owned, had no such
+resources, and the good Colonel's idleness hung heavily upon him. He
+submitted very kindly to this infliction, however, as he would have done
+to any other for Clive's sake; and though he may have wished himself
+back with his regiment again, and engaged in the pursuits in which his
+life had been spent, he chose to consider these desires as very selfish
+and blameable on his part, and sacrificed them resolutely for his son's
+welfare. The young fellow, I dare say, gave his parent no more credit
+for his long self-denial, than many other children award to theirs. We
+take such life-offerings as our due commonly. The old French satirist
+avers that, in a love affair, there is usually one person who loves, and
+the other, qui se laisse aimer; it is only in later days, perhaps, when
+the treasures of love are spent, and the kind hand cold which ministered
+them, that we remember how tender it was; how soft to soothe; how eager
+to shield; how ready to support and caress. The ears may no longer hear,
+which would have received our words of thanks so delightedly. Let us
+hope those fruits of love, though tardy, are yet not all too late; and
+though we bring our tribute of reverence and gratitude, it may be to a
+gravestone, there is an acceptance even there for the stricken heart's
+oblation of fond remorse, contrite memories, and pious tears. I am
+thinking of the love of Clive Newcome's father for him (and, perhaps,
+young reader, that of yours and mine for ourselves); how the old man lay
+awake, and devised kindnesses, and gave his all for the love of his son;
+and the young man took, and spent, and slept, and made merry. Did we
+not say at our tale's commencement that all stories were old? Careless
+prodigals and anxious elders have been from the beginning:--and so may
+love, and repentance, and forgiveness endure even till the end.
+
+The stifling fogs, the slippery mud, the dun dreary November mornings,
+when the Regent's Park, where the Colonel took his early walk, was
+wrapped in yellow mist, must have been a melancholy exchange for the
+splendour of Eastern sunrise, and the invigorating gallop at dawn, to
+which, for so many years of his life, Thomas Newcome had accustomed
+himself. His obstinate habit of early waking accompanied him to England,
+and occasioned the despair of his London domestics, who, if master
+wasn't so awful early, would have found no fault with him; for a
+gentleman as gives less trouble to his servants; as scarcely ever rings
+the bell for his self; as will brush his own clothes; as will even
+boil his own shaving-water in the little hetna which he keeps up in
+his dressing-room; as pays so regular, and never looks twice at the
+accounts; such a man deserved to be loved by his household, and I dare
+say comparisons were made between him and his son, who do ring the
+bells, and scold if his boots ain't nice, and horder about like a young
+lord. But Clive, though imperious, was very liberal and good-humoured,
+and not the worse served because he insisted upon exerting his youthful
+authority. As for friend Binnie, he had a hundred pursuits of his own,
+which made his time pass very comfortably. He had all the Lectures at
+the British Institution; he had the Geographical Society, the Asiatic
+Society, and the Political Economy Club; and though he talked year after
+year of going to visit his relations in Scotland, the months and seasons
+passed away, and his feet still beat the London pavement.
+
+In spite of the cold reception his brothers gave him, duty was duty,
+and Colonel Newcome still proposed, or hoped to be well with the female
+members of the Newcome family; and having, as we have said, plenty of
+time on his hands, and living at no very great distance from either of
+his brothers' town houses, when their wives were in London, the elder
+Newcome was for paying them pretty constant visits. But after the
+good gentleman had called twice or thrice upon his sister-in-law in
+Bryanstone Square--bringing, as was his wont, a present for this little
+niece, or a book for that--Mrs. Newcome, with her usual virtue, gave him
+to understand that the occupation of an English matron, who, besides her
+multifarious family duties, had her own intellectual culture to mind,
+would not allow her to pass the mornings in idle gossips: and of course
+took great credit to herself for having so rebuked him. "I am not above
+instruction of any age," says she, thanking Heaven (or complimenting it,
+rather, for having created a being so virtuous and humble-minded). "When
+Professor Schroff comes, I sit with my children, and take lessons in
+German,--and I say my verbs with Maria and Tommy in the same class!"
+Yes, with curtsies and fine speeches she actually bowed her brother
+out of doors; and the honest gentleman meekly left her, though with
+bewilderment, as he thought of the different hospitality to which he had
+been accustomed in the East, where no friend's house was ever closed
+to him, where no neighbour was so busy but he had time to make Thomas
+Newcome welcome.
+
+When Hobson Newcome's boys came home for the holidays, their kind uncle
+was for treating them to the sights of the town, but here Virtue again
+interposed and laid its interdict upon pleasure. "Thank you, very much,
+my dear Colonel," says Virtue, "there never was surely such a kind,
+affectionate, unselfish creature as you are, and so indulgent for
+children, but my boys and yours are brought up on a very different
+plan. Excuse me for saying that I do not think it is advisable that they
+should even see too much of each other. Clive's company is not good for
+them."
+
+"Great heavens, Maria!" cries the Colonel, starting up, "do you mean
+that my boy's society is not good enough for any boy alive?"
+
+Maria turned very red: she had said not more than she meant, but more
+than she meant to say. "My dear Colonel, how hot we are! how angry you
+Indian gentlemen become with us poor women! Your boy is much older than
+mine. He lives with artists, with all sorts of eccentric people. Our
+children are bred on quite a different plan. Hobson will succeed his
+father in the bank, and dear Samuel I trust will go into the Church. I
+told you, before, the views I had regarding the boys: but it was most
+kind of you to think of them--most generous and kind."
+
+"That nabob of ours is a queer fish," Hobson Newcome remarked to his
+nephew Barnes. "He is as proud as Lucifer, he is always taking huff
+about one thing or the other. He went off in a fume the other night
+because your aunt objected to his taking the boys to the play. She don't
+like their going to the play. My mother didn't either. Your aunt is a
+woman who is uncommon wideawake, I can tell you."
+
+"I always knew, sir, that my aunt was perfectly aware of the time of the
+day," says Barnes, with a bow.
+
+"And then the Colonel flies out about his boy, and says that my wife
+insulted him! I used to like that boy. Before his father came he was a
+good lad enough--a jolly brave little fellow."
+
+"I confess I did not know Mr. Clive at that interesting period of his
+existence," remarks Barnes.
+
+"But since he has taken this madcap freak of turning painter," the uncle
+continues, "there is no understanding the chap. Did you ever see such
+a set of fellows as the Colonel had got together at his party the other
+night? Dirty chaps in velvet coats and beards? They looked like a set of
+mountebanks. And this young Clive is going to turn painter!"
+
+"Very advantageous thing for the family. He'll do our pictures for
+nothing. I always said he was a darling boy," simpered Barnes.
+
+"Darling jackass!" growled out the senior. "Confound it, why doesn't my
+brother set him up in some respectable business? I ain't proud. I have
+not married an earl's daughter. No offence to you, Barnes."
+
+"Not at all, sir. I can't help it if my grandfather is a gentleman,"
+says Barnes, with a fascinating smile.
+
+The uncle laughs. "I mean I don't care what a fellow is if he is a good
+fellow. But a painter! hang it--a painter's no trade at all--I don't
+fancy seeing one of our family sticking up pictures for sale. I don't
+like it, Barnes."
+
+"Hush! here comes his distinguished friend, Mr. Pendennis," whispers
+Barnes; and the uncle growling out, "Damn all literary fellows--all
+artists--the whole lot of them!" turns away. Barnes waves three languid
+fingers of recognition towards Pendennis: and when the uncle and nephew
+have moved out of the club newspaper room, little Tom Eaves comes up and
+tells the present reporter every word of their conversation.
+
+Very soon Mrs. Newcome announced that their Indian brother found the
+society of Bryanstone Square very little to his taste, as indeed how
+should he? being a man of a good harmless disposition certainly, but
+of small intellectual culture. It could not be helped. She had done her
+utmost to make him welcome, and grieved that their pursuits were not
+more congenial. She heard that he was much more intimate in Park Lane.
+Possibly the superior rank of Lady Anne's family might present charms
+to Colonel Newcome, who fell asleep at her assemblies. His boy, she was
+afraid, was leading the most irregular life. He was growing a pair of
+mustachios, and going about with all sorts of wild associates. She found
+no fault; who was she, to find fault with any one? But she had been
+compelled to hint that her children must not be too intimate with him.
+And so, between one brother who meant no unkindness, and another who was
+all affection and goodwill, this undoubting woman created difference,
+distrust, dislike, which might one day possibly lead to open rupture.
+The wicked are wicked, no doubt, and they go astray and they fall, and
+they come by their deserts: but who can tell the mischief which the very
+virtuous do?
+
+To her sister-in-law, Lady Anne, the Colonel's society was more welcome.
+The affectionate gentleman never tired of doing kindnesses to his
+brother's many children; and as Mr. Clive's pursuits now separated him a
+good deal from his father, the Colonel, not perhaps without a sigh that
+fate should so separate him from the society which he loved best in the
+world, consoled himself as best he might with his nephews and nieces,
+especially with Ethel, for whom his belle passion conceived at first
+sight never diminished. If Uncle Newcome had a hundred children, Ethel
+said, who was rather jealous of disposition, he would spoil them all.
+He found a fine occupation in breaking a pretty little horse for her, of
+which he made her a present, and there was no horse in the Park that
+was so handsome, and surely no girl who looked more beautiful than Ethel
+Newcome with her broad hat and red ribbon, with her thick black locks
+waving round her bright face, galloping along the ride on Bhurtpore.
+Occasionally Clive was at their riding-parties, when the Colonel would
+fall back and fondly survey the young people cantering side by side over
+the grass: but by a tacit convention it was arranged that the cousins
+should be but seldom together; the Colonel might be his niece's
+companion and no one could receive him with a more joyous welcome, but
+when Mr. Clive made his appearance with his father at the Park Lane
+door, a certain gene was visible in Miss Ethel, who would never mount
+except with Colonel Newcome's assistance, and who, especially after
+Mr. Clive's famous mustachios made their appearance, rallied him, and
+remonstrated with him regarding those ornaments, and treated him with
+much distance and dignity. She asked him if he was going into the army?
+she could not understand how any but military men could wear mustachios;
+and then she looked fondly and archly at her uncle, and said she liked
+none that were not grey.
+
+Clive set her down as a very haughty, spoiled, aristocratic young
+creature. If he had been in love with her, no doubt he would have
+sacrificed even those beloved new-born whiskers for the charmer. Had
+he not already bought on credit the necessary implements in a fine
+dressing-case, from young Moss? But he was not in love with her;
+otherwise he would have found a thousand opportunities of riding with
+her, walking with her, meeting her, in spite of all prohibitions tacit
+or expressed, all governesses, guardians, mamma's punctilios, and kind
+hints from friends. For a while, Mr. Clive thought himself in love with
+his cousin; than whom no more beautiful young girl could be seen in any
+park, ball, or drawing-room; and he drew a hundred pictures of her, and
+discoursed about her beauties to J. J., who fell in love with her on
+hearsay. But at this time Mademoiselle Saltarelli was dancing at Drury
+Lane Theatre, and it certainly may be said that Clive's first love was
+bestowed upon that beauty: whose picture of course he drew in most of
+her favourite characters; and for whom his passion lasted until the end
+of the season, when her night was announced, tickets to be had at the
+theatre, or of Mademoiselle Saltarelli, Buckingham Street, Strand. Then
+it was that with a throbbing heart and a five-pound note, to
+engage places for the houri's benefit, Clive beheld Madame Rogomme,
+Mademoiselle Saltarelli's mother, who entertained him in the French
+language in a dark parlour smelling of onions. And oh! issuing from the
+adjoining dining-room (where was a dingy vision of a feast and pewter
+pots upon a darkling tablecloth), could that lean, scraggy, old,
+beetle-browed yellow face, who cried, "Ou es tu donc, maman?" with such
+a shrill nasal voice--could that elderly vixen be that blooming and
+divine Saltarelli? Clive drew her picture as she was, and a likeness
+of Madame Rogomme, her mamma; a Mosaic youth, profusely jewelled, and
+scented at once with tobacco and eau-de-cologne, occupied Clive's stall
+on Mademoiselle Saltarelli's night. It was young Mr. Moss, of Gandish's
+to whom Newcome ceded his place, and who laughed (as he always did at
+Clive's jokes) when the latter told the story of his interview with the
+dancer. "Paid five pound to see that woman! I could have took you behind
+the scenes" (or "beide the seeds," Mr. Moss said) "and showed her to you
+for nothing." Did he take Clive behind the scenes? Over this part of the
+young gentleman's life, without implying the least harm to him--for
+have not others been behind the scenes; and can there be any more dreary
+object than those whitened and raddled old women who shudder at the
+slips?--over this stage of Clive Newcome's life we may surely drop the
+curtain.
+
+It is pleasanter to contemplate that kind old face of Clive's father,
+that sweet young blushing lady by his side, as the two ride homewards
+at sunset. The grooms behind in quiet conversation about horses, as men
+never tire of talking about horses. Ethel wants to know about battles;
+about lovers' lamps, which she has read of in Lalla Rookh. "Have you
+ever seen them, uncle, floating down the Ganges of a night?" About
+Indian widows. "Did you actually see one burning, and hear her scream
+as you rode up?" She wonders whether he will tell her anything about
+Clive's mother: how she must have loved Uncle Newcome! Ethel can't bear,
+somehow, to think that her name was Mrs. Casey, perhaps he was very fond
+of her; though he scarcely ever mentions her name. She was nothing like
+that good old funny Miss Honeyman at Brighton. Who could the person
+be?--a person that her uncle knew ever so long ago--a French lady, whom
+her uncle says Ethel often resembles? That is why he speaks French so
+well. He can recite whole pages out of Racine. Perhaps it was the French
+lady who taught him. And he was not very happy at the Hermitage (though
+grandpapa was a very kind good man), and he upset papa in a little
+carriage, and was wild, and got into disgrace, and was sent to India?
+He could not have been very bad, Ethel thinks, looking at him with her
+honest eyes. Last week he went to the Drawing-room, and papa presented
+him. His uniform of grey and silver was quite old, yet he looked much
+grander than Sir Brian in his new deputy-lieutenant's dress. "Next year,
+when I am presented, you must come too, sir," says Ethel. "I insist upon
+it, you must come too!"
+
+"I will order a new uniform, Ethel," says her uncle.
+
+The girl laughs. "When little Egbert took hold of your sword, uncle,
+and asked you how many people you had killed, do you know I had the same
+question in my mind; and I thought when you went to the Drawing-room,
+perhaps the King will knight him. But instead he knighted mamma's
+apothecary, Sir Danby Jilks: that horrid little man, and I won't have
+you knighted any more."
+
+"I hope Egbert won't ask Sir Danby Jilks how many people HE has killed,"
+says the Colonel, laughing; but thinking the joke too severe upon Sir
+Danby and the profession, he forthwith apologises by narrating many
+anecdotes he knows to the credit of surgeons. How, when the fever broke
+out on board the ship going to India, their surgeon devoted himself to
+the safety of the crew, and died himself, leaving directions for the
+treatment of the patients when he was gone! What heroism the doctors
+showed during the cholera in India; and what courage he had seen some
+of them exhibit in action: attending the wounded men under the hottest
+fire, and exposing themselves as readily as the bravest troops. Ethel
+declares that her uncle always will talk of other people's courage, and
+never say a word about his own; "and the only reason," she says, "which
+made me like that odious Sir Thomas de Boots, who laughs so, and looks
+so red, and pays such horrid compliments to all ladies, was, that he
+praised you, uncle, at Newcome, last year, when Barnes and he came to
+us at Christmas. Why did you not come? Mamma and I went to see your old
+nurse; and we found her such a nice old lady." So the pair talk kindly
+on, riding homewards through the pleasant summer twilight. Mamma had
+gone out to dinner; and there were cards for three parties afterwards.
+"Oh, how I wish it was next year!" says Miss Ethel.
+
+Many a splendid assembly, and many a brilliant next year, will the
+ardent and hopeful young creature enjoy; but in the midst of her
+splendour and triumphs, buzzing flatterers, conquered rivals, prostrate
+admirers, no doubt she will think sometimes of that quiet season before
+the world began for her, and that dear old friend, on whose arm she
+leaned while she was yet a young girl.
+
+The Colonel comes to Park Street early in the forenoon, when the
+mistress of the house, surrounded by her little ones, is administering
+dinner to them. He behaves with splendid courtesy to Miss Quigley, the
+governess, and makes a point of taking wine with her, and of making
+a most profound bow during that ceremony. Miss Quigley cannot help
+thinking Colonel Newcome's bow very fine. She has an idea that his
+late Majesty must have bowed in that way: she flutteringly imparts this
+opinion to Lady Anne's maid; who tells her mistress, who tells Miss
+Ethel, who watches the Colonel the next time he takes wine with Miss
+Quigley, and they laugh, and then Ethel tells him; so that the gentleman
+and the governess have to blush ever after when they drink wine
+together. When she is walking with her little charges in the Park, or
+in that before-mentioned paradise nigh to Apsley House, faint signals of
+welcome appear on her wan cheeks. She knows the dear Colonel amongst a
+thousand horsemen. If Ethel makes for her uncle purses, guard-chains,
+antimacassars, and the like beautiful and useful articles, I believe it
+is in reality Miss Quigley who does four-fifths of the work, as she
+sits alone in the schoolroom, high, high up in that lone house, when the
+little ones are long since asleep, before her dismal little tea-tray,
+and her little desk containing her mother's letters and her mementos of
+home.
+
+There are, of course, numberless fine parties in Park Lane, where
+the Colonel knows he would be very welcome. But if there be grand
+assemblies, he does not care to come. "I like to go to the club best,"
+he says to Lady Anne. "We talk there as you do here about persons, and
+about Jack marrying, and Tom dying, and so forth. But we have known Jack
+and Tom all our lives, and so are interested in talking about them. Just
+as you are in speaking of your own friends and habitual society. They
+are people whose names I have sometimes read in the newspaper, but whom
+I never thought of meeting until I came to your house. What has an old
+fellow like me to say to your young dandies or old dowagers?"
+
+"Mamma is very odd and sometimes very captious, my dear Colonel," said
+Lady Anne, with a blush; "she suffers so frightfully from tic that we
+are all bound to pardon her."
+
+Truth to tell, old Lady Kew had been particularly rude to Colonel
+Newcome and Clive. Ethel's birthday befell in the spring, on which
+occasion she was wont to have a juvenile assembly, chiefly of girls of
+her own age and condition; who came, accompanied by a few governesses,
+and they played and sang their little duets and choruses together,
+and enjoyed a gentle refection of sponge-cakes, jellies, tea, and the
+like.--The Colonel, who was invited to this little party, sent a fine
+present to his favourite Ethel; and Clive and his friend J. J. made a
+funny series of drawings, representing the life of a young lady as
+they imagined it, and drawing her progress from her cradle upwards: now
+engaged with her doll, then with her dancing-master; now marching in
+her back-board; now crying over her German lessons: and dressed for
+her first ball finally, and bestowing her hand upon a dandy, of
+preternatural ugliness, who was kneeling at her feet as the happy
+man. This picture was the delight of the laughing happy girls; except,
+perhaps, the little cousins from Bryanstone Square, who were invited to
+Ethel's party, but were so overpowered by the prodigious new dresses in
+which their mamma had attired them, that they could admire nothing but
+their rustling pink frocks, their enormous sashes, their lovely new silk
+stockings.
+
+Lady Kew coming to London attended on the party, and presented her
+granddaughter with a sixpenny pincushion. The Colonel had sent Ethel
+a beautiful little gold watch and chain. Her aunt had complimented
+her with that refreshing work, Alison's History of Europe, richly
+bound.--Lady Kew's pincushion made rather a poor figure among the gifts,
+whence probably arose her ladyship's ill-humour.
+
+Ethel's grandmother became exceedingly testy when, the Colonel arriving,
+Ethel ran up to him and thanked him for the beautiful watch, in return
+for which she gave him a kiss, which, I dare say, amply repaid Colonel
+Newcome; and shortly after him Mr. Clive arrived, looking uncommonly
+handsome, with that smart little beard and mustachio with which nature
+had recently gifted him. As he entered, all the girls, who had been
+admiring his pictures, began to clap their hands. Mr. Clive Newcome
+blushed, and looked none the worse for that indication of modesty.
+
+Lady Kew had met Colonel Newcome a half-dozen times at her daughter's
+house: but on this occasion she had quite forgotten him, for when
+the Colonel made her a bow, her ladyship regarded him steadily, and
+beckoning her daughter to her, asked who the gentleman was who has just
+kissed Ethel? Trembling as she always did before her mother, Lady Anne
+explained. Lady Kew said "Oh!" and left Colonel Newcome blushing and
+rather embarrasse de sa personne--before her.
+
+With the clapping of hands that greeted Clive's arrival, the Countess
+was by no means more good-humoured. Not aware of her wrath, the young
+fellow, who had also previously been presented to her, came forward
+presently to make her his compliments. "Pray, who are you?" she said,
+looking at him very earnestly in the face. He told her his name.
+
+"Hm," said Lady Kew, "I have heard of you, and I have heard very little
+good of you."
+
+"Will your ladyship please to give me your informant?" cried out Colonel
+Newcome.
+
+Barnes Newcome, who had condescended to attend his sister's little fete,
+and had been languidly watching the frolics of the young people, looked
+very much alarmed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. Is Sentimental, but Short
+
+
+Without wishing to disparage the youth of other nations, I think a
+well-bred English lad has this advantage over them, that his bearing is
+commonly more modest than theirs. He does not assume the tail-coat and
+the manners of manhood too early: he holds his tongue, and listens to
+his elders: his mind blushes as well as his cheeks: he does not know
+how to make bows and pay compliments like the young Frenchman: nor to
+contradict his seniors as I am informed American striplings do. Boys,
+who learn nothing else at our public schools, learn at least good
+manners, or what we consider to be such; and with regard to the
+person at present under consideration, it is certain that all his
+acquaintances, excepting perhaps his dear cousin Barnes Newcome, agreed
+in considering him as a very frank, manly, modest, and agreeable young
+fellow.--My friend Warrington found a grim pleasure in his company; and
+his bright face, droll humour, and kindly laughter were always welcome
+in our chambers. Honest Fred Bayham was charmed to be in his society;
+and used pathetically to aver that he himself might have been such a
+youth, had he been blest with a kind father to watch, and good friends
+to guide, his early career. In fact, Fred was by far the most didactic
+of Clive's bachelor acquaintances, pursued the young man with endless
+advice and sermons, and held himself up as a warning to Clive, and
+a touching example of the evil consequences of early idleness and
+dissipation. Gentlemen of much higher rank in the world took a fancy to
+the lad. Captain Jack Belsize introduced him to his own mess, as also to
+the Guard dinner at St. James's; and my Lord Kew invited him to Kewbury,
+his lordship's house in Oxfordshire, where Clive enjoyed hunting,
+shooting, and plenty of good company. Mrs. Newcome groaned in spirit
+when she heard of these proceedings; and feared, feared very much that
+that unfortunate young man was going to ruin; and Barnes Newcome amiably
+disseminated reports amongst his family that the lad was plunged in
+all sorts of debaucheries: that he was tipsy every night: that he was
+engaged, in his sober moments, with dice, the turf, or worse amusements:
+and that his head was so turned by living with Kew and Belsize, that the
+little rascal's pride and arrogance were perfectly insufferable. Ethel
+would indignantly deny these charges; then perhaps credit a few of them;
+and she looked at Clive with melancholy eyes when he came to visit his
+aunt; and I hope prayed that Heaven might mend his wicked ways. The
+truth is, the young fellow enjoyed life, as one of his age and spirit
+might be expected to do; but he did very little harm, and meant less;
+and was quite unconscious of the reputation which his kind friends were
+making for him.
+
+There had been a long-standing promise that Clive and his father were to
+go to Newcome at Christmas: and I dare say Ethel proposed to reform the
+young prodigal, if prodigal he was, for she busied herself delightedly
+in preparing the apartments which they were to inhabit during their
+stay--speculated upon it in a hundred pleasant ways, putting off her
+visit to this pleasant neighbour, or that pretty scene in the vicinage,
+until her uncle should come and they should be enabled to enjoy the
+excursion together. And before the arrival of her relatives, Ethel,
+with one of her young brothers, went to see Mrs. Mason; and introduced
+herself as Colonel Newcome's niece; and came back charmed with the
+old lady, and eager once more in defence of Clive (when that young
+gentleman's character happened to be called in question by her brother
+Barnes), for had she not seen the kindest letter, which Clive had
+written to old Mrs. Mason, and the beautiful drawing of his father on
+horseback and in regimentals, waving his sword in front of the gallant
+the Bengal Cavalry, which the lad had sent down to the good old woman?
+He could not be very bad, Ethel thought, who was so kind and thoughtful
+for the poor. His father's son could not be altogether a reprobate. When
+Mrs. Mason, seeing how good and beautiful Ethel was, and thinking in her
+heart nothing could be too good or beautiful for Clive, nodded her kind
+old head at Miss Ethel, and said she should like to find a husband for
+her, Miss Ethel blushed, and looked handsomer than ever; and at home,
+when she was describing the interview, never mentioned this part of her
+talk with Mrs. Mason.
+
+But the enfant terrible, young Alfred, did: announcing to all the
+company at dessert, that Ethel was in love with Clive--that Clive was
+coming to marry her--that Mrs. Mason, the old woman at Newcome, had told
+him so.
+
+"I dare say she has told the tale all over Newcome!" shrieked out Mr.
+Barnes. "I dare say it will be in the Independent next week. By Jove,
+it's a pretty connexion--and nice acquaintances this uncle of ours
+brings us!" A fine battle ensued upon the receipt and discussion of this
+intelligence: Barnes was more than usually bitter and sarcastic: Ethel
+haughtily recriminated, losing her temper, and then her firmness, until,
+fairly bursting into tears, she taxed Barnes with meanness and malignity
+in for ever uttering stories to his cousin's disadvantage, and pursuing
+with constant slander and cruelty one of the very best of men. She rose
+and left the table in great tribulation--she went to her room and wrote
+a letter to her uncle, blistered with tears, in which she besought him
+not to come to Newcome.--Perhaps she went and looked at the apartments
+which she had adorned and prepared for his reception. It was for him and
+for his company that she was eager. She had met no one so generous and
+gentle, so honest and unselfish, until she had seen him.
+
+Lady Anne knew the ways of women very well; and when Ethel that night,
+still in great indignation and scorn against Barnes, announced that she
+had written a letter to her uncle, begging the Colonel not to come at
+Christmas, Ethel's mother soothed the wounded girl, and treated her with
+peculiar gentleness and affection; and she wisely gave Mr. Barnes to
+understand, that if he wished to bring about that very attachment, the
+idea of which made him so angry, he could use no better means than those
+which he chose to employ at present, of constantly abusing and insulting
+poor Clive, and awakening Ethel's sympathies by mere opposition. And
+Ethel's sad little letter was extracted from the post-bag: and her
+mother brought it to her, sealed, in her own room, where the young lady
+burned it: being easily brought by Lady Anne's quiet remonstrances to
+perceive that it was best no allusion should take place to the silly
+dispute which had occurred that evening; and that Clive and his father
+should come for the Christmas holidays, if they were so minded. But when
+they came, there was no Ethel at Newcome. She was gone on a visit to her
+sick aunt, Lady Julia. Colonel Newcome passed the holidays sadly
+without his young favourite, and Clive consoled himself by knocking
+down pheasants with Sir Brian's keepers: and increased his cousin's
+attachment for him by breaking the knees of Barnes's favourite mare out
+hunting. It was a dreary entertainment; father and son were glad enough
+to get away from it, and to return to their own humbler quarters in
+London.
+
+Thomas Newcome had now been for three years in the possession of that
+felicity which his soul longed after; and had any friend of his asked
+him if he was happy, he would have answered in the affirmative no doubt,
+and protested that he was in the enjoyment of everything a reasonable
+man could desire. And yet, in spite of his happiness, his honest face
+grew more melancholy: his loose clothes hung only the looser on his lean
+limbs: he ate his meals without appetite: his nights were restless: and
+he would sit for hours silent in the midst of his family, so that Mr.
+Binnie first began jocularly to surmise that Tom was crossed in love;
+then seriously to think that his health was suffering and that a doctor
+should be called to see him; and at last to agree that idleness was
+not good for the Colonel, and that he missed the military occupation to
+which he had been for so many years accustomed.
+
+The Colonel insisted that he was perfectly happy and contented. What
+could he want more than he had--the society of his son, for the present;
+and a prospect of quiet for his declining days? Binnie vowed that his
+friend's days had no business to decline as yet; that a sober man of
+fifty ought to be at his best; and that Newcome had grown older in three
+years in Europe, than in a quarter of a century in the East--all which
+statements were true, though the Colonel persisted in denying them.
+
+He was very restless. He was always finding business in distant quarters
+of England. He must go visit Tom Barker who was settled in Devonshire,
+or Harry Johnson who had retired and was living in Wales. He surprised
+Mrs. Honeyman by the frequency of his visits to Brighton, and always
+came away much improved in health by the sea air, and by constant riding
+with the harriers there. He appeared at Bath and at Cheltenham, where,
+as we know, there are many old Indians. Mr. Binnie was not indisposed
+to accompany him on some of these jaunts--"provided," the civilian said,
+"you don't take young Hopeful, who is much better without us; and let us
+two old fogies enjoy ourselves together."
+
+Clive was not sorry to be left alone. The father knew that only too
+well. The young man had occupations, ideas, associates, in whom the
+elder could take no interest. Sitting below in his blank, cheerless
+bedroom, Newcome could hear the lad and his friends talking, singing,
+and making merry overhead. Something would be said in Clive's well-known
+tones, and a roar of laughter would proceed from the youthful company.
+They had all sorts of tricks, bywords, waggeries, of which the father
+could not understand the jest nor the secret. He longed to share in it,
+but the party would be hushed if he went in to join it--and he would
+come away sad at heart, to think that his presence should be a signal
+for silence among them; and that his son could not be merry in his
+company.
+
+We must not quarrel with Clive and Clive's friends, because they could
+not joke and be free in the presence of the worthy gentleman. If they
+hushed when he came in, Thomas Newcome's sad face would seem to look
+round--appealing to one after another of them, and asking, "Why don't
+you go on laughing?" A company of old comrades shall be merry and
+laughing together, and the entrance of a single youngster will stop
+the conversation--and if men of middle age feel this restraint with our
+juniors, the young ones surely have a right to be silent before their
+elders. The boys are always mum under the eyes of the usher. There is
+scarce any parent, however friendly or tender with his children, but
+must feel sometimes that they have thoughts which are not his or hers;
+and wishes and secrets quite beyond the parental control: and, as people
+are vain, long after they are fathers, ay; or grandfathers, and not
+seldom fancy that mere personal desire of domination is overweening
+anxiety and love for their family, no doubt that common outcry against
+thankless children might often be shown to prove, not that the son is
+disobedient, but the father too exacting. When a mother (as fond mothers
+often will) vows that she knows every thought in her daughter's heart,
+I think she pretends to know a great deal too much; nor can there be a
+wholesomer task for the elders, as our young subjects grow up, naturally
+demanding liberty and citizen's rights, than for us gracefully to
+abdicate our sovereign pretensions and claims of absolute control.
+There's many a family chief who governs wisely and gently, who is loth
+to give the power up when he should. Ah, be sure, it is not youth alone
+that has need to learn humility! By their very virtues, and the purity
+of their lives, many good parents create flatterers for themselves, and
+so live in the midst of a filial court of parasites--and seldom without
+a pang of unwillingness, and often not at all, will they consent to
+forgo their autocracy, and exchange the tribute they have been wont
+to exact of love and obedience for the willing offering of love and
+freedom.
+
+Our good Colonel was not of the tyrannous, but of the loving order of
+fathers: and having fixed his whole heart upon this darling youth, his
+son, was punished, as I suppose such worldly and selfish love ought
+to be punished (so Mr. Honeyman says, at least, in his pulpit), by a
+hundred little mortifications, disappointments, and secret wounds, which
+stung not the less severely though never mentioned by their victim.
+
+Sometimes he would have a company of such gentlemen as Messrs.
+Warrington, Honeyman, and Pendennis, when haply a literary conversation
+would ensue after dinner; and the merits of our present poets and
+writers would be discussed with the claret. Honeyman was well enough
+read in profane literature, especially of the lighter sort; and, I dare
+say, could have passed a satisfactory examination in Balzac, Dumas,
+and Paul de Kock himself, of all whose works our good host was entirely
+ignorant,--as indeed he was of graver books, and of earlier books, and
+of books in general--except those few which we have said formed his
+travelling library. He heard opinions that amazed and bewildered him. He
+heard that Byron was no great poet, though a very clever man. He heard
+that there had been a wicked persecution against Mr. Pope's memory and
+fame, and that it was time to reinstate him that his favourite, Dr.
+Johnson, talked admirably, but did not write English: that young Keats
+was a genius to be estimated in future days with young Raphael: and that
+a young gentleman of Cambridge who had lately published two volumes of
+verses, might take rank with the greatest poets of all. Doctor Johnson
+not write English! Lord Byron not one of the greatest poets of the
+world! Sir Walter a poet of the second order! Mr. Pope attacked for
+inferiority and want of imagination; Mr. Keats and this young Mr.
+Tennyson of Cambridge, the chief of modern poetic literature! What
+were these new dicta, which Mr. Warrington delivered with a puff of
+tobacco-smoke: to which Mr. Honeyman blandly assented and Clive listened
+with pleasure? Such opinions were not of the Colonel's time. He tried
+in vain to construe Oenone, and to make sense of Lamia. Ulysses he could
+understand; but what were these prodigious laudations bestowed on it?
+And that reverence for Mr. Wordsworth, what did it mean? Had he not
+written Peter Bell, and been turned into deserved ridicule by all
+the reviews? Was that dreary Excursion to be compared to Goldsmith's
+Traveller, or Doctor Johnson's Imitation of the Tenth Satire of Juvenal?
+If the young men told the truth, where had been the truth in his own
+young days, and in what ignorance had our forefathers been brought
+up?--Mr. Addison was only an elegant essayist, and shallow trifler! All
+these opinions were openly uttered over the Colonel's claret, as he and
+Mr. Binnie sate wondering at the speakers, who were knocking the gods of
+their youth about their ears. To Binnie the shock was not so great; the
+hard-headed Scotchman had read Hume in his college days, and sneered
+at some of the gods even at that early time. But with Newcome the
+admiration for the literature of the last century was an article of
+belief: and the incredulity of the young men seemed rank blasphemy. "You
+will be sneering at Shakspeare next," he said: and was silenced, though
+not better pleased, when his youthful guests told him, that Doctor
+Goldsmith sneered at him too; that Dr. Johnson did not understand him,
+and that Congreve, in his own day and afterwards, was considered to
+be, in some points, Shakspeare's superior. "What do you think a man's
+criticism is worth, sir," cries Mr. Warrington, "who says those lines of
+Mr. Congreve, about a church--
+
+ 'How reverend is the face of yon tall pile,
+ Whose ancient pillars rear their marble heads,
+ To bear aloft its vast and ponderous roof,
+ By its own weight made steadfast and immovable;
+ Looking tranquillity. It strikes an awe
+ And terror on my aching sight'--et caetera
+
+what do you think of a critic who says those lines are finer than
+anything Shakspeare ever wrote?" A dim consciousness of danger for
+Clive, a terror that his son had got into the society of heretics and
+unbelievers, came over the Colonel,--and then presently, as was the wont
+with his modest soul, a gentle sense of humility. He was in the wrong,
+perhaps, and these younger men were right. Who was he, to set up his
+judgment against men of letters, educated at college? It was better that
+Clive should follow them than him, who had had but a brief schooling,
+and that neglected, and who had not the original genius of his son's
+brilliant companions. We particularise these talks, and the little
+incidental mortifications which one of the best of men endured, not
+because the conversations are worth the remembering or recording, but
+because they presently very materially influenced his own and his son's
+future history.
+
+In the midst of the artists and their talk the poor Colonel was equally
+in the dark. They assaulted this Academician and that; laughed at Mr.
+Haydon, or sneered at Mr. Eastlake, or the contrary; deified Mr. Turner
+on one side of the table, and on the other scorned him as a madman--nor
+could Newcome comprehend a word of their jargon. Some sense there must
+be in their conversation: Clive joined eagerly in it and took one side
+or another. But what was all this rapture about a snuffy brown picture
+called Titian, this delight in three flabby nymphs by Rubens, and so
+forth? As for the vaunted Antique, and the Elgin Marbles--it might be
+that that battered torso was a miracle, and that broken-nosed bust a
+perfect beauty. He tried and tried to see that they were. He went away
+privily and worked at the National Gallery with a catalogue: and passed
+hours in the Museum before the ancient statues, desperately praying to
+comprehend them, and puzzled before them as he remembered he was puzzled
+before the Greek rudiments as a child when he cried over o kai hae
+alaethaes kai to alaethaes. Whereas when Clive came to look at these
+same things his eyes would lighten up with pleasure, and his cheeks
+flush with enthusiasm. He seemed to drink in colour as he would a feast
+of wine. Before the statues he would wave his finger, following the line
+of grace, and burst into ejaculations of delight and admiration. "Why
+can't I love the things which he loves?" thought Newcome; "why am I
+blind to the beauties which he admires so much--and am I unable to
+comprehend what he evidently understands at his young age?"
+
+So, as he thought what vain egotistical hopes he used to form about the
+boy when he was away in India--how in his plans for the happy future,
+Clive was to be always at his side; how they were to read, work, play,
+think, be merry together--a sickening and humiliating sense of the
+reality came over him: and he sadly contrasted it with the former fond
+anticipations. Together they were, yet he was alone still. His thoughts
+were not the boy's: and his affections rewarded but with a part of the
+young man's heart. Very likely other lovers have suffered equally. Many
+a man and woman has been incensed and worshipped, and has shown no more
+feeling than is to be expected from idols. There is yonder statue in St.
+Peter's, of which the toe is worn away with kisses, and which sits, and
+will sit eternally, prim and cold. As the young man grew, it seemed
+to the father as if each day separated them more and more. He himself
+became more melancholy and silent. His friend the civilian marked the
+ennui, and commented on it in his laughing way. Sometimes he announced
+to the club that Tom Newcome was in love: then he thought it was not
+Tom's heart but his liver that was affected, and recommended blue pill.
+O thou fond fool! who art thou, to know any man's heart save thine
+alone? Wherefore were wings made, and do feathers grow, but that birds
+should fly? The instinct that bids you love your nest, leads the young
+ones to seek a tree and a mate of their own. As if Thomas Newcome by
+poring over poems or pictures ever so much could read them with Clive's
+eyes!--as if by sitting mum over his wine, but watching till the lad
+came home with his latchkey (when the Colonel crept back to his own room
+in his stockings), by prodigal bounties, by stealthy affection, by any
+schemes or prayers, he could hope to remain first in his son's heart!
+
+One day going into Clive's study, where the lad was so deeply engaged
+that he did not hear the father's steps advancing, Thomas Newcome found
+his son, pencil in hand, poring over a paper, which, blushing, he thrust
+hastily into his breast-pocket, as soon as he saw his visitor. The
+father was deeply smitten and mortified. "I--I am sorry you have any
+secrets from me, Clive," he gasped out at length.
+
+The boy's face lighted up with humour. "Here it is, father, if you would
+like to see:"--and he pulled out a paper which contained neither more
+nor less than a copy of very flowery verses, about a certain young lady,
+who had succeeded (after I know not how many predecessors) to the place
+of prima-donna assoluta in Clive's heart. And be pleased, madam, not
+to be too eager with your censure, and fancy that Mr. Clive or his
+chronicler would insinuate anything wrong. I dare say you felt a flame
+or two before you were married yourself: and that the Captain or the
+Curate, and the interesting young foreigner with whom you danced, caused
+your heart to beat, before you bestowed that treasure on Mr. Candour.
+Clive was doing no more than your own son will do when he is eighteen
+or nineteen years old himself--if he is a lad of any spirit and a worthy
+son of so charming a lady as yourself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. Describes a Visit to Paris; with Accidents and Incidents
+in London
+
+
+Mr. Clive, as we have said, had now begun to make acquaintances of his
+own; and the chimney-glass in his study was decorated with such a number
+of cards of invitation, as made his ex-fellow-student of Gandish's,
+young Moss, when admitted into that sanctum, stare with respectful
+astonishment. "Lady Bary Rowe at obe," the young Hebrew read out; "Lady
+Baughton at obe, dadsig! By eyes! what a tip-top swell you're a gettid
+to be, Newcome! I guess this is a different sort of business to the hops
+at old Levison's, where you first learned the polka; and where we had to
+pay a shilling a glass for negus!"
+
+"We had to pay! You never paid anything, Moss," cries Clive, laughing;
+and indeed the negus imbibed by Mr. Moss did not cost that prudent young
+fellow a penny.
+
+"Well, well; I suppose at these swell parties you 'ave as bush champade
+as ever you like," continues Moss. "Lady Kicklebury at obe--small early
+party. Why, I declare you know the whole peerage! I say, if any of these
+swells want a little tip-top lace, a real bargain, or diamonds, you
+know, you might put in a word for us, and do us a good turn."
+
+"Give me some of your cards," says Clive; "I can distribute them about
+at the balls I go to. But you must treat my friends better than you
+serve me. Those cigars which you sent me were abominable, Moss; the
+groom in the stable won't smoke them."
+
+"What a regular swell that Newcome has become!" says Mr. Moss to an old
+companion, another of Clive's fellow-students: "I saw him riding in
+the Park with the Earl of Kew, and Captain Belsize, and a whole lot of
+'em--I know 'em all--and he'd hardly nod to me. I'll have a horse next
+Sunday, and then I'll see whether he'll cut me or not. Confound his
+airs! For all he's such a count, I know he's got an aunt who lets
+lodgings at Brighton, and an uncle who'll be preaching in the Bench if
+he don't keep a precious good look-out."
+
+"Newcome is not a bit of a count," answers Moss's companion,
+indignantly. "He don't care a straw whether a fellow's poor or rich; and
+he comes up to my room just as willingly as he would go to a duke's.
+He is always trying to do a friend a good turn. He draws the figure
+capitally: he looks proud, but he isn't, and is the best-natured fellow
+I ever saw."
+
+"He ain't been in our place this eighteen months," says Mr. Moss: "I
+know that."
+
+"Because when he came you were always screwing him with some bargain or
+other," cried the intrepid Hicks, Mr. Moss's companion for the moment.
+"He said he couldn't afford to know you: you never let him out of your
+house without a pin, or a box of eau-de-cologne, or a bundle of cigars.
+And when you cut the arts for the shop, how were you and Newcome to go
+on together, I should like to know?"
+
+"I know a relative of his who comes to our 'ouse every three months, to
+renew a little bill," says Mr. Moss, with a grin: "and I know this, if I
+go to the Earl of Kew in the Albany, or the Honourable Captain Belsize,
+Knightsbridge Barracks, they let me in soon enough. I'm told his father
+ain't got much money."
+
+"How the deuce should I know? or what do I care?" cries the young
+artist, stamping the heel of his blucher on the pavement. "When I was
+sick in that confounded Clipstone Street, I know the Colonel came to see
+me, and Newcome too, day after day, and night after night. And when I
+was getting well, they sent me wine and jelly, and all sorts of jolly
+things. I should like to know how often you came to see me, Moss, and
+what you did for a fellow?"
+
+"Well, I kep away because I thought you wouldn't like to be reminded of
+that two pound three you owe me, Hicks: that's why I kep away," says
+Mr. Moss, who, I dare say, was good-natured too. And when young Moss
+appeared at the billiard-room that night, it was evident that Hicks had
+told the story; for the Wardour Street youth was saluted with a roar of
+queries, "How about that two pound three that Hicks owes you?"
+
+The artless conversation of the two youths will enable us to understand
+how our hero's life was speeding. Connected in one way or another with
+persons in all ranks, it never entered his head to be ashamed of the
+profession which he had chosen. People in the great world did not in
+the least trouble themselves regarding him, or care to know whether Mr.
+Clive Newcome followed painting or any other pursuit: and though Clive
+saw many of his schoolfellows in the world, these entering into the
+army, others talking with delight of college, and its pleasures or
+studies; yet, having made up his mind that art was his calling, he
+refused to quit her for any other mistress, and plied his easel very
+stoutly. He passed through the course of study prescribed by Mr.
+Gandish, and drew every cast and statue in that gentleman's studio.
+Grindley, his tutor, getting a curacy, Clive did not replace him; but
+he took a course of modern languages, which he learned with considerable
+aptitude and rapidity. And now, being strong enough to paint without
+a master, it was found that there was no good light in the house in
+Fitzroy Square; and Mr. Clive must needs have an atelier hard by, where
+he could pursue his own devices independently.
+
+If his kind father felt any pang even at this temporary parting, he was
+greatly soothed and pleased by a little mark of attention on the young
+man's part, of which his present biographer happened to be a witness;
+for having walked over with Colonel Newcome to see the new studio, with
+its tall centre window, and its curtains, and carved wardrobes, china
+jars, pieces of armour, and other artistical properties, the lad, with a
+very sweet smile of kindness and affection lighting up his honest face,
+took one of two Bramah's house-keys with which he was provided, and gave
+it to his father: "That's your key, sir," he said to the Colonel; "and
+you must be my first sitter, please, father; for though I'm a historical
+painter, I shall condescend to do a few portraits, you know." The
+Colonel took his son's hand, and grasped it; as Clive fondly put the
+other hand on his father's shoulder. Then Colonel Newcome walked
+away into the next room for a minute or two, and came back wiping his
+moustache with his handkerchief, and still holding the key in the other
+hand. He spoke about some trivial subject when he returned; but his
+voice quite trembled; and I thought his face seemed to glow with love
+and pleasure. Clive has never painted anything better than that head,
+which he executed in a couple of sittings; and wisely left without
+subjecting it to the chances of further labour.
+
+It is certain the young man worked much better after he had been
+inducted into this apartment of his own. And the meals at home were
+gayer; and the rides with his father more frequent and agreeable. The
+Colonel used his key once or twice, and found Clive and his friend
+Ridley engaged in depicting a life-guardsman,--or a muscular negro,--or
+a Malay from a neighbouring crossing, who would appear as Othello,
+conversing with a Clipstone Street nymph, who was ready to represent
+Desdemona, Diana, Queen Ellinor (sucking poison from the arm of the
+Plantagenet of the Blues), or any other model of virgin or maiden
+excellence.
+
+Of course our young man commenced as a historical painter, deeming
+that the highest branch of art; and declining (except for preparatory
+studies) to operate on any but the largest canvasses. He painted a
+prodigious battle-piece of Assaye, with General Wellesley at the head of
+the 19th Dragoons charging the Mahratta Artillery, and sabring them at
+their guns. A piece of ordnance was dragged into the back-yard, and the
+Colonel's stud put into requisition to supply studies for this enormous
+picture. Fred Bayham (a stunning likeness) appeared as the principal
+figure in the foreground, terrifically wounded, but still of undaunted
+courage, slashing about amidst a group of writhing Malays, and
+bestriding the body of a dead cab-horse, which Clive painted, until the
+landlady and rest of the lodgers cried out, and for sanitary reasons the
+knackers removed the slaughtered charger. So large was this picture that
+it could only be got out of the great window by means of artifice and
+coaxing; and its transport caused a shout of triumph among the
+little boys in Charlotte Street. Will it be believed that the Royal
+Academicians rejected the "Battle of Assaye"? The masterpiece was so big
+that Fitzroy Square could not hold it; and the Colonel had thoughts of
+presenting it to the Oriental Club; but Clive (who had taken a trip to
+Paris with his father, as a delassement after the fatigues incident on
+this great work), when he saw it, after a month's interval, declared the
+thing was rubbish, and massacred Britons, Malays, Dragoons, Artillery
+and all.
+
+
+"Hotel de la Terrasse, Rue de Rivoli,
+
+"April 27--May 1, 183-.
+
+"My Dear Pendennis--You said I might write you a line from Paris; and
+if you find in my correspondence any valuable hints for the Pall Mall
+Gazette, you are welcome to use them gratis. Now I am here, I wonder I
+have never been here before, and that I have seen the Dieppe packet a
+thousand times at Brighton pier without thinking of going on board her.
+We had a rough little passage to Boulogne. We went into action as we
+cleared Dover pier--when the first gun was fired, and a stout old lady
+was carried off by a steward to the cabin; half a dozen more dropped
+immediately, and the crew bustled about, bringing basins for the
+wounded. The Colonel smiled as he saw them fall. 'I'm an old sailor,'
+says he to a gentleman on board. 'I was coming home, sir, and we had
+plenty of rough weather on the voyage, I never thought of being unwell.
+My boy here, who made the voyage twelve years ago last May, may have
+lost his sea-legs; but for me, sir--' Here a great wave dashed over the
+three of us; and would you believe it? in five minutes after, the dear
+old governor was as ill as all the rest of the passengers. When we
+arrived, we went through a line of ropes to the custom-house, with a
+crowd of snobs jeering at us on each side; and then were carried off by
+a bawling commissioner to an hotel, where the Colonel, who speaks
+French beautifully, you know, told the waiter to get us a petit dejeuner
+soigne; on which the fellow, grinning, said, a 'nice fried sole,
+sir,--nice mutton-chop, sir,' in regular Temple Bar English; and brought
+us Harvey sauce with the chops, and the last Bell's Life to amuse us
+after our luncheon. I wondered if all the Frenchmen read Bell's Life,
+and if all the inns smell so of brandy-and-water!
+
+"We walked out to see the town, which I dare say you know, and therefore
+shan't describe. We saw some good studies of fishwomen with bare legs,
+and remarked that the soldiers were very dumpy and small. We were glad
+when the time came to set off by the diligence; and having the coupe
+to ourselves, made a very comfortable journey to Paris. It was jolly to
+hear the postillions crying to their horses, and the bells of the
+team, and to feel ourselves really in France. We took in provender
+at Abbeville and Amiens, and were comfortably landed here after about
+six-and-twenty hours of coaching. Didn't I get up the next morning
+and have a good walk in the Tuileries! The chestnuts were out, and the
+statues all shining, and all the windows of the palace in a blaze. It
+looks big enough for the king of the giants to live in. How grand it is!
+I like the barbarous splendour of the architecture, and the ornaments
+profuse and enormous with which it is overladen. Think of Louis XVI.
+with a thousand gentlemen at his back, and a mob of yelling ruffians in
+front of him, giving up his crown without a fight for it; leaving his
+friends to be butchered, and himself sneaking into prison! No end of
+little children were skipping and playing in the sunshiny walks, with
+dresses as bright and cheeks as red as the flowers and roses in the
+parterres. I couldn't help thinking of Barbaroux and his bloody pikemen
+swarming in the gardens, and fancied the Swiss in the windows yonder;
+where they were to be slaughtered when the King had turned his back.
+What a great man that Carlyle is! I have read the battle in his History
+so often, that I knew it before I had seen it. Our windows look out
+on the obelisk where the guillotine stood. The Colonel doesn't admire
+Carlyle. He says Mrs. Graham's Letters from Paris are excellent, and we
+bought Scott's Visit to Paris, and Paris Re-visited, and read them in
+the diligence. They are famous good reading; but the Palais Royal is
+very much altered since Scott's time: no end of handsome shops; I went
+there directly,--the same night we arrived, when the Colonel went to
+bed. But there is none of the fun going on which Scott describes. The
+laquais de place says Charles X. put an end to it all.
+
+"Next morning the governor had letters to deliver after breakfast, and
+left me at the Louvre door. I shall come and live here, I think. I feel
+as if I never want to go away. I had not been ten minutes in the place
+before I fell in love with the most beautiful creature the world has
+ever seen. She was standing silent and majestic in the centre of one
+of the rooms of the statue-gallery; and the very first glimpse of her
+struck one breathless with the sense of her beauty. I could not see the
+colour of her eyes and hair exactly, but the latter is light, and the
+eyes I should think are grey. Her complexion is of a beautiful warm
+marble tinge. She is not a clever woman, evidently; I do not think she
+laughs or talks much--she seems too lazy to do more than smile. She is
+only beautiful. This divine creature has lost an arm, which has been
+cut off at the shoulder, but she looks none the less lovely for the
+accident. She maybe some two-and-thirty years old; and she was born
+about two thousand years ago. Her name is the Venus of Milo. O Victrix!
+O lucky Paris! (I don't mean this present Lutetia, but Priam's son.) How
+could he give the apple to any else but this enslaver--this joy of gods
+and men? at whose benign presence the flowers spring up, and the smiling
+ocean sparkles, and the soft skies beam with serene light! I wish we
+might sacrifice. I would bring a spotless kid, snowy-coated, and a pair
+of doves and a jar of honey--yea, honey from Morel's in Piccadilly,
+thyme-flavoured, narbonian, and we would acknowledge the Sovereign
+Loveliness, and adjure the Divine Aphrodite. Did you ever see my pretty
+young cousin, Miss Newcome, Sir Brian's daughter? She has a great look
+of the huntress Diana. It is sometimes too proud and too cold for me.
+The blare of those horns is too shrill and the rapid pursuit through
+bush and bramble too daring. O thou generous Venus! O thou beautiful
+bountiful calm! At thy soft feet let me kneel--on cushions of Tyrian
+purple. Don't show this to Warrington, please: I never thought when I
+began that Pegasus was going to run away with me.
+
+"I wish I had read Greek a little more at school: it's too late at my
+age; I shall be nineteen soon, and have got my own business; but when
+we return I think I shall try and read it with Cribs. What have I been
+doing, spending six months over a picture of sepoys and dragoons cutting
+each other's throats? Art ought not to be a fever. It ought to be a
+calm; not a screaming bull-fight or a battle of gladiators, but a temple
+for placid contemplation, rapt worship, stately rhythmic ceremony, and
+music solemn and tender. I shall take down my Snyders and Rubens when
+I get home; and turn quietist. To think I have spent weeks in depicting
+bony life-guardsmen delivering cut one, or Saint George, and painting
+black beggars off a crossing!
+
+"What a grand thing it is to think of half a mile of pictures at the
+Louvre! Not but that there are a score under the old pepper-boxes in
+Trafalgar Square as fine as the best here. I don't care for any Raphael
+here, as much as our own St. Catharine. There is nothing more grand.
+Could the Pyramids of Egypt or the Colossus of Rhodes be greater than
+our Sebastian? and for our Bacchus and Ariadne, you cannot beat the best
+you know. But if we have fine jewels, here there are whole sets of them:
+there are kings and all their splendid courts round about them. J. J.
+and I must come and live here. Oh, such portraits of Titian! Oh, such
+swells by Vandyke! I'm sure he must have been as fine a gentleman as
+any he painted! It's a shame they haven't got a Sir Joshua or two. At a
+feast of painters he has a right to a place, and at the high table
+too. Do you remember Tom Rogers, of Gandish's? He used to come to my
+rooms--my other rooms in the Square. Tom is here with a fine carrotty
+beard, and a velvet jacket, cut open at the sleeves, to show that Tom
+has a shirt. I dare say it was clean last Sunday. He has not learned
+French yet, but pretends to have forgotten English; and promises to
+introduce me to a set of the French artists his camarades. There seems
+to be a scarcity of soap among these young fellows; and I think I shall
+cut off my mustachios; only Warrington will have nothing to laugh at
+when I come home.
+
+"The Colonel and I went to dine at the Cafe de Paris, and afterwards to
+the opera. Ask for huitres de Marenne when you dine here. We dined with
+a tremendous French swell, the Vicomte de Florac, officier d'ordonnance
+to one of the princes, and son of some old friends of my father's.
+They are of very high birth, but very poor. He will be a duke when his
+cousin, the Duc d'Ivry, dies. His father is quite old. The vicomte was
+born in England. He pointed out to us no end of famous people at the
+opera--a few of the Fauxbourg St. Germain, and ever so many of the
+present people:--M. Thiers, and Count Mole, and Georges Sand, and Victor
+Hugo, and Jules Janin--I forget half their names. And yesterday we went
+to see his mother, Madame de Florac. I suppose she was an old flame of
+the Colonel's, for their meeting was uncommonly ceremonious and tender.
+It was like an elderly Sir Charles Grandison saluting a middle-aged Miss
+Byron. And only fancy! the Colonel has been here once before since his
+return to England! It must have been last year, when he was away for ten
+days, whilst I was painting that rubbishing picture of the Black Prince
+waiting on King John. Madame de F. is a very grand lady, and must have
+been a great beauty in her time. There are two pictures by Gerard in her
+salon--of her and M. de Florac. M. de Florac, old swell, powder, thick
+eyebrows, hooked nose; no end of stars, ribbons, and embroidery. Madame
+also in the dress of the Empire--pensive, beautiful, black velvet, and a
+look something like my cousin's. She wore a little old-fashioned brooch
+yesterday, and said, 'Voila, la reconnoissez-vous? Last year when you
+were here, it was in the country;' and she smiled at him: and the dear
+old boy gave a sort of groan and dropped his head in his hand. I know
+what it is. I've gone through it myself. I kept for six months an absurd
+ribbon of that infernal little flirt Fanny Freeman. Don't you remember
+how angry I was when you abused her?
+
+"'Your father and I knew each other when we were children, my friend,'
+the Countess said to me (in the sweetest French accent). He was
+looking into the garden of the house where they live, in the Rue Saint
+Dominique. 'You must come and see me often, always. You remind me of
+him,' and she added, with a very sweet kind smile, 'Do you like best
+to think that he was better-looking than you, or that you excel him?'
+I said I should like to be like him. But who is? There are cleverer
+fellows, I dare say; but where is there such a good one? I wonder
+whether he was very fond of Madame de Florac? The old Count does not
+show. He is quite old, and wears a pigtail. We saw it bobbing over his
+garden chair. He lets the upper part of his house; Major-General the
+Honourable Zeno F. Pokey, of Cincinnati, U.S., lives in it. We saw Mrs.
+Pokey's carriage in the court, and her footmen smoking cigars there;
+a tottering old man with feeble legs, as old as old Count de Florac,
+seemed to be the only domestic who waited on the family below.
+
+"Madame de Florac and my father talked about my profession. The Countess
+said it was a belle carriere. The Colonel said it was better than the
+army. 'Ah oui, monsieur,' says she very sadly. And then he said, 'that
+presently I should very likely come to study at Paris, when he knew
+there would be a kind friend to watch over son garcon.'
+
+"'But you will be here to watch over him yourself, mon ami?' says the
+French lady.
+
+"Father shook his head. 'I shall very probably have to go back to
+India,' he said. 'My furlough is expired. I am now taking my extra
+leave. If I can get my promotion, I need not return. Without that I
+cannot afford to live in Europe. But my absence in all probability
+will be but very short,' he said. 'And Clive is old enough now to go on
+without me.'
+
+"Is this the reason why father has been so gloomy for some months
+past? I thought it might have been some of my follies which made him
+uncomfortable; and you know I have been trying my best to amend--I
+have not half such a tailor's bill this year as last. I owe scarcely
+anything. I have paid off Moss every halfpenny for his confounded rings
+and gimcracks. I asked father about this melancholy news as we walked
+away from Madame de Florac.
+
+"He is not near so rich as we thought. Since he has been at home he says
+he has spent greatly more than his income, and is quite angry at his own
+extravagance. At first he thought he might have retired from the army
+altogether; but after three years at home, he finds he cannot live
+upon his income. When he gets his promotion as full Colonel, he will be
+entitled to a thousand a year; that, and what he has invested in India,
+and a little in this country, will be plenty for both of us. He never
+seems to think of my making money by my profession. Why, suppose I sell
+the 'Battle of Assaye' for 500 pounds? that will be enough to carry me
+on ever so long, without dipping into the purse of the dear old father.
+
+"The Viscount de Florac called to dine with us. The Colonel said he did
+not care about going out: and so the Viscount and I went together. Trois
+Freres Provencaux--he ordered the dinner and of course I paid. Then we
+went to a little theatre, and he took me behind the scenes--such a queer
+place! We went to the loge of Mademoiselle Fine who acted the part of
+'Le petit Tambour,' in which she sings a famous song with a drum. He
+asked her and several literary fellows to supper at the Cafe Anglais.
+And I came home ever so late, and lost twenty napoleons at a game called
+bouillotte. It was all the change out of a twenty-pound note which dear
+old Binnie gave me before we set out, with a quotation out of Horace,
+you know, about Neque tu choreas sperne puer. O me! how guilty I felt as
+I walked home at ever so much o'clock to the Hotel de la Terrasse, and
+sneaked into our apartment! But the Colonel was sound asleep. His dear
+old boots stood sentries at his bedroom door, and I slunk into mine as
+silently as I could.
+
+"P.S.--Wednesday.--There's just one scrap of paper left. I have got J.
+J.'s letter. He has been to the private view of the Academy (so that his
+own picture is in), and the 'Battle of Assaye' is refused. Smee told
+him it was too big. I dare say it's very bad. I'm glad I'm away, and the
+fellows are not condoling with me.
+
+"Please go and see Mr. Binnie. He has come to grief. He rode the
+Colonel's horse; came down on the pavement and wrenched his leg, and I'm
+afraid the grey's. Please look at his legs; we can't understand John's
+report of them. He, I mean Mr. B., was going to Scotland to see his
+relations when the accident happened. You know he has always been going
+to Scotland to see his relations. He makes light of the business, and
+says the Colonel is not to think of coming to him: and I don't want to
+go back just yet, to see all the fellows from Gandish's and the Life
+Academy, and have them grinning at my misfortune.
+
+"The governor would send his regards, I dare say, but he is out, and I
+am always yours affectionately, Clive Newcome."
+
+"P.S.--He tipped me himself this morning; isn't he a kind, dear old
+fellow?"
+
+
+Arthur Pendennis, Esq., to Clive Newcome, Esq.
+
+"'Pall Mall Gazette,' Journal of Politics, Literature and Fashion, 225
+Catherine Street, Strand,
+
+"Dear Clive--I regret very much for Fred Bayham's sake (who has lately
+taken the responsible office of Fine Arts Critic for the P. G.) that
+your extensive picture of the 'Battle of Assaye' has not found a place
+in the Royal Academy Exhibition. F. B. is at least fifteen shillings
+out of pocket by its rejection, as he had prepared a flaming eulogium of
+your work, which of course is so much waste paper in consequence of this
+calamity. Never mind. Courage, my son. The Duke of Wellington you know
+was best back at Seringapatam before he succeeded at Assaye. I hope you
+will fight other battles, and that fortune in future years will be
+more favourable to you. The town does not talk very much of your
+discomfiture. You see the parliamentary debates are very interesting
+just now, and somehow the 'Battle of Assaye' did not seem to excite the
+public mind.
+
+"I have been to Fitzroy Square; both to the stables and the house. The
+Houyhnhnm's legs are very well; the horse slipped on his side and not
+on his knees, and has received no sort of injury. Not so Mr. Binnie;
+his ankle is much wrenched and inflamed. He must keep his sofa for many
+days, perhaps weeks. But you know he is a very cheerful philosopher, and
+endures the evils of life with much equanimity. His sister has come to
+him. I don't know whether that may be considered as a consolation of his
+evil or an aggravation of it. You know he uses the sarcastic method in
+his talk, and it was difficult to understand from him whether he was
+pleased or bored by the embraces of his relative. She was an infant when
+he last beheld her, on his departure to India. She is now (to speak with
+respect) a very brisk, plump, pretty little widow; having, seemingly,
+recovered from her grief at the death of her husband, Captain Mackenzie
+in the West Indies. Mr. Binnie was just on the point of visiting his
+relatives, who reside at Musselburgh, near Edinburgh, when he met with
+the fatal accident which prevented his visit to his native shores. His
+account of his misfortune and his lonely condition was so pathetic
+that Mrs. Mackenzie and her daughter put themselves into the Edinburgh
+steamer, and rushed to console his sofa. They occupy your bedroom and
+sitting-room, which latter Mrs. Mackenzie says no longer smells of
+tobacco smoke, as it did when she took possession of your den. If you
+have left any papers about, any bills, any billets-doux, I make no doubt
+the ladies have read every single one of them, according to the
+amiable habits of their sex. The daughter is a bright little blue-eyed
+fair-haired lass, with a very sweet voice, in which she sings (unaided
+by instrumental music, and seated on a chair in the middle of the room)
+the artless ballads of her native country. I had the pleasure of hearing
+the 'Bonnets of Bonny Dundee' and 'Jack of Hazeldean' from her ruby lips
+two evenings since; not indeed for the first time in my life, but never
+from such a pretty little singer. Though both ladies speak our language
+with something of the tone usually employed by the inhabitants of the
+northern part of Britain, their accent is exceedingly pleasant, and
+indeed by no means so strong as Mr. Binnie's own; for Captain Mackenzie
+was an Englishman, for whose sake his lady modified her native
+Musselburgh pronunciation. She tells many interesting anecdotes of him,
+of the West Indies, and of the distinguished regiment of infantry to
+which the captain belonged. Miss Rosa is a great favourite with her
+uncle, and I have had the good fortune to make their stay in the
+metropolis more pleasant, by sending them orders, from the Pall Mall
+Gazette, for the theatres, panoramas, and the principal sights in town.
+For pictures they do not seem to care much; they thought the National
+Gallery a dreary exhibition, and in the Royal Academy could be got to
+admire nothing but the picture of M'Collop of M'Collop, by our friend of
+the like name; but they think Madame Tussaud's interesting exhibition of
+waxwork the most delightful in London; and there I had the happiness of
+introducing them to our friend Mr. Frederick Bayham; who, subsequently,
+on coming to this office with his valuable contributions on the Fine
+Arts, made particular inquiries as to their pecuniary means, and
+expressed himself instantly ready to bestow his hand upon the mother or
+daughter, provided old Mr. Binnie would make a satisfactory settlement.
+I got the ladies a box at the opera, whither they were attended by
+Captain Goby of their regiment, godfather to Miss, and where I had the
+honour of paying them a visit. I saw your fair young cousin Miss
+Newcome in the lobby with her grandmamma Lady Kew. Mr. Bayham with great
+eloquence pointed out to the Scotch ladies the various distinguished
+characters in the house. The opera delighted them, but they were
+astounded at the ballet, from which mother and daughter retreated in
+the midst of a fire of pleasantries of Captain Goby. I can fancy that
+officer at mess, and how brilliant his anecdotes must be when the
+company of ladies does not restrain his genial flow of humour.
+
+"Here comes Mr. Baker with the proofs. In case you don't see the P. G.
+at Galignani's, I send you an extract from Bayham's article on the Royal
+Academy, where you will have the benefit of his opinion on the works of
+some of your friends:--
+
+"'617. 'Moses Bringing Home the Gross of Green Spectacles,' Smith,
+R.A.--Perhaps poor Goldsmith's exquisite little work has never been so
+great a favourite as in the present age. We have here, in a work by one
+of our most eminent artists, an homage to the genius of him 'who touched
+nothing which he did not adorn:' and the charming subject is handled in
+the most delicious manner by Mr. Smith. The chiaroscuro is admirable:
+the impasto is perfect. Perhaps a very captious critic might object to
+the foreshortening of Moses's left leg; but where there is so much to
+praise justly, the Pall Nall Gazette does not care to condemn.
+
+"'420. Our (and the public's) favourite, Brown, R.A., treats us to a
+subject from the best of all stories, the tale 'which laughed Spain's
+chivalry away,' the ever new Don Quixote. The incident which Brown has
+selected is the 'Don's Attack on the Flock of Sheep;' the sheep are in
+his best manner, painted with all his well-known facility and brio.
+Mr. Brown's friendly rival, Hopkins, has selected Gil Blas for an
+illustration this year; and the 'Robber's Cavern' is one of the most
+masterly of Hopkins' productions.
+
+"'Great Rooms. 33. 'Portrait of Cardinal Cospetto,' O'Gogstay,
+A.R.A.; and 'Neighbourhood of Corpodibacco--Evening--a Contadina and
+a Trasteverino dancing at the door of a Locanda to the music of a
+Pifferaro.'--Since his visit to Italy Mr. O'Gogstay seems to have given
+up the scenes of Irish humour with which he used to delight us; and the
+romance, the poetry, the religion of 'Italia la bella' form the subjects
+of his pencil. The scene near Corpodibacco (we know the spot well,
+and have spent many a happy month in its romantic mountains) is most
+characteristic. Cardinal Cospetto, we must say, is a most truculent
+prelate, and not certainly an ornament to his church.
+
+"'49, 210, 311. Smee, R.A.--Portraits which a Reynolds might be proud
+of,--a Vandyke or Claude might not disown. 'Sir Brian Newcome, in the
+costume of a Deputy-Lieutenant,' 'Major-General Sir Thomas de Boots,
+K.C.B.,' painted for the 50th Dragoons, are triumphs, indeed, of this
+noble painter. Why have we no picture of the Sovereign and her
+august consort from Smee's brush? When Charles II. picked up Titian's
+mahl-stick, he observed to a courtier, 'A king you can always have; a
+genius comes but rarely.' While we have a Smee among us, and a monarch
+whom we admire,--may the one be employed to transmit to posterity the
+beloved features of the other! We know our lucubrations are read in high
+places, and respectfully insinuate verbum sapienti.
+
+"'1906. 'The M'Collop of M'Collop,'--A. M'Collop,--is a noble work of
+a young artist, who, in depicting the gallant chief of a hardy Scottish
+clan, has also represented a romantic Highland landscape, in the midst
+of which, 'his foot upon his native heath,' stands a man of splendid
+symmetrical figure and great facial advantages. We shall keep our eye on
+Mr. M'Collop.
+
+"'1367. 'Oberon and Titania.' Ridley.--This sweet and fanciful little
+picture draws crowds round about it, and is one of the most charming
+and delightful works of the present exhibition. We echo the universal
+opinion in declaring that it shows not only the greatest promise,
+but the most delicate and beautiful performance. The Earl of Kew, we
+understand, bought the picture at the private view; and we congratulate
+the young painter heartily upon his successful debut. He is, we
+understand, a pupil of Mr. Gandish. Where is that admirable painter? We
+miss his bold canvasses and grand historic outline.'
+
+"I shall alter a few inaccuracies in the composition of our friend
+F. B., who has, as he says, 'drawn it uncommonly mild in the above
+criticism.' In fact, two days since, he brought in an article of quite
+a different tendency, of which he retains only the two last paragraphs;
+but he has, with great magnanimity, recalled his previous observations;
+and, indeed, he knows as much about pictures as some critics I could
+name.
+
+"Good-bye, my dear Clive! I send my kindest regards to your father; and
+think you had best see as little as possible of your bouillotte-playing
+French friend and his friends. This advice I know you will follow, as
+young men always follow the advice of their seniors and well-wishers.
+I dine in Fitzroy Square to-day with the pretty widow and her daughter,
+and am yours always, dear Clive, A. P."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. In which we hear a Soprano and a Contralto
+
+
+The most hospitable and polite of Colonels would not hear of Mrs.
+Mackenzie and her daughter quitting his house when he returned to it,
+after six weeks' pleasant sojourn in Paris; nor, indeed, did his fair
+guest show the least anxiety or intention to go away. Mrs. Mackenzie had
+a fine merry humour of her own. She was an old soldier's wife, she
+said and knew when her quarters were good; and I suppose, since her
+honeymoon, when the captain took her to Harrogate and Cheltenham,
+stopping at the first hotels, and travelling in a chaise-and-pair the
+whole way, she had never been so well off as in that roomy mansion near
+Tottenham Court Road. Of her mother's house at Musselburgh she gave a
+ludicrous but dismal account. "Eh, James," she said, "I think if you had
+come to mamma, as you threatened, you would not have staid very long.
+It's a wearisome place. Dr. M'Craw boards with her; and it's sermon and
+psalm-singing from morning till night. My little Josey takes kindly to
+the life there, and I left her behind, poor little darling! It was not
+fair to bring three of us to take possession of your house, dear James;
+but my poor little Rosey was just withering away there. It's good for
+the dear child to see the world a little, and a kind uncle, who is not
+afraid of us now he sees us, is he?" Kind Uncle James was not at all
+afraid of little Rosey; whose pretty face and modest manners, and sweet
+songs, and blue eyes, cheered and soothed the old bachelor. Nor was
+Rosey's mother less agreeable and pleasant. She had married the captain
+(it was a love-match, against the will of her parents, who had destined
+her to be the third wife of old Dr. M'Mull) when very young. Many
+sorrows she had had, including poverty, the captain's imprisonment for
+debt, and his demise; but she was of a gay and lightsome spirit. She
+was but three-and-thirty years old, and looked five-and-twenty. She was
+active, brisk, jovial, and alert; and so good-looking, that it was a
+wonder she had not taken a successor to Captain Mackenzie. James Binnie
+cautioned his friend the Colonel against the attractions of the buxom
+siren; and laughingly would ask Clive how he would like Mrs. Mackenzie
+for a mamaw?
+
+Colonel Newcome felt himself very much at ease regarding his future
+prospects. He was very glad that his friend James was reconciled to
+his family, and hinted to Clive that the late Captain Mackenzie's
+extravagance had been the cause of the rupture between him and his
+brother-in-law, who had helped that prodigal captain repeatedly during
+his life; and, in spite of family quarrels, had never ceased to act
+generously to his widowed sister and her family. "But I think, Mr.
+Clive," said he, "that as Miss Rosa is very pretty, and you have a spare
+room at your studio, you had best take up your quarters in Charlotte
+Street as long as the ladies are living with us." Clive was nothing loth
+to be independent; but he showed himself to be a very good home-loving
+youth. He walked home to breakfast every morning, dined often, and spent
+the evenings with the family. Indeed, the house was a great deal more
+cheerful for the presence of the two pleasant ladies. Nothing could
+be prettier than to see the two ladies tripping downstairs together,
+mamma's pretty arm round Rosey's pretty waist. Mamma's talk was
+perpetually of Rosey. That child was always gay, always good, always
+happy! That darling girl woke with a smile on her face, it was sweet to
+see her! Uncle James, in his dry way, said, he dared to say it was very
+pretty. "Go away, you droll, dear old kind Uncle James!" Rosey's mamma
+would cry out. "You old bachelors are wicked old things!" Uncle James
+used to kiss Rosey very kindly and pleasantly. She was as modest, as
+gentle, as eager to please Colonel Newcome as any little girl could be.
+It was pretty to see her tripping across the room with his coffee-cup,
+or peeling walnuts for him after dinner with her white plump little
+fingers.
+
+Mrs. Irons, the housekeeper, naturally detested Mrs. Mackenzie, and was
+jealous of her: though the latter did everything to soothe and coax the
+governess of the two gentlemen's establishment. She praised her dinners,
+delighted in her puddings, must beg Mrs. Irons to allow her to see one
+of those delicious puddings made, and to write the receipt for her, that
+Mrs. Mackenzie might use it when she was away. It was Mrs. Irons' belief
+that Mrs. Mackenzie never intended to go away. She had no ideer of
+ladies, as were ladies, coming into her kitchen. The maids vowed that
+they heard Miss Rosa crying, and mamma scolding in her bedroom for all
+she was so soft-spoken. How was that jug broke, and that chair smashed
+in the bedroom, that day there was such a awful row up there?
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie played admirably, in the old-fashioned way, dances,
+reels, and Scotch and Irish tunes, the former, of which filled James
+Binnie's soul with delectation. The good mother naturally desired that
+her darling should have a few good lessons of the piano while she was in
+London. Rosey was eternally strumming upon an instrument which had been
+taken upstairs for her special practice; and the Colonel, who was always
+seeking to do harmless jobs of kindness for his friends, bethought him
+of little Miss Cann, the governess at Ridley's, whom he recommended as
+an instructress. "Anybody whom you recommend I'm sure, dear Colonel, we
+shall like," said Mrs. Mackenzie, who looked as black as thunder,
+and had probably intended to have Monsieur Quatremains or Signor
+Twankeydillo; and the little governess came to her pupil. Mrs. Mackenzie
+treated her very gruffly and haughtily at first; but as soon as she
+heard Miss Cann play, the widow was pacified--nay, charmed. Monsieur
+Quatremains charged a guinea for three-quarters of an hour; while Miss
+Cann thankfully took five shillings for an hour and a half; and the
+difference of twenty lessons, for which dear Uncle James paid, went into
+Mrs. Mackenzie's pocket, and thence probably on to her pretty shoulders
+and head in the shape of a fine silk dress and a beautiful French
+bonnet, in which Captain Goby said, upon his life, she didn't look
+twenty.
+
+The little governess trotting home after her lesson would often look in
+to Clive's studio in Charlotte Street, where her two boys, as she called
+Clive and J. J., were at work each at his easel. Clive used to laugh,
+and tell us, who joked him about the widow and her daughter, what Miss
+Cann said about them. Mrs. Mack was not all honey, it appeared. If
+Rosey played incorrectly, mamma flew at her with prodigious vehemence of
+language, and sometimes with a slap on poor Rosey's back. She must make
+Rosey wear tight boots, and stamp on her little feet if they refused to
+enter into the slipper. I blush for the indiscretion of Miss Cann; but
+she actually told J. J., that mamma insisted upon lacing her so tight,
+as nearly to choke the poor little lass. Rosey did not fight: Rosey
+always yielded; and the scolding over and the tears dried, would come
+simpering downstairs with mamma's arm round her waist, and her pretty
+artless happy smile for the gentlemen below. Besides the Scottish songs
+without music, she sang ballads at the piano very sweetly. Mamma used to
+cry at these ditties. "That child's voice brings tears into my eyes,
+Mr. Newcome," she would say. "She has never known a moment's sorrow yet!
+Heaven grant, heaven grant, she may be happy! But what shall I be when I
+lose her?"
+
+"Why, my dear, when ye lose Rosey, ye'll console yourself with Josey,"
+says droll Mr. Binnie from the sofa, who perhaps saw the manoeuvre of
+the widow.
+
+The widow laughs heartily and really. She places a handkerchief over her
+mouth. She glances at her brother with a pair of eyes full of knowing
+mischief. "Ah, dear James," she says, "you don't know what it is to have
+a mother's feelings."
+
+"I can partly understand them," says James. "Rosey, sing me that pretty
+little French song." Mrs. Mackenzie's attention to Clive was really
+quite affecting. If any of his friends came to the house, she took them
+aside and praised Clive to them. The Colonel she adored. She had never
+met with such a man or seen such a manner. The manners of the Bishop
+of Tobago were beautiful, and he certainly had one of the softest and
+finest hands in the world; but not finer than Colonel Newcome's. "Look
+at his foot!" (and she put out her own, which was uncommonly pretty,
+and suddenly withdrew it, with an arch glance meant to represent a
+blush)--"my shoe would fit it! When we were at Coventry Island, Sir
+Peregrine Blandy, who succeeded poor dear Sir Rawdon Crawley--I saw
+his dear boy was gazetted to a lieutenant-colonelcy in the Guards last
+week--Sir Peregrine, who was one of the Prince of Wales's most intimate
+friends, was always said to have the finest manner and presence of any
+man of his day; and very grand and noble he was, but I don't think he
+was equal to Colonel Newcome--I don't really think so. Do you think so,
+Mr. Honeyman? What a charming discourse that was last Sunday! I know
+there were two pair of eyes not dry in the church. I could not see the
+other people just for crying myself. Oh, but I wish we could have you
+at Musselburgh! I was bred a Presbyterian, of course; but in much
+travelling through the world with my dear husband, I came to love his
+church. At home we sit under Dr M'Craw, of course; but he is so awfully
+long! Four hours every Sunday at least, morning and afternoon! It nearly
+kills poor Rosey. Did you hear her voice at your church? The dear girl
+is delighted with the chants. Rosey, were you not delighted with the
+chants?"
+
+If she is delighted with the chants, Honeyman is delighted with the
+chantress and her mamma. He dashes the fair hair from his brow: he sits
+down to the piano, and plays one or two of them, warbling a faint
+vocal accompaniment, and looking as if he would be lifted off the screw
+music-stool, and flutter up to the ceiling.
+
+"Oh, it's just seraphic!" says the widow. "It's just the breath of
+incense and the pealing of the organ at the Cathedral at Montreal. Rosey
+doesn't remember Montreal. She was a wee wee child. She was born on the
+voyage out, and christened at sea. You remember, Goby."
+
+"Gad, I promised and vowed to teach her her catechism; 'gad, but I
+haven't," says Captain Goby. "We were between Montreal and Quebec for
+three years with the Hundredth, and the Hundred Twentieth Highlanders,
+and the Thirty-third Dragoon Guards a part of the time; Fipley commanded
+them, and a very jolly time we had. Much better than the West Indies,
+where a fellow's liver goes to the deuce with hot pickles and sangaree.
+Mackenzie was a dev'lish wild fellow," whispers Captain Goby to his
+neighbour (the present biographer, indeed), "and Mrs. Mack was as pretty
+a little woman as ever you set eyes on." (Captain Goby winks, and looks
+peculiarly sly as he makes this statement.) "Our regiment wasn't on your
+side of India, Colonel."
+
+And in the interchange of such delightful remarks, and with music and
+song, the evening passes away. "Since the house had been adorned by the
+fair presence of Mrs. Mackenzie and her daughter," Honeyman said, always
+gallant in behaviour and flowery in expression, "it seemed as if spring
+had visited it. Its hospitality was invested with a new grace; its ever
+welcome little reunions were doubly charming. But why did these ladies
+come, if they were to go away again? How--how would Mr. Binnie console
+himself (not to mention others) if they left him in solitude?"
+
+"We have no wish to leave my brother James in solitude," cries Mrs.
+Mackenzie, frankly laughing. "We like London a great deal better than
+Musselburgh."
+
+"Oh, that we do!" ejaculates the blushing Rosey.
+
+"And we will stay as long as ever my brother will keep us," continues
+the widow.
+
+"Uncle James is so kind and dear," says Rosey. "I hope he won't send me
+and mamma away."
+
+"He were a brute--a savage, if he did!" cries Binnie, with glances
+of rapture towards the two pretty faces. Everybody liked them. Binnie
+received their caresses very good-humouredly. The Colonel liked every
+woman under the sun. Clive laughed and joked and waltzed alternately
+with Rosey and her mamma. The latter was the briskest partner of the
+two. The unsuspicious widow, poor dear innocent, would leave her girl at
+the painting-room, and go shopping herself; but little J. J. also worked
+there, being occupied with his second picture: and he was almost the
+only one of Clive's friends whom the widow did not like. She pronounced
+the quiet little painter a pert, little, obtrusive, underbred creature.
+
+In a word, Mrs. Mackenzie was, as the phrase is, "setting her cap" so
+openly at Clive, that none of us could avoid seeing her play: and Clive
+laughed at her simple manoeuvres as merrily as the rest. She was a merry
+little woman. We gave her and her pretty daughter a luncheon in Lamb
+Court, Temple; in Sibwright's chambers--luncheon from Dick's Coffee
+House--ices and dessert from Partington's in the Strand. Miss Rosey,
+Mr. Sibwright, our neighbour in Lamb Court, and the Reverend Charles
+Honeyman sang very delightfully after lunch; there was quite a crowd
+of porters, laundresses, and boys to listen in the court; Mr. Paley
+was disgusted with the noise we made--in fact, the party was perfectly
+successful. We all liked the widow, and if she did set her pretty
+ribbons at Clive, why should not she? We all liked the pretty, fresh,
+modest Rosey. Why, even the grave old benchers in the Temple church,
+when the ladies visited it on Sunday, winked their reverend eyes
+with pleasure, as they looked at those two uncommonly smart, pretty,
+well-dressed, fashionable women. Ladies, go to the Temple church. You
+will see more young men, and receive more respectful attention there
+than in any place, except perhaps at Oxford or Cambridge. Go to the
+Temple church--not, of course, for the admiration which you will excite
+and which you cannot help; but because the sermon is excellent, the
+choral services beautifully performed, and the church so interesting as
+a monument of the thirteenth century, and as it contains the tombs of
+those dear Knights Templars!
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie could be grave or gay, according to her company: nor
+could any woman be of more edifying behaviour when an occasional
+Scottish friend bringing a letter from darling Josey, or a
+recommendatory letter from Josey's grandmother, paid a visit in Fitzroy
+Square. Little Miss Cann used to laugh and wink knowingly, saying, "You
+will never get back your bedroom, Mr. Clive. You may be sure that Miss
+Josey will come in a few months; and perhaps old Mrs. Binnie, only
+no doubt she and her daughter do not agree. But the widow has taken
+possession of Uncle James; and she will carry off somebody else if I
+am not mistaken. Should you like a stepmother, Mr. Clive, or should you
+prefer a wife?"
+
+Whether the fair lady tried her wiles upon Colonel Newcome the present
+writer has no certain means of ascertaining: but I think another image
+occupied his heart: and this Circe tempted him no more than a score of
+other enchantresses who had tried their spells upon him. If she tried
+she failed. She was a very shrewd woman, quite frank in her talk when
+such frankness suited her. She said to me, "Colonel Newcome has had
+some great passion, once upon a time, I am sure of that, and has no more
+heart to give away. The woman who had his must have been a very lucky
+woman: though I daresay she did not value what she had; or did not
+live to enjoy it--or--or something or other. You see tragedies in some
+people's faces. I recollect when we were in Coventry Island--there was
+a chaplain there--a very good man--a Mr. Bell, and married to a pretty
+little woman who died. The first day I saw him I said, 'I know that
+man has had a great grief in life. I am sure that he left his heart in
+England.' You gentlemen who write books, Mr. Pendennis, and stop at
+the third volume, know very well that the real story often begins
+afterwards. My third volume ended when I was sixteen, and was married to
+my poor husband. Do you think all our adventures ended then, and that we
+lived happy ever after? I live for my darling girls now. All I want is
+to see them comfortable in life. Nothing can be more generous than my
+dear brother James has been. I am only his half-sister, you know, and
+was an infant in arms when he went away. He had differences with Captain
+Mackenzie, who was headstrong and imprudent, and I own my poor dear
+husband was in the wrong. James could not live with my poor mother.
+Neither could by possibility suit the other. I have often, I own, longed
+to come and keep house for him. His home, the society he sees, of men
+of talents like Mr. Warrington and--and I won't mention names, or pay
+compliments to a man who knows human nature so well as the author
+of Walter Lorraine: this house is pleasanter a thousand times than
+Musselburgh--pleasanter for me and my dearest Rosey, whose delicate
+nature shrunk and withered up in poor mamma's society. She was never
+happy except in my room, the dear child! She's all gentleness and
+affection. She doesn't seem to show it: but she has the most wonderful
+appreciation of wit, of genius, and talent of all kinds. She always
+hides her feelings, except from her fond old mother. I went up into our
+room yesterday, and found her in tears. I can't bear to see her eyes
+red or to think of her suffering. I asked her what ailed her, and kissed
+her. She is a tender plant, Mr. Pendennis! Heaven knows with what care
+I have nurtured her! She looked up smiling on my shoulder. She looked so
+pretty! 'Oh, mamma,' the darling child said, 'I couldn't help it. I have
+been crying over Walter Lorraine.' (Enter Rosey.) Rosey, darling! I
+have been telling Mr. Pendennis what a naughty, naughty child you were
+yesterday, and how you read a book which I told you you shouldn't
+read; for it is a very wicked book; and though it contains some sad sad
+truths, it is a great deal too misanthropic (is that the right word? I'm
+a poor soldier's wife, and no scholar, you know), and a great deal too
+bitter; and though the reviews praise it, and the clever people--we
+are poor simple country people--we won't praise it. Sing, dearest, that
+little song" (profuse kisses to Rosey), "that pretty thing that Mr.
+Pendennis likes."
+
+"I am sure that I will sing anything that Mr. Pendennis likes," says
+Rosey, with her candid bright eyes--and she goes to the piano and
+warbles "Batti, Batti," with her sweet fresh artless voice.
+
+More caresses follow. Mamma is in a rapture. How pretty they look--the
+mother and daughter--two lilies twining together! The necessity of an
+entertainment at the Temple-lunch from Dick's (as before mentioned),
+dessert from Partington's, Sibwright's spoons, his boy to aid ours, nay,
+Sib himself, and his rooms, which are so much more elegant than ours,
+and where there is a piano and guitar: all these thoughts pass in rapid
+and brilliant combination in the pleasant Mr. Pendennis's mind. How
+delighted the ladies are with the proposal! Mrs. Mackenzie claps her
+pretty hands, and kisses Rosey again. If osculation is a mark of love,
+surely Mrs. Mack is the best of mothers. I may say, without false
+modesty, that our little entertainment was most successful. The
+champagne was iced to a nicety. The ladies did not perceive that our
+laundress, Mrs. Flanagan, was intoxicated very early in the afternoon.
+Percy Sibwright sang admirably, and with the greatest spirit, ditties in
+many languages. I am sure Miss Rosey thought him (as indeed he is)
+one of the most fascinating young fellows about town. To her mother's
+excellent accompaniment Rosey sang her favourite songs (by the way, her
+stock was very small--five, I think, was the number). Then the table was
+moved into a corner, where the quivering moulds of jelly seemed to
+keep time to the music; and whilst Percy played, two couple of waltzers
+actually whirled round the little room. No wonder that the court below
+was thronged with admirers, that Paley the reading man was in a rage,
+and Mrs. Flanagan in a state of excitement. Ah! pleasant days, happy
+gold dingy chambers illuminated by youthful sunshine! merry songs and
+kind faces--it is pleasant to recall you. Some of those bright eyes
+shine no more: some of those smiling lips do not speak. Some are not
+less kind, but sadder than in those days: of which the memories revisit
+us for a moment, and sink back into the grey past. The dear old Colonel
+beat time with great delight to the songs; the widow lit his cigar
+with her own fair fingers. That was the only smoke permitted during the
+entertainment--George Warrington himself not being allowed to use his
+cutty-pipe--though the gay little widow said that she had been used
+to smoking in the West Indies and I dare say spoke the truth. Our
+entertainment lasted actually until after dark: and a particularly neat
+cab being called from St. Clement's by Mr. Binnie's boy, you may be
+sure we all conducted the ladies to their vehicle: and many a fellow
+returning from his lonely club that evening into chambers must have
+envied us the pleasure of having received two such beauties.
+
+The clerical bachelor was not to be outdone by the gentlemen of the bar;
+and the entertainment at the Temple was followed by one at Honeyman's
+lodgings, which, I must own, greatly exceeded ours in splendour, for
+Honeyman had his luncheon from Gunter's; and if he had been Miss Rosey's
+mother, giving a breakfast to the dear girl on her marriage, the affair
+could not have been more elegant and handsome. We had but two
+bouquets at our entertainment; at Honeyman's there were four upon the
+breakfast-table, besides a great pineapple, which must have cost the
+rogue three or four guineas, and which Percy Sibwright delicately cut
+up. Rosey thought the pineapple delicious. "The dear thing does not
+remember the pineapples in the West Indies!" cries Mrs. Mackenzie; and
+she gave us many exciting narratives of entertainments at which she had
+been present at various colonial governors' tables. After luncheon, our
+host hoped we should have a little music. Dancing, of course, could not
+be allowed. "That," said Honeyman with his soft-bleating sigh, "were
+scarcely clerical. You know, besides, you are in a hermitage; and" (with
+a glance round the table) "must put up with Cenobite's fare." The fare
+was, as I have said, excellent. The wine was bad, as George, and I,
+and Sib agreed; and in so far we flattered ourselves that our feast
+altogether excelled the parson's. The champagne especially was
+such stuff, that Warrington remarked on it to his neighbour, a dark
+gentleman, with a tuft to his chin, and splendid rings and chains.
+
+The dark gentleman's wife and daughter were the other two ladies invited
+by our host. The elder was splendidly dressed. Poor Mrs. Mackenzie's
+simple gimcracks, though she displayed them to the most advantage,
+and could make an ormolu bracelet go as far as another woman's emerald
+clasps, were as nothing compared to the other lady's gorgeous
+jewellery. Her fingers glittered with rings innumerable. The head of her
+smelling-bottle was as big as her husband's gold snuff box, and of the
+same splendid material. Our ladies, it must be confessed, came in a
+modest cab from Fitzroy Square; these arrived in a splendid little open
+carriage with white ponies, and harness all over brass, which the lady
+of the rings drove with a whip that was a parasol. Mrs. Mackenzie,
+standing at Honeyman's window, with her arm round Rosey's waist, viewed
+this arrival perhaps with envy. "My dear Mr. Honeyman, whose are those
+beautiful horses?" cries Rosey, with enthusiasm.
+
+The divine says with a faint blush--"It is--ah--it is Mrs. Sherrick and
+Miss Sherrick who have done me the favour to come to luncheon."
+
+"Wine-merchant. Oh!" thinks Mrs. Mackenzie, who has seen Sherrick's
+brass plate on the cellar door of Lady Whittlesea's Chapel; and hence,
+perhaps, she was a trifle more magniloquent than usual, and entertained
+us with stories of colonial governors and their ladies, mentioning no
+persons but those who "had handles to their names," as the phrase is.
+
+Although Sherrick had actually supplied the champagne which Warrington
+abused to him in confidence, the wine-merchant was not wounded; on the
+contrary, he roared with laughter at the remark, and some of us smiled
+who understood the humour of the joke. As for George Warrington, he
+scarce knew more about the town than the ladies opposite to him; who,
+yet more innocent than George, thought the champagne very good. Mrs.
+Sherrick was silent during the meal, looking constantly up at her
+husband, as if alarmed and always in the habit of appealing to that
+gentleman, who gave her, as I thought, knowing glances and savage winks,
+which made me augur that he bullied her at home. Miss Sherrick was
+exceedingly handsome: she kept the fringed curtains of her eyes
+constantly down; but when she lifted them up towards Clive, who was very
+attentive to her (the rogue never sees a handsome woman but to this day
+he continues the same practice)--when she looked up and smiled, she was
+indeed a beautiful young creature to behold--with her pale forehead, her
+thick arched eyebrows, her rounded cheeks, and her full lips slightly
+shaded,--how shall I mention the word?--slightly pencilled, after the
+manner of the lips of the French governess, Mademoiselle Lenoir.
+
+Percy Sibwright engaged Miss Mackenzie with his usual grace and
+affability. Mrs. Mackenzie did her very utmost to be gracious, but it
+was evident the party was not altogether to her liking. Poor Percy,
+about whose means and expectations she had in the most natural way in
+the world asked information from me, was not perhaps a very eligible
+admirer for darling Rosey. She knew not that Percy can no more help
+gallantry than the sun can help shining. As soon as Rosey had done
+eating up her pineapple, artlessly confessing (to Percy Sibwright's
+inquiries) that she preferred it to the rasps and hinnyblobs in her
+grandmamma's garden, "Now, dearest Rosey," cries Mrs. Mack, "now, a
+little song. You promised Mr. Pendennis a little song." Honeyman whisks
+open the piano in a moment. The widow takes off her cleaned gloves (Mrs.
+Sherrick's were new, and of the best Paris make), and little Rosey sings
+No. 1, followed by No. 2, with very great applause. Mother and daughter
+entwine as they quit the piano. "Brava! brava!" says Percy Sibwright.
+Does Mr. Clive Newcome say nothing? His back is turned to the piano, and
+he is looking with all his might into the eyes of Miss Sherrick.
+
+Percy sings a Spanish seguidilla, or a German lied, or a French romance,
+or a Neapolitan canzonet, which, I am bound to say, excites very little
+attention. Mrs. Ridley is sending in coffee at this juncture, of which
+Mrs. Sherrick partakes, with lots of sugar, as she has partaken of
+numberless things before. Chicken, plovers' eggs, prawns, aspics,
+jellies, creams, grapes, and what-not. Mr. Honeyman advances, and
+with deep respect asks if Mrs. Sherrick and Miss Sherrick will not be
+persuaded to sing? She rises and bows, and again takes off the French
+gloves, and shows the large white hands glittering with rings, and,
+summoning Emily her daughter, they go to the piano.
+
+"Can she sing," whispers Mrs. Mackenzie, "can she sing after eating so
+much?" Can she sing, indeed! Oh, you poor ignorant Mrs. Mackenzie!
+Why, when you were in the West Indies, if you ever read the English
+newspapers, you must have read of the fame of Miss Folthorpe. Mrs.
+Sherrick is no other than the famous artist, who, after three years of
+brilliant triumphs at the Scala, the Pergola, the San Carlo, the opera
+in England, forsook her profession, rejected a hundred suitors, and
+married Sherrick, who was Mr. Cox's lawyer, who failed, as everybody
+knows, as manager of Drury Lane. Sherrick, like a man of spirit, would
+not allow his wife to sing in public after his marriage; but in
+private society, of course, she is welcome to perform: and now with her
+daughter, who possesses a noble contralto voice, she takes her place
+royally at the piano, and the two sing so magnificently that everybody
+in the room, with one single exception, is charmed and delighted; and
+that little Miss Cann herself creeps up the stairs, and stands with Mrs.
+Ridley at the door to listen to the music.
+
+Miss Sherrick looks doubly handsome as she sings. Clive Newcome is in
+a rapture; so is good-natured Miss Rosey, whose little heart beats with
+pleasure, and who says quite unaffectedly to Miss Sherrick, with delight
+and gratitude beaming from her blue eyes, "Why did you ask me to sing,
+when you sing so wonderfully, so beautifully, yourself? Do not leave
+the piano, please--do sing again!" And she puts out a kind little
+hand towards the superior artist, and, blushing, leads her back to the
+instrument. "I'm sure me and Emily will sing for you as much as you
+like, dear," says Mrs. Sherrick, nodding to Rosey good-naturedly. Mrs.
+Mackenzie, who has been biting her lips and drumming the time on a
+side-table, forgets at last the pain of being vanquished in admiration
+of the conquerors. "It was cruel of you not to tell us, Mr. Honeyman,"
+she says, "of the--of the treat you had in store for us. I had no idea
+we were going to meet professional people; Mrs. Sherrick's singing is
+indeed beautiful."
+
+"If you come up to our place in the Regent's Park, Mr. Newcome," Mr.
+Sherrick says, "Mrs. S. and Emily will give you as many songs as you
+like. How do you like the house in Fitzroy Square? Anything wanting
+doing there? I'm a good landlord to a good tenant. Don't care what I
+spend on my houses. Lose by 'em sometimes. Name a day when you'll come
+to us; and I'll ask some good fellows to meet you. Your father and Mr.
+Binnie came once. That was when you were a young chap. They didn't have
+a bad evening, I believe. You just come and try us--I can give you as
+good a glass of wine as most, I think," and he smiles, perhaps thinking
+of the champagne which Mr. Warrington had slighted. "I've ad the close
+carriage for my wife this evening," he continues, looking out of window
+at a very handsome brougham which has just drawn up there. "That little
+pair of horses steps prettily together, don't they? Fond of horses? I
+know you are. See you in the Park; and going by our house sometimes. The
+Colonel sits a horse uncommonly well: so do you, Mr. Newcome. I've often
+said, 'Why don't they get off their horses and say, Sherrick, we're come
+for a bit of lunch and a glass of Sherry?' Name a day, sir. Mr. P., will
+you be in it?"
+
+Clive Newcome named a day, and told his father of the circumstance in
+the evening. The Colonel looked grave. "There was something which I did
+not quite like about Mr. Sherrick," said that acute observer of human
+nature. "It was easy to see that the man is not quite a gentleman. I
+don't care what a man's trade is, Clive. Indeed, who are we, to give
+ourselves airs upon that subject? But when I am gone, my boy, and
+there is nobody near you who knows the world as I do, you may fall into
+designing hands, and rogues may lead you into mischief: keep a sharp
+look-out, Clive. Mr. Pendennis, here, knows that there are designing
+fellows abroad" (and the dear old gentleman gives a very knowing nod as
+he speaks). "When I am gone, keep the lad from harm's way, Pendennis.
+Meanwhile Mr. Sherrick has been a very good and obliging landlord; and
+a man who sells wine may certainly give a friend a bottle. I am glad
+you had a pleasant evening, boys. Ladies, I hope you have had a pleasant
+afternoon. Miss Rosey, you are come back to make tea for the old
+gentlemen? James begins to get about briskly now. He walked to Hanover
+Square, Mrs. Mackenzie, without hurting his ankle in the least."
+
+"I am almost sorry that he is getting well," says Mrs. Mackenzie
+sincerely. "He won't want us when he is quite cured."
+
+"Indeed, my dear creature!" cries the Colonel, taking her pretty hand
+and kissing it; "he will want you, and he shall want you. James no more
+knows the world than Miss Rosey here; and if I had not been with him,
+would have been perfectly unable to take care of himself. When I am gone
+to India, somebody must stay with him; and--and my boy must have a home
+to go to," says the kind soldier, his voice dropping. "I had been in
+hopes that his own relatives would have received him more, but never
+mind about that," he cried more cheerfully. "Why, I may not be absent a
+year! I perhaps need not go at all--I am second for promotion. A couple
+of our old generals may drop any day; and when I get my regiment I come
+back to stay, to live at home. Meantime, whilst I am gone, my dear lady,
+you will take care of James; and you will be kind to my boy."
+
+"That I will!" said the widow, radiant with pleasure, and she took
+one of Clive's hands and pressed it for an instant; and from Clive's
+father's kind face there beamed out that benediction which always made
+his countenance appear to me among the most beautiful of human faces.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. In which the Newcome Brothers once more meet together in
+Unity
+
+
+His narrative, as the judicious reader no doubt is aware, is written
+maturely and at ease, long after the voyage is over, whereof it recounts
+the adventures and perils; the winds adverse and favourable; the storms,
+shoals, shipwrecks, islands, and so forth, which Clive Newcome met in
+his early journey in life. In such a history events follow each other
+without necessarily having a connection with one another. One ship
+crosses another ship, and after a visit from one captain to his comrade,
+they sail away each on his course. The Clive Newcome meets a vessel
+which makes signals that she is short of bread and water; and after
+supplying her, our captain leaves her to see her no more. One or two of
+the vessels with which we commenced the voyage together, part company in
+a gale, and founder miserably; others, after being wofully battered in
+the tempest, make port, or are cast upon surprising islands where all
+sorts of unlooked-for prosperity awaits the lucky crew. Also, no doubt,
+the writer of the book, into whose hands Clive Newcome's logs have been
+put, and who is charged with the duty of making two octavo volumes out
+of his friend's story, dresses up the narrative in his own way; utters
+his own remarks in place of Newcome's; makes fanciful descriptions of
+individuals and incidents with which he never could have been personally
+acquainted; and commits blunders, which the critics will discover. A
+great number of the descriptions in Cook's Voyages, for instance, were
+notoriously invented by Dr. Hawkesworth, who "did" the book: so in the
+present volumes, where dialogues are written down, which the reporter
+could by no possibility have heard, and where motives are detected which
+the persons actuated by them certainly never confided to the writer, the
+public must once for all be warned that the author's individual fancy
+very likely supplies much of the narrative; and that he forms it as
+best he may, out of stray papers, conversations reported to him, and
+his knowledge, right or wrong, of the characters of the persons engaged.
+And, as is the case with the most orthodox histories, the writer's own
+guesses or conjectures are printed in exactly the same type as the
+most ascertained patent facts. I fancy, for my part, that the speeches
+attributed to Clive, the Colonel, and the rest, are as authentic as the
+orations in Sallust or Livy, and only implore the truth-loving public to
+believe that incidents here told, and which passed very probably without
+witnesses, were either confided to me subsequently as compiler of this
+biography, or are of such a nature that they must have happened from
+what we know happened after. For example, when you read such words
+as QVE ROMANVS on a battered Roman stone, your profound antiquarian
+knowledge enables you to assert that SENATVS POPVLVS was also inscribed
+there at some time or other. You take a mutilated statue of Mars,
+Bacchus, Apollo, or Virorum, and you pop him on a wanting hand, an
+absent foot, or a nose which time or barbarians have defaced. You tell
+your tales as you can, and state the facts as you think they must have
+been. In this manner, Mr. James (historiographer to Her Majesty), Titus
+Livius, Professor Alison, Robinson Crusoe, and all historians proceeded.
+Blunders there must be in the best of these narratives, and more
+asserted than they can possibly know or vouch for.
+
+To recur to our own affairs, and the subject at present in hand, I am
+obliged here to supply from conjecture a few points of the history,
+which I could not know from actual experience or hearsay. Clive, let us
+say, is Romanus, and we must add Senatus Populusque to his inscription.
+After Mrs. Mackenzie and her pretty daughter had been for a few months
+in London, which they did not think of quitting, although Mr. Binnie's
+wounded little leg was now as well and as brisk as ever it had been, a
+redintegration of love began to take place between the Colonel and his
+relatives in Park Lane. How should we know that there had ever been a
+quarrel, or at any rate a coolness? Thomas Newcome was not a man to talk
+at length of any such matter; though a word or two occasionally dropped
+in conversation by the simple gentleman might lead persons who chose to
+interest themselves about his family affairs to form their own opinions
+concerning them. After that visit of the Colonel and his son to Newcome,
+Ethel was constantly away with her grandmother. The Colonel went to see
+his pretty little favourite at Brighton, and once, twice, thrice, Lady
+Kew's door was denied to him. The knocker of that door could not be
+more fierce than the old lady's countenance, when Newcome met her in her
+chariot driving on the cliff. Once, forming the loveliest of a charming
+Amazonian squadron, led by Mr. Whiskin, the riding-master, when the
+Colonel encountered his pretty Ethel, she greeted him affectionately, it
+is true; there was still the sweet look of candour and love in her eyes;
+but when he rode up to her she looked so constrained, when he talked
+about Clive, so reserved, when he left her, so sad, that he could not
+but feel pain and commiseration. Back he went to London, having in a
+week only caught this single glance of his darling.
+
+This event occurred while Clive was painting his picture of the "Battle
+of Assaye" before mentioned, during the struggles incident on which
+composition he was not thinking much about Miss Ethel, or his papa,
+or any other subject but his great work. Whilst Assaye was still
+in progress, Thomas Newcome must have had an explanation with his
+sister-in-law, Lady Anne, to whom he frankly owned the hopes which he
+had entertained for Clive, and who must as frankly have told the Colonel
+that Ethel's family had very different views for that young lady to
+those which the simple Colonel had formed. A generous early attachment,
+the Colonel thought, is the safeguard of a young man. To love a noble
+girl; to wait a while and struggle, and haply do some little achievement
+in order to win her; the best task to which his boy could set himself.
+If two young people so loving each other were to marry on rather narrow
+means, what then? A happy home was better than the finest house
+in Mayfair; a generous young fellow, such as, please God, his son
+was--loyal, upright, and a gentleman--might pretend surely to his
+kinswoman's hand without derogation; and the affection he bore Ethel
+himself was so great, and the sweet regard with which she returned
+it, that the simple father thought his kindly project was favoured by
+Heaven, and prayed for its fulfilment, and pleased himself to think,
+when his campaigns were over, and his sword hung on the wall, what a
+beloved daughter he might have to soothe and cheer his old age. With
+such a wife for his son, and child for himself, he thought the happiness
+of his last years might repay him for friendless boyhood, lonely
+manhood, and cheerless exile; and he imparted his simple scheme to
+Ethel's mother, who no doubt was touched as he told his story; for she
+always professed regard and respect for him, and in the differences
+which afterwards occurred in the family, and the quarrels which divided
+the brothers, still remained faithful to the good Colonel.
+
+But Barnes Newcome, Esquire, was the bead of the house, and the governor
+of his father and all Sir Brian's affairs; and Barnes Newcome, Esquire,
+hated his cousin Clive, and spoke of him as a beggarly painter, an
+impudent snob, an infernal young puppy, and so forth; and Barnes with
+his usual freedom of language imparted his opinions to his Uncle Hobson
+at the bank, and Uncle Hobson carried them home to Mrs. Newcome in
+Bryanstone Square; and Mrs. Newcome took an early opportunity of telling
+the Colonel her opinion on the subject, and of bewailing that love
+for aristocracy which she saw actuated some folks; and the Colonel was
+brought to see that Barnes was his boy's enemy, and words very likely
+passed between them, for Thomas Newcome took a new banker at this time,
+and, as Clive informed me, was in very great dudgeon because Hobson
+Brothers wrote to him to say that he had overdrawn his account. "I am
+sure there is some screw loose," the sagacious youth remarked to me;
+"and the Colonel and the people in Park Lane are at variance, because
+he goes there very little now; and he promised to go to Court when Ethel
+was presented, and he didn't go."
+
+Some months after the arrival of Mr. Binnie's niece and sister in
+Fitzroy Square, the fraternal quarrel between the Newcomes must have
+come to an end--for that time at least--and was followed by a rather
+ostentatious reconciliation. And pretty little Rosey Mackenzie was the
+innocent and unconscious cause of this amiable change in the minds of
+the three brethren, as I gathered from a little conversation with Mrs.
+Newcome, who did me the honour to invite me to her table. As she had not
+vouchsafed this hospitality to me for a couple of years previously, and
+perfectly stifled me with affability when we met,--as her invitation
+came quite at the end of the season, when almost everybody was out
+of town, and a dinner to a man is no compliment,--I was at first for
+declining this invitation, and spoke of it with great scorn when Mr.
+Newcome orally delivered it to me at Bays's Club.
+
+"What," said I, turning round to an old man of the world, who happened
+to be in the room at the time, "what do these people mean by asking a
+fellow to dinner in August, and taking me up after dropping me for two
+years?"
+
+"My good fellow," says my friend--it was my kind old Uncle Major
+Pendennis, indeed--"I have lived long enough about town never to ask
+myself questions of that sort. In the world people drop you and take you
+up every day. You know Lady Cheddar by sight? I have known her husband
+for forty years: I have stayed with them in the country, for weeks at a
+time. She knows me as well as she knows King Charles at Charing Cross,
+and a doosid deal better, and yet for a whole season she will drop
+me--pass me by, as if there was no such person in the world. Well, sir,
+what do I do? I never see her. I give you my word I am never conscious
+of her existence; and if I meet her at dinner, I'm no more aware of her
+than the fellows in the play are of Banquo. What's the end of it? She
+comes round--only last Toosday she came round--and said Lord Cheddar
+wanted me to go down to Wiltshire. I asked after the family (you know
+Henry Churningham is engaged to Miss Rennet?--a doosid good match for
+the Cheddars). We shook hands and are as good friends as ever. I don't
+suppose she'll cry when I die, you know," said the worthy old gentleman
+with a grin. "Nor shall I go into very deep mourning if anything happens
+to her. You were quite right to say to Newcome that you did not know
+whether you were free or not, and would look at your engagements when
+you got home, and give him an answer. A fellow of that rank has no right
+to give himself airs. But they will, sir. Some of those bankers are as
+high and mighty as the oldest families. They marry noblemen's daughters,
+by Jove, and think nothing is too good for 'em. But I should go, if
+I were you, Arthur. I dined there a couple of months ago; and the
+bankeress said something about you: that you and her nephew were much
+together, that you were sad wild dogs, I think--something of that sort.
+'Gad, ma'am,' says I, 'boys will be boys.' 'And they grow to be men!'
+says she, nodding her head. Queer little woman, devilish pompous. Dinner
+confoundedly long, stoopid, scientific."
+
+The old gentleman was on this day inclined to be talkative and
+confidential, and I set down some more remarks which he made concerning
+my friends. "Your Indian Colonel," says he, "seems a worthy man."
+The Major quite forgot having been in India himself, unless he was in
+company with some very great personage. "He don't seem to know much of
+the world, and we are not very intimate. Fitzroy Square is a dev'lish
+long way off for a fellow to go for a dinner, and entre nous, the dinner
+is rather queer and the company still more so. It's right for you who
+are a literary man to see all sorts of people; but I'm different, you
+know, so Newcome and I are not very thick together. They say he wanted
+to marry your friend to Lady Anne's daughter, an exceedingly fine girl;
+one of the prettiest girls come out this season. I hear the young men
+say so. And that shows how monstrous ignorant of the world Colonel
+Newcome is. His son could no more get that girl than he could marry one
+of the royal princesses. Mark my words, they intend Miss Newcome for
+Lord Kew. Those banker fellows are wild after grand marriages. Kew will
+sow his wild oats, and they'll marry her to him; or if not to him, to
+some man of high rank. His father Walham was a weak young man; but his
+grandmother, old Lady Kew, is a monstrous clever old woman, too severe
+with her children, one of whom ran away and married a poor devil without
+a shilling. Nothing could show a more deplorable ignorance of the world
+than poor Newcome supposing his son could make such a match as that with
+his cousin. Is it true that he is going to make his son an artist? I
+don't know what the dooce the world is coming to. An artist! By gad,
+in my time a fellow would as soon have thought of making his son a
+hairdresser, or a pastrycook, by gad." And the worthy Major gives
+his nephew two fingers, and trots off to the next club in St. James's
+Street, of which he is a member.
+
+The virtuous hostess of Bryanstone Square was quite civil and
+good-humoured when Mr. Pendennis appeared at her house; and my surprise
+was not inconsiderable when I found the whole party from Saint Pancras
+there assembled--Mr. Binnie; the Colonel and his son; Mrs. Mackenzie,
+looking uncommonly handsome and perfectly well-dressed; and Miss Rosey,
+in pink crape, with pearly shoulders and blushing cheeks, and beautiful
+fair ringlets--as fresh and comely a sight as it was possible to
+witness. Scarcely had we made our bows, and shaken our hands, and
+imparted our observations about the fineness of the weather, when,
+behold! as we look from the drawing-room windows into the cheerful
+square of Bryanstone, a great family coach arrives, driven by a family
+coachman in a family wig, and we recognise Lady Anne Newcome's carriage,
+and see her ladyship, her mother, her daughter, and her husband, Sir
+Brian, descend from the vehicle. "It is quite a family party," whispers
+the happy Mrs. Newcome to the happy writer conversing with her in the
+niche of the window. "Knowing your intimacy with our brother, Colonel
+Newcome, we thought it would please him to meet you here. Will you be so
+kind as to take Miss Newcome to dinner?"
+
+Everybody was bent upon being happy and gracious. It was "My dear
+brother, how do you do?" from Sir Brian. "My dear Colonel, how glad we
+are to see you! how well you look!" from Lady Anne. Miss Newcome ran up
+to him with both hands out, and put her beautiful face so close to his
+that I thought, upon my conscience, she was going to kiss him. And Lady
+Kew, advancing in the frankest manner, with a smile, I must own, rather
+awful, playing round her many wrinkles, round her ladyship's hooked
+nose, and displaying her ladyship's teeth (a new and exceedingly
+handsome set), held out her hand to Colonel Newcome, and said briskly,
+"Colonel, it is an age since we met." She turns to Clive with equal
+graciousness and good-humour, and says, "Mr. Clive, let me shake hands
+with you; I have heard all sorts of good of you, that you have been
+painting the most beautiful things, that you are going to be quite
+famous." Nothing can exceed the grace and kindness of Lady Anne Newcome
+towards Mrs. Mackenzie: the pretty widow blushes with pleasure at this
+greeting; and now Lady Anne must be introduced to Mrs. Mackenzie's
+charming daughter, and whispers in the delighted mother's ear, "She
+is lovely!" Rosey comes up looking rosy indeed, and executes a pretty
+curtsey with a great deal of blushing grace.
+
+Ethel has been so happy to see her dear uncle, that as yet she has
+had no eyes for any one else, until Clive advancing, those bright eyes
+become brighter still with surprise and pleasure as she beholds him. For
+being absent with his family in Italy now, and not likely to see this
+biography for many many months, I may say that he is a much handsomer
+fellow than our designer has represented; and if that wayward artist
+should take this very scene for the purpose of illustration, he is
+requested to bear in mind that the hero of this story will wish to have
+justice done to his person. There exists in Mr. Newcome's possession a
+charming little pencil-drawing of Clive at this age, and which Colonel
+Newcome took with him when he went--whither he is about to go in a very
+few pages--and brought back with him to this country. A florid apparel
+becomes some men, as simple raiment suits others, and Clive in his youth
+was of the ornamental class of mankind--a customer to tailors, a wearer
+of handsome rings, shirt-studs, mustachios, long hair, and the like;
+nor could he help, in his costume or his nature, being picturesque and
+generous and splendid. He was always greatly delighted with that Scotch
+man-at-arms in Quentin Durward, who twists off an inch or two of his
+gold chain to treat a friend and pay for a bottle. He would give a
+comrade a ring or a fine jewelled pin, if he had no money. Silver
+dressing-cases and brocade morning-gowns were in him a sort of propriety
+at this season of his youth. It was a pleasure to persons of colder
+temperament to sun themselves in the warmth of his bright looks and
+generous humour. His laughter cheered one like wine. I do not know
+that he was very witty; but he was pleasant. He was prone to blush:
+the history of a generous trait moistened his eyes instantly. He was
+instinctively fond of children, and of the other sex from one year old
+to eighty. Coming from the Derby once--a merry party--and stopped on the
+road from Epsom in a lock of carriages, during which the people in the
+carriage ahead saluted us with many vituperative epithets, and seized
+the heads of our leaders,--Clive in a twinkling jumped off the box, and
+the next minute we saw him engaged with a half-dozen of the enemy: his
+hat gone, his fair hair flying off his face, his blue eyes flashing with
+fire, his lips and nostrils quivering wrath, his right and left hand
+hitting out, que c'etoit un plaisir voir. His father sat back in the
+carriage, looking with delight and wonder--indeed it was a great sight.
+Policeman X separated the warriors. Clive ascended the box again with
+a dreadful wound in the coat, which was gashed from the waist to
+the shoulder. I hardly ever saw the elder Newcome in such a state of
+triumph. The postboys quite stared at the gratuity he gave them, and
+wished they might drive his lordship to the Oaks.
+
+All the time we have been making this sketch Ethel is standing, looking
+at Clive; and the blushing youth casts down his eyes before hers. Her
+face assumes a look of arch humour. She passes a slim hand over the
+prettiest lips and a chin with the most lovely of dimples, thereby
+indicating her admiration of Mr. Clive's mustachios and imperial. They
+are of a warm yellowish chestnut colour, and have not yet known the
+razor. He wears a low cravat; a shirt-front of the finest lawn, with
+ruby buttons. His hair, of a lighter colour, waves almost to his "manly
+shoulders broad." "Upon my word; my dear Colonel," says Lady Kew, after
+looking at him, and nodding her head shrewdly, "I think we were right."
+
+"No doubt right in everything your ladyship does, but in what
+particularly?" asks the Colonel.
+
+"Right to keep him out of the way. Ethel has been disposed of these ten
+years. Did not Anne tell you? How foolish of her! But all mothers like
+to have young men dying for their daughters. Your son is really the
+handsomest boy in London. Who is that conceited-looking young man in the
+window? Mr. Pen--what? has your son really been very wicked? I was told
+he was a sad scapegrace."
+
+"I never knew him do, and I don't believe he ever thought, anything that
+was untrue, or unkind, or ungenerous," says the Colonel. "If any one has
+belied my boy to you, and I think I know who his enemy has been----"
+
+"The young lady is very pretty," remarks Lady Kew, stopping the
+Colonel's further outbreak. "How very young her mother looks! Ethel,
+my dear! Colonel Newcome must present us to Mrs. Mackenzie and Miss
+Mackenzie;" and Ethel, giving a nod to Clive, with whom she has talked
+for a minute or two, again puts her hand in her uncle's, and walks
+towards Mrs. Mackenzie and her daughter.
+
+And now let the artist, if he has succeeded in drawing Clive to his
+liking, cut a fresh pencil, and give us a likeness of Ethel. She is
+seventeen years old; rather taller than the majority of women; of a
+countenance somewhat grave and haughty, but on occasion brightening with
+humour or beaming with kindliness and affection. Too quick to detect
+affectation or insincerity in others, too impatient of dulness or
+pomposity, she is more sarcastic now than she became when after years of
+suffering had softened her nature. Truth looks out of her bright eyes,
+and rises up armed, and flashes scorn or denial, perhaps too readily,
+when she encounters flattery, or meanness, or imposture. After her first
+appearance in the world, if the truth must be told, this young lady was
+popular neither with many men, nor with most women. The innocent dancing
+youth who pressed round her, attracted by her beauty, were rather
+afraid, after a while, of engaging her. This one felt dimly that she
+despised him; another, that his simpering commonplaces (delights of how
+many well-bred maidens!) only occasioned Miss Newcome's laughter. Young
+Lord Croesus, whom all maidens and matrons were eager to secure, was
+astounded to find that he was utterly indifferent to her, and that she
+would refuse him twice or thrice in an evening, and dance as many times
+with poor Tom Spring, who was his father's ninth son, and only at home
+till he could get a ship and go to sea again. The young women were
+frightened at her sarcasm. She seemed to know what fadaises they
+whispered to their partners as they paused in the waltzes; and Fanny,
+who was luring Lord Croesus towards her with her blue eyes, dropped them
+guiltily to the floor when Ethel's turned towards her; and Cecilia sang
+more out of time than usual; and Clara, who was holding Freddy, and
+Charley, and Tommy round her enchanted by her bright conversation and
+witty mischief, became dumb and disturbed when Ethel passed her with her
+cold face; and old Lady Hookham, who was playing off her little Minnie
+now at young Jack Gorget of the Guards, now at the eager and simple
+Bob Bateson of the Coldstreams, would slink off when Ethel made her
+appearance on the ground, whose presence seemed to frighten away the
+fish and the angler. No wonder that the other Mayfair nymphs were afraid
+of this severe Diana, whose looks were so cold and whose arrows were so
+keen.
+
+But those who had no cause to heed Diana's shot or coldness might admire
+her beauty; nor could the famous Parisian marble, which Clive said she
+resembled, be more perfect in form than this young lady. Her hair and
+eyebrows were jet black (these latter may have been too thick according
+to some physiognomists, giving rather a stern expression to the eyes,
+and hence causing those guilty ones to tremble who came under her lash),
+but her complexion was as dazzlingly fair and her cheeks as red as
+Miss Rosey's own, who had a right to those beauties, being a blonde by
+nature. In Miss Ethel's black hair there was a slight natural ripple, as
+when a fresh breeze blows over the melan hudor--a ripple such as Roman
+ladies nineteen hundred years ago, and our own beauties a short
+time since, endeavoured to imitate by art, paper, and I believe
+crumpling-irons. Her eyes were grey; her mouth rather large; her teeth
+as regular and bright as Lady Kew's own; her voice low and sweet; and
+her smile, when it lighted up her face and eyes, as beautiful as spring
+sunshine; also they could lighten and flash often, and sometimes,
+though rarely, rain. As for her figure--but as this tall slender form is
+concealed in a simple white muslin robe (of the sort which I believe is
+called demi-toilette), in which her fair arms are enveloped, and which
+is confined at her slim waist by an azure ribbon, and descends to her
+feet--let us make a respectful bow to that fair image of Youth, Health,
+and Modesty, and fancy it as pretty as we will. Miss Ethel made a very
+stately curtsey to Mrs. Mackenzie, surveying that widow calmly, so that
+the elder lady looked up and fluttered; but towards Rosey she held
+out her hand, and smiled with the utmost kindness, and the smile was
+returned by the other; and the blushes with which Miss Mackenzie
+was always ready at this time, became her very much. As for Mrs.
+Mackenzie--the very largest curve that shall not be a caricature, and
+actually disfigure the widow's countenance--a smile so wide and steady,
+so exceedingly rident, indeed, as almost to be ridiculous, may be drawn
+upon her buxom face, if the artist chooses to attempt it as it appeared
+during the whole of this summer evening, before dinner came (when people
+ordinarily look very grave), when she was introduced to the company:
+when she was made known to our friends Julia and Maria,--the darling
+child, lovely little dears! how like their papa and mamma!--when Sir
+Brian Newcome gave her his arm downstairs to the dining-room when
+anybody spoke to her: when John offered her meat, or the gentleman in
+the white waistcoat, wine; when she accepted or when she refused these
+refreshments; when Mr. Newcome told her a dreadfully stupid story; when
+the Colonel called cheerily from his end of the table, "My dear Mrs.
+Mackenzie, you don't take any wine to-day; may I not have the honour
+of drinking a glass of champagne with you?" when the new boy from the
+country upset some sauce upon her shoulder: when Mrs. Newcome made the
+sign for departure; and I have no doubt in the drawing-room, when the
+ladies retired thither. "Mrs. Mack is perfectly awful," Clive told me
+afterwards, "since that dinner in Bryanstone Square. Lady Kew and Lady
+Anne are never out of her mouth; she has had white muslin dresses
+made just like Ethel's for herself and her daughter. She has bought a
+Peerage, and knows the pedigree of the whole Kew family. She won't go
+out in a cab now without the boy on the box; and in the plate for the
+cards which she has established in the drawing-room, you know, Lady
+Kew's pasteboard always will come up to the top, though I poke it down
+whenever I go into the room. As for poor Lady Trotter, the governess of
+St. Kitt's, you know, and the Bishop of Tobago, they are quite bowled
+out: Mrs. Mack has not mentioned them for a week."
+
+During the dinner it seemed to me that the lovely young lady by whom
+I sate cast many glances towards Mrs. Mackenzie, which did not betoken
+particular pleasure. Miss Ethel asked me several questions regarding
+Clive, and also respecting Miss Mackenzie: perhaps her questions were
+rather downright and imperious, and she patronised me in a manner that
+would not have given all gentlemen pleasure. I was Clive's friend, his
+schoolfellow? had I seen him a great deal? know him very well--very well
+indeed? Was it true that he had been very thoughtless? very wild? Who
+told her so? That was not her question (with a blush). It was not true,
+and I ought to know? He was not spoiled? He was very good-natured,
+generous, told the truth? He loved his profession very much, and
+had great talent? Indeed she was very glad. Why do they sneer at
+his profession? It seemed to her quite as good as her father's and
+brother's. Were artists not very dissipated? Not more so, nor often so
+much as other young men? Was Mr. Binnie rich, and was he going to
+leave all his money to his niece? How long have you known them? Is Miss
+Mackenzie as good-natured as she looks? Not very clever, I suppose. Mrs.
+Mackenzie looks very--No, thank you, no more. Grandmamma (she is very
+deaf, and cannot hear) scolded me for reading the book you wrote, and
+took the book away. I afterwards got it, and read it all. I don't think
+there was any harm in it. Why do you give such bad characters of women?
+Don't you know any good ones? Yes, two as good as any in the world. They
+are unselfish: they are pious; they are always doing good; they live in
+the country? Why don't you put them into a book? Why don't you put
+my uncle into a book? He is so good, that nobody could make him good
+enough. Before I came out, I heard a young lady--(Lady Clavering's
+daughter, Miss Amory) sing a song of yours. I have never spoken to an
+author before. I saw Mr. Lyon at Lady Popinjoy's, and heard him speak.
+He said it was very hot, and he looked so, I am sure. Who is the
+greatest author now alive? You will tell me when you come upstairs after
+dinner;--and the young lady sails away, following the matrons, who
+rise and ascend to the drawing-room. Miss Newcome has been watching the
+behaviour of the author by whom she sate; curious to know what such a
+person's habits are; whether he speaks and acts like other people; and
+in what respect authors are different from persons "in society."
+
+When we had sufficiently enjoyed claret and politics below-stairs, the
+gentlemen went to the drawing-room to partake of coffee and the ladies'
+delightful conversation. We had heard previously the tinkling of the
+piano above, and the well-known sound of a couple of Miss Rosey's five
+songs. The two young ladies were engaged over an album at a side-table,
+when the males of the party arrived. The book contained a number of
+Clive's drawings made in the time of his very early youth for the
+amusement of his little cousins. Miss Ethel seemed to be very much
+pleased with these performances, which Miss Mackenzie likewise examined
+with great good-nature and satisfaction. So she did the views of
+Rome, Naples, Marble Hill in the county of Sussex, etc., in the same
+collection: so she did the Berlin cockatoo and spaniel which Mrs.
+Newcome was working in idle moments: so she did the "Books of Beauty,"
+"Flowers of Loveliness," and so forth. She thought the prints very sweet
+and pretty: she thought the poetry very pretty and sweet. Which did she
+like best, Mr. Niminy's "Lines to a bunch of violets," or Miss Piminy's
+"Stanzas to a wreath of roses"? Miss Mackenzie was quite puzzled to
+say which of these masterpieces she preferred; she found them alike so
+pretty. She appealed, as in most cases, to mamma. "How, my darling
+love, can I pretend to know?" mamma says. "I have been a soldier's
+wife, battling about the world. I have not had your advantages. I had no
+drawing-masters, nor music-masters as you have. You, dearest child, must
+instruct me in these things." This poses Rosey: who prefers to have her
+opinions dealt out to her like her frocks, bonnets, handkerchiefs, her
+shoes and gloves, and the order thereof; the lumps of sugar for her tea,
+the proper quantity of raspberry jam for breakfast; who trusts for all
+supplies corporeal and spiritual to her mother. For her own part, Rosey
+is pleased with everything in nature. Does she love music? Oh, yes.
+Bellini and Donizetti? Oh, yes. Dancing? They had no dancing at
+grandmamma's, but she adores dancing, and Mr. Clive dances very well
+indeed. (A smile from Miss Ethel at this admission.) Does she like
+the country? Oh, she is so happy in the country! London? London is
+delightful, and so is the seaside. She does not really know which she
+likes best, London or the country, for mamma is not near her to decide,
+being engaged listening to Sir Brian, who is laying down the law to her,
+and smiling, smiling with all her might. In fact, Mr. Newcome says
+to Mr. Pendennis in his droll, humorous way, "That woman grins like
+a Cheshire cat." Who was the naturalist who first discovered that
+peculiarity of the cats in Cheshire?
+
+In regard to Miss Mackenzie's opinions, then, it is not easy to discover
+that they are decided, or profound, or original; but it seems pretty
+clear that she has a good temper, and a happy contented disposition.
+And the smile which her pretty countenance wears shows off to great
+advantage the two dimples on her pink cheeks. Her teeth are even and
+white, her hair of a beautiful colour, and no snow can be whiter than
+her fair round neck and polished shoulders. She talks very kindly and
+good-naturedly with Julia and Maria (Mrs. Hobson's precious ones)
+until she is bewildered by the statements which those young ladies
+make regarding astronomy, botany, and chemistry, all of which they
+are studying. "My dears, I don't know a single word about any of these
+abstruse subjects: I wish I did," she says. And Ethel Newcome laughs.
+She too is ignorant upon all these subjects. "I am glad there is some
+one else," says Rosey, with naivete, "who is as ignorant as I am." And
+the younger children, with a solemn air, say they will ask mamma leave
+to teach her. So everybody, somehow, great or small, seems to protect
+her; and the humble, simple, gentle little thing wins a certain degree
+of goodwill from the world, which is touched by her humility and her
+pretty sweet looks. The servants in Fitzroy Square waited upon her
+much more kindly than upon her smiling bustling mother. Uncle James is
+especially fond of his little Rosey. Her presence in his study never
+discomposes him; whereas his sister fatigues him with the exceeding
+activity of her gratitude, and her energy in pleasing. As I was going
+away, I thought I heard Sir Brian Newcome say, "It" (but what "it" was,
+of course I cannot conjecture)--"it will do very well. The mother seems
+a superior woman."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. Is passed in a Public-house
+
+
+I had no more conversation with Miss Newcome that night, who had
+forgotten her curiosity about the habits of authors. When she had ended
+her talk with Miss Mackenzie, she devoted the rest of the evening to her
+uncle, Colonel Newcome; and concluded by saying, "And now you will
+come and ride with me to-morrow, uncle, won't you?" which the Colonel
+faithfully promised to do. And she shook hands with Clive very kindly:
+and with Rosey very frankly, but as I thought with rather a patronising
+air: and she made a very stately bow to Mrs. Mackenzie, and so departed
+with her father and mother. Lady Kew had gone away earlier. Mrs.
+Mackenzie informed us afterwards that the Countess had gone to sleep
+after her dinner. If it was at Mrs. Mack's story about the Governor's
+ball at Tobago, and the quarrel for precedence between the Lord Bishop's
+lady, Mrs. Rotchet, and the Chief Justice's wife, Lady Barwise, I should
+not be at all surprised.
+
+A handsome fly carried off the ladies to Fitzroy Square, and the two
+worthy Indian gentlemen in their company; Clive and I walking, with the
+usual Havannah to light us home. And Clive remarked that he supposed
+there had been some difference between his father and the bankers: for
+they had not met for ever so many months before, and the Colonel always
+had looked very gloomy when his brothers were mentioned. "And I can't
+help thinking," says the astute youth, "that they fancied I was in love
+with Ethel (I know the Colonel would have liked me to make up to her),
+and that may have occasioned the row. Now, I suppose, they think I am
+engaged to Rosey. What the deuce are they in such a hurry to marry me
+for?"
+
+Clive's companion remarked, "that marriage was a laudable institution:
+and an honest attachment an excellent conservator of youthful morals."
+On which Clive replied, "Why don't you marry yourself?"
+
+This it was justly suggested was no argument, but a merely personal
+allusion foreign to the question, which was, that marriage was laudable,
+etc.
+
+Mr. Clive laughed. "Rosey is as good a little creature as can be," he
+said. "She is never out of temper, though I fancy Mrs. Mackenzie tries
+her. I don't think she is very wise: but she is uncommonly pretty, and
+her beauty grows on you. As for Ethel, anything so high and mighty I
+have never seen since I saw the French giantess. Going to Court, and
+about to parties every night where a parcel of young fools flatter her,
+has perfectly spoiled her. By Jove, how handsome she is! How she turns
+with her long neck, and looks at you from under those black eyebrows!
+If I painted her hair, I think I should paint it almost blue, and then
+glaze over with lake. It is blue. And how finely her head is joined on
+to her shoulders!"--And he waves in the air an imaginary line with his
+cigar. "She would do for Judith, wouldn't she? Or how grand she would
+look as Herodias's daughter sweeping down a stair--in a great dress
+of cloth-of-gold like Paul Veronese--holding a charger before her with
+white arms, you know--with the muscles accented like that glorious Diana
+at Paris--a savage smile on her face and a ghastly solemn gory head on
+the dish. I see the picture, sir, I see the picture!" and he fell to
+curling his mustachios just like his brave old father.
+
+I could not help laughing at the resemblance, and mentioning it to my
+friend. He broke, as was his wont, into a fond eulogium of his sire,
+wished he could be like him--worked himself up into another state of
+excitement, in which he averred "that if his father wanted him to marry,
+he would marry that instant. And why not Rosey? She is a dear little
+thing. Or why not that splendid Miss Sherrick? What ahead!--a regular
+Titian! I was looking at the difference of their colour at Uncle
+Honeyman's that day of the dejeuner. The shadows in Rosey's face, sir,
+are all pearly-tinted. You ought to paint her in milk, sir!" cries the
+enthusiast. "Have you ever remarked the grey round her eyes, and the
+sort of purple bloom of her cheek? Rubens could have done the colour:
+but I don't somehow like to think of a young lady and that sensuous
+old Peter Paul in company. I look at her like a little wild-flower in a
+field--like a little child at play, sir. Pretty little tender nursling!
+If I see her passing in the street, I feel as if I would like some
+fellow to be rude to her, that I might have the pleasure of knocking
+him down. She is like a little songbird, sir,--a tremulous, fluttering
+little linnet that you would take into your hand, pavidam quaerentem
+matrem, and smooth its little plumes, and let it perch on your finger
+and sing. The Sherrick creates quite a different sentiment--the Sherrick
+is splendid, stately, sleepy----"
+
+"Stupid," hints Clive's companion.
+
+"Stupid! Why not? Some women ought to be stupid. What you call dulness
+I call repose. Give me a calm woman, a slow woman,--a lazy, majestic
+woman. Show me a gracious virgin bearing a lily: not a leering giggler
+frisking a rattle. A lively woman would be the death of me. Look at Mrs.
+Mack, perpetually nodding, winking, grinning, throwing out signals which
+you are to be at the trouble to answer! I thought her delightful for
+three days; I declare I was in love with her--that is, as much as I can
+be after--but never mind that, I feel I shall never be really in love
+again. Why shouldn't the Sherrick be stupid, I say? About great beauty
+there should always reign a silence. As you look at the great stars, the
+great ocean, any great scene of nature: you hush, sir. You laugh at a
+pantomime, but you are still in a temple. When I saw the great Venus of
+the Louvre, I thought--Wert thou alive, O goddess, thou shouldst never
+open those lovely lips but to speak lowly, slowly: thou shouldst never
+descend from that pedestal but to walk stately to some near couch, and
+assume another attitude of beautiful calm. To be beautiful is enough. If
+a woman can do that well: who shall demand more from her? You don't
+want a rose to sing. And I think wit is out of place where there's great
+beauty; as I wouldn't have a Queen to cut jokes on her throne. I say,
+Pendennis,"--here broke off the enthusiastic youth,--"have you got
+another cigar? Shall we go into Finch's, and have a game at billiards?
+Just one--it's quite early yet. Or shall we go in the Haunt? It's
+Wednesday night, you know, when all the boys go." We tap at a door in an
+old, old street in Soho: an old maid with a kind, comical face opens
+the door, and nods friendly, and says, "How do, sir? ain't seen you
+this ever so long. How do, Mr. Noocom?" "Who's here?" "Most everybody's
+here." We pass by a little snug bar, in which a trim elderly lady is
+seated by a great fire, on which boils an enormous kettle; while two
+gentlemen are attacking a cold saddle of mutton and West India pickles:
+hard by Mrs. Nokes the landlady's elbow--with mutual bows--we recognise
+Hickson, the sculptor, and Morgan, the intrepid Irish chieftain, chief
+of the reporters of the Morning Press newspaper. We pass through a
+passage into a back room, and are received with a roar of welcome from a
+crowd of men, almost invisible in the smoke.
+
+"I am right glad to see thee, boy!" cries a cheery voice (that will
+never troll a chorus more). "We spake anon of thy misfortune, gentle
+youth! and that thy warriors of Assaye have charged the Academy in vain.
+Mayhap thou frightenedst the courtly school with barbarous visages
+of grisly war.--Pendennis, thou dost wear a thirsty look! Resplendent
+swell! untwine thy choker white, and I will either stand a glass of
+grog, or thou shalt pay the like for me, my lad, and tell us of the
+fashionable world." Thus spake the brave old Tom Sarjent,--also one
+of the Press, one of the old boys: a good old scholar with a good old
+library of books, who had taken his seat any time these forty years by
+the chimney-fire in this old Haunt: where painters, sculptors, men of
+letters, actors, used to congregate, passing pleasant hours in rough
+kindly communion, and many a day seeing the sunrise lighting the rosy
+street ere they parted, and Betsy put the useless lamp out and closed
+the hospitable gates of the Haunt.
+
+The time is not very long since, though to-day is so changed. As we
+think of it, the kind familiar faces rise up, and we hear the pleasant
+voices and singing. There are they met, the honest hearty companions.
+In the days when the Haunt was a haunt, stage-coaches were not yet quite
+over. Casinos were not invented: clubs were rather rare luxuries:
+there were sanded floors, triangular sawdust-boxes, pipes, and tavern
+parlours. Young Smith and Brown, from the Temple, did not go from
+chambers to dine at the Polyanthus, or the Megatherium, off potage a la
+Bisque, turbot au gratin, cotelettes a la What-do-you-call-'em, and a
+pint of St. Emilion; but ordered their beefsteak and pint of port from
+the "plump head-waiter at the Cock;" did not disdain the pit of
+the theatre; and for a supper a homely refection at the tavern. How
+delightful are the suppers in Charles Lamb to read of even now!--the
+cards--the punch--the candles to be snuffed--the social oysters--the
+modest cheer! Whoever snuffs a candle now? What man has a domestic
+supper whose dinner-hour is eight o'clock? Those little meetings, in
+the memory of many of us yet, are gone quite away into the past.
+Five-and-twenty years ago is a hundred years off--so much has our social
+life changed in those five lustres. James Boswell himself, were he to
+revisit London, would scarce venture to enter a tavern. He would find
+scarce a respectable companion to enter its doors with him. It is an
+institution as extinct as a hackney-coach. Many a grown man who peruses
+this historic page has never seen such a vehicle, and only heard of
+rum-punch as a drink which his ancestors used to tipple.
+
+Cheery old Tom Sarjent is surrounded at the Haunt by a dozen of kind
+boon companions. They toil all day at their avocations of art, or
+letters, or law, and here meet for a harmless night's recreation and
+converse. They talk of literature, or politics, or pictures, or plays;
+socially banter one another over their cheap cups: sing brave old songs
+sometimes when they are especially jolly kindly ballads in praise of
+love and wine; famous maritime ditties in honour of Old England. I fancy
+I hear Jack Brent's noble voice rolling out the sad, generous refrain of
+"The Deserter," "Then for that reason and for a season we will be merry
+before we go," or Michael Percy's clear tenor carolling the Irish chorus
+of "What's that to any one, whether or no!" or Mark Wilder shouting his
+bottle-song of "Garryowen na gloria." These songs were regarded with
+affection by the brave old frequenters of the Haunt. A gentleman's
+property in a song was considered sacred. It was respectfully asked for:
+it was heard with the more pleasure for being old. Honest Tom Sarjent!
+how the times have changed since we saw thee! I believe the present
+chief of the reporters of the newspaper (which responsible office Tom
+filled) goes to Parliament in his brougham, and dines with the Ministers
+of the Crown.
+
+Around Tom are seated grave Royal Academicians, rising gay Associates;
+writers of other journals besides the Pall Mall Gazette; a barrister
+maybe, whose name will be famous some day: a hewer of marble perhaps: a
+surgeon whose patients have not come yet; and one or two men about town
+who like this queer assembly better than haunts much more splendid.
+Captain Shandon has been here, and his jokes are preserved in the
+tradition of the place. Owlet, the philosopher, came once and tried, as
+his wont is, to lecture; but his metaphysics were beaten down by a
+storm of banter. Slatter, who gave himself such airs because he wrote in
+the------ Review, tried to air himself at the Haunt, but was choked by
+the smoke, and silenced by the unanimous pooh-poohing of the assembly.
+Dick Walker, who rebelled secretly at Sarjent's authority, once thought
+to give himself consequence by bringing a young lord from the Blue
+Posts, but he was so unmercifully "chaffed" by Tom, that even the young
+lord laughed at him. His lordship has been heard to say he had been
+taken to a monsus queeah place, queeah set of folks, in a tap somewhere,
+though he went away quite delighted with Tom's affability, but he never
+came again. He could not find the place, probably. You might pass the
+Haunt in the daytime, and not know it in the least. "I believe," said
+Charley Ormond (A.R.A. he was then)--"I believe in the day there's no
+such place at all: and when Betsy turns the gas off at the door-lamp as
+we go away, the whole thing vanishes: the door, the house, the bar, the
+Haunt, Betsy, the beer-boy, Mrs. Nokes and all." It has vanished: it is
+to be found no more: neither by night nor by day--unless the ghosts of
+good fellows still haunt it.
+
+As the genial talk and glass go round, and after Clive and his friend
+have modestly answered the various queries put to them by good old Tom
+Sarjent, the acknowledged Praeses of the assembly and Sachem of this
+venerable wigwam, the door opens and another well-known figure is
+recognised with shouts as it emerges through the smoke. "Bayham, all
+hail!" says Tom. "Frederick, I am right glad to see thee!"
+
+Bayham says he is disturbed in spirit, and calls for a pint of beer to
+console him.
+
+"Hast thou flown far, thou restless bird of night?" asks Father Tom, who
+loves speaking in blank verses.
+
+"I have come from Cursitor Street," says Bayham, in a low groan. "I have
+just been to see a poor devil in quod there. Is that you, Pendennis? You
+know the man--Charles Honeyman."
+
+"What!" cries Clive, starting up.
+
+"O my prophetic soul, my uncle!" growls Bayham. "I did not see the young
+one; but 'tis true."
+
+The reader is aware that more than the three years have elapsed, of
+which time the preceding pages contain the harmless chronicle; and
+while Thomas Newcome's leave has been running out and Clive's mustachios
+growing, the fate of other persons connected with our story has also had
+its development, and their fortune has experienced its natural progress,
+its increase or decay. Our tale, such as it has hitherto been arranged,
+has passed leisurely in scenes wherein the present tense is perforce
+adopted; the writer acting as chorus to the drama, and occasionally
+explaining, by hints or more open statements, what has occurred during
+the intervals of the acts; and how it happens that the performers are in
+such or such a posture. In the modern theatre, as the play-going critic
+knows, the explanatory personage is usually of quite a third-rate
+order. He is the two walking-gentlemen friends of Sir Harry Courtly,
+who welcome the young baronet to London, and discourse about the
+niggardliness of Harry's old uncle, the Nabob; and the depth of
+Courtly's passion for Lady Annabel the premiere amoureuse. He is the
+confidant in white linen to the heroine in white satin. He is "Tom,
+you rascal," the valet or tiger, more or less impudent and acute--that
+well-known menial in top-boots and a livery frock with red cuffs and
+collar, whom Sir Harry always retains in his service, addresses with
+scurrilous familiarity, and pays so irregularly: or he is Lucetta, Lady
+Annabel's waiting-maid, who carries the billets-doux and peeps into
+them; knows all about the family affairs; pops the lover under the sofa;
+and sings a comic song between the scenes. Our business now is to
+enter into Charles Honeyman's privacy, to peer into the secrets of that
+reverend gentleman, and to tell what has happened to him during the past
+months, in which he has made fitful though graceful appearances on our
+scene.
+
+While his nephew's whiskers have been budding, and his brother-in-law
+has been spending his money and leave, Mr. Honeyman's hopes have been
+withering, his sermons growing stale, his once blooming popularity
+drooping and running to seed. Many causes have contributed to bring
+him to his present melancholy strait. When you go to Lady Whittlesea's
+Chapel now, it is by no means crowded. Gaps are in the pews: there is
+not the least difficulty in getting a snug place near the pulpit, whence
+the preacher can look over his pocket-handkerchief and see Lord Dozeley
+no more: his lordship has long gone to sleep elsewhere and a host of the
+fashionable faithful have migrated too. The incumbent can no more cast
+his fine eyes upon the French bonnets of the female aristocracy and see
+some of the loveliest faces in Mayfair regarding his with expressions of
+admiration. Actual dowdy tradesmen of the neighbourhood are seated with
+their families in the aisles: Ridley and his wife and son have one of
+the very best seats. To be sure Ridley looks like a nobleman, with his
+large waistcoat, bald head, and gilt book: J. J. has a fine head; but
+Mrs. Ridley! cook and housekeeper is written on her round face. The
+music is by no means of its former good quality. That rebellious and
+ill-conditioned basso Bellew has seceded, and seduced the four best
+singing boys, who now perform glees at the Cave of Harmony. Honeyman has
+a right to speak of persecution, and to compare himself to a hermit
+in so far that he preaches in a desert. Once, like another hermit, St.
+Hierome, he used to be visited by lions. None such come to him now.
+Such lions as frequent the clergy are gone off to lick the feet of other
+ecclesiastics. They are weary of poor Honeyman's old sermons.
+
+Rivals have sprung up in the course of these three years--have sprung up
+round about Honeyman and carried his flock into their folds. We know
+how such simple animals will leap one after another, and that it is the
+sheepish way. Perhaps a new pastor has come to the church of St. Jacob's
+hard by--bold, resolute, bright, clear, a scholar and no pedant: his
+manly voice is thrilling in their ears, he speaks of life and conduct,
+of practice as well as faith; and crowds of the most polite and most
+intelligent, and best informed, and best dressed, and most selfish
+people in the world come and hear him twice at least. There are so many
+well-informed and well-dressed etc. etc. people in the world that the
+succession of them keeps St. Jacob's full for a year or more. Then, it
+may be, a bawling quack, who has neither knowledge, nor scholarship, nor
+charity, but who frightens the public with denunciations and rouses them
+with the energy of his wrath, succeeds in bringing them together for a
+while till they tire of his din and curses. Meanwhile the good quiet
+old churches round about ring their accustomed bell: open their Sabbath
+gates: receive their tranquil congregations and sober priest, who
+has been busy all the week, at schools and sick-beds, with watchful
+teaching, gentle counsel, and silent alms.
+
+Though we saw Honeyman but seldom, for his company was not altogether
+amusing, and his affectation, when one became acquainted with it, very
+tiresome to witness, Fred Bayham, from his garret at Mrs. Ridley's, kept
+constant watch over the curate, and told us of his proceedings from time
+to time. When we heard the melancholy news first announced, of course
+the intelligence damped the gaiety of Clive and his companion; and F.
+B., conducted all the affairs of life with great gravity, telling Tom
+Sarjent that he had news of importance for our private ear, Tom with
+still more gravity than F. B.'s, said, "Go, my children, you had best
+discuss this topic in a separate room, apart from the din and fun of
+a convivial assembly;" and ringing the bell he bade Betsy bring him
+another glass of rum-and-water, and one for Mr. Desborough, to be
+charged to him.
+
+We adjourned to another parlour then, where gas was lighted up: and F.
+B. over a pint of beer narrated poor Honeyman's mishap. "Saving your
+presence, Clive," said Bayham, "and with every regard for the youthful
+bloom of your young heart's affections, your uncle Charles Honeyman,
+sir, is a bad lot. I have known him these twenty years, when I was at
+his father's as a private tutor. Old Miss Honeyman is one of those cards
+which we call trumps--so was old Honeyman a trump; but Charles and his
+sister----"
+
+I stamped on F. B.'s foot under the table. He seemed to have forgotten
+that he was about to speak of Clive's mother.
+
+"Hem! of your poor mother, I--hem--I may say vidi tantum. I scarcely
+knew her. She married very young: as I was when she left Borhambury. But
+Charles exhibited his character at a very early age--and it was not a
+charming one--no, by no means a model of virtue. He always had a genius
+for running into debt. He borrowed from every one of the pupils--I don't
+know how he spent it except in hardbake and alycompaine--and even from
+old Nosey's groom,--pardon me, we used to call your grandfather by that
+playful epithet (boys will be boys, you know),--even from the doctor's
+groom he took money, and I recollect thrashing Charles Honeyman for that
+disgraceful action.
+
+"At college, without any particular show, he was always in debt and
+difficulties. Take warning by him, dear youth! By him and by me, if you
+like. See me--me, F. Bayham, descended from the ancient kings that long
+the Tuscan sceptre swayed, dodge down a street to get out of sight of a
+boot-shop, and my colossal frame tremble if a chap puts his hand on my
+shoulder, as you did, Pendennis, the other day in the Strand, when I
+thought a straw might have knocked me down! I have had my errors, Clive.
+I know 'em. I'll take another pint of beer, if you please. Betsy, has
+Mrs. Nokes any cold meat in the bar? and an accustomed pickle? Ha! Give
+her my compliments, and say F. B. is hungry. I resume my tale. Faults
+F. B. has, and knows it. Humbug he may have been sometimes; but I'm not
+such a complete humbug as Honeyman."
+
+Clive did not know how to look at this character of his relative, but
+Clive's companion burst into a fit of laughter, at which F. B. nodded
+gravely, and resumed his narrative. "I don't know how much money he has
+had from your governor, but this I can say, the half of it would make
+F. B. a happy man. I don't know out of how much the reverend party has
+nobbled his poor old sister at Brighton. He has mortgaged his chapel to
+Sherrick, I suppose you know, who is master of it, and could turn him
+out any day. I don't think Sherrick is a bad fellow. I think he's a good
+fellow; I have known him do many a good turn to a chap in misfortune.
+He wants to get into society: what more natural? That was why you were
+asked to meet him the other day, and why he asked you to dinner. I hope
+you had a good one. I wish he'd ask me.
+
+"Then Moss has got his bills, and Moss's brother-in-law in Cursitor
+Street has taken possession of his revered person. He's very welcome.
+One Jew has the chapel, another Hebrew has the clergyman. It's singular,
+ain't it? Sherrick might turn Lady Whittlesea into a synagogue and have
+the Chief Rabbi into the pulpit, where my uncle the Bishop has given out
+the text.
+
+"The shares of that concern ain't at a premium. I have had immense fun
+with Sherrick about it. I like the Hebrew, sir. He maddens with rage
+when F. B. goes and asks him whether any more pews are let overhead.
+Honeyman begged and borrowed in order to buy out the last man. I
+remember when the speculation was famous, when all the boxes (I mean the
+pews) were taken for the season, and you couldn't get a place, come ever
+so early. Then Honeyman was spoilt, and gave his sermons over and over
+again. People got sick of seeing the old humbug cry, the old crocodile!
+Then we tried the musical dodge. F. B. came forward, sir, there. That
+was a coup: I did it, sir. Bellew wouldn't have sung for any man but
+me--and for two-and-twenty months I kept him as sober as Father Mathew.
+Then Honeyman didn't pay him: there was a row in the sacred building,
+and Bellew retired. Then Sherrick must meddle in it. And having heard
+a chap out Hampstead way who Sherrick thought would do, Honeyman was
+forced to engage him, regardless of expense. You recollect the fellow,
+sir? The Reverend Simeon Rawkins, the lowest of the Low Church, sir--a
+red-haired dumpy man, who gasped at his h's and spoke with a Lancashire
+twang--he'd no more do for Mayfair than Grimaldi for Macbeth. He and
+Honeyman used to fight like cat and dog in the vestry: and he drove away
+a third part of the congregation. He was an honest man and an able man
+too, though not a sound Churchman" (F. B. said this with a very edifying
+gravity): "I told Sherrick this the very day I heard him. And if he had
+spoken to me on the subject I might have saved him a pretty penny--a
+precious deal more than the paltry sum which he and I had a quarrel
+about at that time--a matter of business, sir--a pecuniary difference
+about a small three months' thing which caused a temporary estrangement
+between us. As for Honeyman, he used to cry about it. Your uncle is
+great in the lachrymatory line, Clive Newcome. He used to go with tears
+in his eyes to Sherrick, and implore him not to have Rawkins, but
+he would. And I must say for poor Charles that the failure of Lady
+Whittlesea's has not been altogether Charles's fault; and that Sherrick
+has kicked down that property.
+
+"Well, then, sir, poor Charles thought to make it all right by marrying
+Mrs. Brumby;--and she was very fond of him and the thing was all but
+done, in spite of her sons, who were in a rage as you may fancy. But
+Charley, sir, has such a propensity for humbug that he will tell lies
+when there is no earthly good in lying. He represented his chapel at
+twelve hundred a year, his private means as so-and-so; and when he came
+to book up with Briggs the lawyer, Mrs. Brumby's brother, it was found
+that he lied and prevaricated so, that the widow in actual disgust would
+have nothing more to do with him. She was a good woman of business,
+and managed the hat-shop for nine years, whilst poor Brumby was at Dr.
+Tokelys. A first-rate shop it was, too. I introduced Charles to it. My
+uncle the Bishop had his shovels there: and they used for a considerable
+period to cover this humble roof with tiles," said F. B., tapping his
+capacious forehead; "I am sure he might have had Brumby," he added,
+in his melancholy tones, "but for those unlucky lies. She didn't want
+money. She had plenty. She longed to get into society, and was bent on
+marrying a gentleman.
+
+"But what I can't pardon in Honeyman is the way in which he has done
+poor old Ridley and his wife. I took him there, you know, thinking
+they would send their bills in once a month: that he was doing a good
+business: in fact, that I had put 'em into a good thing. And the fellow
+has told me a score of times that he and the Ridleys were all right. But
+he has not only not paid his lodgings, but he has had money of them: he
+has given dinners: he has made Ridley pay for wine. He has kept paying
+lodgers out of the house, and he tells me all this with a burst of
+tears, when he sent for me to Lazarus's to-night, and I went to him,
+sir, because he was in distress--went into the lion's den, sir!" says F.
+B., looking round nobly. "I don't know how much he owes them: because of
+course you know the sum he mentions ain't the right one. He never does
+tell the truth--does Charles. But think of the pluck of those good
+Ridleys never saying a single word to F. B. about the debt! 'We are
+poor, but we have saved some money and can lie out of it. And we think
+Mr. Honeyman will pay us,' says Mrs. Ridley to me this very evening.
+And she thrilled my heart-strings, sir; and I took her in my arms, and
+kissed the old woman," says Bayham; "and I rather astonished little Miss
+Cann, and young J. J., who came in with a picture under his arm. But she
+said she had kissed Master Frederick long before J. J. was born--and so
+she had: that good and faithful servant--and my emotion in embracing her
+was manly, sir, manly."
+
+Here old Betsy came in to say that the supper was a-waitin' for Mr.
+Bayham and it was a-getting' very late; and we left F. B. to his
+meal; and bidding adieu to Mrs. Nokes, Clive and I went each to our
+habitation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. In which Colonel Newcome's Horses are sold
+
+
+At an hour early the next morning I was not surprised to see Colonel
+Newcome at my chambers, to whom Clive had communicated Bayham's
+important news of the night before. The Colonel's object, as any one who
+knew him need scarcely be told, was to rescue his brother-in-law; and
+being ignorant of lawyers, sheriffs'-officers, and their proceedings, he
+bethought him that he would apply to Lamb Court for information, and in
+so far showed some prudence, for at least I knew more of the world and
+its ways than my simple client, and was enabled to make better terms
+for the unfortunate prisoner, or rather for Colonel Newcome, who was
+the real sufferer, than Honeyman's creditors might otherwise have been
+disposed to give.
+
+I thought it would be more prudent that our good Samaritan should not
+see the victim of rogues whom he was about to succour; and left him to
+entertain himself with Mr. Warrington in Lamb Court, while I sped to the
+lock-up house, where the Mayfair pet was confined. A sickly smile played
+over his countenance as he beheld me when I was ushered to his private
+room. The reverent gentleman was not shaved; he had partaken of
+breakfast. I saw a glass which had once contained brandy on the dirty
+tray whereon his meal was placed: a greasy novel from a Chancery Lane
+library lay on the table: but he was at present occupied in writing one
+or more of those great long letters, those laborious, ornate, eloquent
+statements, those documents so profusely underlined, in which the
+machinations of villains are laid bare with italic fervour; the
+coldness, to use no harsher phrase, of friends on whom reliance might
+have been placed; the outrageous conduct of Solomons; the astonishing
+failure of Smith to pay a sum of money on which he had counted as on
+the Bank of England; finally, the infallible certainty of repaying (with
+what heartfelt thanks need not be said) the loan of so many pounds next
+Saturday week at farthest. All this, which some readers in the course of
+their experience have read no doubt in many handwritings, was duly set
+forth by poor Honeyman. There was a wafer in a wine-glass on the table,
+and the bearer no doubt below to carry the missive. They always sent
+these letters by a messenger, who is introduced in the postscript; he is
+always sitting in the hall when you get the letter, and is "a young man
+waiting for an answer, please."
+
+No one can suppose that Honeyman laid a complete statement of his
+affairs before the negotiator who was charged to look into them. No
+debtor does confess all his debts, but breaks them gradually to his
+man of business, factor or benefactor, leading him on from surprise to
+surprise; and when he is in possession of the tailor's little account,
+introducing him to the bootmaker. Honeyman's schedule I felt perfectly
+certain was not correct. The detainees against him were trifling. "Moss
+of Wardour Street, one hundred and twenty--I believe I have paid him
+thousands in this very transaction," ejaculates Honeyman. "A heartless
+West End tradesman hearing of my misfortune--all these people a
+linked together, my dear Pendennis, and rush like vultures upon their
+prey!--Waddilove, the tailor, has another writ out for ninety-eight
+pounds; a man whom I have made by my recommendations! Tobbins, the
+bootmaker, his neighbour in Jermyn Street, forty-one pounds more, and
+that is all--I give you my word, all. In a few months, when my pew-rents
+will be coming in, I should have settled with those cormorants;
+otherwise, my total and irretrievable ruin, and the disgrace and
+humiliation of a prison attends me. I know it; I can bear it; I have
+been wretchedly weak, Pendennis: I can say mea culpa, mea maxima culpa,
+and I can--bear--my--penalty." In his finest moments he was never more
+pathetic. He turned his head away, and concealed it in a handkerchief
+not so white as those which veiled his emotions at Lady Whittlesea's.
+
+How by degrees this slippery penitent was induced to make other
+confessions; how we got an idea of Mrs. Ridley's account from him,
+of his dealings with Mr. Sherrick, need not be mentioned here. The
+conclusion to which Colonel Newcome's ambassador came was, that to help
+such a man would be quite useless; and that the Fleet Prison would be
+a most wholesome retreat for this most reckless divine. Ere the day was
+out, Messrs. Waddilove and Tobbins had conferred with their neighbour in
+St. James's, Mr. Brace; and there came a detainer from that haberdasher
+for gloves, cravats, and pocket-handkerchiefs, that might have done
+credit to the most dandified young Guardsman. Mr. Warrington was on Mr.
+Pendennis's side, and urged that the law should take its course. "Why
+help a man," said he, "who will not help himself? Let the law sponge out
+the fellow's debts; set him going again with twenty pounds when he quits
+the prison, and get him a chaplaincy in the Isle of Man."
+
+I saw by the Colonel's grave kind face that these hard opinions did not
+suit him. "At all events, sir, promise us," we said, "that you will
+pay nothing yourself--that you won't see Honeyman's creditors, and let
+people, who know the world better, deal with him." "Know the world,
+young man!" cries Newcome; "I should think if I don't know the world at
+my age, I never shall." And if he had lived to be as old as Jahaleel, a
+boy could still have cheated him.
+
+"I do not scruple to tell you," he said, after a pause during which a
+plenty of smoke was delivered from the council of three, "that I have--a
+fund--which I had set aside for mere purposes of pleasure, I give you
+my word, and a part of which I shall think it my duty to devote to poor
+Honeyman's distresses. The fund is not large. The money was intended,
+in fact:--however, there it is. If Pendennis will go round to these
+tradesmen, and make some composition with them, as their prices have
+been no doubt enormously exaggerated, I see no harm. Besides the
+tradesfolk, there is good Mrs. Ridley and Mr. Sherrick--we must see
+them; and, if we can, set this luckless Charles again on his legs. We
+have read of other prodigals who were kindly treated; and we may have
+debts of our own to forgive, boys."
+
+Into Mr. Sherrick's account we had no need to enter. That gentleman had
+acted with perfect fairness by Honeyman. He laughingly said to us, "You
+don't imagine I would lend that chap a shilling without security? I
+will give him fifty or a hundred. Here's one of his notes, with
+What-do-you-call-'ems--that rum fellow Bayham's name as drawer. A nice
+pair, ain't they? Pooh! I shall never touch 'em. I lent some money on
+the shop overhead," says Sherrick, pointing to the ceiling (we were in
+his counting-house in the cellar of Lady Whittlesea's Chapel), "because
+I thought it was a good speculation. And so it was at first. The people
+liked Honeyman. All the nobs came to hear him. Now the speculation ain't
+so good. He's used up. A chap can't be expected to last for ever. When
+I first engaged Mademoiselle Bravura at my theatre, you couldn't get
+a place for three weeks together. The next year she didn't draw twenty
+pounds a week. So it was with Pottle and the regular drama humbug. At
+first it was all very well. Good business, good houses, our immortal
+bard, and that sort of game. They engaged the tigers and the French
+riding people over the way; and there was Pottle bellowing away in my
+place to the orchestra and the orders. It's all a speculation. I've
+speculated in about pretty much everything that's going: in theatres,
+in joint-stock jobs, in building-ground, in bills, in gas and insurance
+companies, and in this chapel. Poor old Honeyman! I won't hurt him.
+About that other chap I put in to do the first business--that red-haired
+chap, Rawkins--I think I was wrong. I think he injured the property.
+But I don't know everything, you know. I wasn't bred to know about
+parsons--quite the reverse. I thought, when I heard Rawkins at
+Hampstead, he was just the thing. I used to go about, sir, just as I
+did to the provinces, when I had the theatre--Camberwell, Islington,
+Kennington, Clapton, all about, and hear the young chaps. Have a glass
+of sherry; and here's better luck to Honeyman. As for that Colonel,
+he's a trump, sir! I never see such a man. I have to deal with such a
+precious lot of rogues, in the City and out of it, among the swells
+and all, you know, that to see such a fellow refreshes me; and I'd do
+anything for him. You've made a good thing of that Pall Mall Gazette! I
+tried papers too; but mine didn't do. I don't know why. I tried a Tory
+one, moderate Liberal, and out-and-out uncompromising Radical. I say,
+what d'ye think of a religious paper, the Catechism, or some such name?
+Would Honeyman do as editor? I'm afraid it's all up with the poor cove
+at the chapel." And I parted with Mr. Sherrick, not a little edified by
+his talk, and greatly relieved as to Honeyman's fate. The tradesmen of
+Honeyman's body were appeased; and as for Mr. Moss, when he found that
+the curate had no effects, and must go before the Insolvent Court,
+unless Moss chose to take the composition which we were empowered
+to offer him, he too was brought to hear reason, and parted with the
+stamped paper on which was poor Honeyman's signature. Our negotiation
+had like to have come to an end by Clive's untimely indignation, who
+offered at one stage of the proceedings to pitch young Moss out of
+window; but nothing came of this most ungentlemanlike behaviour on
+Noocob's part, further than remonstrance and delay in the proceedings;
+and Honeyman preached a lovely sermon at Lady Whittlesea's the very next
+Sunday. He had made himself much liked in the sponging-house, and Mr.
+Lazarus said, "if he hadn't a got out time enough, I'd a let him out
+for Sunday, and sent one of my men with him to show him the way ome, you
+know; for when a gentleman behaves as a gentleman to me, I behave as a
+gentleman to him."
+
+Mrs. Ridley's account, and it was a long one, was paid without a
+single question, or the deduction of a farthing; but the Colonel rather
+sickened of Honeyman's expressions of rapturous gratitude, and received
+his professions of mingled contrition and delight very coolly. "My boy,"
+says the father to Clive, "you see to what straits debt brings a man,
+to tamper with truth to have to cheat the poor. Think of flying before
+a washerwoman, or humbling yourself to a tailor, or eating a poor man's
+children's bread!" Clive blushed, I thought, and looked rather confused.
+
+"Oh, father," says he, "I--I'm afraid I owe some money too--not much;
+but about forty pound, five-and-twenty for cigars, and fifteen I
+borrowed of Pendennis, and--and I've been devilish annoyed about it all
+this time."
+
+"You stupid boy," says the father "I knew about the cigars bill, and
+paid it last week. Anything I have is yours, you know. As long as there
+is a guinea, there is half for you. See that every shilling we owe is
+paid before--before a week is over. And go down and ask Binnie if I can
+see him in his study. I want to have some conversation with him." When
+Clive was gone away, he said to me in a very sweet voice, "In God's
+name, keep my boy out of debt when I am gone, Arthur. I shall return to
+India very soon."
+
+"Very soon, sir! You have another year's leave," said I.
+
+"Yes, but no allowances, you know; and this affair of Honeyman's has
+pretty nearly emptied the little purse I had set aside for European
+expenses. They have been very much heavier than I expected. As it is, I
+overdrew my account at my brother's, and have been obliged to draw money
+from my agents in Calcutta. A year sooner or later (unless two of our
+senior officers had died, when I should have got my promotion and full
+colonel's pay with it, and proposed to remain in this country)--a year
+sooner or later, what does it matter? Clive will go away and work at his
+art, and see the great schools of painting while I am absent. I thought
+at one time how pleasant it would be to accompany him. But l'homme
+propose, Pendennis. I fancy now a lad is not the better for being always
+tied to his parent's apron-string. You young fellows are too clever for
+me. I haven't learned your ideas or read your books. I feel myself very
+often an old damper in your company. I will go back, sir, where I have
+some friends, where I am somebody still. I know an honest face or two,
+white and brown, that will lighten up in the old regiment when they
+see Tom Newcome again. God bless you, Arthur. You young fellows in this
+country have such cold ways that we old ones hardly know how to like you
+at first. James Binnie and I, when we first came home, used to talk you
+over, and think you laughed at us. But you didn't, I know. God Almighty
+bless you, and send you a good wife, and make a good man of you. I have
+bought a watch, which I would like you to wear in remembrance of me and
+my boy, to whom you were so kind when you were boys together in the
+old Grey Friars." I took his hand, and uttered some incoherent words of
+affection and respect. Did not Thomas Newcome merit both from all who
+knew him?
+
+His resolution being taken, our good Colonel began to make silent but
+effectual preparations for his coming departure. He was pleased during
+these last days of his stay to give me even more of his confidence than
+I had previously enjoyed, and was kind enough to say that he regarded me
+almost as a son of his own, and hoped I would act as elder brother and
+guardian to Clive. Ah! who is to guard the guardian? The younger brother
+had many nobler qualities than belonged to the elder. The world had
+not hardened Clive, nor even succeeded in spoiling him. I perceive I am
+diverging from his history into that of another person, and will return
+to the subject proper of the book.
+
+Colonel Newcome expressed himself as being particularly touched and
+pleased with his friend Binnie's conduct, now that the Colonel's
+departure was determined. "James is one of the most generous of men,
+Pendennis, and I am proud to be put under an obligation to him, and to
+tell it too. I hired this house, as you are aware, of our speculative
+friend Mr. Sherrick, and am answerable for the payment of the rent
+till the expiry of the lease. James has taken the matter off my hands
+entirely. The place is greatly too large for him, but he says that he
+likes it, and intends to stay, and that his sister and niece shall be
+his housekeepers. Clive" (here, perhaps, the speaker's voice drops a
+little)--"Clive will be the son of the house still, honest James says,
+and God bless him. James is richer than I thought by near a lakh of
+rupees--and here is a hint for you, Master Arthur. Mr. Binnie has
+declared to me in confidence that if his niece, Miss Rosey, shall marry
+a person of whom he approves, he will leave her a considerable part of
+his fortune."
+
+The Colonel's confidant here said that his own arrangements were made
+in another quarter, to which statement the Colonel replied knowingly, "I
+thought so. A little bird has whispered to me the name of a certain
+Miss A. I knew her grandfather, an accommodating old gentleman, and I
+borrowed some money from him when I was a subaltern at Calcutta. I tell
+you in strict confidence, my dear young friend, that I hope and trust a
+certain young gentleman of your acquaintance may be induced to think how
+good and pretty and sweet-tempered a girl Miss Mackenzie is, and that
+she may be brought to like him. If you young men would marry in good
+time good and virtuous women--as I am sure--ahem!--Miss Amory is--half
+the temptations of your youth would be avoided. You would neither be
+dissolute, has many of you seem to me, or cold and selfish, which are
+worse vices still. And my prayer is, that my Clive may cast anchor early
+out of the reach of temptation, and mate with some such kind girl as
+Binnie's niece. When I first came home I formed other plans for him
+which could not be brought to a successful issue; and knowing his ardent
+disposition, and having kept an eye on the young rogue's conduct, I
+tremble lest some mischance with a woman should befall him, and long to
+have him out of danger."
+
+So the kind scheme of the two elders was, that their young ones should
+marry and be happy ever after, like the Prince and Princess of the Fairy
+Tale: and dear Mrs. Mackenzie (have I said that at the commencement of
+her visit to her brother she made almost open love to the Colonel?),
+dear Mrs. Mack was content to forgo her own chances so that her darling
+Rosey might be happy. We used to laugh and say, that as soon as Clive's
+father was gone, Josey would be sent for to join Rosey. But little Josey
+being under her grandmother's sole influence took most gratifying and
+serious turn; wrote letters, in which she questioned the morality of
+operas, Towers of London, and waxworks; and, before a year was out,
+married Elder Bogie, of Mr. M'Craw's church.
+
+Presently was to be read in the Morning Post an advertisement of the
+sale of three horses (the description and pedigree following), "the
+property of an officer returning to India. Apply to the groom, at the
+stables, 150 Fitzroy Square."
+
+The Court of Directors invited Lieutenant-Colonel Newcome to an
+entertainment given to Major-General Sir Ralph Spurrier, K.C.B.,
+appointed Commander-in-Chief at Madras. Clive was asked to this dinner
+too, "and the governor's health was drunk, sir," Clive said, "after
+dinner, and the dear old fellow made such a good speech, in returning
+thanks!"
+
+He, Clive, and I made a pilgrimage to Grey Friars, and had the Green to
+ourselves, it being the Bartlemytide vacation, and the boys all away.
+One of the good old Poor Brothers whom we both recollected accompanied
+us round the place; and we sate for a while in Captain Scarsdale's
+little room (he had been a Peninsular officer, who had sold out, and was
+fain in his old age to retire into this calm retreat). And we talked,
+as old schoolmates and lovers talk, about subjects interesting to
+schoolmates and lovers only.
+
+One by one the Colonel took leave of his friends, young and old; ran
+down to Newcome, and gave Mrs. Mason a parting benediction; slept a
+night at Tom Smith's, and passed a day with Jack Brown; went to all the
+boys' and girls' schools where his little proteges were, so as to be
+able to take the very last and most authentic account of the young
+folks to their parents in India; spent a week at Marble Hill, and shot
+partridges there, but for which entertainment, Clive said, the place
+would have been intolerable; and thence proceeded to Brighton to pass
+a little time with good Miss Honeyman. As for Sir Brian's family, when
+Parliament broke up, of course, they did not stay in town. Barnes, of
+course, had part of a moor in Scotland, whither his uncle and cousin
+did not follow him. The rest went abroad. Sir Brian wanted the waters of
+Aix-la-Chapelle. The brothers parted very good friends; Lady Anne, and
+all the young people, heartily wished him farewell. I believe Sir Brian
+even accompanied the Colonel downstairs from the drawing-room, in Park
+Lane, and actually came out and saw his brother into his cab (just as he
+would accompany old Lady Bagges when she came to look at her account at
+the bank, from the parlour to her carriage). But as for Ethel, she was
+not going to be put off with this sort of parting and the next morning a
+cab dashed up to Fitzroy Square, and a veiled lady came out thence, and
+was closeted with Colonel Newcome for five minutes, and when he led her
+back to the carriage there were tears in his eyes.
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie joked about the transaction (having watched it from the
+dining-room windows), and asked the Colonel who his sweetheart was?
+Newcome replied very sternly, that he hoped no one would ever speak
+lightly of that young lady, whom he loved as his own daughter; and I
+thought Rosey looked vexed at the praises thus bestowed. This was the
+day before we all went down to Brighton. Miss Honeyman's lodgings were
+taken for Mr. Binnie and his ladies. Clive and her dearest Colonel had
+apartments next door. Charles Honeyman came dawn and preached one of his
+very best sermons. Fred Bayham was there, and looked particularly grand
+and noble on the pier and the cliff. I am inclined to think he had had
+some explanation with Thomas Newcome, which had placed F. B. in a state
+of at least temporary prosperity. Whom did he not benefit whom he knew,
+and what eye that saw him did not bless him? F. B. was greatly affected
+at Charles's sermon, of which our party of course could see the
+allusions. Tears actually rolled down his brown cheeks; for Fred was a
+man very easily moved, and, as it were, a softened sinner. Little Rosey
+and her mother sobbed audibly, greatly to the surprise of stout old
+Miss Honeyman, who had no idea of such watery exhibitions, and to the
+discomfiture of poor Newcome, who was annoyed to have his praises even
+hinted in that sacred edifice. Good Mr. James Binnie came for once to
+church; and, however variously their feelings might be exhibited
+or, repressed, I think there was not one of the little circle there
+assembled who did not bring to the place a humble prayer and a gentle
+heart. It was the last Sabbath-bell our dear friend was to hear for many
+a day on his native shore. The great sea washed the beach as we came
+out, blue with the reflection of the skies, and its innumerable waves
+crested with sunshine. I see the good man and his boy yet clinging to
+him, as they pace together by the shore.
+
+The Colonel was very much pleased by a visit from Mr. Ridley and the
+communication which he made (my Lord Todmorden has a mansion and park in
+Sussex, whence Mr. Ridley came to pay his duty to Colonel Newcome). He
+said he "never could forget the kindness with which the Colonel have a
+treated him. His lordship have taken a young man, which Mr. Ridley had
+brought him up under his own eye, and can answer for him, Mr. R. says,
+with impunity; and which he is to be his lordship's own man for the
+future. And his lordship have appointed me his steward, and having, as
+he always hev been, been most liberal in point of sellary. And me and
+Mrs. Ridley was thinking, sir, most respectfully, with regard to our
+son, Mr. John James Ridley--as good and honest a young man, which I am
+proud to say it, that if Mr. Clive goes abroad we should be most proud
+and happy if John James went with him. And the money which you have paid
+us so handsome, Colonel, he shall have it; which it was the excellent
+ideer of Miss Cann; and my lord have ordered a pictur of John James in
+the most libral manner, and have asked my son to dinner, sir, at his
+lordship's own table, which I have faithfully served him five-and-thirty
+years." Ridley's voice fairly broke down at this part of his speech,
+which evidently was a studied composition, and he uttered no more of
+it, for the Colonel cordially shook him by the hand, and Clive jumped up
+clapping his, and saying that it was the greatest wish of his heart that
+J. J. and he should be companions in France and Italy. "But I did not
+like to ask my dear old father," he said, "who has had so many calls on
+his purse, and besides, I knew that J. J. was too independent to come as
+my follower."
+
+The Colonel's berth has been duly secured ere now. This time he makes
+the overland journey; and his passage is to Alexandria, taken in one of
+the noble ships of the Peninsular and Oriental Company. His kit is as
+simple as a subaltern's; I believe, but for Clive's friendly compulsion,
+he would have carried back no other than the old uniform which has
+served him for so many years. Clive and his father travelled to
+Southampton together by themselves. F. B. and I took the Southampton
+coach: we had asked leave to see the last of him, and say a "God bless
+you" to our dear old friend. So the day came when the vessel was to
+sail. We saw his cabin, and witnessed all the bustle and stir on board
+the good ship on a day of departure. Our thoughts, however, were fixed
+but on one person--the case, no doubt, with hundreds more on such a
+day. There was many a group of friends closing wistfully together on
+the sunny deck, and saying the last words of blessing and farewell. The
+bustle of the ship passes dimly round about them; the hurrying noise of
+crew and officers running on their duty; the tramp and song of the men
+at the capstan-bars; the bells ringing, as the hour for departure comes
+nearer and nearer, as mother and son, father and daughter, husband and
+wife, hold hands yet for a little while. We saw Clive and his father
+talking together by the wheel. Then they went below; and a passenger,
+her husband, asked me to give my arm to an almost fainting lady, and to
+lead her off the ship. Bayham followed us, carrying their two children
+in his arms, as the husband turned away and walked aft. The last bell
+was ringing, and they were crying, "Now for the shore." The whole ship
+had begun to throb ere this, and its great wheels to beat the water, and
+the chimneys had flung out their black signals for sailing. We were as
+yet close on the dock, and we saw Clive coming up from below, looking
+very pale; the plank was drawn after him as he stepped on land.
+
+Then, with three great cheers from the dock, and from the crew in
+the bows, and from the passengers on the quarter-deck, the noble ship
+strikes the first stroke of her destined race, and swims away towards
+the ocean. "There he is, there he is," shouts Fred Bayham, waving his
+hat. "God bless him, God bless him!" I scarce perceived at the ship's
+side, beckoning an adieu, our dear old friend, when the lady, whose
+husband had bidden me to lead her away from the ship, fainted in my
+arms. Poor soul! Her, too, has fate stricken. Ah, pangs of hearts torn
+asunder, passionate regrets, cruel, cruel partings! Shall you not end
+one day, ere many years; when the tears shall be wiped from all eyes,
+and there shall be neither sorrow nor pain?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. Youth and Sunshine
+
+
+Although Thomas Newcome was gone back to India in search of more
+money, finding that he could not live upon his income at home, he was
+nevertheless rather a wealthy man; and at the moment of his departure
+from Europe had two lakhs of rupees invested in various Indian
+securities. "A thousand a year," he thought, "more, added to the
+interest accruing from my two lakhs, will enable us to live very
+comfortably at home. I can give Clive ten thousand pounds when he
+marries, and five hundred a year out of my allowances. If he gets a wife
+with some money, they may have every enjoyment of life; and as for his
+pictures, he can paint just as few or as many of those as he pleases."
+Newcome did not seem seriously to believe that his son would live by
+painting pictures, but considered Clive as a young prince who chose to
+amuse himself with painting. The Muse of Painting is a lady whose social
+station is not altogether recognised with us as yet. The polite world
+permits a gentleman to amuse himself with her; but to take her for
+better or for worse! forsake all other chances and cleave unto her! to
+assume her name! Many a respectable person would be as much shocked at
+the notion, as if his son had married an opera-dancer.
+
+Newcome left a hundred a year in England, of which the principal sum was
+to be transferred to his boy as soon as he came of age. He endowed Clive
+further with a considerable annual sum, which his London bankers would
+pay: "And if these are not enough," says he kindly, "you must draw upon
+my agents, Messrs. Frank and Merryweather at Calcutta, who will receive
+your signature just as if it was mine." Before going away, he introduced
+Clive to F. and M.'s corresponding London house, Jolly and Baines, Fog
+Court--leading out of Leadenhall--Mr. Jolly, a myth as regarded the
+firm, now married to Lady Julia Jolly--a Park in Kent--evangelical
+interest--great at Exeter Hall meetings--knew Clive's grandmother--that
+is, Mrs. Newcome, a most admirable woman. Baines represents a house
+in the Regent's Park, with an emigrative tendency towards
+Belgravia--musical daughters--Herr Moscheles, Benedick, Ella,--Osborne,
+constantly at dinner-sonatas in P flat (op. 936), composed and dedicated
+to Miss Euphemia Baines, by her most obliged, most obedient servant,
+Ferdinando Blitz. Baines hopes that his young friend will come
+constantly to York Terrace, where the most girls will be happy to see
+him; and mentions at home a singular whim of Colonel Newcome's, who can
+give his son twelve or fifteen hundred a year, and makes an artist of
+him. Euphemia and Flora adore artists; they feel quite interested
+about this young man. "He was scribbling caricatures all the time I was
+talking with his father in my parlour," says Mr. Baines, and produces
+a sketch of an orange-woman near the Bank, who had struck Clive's eyes,
+and been transferred to the blotting-paper in Fog Court. "He needn't do
+anything," said good-natured Mr. Baines. "I guess all the pictures he'll
+paint won't sell for much."
+
+"Is he fond of music, papa?" asks Miss. "What a pity he had not come to
+our last evening; and now the season is over!"
+
+"And Mr. Newcome is going out of town. He came to me, to-day
+for circular notes--says he's going through Switzerland and into
+Italy--lives in Charlotte Street, Fitzroy Square. Queer place, ain't it?
+Put his name down in your book, and ask him to dinner next season."
+
+Before Clive went away, he had an apparatus of easels, sketching-stools,
+umbrellas, and painting-boxes, the most elaborate and beautiful that
+Messrs. Soap and Isaac could supply. It made J. J.'s eyes glisten to
+see those lovely gimcracks of art; those smooth mill-boards, those
+slab-tinted sketching-blocks, and glistening rows of colour-tubes
+lying in their boxes, which seemed to cry, "Come, squeeze me." If
+painting-boxes made painters, if sketching-stools would but enable one
+to sketch, surely I would hasten this very instant to Messrs. Soap and
+Isaac! but, alas! these pretty toys no more make artists than cowls make
+monks.
+
+As a proof that Clive did intend to practise his profession, and to live
+by it too, at this time he took four sporting sketches to a printseller
+in the Haymarket, and disposed of them at the rate of seven shillings
+and sixpence per sketch. His exultation at receiving a sovereign and
+half a sovereign from Mr. Jones was boundless. "I can do half a dozen of
+these things easily in a morning," he says. "Two guineas a day is twelve
+guineas--say ten guineas a week, for I won't work on Sundays, and may
+take a holiday in the week besides. Ten guineas a week is five hundred
+a year. That is pretty nearly as much money as I shall want, and I need
+not draw the dear old governor's allowance at all." He wrote an ardent
+letter, full of happiness and affection, to the kind father, which
+he shall find a month after he has arrived in India, and read to his
+friends in Calcutta and Barrackpore. Clive invited many of his artist
+friends to a grand feast in honour of the thirty shillings. The King's
+Arms, Kensington, was the hotel selected (tavern beloved of artists for
+many score years!). Gandish was there, and the Gandishites, and some
+chosen spirits from the Life Academy, Clipstone Street, and J. J. was
+vice-president, with Fred Bayham by his side, to make the speeches and
+carve the mutton; and I promise you many a merry song was sung, and many
+a health drunk in flowing bumpers; and as jolly a party was assembled as
+any London contained that day. The beau-monde had quitted it; the Park
+was empty as we crossed it; and the leaves of Kensington Gardens had
+begun to fall, dying after the fatigues of a London season. We sang all
+the way home through Knightsbridge and by the Park railings, and the
+Covent Garden carters halting at the Half-way House were astonished
+at our choruses. There is no half-way house now; no merry chorus at
+midnight.
+
+Then Clive and J. J. took the steamboat to Antwerp; and those who love
+pictures may imagine how the two young men rejoiced in one of the most
+picturesque cities of the world; where they went back straightway into
+the sixteenth century; where the inn at which they stayed (delightful
+old Grand Laboureur, thine ancient walls are levelled! thy comfortable
+hospitalities exist no more!) seemed such a hostelry as that where
+Quentin Durward first saw his sweetheart; where knights of Velasquez
+or burgomasters of Rubens seemed to look from the windows of the
+tall-gabled houses and the quaint porches; where the Bourse still stood,
+the Bourse of three hundred years ago, and you had but to supply figures
+with beards and ruffs, and rapiers and trunk-hose, to make the picture
+complete; where to be awakened by the carillon of the bells was to waken
+to the most delightful sense of life and happiness; where nuns, actual
+nuns, walked the streets, and every figure in the Place de Meir, and
+every devotee at church, kneeling and draped in black, or entering the
+confessional (actually the confessional!), was a delightful subject for
+the new sketchbook. Had Clive drawn as much everywhere as at Antwerp,
+Messrs. Soap and Isaac might have made a little income by supplying him
+with materials.
+
+After Antwerp, Clive's correspondent gets a letter dated from the Hotel
+de Suede at Brussels, which contains an elaborate eulogy of the cookery
+and comfort of that hotel, where the wines, according to the writer's
+opinion, are unmatched almost in Europe. And this is followed by a
+description of Waterloo, and a sketch of Hougoumont, in which J. J. is
+represented running away in the character of a French grenadier, Clive
+pursuing him in the lifeguard's habit, and mounted on a thundering
+charger.
+
+Next follows a letter from Bonn. Verses about Drachenfels of a not very
+superior style of versification; an account of Crichton, an old Grey
+Friars man, who has become a student at the university; of a commerz,
+a drunken bout, and a students' duel at Bonn. "And whom should I find
+here," says Mr. Clive, "but Aunt Anne, Ethel, Miss Quigley, and the
+little ones, the whole detachment under the command of Kuhn? Uncle
+Brian is staying at Aix. He is recovered from his attack. And, upon my
+conscience, I think my pretty cousin looks prettier every day.
+
+"When they are not in London," Clive goes on to write, "or I sometimes
+think when Barnes or old Lady Kew are not looking over them, they are
+quite different. You know how cold they have latterly seemed to us, and
+how their conduct annoyed my dear old father. Nothing can be kinder
+than their behaviour since we have met. It was on the little hill
+at Godesberg: J. J. and I were mounting to the ruin, followed by the
+beggars who waylay you, and have taken the place of the other robbers
+who used to live there, when there came a procession of donkeys down
+the steep, and I heard a little voice cry, 'Hullo! it's Clive! hooray,
+Clive!' and an ass came pattering down the declivity, with a little pair
+of white trousers at an immensely wide angle over the donkey's back, and
+behold there was little Alfred grinning with all his might.
+
+"He turned his beast and was for galloping up the hill again, I suppose
+to inform his relations; but the donkey refused with many kicks, one of
+which sent Alfred plunging amongst the stones, and we were rubbing him
+down just as the rest of the party came upon us. Miss Quigley looked
+very grim on an old white pony; my aunt was on a black horse that might
+have turned grey, he is so old. Then come two donkeysful of children,
+with Kuhn as supercargo; then Ethel on donkey-back, too, with a bunch
+of wildflowers in her hand, a great straw hat with a crimson ribbon, a
+white muslin jacket, you know, bound at the waist with a ribbon of the
+first, and a dark skirt, with a shawl round her feet which Kuhn had
+arranged. As she stopped, the donkey fell to cropping greens in the
+hedge; the trees there chequered her white dress and face with shadow.
+Her eyes, hair, and forehead were in shadow too--but the light was all
+upon her right cheek: upon her shoulder down to her arm, which was of a
+warmer white, and on the bunch of flowers which she held, blue, yellow,
+and red poppies, and so forth.
+
+"J. J. says, 'I think the birds began to sing louder when she came.' We
+have both agreed that she is the handsomest woman in England. It's
+not her form merely, which is certainly as yet too thin and a little
+angular--it is her colour. I do not care for woman or picture without
+colour. O ye carnations! O ye lilia mista rosis! O such black hair and
+solemn eyebrows! It seems to me the roses and carnations have bloomed
+again since we saw them last in London, when they were drooping from the
+exposure to night air, candle-light, and heated ballrooms.
+
+"Here I was in the midst of a regiment of donkeys, bearing a crowd of
+relations; J. J. standing modestly in the background--beggars completing
+the group, and Kuhn ruling over them with voice and gesture, oaths
+and whip. Throw in the Rhine in the distance flashing by the Seven
+Mountains--but mind and make Ethel the principal figure: if you make her
+like, she certainly will be--and other lights will be only minor fires.
+You may paint her form, but you can't paint her colour; that is what
+beats us in nature. A line must come right; you can force that into its
+place, but you can't compel the circumambient air. There is no yellow I
+know of will make sunshine, and no blue that is a bit like sky. And so
+with pictures: I think you only get signs of colour, and formulas to
+stand for it. That brick-dust which we agree to receive as representing
+a blush, look at it--can you say it is in the least like the blush which
+flickers and varies as it sweeps over the down of the cheek--as you see
+sunshine playing over a meadow? Look into it and see what a variety of
+delicate blooms there are! a multitude of flowerets twining into one
+tint! We may break our colour-pots and strive after the line alone: that
+is palpable and we can grasp it--the other is impossible and beyond
+us." Which sentiment I here set down, not on account of its worth (and
+I think it is contradicted--as well as asserted--in more than one of the
+letters I subsequently had from Mr. Clive, but it may serve to show the
+ardent and impulsive disposition of this youth), by whom all beauties
+of art and nature, animate or inanimate (the former especially), were
+welcomed with a gusto and delight whereof colder temperaments are
+incapable. The view of a fine landscape, a fine picture, a handsome
+woman, would make this harmless young sensualist tipsy with pleasure. He
+seemed to derive an actual hilarity and intoxication as his eye drank in
+these sights; and, though it was his maxim that all dinners were good,
+and he could eat bread and cheese and drink small beer with perfect
+good-humour, I believe that he found a certain pleasure in a bottle of
+claret, which most men's systems were incapable of feeling.
+
+This springtime of youth is the season of letter-writing. A lad in high
+health and spirits, the blood running briskly in his young veins, and
+the world, and life, and nature bright and welcome to him, looks out,
+perforce, for some companion to whom he may impart his sense of the
+pleasure which he enjoys, and which were not complete unless a friend
+were by to share it. I was the person most convenient for the young
+fellow's purpose; he was pleased to confer upon me the title of friend
+en titre, and confidant in particular; to endow the confidant in
+question with a number of virtues and excellences which existed very
+likely only in the lad's imagination; to lament that the confidant had
+no sister whom he, Clive, might marry out of hand; and to make me a
+thousand simple protests of affection and admiration, which are noted
+here as signs of the young man's character, by no means as proofs of
+the goodness of mine. The books given to the present biographer by "his
+affectionate friend, Clive Newcome," still bear on the titlepages the
+marks of that boyish hand and youthful fervour. He had a copy of Walter
+Lorraine bound and gilt with such splendour as made the author blush for
+his performance, which has since been seen at the bookstalls at a price
+suited to the very humblest purses. He fired up and fought a newspaper
+critic (whom Clive met at the Haunt one night) who had dared to write
+an article in which that work was slighted; and if, in the course of
+nature, his friendship has outlived that rapturous period, the kindness
+of the two old friends, I hope, is not the less because it is no longer
+romantic, and the days of white vellum and gilt edges have passed away.
+From the abundance of the letters which the affectionate young fellow
+now wrote, the ensuing portion of his youthful history is compiled. It
+may serve to recall passages of their early days to such of his seniors
+as occasionally turn over the leaves of a novel; and in the story of
+his faults, indiscretions, passions, and actions, young readers may be
+reminded of their own.
+
+Now that the old Countess, and perhaps Barnes, were away, the barrier
+between Clive and this family seemed to be withdrawn. The young folks
+who loved him were free to see him as often as he would come. They were
+going to Baden: would he come too? Baden was on the road to Switzerland,
+he might journey to Strasbourg, Basle, and so on. Clive was glad enough
+to go with his cousins, and travel in the orbit of such a lovely girl
+as Ethel Newcome. J. J. performed the second part always when Clive was
+present: and so they all travelled to Coblentz, Mayence, and Frankfort
+together, making the journey which everybody knows, and sketching the
+mountains and castles we all of us have sketched. Ethel's beauty made
+all the passengers on all the steamers look round and admire. Clive
+was proud of being in the suite of such a lovely person. The family
+travelled with a pair of those carriages which used to thunder along
+the Continental roads a dozen years since, and from interior, box, and
+rumble discharge a dozen English people at hotel gates.
+
+The journey is all sunshine and pleasure and novelty: the circular notes
+with which Mr. Baines of Fog Court has supplied Clive Newcome, Esquire,
+enabled that young gentleman to travel with great ease and comfort. He
+has not yet ventured upon engaging a valet-de-chambre, it being agreed
+between him and J. J. that two travelling artists have no right to such
+an aristocratic appendage; but he has bought a snug little britzska at
+Frankfort (the youth has very polite tastes, is already a connoisseur
+in wine, and has no scruple in ordering the best at the hotels), and the
+britzska travels in company with Lady Anne's caravan, either in its wake
+so as to be out of reach of the dust, or more frequently ahead of that
+enormous vehicle and its tender, in which come the children and the
+governess of Lady Anne Newcome, guarded by a huge and melancholy London
+footman, who beholds Rhine and Neckar, valley and mountain, village and
+ruin, with a like dismal composure. Little Alfred and little Egbert are
+by no means sorry to escape from Miss Quigley and the tender, and for a
+stage ride or two in Clive's britzska. The little girls cry sometimes to
+be admitted to that privilege. I dare say Ethel would like very well to
+quit her place in the caravan, where she sits, circumvented by mamma's
+dogs, and books, bags, dressing-boxes, and gimcrack cases, without which
+apparatus some English ladies of condition cannot travel; but Miss
+Ethel is grown up, she is out, and has been presented at Court, and is
+a person of too great dignity now to sit anywhere but in the place
+of state in the chariot corner. I like to think, for my part, of the
+gallant young fellow taking his pleasure and enjoying his holiday, and
+few sights are more pleasant than to watch a happy, manly English youth,
+free-handed and generous-hearted, content and good-humour shining in
+his honest face, pleased and pleasing, eager, active, and thankful for
+services, and exercising bravely his noble youthful privilege to be
+happy and to enjoy. Sing, cheery spirit, whilst the spring lasts; bloom
+whilst the sun shines, kindly flowers of youth! You shall be none the
+worse to-morrow for having been happy to-day, if the day brings no
+action to shame it. As for J. J., he too had his share of enjoyment; the
+charming scenes around him did not escape his bright eye, he absorbed
+pleasure in his silent way, he was up with the sunrise always, and at
+work with his eyes and his heart if not with his hands. A beautiful
+object too is such a one to contemplate, a pure virgin soul, a creature
+gentle, pious, and full of love, endowed with sweet gifts, humble and
+timid; but for truth's and justice's sake inflexible, thankful to God
+and man, fond, patient, and faithful. Clive was still his hero as ever,
+his patron, his splendid young prince and chieftain. Who was so brave,
+who was so handsome, generous, witty as Clive? To hear Clive sing, as
+the lad would whilst they were seated at their work, or driving along on
+this happy journey, through fair landscapes in the sunshine, gave J. J.
+the keenest pleasure; his wit was a little slow, but he would laugh
+with his eyes at Clive's sallies, or ponder over them and explode with
+laughter presently, giving a new source of amusement to these merry
+travellers, and little Alfred would laugh at J. J.'s laughing; and
+so, with a hundred harmless jokes to enliven, and the ever-changing,
+ever-charming smiles of nature to cheer and accompany it, the happy
+day's journey would come to an end.
+
+So they travelled by the accustomed route to the prettiest town of
+all places where Pleasure has set up her tents; and where the gay, the
+melancholy, the idle or occupied, grave or haughty, come for amusement,
+or business, or relaxation; where London beauties, having danced
+and flirted all the season, may dance and flirt a little more; where
+well-dressed rogues from all quarters of the world assemble; where I
+have seen severe London lawyers, forgetting their wigs and the Temple,
+trying their luck against fortune and M. Benazet; where wistful schemers
+conspire and prick cards down, and deeply meditate the infallible coup;
+and try it, and lose it, and borrow a hundred francs to go home; where
+even virtuous British ladies venture their little stakes, and draw up
+their winnings with trembling rakes, by the side of ladies who are not
+virtuous at all, no, not even by name; where young prodigals break the
+bank sometimes, and carry plunder out of a place which Hercules
+himself could scarcely compel; where you meet wonderful countesses
+and princesses, whose husbands are almost always absent on their vast
+estates--in Italy, Spain, Piedmont--who knows where their lordships'
+possessions are?--while trains of suitors surround those wandering
+Penelopes their noble wives; Russian Boyars, Spanish Grandees of the
+Order of the Fleece, Counts of France, and Princes Polish and Italian
+innumerable, who perfume the gilded halls with their tobacco-smoke, and
+swear in all languages against the black and the red. The famous English
+monosyllable by which things, persons, luck, even eyes, are devoted to
+the infernal gods, we may be sure is not wanting in that Babel. Where
+does one not hear it? "D---- the luck," says Lord Kew, as the croupier
+sweeps off his lordship's rouleaux. "D---- the luck," says Brown the
+bagman, who has been backing his lordship with five-franc pieces. "Ah,
+body of Bacchus!" says Count Felice, whom we all remember a courier.
+"Ah, sacre coup," cries M. le Vicomte de Florac, as his last louis parts
+company from him--each cursing in his native tongue. Oh, sweet chorus!
+
+That Lord Kew should be at Baden is no wonder. If you heard of him at
+the Finish, or at Buckingham Palace ball, or in a watch-house, or at the
+Third Cataract, or at a Newmarket meeting, you would not be surprised.
+He goes everywhere; does everything with all his might; knows everybody.
+Last week he won who knows how many thousand louis from the bank (it
+appears Brown has chosen one of the unlucky days to back his lordship).
+He will eat his supper as gaily after a great victory as after a signal
+defeat; and we know that to win with magnanimity requires much more
+constancy than to lose. His sleep will not be disturbed by one event
+or the other. He will play skittles all the morning with perfect
+contentment, romp with children in the forenoon (he is the friend of
+half the children in the place), or he will cheerfully leave the green
+table and all the risk and excitement there, to take a hand at sixpenny
+whist with General Fogey, or to give the six Miss Fogeys a turn each in
+the ballroom. From H.R.H. the Prince Royal of ----, who is the greatest
+guest at Baden, down to Brown the bagman, who does not consider himself
+the smallest, Lord Kew is hail fellow with everybody, and has a kind
+word from and for all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. In which Clive begins to see the World
+
+
+In the company assembled at Baden, Clive found one or two old
+acquaintances; among them his friend of Paris, M. de Florac, not in
+quite so brilliant a condition as when Newcome had last met him on the
+Boulevard. Florac owned that Fortune had been very unkind to him
+at Baden; and, indeed, she had not only emptied his purse, but his
+portmanteaus, jewel-box, and linen-closet--the contents of all of which
+had ranged themselves on the red and black against Monsieur Benazet's
+crown-pieces: whatever side they took was, however, the unlucky one.
+"This campaign has been my Moscow, mon cher," Florac owned to Clive. "I
+am conquered by Benazet; I have lost in almost every combat. I have lost
+my treasure, my baggage, my ammunition of war, everything but my honour,
+which, au reste, Mons. Benazet will not accept as a stake; if he
+would, there are plenty here, believe me, who would set it on the
+trente-et-quarante. Sometimes I have had a mind to go home; my mother,
+who is an angel all forgiveness, would receive her prodigal, and kill
+the fatted veal for me. But what will you? He annoys me--the domestic
+veal. Besides, my brother the Abbe, though the best of Christians, is
+a Jew upon certain matters; a Benazet who will not troquer absolution
+except against repentance; and I have not for a sou of repentance in my
+pocket! I have been sorry, yes--but it was because odd came up in
+place of even, or the reverse. The accursed apres has chased me like a
+remorse, and when black has come up I have wished myself converted to
+red. Otherwise I have no repentance--I am joueur--nature has made me
+so, as she made my brother devot. The Archbishop of Strasbourg is of our
+parents; I saw his grandeur when I went lately to Strasbourg, on my last
+pilgrimage to the Mont de Piete. I owned to him that I would pawn
+his cross and ring to go play: the good prelate laughed, and said his
+chaplain should keep an eye on them. Will you dine with me? The landlord
+of my hotel was the intendant of our cousin, the Duc d'Ivry, and
+will give me credit to the day of judgment. I do not abuse his noble
+confidence. My dear! there are covers of silver put upon my table
+every day with which I could retrieve my fortune, did I listen to the
+suggestions of Satanas; but I say to him, Vade retro. Come and dine with
+me--Duluc's kitchen is very good."
+
+These easy confessions were uttered by a gentleman who was nearly forty
+years of age, and who had indeed played the part of a young man in Paris
+and the great European world so long, that he knew or chose to perform
+no other. He did not want for abilities; had the best temper in the
+world; was well bred and gentlemanlike always; and was gay even after
+Moscow. His courage was known, and his character for bravery and another
+kind of gallantry probably exaggerated by his bad reputation. Had his
+mother not been alive, perhaps he would have believed in the virtue
+of no woman. But this one he worshipped, and spoke with tenderness and
+enthusiasm of her constant love and patience and goodness. "See her
+miniature!" he said, "I never separate myself from it--oh, never! It
+saved my life in an affair about--about a woman who was not worth the
+powder which poor Jules and I burned for her. His ball struck me here,
+upon the waistcoat, bruising my rib and sending me to my bed, which I
+never should have left alive but for this picture. Oh, she is an angel,
+my mother! I am sure that Heaven has nothing to deny that saint, and
+that her tears wash out my sins."
+
+Olive smiled. "I think Madame de Florac must weep a good deal," he said.
+
+"Enormement, my friend! My faith! I do not deny it! I give her cause,
+night and evening. I am possessed by demons! This little Affenthaler
+wine of this country has a little smack which is most agreeable. The
+passions tear me, my young friend! Play is fatal, but play is not so
+fatal as woman. Pass me the ecrevisses, they are most succulent. Take
+warning by me, and avoid both. I saw you roder round the green tables,
+and marked your eyes as they glistened over the heaps of gold, and
+looked at some of our beauties of Baden. Beware of such sirens, young
+man! and take me for your Mentor; avoiding what I have done--that
+understands itself. You have not played as yet? Do not do so; above
+all avoid a martingale, if you do. Play ought not to be an affair of
+calculation, but of inspiration. I have calculated infallibly, and what
+has been the effect? Gousset empty, tiroirs empty, necessaire parted for
+Strasbourg! Where is my fur pelisse, Frederic?"
+
+"Parbleu, vous le savez bien, Monsieur le Vicomte," says Frederic, the
+domestic, who was waiting on Clive and his friend.
+
+"A pelisse lined with true sable, and, worth three thousand francs,
+that I won of a little Russian at billiards. That pelisse at Strasbourg
+(where the infamous worms of the Mount of Piety are actually gnawing
+her). Two hundred francs and this reconnaissance, which Frederic
+receive, are all that now represent the pelisse. How many chemises have
+I, Frederic?"
+
+"Eh, parbleu, Monsieur le Vicomte sait bien que nous avons toujours
+vingt-quatre chemises," says Frederic, grumbling.
+
+Monsieur le Vicomte springs up shrieking from the dinner-table.
+"Twenty-four shirts," says he, "and I have been a week without a louis
+in my pocket! Belitre! Nigaud!" He flings open one drawer after another,
+but there are no signs of that--superfluity of linen of which the
+domestic spoke, whose countenance now changes from a grim frown to a
+grim smile.
+
+"Ah, my faithful Frederic, I pardon thee! Mr. Newcome will understand
+my harmless supercherie. Frederic was in my company of the Guard, and
+remains with me since. He is Caleb Balderstone and I am Ravenswood. Yes,
+I am Edgard. Let us have coffee and a cigar, Balderstone."
+
+"Plait-il, Monsieur le Vicomte?" says the French Caleb.
+
+"Thou comprehendest not English. Thou readest not Valtare Scott, thou!"
+cries the master. "I was recounting to Monsieur Newcome thy history and
+my misfortunes. Go seek coffee for us, nigaud." And as the two gentlemen
+partake of that exhilarating liquor, the elder confides gaily to his
+guest the reason why he prefers taking coffee at the hotel to the coffee
+at the great Cafe of the Redoute, with a duris urgens in rebus egestass!
+pronounced in the true French manner.
+
+Clive was greatly amused by the gaiety of the Viscount after his
+misfortunes and his Moscow; and thought that one of Mr. Baines's
+circular notes might not be ill laid out in succouring this hero. It may
+have been to this end that Florac's confessions tended; though, to do
+him justice, the incorrigible young fellow would confide his adventures
+to any one who would listen; and the exact state of his wardrobe, and
+the story of his pawned pelisse, dressing-case, rings and watches, were
+known to all Baden.
+
+"You tell me to marry and range myself," said Clive (to whom the
+Viscount was expatiating upon the charms of the superbe young Anglaise
+with whom he had seen Clive walking on the promenade). "Why do you not
+marry and range yourself too?"
+
+"Eh, my dear! I am married already. You do not know it? I am married
+since the Revolution of July. Yes. We were poor in those days, as poor
+we remain. My cousins the Duc d'Ivry's sons and his grandson were still
+alive. Seeing no other resource and pursued by the Arabs, I espoused the
+Vicomtesse de Florac. I gave her my name, you comprehend, in exchange
+for her own odious one. She was Miss Higg. Do you know the family Higg
+of Manchesterre in the comte of Lancastre? She was then a person of a
+ripe age. The Vicomtesse is now--ah! it is fifteen years since, and she
+dies not. Our union was not happy, my friend--Madame Paul de Florac
+is of the reformed religion--not of the Anglican Church, you
+understand--but a dissident I know not of what sort. We inhabited
+the Hotel de Florac for a while after our union, which was all of
+convenience, you understand. She filled her salon with ministers to make
+you die. She assaulted my poor father in his garden-chair, whence
+he could not escape her. She told my sainted mother that she was an
+idolatress--she who only idolatrises her children! She called us other
+poor Catholics who follow the rites of our fathers, des Romishes;
+and Rome, Babylon; and the Holy Father--a scarlet--eh! a scarlet
+abomination. She outraged my mother, that angel; essayed to convert the
+antechamber and the office; put little books in the Abbe's bedroom. Eh,
+my friend! what a good king was Charles IX., and his mother what a wise
+sovereign! I lament that Madame de Florac should have escaped the St.
+Barthelemi, when no doubt she was spared on account of her tender
+age. We have been separated for many years; her income was greatly
+exaggerated. Beyond the payment of my debts I owe her nothing. I wish I
+could say as much of all the rest of the world. Shall we take a turn
+of promenade? Mauvais sujet! I see you are longing to be at the green
+table."
+
+Clive was not longing to be at the green table: but his companion was
+never easy at it or away from it. Next to winning, losing, M. de Florac
+said, was the best sport--next to losing, looking on. So he and Clive
+went down to the Redoute, where Lord Kew was playing with a crowd
+of awestruck amateurs and breathless punters admiring his valour and
+fortune; and Clive, saying that he knew nothing about the game, took out
+five Napoleons from his purse, and besought Florac to invest them in the
+most profitable manner at roulette. The other made some faint attempts
+at a scruple: but the money was speedily laid on the table, where it
+increased and multiplied amazingly too; so that in a quarter of an hour
+Florac brought quite a handful of gold pieces to his principal. Then
+Clive, I dare say blushing as he made the proposal, offered half the
+handful of Napoleons to M. de Florac, to be repaid when he thought fit.
+And fortune must have been very favourable to the husband of Miss Higg
+that night; for in the course of an hour he insisted on paying back
+Clive's loan; and two days afterwards appeared with his shirt-studs (of
+course with his shirts also), released from captivity, his watch, rings,
+and chains, on the parade; and was observed to wear his celebrated fur
+pelisse as he drove back in a britzska from Strasbourg. "As for myself,"
+wrote Clive, "I put back into my purse the five Napoleons with which I
+had begun; and laid down the whole mass of winnings on the table, where
+it was doubled and then quadrupled, and then swept up by the croupiers,
+greatly to my ease of mind. And then Lord Kew asked me to supper and we
+had a merry night."
+
+This was Mr. Clive's first and last appearance as a gambler. J. J.
+looked very grave when he heard of these transactions. Clive's French
+friend did not please his English companion at all, nor the friends of
+Clive's French friend, the Russians, the Spaniards, the Italians, of
+sounding titles and glittering decorations, and the ladies who belonged
+to their society. He saw by chance Ethel, escorted by her cousin Lord
+Kew, passing through a crowd of this company one day. There was not one
+woman there who was not the heroine of some discreditable story. It was
+the Comtesse Calypso who had been jilted by the Duc Ulysse. It was the
+Marquise Ariane to whom the Prince Thesee had behaved so shamefully, and
+who had taken to Bacchus as a consolation. It was Madame Medee, who had
+absolutely killed her old father by her conduct regarding Jason: she
+had done everything for Jason: she had got him the toison d'or from the
+Queen Mother, and now had to meet him every day with his little blonde
+bride on his arm! J. J. compared Ethel, moving in the midst of these
+folks, to the Lady amidst the rout of Comus. There they were the Fauns
+and Satyrs: there they were, the merry Pagans: drinking and dancing,
+dicing and sporting; laughing out jests that never should be spoken;
+whispering rendezvous to be written in midnight calendars; jeering at
+honest people who passed under their palace windows--jolly rebels and
+repealers of the law. Ah, if Mrs. Brown, whose children are gone to
+bed at the hotel, knew but the history of that calm dignified-looking
+gentleman who sits under her, and over whose patient back she
+frantically advances and withdraws her two-franc piece, whilst his own
+columns of louis d'or are offering battle to fortune--how she would
+shrink away from the shoulder which she pushes! That man so calm and
+well bred, with a string of orders on his breast, so well dressed, with
+such white hands, has stabbed trusting hearts; severed family ties;
+written lying vows; signed false oaths; torn up pitilessly tender
+appeals for redress, and tossed away into the fire supplications
+blistered with tears; packed cards and cogged dice; or used pistol or
+sword as calmly and dexterously as he now ranges his battalions of gold
+pieces.
+
+Ridley shrank away from such lawless people with the delicacy belonging
+to his timid and retiring nature, but it must be owned that Mr. Clive
+was by no means so squeamish. He did not know, in the first place, the
+mystery of their iniquities; and his sunny kindly spirit, undimmed by
+any of the cares which clouded it subsequently, was disposed to shine
+upon all people alike. The world was welcome to him: the day a pleasure:
+all nature a gay feast: scarce any dispositions discordant with his own
+(for pretension only made him laugh, and hypocrisy he will never be able
+to understand if he lives to be a hundred years old): the night brought
+him a long sleep, and the morning a glad waking. To those privileges
+of youth what enjoyments of age are comparable? what achievements of
+ambition? what rewards of money and fame? Clive's happy friendly nature
+shone out of his face; and almost all who beheld it felt kindly towards
+him. As those guileless virgins of romance and ballad, who walk smiling
+through dark forests charming off dragons and confronting lions, the
+young man as yet went through the world harmless; no giant waylaid him
+as yet; no robbing ogre fed on him: and (greatest danger of all for one
+of his ardent nature) no winning enchantress or artful siren coaxed him
+to her cave, or lured him into her waters--haunts into which we know so
+many young simpletons are drawn, where their silly bones are picked and
+their tender flesh devoured.
+
+The time was short which Clive spent at Baden, for it has been said the
+winter was approaching, and the destination of our young artists was
+Rome; but he may have passed some score of days here, to which he
+and another person in that pretty watering-place possibly looked back
+afterwards, as not the unhappiest period of their lives. Among Colonel
+Newcome's papers to which the family biographer has had subsequent
+access, there are a couple of letters from Clive, dated Baden, at this
+time, and full of happiness, gaiety, and affection. Letter No. 1 says,
+"Ethel is the prettiest girl here. At the assemblies all the princes,
+counts, dukes, Parthians, Medes, and Elamites, are dying to dance with
+her. She sends her dearest love to her uncle." By the side of the words
+"prettiest girl," was written in a frank female hand the monosyllable
+"Stuff;" and as a note to the expression "dearest love," with a star
+to mark the text and the note, are squeezed, in the same feminine
+characters, at the bottom of Clive's page, the words, "That I do. E. N."
+
+In letter No. 2, the first two pages are closely written in Clive's
+handwriting, describing his pursuits and studies, and giving
+amusing details of the life at Baden, and the company whom he met
+there--narrating his rencontre with their Paris friend, M. de Florac,
+and the arrival of the Duchesse d'Ivry, Florac's cousin, whose titles
+the Vicomte will probably inherit. Not a word about Florac's gambling
+propensities are mentioned in the letter; but Clive honestly confesses
+that he has staked five Napoleons, doubled them, quadrupled them, won
+ever so much, lost it all back again, and come away from the table with
+his original five pounds in his pocket--proposing never to play any
+more. "Ethel," he concluded, "is looking over my shoulder. She thinks me
+such a delightful creature that she is never easy without me. She bids
+me to say that I am the best of sons and cousins, and am, in a word, a
+darling du--" The rest of this important word is not given, but goose is
+added in the female hand. In the faded ink, on the yellow paper that may
+have crossed and recrossed oceans, that has lain locked in chests for
+years, and buried under piles of family archives, while your friends
+have been dying and your head has grown white--who has not disinterred
+mementos like these--from which the past smiles at you so sadly,
+shimmering out of Hades an instant but to sink back again into the cold
+shades, perhaps with a faint, faint sound as of a remembered tone--a
+ghostly echo of a once familiar laughter? I was looking of late at a
+wall in the Naples Museum, whereon a boy of Herculaneum eighteen hundred
+years ago had scratched with a nail the figure of a soldier. I could
+fancy the child turning round and smiling on me after having done his
+etching. Which of us that is thirty years old has not had his Pompeii?
+Deep under ashes lies the Life of Youth,--the careless Sport, the
+Pleasure and Passion, the darling Joy. You open an old letter-box and
+look at your own childish scrawls, or your mother's letters to you when
+you were at school; and excavate your heart. Oh me, for the day when
+the whole city shall be bare and the chambers unroofed--and every cranny
+visible to the Light above, from the Forum to the Lupanar!
+
+Ethel takes up the pen. "My dear uncle," she says, "while Clive is
+sketching out of window, let me write you a line or two on his paper,
+though I know you like to hear no one speak but him. I wish I could draw
+him for you as he stands yonder, looking the picture of good health,
+good spirits, and good humour. Everybody likes him. He is quite
+unaffected; always gay; always pleased. He draws more and more
+beautifully every day; and his affection for young Mr. Ridley, who is
+really a most excellent and astonishing young man, and actually a better
+artist than Clive himself, is most romantic, and does your son the
+greatest credit. You will order Clive not to sell his pictures, won't
+you? I know it is not wrong, but your son might look higher than to be
+an artist. It is a rise for Mr. Ridley, but a fall for him. An artist,
+an organist, a pianist, all these are very good people, but you know not
+de notre monde, and Clive ought to belong to it.
+
+"We met him at Bonn on our way to a great family gathering here; where,
+I must tell you, we are assembled for what I call the Congress of Baden!
+The chief of the house of Kew is here, and what time he does not devote
+to skittles, to smoking cigars, to the jeu in the evenings, to Madame
+d'Ivry, to Madame de Cruchecassee, and the foreign people (of whom there
+are a host here of the worst kind, as usual), he graciously bestows on
+me. Lord and Lady Dorking are here, with their meek little daughter,
+Clara Pulleyn; and Barnes is coming. Uncle Hobson has returned to
+Lombard Street to relieve guard. I think you will hear before very
+long of Lady Clara Newcome. Grandmamma, who was to have presided at the
+Congress of Baden, and still, you know, reigns over the house of Kew,
+has been stopped at Kissingen with an attack of rheumatism; I pity poor
+Aunt Julia, who can never leave her. Here are all our news. I declare I
+have filled the whole page; men write closer than we do. I wear the dear
+brooch you gave me, often and often; I think of you always, dear, kind
+uncle, as your affectionate Ethel."
+
+Besides roulette and trente-et-quarante, a number of amusing games are
+played at Baden, which are not performed, so to speak, sur table. These
+little diversions and jeux de societe can go on anywhere; in an alley in
+the park; in a picnic to this old schloss, or that pretty hunting-lodge;
+at a tea-table in a lodging-house or hotel; in a ball at the Redoute;
+in the play-rooms behind the backs of the gamblers, whose eyes are only
+cast upon rakes and rouleaux, and red and black; or on the broad walk in
+front of the conversation rooms, where thousands of people are drinking
+and chattering, lounging and smoking, whilst the Austrian brass band,
+in the little music pavilion, plays the most delightful mazurkas and
+waltzes. Here the widow plays her black suit and sets her bright eyes
+against the rich bachelor, elderly or young as may be. Here the artful
+practitioner, who has dealt in a thousand such games, engages the young
+simpleton with more money than wit; and knowing his weakness and her
+skill, we may safely take the odds, and back rouge et couleur to win.
+Here mamma, not having money, perhaps, but metal more attractive, stakes
+her virgin daughter against Count Fettacker's forests and meadows; or
+Lord Lackland plays his coronet, of which the jewels have long since
+been in pawn, against Miss Bags' three-per-cents. And so two or
+three funny little games were going on at Baden amongst our immediate
+acquaintance; besides that vulgar sport round the green table, at which
+the mob, with whom we have little to do, was elbowing each other. A
+hint of these domestic prolusions has been given to the reader in
+the foregoing extract from Miss Ethel Newcome's letter: likewise some
+passions have been in play, of which a modest young English maiden could
+not be aware. Do not, however, let us be too prematurely proud of our
+virtue. That tariff of British virtue is wonderfully organised. Heaven
+help the society which made its laws! Gnats are shut out of its ports,
+or not admitted without scrutiny and repugnance, whilst herds of camels
+are let in. The law professes to exclude some goods (or bads shall we
+call them?)--well, some articles of baggage, which are yet smuggled
+openly under the eyes of winking officers, and worn every day without
+shame. Shame! What is shame? Virtue is very often shameful according to
+the English social constitution, and shame honourable. Truth, if
+yours happens to differ from your neighbour's, provokes your friend's
+coldness, your mother's tears, the world's persecution. Love is not to
+be dealt in, save under restrictions which kill its sweet, healthy, free
+commerce. Sin in man is so light, that scarce the fine of a penny is
+imposed; while for woman it is so heavy that no repentance can wash it
+out. Ah! yes; all stories are old. You proud matrons in your Mayfair
+markets, have you never seen a virgin sold, or sold one? Have you never
+heard of a poor wayfarer fallen among robbers, and not a Pharisee to
+help him? of a poor woman fallen more sadly yet, abject in repentance
+and tears, and a crowd to stone her? I pace this broad Baden walk as
+the sunset is gilding the hills round about, as the orchestra blows its
+merry tunes, as the happy children laugh and sport in the alleys, as
+the lamps of the gambling-palace are lighted up, as the throngs of
+pleasure-hunters stroll, and smoke, and flirt, and hum: and wonder
+sometimes, is it the sinners who are the most sinful? Is it poor
+Prodigal yonder amongst the bad company, calling black and red
+and tossing the champagne; or brother Straitlace that grudges his
+repentance? Is it downcast Hagar that slinks away with poor little
+Ishmael in her hand; or bitter old virtuous Sarah, who scowls at her
+from my demure Lord Abraham's arm?
+
+One day of the previous May, when of course everybody went to visit the
+Water-colour Exhibitions, Ethel Newcome was taken to see the pictures by
+her grandmother, that rigorous old Lady Kew, who still proposed to reign
+over all her family. The girl had high spirit, and very likely hot words
+had passed between the elder and the younger lady; such as I am given to
+understand will be uttered in the most polite families. They came to a
+piece by Mr. Hunt, representing one of those figures which he knows how
+to paint with such consummate truth and pathos--a friendless young girl
+cowering in a doorway, evidently without home or shelter. The exquisite
+fidelity of the details, and the plaintive beauty of the expression of
+the child, attracted old Lady Kew's admiration, who was an excellent
+judge of works of art; and she stood for some time looking at the
+drawing, with Ethel by her side. Nothing, in truth, could be more simple
+or pathetic; Ethel laughed, and her grandmother looking up from her
+stick on which she hobbled about, saw a very sarcastic expression in the
+girl's eyes.
+
+"You have no taste for pictures, only for painters, I suppose," said
+Lady Kew.
+
+"I was not looking at the picture," said Ethel, still with a smile, "but
+at the little green ticket in the corner."
+
+"Sold," said Lady Kew. "Of course it is sold; all Mr. Hunt's pictures
+are sold. There is not one of them here on which you won't see the green
+ticket. He is a most admirable artist. I don't know whether his comedy
+or tragedy are the most excellent."
+
+"I think, grandmamma," Ethel said, "we young ladies in the world, when
+we are exhibiting, ought to have little green tickets pinned on our
+backs, with 'Sold' written on them; it would prevent trouble and any
+future haggling, you know. Then at the end of the season the owner would
+come to carry us home."
+
+Grandmamma only said, "Ethel, you are a fool," and hobbled on to Mr.
+Cattermole's picture hard by. "What splendid colour; what a romantic
+gloom; what a flowing pencil and dexterous hand!" Lady Kew could delight
+in pictures, applaud good poetry, and squeeze out a tear over a good
+novel too. That afternoon, young Dawkins, the rising water-colour
+artist, who used to come daily to the gallery and stand delighted before
+his own piece, was aghast to perceive that there was no green ticket in
+the corner of his frame, and he pointed out the deficiency to the keeper
+of the pictures. His landscape, however, was sold and paid for, so no
+great mischief occurred. On that same evening, when the Newcome family
+assembled at dinner in Park Lane, Ethel appeared with a bright green
+ticket pinned in the front of her white muslin frock, and when asked
+what this queer fancy meant, she made Lady Kew a curtsey, looking
+her full in the face, and turning round to her father, said, "I am a
+tableau-vivant, papa. I am Number 46 in the Exhibition of the Gallery of
+Painters in Water-colours."
+
+"My love, what do you mean?" says mamma; and Lady Kew, jumping up on her
+crooked stick with immense agility, tore the card out of Ethel's bosom,
+and very likely would have boxed her ears, but that her parents were
+present and Lord Kew announced.
+
+Ethel talked about pictures the whole evening, and would talk of nothing
+else. Grandmamma went away furious. "She told Barnes, and when everybody
+was gone there was a pretty row in the building," said Madam Ethel, with
+an arch look, when she narrated the story. "Barnes was ready to kill
+me and eat me; but I never was afraid of Barnes." And the biographer
+gathers from this little anecdote, narrated to him, never mind by whom,
+at a long subsequent period, that there had been great disputes in Sir
+Brian Newcome's establishment, fierce drawing-room battles, whereof
+certain pictures of a certain painter might have furnished the cause,
+and in which Miss Newcome had the whole of the family forces against
+her. That such battles take place in other domestic establishments,
+who shall say or shall not say? Who, when he goes out to dinner, and
+is received by a bland host with a gay shake of the hand, and a pretty
+hostess with a gracious smile of welcome, dares to think that Mr.
+Johnson upstairs, half an hour before, was swearing out of his
+dressing-room at Mrs. Johnson, for having ordered a turbot instead of a
+salmon, or that Mrs. Johnson now talking to Lady Jones so nicely about
+their mutual darling children, was crying her eyes out as her maid
+was fastening her gown, as the carriages were actually driving up? The
+servants know these things, but not we in the dining-room. Hark with
+what a respectful tone Johnson begs the clergyman present to say grace!
+
+Whatever these family quarrels may have been, let bygones be bygones,
+and let us be perfectly sure, that to whatever purpose Miss Ethel
+Newcome, for good or for evil, might make her mind up, she had quite
+spirit enough to hold her own. She chose to be Countess of Kew because
+she chose to be Countess of Kew; had she set her heart on marrying Mr.
+Kuhn, she would have had her way, and made the family adopt it, and
+called him dear Fritz, as by his godfathers and godmothers, in his
+baptism, Mr. Kuhn was called. Clive was but a fancy, if he had even been
+so much as that, not a passion, and she fancied a pretty four-pronged
+coronet still more.
+
+So that the diatribe wherein we lately indulged, about the selling
+of virgins, by no means applies to Lady Anne Newcome, who signed the
+address to Mrs Stowe, the other day, along with thousands more virtuous
+British matrons; but should the reader haply say, "Is thy fable, O Poet,
+narrated concerning Tancred Pulleyn, Earl of Dorking, and Sigismunda,
+his wife?" the reluctant moralist is obliged to own that the cap does
+fit those noble personages, of whose lofty society you will, however,
+see but little.
+
+For though I would like to go into an Indian Brahmin's house, and see
+the punkahs, and the purdahs and tattys, and the pretty brown maidens
+with great eyes, and great nose-rings, and painted foreheads, and slim
+waists cased in Cashmir shawls, Kincob scarfs, curly slippers, gilt
+trousers, precious anklets and bangles; and have the mystery of Eastern
+existence revealed to me (as who would not who has read the Arabian
+Nights in his youth?), yet I would not choose the moment when the
+Brahmin of the house was dead, his women howling, his priests doctoring
+his child of a widow, now frightening her with sermons, now drugging her
+with bang, so as to push her on his funeral pile at last, and into the
+arms of that carcase, stupefied, but obedient and decorous. And though I
+like to walk, even in fancy, in an earl's house, splendid, well ordered,
+where there are feasts and fine pictures and fair ladies and endless
+books and good company; yet there are times when the visit is not
+pleasant; and when the parents in that fine house are getting ready
+their daughter for sale, and frightening away her tears with threats,
+and stupefying her grief with narcotics, praying her and imploring her,
+and dramming her and coaxing her, and blessing her, and cursing her
+perhaps, till they have brought her into such a state as shall fit the
+poor young thing for that deadly couch upon which they are about to
+thrust her. When my lord and lady are so engaged I prefer not to call
+at their mansion, Number 1000 in Grosvenor Square, but to partake of
+a dinner of herbs rather than of that stalled ox which their cook is
+roasting whole. There are some people who are not so squeamish. The
+family comes, of course; the Most Reverend the Lord Arch-Brahmin of
+Benares will attend the ceremony; there will be flowers and lights and
+white favours; and quite a string of carriages up to the pagoda; and
+such a breakfast afterwards; and music in the street and little parish
+boys hurrahing; and no end of speeches within and tears shed (no doubt),
+and His Grace the Arch-Brahmin will make a highly appropriate speech,
+just with a faint scent of incense about it as such a speech ought to
+have; and the young person will slip away unperceived, and take off her
+veils, wreaths, orange-flowers, bangles and finery, and will put on
+a plain dress more suited for the occasion, and the house-door will
+open--and there comes the SUTTEE in company of the body: yonder the pile
+is waiting on four wheels with four horses, the crowd hurrahs and the
+deed is done.
+
+This ceremony amongst us is so stale and common that to be sure there is
+no need to describe its rites, and as women sell themselves for what you
+call an establishment every day; to the applause of themselves, their
+parents, and the world, why on earth should a man ape at originality
+and pretend to pity them? Never mind about the lies at the altar, the
+blasphemy against the godlike name of love, the sordid surrender, the
+smiling dishonour. What the deuce does a mariage de convenance mean
+but all this, and are not such sober Hymeneal torches more satisfactory
+often than the most brilliant love matches that ever flamed and burnt
+out? Of course. Let us not weep when everybody else is laughing: let us
+pity the agonised duchess when her daughter, Lady Atalanta, runs
+away with the doctor--of course, that's respectable; let us pity Lady
+Iphigenia's father when that venerable chief is obliged to offer up his
+darling child; but it is over her part of the business that a decorous
+painter would throw the veil now. Her ladyship's sacrifice is performed,
+and the less said about it the better.
+
+Such was the case regarding an affair which appeared in due subsequence
+in the newspapers not long afterwards under the fascinating title of
+"Marriage in High Life," and which was in truth the occasion of the
+little family Congress of Baden which we are now chronicling. We all
+know--everybody at least who has the slightest acquaintance with the
+army list--that, at the commencement of their life, my Lord Kew, my Lord
+Viscount Rooster, the Earl of Dorking's eldest son, and the Honourable
+Charles Belsize, familiarly called Jack Belsize, were subaltern officers
+in one of His Majesty's regiments of cuirassier guards. They heard the
+chimes at midnight like other young men, they enjoyed their fun
+and frolics as gentlemen of spirit will do; sowing their wild oats
+plentifully, and scattering them with boyish profusion. Lady Kew's luck
+had blessed him with more sacks of oats than fell to the lot of his
+noble young companions. Lord Dorking's house is known to have been long
+impoverished; an excellent informant, Major Pendennis, has entertained
+me with many edifying accounts of the exploits of Lord Rooster's
+grandfather "with the wild Prince and Poins," of his feats in the
+hunting-field, over the bottle, over the dice-box. He played two nights
+and two days at a sitting with Charles Fox, when they both lost sums
+awful to reckon. He played often with Lord Steyne, and came away, as
+all men did, dreadful sufferers from those midnight encounters. His
+descendants incurred the penalties of the progenitor's imprudence, and
+Chanticlere, though one of the finest castles in England, is splendid
+but for a month in the year. The estate is mortgaged up to the very
+castle windows. "Dorking cannot cut a stick or kill a buck in his own
+park," the good old Major used to tell with tragic accents, "he lives by
+his cabbages, grapes, and pineapples, and the fees which people give for
+seeing the place and gardens, which are still the show of the
+county, and among the most splendid in the island. When Dorking is at
+Chanticlere, Ballard, who married his sister, lends him the plate and
+sends three men with it. Four cooks inside, and four maids and six
+footmen on the roof, with a butler driving, come down from London in a
+trap, and wait the month. And as the last carriage of the company drives
+away, the servants' coach is packed, and they all bowl back to town
+again. It's pitiable, sir, pitiable."
+
+In Lord Kew's youth, the names of himself and his two noble friends
+appeared on innumerable slips of stamped paper, conveying pecuniary
+assurances of a promissory nature; all of which promises, my Lord
+Kew singly and most honourably discharged. Neither of his two
+companions-in-arms had the means of meeting these engagements. Ballard,
+Rooster's uncle, was said to make his lordship some allowance. As for
+Jack Belsize: how he lived; how he laughed; how he dressed himself so
+well, and looked so fat and handsome; how he got a shilling to pay for a
+cab or a cigar; what ravens fed him; was a wonder to all. The young men
+claimed kinsmanship with one another, which those who are learned in the
+peerage may unravel.
+
+When Lord Dorking's eldest daughter married the Honourable and Venerable
+Dennis Gallowglass, Archdeacon of Bullintubber (and at present Viscount
+Gallowglass and Killbrogue, and Lord Bishop of Ballyshannon), great
+festivities took place at Chanticlere, whither the relatives of the high
+contracting parties were invited. Among them came poor Jack Belsize, and
+hence the tears which are dropping at Baden at this present period of
+our history. Clara Pulleyn was then a pretty little maiden of sixteen,
+and Jack a handsome guardsman of six or seven and twenty. As she had
+been especially warned against Jack as a wicked young rogue, whose
+antecedents were wofully against him; as she was never allowed to sit
+near him at dinner, or to walk with him, or to play at billiards with
+him, or to waltz with him; as she was scolded if he spoke a word to her,
+or if he picked up her glove, or touched her hand in a round game, or
+caught him when they were playing at blindman's-buff; as they neither
+of them had a penny in the world, and were both very good-looking, of
+course Clara was always catching Jack at blindman's-buff; constantly
+lighting upon him in the shrubberies or corridors, etc. etc. etc. She
+fell in love (she was not the first) with Jack's broad chest and thin
+waist; she thought his whiskers as indeed they were, the handsomest pair
+in all His Majesty's Brigade of Cuirassiers.
+
+We know not what tears were shed in the vast and silent halls of
+Chanticlere, when the company were gone, and the four cooks, and four
+maids, six footmen, and temporary butler had driven back in their
+private trap to the metropolis, which is not forty miles distant
+from that splendid castle. How can we tell? The guests departed, the
+lodge-gates shut; all is mystery:--darkness with one pair of wax candles
+blinking dismally in a solitary chamber; all the rest dreary vistas
+of brown hollands, rolled Turkey carpets, gaunt ancestors on the walls
+scowling out of the twilight blank. The imagination is at liberty to
+depict his lordship, with one candle, over his dreadful endless tapes
+and papers; her ladyship with the other, and an old, old novel, wherein
+perhaps, Mrs. Radcliffe describes a castle as dreary as her own; and
+poor little Clara sighing and crying in the midst of these funereal
+splendours, as lonely and heart-sick as Oriana in her moated
+grange:--poor little Clara!
+
+Lord Kew's drag took the young men to London; his lordship driving, and
+the servants sitting inside. Jack sat behind with the two grooms, and
+tooted on a cornet-a-piston in the most melancholy manner. He partook
+of no refreshment on the road. His silence at his clubs was remarked:
+smoking, billiards, military duties, and this and that, roused him a
+little, and presently Jack was alive again. But then came the season,
+Lady Clara Pulleyn's first season in London, and Jack was more alive
+than ever. There was no ball he did not go to; no opera (that is to say,
+no opera of certain operas) which he did not frequent. It was easy to
+see by his face, two minutes after entering a room, whether the person
+he sought was there or absent; not difficult for those who were in the
+secret to watch in another pair of eyes the bright kindling signals
+which answered Jack's fiery glances. Ah! how beautiful he looked on his
+charger on the birthday, all in a blaze of scarlet, and bullion, and
+steel. O Jack! tear her out of yon carriage, from the side of yonder
+livid, feathered, painted, bony dowager! place her behind you on the
+black charger; cut down the policeman, and away with you! The carriage
+rolls in through St. James's Park; Jack sits alone with his sword
+dropped to the ground, or only atra cura on the crupper behind him; and
+Snip, the tailor, in the crowd, thinks it is for fear of him Jack's head
+droops. Lady Clara Pulleyn is presented by her mother, the Countess of
+Dorking; and Jack is arrested that night as he is going out of White's
+to meet her at the Opera.
+
+Jack's little exploits are known in the Insolvent Court, where he made
+his appearances as Charles Belsize, commonly called the Honourable
+Charles Belsize, whose dealings were smartly chronicled by the indignant
+moralists of the press of those days. The Scourge flogged him heartily.
+The Whip (of which the accomplished editor was himself in Whitecross
+Street prison) was especially virtuous regarding him; and the Penny
+Voice of Freedom gave him an awful dressing. I am not here to scourge
+sinners; I am true to my party; it is the other side this humble pen
+attacks; let us keep to the virtuous and respectable, for as for poor
+sinners they get the whipping-post every day. One person was faithful
+to poor Jack through all his blunders and follies and extravagance and
+misfortunes, and that was the pretty young girl of Chanticlere, round
+whose young affections his luxuriant whiskers had curled. And the world
+may cry out at Lord Kew for sending his brougham to the Queen's Bench
+prison, and giving a great feast at Grignon's to Jack on the day of his
+liberation, but I for one will not quarrel with his lordship. He and
+many other sinners had a jolly night. They said Kew made a fine speech,
+in hearing and acknowledging which Jack Belsize wept copiously. Barnes
+Newcome was in a rage at Jack's manumission, and sincerely hoped Mr.
+Commissioner would give him a couple of years longer; and cursed and
+swore with a great liberality on hearing of his liberty.
+
+That this poor prodigal should marry Clara Pulleyn, and by way of a
+dowry lay his schedule at her feet, was out of the question. His noble
+father, Lord Highgate, was furious against him; his eldest brother would
+not see him; he had given up all hopes of winning his darling prize long
+ago, and one day there came to him a great packet bearing the seal of
+Chanticlere, containing a wretched little letter signed C. P., and a
+dozen sheets of Jack's own clumsy writing, delivered who knows how,
+in what crush-rooms, quadrilles, bouquets, balls, and in which were
+scrawled Jack's love and passion and ardour. How many a time had he
+looked into the dictionary at White's, to see whether eternal was spelt
+with an e, and adore with one a or two! There they were, the incoherent
+utterances of his brave longing heart; and those two wretched, wretched
+lines signed C., begging that C.'s little letters might too be returned
+or destroyed. To do him justice, he burnt them loyally every one along
+with his own waste paper. He kept not one single little token which
+she had given him or let him take. The rose, the glove, the little
+handkerchief which she had dropped to him, how he cried over them! The
+ringlet of golden hair--he burnt them all, all in his own fire in the
+prison, save a little, little bit of the hair, which might be any one's,
+which was the colour of his sister's. Kew saw the deed done; perhaps he
+hurried away when Jack came to the very last part of the sacrifice, and
+flung the hair into the fire, where he would have liked to fling his
+heart and his life too.
+
+So Clara was free, and the year when Jack came out of prison and went
+abroad, she passed the season in London dancing about night after night,
+and everybody said she was well out of that silly affair with Jack
+Belsize. It was then that Barnes Newcome, Esq., a partner of the wealthy
+banking firm of Hobson Brothers and Newcome, son and heir of Sir Brian
+Newcome, of Newcome, Bart., and M. P., descended in right line from
+Bryan de Newcomyn, slain at Hastings, and barber-surgeon to Edward the
+Confessor, etc. etc., cast the eyes of regard on the Lady Clara Pulleyn,
+who was a little pale and languid certainly, but had blue eyes, a
+delicate skin, and a pretty person, and knowing her previous history as
+well as you who have just perused it, deigned to entertain matrimonial
+intentions towards her ladyship.
+
+Not one of the members of these most respectable families, excepting
+poor little Clara perhaps, poor little fish (as if she had any call but
+to do her duty, or to ask a quelle sauce elle serait mangee), protested
+against this little affair of traffic; Lady Dorking had a brood of
+little chickens to succeed Clara. There was little Hennie, who was
+sixteen, and Biddy, who was fourteen, and Adelaide, and who knows how
+many more? How could she refuse a young man, not very agreeable it
+is true, nor particularly amiable, nor of good birth, at least on his
+father's side, but otherwise eligible, and heir to so many thousands a
+year? The Newcomes, on their side, think it a desirable match. Barnes,
+it must be confessed, is growing rather selfish, and has some bachelor
+ways which a wife will reform. Lady Kew is strongly for the match. With
+her own family interest, Lord Steyne and Lord Kew, her nephews, and
+Barnes's own father-in-law, Lord Dorking, in the Peers, why shall not
+the Newcomes sit there too, and resume the old seat which all the world
+knows they had in the time of Richard III.? Barnes and his father had
+got up quite a belief about a Newcome killed at Bosworth, along with
+King Richard, and hated Henry VII. as an enemy of their noble race. So
+all the parties were pretty well agreed. Lady Anne wrote rather a pretty
+little poem about welcoming the white Fawn to the Newcome bowers, and
+"Clara" was made to rhyme with "fairer," and "timid does and antlered
+deer to dot the glades of Chanticlere," quite in a picturesque way. Lady
+Kew pronounced that the poem was very pretty indeed.
+
+The year after Jack Belsize made his foreign tour he returned to London
+for the season. Lady Clara did not happen to be there; her health was
+a little delicate, and her kind parents took her abroad; so all things
+went on very smoothly and comfortably indeed.
+
+Yes, but when things were so quiet and comfortable, when the ladies of
+the two families had met at the Congress of Baden, and liked each
+other so much, when Barnes and his papa the Baronet, recovered from his
+illness, were actually on their journey from Aix-la-Chapelle, and Lady
+Kew in motion from Kissingen to the Congress of Baden, why on earth
+should Jack Belsize, haggard, wild, having been winning great sums, it
+was said, at Hombourg, forsake his luck there, and run over frantically
+to Baden? He wore a great thick beard, a great slouched hat--he
+looked like nothing more or less than a painter or an Italian brigand.
+Unsuspecting Clive, remembering the jolly dinner which Jack had procured
+for him at the Guards' mess in St. James's, whither Jack himself came
+from the Horse Guards--simple Clive, seeing Jack enter the town, hailed
+him cordially, and invited him to dinner, and Jack accepted, and Clive
+told him all the news he had of the place; how Kew was there, and Lady
+Anne Newcome, and Ethel; and Barnes was coming. "I am not very fond of
+him either," says Clive, smiling, when Belsize mentioned his name. So
+Barnes was coming to marry that pretty little Lady Clara Pulleyn. The
+knowing youth! I dare say he was rather pleased with his knowledge of
+the fashionable world, and the idea that Jack Belsize would think he,
+too, was somebody.
+
+Jack drank an immense quantity of champagne, and the dinner over, as
+they could hear the band playing from Clive's open windows in the
+snug clean little Hotel de France, Jack proposed they should go on
+the promenade. M. de Florac was of the party; he had been exceedingly
+jocular when Lord Kew's name was mentioned, and said, "Ce petit Kiou!
+M. le Duc d'Ivry, mon oncle, l'honore d'une amitie toute particuliere."
+These three gentlemen walked out; the promenade was crowded, the was
+band playing "Home, sweet Home" very sweetly, and the very first persons
+they met on the walk were the Lords of Kew and Dorking, on the arm of
+which latter venerable peer his daughter Lady Clara was hanging.
+
+Jack Belsize, in a velvet coat, with a sombrero slouched over his face,
+with a beard reaching to his waist, was, no doubt, not recognised at
+first by the noble lord of Dorking, for he was greeting the other two
+gentlemen with his usual politeness and affability; when, of a sudden,
+Lady Clara looking up, gave a little shriek and fell down lifeless on
+the gravel walk. Then the old earl recognised Mr. Belsize, and Clive
+heard him say, "You villain, how dare you come here?"
+
+Belsize had flung himself down to lift up Clara, calling her frantically
+by her name, when old Dorking sprang to seize him.
+
+"Hands off, my lord," said the other, shaking the old man from his back.
+"Confound you, Jack, hold your tongue," roars out Kew. Clive runs for a
+chair, and a dozen were forthcoming. Florac skips back with a glass of
+water. Belsize runs towards the awakening girl: and the father, for an
+instant losing all patience and self-command, trembling in every limb,
+lifts his stick, and says again, "Leave her, you ruffian." "Lady Clara
+has fainted again, sir," says Captain Belsize. "I am staying at the
+Hotel de France. If you touch me, old man" (this in a very low voice),
+"by Heaven I shall kill you. I wish you good morning;" and taking a last
+long look at the lifeless girl, he lifts his hat and walks away. Lord
+Dorking mechanically takes his hat off, and stands stupidly gazing after
+him. He beckoned Clive to follow him, and a crowd of the frequenters of
+the place are by this time closed round the fainting young lady.
+
+Here was a pretty incident in the Congress of Baden!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. In which Barnes comes a-wooing
+
+
+Ethel had all along known that her holiday was to be a short one, and
+that, her papa and Barnes arrived, there was to be no more laughing and
+fun and sketching and walking with Clive; so she took the sunshine while
+it lasted, determined to bear with a stout heart the bad weather.
+
+Sir Brian Newcome and his eldest born arrived at Baden on the very
+night of Jack Belsize's performance upon the promenade; of course it was
+necessary to inform the young bridegroom of the facts. His acquaintances
+of the public, who by this time know his temper, and are acquainted with
+his language, can imagine the explosions of the one and the vehemence
+of the other; it was a perfect feu d'artifice of oaths which he sent
+up. Mr. Newcome only fired off these volleys of curses when he was in a
+passion, but then he was in a passion very frequently.
+
+As for Lady Clara's little accident, he was disposed to treat that very
+lightly. "Poor dear Clara, of course, of course," he said, "she's been
+accustomed to fainting fits; no wonder she was agitated on the sight of
+that villain, after his infernal treatment of her. If I had been there"
+(a volley of oaths comes here along the whole line) "I should have
+strangled the scoundrel; I should have murdered him."
+
+"Mercy, Barnes!" cries Lady Anne.
+
+"It was a mercy Barnes was not there," says Ethel, gravely; "a fight
+between him and Captain Belsize would have been awful indeed."
+
+"I am afraid of no man, Ethel," says Barnes fiercely, with another oath.
+
+"Hit one of your own size, Barnes," says Miss Ethel (who had a number
+of school-phrases from her little brothers, and used them on occasions
+skilfully). "Hit Captain Belsize, he has no friends."
+
+As Jack Belsize from his height and strength was fitted to be not only
+an officer but actually a private in his former gallant regiment, and
+brother Barnes was but a puny young gentleman, the idea of a personal
+conflict between them was rather ridiculous. Some notion of this sort
+may have passed through Sir Brian's mind, for the Baronet said with
+his usual solemnity, "It is the cause, Ethel, it is the cause, my dear,
+which gives strength; in such a cause as Barnes's, with a beautiful
+young creature to protect from a villain, any man would be strong, any
+man would be strong." "Since his last attack," Barnes used to say, "my
+poor old governor is exceedingly shaky, very groggy about the head;"
+which was the fact. Barnes was already master at Newcome and the bank,
+and awaiting with perfect composure the event which was to place the
+blood-red hand of the Newcome baronetcy on his own brougham.
+
+Casting his eyes about the room, a heap of drawings, the work of a
+well-known hand which he hated, met his eye. There were a half-dozen
+sketches of Baden; Ethel on horseback again; the children and the dogs
+just in the old way. "D---- him, is he here?" screams out Barnes. "Is
+that young pothouse villain here? and hasn't Kew knocked his head off?
+Is Clive Newcome here, sir," he cries out to his father. "The Colonel's
+son. I have no doubt they met by----"
+
+"By what, Barnes?" says Ethel.
+
+"Clive is here, is he?" says the Baronet; "making caricatures, hey? You
+did not mention him in your letters, Lady Anne."
+
+Sir Brian was evidently very much touched by his last attack.
+
+Ethel blushed; it was a curious fact, but there had been no mention of
+Clive in the ladies' letters to Sir Brian.
+
+"My dear, we met him by the merest chance, at Bonn, travelling with a
+friend of his; and he speaks a little German, and was very useful to us,
+and took one of the boys in his britzska the whole way."
+
+"Boys always crowd in a carriage," says Sir Brian. "Kick your shins;
+always in the way. I remember, when we used to come in the carriage from
+Clapham, when we were boys, I used to kick my brother Tom's shins. Poor
+Tom, he was a devilish wild fellow in those days. You don't recollect
+Tom, my Lady Anne?"
+
+Further anecdotes from Sir Brian are interrupted by Lord Kew's arrival.
+"How dydo, Kew!" cries Barnes. "How's Clara?" and Lord Kew walking up
+with great respect to shake hands with Sir Brian, says, "I am glad to
+see you looking so well, sir," and scarcely takes any notice of Barnes.
+That Mr. Barnes Newcome was an individual not universally beloved, is a
+point of history of which there can be no doubt.
+
+"You have not told me how Clara is, my good fellow," continues Barnes.
+"I have heard all about her meeting with that villain, Jack Belsize."
+
+"Don't call names, my good fellow," says Lord Kew. "It strikes me you
+don't know Belsize well enough to call him by nicknames or by other
+names. Lady Clara Pulleyn, I believe, is very unwell indeed."
+
+"Confound the fellow! How dared he to come here?" cries Barnes, backing
+from this little rebuff.
+
+"Dare is another ugly word. I would advise you not to use it to the
+fellow himself."
+
+"What do you mean?" says Barnes, looking very serious in an instant.
+
+"Easy, my good friend. Not so very loud. It appears, Ethel, that poor
+Jack--I know him pretty well, you see, Barnes, and may call him by what
+names I like--had been dining to-day with cousin Clive; he and M. de
+Florac; and that they went with Jack to the promenade, not in the least
+aware of Mr. Jack Belsize's private affairs, or of the shindy that was
+going to happen."
+
+"By Jove, he shall answer for it," cries out Barnes in a loud voice.
+
+"I dare say he will, if you ask him," says the other drily; "but not
+before ladies. He'd be afraid of frightening them. Poor Jack was always
+as gentle as a lamb before women. I had some talk with the Frenchman
+just now," continued Lord Kew gaily, as if wishing to pass over this
+side of the subject. "Mi Lord Kiou," says he, "we have made your friend
+Jac to hear reason. He is a little fou, your friend Jack. He drank
+champagne at dinner like an ogre. How is the charmante Miss Clara?
+Florac, you see, calls her Miss Clara, Barnes; the world calls her Lady
+Clara. You call her Clara. You happy dog, you."
+
+"I don't see why that infernal young cub of a Clive is always meddling
+in our affairs," cries out Barnes, whose rage was perpetually being
+whipped into new outcries. "Why has he been about this house? Why is he
+here?"
+
+"It is very well for you that he was, Barnes," Lord Kew said. "The young
+fellow showed great temper and spirit. There has been a famous row, but
+don't be alarmed, it is all over. It is all over, everybody may go to
+bed and sleep comfortably. Barnes need not get up in the morning to
+punch Jack Belsize's head. I'm sorry for your disappointment, you
+Fenchurch Street fire-eater. Come away. It will be but proper, you know,
+for a bridegroom elect to go and ask news of la charmante Miss Clara."
+
+"As we went out of the house," Lord Kew told Clive, "I said to Barnes
+that every word I had uttered upstairs with regard to the reconciliation
+was a lie. That Jack Belsize was determined to have his blood, and was
+walking under the lime-trees by which we had to pass with a thundering
+big stick. You should have seen the state the fellow was in, sir. The
+sweet youth started back, and turned as yellow as a cream cheese.
+Then he made a pretext to go into his room, and said it was for his
+pocket-handkerchief, but I know it was for a pistol; for he dropped his
+hand from my arm into his pocket, every time I said 'Here's Jack,' as we
+walked down the avenue to Lord Dorking's apartment."
+
+A great deal of animated business had been transacted during the two
+hours subsequent to poor Lady Clara's mishap. Clive and Belsize had
+returned to the former's quarters, while gentle J. J. was utilising
+the last rays of the sun to tint a sketch which he had made during
+the morning. He fled to his own apartment on the arrival of the
+fierce-looking stranger, whose glaring eyes, pallid looks, shaggy beard,
+clutched hands, and incessant gasps and mutterings as he strode up and
+down, might well scare a peaceable person. Very terrible must Jack
+have looked as he trampled those boards in the growing twilight,
+anon stopping to drink another tumbler of champagne, then groaning
+expressions of inarticulate wrath, and again sinking down on Clive's
+bed with a dropping head and breaking voice, crying, "Poor little thing,
+poor little devil."
+
+"If the old man sends me a message, you will stand by me, won't you,
+Newcome? He was a fierce old fellow in his time, and I have seen him
+shoot straight enough at Chanticlere. I suppose you know what the affair
+is about?"
+
+"I never heard of it before, but I think I understand," says Clive,
+gravely.
+
+"I can't ask Kew, he is one of the family; he is going to marry Miss
+Newcome. It is no use asking him."
+
+All Clive's blood tingled at the idea that any man was going to marry
+Miss Newcome. He knew it before--a fortnight since, and it was nothing
+to him to hear it. He was glad that the growing darkness prevented his
+face from being seen. "I am of the family, too," said Clive, "and Barnes
+Newcome and I had the same grandfather."
+
+"Oh, yes, old boy--old banker, the weaver, what was he? I forgot," says
+poor Jack, kicking on Clive's bed, "in that family the Newcomes don't
+count. I beg your pardon," groans poor Jack.
+
+They lapse into silence, during which Jack's cigar glimmers from the
+twilight corner where Clive's bed is; whilst Clive wafts his fragrance
+out of the window where he sits, and whence he has a view of Lady
+Anne Newcome's windows to the right, over the bridge across the little
+rushing river, at the Hotel de Hollande hard by. The lights twinkle in
+the booths under the pretty lime avenues. The hum of distant voices is
+heard; the gambling-palace is all in a blaze; it is an assembly night,
+and from the doors of the conversation rooms, as they open and close,
+escape gusts of harmony. Behind on the little hill the darkling woods
+lie calm, the edges of the fir-trees cut sharp against the sky, which is
+clear with a crescent moon and the lambent lights of the starry hosts of
+heaven. Clive does not see pine-robed hills and shining stars, nor think
+of pleasure in its palace yonder, nor of pain writhing on his own bed
+within a few feet of him, where poor Belsize was groaning. His eyes are
+fixed upon a window whence comes the red light of a lamp, across which
+shadows float now and again. So every light in every booth yonder has
+a scheme of its own: every star above shines by itself; and each
+individual heart of ours goes on brightening with its own hopes, burning
+with its own desires, and quivering with its own pain.
+
+The reverie is interrupted by the waiter, who announces M. le Vicomte
+de Florac, and a third cigar is added to the other two smoky lights.
+Belsize is glad to see Florac, whom he has known in a thousand haunts.
+"He will do my business for me. He has been out half a dozen times,"
+thinks Jack. It would relieve the poor fellow's boiling blood that some
+one would let a little out. He lays his affair before Florac; he expects
+a message from Lord Dorking.
+
+"Comment donc?" cries Florac; "il y avait donc quelque chose! Cette
+pauvre petite Miss! Vous voulez tuer le pere, apres avoir delaisse la
+fille? Cherchez d'autres temoins, Monsieur. Le Vicomte de Florac ne se
+fait pas complice de telles lachetes."
+
+"By Heaven," says Jack, sitting up on the bed, with his eyes glaring,
+"I have a great mind, Florac, to wring your infernal little neck, and to
+fling you out of the window. Is all the world going to turn against
+me? I am half mad as it is. If any man dares to think anything wrong
+regarding that little angel, or to fancy that she is not as pure, and as
+good, and as gentle, and as innocent, by Heaven, as any angel there,--if
+any man thinks I'd be the villain to hurt her, I should just like to see
+him," says Jack. "By the Lord, sir, just bring him to me. Just tell the
+waiter to send him upstairs. Hurt her! I hurt her! Oh! I'm a fool! a
+fool! a d----d fool! Who's that?"
+
+"It's Kew," says a voice out of the darkness from behind cigar No. 4,
+and Clive now, having a party assembled, scrapes a match and lights his
+candles.
+
+"I heard your last words, Jack," Lord Kew says bluntly, "and you never
+spoke more truth in your life. Why did you come here? What right had you
+to stab that poor little heart over again, and frighten Lady Clara with
+your confounded hairy face? You promised me you would never see her. You
+gave your word of honour you wouldn't, when I gave you the money to go
+abroad. Hang the money, I don't mind that; it was on your promise that
+you would prowl about her no more. The Dorkings left London before you
+came there; they gave you your innings. They have behaved kindly and
+fairly enough to that poor girl. How was she to marry such a bankrupt
+beggar as you are? What you have done is a shame, Charley Belsize. I
+tell you it is unmanly and cowardly."
+
+"Pst," says Florac, "numero deux, voila le mot lache."
+
+"Don't bite your thumb at me," Kew went on. "I know you could thrash me,
+if that's what you mean by shaking your fists; so could most men. I
+tell you again--you have done a bad deed; you have broken your word of
+honour, and you knocked down Clara Pulleyn to-day as cruelly as if you
+had done it with your hand."
+
+With this rush upon him, and fiery assault of Kew, Belsize was quite
+bewildered. The huge man flung up his great arms, and let them drop at
+his side as a gladiator that surrenders, and asks for pity. He sank down
+once more on the iron bed.
+
+"I don't know," says he, rolling and rolling round, in one of his great
+hands, one of the brass knobs of the bed by which he was seated. "I
+don't know, Frank," says he, "what the world is coming to, or me either;
+here is twice in one night I have been called a coward by you, and by
+that little what-d'-you-call-'m. I beg your pardon, Florac. I don't
+know whether it is very brave in you to hit a chap when he is down: hit
+again, I have no friends. I have acted like a blackguard, I own that; I
+did break my promise; you had that safe enough, Frank, my boy; but I did
+not think it would hurt her to see me," says he, with a dreadful sob in
+his voice. "By--I would have given ten years of my life to look at her.
+I was going mad without her. I tried every place, everything; went to
+Ems, to Wiesbaden, to Hombourg, and played like hell. It used to excite
+me once, and now I don't care for it. I won no end of money,--no end for
+a poor beggar like me, that is; but I couldn't keep away. I couldn't,
+and if she had been at the North Pole, by Heavens I would have followed
+her."
+
+"And so just to look at her, just to give your confounded stupid eyes
+two minutes' pleasure, you must bring about all this pain, you great
+baby," cries Kew, who was very soft-hearted, and in truth quite torn
+himself by the sight of poor Jack's agony.
+
+"Get me to see her for five minutes, Kew," cries the other, griping his
+comrade's hand in his; "but for five minutes."
+
+"For shame," cries Lord Kew, shaking away his hand, "be a man, Jack, and
+have no more of this puling. It's not a baby, that must have its toy,
+and cries because it can't get it. Spare the poor girl this pain, for
+her own sake, and balk yourself of the pleasure of bullying and making
+her unhappy."
+
+Belsize started up with looks that were by no means pleasant. "There's
+enough of this chaff I have been called names, and blackguarded quite
+sufficiently for one sitting. I shall act as I please. I choose to take
+my own way, and if any gentleman stops me he has full warning." And
+he fell to tugging his mustachios, which were of a dark tawny hue, and
+looked as warlike as he had ever done on any field-day.
+
+"I take the warning!" said Lord Kew. "And if I know the way you are
+going, as I think I do, I will do my best to stop you, madman as you
+are! You can hardly propose to follow her to her own doorway and pose
+yourself before your mistress as the murderer of her father, like
+Rodrigue in the French play. If Rooster were here it would be his
+business to defend his sister; In his absence I will take the duty on
+myself, and I say to you, Charles Belsize, in the presence of these
+gentlemen, that any man who iusults this young lady, who persecutes
+her with his presence, knowing it can but pain her, who persists in
+following her when he has given his word of honour to avoid her, that
+such a man is----"
+
+"What, my Lord Kew?" cries Belsize, whose chest began to heave.
+
+"You know what," answers the other. "You know what a man is who insults
+a poor woman, and breaks his word of honour. Consider the word said, and
+act upon it as you think fit."
+
+"I owe you four thousand pounds, Kew," says Belsize, "and I have got
+four thousand on the bills, besides four hundred when I came out of that
+place."
+
+"You insult me the more," cries Kew, flashing out, "by alluding to the
+money. If you will leave this place to-morrow, well and good; if not,
+you will please to give me a meeting. Mr. Newcome will you be so kind
+as to act as my friend? We are connexions, you know, and this gentleman
+chooses to insult a lady who is about to become one of our family."
+
+"C'est bien, milord. Ma foi! c'est d'agir en vrai gentilhomme," says
+Florac, delighted. "Touchez-la, mon petit Kiou. Tu as du coeur. Godam!
+you are a brave! A brave fellow!" and the Viscount reached out his hand
+cordially to Lord Kew.
+
+His purpose was evidently pacific. From Kew he turned to the great
+guardsman, and taking him by the coat began to apostrophise him. "And
+you, mon gros," says he, "is there no way of calming this hot blood
+without a saignee? Have you a penny to the world? Can you hope to carry
+off your Chimene, O Rodrigue, and live by robbing afterwards on the
+great way? Suppose you kill ze Fazer, you kill Kiou, you kill Roostere,
+your Chimene will have a pretty moon of honey."
+
+"What the devil do you mean about your Chimene and your Rodrigue? Do
+you mean, Viscount----?" says Belsize, "Jack Belsize once more, and he
+dashed his hand across his eyes. Kew has riled me, and he drove me half
+wild. I ain't much of a Frenchman, but I know enough of what you said,
+to say it's true, by Jove, and that Frank Kew's a trump. That's what
+you mean. Give us your hand, Frank. God bless you, old boy; don't be too
+hard upon me, you know I'm d----d miserable, that I am. Hullo! What's
+this?" Jack's pathetic speech was interrupted at this instant, for the
+Vicomte de Florac in his enthusiasm rushed into his arms, and jumped up
+towards his face and proceeded to kiss Jack. A roar of immense laughter,
+as he shook the little Viscount off, cleared the air and ended this
+quarrel.
+
+Everybody joined in this chorus, the Frenchman with the rest, who said,
+"he loved to laugh meme when he did not know why." And now came the
+moment of the evening, when Clive, according to Lord Kew's saying,
+behaved so well and prevented Barnes from incurring a great danger.
+In truth, what Mr. Clive did or said amounted exactly to nothing. What
+moments can we not all remember in our lives when it would have been so
+much wittier and wiser to say and do nothing?
+
+Florac, a very sober drinker like most of his nation, was blessed with
+a very fine appetite, which, as he said, renewed itself thrice a day
+at least. He now proposed supper, and poor Jack was for supper too, and
+especially more drink, champagne and seltzer-water; "bring champagne and
+seltzer-water, there is nothing like it." Clive could not object to this
+entertainment, which was ordered forthwith, and the four young men sat
+down to share it.
+
+Whilst Florac was partaking of his favourite ecrevisses, giving not only
+his palate but his hands, his beard, his mustachios and cheeks a full
+enjoyment of the sauce which he found so delicious, he chose to revert
+now and again to the occurrences which had just passed, and which had
+better perhaps have been forgotten, and gaily rallied Belsize upon his
+warlike humour. "If ze petit pretendu was here, what would you have done
+wiz him, Jac? You would croquer im, like zis ecrevisse, hein? You would
+mache his bones, hein?"
+
+Jack, who had forgotten to put the seltzer-water into his champagne,
+writhed at the idea of having Barnes Newcome before him, and swore,
+could he but see Barnes, he would take the little villain's life.
+
+And but for Clive, Jack might actually have beheld his enemy. Young
+Clive after the meal went to the window with his eternal cigar, and
+of course began to look at That Other window. Here, as he looked, a
+carriage had at the moment driven up. He saw two servants descend, then
+two gentlemen, and then he heard a well-known voice swearing at the
+couriers. To his credit be it said, he checked the exclamation which was
+on his lips, and when he came back to the table did not announce to
+Kew or his right-hand neighbour Belsize, that his uncle and Barnes had
+arrived. Belsize, by this time, had had quite too much wine: when the
+viscount went away, poor Jack's head was nodding; he had been awake all
+the night before; sleepless for how many nights previous. He scarce took
+any notice of the Frenchman's departure.
+
+Lord Kew remained. He was for taking Jack to walk, and for reasoning
+with him further, and for entering more at large than perhaps he chose
+to do before the two others upon this family dispute. Clive took a
+moment to whisper to Lord Kew, "My uncle and Barnes are arrived, don't
+let Belsize go out; for goodness' sake let us get him to bed."
+
+And lest the poor fellow should take a fancy to visit his mistress by
+moonlight, when he was safe in his room Lord Kew softly turned the key
+in Mr. Jack's door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. A Retreat
+
+
+As Clive lay awake revolving the strange incidents of the day, and
+speculating upon the tragedy in which he had been suddenly called to
+take a certain part, a sure presentiment told him that his own happy
+holiday was come to an end, and that the clouds and storm which he had
+always somehow foreboded, were about to break and obscure this brief
+pleasant period of sunshine. He rose at a very early hour, flung his
+windows open, looked out no doubt towards those other windows in the
+neighbouring hotel, where he may have fancied he saw a curtain stirring,
+drawn by a hand that every hour now he longed more to press. He turned
+back into his chamber with a sort of groan, and surveyed some of the
+relics of the last night's little feast, which still remained on the
+table. There were the champagne-flasks which poor Jack Belsize had
+emptied, the tall seltzer-water bottle, from which the gases had issued
+and mingled with the hot air of the previous night's talk; glasses with
+dregs of liquor, ashes of cigars, or their black stumps, strewing the
+cloth; the dead men, the burst guns of yesterday's battle. Early as it
+was, his neighbour J. J had been up before him. Clive could hear him
+singing as was his wont when the pencil went well, and the colours
+arranged themselves to his satisfaction over his peaceful and happy
+work.
+
+He pulled his own drawing-table to the window, set out his board and
+colour-box, filled a great glass from the seltzer-water bottle, drank
+some of the vapid liquor, and plunged his brushes in the rest, with
+which he began to paint. The work all went wrong. There was no song
+for him over his labour; he dashed brush and board aside after a while,
+opened his drawers, pulled out his portmanteaus from under the bed, and
+fell to packing mechanically. J. J. heard the noise from the next room,
+and came in smiling, with a great painting-brush in his mouth.
+
+"Have the bills in, J. J.," says Clive. "Leave your cards on your
+friends, old boy; say good-bye to that pretty little strawberry-girl
+whose picture you have been doing; polish it off to-day, and dry the
+little thing's tears. I read P.P.C. in the stars last night, and my
+familiar spirit came to me in a vision, and said, 'Clive, son of Thomas,
+put thy travelling-boots on.'"
+
+Lest any premature moralist should prepare to cry fie against the good,
+pure-minded little J. J., I hereby state that his strawberry-girl was a
+little village maiden of seven years old, whose sweet little picture a
+bishop purchased at the next year's Exhibition.
+
+"Are you going already?" cries J. J., removing the bit out of his mouth.
+"I thought you had arranged parties for a week to come, and that the
+princesses and the duchesses had positively forbidden the departure of
+your lordship!"
+
+"We have dallied at Capua long enough," says Clive; "and the legions
+have the route for Rome. So wills Hannibal, the son of Hasdrubal."
+
+"The son of Hasdrubal is quite right," his companion answered; "the
+sooner we march the better. I have always said it; I will get all the
+accounts in. Hannibal has been living like a voluptuous Carthaginian
+prince. One, two, three champagne-bottles! There will be a deuce of a
+bill to pay."
+
+"Ah! there will be a deuce of a bill to pay," says Clive, with a groan
+whereof J. J. knew the portent; for the young men had the confidence of
+youth one in another. Clive was accustomed to pour out his full heart to
+any crony who was near him; and indeed had he spoken never a word, his
+growing attachment to his cousin was not hard to see. A hundred times,
+and with the glowing language and feelings of youth, with the fire of
+his twenty years, with the ardour of a painter, he had spoken of her and
+described her. Her magnanimous simplicity, her courage and lofty scorn,
+her kindness towards her little family, her form, her glorious colour of
+rich carnation and dazzling white, her queenly grace when quiescent and
+in motion, had constantly formed the subjects of this young gentleman's
+ardent eulogies. As he looked at a great picture or statue, as the Venus
+of Milo, calm and deep, unfathomably beautiful as the sea from which she
+sprung; as he looked at the rushing Aurora of the Rospigliosi, or the
+Assumption of Titian, more bright and glorious than sunshine, or that
+divine Madonna and divine Infant, of Dresden, whose sweet faces must
+have shone upon Raphael out of heaven; his heart sang hymns, as it
+were, before these gracious altars; and, somewhat as he worshipped these
+masterpieces of his art, he admired the beauty of Ethel.
+
+J. J. felt these things exquisitely after his manner, and enjoyed
+honest Clive's mode of celebration and rapturous fioriture of song;
+but Ridley's natural note was much gentler, and he sang his hymns in
+plaintive minors. Ethel was all that was bright and beautiful but--but
+she was engaged to Lord Kew. The shrewd kind confidant used gently to
+hint the sad fact to the impetuous hero of this piece. The impetuous
+hero knew this quite well. As he was sitting over his painting-board he
+would break forth frequently, after his manner, in which laughter and
+sentiment were mingled, and roar out with all the force of his healthy
+young lungs----
+
+ "But her heart it is another's, she never--can--be--mine;"
+
+and then hero and confidant would laugh each at his drawing-table. Miss
+Ethel went between the two gentlemen by the name of Alice Grey.
+
+Very likely, Night, the Grey Mentor, had given Clive Newcome the benefit
+of his sad counsel. Poor Belsize's agony, and the wretchedness of the
+young lady who shared in the desperate passion, may have set our young
+man a-thinking; and Lord Kew's frankness and courage, and honour,
+whereof Clive had been a witness during the night, touched his heart
+with a generous admiration, and manned him for a trial which he felt was
+indeed severe. He thought of the dear old father ploughing the seas on
+the way to his duty, and was determined, by Heaven's help, to do his
+own. Only three weeks since, when strolling careless about Bonn he had
+lighted upon Ethel and the laughing group of little cousins, he was
+a boy as they were, thinking but of the enjoyment of the day and the
+sunshine, as careless as those children. And now the thoughts and
+passions which had sprung up in a week or two, had given him an
+experience such as years do not always furnish; and our friend was to
+show, not only that he could feel love in his heart, but that he could
+give proof of courage, and self-denial, and honour.
+
+"Do you remember, J. J.," says he, as boots and breeches went plunging
+into the portmanteau, and with immense energy, he pummels down one upon
+the other, "do you remember" (a dig into the snowy bosom of a dress
+cambric shirt) "my dear old father's only campaign story of his running
+away" (a frightful blow into the ribs of a waistcoat), "running away at
+Asseer-Ghur?"
+
+"Asseer-What?" says J. J. wondering.
+
+"The siege of Asseer-Ghur!" says Clive, "fought in the eventful year
+1803: Lieutenant Newcome, who has very neat legs, let me tell you,
+which also he has imparted to his descendants, had put on a new pair of
+leather breeches, for he likes to go handsomely dressed into action. His
+horse was shot, the enemy were upon him, and the governor had to choose
+between death and retreat. I have heard his brother-officers say that
+my dear old father was the bravest man they ever knew, the coolest hand,
+sir. What do you think it was Lieutenant Newcome's duty to do under
+these circumstances? To remain alone as he was, his troop having turned
+about, and to be cut down by the Mahratta horsemen--to perish or to run,
+sir?"
+
+"I know which I should have done," says Ridley.
+
+"Exactly. Lieutenant Newcome adopted that course. His bran-new leather
+breeches were exceedingly tight, and greatly incommoded the rapidity of
+his retreating movement, but he ran away, sir, and afterwards begot your
+obedient servant. That is the history of the battle of Asseer-Ghur."
+
+"And now for the moral," says J. J., not a little amused.
+
+"J. J., old boy, this is my battle of Asseer-Ghur. I am off. Dip into
+the money-bag: pay the people: be generous, J. J., but not too prodigal.
+The chambermaid is ugly, yet let her not want for a crown to console her
+at our departure. The waiters have been brisk and servile; reward the
+slaves for their labours. Forget not the humble boots, so shall he bless
+us when we depart. For artists are gentlemen, though Ethel does not
+think so. De--No--God bless her, God bless her," groans out Clive,
+cramming his two fists into his eyes. If Ridley admired him before, he
+thought none the worse of him now. And if any generous young fellow in
+life reads the Fable, which may possibly concern him, let him take a
+senior's counsel and remember that there are perils in our battle, God
+help us, from which the bravest had best run away.
+
+Early as the morning yet was, Clive had a visitor, and the door opened
+to let in Lord Kew's honest face. Ridley retreated before it into his
+own den; the appearance of earls scared the modest painter, though he
+was proud and pleased that his Clive should have their company. Lord
+Kew indeed lived in more splendid apartments on the first floor of the
+hotel, Clive and his friend occupying a couple of spacious chambers on
+the second story. "You are an early bird," says Kew. "I got up myself in
+a panic before daylight almost; Jack was making a deuce of a row in his
+room, and fit to blow the door out. I have been coaxing him for this
+hour; I wish we had thought of giving him a dose of laudanum last night;
+if it finished him, poor old boy, it would do him no harm." And then,
+laughing, he gave Clive an account of his interview with Barnes on the
+previous night. "You seem to be packing up to go, too," says Lord
+Kew, with a momentary glance of humour darting from his keen eyes.
+"The weather is breaking up here, and if you are going to cross the St.
+Gothard, as the Newcomes told me, the sooner the better. It's bitter
+cold over the mountains in October."
+
+"Very cold," says Clive, biting his nails.
+
+"Post or Vett.?" asks my lord.
+
+"I bought a carriage at Frankfort," says Clive, in an offhand manner.
+
+"Hulloh!" cries the other, who was perfectly kind, and entirely frank
+and pleasant, and showed no difference in his conversation with men of
+any degree, except perhaps that to his inferiors in station he was
+a little more polite than to his equals; but who would as soon have
+thought of a young artist leaving Baden in a carriage of his own as of
+his riding away on a dragon.
+
+"I only gave twenty pounds for the carriage; it's a little light thing,
+we are two, a couple of horses carry us and our traps, you know, and we
+can stop where we like. I don't depend upon my profession," Clive added,
+with a blush. "I made three guineas once, and that is the only money I
+ever gained in my life."
+
+"Of course, my dear fellow, have not I been to your father's house? At
+that pretty ball, and seen no end of fine people there? We are young
+swells. I know that very well. We only paint for pleasure."
+
+"We are artists, and we intend to paint for money, my lord," says Clive.
+"Will your lordship give me an order?"
+
+"My lordship serves me right," the other said. "I think, Newcome, as you
+are going, I think you might do some folks here a good turn, though the
+service is rather a disagreeable one. Jack Belsize is not fit to be left
+alone. I can't go away from here just now for reasons of state. Do be
+a good fellow and take him with you. Put the Alps between him and
+this confounded business, and if I can serve you in any way I shall be
+delighted, if you will furnish me with the occasion. Jack does not know
+yet that our amiable Barnes is here. I know how fond you are of him. I
+have heard the story--glass of claret and all. We all love Barnes.
+How that poor Lady Clara can have accepted him the Lord knows. We are
+fearfully and wonderfully made, especially women."
+
+"Good heavens," Clive broke out, "can it be possible that a young
+creature can have been brought to like such a selfish, insolent coxcomb
+as that, such a cocktail as Barnes Newcome? You know very well, Lord
+Kew, what his life is. There was a poor girl whom he brought out of a
+Newcome factory when he was a boy himself, and might have had a heart
+one would have thought, whom he ill-treated, whom he deserted, and
+flung out of doors without a penny, upon some pretence of her infidelity
+towards him; who came and actually sat down on the steps of Park Lane
+with a child on each side of her, and not their cries and their hunger,
+but the fear of his own shame and a dread of a police-court, forced him
+to give her a maintenance. I never see the fellow but I loathe him, and
+long to kick him out of window and this man is to marry a noble young
+lady because forsooth he is a partner in a bank, and heir to seven or
+eight thousand a year. Oh, it is a shame, it is a shame! It makes me
+sick when I think of the lot which the poor thing is to endure."
+
+"It is not a nice story," said Lord Kew, rolling a cigarette; "Barnes is
+not a nice man. I give you that in. You have not heard it talked about
+in the family, have you?"
+
+"Good heavens! you don't suppose that I would speak to Ethel, to Miss
+Newcome, about such a foul subject as that?" cries Clive. "I never
+mentioned it to my own father. He would have turned Barnes out of his
+doors if he had known it."
+
+"It was the talk about town, I know," Kew said dryly. "Everything is
+told in those confounded clubs. I told you I give up Barnes. I like him
+no more than you do. He may have treated the woman ill, I suspect he has
+not an angelical temper: but in this matter he has not been so bad, so
+very bad as it would seem. The first step is wrong, of course--those
+factory towns--that sort of thing, you know--well, well, the
+commencement of the business is a sad one. But he is not the only sinner
+in London. He has declared on his honour to me when the matter was
+talked about, and he was coming on for election at Bays's, and was as
+nearly as any man I ever knew in my life,--he declared on his word that
+he only parted from poor Mrs. Delacy, (Mrs. Delacy, the devil used to
+call herself) because he found that she had served him--as such
+women will serve men. He offered to send his children to school in
+Yorkshire--rather a cheap school--but she would not part with them. She
+made a scandal in order to get good terms, and she succeeded. He was
+anxious to break the connexion: he owned it had hung like a millstone
+round his neck and caused him a great deal of remorse--annoyance you may
+call it. He was immensely cut up about it. I remember, when that fellow
+was hanged for murdering a woman, Barnes said he did not wonder at his
+having done it. Young men make those connexions in their early lives and
+rue them all their days after. He was heartily sorry, that we may take
+for granted. He wished to lead a proper life. My grandmother managed
+this business with the Dorkings. Lady Kew still pulls stroke oar in our
+boat, you know, and the old woman will not give up her place. They know
+everything, the elders do. He is a clever fellow. He is witty in his
+way. When he likes he can make himself quite agreeable to some people.
+There has been no sort of force. You don't suppose young ladies are
+confined in dungeons and subject to tortures, do you? But there is a
+brood of Pulleyns at Chanticlere, and old Dorking has nothing to give
+them. His daughter accepted Barnes of her own free will, he knowing
+perfectly well of that previous affair with Jack. The poor devil bursts
+into the place yesterday and the girl drops down in a faint. She will
+see Belsize this very day if he likes. I took a note from Lady Dorking
+to him at five o'clock this morning. If he fancies that there is any
+constraint put upon Lady Clara's actions she will tell him with her own
+lips that she has acted of her own free will. She will marry the husband
+she has chosen and do her duty by him. You are quite a young un who boil
+and froth up with indignation at the idea that a girl hardly off with an
+old love should take on with a new----"
+
+"I am not indignant with her," says Clive, "for breaking with Belsize,
+but for marrying Barnes."
+
+"You hate him, and you know he is your enemy; and, indeed, young
+fellow, he does not compliment you in talking about you. A pretty young
+scapegrace he has made you out to be, and very likely thinks you to be.
+It depends on the colours in which a fellow is painted. Our friends
+and our enemies draw us,--and I often think both pictures are like,"
+continued the easy world-philosopher. "You hate Barnes, and cannot
+see any good in him. He sees none in you. There have been tremendous
+shindies in Park Lane a propos of your worship, and of a subject which
+I don't care to mention," said Lord Kew, with some dignity; "and what
+is the upshot of all this malevolence? I like you; I like your father,
+I think he is a noble old boy; there are those who represented him as
+a sordid schemer. Give Mr. Barnes the benefit of common charity at any
+rate; and let others like him, if you do not.
+
+"And as for this romance of love," the young nobleman went on, kindling
+as he spoke, and forgetting the slang and colloquialisms with which we
+garnish all our conversation--"this fine picture of Jenny and Jessamy
+falling in love at first sight, billing and cooing in an arbour, and
+retiring to a cottage afterwards to go on cooing and billing--Psha! what
+folly is this! It is good for romances, and for misses to sigh about;
+but any man who walks through the world with his eyes open, knows how
+senseless is all this rubbish. I don't say that a young man and woman
+are not to meet, and to fall in love that instant, and to marry that day
+year, and love each other till they are a hundred; that is the supreme
+lot--but that is the lot which the gods only grant to Baucis and
+Philemon, and a very, very few besides. As for the rest, they must
+compromise; make themselves as comfortable as they can, and take the
+good and the bad together. And as for Jenny and Jessamy, by Jove! look
+round among your friends, count up the love matches, and see what has
+been the end of most of them! Love in a cottage! Who is to pay the
+landlord for the cottage? Who is to pay for Jenny's tea and cream, and
+Jessamy's mutton-chops? If he has cold mutton, he will quarrel with her.
+If there is nothing in the cupboard, a pretty meal they make. No, you
+cry out against people in our world making money marriages. Why, kings
+and queens marry on the same understanding. My butcher has saved a
+stockingful of money, and marries his daughter to a young salesman; Mr.
+and Mrs. Salesman prosper in life, and get an alderman's daughter for
+their son. My attorney looks out amongst his clients for an eligible
+husband for Miss Deeds; sends his son to the bar, into Parliament, where
+he cuts a figure and becomes attorney-general, makes a fortune, has
+a house in Belgrave Square, and marries Miss Deeds of the second
+generation to a peer. Do not accuse us of being more sordid than our
+neighbours. We do but as the world does; and a girl in our society
+accepts the best party which offers itself, just as Miss Chummey, when
+entreated by two young gentlemen of the order of costermongers, inclines
+to the one who rides from market on a moke, rather than to the gentleman
+who sells his greens from a handbasket."
+
+This tirade, which his lordship delivered with considerable spirit,
+was intended no doubt to carry a moral for Clive's private hearing;
+and which, to do him justice, the youth was not slow to comprehend. The
+point was, "Young man, if certain persons of rank choose to receive you
+very kindly, who have but a comely face, good manners, and three or four
+hundred pounds a year, do not presume upon their good-nature, or indulge
+in certain ambitious hopes which your vanity may induce you to form.
+Sail down the stream with the brass-pots, Master Earthen-pot, but beware
+of coming too near! You are a nice young man, but there are prizes which
+are some too good for you, and are meant for your betters. And you might
+as well ask the prime minister for the next vacant garter as expect to
+wear on your breast such a star as Ethel Newcome."
+
+Before Clive made his accustomed visit to his friends at the hotel
+opposite, the last great potentiary had arrived who was to take part in
+the family Congress of Baden. In place of Ethel's flushing cheeks and
+bright eyes, Clive found, on entering Lady Anne Newcome's sitting-room,
+the parchment-covered features and the well-known hooked beak of the
+old Countess of Kew. To support the glances from beneath the bushy black
+eyebrows on each side of that promontory was no pleasant matter. The
+whole family cowered under Lady Kew's eyes and nose, and she ruled
+by force of them. It was only Ethel whom these awful features did not
+utterly subdue and dismay.
+
+Besides Lady Kew, Clive had the pleasure of finding his lordship, her
+grandson, Lady Anne and children of various sizes, and Mr. Barnes; not
+one of whom was the person whom Clive desired to behold.
+
+The queer glance in Kew's eye directed towards Clive, who was himself
+not by any means deficient in perception, informed him that there had
+just been a conversation in which his own name had figured. Having been
+abusing Clive extravagantly as he did whenever he mentioned his cousin's
+name, Barnes must needs hang his head when the young fellow came in. His
+hand was yet on the chamber-door, and Barnes was calling his miscreant
+and scoundrel within; so no wonder Barnes had a hangdog look. But as for
+Lady Kew, that veteran diplomatist allowed no signs of discomfiture, or
+any other emotion, to display themselves on her ancient countenance. Her
+bushy eyebrows were groves of mystery, her unfathomable eyes were wells
+of gloom.
+
+She gratified Clive by a momentary loan of two knuckly old fingers,
+which he was at liberty to hold or to drop; and then he went on to
+enjoy the felicity of shaking hands with Mr. Barnes, who, observing
+and enjoying his confusion over Lady Kew's reception, determined to try
+Clive in the same way, and he gave Clive at the same time a supercilious
+"How de dah," which the other would have liked to drive down his throat.
+A constant desire to throttle Mr. Barnes--to beat him on the nose--to
+send him flying out of window, was a sentiment with which this singular
+young man inspired many persons whom he accosted. A biographer ought to
+be impartial, yet I own, in a modified degree, to have partaken of this
+sentiment. He looked very much younger than his actual time of life, and
+was not of commanding stature; but patronised his equals, nay, let
+us say, his betters, so insufferably, that a common wish for his
+suppression existed amongst many persons in society.
+
+Clive told me of this little circumstance, and I am sorry to say of his
+own subsequent ill behaviour. "We were standing apart from the ladies,"
+so Clive narrated, "when Barnes and I had our little passage-of-arms. He
+had tried the finger business upon me before, and I had before told him,
+either to shake hands or to leave it alone. You know the way in which
+the impudent little beggar stands astride, and sticks his little feet
+out. I brought my heel well down on his confounded little varnished
+toe, and gave it a scrunch which made Mr. Barnes shriek out one of his
+loudest oaths."
+
+"D---- clumsy ----!" screamed out Barnes.
+
+Clive said, in a low voice, "I thought you only swore at women, Barnes."
+
+"It is you that say things before women, Clive," cries his cousin,
+looking very furious.
+
+Mr. Clive lost all patience. "In what company, Barnes, would you like
+me to say, that I think you are a snob? Will you have it on the Parade?
+Come out and I will speak to you."
+
+"Barnes can't go out on the Parade," cries Lord Kew, bursting out
+laughing: "there's another gentleman there wanting him." And two of the
+three young men enjoyed this joke exceedingly. I doubt whether Barnes
+Newcome Newcome, Esq., of Newcome, was one of the persons amused.
+
+"What wickedness are you three boys laughing at?" cries Lady Anne,
+perfectly innocent and good-natured; "no good, I will be bound. Come
+here, Clive." Our young friend, it must be premised, had no sooner
+received the thrust of Lady Kew's two fingers on entering, than it had
+been intimated to him that his interview with that gracious lady was at
+an end. For she had instantly called her daughter to her, with whom her
+ladyship fell a-whispering; and then it was that Clive retreated from
+Lady Kew's hand, to fall into Barnes's.
+
+"Clive trod on Barnes's toe," cries out cheery Lord Kew, "and has hurt
+Barnes's favourite corn, so that he cannot go out, and is actually
+obliged to keep the room. That's what we were laughing at."
+
+"Hem!" growled Lady Kew. She knew to what her grandson alluded. Lord Kew
+had represented Jack Belsize, and his thundering big stick, in the most
+terrific colours to the family council. The joke was too good a one not
+to serve twice.
+
+Lady Anne, in her whispered conversation with the old Countess, had
+possibly deprecated her mother's anger towards poor Clive, for when
+he came up to the two ladies, the younger took his hand with great
+kindness, and said, "My dear Clive, we are very sorry you are going. You
+were of the greatest use to us on the journey. I am sure you have been
+uncommonly good-natured and obliging, and we shall all miss you very
+much." Her gentleness smote the generous young fellow, and an emotion of
+gratitude towards her for being so compassionate to him in his misery,
+caused his cheeks to blush and his eyes perhaps to moisten. "Thank you,
+dear aunt," says he, "you have been very good and kind to me. It is I
+that shall feel lonely; but--but it is quite time that I should go to my
+work."
+
+"Quite time!" said the severe possessor of the eagle beak. "Baden is
+a bad place for young men. They make acquaintances here of which very
+little good can come. They frequent the gambling-tables, and live with
+the most disreputable French Viscounts. We have heard of your goings-on,
+sir. It is a great pity that Colonel Newcome did not take you with him
+to India."
+
+"My dear mamma," cries Lady Anne, "I am sure Clive has been a very good
+boy indeed." The old lady's morality put a stop to Clive's pathetic
+mood, and he replied with a great deal of spirit, "Dear Lady Anne, you
+have been always very good, and kindness is nothing surprising from you;
+but Lady Kew's advice, which I should not have ventured to ask, is
+an unexpected favour; my father knows the extent of the gambling
+transactions to which your ladyship was pleased to allude, and
+introduced me to the gentleman whose acquaintance you don't seem to
+think eligible."
+
+"My good young man, I think it is time you were off," Lady Kew said,
+this time with great good-humour; she liked Clive's spirit, and as
+long as he interfered with none of her plans, was quite disposed to be
+friendly with him. "Go to Rome, go to Florence, go wherever you like,
+and study very hard, and make very good pictures, and come back
+again, and we shall all be very glad to see you. You have very great
+talents--these sketches are really capital."
+
+"Is not he very clever, mamma?" said kind Lady Anne, eagerly. Clive felt
+the pathetic mood coming on again, and an immense desire to hug Lady
+Anne in his arms, and to kiss her. How grateful are we--how touched a
+frank and generous heart is for a kind word extended to us in our pain!
+The pressure of a tender hand nerves a man for an operation, and cheers
+him for the dreadful interview with the surgeon.
+
+That cool old operator, who had taken Mr. Clive's case in hand, now
+produced her shining knife, and executed the first cut with perfect
+neatness and precision. "We are come here, as I suppose you know, Mr.
+Newcome, upon family matters, and I frankly tell you that I think, for
+your own sake, you would be much better away. I wrote my daughter a
+great scolding when I heard that you were in this place."
+
+"But it was by the merest chance, mamma, indeed it was," cries Lady
+Anne.
+
+"Of course, by the merest chance, and by the merest chance I heard of
+it too. A little bird came and told me at Kissingen. You have no more
+sense, Anne, than a goose. I have told you so a hundred times. Lady Anne
+requested you to stay, and I, my good young friend, request you to go
+away."
+
+"I needed no request," said Clive. "My going, Lady Kew, is my own act. I
+was going without requiring any guide to show me to the door."
+
+"No doubt you were, and my arrival is the signal for Mr. Newcome's bon
+jour. I am Bogey, and I frighten everybody away. By the scene which
+you witnessed yesterday, my good young friend, and all that painful
+esclandre on the promenade, you must see how absurd, and dangerous, and
+wicked--yes, wicked it is for parents to allow intimacies to spring up
+between young people, which can only lead to disgrace and unhappiness.
+Lady Dorking was another good-natured goose. I had not arrived yesterday
+ten minutes, when my maid came running in to tell me of what had
+occurred on the promenade; and, tired as I was, I went that instant
+to Jane Dorking and passed the evening with her, and that poor little
+creature to whom Captain Belsize behaved so cruelly. She does not care a
+fig for him--not one fig. Her childish inclination is passed away these
+two years, whilst Mr. Jack was performing his feats in prison; and if
+the wretch flatters himself that it was on his account she was agitated
+yesterday, he is perfectly mistaken, and you may tell him Lady Kew said
+so. She is subject to fainting fits. Dr. Finck has been attending her
+ever since she has been here. She fainted only last Tuesday at the sight
+of a rat walking about their lodgings (they have dreadful lodgings, the
+Dorkings), and no wonder she was frightened at the sight of that great
+coarse tipsy wretch! She is engaged, as you know, to your connexion, my
+grandson, Barnes:--in all respects a most eligible union. The rank
+of life of the parties suits them to one another. She is a good young
+woman, and Barnes has experienced from persons of another sort such
+horrors, that he will know the blessing of domestic virtue. It was high
+time he should. I say all this in perfect frankness to you.
+
+"Go back again and play in the garden, little brats" (this to the
+innocents who came frisking in from the lawn in front of the windows).
+"You have been? And Barnes sent you in here? Go up to Miss Quigley. No,
+stop. Go and tell Ethel to come down; bring her down with you. Do you
+understand?"
+
+The unconscious infants toddle upstairs to their sister; and Lady Kew
+blandly says, "Ethel's engagement to my grandson, Lord Kew, has long
+been settled in our family, though these things are best not talked
+about until they are quite determined, you know, my dear Mr. Newcome.
+When we saw you and your father in London, we heard that you too-that
+you too were engaged to a young lady in your own rank of life, a
+Miss--what was her name?--Miss MacPherson, Miss Mackenzie. Your aunt,
+Mrs. Hobson Newcome, who I must say is a most blundering silly person,
+had set about this story. It appears there is no truth in it. Do not
+look surprised that I know about your affairs. I am an old witch, and
+know numbers of things."
+
+And, indeed, how Lady Kew came to know this fact, whether her maid
+corresponded with Lady Anne's maid, what her ladyship's means of
+information were, avowed or occult, this biographer has never been able
+to ascertain. Very likely Ethel, who in these last three weeks had been
+made aware of that interesting circumstance, had announced it to Lady
+Kew in the course of a cross-examination, and there may have been a
+battle between the granddaughter and the grandmother, of which the
+family chronicler of the Newcomes has had no precise knowledge.
+That there were many such I know--skirmishes, sieges, and general
+engagements. When we hear the guns, and see the wounded, we know there
+has been a fight. Who knows had there been a battle-royal, and was Miss
+Newcome having her wounds dressed upstairs?
+
+"You will like to say good-bye to your cousin, I know," Lady Kew
+continued, with imperturbable placidity. "Ethel, my dear, here is Mr.
+Clive Newcome, who has come to bid us all good-bye." The little girls
+came trotting down at this moment, each holding a skirt of their elder
+sister. She looked rather pale, but her expression was haughty--almost
+fierce.
+
+Clive rose up as she entered, from the sofa by the old Countess's side,
+which place she had pointed him to take during the amputation. He rose
+up and put his hair back off his face, and said very calmly, "Yes, I'm
+come to say good-bye. My holidays are over, and Ridley and I are off for
+Rome; good-bye, and God bless you, Ethel."
+
+She gave him her hand and said, "Good-bye, Clive," but her hand did not
+return his pressure, and dropped to her side, when he let it go.
+
+Hearing the words good-bye, little Alice burst into a howl, and little
+Maude, who was an impetuous little thing, stamped her little red shoes
+and said, "It san't be good-bye. Tlive san't go." Alice, roaring, clung
+hold of Clive's trousers. He took them up gaily, each on an arm, as he
+had done a hundred times, and tossed the children on to his shoulders,
+where they used to like to pull his yellow mustachios. He kissed the
+little hands and faces, and a moment after was gone.
+
+"Qu'as-tu?" says M. de Florac, meeting him going over the bridge to his
+own hotel. "Qu'as-tu, mon petit Claive? Est-ce qu'on vient de t'arracher
+une dent?"
+
+"C'est ca," says Clive, and walked into the Hotel de France. "Hulloh!
+J. J.! Ridley!" he sang out. "Order the trap out and let's be off."
+"I thought we were not to march till to-morrow," says J. J., divining
+perhaps that some catastrophe had occurred. Indeed, Mr. Clive was going
+a day sooner than he had intended. He woke at Fribourg the next morning.
+It was the grand old cathedral he looked at, not Baden of the pine-clad
+hills, of the pretty walks and the lime-tree avenues. Not Baden, the
+prettiest booth of all Vanity Fair. The crowds and the music, the
+gambling-tables and the cadaverous croupiers and chinking gold, were far
+out of sight and hearing. There was one window in the Hotel de Hollande
+that he thought of, how a fair arm used to open it in the early morning,
+how the muslin curtain in the morning air swayed to and fro. He would
+have given how much to see it once more! Walking about at Fribourg in
+the night, away from his companions, he had thought of ordering horses,
+galloping back to Baden, and once again under that window, calling
+Ethel, Ethel. But he came back to his room and the quiet J. J., and to
+poor Jack Belsize, who had had his tooth taken out too.
+
+We had almost forgotten Jack, who took a back seat in Clive's carriage,
+as befits a secondary personage in this history, and Clive in truth had
+almost forgotten him too. But Jack having his own cares and business,
+and having rammed his own carpet-bag, brought it down without a word,
+and Clive found him environed in smoke when he came down to take his
+place in the little britzska. I wonder whether the window at the
+Hotel de Hollande saw him go? There are some curtains behind which no
+historian, however prying, is allowed to peep.
+
+"Tiens, le petit part," says Florac of the cigar, who was always
+sauntering. "Yes, we go," says Clive. "There is a fourth place,
+Viscount; will you come too?"
+
+"I would love it well," replies Florac, "but I am here in faction. My
+cousin and seigneur M. le Duc d'Ivry is coming all the way from Bagneres
+de Bigorre. He says he counts on me:--affaires mon cher, affaires
+d'etat."
+
+"How pleased the duchess will be! Easy with that bag!" shouts Clive.
+"How pleased the princess will be!" In truth he hardly knew what he was
+saying.
+
+"Vous croyez; vous croyez," says M. de Florac. "As you have a fourth
+place, I know who had best take it."
+
+"And who is that?" asked the young traveller.
+
+Lord Kew and Barnes, Esq., of Newcome, came out of the Hotel de Hollande
+at this moment. Barnes slunk back, seeing Jack Belsize's hairy face. Kew
+ran over the bridge. "Good-bye, Clive. Good-bye, Jack." "Good-bye, Kew."
+It was a great handshake. Away goes the postillion blowing his horn, and
+young Hannibal has left Capua behind him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. Madame la Duchesse
+
+
+In one of Clive Newcome's letters from Baden, the young man described to
+me, with considerable humour and numerous illustrations as his wont
+was, a great lady to whom he was presented at that watering-place by his
+friend Lord Kew. Lord Kew had travelled in the East with Monsieur le
+Duc and Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry--the prince being an old friend of
+his lordship's family. He is the "Q" of Madame d'Ivry's book of travels,
+Footprints of the Gazelles, by a daughter of the Crusaders, in which she
+prays so fervently for Lord Kew's conversion. He is the "Q" who rescued
+the princess from the Arabs, and performed many a feat which lives in
+her glowing pages. He persists in saying that he never rescued Madame la
+Princesse from any Arabs at all, except from one beggar who was bawling
+out for bucksheesh, and whom Kew drove away with a stick. They made
+pilgrimages to all the holy places, and a piteous sight it was, said
+Lord Kew, to see the old prince in the Jerusalem processions at Easter
+pacing with bare feet and a candle. Here Lord Kew separated from
+the prince's party. His name does not occur in the last part of the
+Footprints; which, in truth, are filled full of strange rhapsodies,
+adventures which nobody was but the princess, and mystic disquisitions.
+She hesitates at nothing, like other poets of her nation: not profoundly
+learned, she invents where she has not acquired: mingles together
+religion and the opera; and performs Parisian pas-de-ballet before the
+gates of monasteries and the cells of anchorites. She describes, as if
+she had herself witnessed the catastrophe, the passage of the Red
+Sea: and, as if there were no doubt of the transaction, an unhappy
+love-affair between Pharaoh's eldest son and Moses's daughter. At Cairo,
+apropos of Joseph's granaries, she enters into a furious tirade against
+Putiphar, whom she paints as an old savage, suspicious and a tyrant.
+They generally have a copy of the Footprints of the Gazelles at the
+Circulating Library at Baden, as Madame d'Ivry constantly visits that
+watering-place. M. le Duc was not pleased with the book, which was
+published entirely without his concurrence, and which he described as
+one of the ten thousand follies of Madame la Duchesse.
+
+This nobleman was five-and-forty years older than his duchess. France
+is the country where that sweet Christian institution of mariages de
+convenance (which so many folks of the family about which this story
+treats are engaged in arranging) is most in vogue. There the newspapers
+daily announce that M. de Foy has a bureau de confiance, where families
+may arrange marriages for their sons and daughters in perfect comfort
+and security. It is but a question of money on one side and the other.
+Mademoiselle has so many francs of dot; Monsieur has such and such
+rentes or lands in possession or reversion, an etude d'avoue, a shop
+with a certain clientele bringing him such and such an income, which may
+be doubled by the judicious addition of so much capital, and the pretty
+little matrimonial arrangement is concluded (the agent touching his
+percentage), or broken off, and nobody unhappy, and the world none the
+wiser. The consequences of the system I do not pretend personally
+to know; but if the light literature of a country is a reflex of its
+manners, and French novels are a picture of French life, a pretty
+society must that be into the midst of which the London reader may walk
+in twelve hours from this time of perusal, and from which only twenty
+miles of sea separate us.
+
+When the old Duke d'Ivry, of the ancient ancient nobility of France, an
+emigrant with Artois, a warrior with Conde, an exile during the reign
+of the Corsican usurper, a grand prince, a great nobleman
+afterwards, though shorn of nineteen-twentieths of his wealth by the
+Revolution,--when the Duke d'Ivry lost his two sons, and his son's son
+likewise died, as if fate had determined to end the direct line of that
+noble house, which had furnished queens to Europe, and renowned chiefs
+to the Crusaders--being of an intrepid spirit, the Duke was ill disposed
+to yield to his redoubtable energy, in spite of the cruel blows which
+the latter had inflicted upon him, and when he was more than sixty years
+of age, three months before the July Revolution broke out, a young lady
+of a sufficient nobility, a virgin of sixteen, was brought out of the
+convent of the Sacre Coeur at Paris, and married with immense splendour
+and ceremony to this princely widower. The most august names signed the
+book of the civil marriage. Madame la Dauphine and Madame la Duchesse de
+Berri complimented the young bride with royal favours. Her portrait by
+Dubufe was in the Exhibition next year, a charming young duchess indeed,
+with black eyes, and black ringlets, pearls on her neck, and diamonds in
+her hair, as beautiful as a princess of a fairy tale. M. d'Ivry, whose
+early life may have been rather oragious, was yet a gentleman perfectly
+well conserved. Resolute against fate his enemy (one would fancy fate
+was of an aristocratic turn, and took especial delight in combats with
+princely houses; the Atridae, the Borbonidae, the Ivrys,--the Browns
+and Joneses being of no account), the prince seemed to be determined not
+only to secure a progeny, but to defy age. At sixty he was still young,
+or seemed to be so. His hair was as black as the princess's own, his
+teeth as white. If you saw him on the Boulevard de Gand, sunning among
+the youthful exquisites there, or riding au Bois, with a grace worthy
+of old Franconi himself, you would take him for one of the young men,
+of whom indeed up to his marriage he retained a number of the graceful
+follies and amusements, though his manners had a dignity acquired in
+old days of Versailles and the Trianon, which the moderns cannot hope
+to imitate. He was as assiduous behind the scenes of the opera as any
+journalist, or any young dandy of twenty years. He "ranged himself," as
+the French phrase is, shortly before his marriage, just like any other
+young bachelor: took leave of Phryne and Aspasie in the coulisses, and
+proposed to devote himself henceforth to his charming young wife.
+
+The affreux catastrophe of July arrived. The ancient Bourbons were once
+more on the road to exile (save one wily old remnant of the race, who
+rode grinning over the barricades, and distributing poignees de main to
+the stout fists that had pummelled his family out of France). M. le Duc
+d'Ivry, who lost his place at court, his appointments which helped his
+income very much, and his peerage would no more acknowledge the usurper
+of Neuilly, than him of Elba. The ex-peer retired to his terres. He
+barricaded his house in Paris against all supporters of the citizen
+king; his nearest kinsman, M. de Florac, among the rest, who for
+his part cheerfully took his oath of fidelity, and his seat in Louis
+Philippe's house of peers, having indeed been accustomed to swear to all
+dynasties for some years past.
+
+In due time Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry gave birth to a child, a daughter,
+whom her noble father received with but small pleasure. What the Duke
+desired, was an heir to his name, a Prince of Moncontour, to fill the
+place of the sons and grandsons gone before him, to join their ancestors
+in the tomb. No more children, however, blessed the old Duke's union.
+Madame d'Ivry went the round of all the watering-places: pilgrimages
+were tried: vows and gifts to all saints supposed to be favourable to
+the d'Ivry family, or to families in general:--but the saints turned
+a deaf ear; they were inexorable since the true religion and the elder
+Bourbons were banished from France.
+
+Living by themselves in their ancient castles, or their dreary mansion
+of the Faubourg St. Germain, I suppose the Duke and Duchess grew tried
+of one another, as persons who enter into a mariage de convenance
+sometimes, nay, as those who light a flaming love-match, and run away
+with one another, will be found to do. A lady of one-and-twenty, and a
+gentleman of sixty-six, alone in a great castle, have not unfrequently
+a third guest at their table, who comes without a card, and whom they
+cannot shut out, though they keep their doors closed ever so. His name
+is Ennui, and many a long hour and weary night must such folks pass in
+the unbidden society of this Old Man of the Sea; this daily guest at the
+board; this watchful attendant at the fireside; this assiduous companion
+who will walk out with you; this sleepless restless bedfellow.
+
+At first, M. d'Ivry, that well-conserved nobleman who never would allow
+that he was not young, exhibited no sign of doubt regarding his own
+youth except an extreme jealousy and avoidance of all other young
+fellows. Very likely Madame la Duchesse may have thought men in general
+dyed their hair, wore stays, and had the rheumatism. Coming out of the
+convent of the Sacre Coeur, how was the innocent young lady to know
+better? You see, in these mariages de convenance, though a coronet
+may be convenient to a beautiful young creature, and a beautiful young
+creature may be convenient to an old gentleman, there are articles which
+the marriage-monger cannot make to convene at all: tempers over which M.
+de Foy and his like have no control; and tastes which cannot be put into
+the marriage settlements. So this couple were unhappy, and the Duke and
+Duchess quarrelled with one another like the most vulgar pair who ever
+fought across a table.
+
+In this unhappy state of home affairs, madame took to literature,
+monsieur to politics. She discovered that she was a great unappreciated
+soul, and when a woman finds that treasure in her bosom of course she
+sets her own price on the article. Did you ever see the first poems of
+Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry, Les Cris de l'Ame? She used to read them to
+her very intimate friends, in white, with her hair a good deal down her
+back. They had some success. Dubufe having painted her as a Duchess,
+Scheffer depicted her as a Muse. That was in the third year of her
+marriage, when she rebelled against the Duke her husband, insisted on
+opening her saloons to art and literature, and, a fervent devotee still,
+proposed to unite genius and religion. Poets had interviews with her.
+Musicians came and twanged guitars to her.
+
+Her husband, entering her room, would fall over the sabre and spurs
+of Count Almaviva from the boulevard, or Don Basilio with his great
+sombrero and shoe-buckles. The old gentleman was breathless and
+bewildered in following her through all her vagaries. He was of old
+France, she of new. What did he know of the Ecole Romantique, and these
+jeunes gens with their Marie Tudors and Tours de Nesle, and sanguineous
+histories of queens who sewed their lovers into sacks, emperors who
+had interviews with robber captains in Charlemagne's tomb, Buridans and
+Hernanis, and stuff? Monsieur le Vicomte de Chateaubriand was a man of
+genius as a writer, certainly immortal; and M. de Lamartine was a young
+man extremely bien pensant, but, ma foi, give him Crebillon fils, or a
+bonne farce of M. Vade to make laugh; for the great sentiments, for the
+beautiful style, give him M. de Lormian (although Bonapartist) or the
+Abbe de Lille. And for the new school! bah! these little Dumass, and
+Hugos, and Mussets, what is all that? "M. de Lormian shall be immortal,
+monsieur," he would say, "when all these freluquets are forgotten."
+After his marriage he frequented the coulisses of the opera no more; but
+he was a pretty constant attendant at the Theatre Francais, where you
+might hear him snoring over the chefs-d'oeuvres of French tragedy.
+
+For some little time after 1830, the Duchesse was as great a Carlist as
+her husband could wish; and they conspired together very comfortably
+at first. Of an adventurous turn, eager for excitement of all kinds,
+nothing would have better pleased the Duchesse than to follow MADAME in
+her adventurous courses in La Vendee, disguised as a boy above all. She
+was persuaded to stay at home, however, and aid the good cause at Paris;
+while Monsieur le Duc went off to Brittany to offer his old sword to the
+mother of his king. But MADAME was discovered up the chimney at Rennes,
+and all sorts of things were discovered afterwards. The world said that
+our silly little Duchess of Paris was partly the cause of the discovery.
+Spies were put upon her, and to some people she would tell anything. M.
+le Duc, on paying his annual visit to august exiles at Goritz, was very
+badly received: Madame la Dauphine gave him a sermon. He had an awful
+quarrel with Madame la Duchesse on returning to Paris. He provoked
+Monsieur le Comte Tiercelin, le beau Tiercelin, an officer of ordonnance
+of the Duke of Orleans, into a duel, a propos of a cup of coffee in a
+salon; he actually wounded the beau Tiercelin--he sixty-five years
+of age! his nephew, M. de Florac, was loud in praise of his kinsman's
+bravery.
+
+That pretty figure and complexion which still appear so captivating in
+M. Dubufe's portrait of Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry, have long existed--it
+must be owned only in paint. "Je la prefere a l'huile," the Vicomte de
+Florac said of his cousin. "She should get her blushes from Monsieur
+Dubufe--those of her present furnishers are not near so natural."
+Sometimes the Duchess appeared with these postiches roses, sometimes
+of a mortal paleness. Sometimes she looked plump, on other occasions
+wofully thin. "When she goes into the world," said the same chronicler,
+"ma cousine surrounds herself with jupons--c'est pour defendre sa vertu:
+when she is in a devotional mood, she gives up rouge, roast meat, and
+crinoline, and fait maigre absolument." To spite the Duke her husband,
+she took up with the Vicomte de Florac, and to please herself she cast
+him away. She took his brother, the Abbe de Florac, for a director, and
+presently parted from him. "Mon frere, ce saint homme ne parle jamais
+de Madame la Duchesse, maintenant," said the Vicomte. "She must have
+confessed to him des choses affreuses--oh, oui!--affreuses ma parole
+d'honneur!"
+
+The Duke d'Ivry being archiroyaliste, Madame la Duchesse must make
+herself ultra-Philippiste. "Oh, oui! tout ce qu'il y a de plus Madame
+Adelaide au monde!" cried Florac. "She raffoles of M. le Regent. She
+used to keep a fast of the day of the supplice of Philippe Egalite,
+Saint and Martyr. I say used, for to make to enrage her husband, and to
+recall the Abbe my brother, did she not advise herself to consult M. le
+Pasteur Grigou, and to attend the preach at his Temple? When this sheep
+had brought her shepherd back, she dismissed the Pasteur Grigou. Then
+she tired of M. l'Abbe again, and my brother is come out from her,
+shaking his good head. Ah! she must have put things into it which
+astonished the good Abbe! You know he has since taken the Dominican
+robe? My word of honour! I believe it was terror of her that drove him
+into a convent. You shall see him at Rome, Clive. Give him news of his
+elder, and tell him this gross prodigal is repenting amongst the swine.
+My word of honour! I desire but the death of Madame la Vicomtesse de
+Florac, to marry and range myself!
+
+"After being Royalist, Philippist, Catholic, Huguenot, Madame d'Ivry
+must take to Pantheism, to bearded philosophers who believe in nothing,
+not even in clean linen, eclecticism, republicanism, what know I?
+All her changes have been chronicled by books of her composition. Les
+Demons, poem Catholic; Charles IX. is the hero and the demons are shot
+for the most part at the catastrophe of St. Bartholomew. My good mother,
+all good Catholic as she is, was startled by the boldness of this
+doctrine. Then there came Une Dragonnade, par Mme. la Duchesse d'Ivry,
+which is all on your side. That was of the time of the Pastor Grigou,
+that one. The last was Les Dieux dechus, poeme en 20 chants, par Mme. la
+D---- d'I. Guard yourself well from this Muse! If she takes a fancy to
+you she will never leave you alone. If you see her often, she will fancy
+you are in love with her, and tell her husband. She always tells my
+uncle--afterwards--after she has quarrelled with you and grown tired
+of you! Eh, being in London once, she had the idea to make herself
+a Quakre; wore the costume, consulted a minister of that culte, and
+quarrelled with him as of rule. It appears the Quakers do not beat
+themselves, otherwise my poor uncle must have paid of his person.
+
+"The turn of the philosophers then came, the chemists, the natural
+historians, what know I? She made a laboratory in her hotel, and
+rehearsed poisons like Madame de Brinvilliers--she spent hours in the
+Jardin des Plantes. Since she has grown affreusenent maigre and wears
+mounting robes, she has taken more than ever to the idea that she
+resembles Mary Queen of Scots. She wears a little frill and a little
+cap. Every man she loves, she says, has come to misfortune. She calls
+her lodgings Lochleven. Eh! I pity the landlord of Lochleven! She calls
+ce gros Blackball, vous savez, that pillar of estaminets, that prince of
+mauvais-ton, her Bothwell; little Mijaud, the poor little pianist, she
+named her Rizzio; young Lord Greenhorn who was here with governor,
+a Monsieur of Oxfort, she christened her Darnley, and the Minister
+Anglican, her John Knox! The poor man was quite enchanted! Beware of
+this haggard siren, my little Clive!--mistrust her dangerous song! Her
+cave is jonchee with the bones of her victims. Be you not one!"
+
+Far from causing Clive to avoid Madame la Duchesse, these cautions very
+likely would have made him only the more eager to make her acquaintance,
+but that a much nobler attraction drew him elsewhere. At first, being
+introduced to Madame d'Ivry's salon, he was pleased and flattered, and
+behaved himself there merrily and agreeably enough. He had not studied
+Horace Vernet for nothing; he drew a fine picture of Kew rescuing
+her from the Arabs, with a plenty of sabres, pistols, burnouses, and
+dromedaries. He made a pretty sketch of her little girl Antoinette, and
+a wonderful likeness of Miss O'Grady, the little girl's governess, the
+mother's dame de compagnie;--Miss O'Grady, with the richest Milesian
+brogue, who had been engaged to give Antoinette the pure English accent.
+But the French lady's great eyes and painted smiles would not bear
+comparison with Ethel's natural brightness and beauty. Clive, who had
+been appointed painter in ordinary to the Queen of Scots, neglected his
+business, and went over to the English faction; so did one or two
+more of the Princess's followers, leaving her Majesty by no means well
+pleased at their desertion.
+
+There had been many quarrels between M. d'Ivry and his next-of-kin.
+Political differences, private differences--a long story. The Duke, who
+had been wild himself, could not pardon the Vicomte de Florac for
+being wild. Efforts at reconciliation had been made which ended
+unsuccessfully. The Vicomte de Florac had been allowed for a brief space
+to be intimate with the chief of his family, and then had been dismissed
+for being too intimate. Right or wrong, the Duke was jealous of all
+young men who approached the Duchesse. "He is suspicious," Madame de
+Florac indignantly said, "because he remembers: and he thinks other men
+are like himself." The Vicomte discreetly said, "My cousin has paid me
+the compliment to be jealous of me," and acquiesced in his banishment
+with a shrug.
+
+During the emigration the old Lord Kew had been very kind to exiles, M.
+d'Ivry amongst the number; and that nobleman was anxious to return to
+all Lord Kew's family when they came to France the hospitality which
+he had received himself in England. He still remembered or professed to
+remember Lady Kew's beauty. How many women are there, awful of aspect,
+at present, of whom the same pleasing legend is not narrated! It must be
+true, for do not they themselves confess it? I know of few things
+more remarkable or suggestive of philosophic contemplation than those
+physical changes.
+
+When the old Duke and the old Countess met together and talked
+confidentially, their conversation bloomed into a jargon wonderful to
+hear. Old scandals woke up, old naughtinesses rose out of their graves,
+and danced, and smirked, and gibbered again, like those wicked nuns
+whom Bertram and Robert le Diable evoke from their sepulchres whilst
+the bassoon performs a diabolical incantation. The Brighton Pavilion
+was tenanted; Ranelagh and the Pantheon swarmed with dancers and masks;
+Perdita was found again, and walked a minuet with the Prince of Wales.
+Mrs. Clarke and the Duke of York danced together--a pretty dance. The
+old Duke wore a jabot and ailes-de-pigeon, the old Countess a hoop,
+and a cushion on her head. If haply the young folks came in, the elders
+modified their recollections, and Lady Kew brought honest old King
+George and good old ugly Queen Charlotte to the rescue. Her ladyship
+was sister of the Marquis of Steyne: and in some respects resembled that
+lamented nobleman. Their family had relations in France (Lady Kew had
+always a pied-a-terre at Paris, a bitter little scandal-shop, where les
+bien pensants assembled and retailed the most awful stories against the
+reigning dynasty). It was she who handed over le petit Kiou, when
+quite a boy, to Monsieur and Madame d'Ivry, to be lanced into Parisian
+society. He was treated as a son of the family by the Duke, one of whose
+many Christian names, his lordship, Francis George Xavier, Earl of Kew
+and Viscount Walham, bears. If Lady Kew hated any one (and she could
+hate very considerably) she hated her daughter-in-law, Walham's widow,
+and the Methodists who surrounded her. Kew remain among a pack of
+psalm-singing old women and parsons with his mother! Fi donc! Frank was
+Lady Kew's boy; she would form him, marry him, leave him her money if he
+married to her liking, and show him life. And so she showed it to him.
+
+Have you taken your children to the National Gallery in London, and
+shown them the "Marriage a la Mode?" Was the artist exceeding the
+privilege of his calling in painting the catastrophe in which those
+guilty people all suffer? If this fable were not true, if many and many
+of your young men of pleasure had not acted it, and rued the moral,
+I would tear the page. You know that in our Nursery Tales there is
+commonly a good fairy to counsel, and a bad one to mislead the young
+prince. You perhaps feel that in your own life there is a Good Principle
+imploring you to come into its kind bosom, and a Bad Passion which
+tempts you into its arms. Be of easy minds good-natured people! Let us
+disdain surprises and coups-de-theatre for once; and tell those good
+souls who are interested about him, that there is a Good Spirit coming
+to the rescue of our young Lord Kew.
+
+Surrounded by her court and royal attendants, La Reine Marie used
+graciously to attend the play-table, where luck occasionally declared
+itself for and against her Majesty. Her appearance used to create not
+a little excitement in the Saloon of Roulette, the game which she
+patronised, it being more "fertile of emotions" than the slower
+trente-et-quarante. She dreamed of numbers, had favourite incantations
+by which to conjure them: noted the figures made by peels of peaches and
+so forth, the numbers of houses, on hackney-coaches--was superstitious
+comme toutes les rimes poetiques. She commonly brought a beautiful agate
+bonbonniere full of gold pieces, when she played. It was wonderful to
+see her grimaces: to watch her behaviour: her appeals to heaven, her
+delight and despair. Madame la Baronne de la Cruchecassee played on one
+side of her, Madame la Comtesse de Schlanigenbad on the other. When she
+had lost all her money her Majesty would condescend to borrow--not from
+those ladies:--knowing the royal peculiarity, they never had any money;
+they always lost; they swiftly pocketed their winnings and never left a
+mass on the table, or quitted it, as courtiers will, when they saw luck
+was going against their sovereign. The officers of her household were
+Count Punter, a Hanoverian, the Cavaliere Spada, Captain Blackball of a
+mysterious English regiment, which might be any one of the hundred
+and twenty in the Army List, and other noblemen and gentlemen, Greeks,
+Russians, and Spaniards. Mr. and Mrs. Jones (of England), who had made
+the princess's acquaintance at Bagneres (where her lord still remained
+in the gout) and perseveringly followed her all the way to Baden, were
+dazzled by the splendour of the company in which they found themselves.
+Miss Jones wrote such letters to her dearest friend Miss Thompson,
+Cambridge Square, London, as caused that young person to crever with
+envy. Bob Jones, who had grown a pair of mustachios since he left home,
+began to think slightingly of poor little Fanny Thompson, now he had got
+into "the best Continental society." Might not he quarter a countess's
+coat on his brougham along with the Jones arms, or, more slap-up still,
+have the two shields painted on the panels with the coronet over? "Do
+you know the princess calls herself the Queen of Scots, and she calls me
+Julian Avenel?" says Jones delighted, to Clive, who wrote me about
+the transmogrification of our schoolfellow, an attorney's son, whom I
+recollected a snivelling little boy at Grey Friars. "I say, Newcome, the
+princess is going to establish an order," cried Bob in ecstasy. Every
+one of her aides-de-camp had a bunch of orders at his button, excepting,
+of course, poor Jones.
+
+Like all persons who beheld her, when Miss Newcome and her party made
+their appearance at Baden, Monsieur de Florac was enraptured with her
+beauty. "I speak of it constantly before the Duchesse. I know it pleases
+her," so the Vicomte said. "You should have seen her looks when your
+friend M. Jones praised Miss Newcome! She ground her teeth with fury.
+Tiens ce petit sournois de Kiou! He always spoke of her as a mere sac
+d'argent that he was about to marry--an ingot of the cite--une fille de
+Lord Maire. Have all English bankers such pearls of daughters? If
+the Vicomtesse de Florac had but quitted the earth, dont elle fait
+l'ornement--I would present myself to the charmante meess and ride
+a steeple-chase with Kiou!" That he should win it the Viscount never
+doubted.
+
+When Lady Anne Newcome first appeared in the ballroom at Baden, Madame
+la Duchesse d'Ivry begged the Earl of Kew (notre filleul, she called
+him) to present her to his aunt miladi and her charming daughter. "My
+filleul had not prepared me for so much grace," she said, turning a
+look towards Lord Kew, which caused his lordship some embarrassment.
+Her kindness and graciousness were extreme. Her caresses and compliments
+never ceased all the evening. She told the mother and the daughter too
+that she had never seen any one so lovely as Ethel. Whenever she saw
+Lady Anne's children in the walks she ran to them (so that Captain
+Blackball and Count Punter, A.D.C., were amazed at her tenderness), she
+etouffed them with kisses. What lilies and roses! What lovely little
+creatures! What companions for her own Antoinette. "This is your
+governess, Miss Quigli; mademoiselle, you must let me present you to
+Miss O'Gredi, your compatriot, and I hope your children will be
+always together." The Irish Protestant governess scowled at the Irish
+Catholic--there was a Boyne Water between them.
+
+Little Antoinette; a lonely little girl, was glad to find any
+companions. "Mamma kisses me on the promenade," she told them in her
+artless way. "She never kisses me at home!" One day when Lord Kew
+with Florac and Clive were playing with the children, Antoinette said,
+"Pourquoi ne venez-vous plus chez nous, M. de Kew? And why does mamma
+say you are a lache? She said so yesterday to ces messieurs. And why
+does mamma say thou art only a vaurien, mon cousin? Thou art always
+very good for me. I love thee better than all those messieurs. Ma tante
+Florac a ete bonne pour moi a Paris aussi--Ah! qu'elle a ete bonne!"
+
+"C'est que les anges aiment bien les petits cherubins, and my mother is
+an angel, seest thou," cries Florac, kissing her.
+
+"Thy mother is not dead," said little Antoinette, "then why dost thou
+cry, my cousin?" And the three spectators were touched by this little
+scene and speech.
+
+Lady Anne Newcome received the caresses and compliments of Madame
+la Duchesse with marked coldness on the part of one commonly so very
+good-natured. Ethel's instinct told her that there was something wrong
+in this woman, and she shrank from her with haughty reserve. The girl's
+conduct was not likely to please the French lady, but she never relaxed
+in her smiles and her compliments, her caresses, and her professions of
+admiration. She was present when Clara Pulleyn fell; and, prodigal of
+calineries and consolation, and shawls and scent-bottles, to the unhappy
+young lady, she would accompany her home. She inquired perpetually after
+the health of cette pauvre petite Miss Clara. Oh, how she railed against
+ces Anglaises and their prudery! Can you fancy her and her circle, the
+tea-table set in the twilight that evening, the court assembled, Madame
+de la Cruchecassee and Madame de Schlangenbad; and their whiskered
+humble servants, Baron Punter and Count Spada, and Marquis Iago, and
+Prince Iachimo, and worthy Captain Blackball? Can you fancy a moonlight
+conclave, and ghouls feasting on the fresh corpse of a reputation:--the
+gibes and sarcasms, the laughing and the gnashing of teeth? How they
+tear the dainty limbs, and relish the tender morsels!
+
+"The air of this place is not good for you, believe me, my little Kew;
+it is dangerous. Have pressing affairs in England; let your chateau
+burn down; or your intendant run away, and pursue him. Partez, mon petit
+Kiou; partez, or evil will come of it." Such was the advice which a
+friend of Lord Kew gave the young nobleman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. Barnes's Courtship
+
+
+Ethel had made various attempts to become intimate with her future
+sister-in-law; had walked, and ridden, and talked with Lady Clara before
+Barnes's arrival. She had come away not very much impressed with respect
+for Lady Clara's mental powers; indeed, we have said that Miss Ethel was
+rather more prone to attack women than to admire them, and was a little
+hard upon the fashionable young persons of her acquaintance and sex. In
+after life, care and thought subdued her pride, and she learned to look
+at society more good-naturedly; but at this time, and for some years
+after, she was impatient of commonplace people, and did not choose to
+conceal her scorn. Lady Clara was very much afraid of her. Those timid
+little thoughts, which would come out, and frisk and gambol with pretty
+graceful antics, and advance confidingly at the sound of Jack Belsize's
+jolly voice, and nibble crumbs out of his hand, shrank away before
+Ethel, severe nymph with the bright eyes, and hid themselves under the
+thickets and in the shade. Who has not overheard a simple couple of
+girls, or of lovers possibly, pouring out their little hearts, laughing
+at their own little jokes, prattling and prattling away unceasingly,
+until mamma appears with her awful didactic countenance, or the
+governess with her dry moralities, and the colloquy straightway ceases,
+the laughter stops, the chirp of the harmless little birds is hushed.
+Lady Clara being of a timid nature, stood in as much awe of Ethel as of
+her father and mother; whereas her next sister, a brisk young creature
+of seventeen, who was of the order of romps or tomboys, was by no means
+afraid of Miss Newcome, and indeed a much greater favourite with her
+than her placid elder sister.
+
+Young ladies may have been crossed in love, and have had their
+sufferings, their frantic moments of grief and tears, their wakeful
+nights, and so forth; but it is only in very sentimental novels that
+people occupy themselves perpetually with that passion: and, I believe,
+what are called broken hearts are very rare articles indeed. Tom
+is jilted--is for a while in a dreadful state--bores all his male
+acquaintance with his groans and his frenzy--rallies from the
+complaint--eats his dinner very kindly--takes an interest in the next
+turf event, and is found at Newmarket, as usual, bawling out the odds
+which he will give or take. Miss has her paroxysm and recovery--Madame
+Crinoline's new importations from Paris interest the young creature--she
+deigns to consider whether pink or blue will become her most--she
+conspires with her maid to make the spring morning dresses answer for
+the autumn--she resumes her books, piano, and music (giving up certain
+songs perhaps that she used to sing)--she waltzes with the Captain--gets
+a colour--waltzes longer, better, and ten times quicker than Lucy,
+who is dancing with the Major--replies in an animated manner to the
+Captain's delightful remarks--takes a little supper--and looks quite
+kindly at him before she pulls up the carriage windows.
+
+Clive may not like his cousin Barnes Newcome, and many other men share
+in that antipathy, but all ladies do not. It is a fact that Barnes,
+when he likes, can make himself a very pleasant fellow. He is dreadfully
+satirical, that is certain; but many persons are amused by those
+dreadful satirical young men: and to hear fun made of our neighbours,
+even of some of our friends, does not make us very angry. Barnes is one
+of the very best waltzers in all society, that is the truth; whereas it
+must be confessed Some One Else was very heavy and slow, his great foot
+always crushing you, and he always begging your pardon. Barnes whirls a
+partner round a room ages after she is ready to faint. What wicked fun
+he makes of other people when he stops! He is not handsome, but in his
+face there is something odd-looking and distinguished. It is certain he
+has beautiful small feet and hands.
+
+He comes every day from the City, drops in, in his quiet unobtrusive
+way, and drinks tea at five o'clock; always brings a budget of the
+funniest stories with him, makes mamma laugh, Clara laugh, Henrietta,
+who is in the schoolroom still, die of laughing. Papa has the highest
+opinion of Mr. Newcome as a man of business: if he had had such a friend
+in early life his affairs would not be where they now are, poor dear
+kind papa! Do they want to go anywhere, is not Mr. Newcome always ready?
+Did he not procure that delightful room for them to witness the Lord
+Mayor's show; and make Clara die of laughing at those odd City people at
+the Mansion House ball? He is at every party, and never tired though he
+gets up so early: he waltzes with nobody else: he is always there to put
+Lady Clara in the carriage: at the drawing-room he looked quite handsome
+in his uniform of the Newcome Hussars, bottle-green and silver lace:
+he speaks Politics so exceedingly well with papa and gentlemen after
+dinner: he is a sound conservative, full of practical good sense and
+information, with no dangerous new-fangled ideas, such as young men
+have. When poor dear Sir Brian Newcome's health gives way quite, Mr.
+Newcome will go into Parliament, and then he will resume the old barony
+which has been in abeyance in the family since the reign of Richard the
+Third. They had fallen quite, quite low. Mr. Newcome's grandfather
+came to London with a satchel on his back, like Whittington. Isn't it
+romantic?
+
+This process has been going on for months. It is not in one day that
+poor Lady Clara has been made to forget the past, and to lay aside her
+mourning. Day after day, very likely, the undeniable faults and many
+peccadilloes of--of that other person, have been exposed to her. People
+around the young lady may desire to spare her feelings, but can have
+no interest in screening Poor Jack from condign reprobation. A wild
+prodigal--a disgrace to his order--a son of old Highgate's leading such
+a life, and making such a scandal! Lord Dorking believes Mr. Belsize to
+be an abandoned monster and fiend in human shape; gathers and
+relates all the stories that ever have been told to the young man's
+disadvantage, and of these be sure there are enough, and speaks of
+him with transports of indignation. At the end of months of unwearied
+courtship, Mr. Barnes Newcome is honestly accepted, and Lady Clara is
+waiting for him at Baden, not unhappy to receive him; when walking on
+the promenade with her father, the ghost of her dead love suddenly rises
+before her, and the young lady faints to the ground.
+
+When Barnes Newcome thinks fit he can be perfectly placable in his
+demeanour and delicate in his conduct. What he said upon this painful
+subject was delivered with the greatest propriety. He did not for one
+moment consider that Lady Clara's agitation arose from any present
+feeling in Mr. Belsize's favour, but that she was naturally moved by the
+remembrance of the past, and the sudden appearance which recalled it.
+"And but that a lady's name should never be made the subject of dispute
+between men," Newcome said to Lord Dorking, with great dignity, "and
+that Captain Belsize has opportunely quitted the place, I should
+certainly have chastised him. He and another adventurer, against whom I
+have had to warn my own family, have quitted Baden this afternoon. I am
+glad that both are gone, Captain Belsize especially; for my temper, my
+lord, is hot, and I do not think I should have commanded it."
+
+Lord Kew, when the elder lord informed him of this admirable speech of
+Barnes Newcome's, upon whose character, prudence, and dignity the Earl
+of Dorking pronounced a fervent eulogium, shook his head gravely, and
+said, "Yes, Barnes was a dead shot, and a most determined fellow:" and
+did not burst out laughing until he and Lord Dorking had parted. Then
+to be sure he took his fill of laughter, he told the story to Ethel,
+he complimented Barnes on his heroic self-denial; the joke of the
+thundering big stick was nothing to it. Barnes Newcome laughed too; he
+had plenty of humour, Barnes. "I think you might have whopped Jack when
+he came out from his interview with the Dorkings," Kew said: "the poor
+devil was so bewildered and weak, that Alfred might have thrashed him.
+At other times you would find it more difficult, Barnes my man." Mr. B.
+Newcome resumed his dignity; said a joke was a joke, and there was quite
+enough of this one; which assertion we may be sure he conscientiously
+made.
+
+That meeting and parting between the old lovers passed with a great
+deal of calm and propriety on both sides. Miss's parents of course were
+present when Jack at their summons waited upon them and their daughter,
+and made his hang-dog bow. My Lord Dorking said (poor Jack in the
+anguish of his heart had poured out the story to Clive Newcome
+afterwards), "Mr. Belsize, I have to apologise for words which I used
+in my heat yesterday, and which I recall and regret, as I am sure you do
+that there should have been any occasion for them."
+
+Mr. Belsize looking at the carpet said he was very sorry.
+
+Lady Dorking here remarked, that as Captain Belsize was now at Baden,
+he might wish to hear from Lady Clara Pulleyn's own lips that the
+engagement into which she had entered was formed by herself, certainly
+with the consent and advice of her family. "Is it not so, my dear?"
+
+Lady Clara said, "Yes, mamma," with a low curtsey.
+
+"We have now to wish you good-bye, Charles Belsize," said my lord, with
+some feeling. "As your relative, and your father's old friend, I wish
+you well. I hope your future course in life may not be so unfortunate
+as the past year. I request that we may part friends. Good-bye, Charles.
+Clara, shake hands with Captain Belsize. My Lady Dorking, you will
+please to give Charles your hand. You have known him since he was a
+child; and--and--we are sorry to be obliged to part in this way." In
+this wise Mr. Jack Belsize's tooth was finally extracted; and for the
+moment we wish him and his brother-patient a good journey.
+
+Little lynx-eyed Dr. Von Finck, who attends most of the polite company
+at Baden, drove ceaselessly about the place that day, with the real
+version of the fainting-fit story, about which we may be sure the wicked
+and malicious, and the uninitiated, had a hundred absurd details. Lady
+Clara ever engaged to Captain Belsize? Fiddle-de-dee! Everybody knew
+the Captain's affairs, and that he could no more think of marrying than
+flying. Lady Clara faint at seeing him! she fainted before he came up;
+she was always fainting, and had done so thrice in the last week to his
+knowledge. Lord Dorking had a nervous affection of his right arm, and
+was always shaking his stick. He did not say Villain, he said William;
+Captain Belsize's name is William. It is not so in the Peerage? Is
+he called Jack in the Peerage? Those Peerages are always wrong. These
+candid explanations of course had their effect. Wicked tongues were
+of course instantaneously silent. People were entirely satisfied; they
+always are. The next night being Assembly night, Lady Clara appeared
+at the rooms and danced with Lord Kew and Mr. Barnes Newcome. All the
+society was as gracious and good-humoured as possible, and there was no
+more question of fainting than of burning down the Conversation-house.
+But Madame de Cruchecassee, and Madame de Schlangenbad, and those horrid
+people whom the men speak to, but whom the women salute with silent
+curtseys, persisted in declaring that there was no prude like an English
+prude; and to Dr. Finck's oaths, assertions, explanations, only replied,
+with a shrug of their bold shoulders, "Taisez-vous, Docteur, vous n'ete
+qu'une vieille bete."
+
+Lady Kew was at the rooms, uncommonly gracious. Miss Ethel took a few
+turns of the waltz with Lord Kew, but this nymph looked more farouche
+than upon ordinary days. Bob Jones, who admired her hugely, asked leave
+to waltz with her, and entertained her with recollections of Clive
+Newcome at school. He remembered a fight in which Clive had been
+engaged, and recounted that action to Miss Newcome, who seemed to be
+interested. He was pleased to deplore Clive's fancy for turning artist,
+and that Miss Newcome recommended him to have his likeness taken, for
+she said his appearance was exceedingly picturesque. He was going on
+with further prattle, but she suddenly cut Mr. Jones short, making him
+a bow, and going to sit down by Lady Kew. "And the next day, sir," said
+Bob, with whom the present writer had the happiness of dining at a mess
+dinner at the Upper Temple, "when I met her on the walk, sir, she cut me
+as dead as a stone. The airs those swells give themselves is enough to
+make any man turn republican."
+
+Miss Ethel indeed was haughty, very haughty, and of a difficult temper.
+She spared none of her party except her kind mother, to whom Ethel
+always was kind, and her father, whom, since his illnesses, she tended
+with much benevolence and care. But she did battle with Lady Kew
+repeatedly, coming to her Aunt Julia's rescue, on whom her mother as
+usual exercised her powers of torturing. She made Barnes quail before
+her by the shafts of contempt which she flashed at him; and she did not
+spare Lord Kew, whose good-nature was no shield against her scorn. The
+old queen-mother was fairly afraid of her; she even left off beating
+Lady Julia when Ethel came in, of course taking her revenge in the young
+girl's absence, but trying in her presence to soothe and please her.
+Against Lord Kew the young girl's anger was most unjust, and the more
+cruel because the kindly young nobleman never spoke a hard word of any
+one mortal soul, and, carrying no arms, should have been assaulted by
+none. But his very good-nature seemed to make his young opponent only
+the more wrathful; she shot because his honest breast was bare; it bled
+at the wounds which she inflicted. Her relatives looked at her surprised
+at her cruelty, and the young man himself was shocked in his dignity and
+best feelings by his cousin's wanton ill-humour.
+
+Lady Kew fancied she understood the cause of this peevishness, and
+remonstrated with Miss Ethel. "Shall we write a letter to Lucerne, and
+order Dick Tinto back again?" said her ladyship. "Are you such a fool,
+Ethel, as to be hankering after that young scapegrace, and his yellow
+beard? His drawings are very pretty. Why, I think he might earn a couple
+of hundred a year as a teacher, and nothing would be easier than to
+break your engagement with Kew, and whistle the drawing-master back
+again."
+
+Ethel took up the whole heap of Clive's drawings, lighted a taper,
+carried the drawings to the fireplace, and set them in a blaze. "A very
+pretty piece of work," says Lady Kew, "and which proves satisfactorily
+that you don't care for the young Clive at all. Have we arranged a
+correspondence? We are cousins, you know; we may write pretty cousinly
+letters to one another." A month before the old lady would have attacked
+her with other arms than sarcasm, but she was scared now, and dared to
+use no coarser weapons. "Oh!" cried Ethel in a transport, "what a life
+ours is, and how you buy and sell, and haggle over your children! It
+is not Clive I care about, poor boy. Our ways of life are separate.
+I cannot break from my own family, and I know very well how yon would
+receive him in it. Had he money, it would be different. You would
+receive him, and welcome him, and hold out your hands to him; but he
+is only a poor painter, and we forsooth are bankers in the City; and
+he comes among us on sufferance, like those concert-singers whom mamma
+treats with so much politeness, and who go down and have supper by
+themselves. Why should they not be as good as we are?"
+
+"M. de C----, my dear, is of a noble family," interposed Lady Kew; "when
+he has given up singing and made his fortune, no doubt he can go back
+into the world again."
+
+"Made his fortune, yes," Ethel continued, "that is the cry. There never
+were, since the world began, people so unblushingly sordid! We own it,
+and are proud of it. We barter rank against money, and money against
+rank, day after day. Why did you marry my father to my mother? Was it
+for his wit? You know he might have been an angel and you would have
+scorned him. Your daughter was bought with papa's money as surely as
+ever Newcome was. Will there be no day when this mammon-worship will
+cease among us?"
+
+"Not in my time or yours, Ethel," the elder said, not unkindly; perhaps
+she thought of a day long ago before she was old herself.
+
+"We are sold," the young girl went on, "we are as much sold as Turkish
+women; the only difference being that our masters may have but one
+Circassian at a time. No, there is no freedom for us. I wear my green
+ticket, and wait till my master comes. But every day as I think of our
+slavery, I revolt against it more. That poor wretch, that poor girl whom
+my brother is to marry, why did she not revolt and fly? I would, if I
+loved a man sufficiently, loved him better than the world, than wealth,
+than rank, than fine houses and titles,--and I feel I love these
+best,--I would give up all to follow him. But what can I be with my name
+and my parents? I belong to the world like all the rest of my family. It
+is you who have bred us up; you who are answerable for us. Why are there
+no convents to which we can fly? You make a fine marriage for me; you
+provide me with a good husband, a kind soul, not very wise, but very
+kind; you make me what you call happy, and I would rather be at the
+plough like the women here."
+
+"No, you wouldn't, Ethel," replies the grandmother, drily. "These are
+the fine speeches of schoolgirls. The showers of rain would spoil your
+complexion--you would be perfectly tired in an hour, and come back to
+luncheon--you belong to your belongings, my dear, and are not better
+than the rest of the world:--very good-looking, as you know perfectly
+well, and not very good-tempered. It is lucky that Kew is. Calm your
+temper, at least before marriage; such a prize does not fall to a
+pretty girl's lot every day. Why, you sent him away quite seared by your
+cruelty; and if he is not playing at roulette, or at billiards, I dare
+say he is thinking what a little termagant you are, and that he had beat
+pause while it is yet time. Before I was married, your poor grandfather
+never knew I had a temper; of after-days I say nothing; but trials are
+good for all of us, and he bore his like an angel."
+
+Lady Kew, too, on this occasion at least, was admirably good-humoured.
+She also when it was necessary could put a restraint on her temper, and,
+having this match very much at heart, chose to coax and to soothe her
+granddaughter rather than to endeavour to scold and frighten her.
+
+"Why do you desire this marriage so much, grandmamma," the girl asked.
+"My cousin is not very much in love,--at least I should fancy not," she
+added, blushing. "I am bound to own Lord Kew is not in the least eager,
+and I think if you were to tell him to wait for five years he would be
+quite willing. Why should you be so very anxious?"
+
+"Why, my dear? Because I think young ladies who want to go and work in
+the fields, should make hay while the sun shines; because I think it is
+high time that Kew should ranger himself; because I am sure he will make
+the best husband, and Ethel the prettiest Countess in England." And
+the old lady, seldom exhibiting any signs of affection, looked at her
+granddaughter very fondly. From her Ethel looked up into the glass,
+which very likely repeated on its shining face the truth her elder
+had just uttered. Shall we quarrel with the girl for that dazzling
+reflection; for owning that charming truth, and submitting to the
+conscious triumph? Give her her part of vanity, of youth, of desire to
+rule and be admired. Meanwhile Mr. Clive's drawings have been crackling
+in the fireplace at her feet, and the last spark of that combustion is
+twinkling out unheeded.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII. Lady Kew at the Congress
+
+
+When Lady Kew heard that Madame d'Ivry was at Baden, and was informed at
+once of the French lady's graciousness towards the Newcome family, and
+of her fury against Lord Kew, the old Countess gave a loose to that
+energetic temper with which nature had gifted her; a temper which she
+tied up sometimes and kept from barking and biting; but which when
+unmuzzled was an animal of whom all her ladyship's family had a just
+apprehension. Not one of them but in his or her time had been wounded,
+lacerated, tumbled over, otherwise frightened or injured by this unruly
+brute. The cowards brought it sops and patted it; the prudent gave it a
+clear berth, and walked round so as not to meet it; but woe be to those
+of the family who had to bring the meal, and prepare the litter, and (to
+speak respectfully) share the kennel with Lady Kew's "Black Dog!" Surely
+a fine furious temper, if accompanied with a certain magnanimity and
+bravery which often go together with it, is one of the most precious and
+fortunate gifts with which a gentleman or lady can be endowed. A person
+always ready to fight is certain of the greatest consideration amongst
+his or her family circle. The lazy grow tired of contending with him;
+the timid coax and flatter him; and as almost every one is timid or
+lazy, a bad-tempered man is sure to have his own way. It is he who
+commands, and all the others obey. If he is a gourmand, he has' what he
+likes for dinner; and the tastes of all the rest are subservient to him.
+She (we playfully transfer the gender, as a bad temper is of both sexes)
+has the place which she likes best in the drawing-room; nor do her
+parents, nor her brothers and sisters, venture to take her favourite
+chair. If she wants to go to a party, mamma will dress herself in spite
+of her headache; and papa, who hates those dreadful soirees, will go
+upstairs after dinner and put on his poor old white neckcloth, though
+he has been toiling at chambers all day, and must be there early in the
+morning--he will go out with her, we say, and stay for the cotillon. If
+the family are taking their tour in the summer, it is she who ordains
+whither they shall go, and when they shall stop. If he comes home late,
+the dinner is kept for him, and not one dares to say a word though ever
+so hungry. If he is in a good humour, how every one frisks about and is
+happy! How the servants jump up at his bell and run to wait upon him!
+How they sit up patiently, and how eagerly they rush out to fetch cabs
+in the rain! Whereas for you and me, who have the tempers of angels, and
+never were known to be angry or to complain, nobody cares whether we are
+pleased or not. Our wives go to the milliners and send us the bill, and
+we pay it; our John finishes reading the newspaper before he answers
+our bell, and brings it to us; our sons loll in the arm-chair which
+we should like; fill the house with their young men, and smoke in the
+dining-room; our tailors fit us badly; our butchers give us the youngest
+mutton; our tradesmen dun us much more quickly than other people's,
+because they know we are good-natured; and our servants go out whenever
+they like, and openly have their friends to supper in the kitchen. When
+Lady Kew said Sic volo, sic jubeo, I promise you few persons of her
+ladyship's belongings stopped, before they did her biddings, to ask her
+reasons.
+
+If, which very seldom happens, there are two such imperious and
+domineering spirits in a family, unpleasantries of course will arise
+from their contentions; or, if out of doors the family Bajazet meets
+with some other violent Turk, dreadful battles ensue, all the allies
+on either side are brought in, and the surrounding neighbours perforce
+engaged in the quarrel. This was unluckily the case in the present
+instance. Lady Kew, unaccustomed to have her will questioned at home,
+liked to impose it abroad. She judged the persons around her with great
+freedom of speech. Her opinions were quoted, as people's sayings will
+be; and if she made bitter speeches, depend on it they lost nothing in
+the carrying. She was furious against Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry, and
+exploded in various companies whenever that lady's name was mentioned.
+"Why was she not with her husband? Why was the poor old Duke left to
+his gout, and this woman trailing through the country with her vagabond
+court of billiard-markers at her heels? She to call herself Mary Queen
+of Scots, forsooth!--well, she merited the title in some respects,
+though she had not murdered her husband as yet. Ah! I should like to be
+Queen Elizabeth if the Duchess is Queen of Scots!" said the old lady,
+shaking her old fist. And these sentiments being uttered in public, upon
+the promenade, to mutual friends, of course the Duchess had the benefit
+of Lady Kew's remarks a few minutes after they were uttered; and her
+grace, and the distinguished princes, counts, and noblemen in her
+court, designated as billiard-markers by the old Countess, returned the
+latter's compliments with pretty speeches of their own. Scandals were
+dug up respecting her ladyship, so old that one would have thought them
+forgotten these forty years,--so old that they happened before most of
+the Newcomes now extant were born, and surely therefore are out of the
+province of this contemporary biography. Lady Kew was indignant with her
+daughter (there were some moments when any conduct of her friends did
+not meet her ladyship's approbation) even for the scant civility with
+which Lady Anne had received the Duchess's advances. "Leave a card
+upon her!--yes, send a card by one of your footmen; but go in to see
+her--because she was at the window and saw you drive up.--Are you mad,
+Anne? That was the very reason you should not have come out of your
+carriage. But you are so weak and good-natured, that if a highwayman
+stopped you, you would say, 'Thank you, sir,' as you gave him your
+purse: yes, and if Mrs. Macheath called on you afterwards you would
+return the visit!"
+
+Even had these speeches been made about the Duchess, and some of them
+not addressed to her, things might have gone on pretty well. If we
+quarrelled with all the people who abuse us behind our backs, and began
+to tear their eyes out as soon as we set ours on them, what a life it
+would be, and when should we have any quiet? Backbiting is all fair in
+society. Abuse me, and I will abuse you; but let us be friends when we
+meet. Have not we all entered a dozen rooms, and been sure, from
+the countenances of the amiable persons present, that they had been
+discussing our little peculiarities, perhaps as we were on the stairs?
+Was our visit, therefore, the less agreeable? Did we quarrel and say
+hard words to one another's faces? No--we wait until some of our dear
+friends take their leave, and then comes our turn. My back is at my
+neighbour's service; as soon as that is turned let him make what
+faces he thinks proper: but when we meet we grin and shake hands like
+well-bred folk, to whom clean linen is not more necessary than a clean
+sweet-looking countenance, and a nicely got-up smile, for company.
+
+Here was Lady Kew's mistake. She wanted, for some reason, to drive
+Madame d'Ivry out of Baden; and thought there were no better means of
+effecting this object than by using the high hand, and practising those
+frowns upon the Duchess which had scared away so many other persons. But
+the Queen of Scots was resolute, too, and her band of courtiers fought
+stoutly round about her. Some of them could not pay their bills, and
+could not retreat: others had courage, and did not choose to fly.
+Instead of coaxing and soothing Madame d'Ivry, Madame de Kew thought by
+a brisk attack to rout and dislodge her. She began on almost the
+very first occasion when the ladies met. "I was so sorry to hear that
+Monsieur le Duc was ill at Bagneres, Madame la Duchesse," the old lady
+began on their very first meeting, after the usual salutations had taken
+place.
+
+"Madame la Comtesse is very kind to interest herself in Monsieur
+d'Ivry's health. Monsieur le Duc at his age is not disposed to travel.
+You, dear miladi, are more happy in being always able to retain the gout
+des voyages!"
+
+"I come to my family! my dear Duchess."
+
+"How charmed they must be to possess you! Miladi Anne, you must be
+inexpressibly consoled by the presence of a mother so tender! Permit me
+to present Madame la Comtesse de la Cruchecassee to Madame la Comtesse
+de Kew. Miladi is sister to that amiable Marquis of Steyne, whom you
+have known, Ambrosine! Madame la Baronne de Schlangenbad, Miladi Kew.
+Do you not see the resemblance to milor? These ladies have enjoyed the
+hospitalities--the splendours of Gaunt House. They were of those famous
+routs of which the charming Mistress Crawley, la semillante Becki,
+made part! How sad the Hotel de Gaunt must be under the present
+circumstances! Have you heard, miladi, of the charming Mistress Becki?
+Monsieur le Duc describes her as the most spirituelle Englishwoman he
+ever met." The Queen of Scots turns and whispers her lady of honour, and
+shrugs and taps her forehead. Lady Kew knows that Madame d'Ivry speaks
+of her nephew, the present Lord Steyne, who is not in his right mind.
+The Duchess looks round, and sees a friend in the distance whom she
+beckons. "Comtesse, you know already monsieur the Captain Blackball? He
+makes the delight of our society!" A dreadful man with a large cigar,
+a florid waistcoat, and billiards written on his countenance, swaggers
+forward at the Duchess's summons. The Countess of Kew has not gained
+much by her attack. She has been presented to Cruchecassee and
+Schlangenbad. She sees herself on the eve of becoming the acquaintance
+of Captain Blackball.
+
+"Permit me, Duchess, to choose my English friends at least for myself,"
+says Lady Kew, drumming her foot.
+
+"But, madam, assuredly! You do not love this good Monsieur de Blackball?
+Eh! the English manners are droll, pardon me for saying so. It is
+wonderful how proud you are as a nation, and how ashamed you are of your
+compatriots!"
+
+"There are some persons who are ashamed of nothing, Madame la Duchesse,"
+cries Lady Kew; losing her temper.
+
+"Is that gracieusete for me? How much goodness! This good Monsieur de
+Blackball is not very well bred; but, for an Englishman, he is not too
+bad. I have met with people who are more ill-bred than Englishmen in my
+travels."
+
+"And they are?" said Lady Anne, who had been in vain endeavouring to put
+an end to this colloquy.
+
+"Englishwomen, madam! I speak not for you. You are kind; you--you are
+too soft, dear Lady Anne, for a persecutor."
+
+The counsels of the worldly woman who governed and directed that branch
+of the Newcome family of whom it is our business to speak now for a
+little while, bore other results than those which the elderly lady
+desired and foresaw. Who can foresee everything and always? Not the
+wisest among us. When his Majesty Louis XIV., jockeyed his grandson on
+to the throne of Spain (founding thereby the present revered dynasty
+of that country), did he expect to peril his own, and bring all Europe
+about his royal ears? Could a late King of France, eager for the
+advantageous establishment of one of his darling sons, and anxious
+to procure a beautiful Spanish princess, with a crown and kingdom in
+reversion, for the simple and obedient youth, ever suppose that the
+welfare of his whole august race and reign would be upset by that smart
+speculation? We take only the most noble examples to illustrate the
+conduct of such a noble old personage as her ladyship of Kew, who
+brought a prodigious deal of trouble upon some of the innocent members
+of her family, whom no doubt she thought to better in life by her
+experienced guidance and undoubted worldly wisdom. We may be as deep as
+Jesuits, know the world ever so well, lay the best-ordered plans, and
+the profoundest combinations, and by a certain not unnatural turn of
+fate, we, and our plans and combinations, are sent flying before the
+wind. We may be as wise as Louis Philippe, that many-counselled Ulysses
+whom the respectable world admired so; and after years of patient
+scheming, and prodigies of skill, after coaxing, wheedling, doubling,
+bullying, wisdom, behold yet stronger powers interpose: and schemes, and
+skill and violence, are nought.
+
+Frank and Ethel, Lady Kew's grandchildren, were both the obedient
+subjects of this ancient despot: this imperious old Louis XIV. in a
+black front and a cap and ribbon, this scheming old Louis Philippe in
+tabinet; but their blood was good and their tempers high; and for all
+her bitting and driving, and the training of her mange, the generous
+young colts were hard to break. Ethel, at this time, was especially
+stubborn in training, rebellious to the whip, and wild under harness;
+and the way in which Lady Kew managed her won the admiration of her
+family: for it was a maxim among these folks that no one could manage
+Ethel but Lady Kew. Barnes said no one could manage his sister but
+his grandmother. He couldn't, that was certain. Mamma never tried, and
+indeed was so good-natured, that rather than ride the filly, she would
+put the saddle on her own back and let the filly ride her; no, there was
+no one but her ladyship capable of managing that girl, Barnes owned, who
+held Lady Kew in much respect and awe. "If the tightest hand were not
+kept on her, there's no knowing what she mightn't do," said her
+brother. "Ethel Newcome, by Jove, is capable of running away with the
+writing-master."
+
+After poor Jack Belsize's mishap and departure, Barnes's own bride
+showed no spirit at all, save one of placid contentment. She came at
+call and instantly, and went through whatever paces her owner demanded
+of her. She laughed whenever need was, simpered and smiled when spoken
+to, danced whenever she was asked; drove out at Barnes's side in Kew's
+phaeton, and received him certainly not with warmth, but with politeness
+and welcome. It is difficult to describe the scorn with which her
+sister-in-law regarded her. The sight of the patient timid little thing
+chafed Ethel, who was always more haughty and flighty and bold when in
+Clara's presence than at any other time. Her ladyship's brother, Captain
+Lord Viscount Rooster, before mentioned, joined the family party at
+this interesting juncture. My Lord Rooster found himself surprised,
+delighted, subjugated by Miss Newcome, her wit and spirit. "By Jove, she
+is a plucky one," his lordship exclaimed. "To dance with her is the best
+fun in life. How she pulls all the other girls to pieces, by Jove, and
+how splendidly she chaffs everybody! But," he added with the shrewdness
+and sense of humour which distinguished the young officer, "I'd rather
+dance with her than marry her--by a doosid long score--I don't envy you
+that part of the business, Kew, my boy." Lord Kew did not set himself up
+as a person to be envied. He thought his cousin beautiful: and with
+his grandmother, that she would make a very handsome Countess; and he
+thought the money which Lady Kew would give or leave to the young couple
+a very welcome addition to his means.
+
+On the next night, when there was a ball at the room, Miss Ethel chose
+to appear in a toilette the very grandest and finest which she had
+ever assumed, who was ordinarily exceedingly simple in her attire,
+and dressed below the mark of the rest of the world. Her clustering
+ringlets, her shining white shoulders, her splendid raiment (I believe
+indeed it was her court-dress which the young lady assumed) astonished
+all beholders. She errased all other beauties by her appearance; so much
+so that Madame d'Ivry's court could not but look, the men in admiration,
+the women in dislike, at this dazzling young creature. None of the
+countesses, duchesses, princesses, Russ, Spanish, Italian, were so fine
+or so handsome. There were some New York ladies at Baden as there are
+everywhere else in Europe now. Not even these were more magnificent than
+Miss Ethel. General Jeremiah J. Bung's lady owned that Miss Newcome
+was fit to appear in any party in Fourth Avenue. She was the only
+well-dressed English girl Mrs. Bung had seen in Europe. A young German
+Durchlaucht deigned to explain to his aide-de-camp how very handsome he
+thought Miss Newcome. All our acquaintances were of one mind. Mr. Jones
+of England pronounced her stunning; the admirable Captain Blackball
+examined her points with the skill of an amateur, and described them
+with agreeable frankness. Lord Rooster was charmed as he surveyed her,
+and complimented his late companion-in-arms on the possession of such a
+paragon. Only Lord Kew was not delighted--nor did Miss Ethel mean that
+he should be. She looked as splendid as Cinderella in the prince's
+palace. But what need for all this splendour? this wonderful toilette?
+this dazzling neck and shoulders, whereof the brightness and beauty
+blinded the eyes of lookers-on? She was dressed as gaudily as an actress
+of the Varietes going to a supper at Trois Freres. "It was Mademoiselle
+Mabille en habit de coeur," Madame d'Ivry remarked to Madame
+Schlangenbad. Barnes, who with his bride-elect for a partner made a
+vis-a-vis for his sister and the admiring Lord Rooster, was puzzled
+likewise by Ethel's countenance and appearance. Little Lady Clara looked
+like a little schoolgirl dancing before her.
+
+One, two, three, of the attendants of her Majesty the Queen of Scots
+were carried off in the course of the evening by the victorious young
+beauty, whose triumph had the effect, which the headstrong girl perhaps
+herself anticipated, of mortifying the Duchesse d'Ivry, of exasperating
+old Lady Kew, and of annoying the young nobleman to whom Miss Ethel
+was engaged. The girl seemed to take a pleasure in defying all three, a
+something embittered her, alike against her friends and her enemies.
+The old dowager chaffed and vented her wrath upon Lady Anne and Barnes.
+Ethel kept the ball alive by herself almost. She refused to go home,
+declining hints and commands alike. She was engaged for ever so many
+dances more. Not dance with Count Punter? it would be rude to leave
+him after promising him. Not waltz with Captain Blackball? He was not a
+proper partner for her? Why then did Kew know him? Lord Kew walked and
+talked with Captain Blackball every day. Was she to be so proud as
+not to know Lord Kew's friends? She greeted the Captain with a most
+fascinating smile as he came up whilst the controversy was pending, and
+ended it by whirling round the room in his arms.
+
+Madame d'Ivry viewed with such pleasure as might be expected the
+defection of her adherents, and the triumph of her youthful rival, who
+seemed to grow more beautiful with each waltz, so that the other dancers
+paused to look at her, the men breaking out in enthusiasm, the reluctant
+women being forced to join in the applause. Angry as she was, and
+knowing how Ethel's conduct angered her grandson, old Lady Kew could not
+help admiring the rebellious beauty, whose girlish spirit was more than
+a match for the imperious dowager's tough old resolution. As for Mr.
+Barnes's displeasure, the girl tossed her saucy head, shrugged her fair
+shoulders, and passed on with a scornful laugh. In a word, Miss Ethel
+conducted herself as a most reckless and intrepid young flirt, using her
+eyes with the most consummate effect, chattering with astounding gaiety,
+prodigal of smiles, gracious thanks and killing glances. What wicked
+spirit moved her? Perhaps had she known the mischief she was doing, she
+would have continued it still.
+
+The sight of this wilfulness and levity smote poor Lord Kew's honest
+heart with cruel pangs of mortification. The easy young nobleman
+had passed many a year of his life in all sorts of wild company. The
+chaumiere knew him, and the balls of Parisian actresses, the coulisses
+of the opera at home and abroad. Those pretty heads of ladies whom
+nobody knows, used to nod their shining ringlets at Kew, from private
+boxes at theatres, or dubious Park broughams. He had run the career of
+young men of pleasure, and laughed and feasted with jolly prodigals and
+their company. He was tired of it: perhaps he remembered an earlier
+and purer life, and was sighing to return to it. Living as he had done
+amongst the outcasts, his ideal of domestic virtue was high and pure. He
+chose to believe that good women were entirely good. Duplicity he could
+not understand; ill-temper shocked him: wilfulness he seemed to fancy
+belonged only to the profane and wicked; not to good girls, with good
+mothers, in honest homes. Their nature was to love their families; to
+obey their parents; to tend their poor; to honour their husbands; to
+cherish their children. Ethel's laugh woke him up from one of these
+simple reveries very likely, and then she swept round the ballroom
+rapidly, to the brazen notes of the orchestra. He never offered to dance
+with her more than once in the evening; went away to play, and returned
+to find her still whirling to the music. Madame d'Ivry remarked
+his tribulation and gloomy face, though she took no pleasure at his
+discomfiture, knowing that Ethel's behaviour caused it.
+
+In plays and novels, and I dare say in real life too sometimes, when the
+wanton heroine chooses to exert her powers of fascination, and to flirt
+with Sir Harry or the Captain, the hero, in a pique, goes off and makes
+love to somebody else: both acknowledge their folly after a while, shake
+hands, and are reconciled, and the curtain drops, or the volume ends.
+But there are some people too noble and simple for these amorous scenes
+and smirking artifices. When Kew was pleased he laughed, when he was
+grieved he was silent. He did not deign to hide his grief or pleasure
+under disguises. His error, perhaps, was in forgetting that Ethel was
+very young; that her conduct was not design so much as girlish mischief
+and high spirits; and that if young men have their frolics, sow their
+wild oats, and enjoy their pleasure, young women may be permitted
+sometimes their more harmless vagaries of gaiety, and sportive outbreaks
+of wilful humour.
+
+When she consented to go home at length, Lord Kew brought Miss Newcome's
+little white cloak for her (under the hood of which her glossy curls,
+her blushing cheeks, and bright eyes looked provokingly handsome), and
+encased her in this pretty garment without uttering one single word.
+She made him a saucy curtsey in return for this act of politeness, which
+salutation he received with a grave bow; and then he proceeded to cover
+up old Lady Kew, and to conduct her ladyship to her chariot. Miss Ethel
+chose to be displeased at her cousin's displeasure. What were balls made
+for but that people should dance? She a flirt? She displease Lord Kew?
+If she chose to dance, she would dance; she had no idea of his giving
+himself airs; besides it was such fun taking away the gentlemen of Mary
+Queen of Scots' court from her; such capital fun! So she went to bed,
+singing and performing wonderful roulades as she lighted her candle and
+retired to her room. She had had such a jolly evening!! such famous fun,
+and, I dare say (but how shall a novelist penetrate these mysteries?),
+when her chamber door was closed, she scolded her maid and was as cross
+as two sticks. You see there come moments of sorrow after the most
+brilliant victories; and you conquer and rout the enemy utterly, and
+then regret that you fought.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV. The End of the Congress of Baden
+
+
+Mention has been made of an elderly young person from Ireland, engaged
+by Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry, as companion and teacher of English for
+her little daughter. When Miss O'Grady, as she did some time afterwards,
+quitted Madame d'Ivry's family, she spoke with great freedom regarding
+the behaviour of that duchess, and recounted horrors which she, the
+latter, had committed. A number of the most terrific anecdotes issued
+from the lips of the indignant Miss, whose volubility Lord Kew was
+obliged to check, not choosing that his countess, with whom he was
+paying a bridal visit to Paris, should hear such dreadful legends. It
+was there that Miss O'Grady, finding herself in misfortune, and reading
+of Lord Kew's arrival at the Hotel Bristol, waited upon his lordship
+and the Countess of Kew, begging them to take tickets in a raffle for
+an invaluable ivory writing-desk, sole relic of her former prosperity,
+which she proposed to give her friends the chance of acquiring: in fact,
+Miss O'Grady lived for some years on the produce of repeated raffles for
+this beautiful desk: many religious ladies of the Faubourg St. Germain
+taking an interest in her misfortunes, and alleviating them by the
+simple lottery system. Protestants as well as Catholics were permitted
+to take shares in Miss O'Grady's raffles; and Lord Kew, good-natured
+then as always, purchased so many tickets, that the contrite O'Grady
+informed him of a transaction which had nearly affected his happiness,
+and in which she took a not very creditable share. "Had I known your
+lordship's real character," Miss O'G was pleased to say, "no tortures
+would have induced me to do an act for which I have undergone penance.
+It was that black-hearted woman, my lord, who maligned your lordship
+to me: that woman whom I called friend once, but who is the most false,
+depraved, and dangerous of her sex." In this way do ladies' companions
+sometimes speak of ladies when quarrels separate them, when confidential
+attendants are dismissed, bearing away family secrets in their minds,
+and revenge in their hearts.
+
+The day after Miss Ethel's feats at the assembly, old Lady Kew went over
+to advise her granddaughter, and to give her a little timely warning
+about the impropriety of flirtations; above all, with such men as are
+to be found at watering-places, persons who are never seen elsewhere in
+society. "Remark the peculiarities of Kew's temper, who never flies into
+a passion like you and me, my dear," said the old lady (being determined
+to be particularly gracious and cautious); "when once angry he remains
+so, and is so obstinate that it is almost impossible to coax him into
+good-humour. It is much better, my love, to be like us," continued the
+old lady, "to fly out in a rage and have it over; but que voulez-vous?
+such is Frank's temper, and we must manage him." So she went on, backing
+her advice by a crowd of examples drawn from the family history; showing
+how Kew was like his grandfather, her own poor husband; still more like
+his late father, Lord Walham; between whom and his mother there had been
+differences, chiefly brought on by my Lady Walham, of course, which had
+ended in the almost total estrangement of mother and son. Lady Kew then
+administered her advice, and told her stories with Ethel alone for a
+listener; and in a most edifying manner, she besought Miss Newcome
+to menager Lord Kew's susceptibilities, as she valued her own future
+comfort in life, as well as the happiness of a most amiable man, of
+whom, if properly managed, Ethel might make what she pleased. We have
+said Lady Kew managed everybody, and that most of the members of her
+family allowed themselves to be managed by her ladyship.
+
+Ethel, who had permitted her grandmother to continue her sententious
+advice, while she herself sat tapping her feet on the floor, and
+performing the most rapid variations of that air which is called the
+Devil's Tattoo, burst out, at length, to the elder lady's surprise, with
+an outbreak of indignation, a flushing face, and a voice quivering with
+anger.
+
+"This most amiable man," she cried out, "that you design for me, I know
+everything about this most amiable man, and thank you and my family for
+the present you make me! For the past year, what have you been doing?
+Every one of you! my father, my brother, and you yourself, have been
+filling my ears wit cruel reports against a poor boy, whom you chose
+to depict as everything that was dissolute and wicked, when there was
+nothing against him; nothing, but that he was poor. Yes, you yourself,
+grandmamma, have told me many and many a time, that Clive Newcome was
+not a fit companion for us; warned me against his bad courses, and
+painted him as extravagant, unprincipled, I don't know how bad. How bad!
+I know how good he is; how upright, generous, and truth-telling: though
+there was not a day until lately, that Barnes did not make some wicked
+story against him,--Barnes, who, I believe, is bad himself, like--like
+other young men. Yes, I am sure there was something about Barnes in that
+newspaper which my father took away from me. And you come, and you lift
+up your hands, and shake your head, because I dance with one gentleman
+or another. You tell me I am wrong; mamma has told me so this morning.
+Barnes, of course, has told me so, and you bring me Frank as a pattern,
+and tell me to love and honour and obey him! Look here," and she drew
+out a paper and put it into Lady Kew's hands. "Here is Kew's history,
+and I believe it is true; yes, I am sure it is true."
+
+The old dowager lifted her eyeglass to her black eyebrow, and read
+a paper written in English, and bearing no signature, in which many
+circumstances of Lord Kew's life were narrated for poor Ethel's benefit.
+It was not a worse life than that of a thousand young men of pleasure,
+but there were Kew's many misdeeds set down in order: such a catalogue
+as we laugh at when Leporello trolls it, and sings his master's
+victories in France, Italy, and Spain. Madame d'Ivry's name was not
+mentioned in this list, and Lady Kew felt sure that the outrage came
+from her.
+
+With real ardour Lady Kew sought to defend her grandson from some of
+the attacks here made against him; and showed Ethel that the person who
+could use such means of calumniating him, would not scruple to resort to
+falsehood in order to effect her purpose.
+
+"Her purpose!" cries Ethel. "How do you know it is a woman?" Lady Kew
+lapsed into generalities. She thought the handwriting was a woman's--at
+least it was not likely that a man should think of addressing an
+anonymous letter to a young lady, and so wreaking his hatred upon
+Lord Kew. "Besides, Frank has had no rivals--except--except one young
+gentleman who has carried his paint-boxes to Italy," says Lady Kew. "You
+don't think your dear Colonel's son would leave such a piece of mischief
+behind him? You must act, my dear," continued her ladyship, "as if this
+letter had never been written at all; the person who wrote it no doubt
+will watch you. Of course we are too proud to allow him to see that we
+are wounded; and pray, pray do not think of letting poor Frank know a
+word about this horrid transaction."
+
+"Then the letter is true?" burst out Ethel. "You know it is true,
+grandmamma, and that is why you would have me keep it a secret from my
+cousin; besides," she added, with a little hesitation, "your caution
+comes too late, Lord Kew has seen the letter."
+
+"You fool!" screamed the old lady, "you were not so mad as to show it to
+him?"
+
+"I am sure the letter is true," Ethel said, rising up very haughtily.
+"It is not by calling me bad names that your ladyship will disprove it.
+Keep them, if you please, for my Aunt Julia; she is sick and weak,
+and can't defend herself. I do not choose to bear abuse from you, or
+lectures from Lord Kew. He happened to be here a short while since,
+when the letter arrived. He had been good enough to come to preach me a
+sermon on his own account. He to find fault with my actions!" cried
+Miss Ethel, quivering with wrath and clenching the luckless paper in her
+hand. "He to accuse me of levity, and to warn me against making improper
+acquaintances! He began his lectures too soon. I am not a lawful slave
+yet, and prefer to remain unmolested, at least as long as I am free."
+
+"And you told Frank all this, Miss Newcome, and you showed him that
+letter?" said the old lady.
+
+"The letter was actually brought to me whilst his lordship was in the
+midst of his sermon," Ethel replied. "I read it as he was making his
+speech," she continued, gathering anger and scorn as she recalled
+the circumstances of the interview. "He was perfectly polite in his
+language. He did not call me a fool or use a single other bad name. He
+was good enough to advise me and to make such virtuous pretty speeches,
+that if he had been a bishop he could not have spoken better; and as
+I thought the letter was a nice commentary on his lordship's sermon, I
+gave it to him. I gave it to him," cried the young woman, "and much good
+may it do him. I don't think my Lord Kew will preach to me again for
+some time."
+
+"I don't think he will indeed," said Lady Kew, in a hard dry voice. "You
+don't know what you may have done. Will you be pleased to ring the bell
+and order my carriage? I congratulate you on having performed a most
+charming morning's work."
+
+Ethel made her grandmother a very stately curtsey. I pity Lady Julia's
+condition when her mother reached home.
+
+All who know Lord Kew may be pretty sure that in that unlucky interview
+with Ethel, to which the young lady has alluded, he just said no single
+word to her that was not kind, and just, and gentle. Considering the
+relation between them, he thought himself justified in remonstrating
+with her as to the conduct which she chose to pursue, and in warning
+her against acquaintances of whom his own experience had taught him the
+dangerous character. He knew Madame d'Ivry and her friends so well that
+he would not have his wife-elect a member of their circle. He could not
+tell Ethel what he knew of those women and their history. She chose not
+to understand his hints--did not, very likely, comprehend them. She was
+quite young, and the stories of such lives as theirs had never been told
+before her. She was indignant at the surveillance which Lord Kew exerted
+over her, and the authority which he began to assume. At another moment
+and in a better frame of mind she would have been thankful for his
+care, and very soon and ever after she did justice to his many admirable
+qualities--his frankness, honesty, and sweet temper. Only her high
+spirit was in perpetual revolt at this time against the bondage in
+which her family strove to keep her. The very worldly advantages of the
+position which they offered her served but to chafe her the more. Had
+her proposed husband been a young prince with a crown to lay at her
+feet, she had been yet more indignant very likely, and more rebellious.
+Had Kew's younger brother been her suitor, or Kew in his place, she had
+been not unwilling to follow her parents' wishes. Hence the revolt in
+which she was engaged--the wayward freaks and outbreaks her haughty
+temper indulged in. No doubt she saw the justice of Lord Kew's reproofs.
+That self-consciousness was not likely to add to her good-humour. No
+doubt she was sorry for having shown Lord Kew the letter the moment
+after she had done that act, of which the poor young lady could not
+calculate the consequences that were now to ensue.
+
+Lord Kew, on glancing over the letter, at once divined the quarter
+whence it came. The portrait drawn of him was not unlike, as our
+characters described by those who hate us are not unlike. He had passed
+a reckless youth; indeed he was sad and ashamed of that past life,
+longed like the poor prodigal to return to better courses, and had
+embraced eagerly the chance afforded him of a union with a woman young,
+virtuous, and beautiful, against whom and against heaven he hoped to sin
+no more. If we have told or hinted at more of his story than will please
+the ear of modern conventionalism, I beseech the reader to believe that
+the writer's purpose at least is not dishonest, nor unkindly. The young
+gentleman hung his head with sorrow over that sad detail of his life and
+its follies. What would he have given to be able to say to Ethel, "This
+is not true."
+
+His reproaches to Miss Newcome of course were at once stopped by this
+terrible assault on himself. The letter had been put in the Baden
+post-box, and so had come to its destination. It was in a disguised
+handwriting. Lord Kew could form no idea even of the sex of the scribe.
+He put the envelope in his pocket, when Ethel's back was turned.
+He examined the paper when he left her. He could make little of the
+superscription or of the wafer which had served to close the note. He
+did not choose to caution Ethel as to whether she should burn the letter
+or divulge it to her friends. He took his share of the pain, as a boy at
+school takes his flogging, stoutly and in silence.
+
+When he saw Ethel again, which he did in an hour's time, the generous
+young gentleman held his hand out to her. "My dear," he said, "if you
+had loved me you never would have shown me that letter." It was his only
+reproof. After that he never again reproved or advised her.
+
+Ethel blushed. "You are very brave and generous, Frank," said, bending
+her head, "and I am captious and wicked." He felt the hot tear blotting
+on his hand from his cousin's downcast eyes.
+
+He kissed her little hand. Lady Anne, who was in the room with her
+children when these few words passed between the two in a very low tone,
+thought it was a reconciliation. Ethel knew it was a renunciation on
+Kew's part--she never liked him so much as at that moment. The young
+man was too modest and simple to guess himself what the girl's feelings
+were. Could he have told them, his fate and hers might have been
+changed.
+
+"You must not allow our kind letter-writing friend," Lord Kew continued,
+"to fancy we are hurt. We must walk out this afternoon, and we must
+appear very good friends."
+
+"Yes, always, Kew," said Ethel, holding out her hand again. The next
+minute her cousin was at the table carving roast-fowls, and distributing
+the portions to the hungry children.
+
+The assembly of the previous evening had been one of those which the
+fermier des jeux at Baden beneficently provides for the frequenters of
+the place, and now was to come off a much more brilliant entertainment,
+in which poor Clive, who is far into Switzerland by this time, was to
+have taken a share. The Bachelors had agreed to give a ball, one of
+the last entertainments of the season: a dozen or more of them had
+subscribed the funds, and we may be sure Lord Kew's name was at the head
+of the list, as it was of any list, of any scheme, whether of charity
+or fun. The English were invited, and the Russians were invited; the
+Spaniards and Italians, Poles, Prussians, and Hebrews; all the motley
+frequenters of the place, and the warriors in the Duke of Baden's army.
+Unlimited supper was set in the restaurant. The dancing-room glittered
+with extra lights, and a profusion of cut-paper flowers decorated the
+festive scene. Everybody was present, those crowds with whom our story
+has nothing to do, and those two or three groups of persons who
+enact minor or greater parts in it. Madame d'Ivry came in a dress of
+stupendous splendour, even more brilliant than that in which Miss Ethel
+had figured at the last assembly. If the Duchess intended to ecraser
+Miss Newcome by the superior magnificence of her toilet, she was
+disappointed. Miss Newcome wore a plain white frock on the occasion, and
+resumed, Madame d'Ivry said, her role of ingenue for that night.
+
+During the brief season in which gentlemen enjoyed the favour of Mary
+Queen of Scots, that wandering sovereign led them through all the paces
+and vagaries of a regular passion. As in a fair, where time is short
+and pleasures numerous, the master of the theatrical booth shows you a
+tragedy, a farce, and a pantomime, all in a quarter of an hour, having
+a dozen new audiences to witness his entertainments in the course of
+the forenoon; so this lady with her platonic lovers went through the
+complete dramatic course,--tragedies of jealousy, pantomimes of rapture,
+and farces of parting. There were billets on one side and the other;
+hints of a fatal destiny, and a ruthless, lynx-eyed tyrant, who held
+a demoniac grasp over the Duchess by means of certain secrets which he
+knew: there were regrets that we had not known each other sooner: why
+were we brought out of our convent and sacrificed to Monsieur le Duc?
+There were frolic interchanges of fancy and poesy: pretty bouderies;
+sweet reconciliations; yawns finally--and separation. Adolphe went out
+and Alphonse came in. It was the new audience; for which the bell rang,
+the band played, and the curtain rose; and the tragedy, comedy, and
+farce were repeated.
+
+Those Greenwich performers who appear in the theatrical pieces
+above-mentioned, make a great deal more noise than your stationary
+tragedians; and if they have to denounce a villain, to declare a
+passion, or to threaten an enemy, they roar, stamp, shake their fists,
+and brandish their sabres, so that every man who sees the play has
+surely a full pennyworth for his penny. Thus Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry
+perhaps a little exaggerated her heroines' parts liking to strike her
+audiences quickly, and also to change them often. Like good performers,
+she flung herself heart and soul into the business of the stage, and was
+what she acted. She was Phedre, and if in the first part of the play
+she was uncommonly tender to Hippolyte, in the second she hated him
+furiously. She was Medea, and if Jason was volage, woe to Creusa!
+Perhaps our poor Lord Kew had taken the first character in a performance
+with Madame d'Ivry; for his behaviour in which part it was difficult
+enough to forgive him; but when he appeared at Baden the affianced
+husband of one of the most beautiful young creatures in Europe,--when
+his relatives scorned Madame d'Ivry,--no wonder she was maddened and
+enraged, and would have recourse to revenge, steel, poison.
+
+There was in the Duchess's court a young fellow from the South of
+France, whose friends had sent him to faire son droit at Paris, where he
+had gone through the usual course of pleasure and studies of the young
+inhabitants of the Latin Quarter. He had at one time exalted republican
+opinions, and had fired his shot with distinction at St. Meri. He was a
+poet of some little note--a book of his lyrics, Les Rales d'un Asphyxie,
+having made a sensation at the time of their appearance. He drank great
+quantities of absinthe of a morning; smoked incessantly; played roulette
+whenever he could get a few pieces; contributed to a small journal, and
+was especially great in his hatred of l'infame Angleterre. Delenda est
+Carthago was tattooed beneath his shirt-sleeves. Fifine and Clarisse,
+young milliners of the students' district, had punctured this terrible
+motto on his manly right arm. Le leopard, emblem of England, was his
+aversion; he shook his fist at the caged monster in the Garden of
+Plants. He desired to have "Here lies an enemy of England" engraved upon
+his early tomb. He was skilled at billiards and dominoes, adroit in
+the use of arms, of unquestionable courage and fierceness. Mr. Jones of
+England was afraid of M. de Castillonnes, and cowered before his scowls
+and sarcasms. Captain Blackball, the other English aide-de-camp of the
+Duchesse d'Ivry, a warrior of undoubted courage, who had been "on the
+ground" more than once, gave him a wide berth, and wondered what the
+little beggar meant when he used to say, "Since the days of the Prince
+Noir, monsieur, my family has been at feud with l'Angleterre!" His
+family were grocers at Bordeaux, and his father's name was M. Cabasse.
+He had married a noble in the revolutionary times; and the son at
+Paris himself himself Victor Cabasse de Castillonnes; then Victor C. de
+Castillonnes; then M. de Castillonnes. One of the followers of the
+Black Prince had insulted a lady of the house of Castillonnes, when
+the English were lords of Guienne; hence our friend's wrath against the
+Leopard. He had written, and afterwards dramatised a terrific legend
+describing the circumstances, and the punishment of the Briton by a
+knight of the Castillonnes family. A more awful coward never existed
+in a melodrama than that felon English knight. His blanche-fille, of
+course, died of hopeless love for the conquering Frenchman, her father's
+murderer. The paper in which the feuilleton appeared died at the sixth
+number of the story. The theatre of the Boulevard refused the drama;
+so the author's rage against l'infame Albion was yet unappeased. On
+beholding Miss Newcome, Victor had fancied a resemblance between her and
+Agnes de Calverley, the blanche Miss of his novel and drama, and cast
+an eye of favour upon the young creature. He even composed verses in her
+honour (for I presume that the "Miss Betti" and the Princess Crimhilde
+of the poems which he subsequently published, were no other than Miss
+Newcome, and the Duchess, her rival). He had been one of the lucky
+gentlemen who had danced with Ethel on the previous evening. On the
+occasion of the ball, he came to her with a highflown compliment, and a
+request to be once more allowed to waltz with her--a request to which
+he expected a favourable answer, thinking, no doubt, that his wit, his
+powers of conversation, and the amour qui flambait dans son regard, had
+had their effect upon the charming Meess. Perhaps he had a copy of the
+very verses in his breast-pocket, with which he intended to complete his
+work of fascination. For her sake alone, he had been heard to say that
+he would enter into a truce with England, and forget the hereditary
+wrongs of his race.
+
+But the blanche Miss on this evening declined to waltz with him. His
+compliments were not of the least avail. He retired with them and his
+unuttered verses in his crumpled bosom. Miss Newcome only danced in one
+quadrille with Lord Kew, and left the party quite early, to the despair
+of many of the bachelors, who lost the fairest ornament of their ball.
+
+Lord Kew, however, had been seen walking with her in public, and
+particularly attentive to her during her brief appearance in the
+ballroom; and the old Dowager, who regularly attended all places of
+amusement, and was at twenty parties and six dinners the week before she
+died, thought fit to be particularly gracious to Madame d'Ivry upon this
+evening, and, far from shunning the Duchesse's presence or being rude
+to her, as on former occasions, was entirely smiling and good-humoured.
+Lady Kew, too, thought there had been a reconciliation between Ethel
+and her cousin. Lady Anne had given her mother some account of the
+handshaking. Kew's walk with Ethel, the quadrille which she had danced
+with him alone, induced the elder lady to believe that matters had been
+made up between the young people.
+
+So, by way of showing the Duchesse that her little shot of the morning
+had failed in its effect, as Frank left the room with his cousin, Lady
+Kew gaily hinted, "that the young earl was aux petits soins with Miss
+Ethel; that she was sure her old friend, the Duc d'Ivry, would be glad
+to hear that his godson was about to range himself. He would settle down
+on his estates. He would attend to his duties as an English peer and a
+country gentleman. We shall go home," says the benevolent Countess, "and
+kill the veau gras, and you shall see our dear prodigal will become a
+very quiet gentleman."
+
+The Duchesse said, "my Lady Kew's plan was most edifying. She was
+charmed to hear that Lady Kew loved veal; there were some who thought
+that meat rather insipid." A waltzer came to claim her hand at this
+moment; and as she twirled round the room upon that gentleman's arm,
+wafting odours as she moved, her pink silks, pink feathers, pink
+ribands, making a mighty rustling, the Countess of Kew had the
+satisfaction of thinking that she had planted an arrow in that
+shrivelled little waist, which Count Punter's arms embraced, and had
+returned the stab which Madame d'Ivry had delivered in the morning.
+
+Mr. Barnes, and his elect bride, had also appeared, danced, and
+disappeared. Lady Kew soon followed her young ones; and the ball went on
+very gaily, in spite of the absence of these respectable personages.
+
+Being one of the managers of the entertainment, Lord Kew returned to it
+after conducting Lady Anne and her daughter to their carriage, and now
+danced with great vigour, and with his usual kindness, selecting those
+ladies whom other waltzers rejected because they were too old, or too
+plain, or too stout, or what not. But he did not ask Madame d'Ivry to
+dance. He could condescend to dissemble so far as to hide the pain which
+he felt; but did not care to engage in that more advanced hypocrisy of
+friendship, which for her part, his old grandmother had not shown the
+least scruple in assuming.
+
+Amongst other partners, my lord selected that intrepid waltzer, the
+Graefinn von Gumpelheim, who, in spite of her age, size, and large
+family, never lost a chance of enjoying her favourite recreation. "Look
+with what a camel my lord waltzes," said M. Victor to Madame d'Ivry,
+whose slim waist he had the honour of embracing to the same music. "What
+man but an Englishman would ever select such a dromedary?"
+
+"Avant de se marier," said Madame d'Ivry, "il faut avouer que my lord se
+permet d'enormes distractions."
+
+"My lord marries himself! And when and whom?" cried the Duchesse's
+partner.
+
+"Miss Newcome. Do not you approve of his choice? I thought the eyes of
+Stenio" (the Duchess called M. Victor, Stenio) "looked with some favour
+upon that little person. She is handsome, even very handsome. Is it not
+so often in life, Stenio? Are not youth and innocence (I give Miss Ethel
+the compliment of her innocence, now surtout that the little painter is
+dismissed)--are we not cast into the arms of jaded roues? Tender young
+flowers, are we not torn from our convent gardens, and flung into a
+world of which the air poisons our pure life, and withers the sainted
+buds of hope and love and faith? Faith! The mocking world tramples
+on it, n'est-ce pas? Love! The brutal world strangles the heaven-born
+infant at its birth. Hope! It smiled at me in my little convent chamber,
+played among the flowers which I cherished, warbled with the birds that
+I loved. But it quitted me at the door of the world, Stenio. It folded
+its white wings and veiled its radiant face! In return for my young
+love, they gave me--sixty years, the dregs of a selfish heart, egotism
+cowering over its fire, and cold for all its mantle of ermine! In place
+of the sweet flowers of my young years, they gave me these, Stenio!" and
+she pointed to her feathers and her artificial roses. "Oh, I should
+like to crush them under my feet!" and she put out the neatest little
+slipper. The Duchesse was great upon her wrongs, and paraded her
+blighted innocence to every one who would feel interested by that
+piteous spectacle. The music here burst out more swiftly and melodiously
+than before; the pretty little feet forgot their desire to trample upon
+the world. She shrugged the lean little shoulders--"Eh!" said the Queen
+of Scots, "dansons et oublions;" and Stenio's arm once more surrounded
+her fairy waist (she called herself a fairy; other ladies called her a
+skeleton); and they whirled away in the waltz again and presently
+she and Stenio came bumping up against the stalwart Lord Kew and the
+ponderous Madame de Gumpelheim, as a wherry dashes against the oaken
+ribs of a steamer.
+
+The little couple did not fall; they were struck on to a neighbouring
+bench, luckily: but there was a laugh at the expense of Stenio and the
+Queen of Scots--and Lord Kew, settling his panting partner on to a seat,
+came up to make excuses for his awkwardness to the lady who had been its
+victim. At the laugh produced by the catastrophe, the Duchesse's eyes
+gleamed with anger.
+
+"M. de Castillonnes," she said to her partner, "have you had any quarrel
+with that Englishman?"
+
+"With ce milor? But no," said Stenio.
+
+"He did it on purpose. There has been no day but his family has insulted
+me!" hissed out the Duchesse, and at this moment Lord Kew came up to
+make his apologies. He asked a thousand pardons of Madame la Duchesse
+for being so maladroit.
+
+"Maladroit! et tres maladroit, monsieur," says Stenio, curling his
+moustache; "c'est bien le mot, monsieur!
+
+"Also, I make my excuses to Madame la Duchesse, which I hope she will
+receive," said Lord Kew. The Duchesse shrugged her shoulders and sunk
+her head.
+
+"When one does not know how to dance, one ought not to dance," continued
+the Duchesse's knight.
+
+"Monsieur is very good to give me lessons in dancing," said Lord Kew.
+
+"Any lessons which you please, milor!" cries Stenio; "and everywhere
+where you will them."
+
+Lord Kew looked at the little man with surprise. He could not understand
+so much anger for so trifling an accident, which happens a dozen times
+in every crowded ball. He again bowed to the Duchesse, and walked away.
+
+"This is your Englishman--your Kew, whom you vaunt everywhere," said
+Stenio to M. de Florac, who was standing by and witnessed the scene. "Is
+he simply bete, or is he poltron as well? I believe him to be both."
+
+"Silence, Victor!" cried Florac, seizing his arm, and drawing him away.
+"You know me, and that I am neither one or the other. Believe my word,
+that my Lord Kew wants neither courage nor wit!"
+
+"Will you be my witness, Florac?" continues the other.
+
+"To take him your excuses? yes. It is you who have insulted--"
+
+"Yes, parbleu, I have insulted!" says the Gascon.
+
+"--A man who never willingly offended soul alive. A man full of heart:
+the most frank: the most loyal. I have seen him put to the proof, and
+believe me he is all I say."
+
+"Eh! so much the better for me!" cried the Southron. "I shall have the
+honour of meeting a gallant man: and there will be two on the field."
+
+"They are making a tool of you, my poor Gascon," said M. de Florac, who
+saw Madame d'Ivry's eyes watching the couple. She presently took the arm
+of the noble Count de Punter, and went for fresh air into the adjoining
+apartment, where play was going on as usual; and Lord Kew and his friend
+Lord Rooster were pacing the room apart from the gamblers.
+
+My Lord Rooster, at something which Kew said, looked puzzled, and said,
+"Pooh, stuff, damned little Frenchman! Confounded nonsense!"
+
+"I was searching you, milor!" said Madame d'Ivry, in a most winning
+tone, tripping behind him with her noiseless little feet. "Allow me a
+little word. Your arm! You used to give it me once, mon filleul! I hope
+you think nothing of the rudeness of M. de Castillonnes; he is a foolish
+Gascon: he must have been too often to the buffet this evening."
+
+Lord Kew said, No, indeed, he thought nothing of de Castillonnes'
+rudeness.
+
+"I am so glad! These heroes of the salle-d'armes have not the commonest
+manners. These Gascons are always flamberge au vent. What would the
+charming Miss Ethel say, if she heard of the dispute?"
+
+"Indeed there is no reason why she should hear of it," said Lord Kew,
+"unless some obliging friend should communicate it to her."
+
+"Communicate it to her--the poor dear! who would be so cruel as to
+give her pain?" asked the innocent Duchesse. "Why do you look at me so,
+Frank?"
+
+"Because I admire you," said her interlocutor, with a bow. "I have never
+seen Madame la Duchesse to such advantage as to-day."
+
+"You speak in enigmas! Come back with me to the ballroom. Come and dance
+with me once more. You used to dance with me. Let us have one waltz
+more, Kew. And then, and then, in a day or two I shall go back to
+Monsieur le Duc, and tell him that his filleul is going to marry the
+fairest of all Englishwomen and to turn hermit in the country, and
+orator in the Chamber of Peers. You have wit! ah si--you have wit!" And
+she led back Lord Kew, rather amazed himself at what he was doing, into
+the ballroom; so that the good-natured people who were there, and who
+beheld them dancing, could not refrain from clapping their hands at the
+sight of this couple.
+
+The Duchess danced as if she was bitten by that Neapolitan spider which,
+according to the legend, is such a wonderful dance-incentor. She would
+have the music quicker and quicker. She sank on Kew's arm, and clung on
+his support. She poured out all the light of her languishing eyes
+into his face. Their glances rather confused than charmed him. But
+the bystanders were pleased; they thought it so good-hearted of
+the Duchesse, after the little quarrel, to make a public avowal of
+reconciliation!
+
+Lord Rooster looking on, at the entrance of the dancing-room, over
+Monsieur de Florac's shoulder, said, "It's all right! She's a clipper to
+dance, the little Duchess."
+
+"The viper!" said Florac, "how she writhes!"
+
+"I suppose that business with the Frenchman is all over," says Lord
+Rooster. "Confounded piece of nonsense."
+
+"You believe it finished? We shall see!" said Florac, who perhaps knew
+his fair cousin better. When the waltz was over, Kew led his partner to
+a seat, and bowed to her; but though she made room for him at her side,
+pointing to it, and gathering up her rustling robes so that he might sit
+down, he moved away, his face full of gloom. He never wished to be near
+her again. There was something more odious to him in her friendship than
+her hatred. He knew hers was the hand that had dealt that stab at him
+and Ethel in the morning. He went back and talked with his two friends
+in the doorway. "Couch yourself, my little Kiou," said Florac. "You are
+all pale. You were best in bed, mon garcon!"
+
+"She has made me promise to take her in to supper," Kew said, with a
+sigh.
+
+"She will poison you," said the other. "Why have they abolished the roue
+chez nous? My word of honour they should retabliche it for this woman."
+
+"There is one in the next room," said Kew, with a laugh, "Come, Vicomte,
+let us try our fortune," and he walked back into the play-room.
+
+That was the last night on which Lord Kew ever played a gambling game.
+He won constantly. The double zero seemed to obey him; so that the
+croupiers wondered at his fortune. Florac backed it; saying with the
+superstition of a gambler, "I am sure something goes to arrive to this
+boy." From time to time M. de Florac went back to the dancing-room,
+leaving his mise under Kew's charge. He always found his heaps
+increased; indeed the worthy Vicomte wanted a turn of luck in his
+favour. On one occasion he returned with a grave face, saying to
+Lord Rooster, "She has the other one in hand. We are going to see."
+"Trente-six encor! et rouge gagne," cried the croupier with his nasal
+tone, Monsieur de Florac's pockets overflowed with double Napoleons, and
+he stopped his play, luckily, for Kew putting down his winnings, once,
+twice, thrice, lost them all.
+
+When Lord Kew had left the dancing-room, Madame d'Ivry saw Stenio
+following him with fierce looks, and called back that bearded bard. "You
+were going to pursue M. de Kew," she said: "I knew you were. Sit down
+here, sir," and she patted him down on her seat with her fan.
+
+"Do you wish that I should call him back, madame?" said the poet, with
+the deepest tragic accents.
+
+"I can bring him when I want him, Victor," said the lady.
+
+"Let us hope others will be equally fortunate," the Gascon said, with
+one hand in his breast, the other stroking his moustache.
+
+"Fi, monsieur, que vous sentez le tabac! je vous le defends,
+entendez-vous, monsieur?"
+
+"Pourtant, I have seen the day when Madame la Duchesse did not disdain a
+cigar," said Victor. "If the odour incommodes, permit that I retire."
+
+"And you also would quit me, Stenio? Do you think I did not mark your
+eyes towards Miss Newcome? your anger when she refused you to dance? Ah!
+we see all. A woman does not deceive herself, do you see? You send me
+beautiful verses, Poet. You can write as well of a statue or a picture,
+of a rose or a sunset, as of the heart of a woman. You were angry just
+now because I danced with M. de Kew. Do you think in a woman's eyes
+jealousy is unpardonable?"
+
+"You know how to provoke it, madame," continued the tragedian.
+
+"Monsieur," replied the lady, with dignity, "am I to render you an
+account of all my actions, and ask your permission for a walk?"
+
+"In fact, I am but the slave, madame," groaned the Gascon, "I am not the
+master."
+
+"You are a very rebellious slave, monsieur," continues the lady, with a
+pretty moue, and a glance of the large eyes artfully brightened by
+her rouge. "Suppose--suppose I danced with M. de Kew, not for his
+sake--Heaven knows to dance with him is not a pleasure--but for yours.
+Suppose I do not want a foolish quarrel to proceed. Suppose I know that
+he is ni sot ni poltron as you pretend. I overheard you, sir, talking
+with one of the basest of men, my good cousin, M. de Florac: but it is
+not of him I speak. Suppose I know the Comte de Kew to be a man, cold
+and insolent, ill-bred, and grossier, as the men of his nation are--but
+one who lacks no courage--one who is terrible when roused; might I have
+no occasion to fear, not for him, but----"
+
+"But for me! Ah, Marie! Ah, madame! Believe you that a man of my blood
+will yield a foot to any Englishman? Do you know the story of my race?
+do you know that since my childhood I have vowed hatred to that nation?
+Tenez, madame, this M. Jones who frequents your salon, it was but
+respect for you that has enabled me to keep my patience with this stupid
+islander. This Captain Blackball, whom you distinguish, who certainly
+shoots well, who mounts well to horse, I have always thought his manners
+were those of the marker of a billiard. But I respect him because he has
+made war with Don Carlos against the English. But this young M. de Kew,
+his laugh crisps me the nerves; his insolent air makes me bound; in
+beholding him I said to myself, I hate you; think whether I love him
+better after having seen him as I did but now, madame!" Also, but this
+Victor did not say, he thought Kew had laughed at him at the beginning
+of the evening, when the blanche Miss had refused to dance with him.
+
+"Ah, Victor, it is not him, but you that I would save," said the
+Duchess. And the people round about, and the Duchess herself, afterwards
+said, yes, certainly, she had a good heart. She entreated Lord Kew;
+she implored M. Victor; she did everything in her power to appease the
+quarrel between him and the Frenchman.
+
+After the ball came the supper, which was laid at separate little
+tables, where parties of half a dozen enjoyed themselves. Lord Kew was
+of the Duchess's party, where our Gascon friend had not a seat. But
+being one of the managers of the entertainment, his lordship went about
+from table to table, seeing that the guests at each lacked nothing. He
+supposed too that the dispute with the Gascon had possibly come to an
+end; at any rate, disagreeable as the other's speech had been, he had
+resolved to put up with it, not having the least inclination to drink
+the Frenchman's blood, or to part with his own on so absurd a quarrel.
+He asked people in his good-natured way to drink wine with him; and
+catching M. Victor's eye scowling at him from a distant table, he sent
+a waiter with a champagne-bottle to his late opponent, and lifted his
+glass as a friendly challenge. The waiter carried the message to M.
+Victor, who, when he heard it, turned up his glass, and folded his arms
+in a stately manner. "M. de Castillonnes dit qu'il refuse, milor,"
+said the waiter, rather scared. "He charged me to bring that message
+to milor." Florac ran across to the angry Gascon. It was not while at
+Madame d'Ivry's table that Lord Kew sent his challenge and received
+his reply; his duties as steward had carried him away from that pretty
+early.
+
+Meanwhile the glimmering dawn peered into the windows of the
+refreshment-room, and behold, the sun broke in and scared all the
+revellers. The ladies scurried away like so many ghosts at cock-crow,
+some of them not caring to face that detective luminary. Cigars had been
+lighted ere this; the men remained smoking them with those sleepless
+German waiters still bringing fresh supplies of drink. Lord Kew gave
+the Duchesse d'Ivry his arm, and was leading her out; M. de Castillonnes
+stood scowling directly in their way, upon which, with rather an abrupt
+turn of the shoulder, and a "Pardon, monsieur," Lord Kew pushed by, and
+conducted the Duchesse to her carriage. She did not in the least see
+what had happened between the two gentlemen in the passage; she ogled,
+and nodded, and kissed her hands quite affectionately to Kew as the fly
+drove away.
+
+Florac in the meanwhile had seized his compatriot, who had drunk
+champagne copiously with others, if not with Kew, and was in vain
+endeavouring to make him hear reason. The Gascon was furious; he vowed
+that Lord Kew had struck him. "By the tomb of my mother," he bellowed,
+"I swear I will have his blood!" Lord Rooster was bawling out, "D----
+him, carry him to bed, and shut him up;" which remarks Victor did not
+understand, or two victims would doubtless have been sacrificed on his
+mamma's mausoleum.
+
+When Kew came back (as he was only too sure to do), the little Gascon
+rushed forward with a glove in his hand, and having an audience of
+smokers round about him, made a furious speech about England, leopards,
+cowardice, insolent islanders, and Napoleon at St. Helena; and demanded
+reason for Kew's conduct during the night. As he spoke, he advanced
+towards Lord Kew, glove in hand, and lifted it as if he was actually
+going to strike.
+
+"There is no need for further words," said Lord Kew, taking his cigar
+out of his mouth. "If you don't drop that glove, upon my word I will
+pitch you out of the window. Ha!--Pick the man up, somebody. You'll
+bear witness, gentlemen, I couldn't help myself. If he wants me in the
+morning, he knows where to find me."
+
+"I declare that my Lord Kew has acted with great forbearance, and under
+the most brutal provocation--the most brutal provocation, entendez-vows,
+M. Cabasse?" cried out M. de Florac, rushing forward to the Gascon, who
+had now risen; "monsieur's conduct has been unworthy of a Frenchman and
+a gallant homme."
+
+"D---- it, he has had it on his nob, though," said Lord Viscount
+Rooster, laconically.
+
+"Ah, Roosterre! ceci n'est pas pour rire," Florac cried sadly, as they
+both walked away with Lord Kew; "I wish that first blood was all that
+was to be shed in this quarrel"
+
+"Gaw! how he did go down!" cried Rooster, convulsed with laughter.
+
+"I am very sorry for it," said Kew, quite seriously; "I couldn't help
+it. God forgive me." And he hung down his head. He thought of the past,
+and its levities, and punishment coming after him pede claudo. It was
+with all his heart the contrite young man said "God forgive me." He
+would take what was to follow as the penalty of what had gone before.
+
+"Pallas te hoc vulnere, Pallas immolat, mon pauvre Kiou," said his
+French friend. And Lord Rooster, whose classical education had been much
+neglected, turned round and said, "Hullo, mate, what ship's that?"
+
+Viscount Rooster had not been two hours in bed, when the Count de Punter
+(formerly of the Black Jaegers) waited upon him upon the part of M. de
+Castillonnes and the Earl of Kew, who had referred him to the Viscount
+to arrange matters for a meeting between them. As the meeting must take
+place out of the Baden territory, and they ought to move before the
+police prevented them, the Count proposed that they should at once make
+for France; where, as it was an affair of honneur, they would assuredly
+be let to enter without passports.
+
+Lady Anne and Lady Kew heard that the gentlemen after the ball had all
+gone out on a hunting-party, and were not alarmed for four-and-twenty
+hours at least. On the next day none of them returned; and on the day
+after, the family heard that Lord Kew had met with rather a dangerous
+accident; but all the town knew he had been shot by M. de Castillonnes
+on one of the islands on the Rhine, opposite Kehl, where he was now
+lying.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV. Across the Alps
+
+
+Our discursive muse must now take her place in the little britzska in
+which Clive Newcome and his companions are travelling, and cross the
+Alps in that vehicle, beholding the snows on St. Gothard, and the
+beautiful region through which the Ticino rushes on its way to the
+Lombard lakes, and the corn-covered great plains of the Milanese; and
+that royal city, with the cathedral for its glittering crown, only less
+magnificent than the imperial dome of Rome. I have some long letters
+from Mr. Clive, written during this youthful tour, every step of which,
+from the departure at Baden, to the gate of Milan, he describes as
+beautiful; and doubtless, the delightful scenes through which the young
+man went, had their effect in soothing any private annoyances with which
+his journey commenced. The aspect of nature, in that fortunate route
+which he took, is so noble and cheering, that our private affairs and
+troubles shrink away abashed before that serene splendour. O sweet
+peaceful scene of azure lake, and snow-crowned mountain, so wonderfully
+lovely is your aspect, that it seems like heaven almost, and as if grief
+and care could not enter it! What young Clive's private cares were I
+knew not as yet in those days; and he kept them out of his letters; it
+was only in the intimacy of future life that some of these pains were
+revealed to me.
+
+Some three months after taking leave of Miss Ethel, our young gentleman
+found himself at Rome, with his friend Ridley still for a companion.
+Many of us, young or middle-aged, have felt that delightful shock which
+the first sight of the great city inspires. There is one other place of
+which the view strikes one with an emotion even greater than that with
+which we look at Rome, where Augustus was reigning when He saw the day,
+whose birthplace is separated but by a hill or two from the awful gates
+of Jerusalem. Who that has beheld both can forget that first aspect of
+either? At the end of years the emotion occasioned by the sight still
+thrills in your memory, and it smites you as at the moment when you
+first viewed it.
+
+The business of the present novel, however, lies neither with priest nor
+pagan, but with Mr. Clive Newcome, and his affairs and his companions at
+this period of his life. Nor, if the gracious reader expects to hear of
+cardinals in scarlet, and noble Roman princes and princesses, will he
+find such in this history. The only noble Roman into whose mansion our
+friend got admission was the Prince Polonia, whose footmen wear the
+liveries of the English royal family, who gives gentlemen and even
+painters cash upon good letters of credit; and, once or twice in a
+season, opens his transtiberine palace and treats his customers to a
+ball. Our friend Clive used jocularly to say, he believed there were no
+Romans. There were priests in portentous hats; there were friars with
+shaven crowns; there were the sham peasantry, who dressed themselves out
+in masquerade costumes, with bagpipe and goatskin, with crossed leggings
+and scarlet petticoats, who let themselves out to artists at so many
+pauls per sitting; but he never passed a Roman's door except to buy a
+cigar or to purchase a handkerchief. Thither, as elsewhere, we carry
+our insular habits with us. We have a little England at Paris, a little
+England at Munich, Dresden, everywhere. Our friend is an Englishman, and
+did at Rome as the English do.
+
+There was the polite English society, the society that flocks to see
+the Colosseum lighted up with blue fire, that flocks to the Vatican
+to behold the statues by torchlight, that hustles into the churches on
+public festivals in black veils and deputy-lieutenants' uniforms, and
+stares, and talks, and uses opera-glasses while the pontiffs of the
+Roman Church are performing its ancient rites, and the crowds of
+faithful are kneeling round the altars; the society which gives its
+balls and dinners, has its scandal and bickerings, its aristocrats,
+parvenus, toadies imported from Belgravia; has its club, its hunt,
+and its Hyde Park on the Pincio: and there is the other little English
+world, the broad-hatted, long-bearded, velvet-jacketed, jovial colony
+of the artists, who have their own feasts, haunts, and amusements by the
+side of their aristocratic compatriots, with whom but few of them have
+the honour to mingle.
+
+J. J. and Clive engaged pleasant lofty apartments in the Via Gregoriana.
+Generations of painters had occupied these chambers and gone their way.
+The windows of their painting-room looked into a quaint old garden,
+where there were ancient statues of the Imperial time, a babbling
+fountain and noble orange-trees with broad clustering leaves and golden
+balls of fruit, glorious to look upon. Their walks abroad were endlessly
+pleasant and delightful. In every street there were scores of pictures
+of the graceful characteristic Italian life, which our painters seem one
+and all to reject, preferring to depict their quack brigands, contadini,
+pifferari, and the like, because Thompson painted them before Jones, and
+Jones before Thompson, and so on, backwards into time. There were
+the children at play, the women huddled round the steps of the open
+doorways, in the kindly Roman winter; grim, portentous old hags, such as
+Michael Angelo painted, draped in majestic raggery; mothers and swarming
+bambins; slouching countrymen, dark of beard and noble of countenance,
+posed in superb attitudes, lazy, tattered, and majestic. There came the
+red troops, the black troops, the blue troops of the army of priests;
+the snuffy regiments of Capuchins, grave and grotesque; the trim French
+abbes; my lord the bishop, with his footman (those wonderful footmen);
+my lord the cardinal, in his ramshackle coach and his two, nay three,
+footmen behind him;--flunkeys, that look as if they had been dressed
+by the costumier of a British pantomime; coach with prodigious
+emblazonments of hats and coats-of-arms, that seems as if it came out of
+the pantomime too, and was about to turn into something else. So it is,
+that what is grand to some persons' eyes appears grotesque to others;
+and for certain sceptical persons, that step, which we have heard of,
+between the sublime and the ridiculous, is not visible.
+
+"I wish it were not so," writes Clive, in one of the letters wherein he
+used to pour his full heart out in those days. "I see these people at
+their devotions, and envy them their rapture. A friend, who belongs to
+the old religion, took me, last week, into a church where the Virgin
+lately appeared in person to a Jewish gentleman, flashed down upon
+him from heaven in light and splendour celestial, and, of course,
+straightway converted him. My friend bade me look at the picture, and,
+kneeling down beside me, I know prayed with all his honest heart that
+the truth might shine down upon me too; but I saw no glimpse of heaven
+at all. I saw but a poor picture, an altar with blinking candles, a
+church hung with tawdry strips of red and white calico. The good, kind
+W---- went away, humbly saying 'that such might have happened again if
+heaven so willed it.' I could not but feel a kindness and admiration for
+the good man. I know his works are made to square with his faith, that
+he dines on a crust, lives as chaste as a hermit, and gives his all to
+the poor.
+
+"Our friend J. J., very different to myself in so many respects, so
+superior in all, is immensely touched by these ceremonies. They seem to
+answer to some spiritual want of his nature, and he comes away satisfied
+as from a feast, where I have only found vacancy. Of course our first
+pilgrimage was to St. Peter's. What a walk! Under what noble shadows
+does one pass; how great and liberal the houses are, with generous
+casements and courts, and great grey portals which giants might get
+through and keep their turbans on. Why, the houses are twice as tall as
+Lamb Court itself; and over them hangs a noble dinge, a venerable mouldy
+splendour. Over the solemn portals are ancient mystic escutcheons--vast
+shields of princes and cardinals, such as Ariosto's knights might take
+down; and every figure about them is a picture by himself. At every
+turn there is a temple: in every court a brawling fountain. Besides
+the people of the streets and houses, and the army of priests black and
+brown, there's a great silent population of marble. There are battered
+gods tumbled out of Olympus and broken in the fall, and set up under
+niches and over fountains; there are senators namelessly, noselessly,
+noiselessly seated under archways, or lurking in courts and gardens. And
+then, besides these defunct ones, of whom these old figures may be said
+to be the corpses, there is the reigning family, a countless carved
+hierarchy of angels, saints, confessors of the latter dynasty which has
+conquered the court of Jove. I say, Pen, I wish Warrington would write
+the history of the Last of the Pagans. Did you never have a sympathy for
+them as the monks came rushing into their temples, kicking down their
+poor altars, smashing the fair calm faces of their gods, and sending
+their vestals a-flying? They are always preaching here about the
+persecution of the Christians. Are not the churches full of martyrs
+with choppers in their meek heads; virgins on gridirons; riddled St.
+Sebastians, and the like? But have they never persecuted in their
+turn? O me! You and I know better, who were bred up near to the pens of
+Smithfield, where Protestants and Catholics have taken their turn to be
+roasted.
+
+"You pass through an avenue of angels and saints on the bridge across
+Tiber, all in action; their great wings seem clanking, their marble
+garments clapping; St. Michael, descending upon the Fiend, has been
+caught and bronzified just as he lighted on the Castle of St. Angelo:
+his enemy doubtless fell crushing through the roof and so downwards.
+He is as natural as blank verse--that bronze angel-set, rhythmic,
+grandiose. You'll see, some day or other, he's a great sonnet, sir, I'm
+sure of that. Milton wrote in bronze; I am sure Virgil polished off his
+Georgics in marble--sweet calm shapes! exquisite harmonies of line! As
+for the Aeneid; that, sir, I consider to be so many bas-reliefs, mural
+ornaments which affect me not much.
+
+"I think I have lost sight of St. Peter's, haven't I? Yet it is big
+enough. How it makes your heart beat when you first see it! Ours did
+as we came in at night from Civita Vecchia, and saw a great ghostly
+darkling dome rising solemnly up into the grey night, and keeping us
+company ever so long as we drove, as if it had been an orb fallen out
+of heaven with its light put out. As you look at it from the Pincio, and
+the sun sets behind it, surely that aspect of earth and sky is one of
+the grandest in the world. I don't like to say that the facade of the
+church is ugly and obtrusive. As long as the dome overawes, that facade
+is supportable. You advance towards it--through, oh, such a noble court!
+with fountains flashing up to meet the sunbeams; and right and left of
+you two sweeping half-crescents of great columns; but you pass by the
+courtiers and up to the steps of the throne, and the dome seems to
+disappear behind it. It is as if the throne was upset, and the king had
+toppled over.
+
+"There must be moments, in Rome especially, when every man of friendly
+heart, who writes himself English and Protestant, must feel a pang
+at thinking that he and his countrymen are insulated from European
+Christendom. An ocean separates us. From one shore or the other one can
+see the neighbour cliffs on clear days: one must wish sometimes that
+there were no stormy gulf between us; and from Canterbury to Rome a
+pilgrim could pass, and not drown beyond Dover. Of the beautiful parts
+of the great Mother Church I believe among us many people have no idea;
+we think of lazy friars, of pining cloistered virgins, of ignorant
+peasants worshipping wood and stones, bought and sold indulgences,
+absolutions, and the like commonplaces of Protestant satire. Lo! yonder
+inscription, which blazes round the dome of the temple, so great and
+glorious it looks like heaven almost, and as if the words were written
+in stars, it proclaims to all the world, this is that Peter, and on this
+rock the Church shall be built, against which Hell shall not prevail.
+Under the bronze canopy his throne is lit with lights that have been
+burning before it for ages. Round this stupendous chamber are ranged
+the grandees of his court. Faith seems to be realised in their marble
+figures. Some of them were alive but yesterday; others, to be as blessed
+as they, walk the world even now doubtless; and the commissioners
+of heaven, here holding their court a hundred years hence, shall
+authoritatively announce their beatification. The signs of their power
+shall not be wanting. They heal the sick, open the eyes of the blind,
+cause the lame to walk to-day as they did eighteen centuries ago. Are
+there not crowds ready to bear witness to their wonders? Isn't there
+a tribunal appointed to try their claims; advocates to plead for and
+against; prelates and clergy and multitudes of faithful to back and
+believe them? Thus you shall kiss the hand of a priest to-day, who has
+given his to a friar whose bones are already beginning to work miracles,
+who has been the disciple of another whom the Church has just proclaimed
+a saint,--hand in hand they hold by one another till the line is lost
+up in heaven. Come, friend, let us acknowledge this, and go and kiss the
+toe of St. Peter. Alas! there's the Channel always between us; and we no
+more believe in the miracles of St. Thomas of Canterbury, than that the
+bones of His Grace John Bird, who sits in St. Thomas's chair presently,
+will work wondrous cures in the year 2000: that his statue will speak,
+or his portrait by Sir Thomas Lawrence will wink.
+
+"So, you see, at those grand ceremonies which the Roman Church exhibits
+at Christmas, I looked on as a Protestant. Holy Father on his throne or
+in his palanquin, cardinals with their tails and their train-bearers,
+mitred bishops and abbots, regiments of friars and clergy, relics
+exposed for adoration, columns draped, altars illuminated, incense
+smoking, organs pealing, and boxes of piping soprani, Swiss guards
+with slashed breeches and fringed halberts;--between us and all this
+splendour of old-world ceremony, there's an ocean flowing: and yonder
+old statue of Peter might have been Jupiter again, surrounded by a
+procession of flamens and augurs, and Augustus as Pontifex Maximus,
+to inspect the sacrifices,--and my feelings at the spectacle had been,
+doubtless, pretty much the same.
+
+"Shall I utter any more heresies? I am an unbeliever in Raphael's
+'Transfiguration'--the scream of that devil-possessed boy, in the lower
+part of the figure of eight (a stolen boy too), jars the whole music
+of the composition. On Michael Angelo's great wall, the grotesque and
+terrible are not out of place. What an awful achievement! Fancy the
+state of mind of the man who worked it--as alone, day after day, he
+devised and drew those dreadful figures! Suppose in the days of the
+Olympian dynasty, the subdued Titan rebels had been set to ornament a
+palace for Jove, they would have brought in some such tremendous work:
+or suppose that Michael descended to the Shades, and brought up this
+picture out of the halls of Limbo. I like a thousand and a thousand
+times better to think of Raphael's loving spirit. As he looked at women
+and children, his beautiful face must have shone like sunshine: his
+kind hand must have caressed the sweet figures as he formed them. If
+I protest against the 'Transfiguration,' and refuse to worship at that
+altar before which so many generations have knelt, there are hundreds of
+others which I salute thankfully. It is not so much in the set harangues
+(to take another metaphor), as in the daily tones and talk that his
+voice is so delicious. Sweet poetry, and music, and tender hymns drop
+from him: he lifts his pencil, and something gracious falls from it on
+the paper. How noble his mind must have been! it seems but to receive,
+and his eye seems only to rest on, what is great, and generous, and
+lovely. You walk through crowded galleries, where are pictures ever so
+large and pretentious; and come upon a grey paper, or a little fresco,
+bearing his mark-and over all the brawl and the throng recognise his
+sweet presence. 'I would like to have you been Giulio Romano,' J. J.
+says (who does not care for Giulio's pictures), 'because then I would
+have been Raphael's favourite pupil.' We agreed that we would rather
+have seen him and William Shakspeare, than all the men we ever read of.
+Fancy poisoning a fellow out of envy--as Spagnoletto did! There are some
+men whose admiration takes that bilious shape. There's a fellow in our
+mess at the Lepre, a clever enough fellow too--and not a bad fellow to
+the poor. He was a Gandishite. He is a genre and portrait painter, by
+the name of Haggard. He hates J. J. because Lord Fareham, who is here,
+has given J. J. an order; and he hates me, because I wear a clean shirt,
+and ride a cock-horse.
+
+"I wish you could come to our mess at the Lepre. It's such a dinner:
+such a tablecloth: such a waiter: such a company! Every man has a beard
+and a sombrero: and you would fancy we were a band of brigands. We are
+regaled with woodcocks, snipes, wild swans, ducks, robins, and owls and
+oionoisi te pasi for dinner; and with three pauls' worth of wines and
+victuals the hungriest has enough, even Claypole the sculptor. Did you
+ever know him? He used to come to the Haunt. He looks like the Saracen's
+head with his beard now. There is a French table still more hairy than
+ours, a German table, an American table. After dinner we go and have
+coffee and mezzo-caldo at the Cafe Greco over the way. Mezzo-caldo is
+not a bad drink--a little rum--a slice of fresh citron--lots of pounded
+sugar, and boiling water for the rest. Here in various parts of the
+cavern (it is a vaulted low place) the various nations have their
+assigned quarters, and we drink our coffee and strong waters, and abuse
+Guido, or Rubens, or Bernini selon les gouts, and blow such a cloud of
+smoke as would make Warrington's lungs dilate with pleasure. We get very
+good cigars for a bajoccho and half--that is very good for us, cheap
+tobaccanalians; and capital when you have got no others. M'Collop is
+here: he made a great figure at a cardinal's reception in the tartan of
+the M'Collop. He is splendid at the tomb of the Stuarts, and wanted
+to cleave Haggard down to the chine with his claymore for saying that
+Charles Edward was often drunk.
+
+"Some of us have our breakfasts at the Cafe Greco at dawn. The birds are
+very early birds here; and you'll see the great sculptors--the old Dons,
+you know, who look down on us young fellows--at their coffee here when
+it is yet twilight. As I am a swell, and have a servant, J. J. and I
+breakfast at our lodgings. I wish you could see Terribile our attendant,
+and Ottavia our old woman! You will see both of them on the canvas
+one day. When he hasn't blacked our boots and has got our breakfast,
+Terribile the valet-de-chambre becomes Terribile the model. He has
+figured on a hundred canvases ere this, and almost ever since he was
+born. All his family were models. His mother having been a Venus, is now
+a Witch of Endor. His father is in the patriarchal line: he has himself
+done the cherubs, the shepherd-boys, and now is a grown man, and ready
+as a warrior, a pifferaro, a capuchin, or what you will.
+
+"After the coffee and the Cafe Greco we all go to the Life Academy.
+After the Life Academy, those who belong to the world dress and go
+out to tea-parties just as if we were in London. Those who are not
+in society have plenty of fun of their own--and better fun than the
+tea-party fun too. Jack Screwby has a night once a week, sardines and
+ham for supper, and a cask of Marsala in the corner. Your humble servant
+entertains on Thursdays: which is Lady Fitch's night too; and I flatter
+myself some of the London dandies who are passing the winter here,
+prefer the cigars and humble liquors which we dispense, to tea and Miss
+Fitch's performance on the pianoforte.
+
+"What is that I read in Galignani about Lord K-- and an affair of
+honour at Baden? Is it my dear kind jolly Kew with whom some one has
+quarrelled? I know those who will be even more grieved than I am, should
+anything happen to the best of good fellows. A great friend of Lord
+Kew's, Jack Belsize commonly called, came with us from Baden through
+Switzerland, and we left him at Milan. I see by the paper that his elder
+brother is dead and so poor Jack will be a great man some day. I wish
+the chance had happened sooner if it was to befall at all. So my amiable
+cousin, Barnes Newcome Newcome, Esq., has married my Lady Clara Pulleyn;
+I wish her joy of her bridegroom. All I have heard of that family is
+from the newspaper. If you meet them, tell me anything about them.--We
+had a very pleasant time altogether at Baden. I suppose the accident to
+Kew will put off his marriage with Miss Newcome. They have been engaged,
+you know, ever so long.--And--do, do write to me and tell me something
+about London. It's best I should--should stay here and work this winter
+and the next. J. J. has done a famous picture, and if I send a couple
+home, you'll give them a notice in the Pall Mall Gazette--won't
+you?--for the sake of old times and yours affectionately, Clive
+Newcome."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI. In which M. de Florac is promoted
+
+
+However much Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry was disposed to admire and praise
+her own conduct in the affair which ended so unfortunately for poor
+Lord Kew, between whom and the Gascon her grace vowed that she had done
+everything in her power to prevent a battle, the old Duke, her lord,
+was, it appeared, by no means delighted with his wife's behaviour,
+nay, visited her with his very sternest displeasure. Miss O'Grady, the
+Duchesse's companion, and her little girl's instructress, at this time
+resigned her functions in the Ivry family; it is possible that in the
+recriminations consequent upon the governess's dismissal, the Miss
+Irlandaise, in whom the family had put so much confidence, divulged
+stories unfavourable to her patroness, and caused the indignation of the
+Duke, her husband. Between Florac and the Duchesse there was also open
+war and rupture. He had been one of Kew's seconds in the latter's affair
+with the Vicomte's countryman. He had even cried out for fresh pistols,
+and proposed to engage Castillonnes, when his gallant principal fell;
+and though a second duel was luckily averted as murderous and needless,
+M. de Florac never hesitated afterwards, and in all companies, to
+denounce with the utmost virulence the instigator and the champion of
+the odious original quarrel. He vowed that the Duchesse had shot le
+petit Kiou as effectually as if she had herself fired the pistol at his
+breast. Murderer, poisoner, Brinvilliers, a hundred more such epithets
+he used against his kinswoman, regretting that the good old times were
+past--that there was no Chambre Ardente to try her, and no rack and
+wheel to give her her due.
+
+The biographer of the Newcomes has no need (although he possesses the
+fullest information) to touch upon the Duchesse's doings, further than
+as they relate to that most respectable English family. When the Duke
+took his wife into the country, Florac never hesitated to say that
+to live with her was dangerous for the old man, and to cry out to his
+friends of the Boulevards or the Jockey Club, "Ma parole d'honneur,
+cette femme le tuera!"
+
+Do you know, O gentle and unsuspicious readers, or have you ever
+reckoned as you have made your calculation of society, how many most
+respectable husbands help to kill their wives--how many respectable
+wives aid in sending their husbands to Hades? The wife of a
+chimney-sweep or a journeyman butcher comes shuddering before a police
+magistrate--her head bound up--her body scarred and bleeding with
+wounds, which the drunken ruffian, her lord, has administered: a
+poor shopkeeper or mechanic is driven out of his home by the furious
+ill-temper of the shrill virago his wife--takes to the public-house--to
+evil courses--to neglecting his business--to the gin-bottle--to delirium
+tremens--to perdition. Bow Street, and policemen, and the newspaper
+reporters, have cognisance and a certain jurisdiction over these vulgar
+matrimonial crimes; but in politer company how many murderous assaults
+are there by husband or wife--where the woman is not felled by the
+actual fist, though she staggers and sinks under blows quite as cruel
+and effectual; where, with old wounds yet unhealed, which she strives to
+hide under a smiling face from the world, she has to bear up and to be
+stricken down and to rise to her feet again, under fresh daily strokes
+of torture; where the husband, fond and faithful, has to suffer slights,
+coldness, insult, desertion, his children sneered away from their love
+for him, his friends driven from his door by jealousy, his happiness
+strangled, his whole life embittered, poisoned, destroyed! If you were
+acquainted with the history of every family in your street, don't you
+know that in two or three of the houses there such tragedies have been
+playing? Is not the young mistress of Number 20 already pining at her
+husband's desertion? The kind master of Number 30 racking his fevered
+brains and toiling through sleepless nights to pay for the jewels on
+his wife's neck, and the carriage out of which she ogles Lothario in the
+Park? The fate under which man or woman falls, blow of brutal tyranny,
+heartless desertion, weight of domestic care too heavy to bear--are
+not blows such as these constantly striking people down? In this long
+parenthesis we are wandering ever so far away from M. le Duc and Madame
+la Duchesse d'Ivry, and from the vivacious Florac's statement regarding
+his kinsman, that that woman will kill him.
+
+There is this at least to be said, that if the Duc d'Ivry did die he
+was a very old gentleman, and had been a great viveur for at least
+threescore years of his life. As Prince de Moncontour in his father's
+time before the Revolution, during the Emigration, even after the
+Restoration, M. le Duc had vecu with an extraordinary vitality. He
+had gone through good and bad fortune: extreme poverty, display and
+splendour, affairs of love--affairs of honour,--and of one disease or
+another a man must die at the end. After the Baden business--and he had
+dragged off his wife to Champagne--the Duke became greatly broken; he
+brought his little daughter to a convent at Paris, putting the child
+under the special guardianship of Madame de Florac, with whom and with
+whose family in these latter days the old chief of the house effected a
+complete reconciliation. The Duke was now for ever coming to Madame de
+Florac; he poured all his wrongs and griefs into her ear with garrulous
+senile eagerness. "That little Duchesse is a monstre, a femme d'Eugene
+Sue," the Vicomte used to say; "the poor old Duke he cry--ma parole
+d'honneur, he cry and I cry too when he comes to recount to my poor
+mother, whose sainted heart is the asile of all griefs, a real Hotel
+Dieu, my word the most sacred, with beds for all the afflicted, with
+sweet words, like Sisters of Charity, to minister to them:--I cry, mon
+bon Pendennis, when this vieillard tells his stories about his wife and
+tears his white hairs to the feet of my mother."
+
+When the little Antoinette was separated by her father from her mother,
+the Duchesse d'Ivry, it might have been expected that that poetess would
+have dashed off a few more cris de l'ame, shrieking according to her
+wont, and baring and beating that shrivelled maternal bosom of hers,
+from which her child had been just torn. The child skipped and laughed
+to go away to the convent. It was only when she left Madame de Florac
+that she used to cry; and when urged by that good lady to exhibit a
+little decorous sentiment in writing to her mamma, Antoinette would ask,
+in her artless way, "Pourquoi? Mamma used never to speak to me except
+sometimes before the world, before ladies, that understands itself. When
+her gentleman came, she put me to the door; then she gave me tapes, o
+oui, she gave me tapes! I cry no more; she has so much made to cry M. le
+Duc, that it is quite enough of one in a family." So Madame la Duchesse
+d'Ivry did not weep, even in print, for the loss of her pretty little
+Antoinette; besides, she was engaged, at that time, by other sentimental
+occupations. A young grazier of their neighbouring town, of an aspiring
+mind and remarkable poetic talents, engrossed the Duchesse's platonic
+affections at this juncture. When he had sold his beasts at market, he
+would ride over and read Rousseau and Schiller with Madame la Duchesse,
+who formed him. His pretty young wife was rendered miserable by all
+these readings, but what could the poor little ignorant countrywoman
+know of Platonism? Faugh! there is more than one woman we see in society
+smiling about from house to house, pleasant and sentimental and formosa
+superne enough; but I fancy a fish's tail is flapping under her fine
+flounces, and a forked fin at the end of it!
+
+Finer flounces, finer bonnets, more lovely wreaths, more beautiful lace,
+smarter carriages, bigger white bows, larger footmen, were not seen,
+during all the season of 18--, than appeared round about St. George's,
+Hanover Square, in the beautiful month of June succeeding that September
+when so many of our friends the Newcomes were assembled at Baden. Those
+flaunting carriages, powdered and favoured footmen, were in attendance
+upon members of the Newcome family and their connexions, who were
+celebrating what is called a marriage in high life in the temple within.
+Shall we set down a catalogue of the dukes, marquises, earls, who
+were present; cousins of the lovely bride? Are they not already in the
+Morning Herald and Court Journal, as well as in the Newcome Chronicle
+and Independent, and the Dorking Intelligencer and Chanticleer Weekly
+Gazette? There they are, all printed at full length sure enough; the
+name of the bride, Lady Clara Pulleyn, the lovely and accomplished
+daughter of the Earl and Countess of Dorking; of the beautiful
+bridesmaids, the Ladies Henrietta, Belinda, Adelaide Pulleyn, Miss
+Newcome, Miss Alice Newcome, Miss Maude Newcome, Miss Anna Maria
+(Hobson) Newcome; and all the other persons engaged in the ceremony. It
+was performed by the Right Honourable Viscount Gallowglass, Bishop of
+Ballyshannon, brother-in-law to the bride, assisted by the Honourable
+and Reverend Hercules O'Grady, his lordship's chaplain, and the Reverend
+John Bulders, Rector of St. Mary's, Newcome. Then follow the names of
+all the nobility who were present, and of the noble and distinguished
+personages who signed the book. Then comes an account of the principal
+dresses, chefs-d'oeuvre of Madame Crinoline; of the bride's coronal
+of brilliants, supplied by Messrs. Morr and Stortimer;--of the veil of
+priceless Chantilly lace, the gift of the Dowager Countess of Kew. Then
+there is a description of the wedding-breakfast at the house of the
+bride's noble parents, and of the cake, decorated by Messrs. Gunter with
+the most delicious taste and the sweetest hymeneal allusions.
+
+No mention was made by the fashionable chronicler of a slight
+disturbance which occurred at St. George's, and which was indeed out
+of the province of such a genteel purveyor of news. Before the marriage
+service began, a woman of vulgar appearance and disorderly aspect,
+accompanied by two scared children who took no part in the disorder
+occasioned by their mother's proceeding, except by their tears and
+outcries to augment the disquiet, made her appearance in one of the pews
+of the church, was noted there by persons in the vestry, was requested
+to retire by a beadle, and was finally induced to quit the sacred
+precincts of the building by the very strongest persuasion of a couple
+of policemen; X and Y laughed at one another, and nodded their heads
+knowingly as the poor wretch with her whimpering boys was led away. They
+understood very well who the personage was who had come to disturb the
+matrimonial ceremony; it did not commence until Mrs. De Lacy (as this
+lady chose to be called) had quitted this temple of Hymen. She slunk
+through the throng of emblazoned carriages, and the press of footmen
+arrayed as splendidly as Solomon in his glory. John jeered at Thomas,
+William turned his powdered head, and signalled Jeames, who
+answered with a corresponding grin, as the woman with sobs, and wild
+imprecations, and frantic appeals, made her way through the splendid
+crowd escorted by her aides-de-camp in blue. I dare say her little
+history was discussed at many a dinner-table that day in the basement
+story of several fashionable houses. I know that at clubs in St. James's
+the facetious little anecdote was narrated. A young fellow came to
+Bays's after the marriage breakfast and mentioned the circumstance with
+funny comments; although the Morning Post, in describing this affair in
+high life, naturally omitted all mention of such low people as Mrs. De
+Lacy and her children.
+
+Those people who knew the noble families whose union had been celebrated
+by such a profusion of grandees, fine equipages, and footmen, brass
+bands, brilliant toilets, and wedding favours, asked how it was that
+Lord Kew did not assist at Barnes Newcome's marriage; other persons in
+society inquired waggishly why Jack Belsize was not present to give Lady
+Clara away.
+
+As for Jack Belsize, his clubs had not been ornamented by his presence
+for a year past. It was said he had broken the bank at Hombourg last
+autumn; had been heard of during the winter at Milan, Venice, and
+Vienna; and when, a few months after the marriage of Barnes Newcome and
+Lady Clara, Jack's elder brother died, and he himself became the next in
+succession to the title and estates of Highgate, many folks said it was
+a pity little Barney's marriage had taken place so soon. Lord Kew was
+not present, because Kew was still abroad; he had had a gambling duel
+with a Frenchman, and a narrow squeak for his life. He had turned Roman
+Catholic, some men said; others vowed that he had joined the Methodist
+persuasion. At all events Kew had given up his wild courses, broken with
+the turf, and sold his stud off; he was delicate yet, and his mother
+was taking care of him; between whom and the old dowager of Kew, who had
+made up Barney's marriage, as everybody knew, there was no love lost.
+
+Then who was the Prince de Moncontour, who, with his princess, figured
+at this noble marriage? There was a Moncontour, the Duc d'Ivry's son,
+but he died at Paris before the revolution of '30: one or two of the
+oldsters at Bays's, Major Pendennis, General Tufto, old Cackleby--the
+old fogies, in a word--remembered the Duke of Ivry when he was here
+during the Emigration, and when he was called Prince de Moncontour, the
+title of the eldest son of the family. Ivry was dead, having buried his
+son before him, and having left only a daughter by that young woman
+whom he married, and who led him such a life. Who was this present
+Moncontour?
+
+He was a gentleman to whom the reader has already been presented, though
+when we lately saw him at Baden he did not enjoy so magnificent a title.
+Early in the year of Barnes Newcome's marriage, there came to England,
+and to our modest apartment in the Temple, a gentleman bringing a letter
+of recommendation from our dear young Clive, who said that the bearer,
+the Vicomte de Florac, was a great friend of his, and of the Colonel's,
+who had known his family from boyhood. A friend of our Clive and our
+Colonel was sure of a welcome in Lamb Court; we gave him the hand of
+hospitality, the best cigar in the box, the easy-chair with only one
+broken leg; the dinner in chambers and at the club, the banquet at
+Greenwich (where, ma foi, the little whites baits elicited his profound
+satisfaction); in a word, did our best to honour that bill which our
+young Clive had drawn upon us. We considered the young one in the light
+of a nephew of our own; we took a pride in him, and were fond of him;
+and as for the Colonel, did we not love and honour him; would we not
+do our utmost in behalf of any stranger who came recommended to us by
+Thomas Newcome's good word? So Florac was straightway admitted to our
+companionship. We showed him the town, and some of the modest pleasures
+thereof; we introduced him to the Haunt, and astonished him by the
+company which he met there. Between Brent's "Deserter" and Mark Wilder's
+"Garryowen," Florac sang--
+
+ Tiens voici ma pipe, voila mon bri--quet;
+ Et quand la Tulipe fait le noir tra--jet
+ Que tu sois la seule dans le regi--ment
+ Avec la brule-gueule de ton cher z'a--mant;
+
+to the delight of Tom Sarjent, who, though he only partially
+comprehended the words of the song, pronounced the singer to be a rare
+gentleman, full of most excellent differences. We took our Florac to the
+Derby; we presented him in Fitzroy Square, whither we still occasionally
+went, for Clive's and our dear Colonel's sake.
+
+The Vicomte pronounced himself strongly in favour of the blanche
+misse little Rosey Mackenzie, of whom we have lost sight for some few
+chapters. Mrs. Mac he considered, my faith, to be a woman superb. He
+used to kiss the tips of his own fingers, in token of his admiration for
+the lovely widow; he pronounced her again more pretty than her daughter;
+and paid her a thousand compliments, which she received with exceeding
+good-humour. If the Vicomte gave us to understand presently that Rosey
+and her mother were both in love with him, but that for all the world
+he would not meddle with the happiness of his dear little Clive, nothing
+unfavourable to the character or constancy of the before-mentioned
+ladies must be inferred from M. de Florac's speech; his firm conviction
+being, that no woman could pass many hours in his society without danger
+to her subsequent peace of mind.
+
+For some little time we had no reason to suspect that our French friend
+was not particularly well furnished with the current coin of the realm.
+Without making any show of wealth, he would, at first, cheerfully engage
+in our little parties: his lodgings in the neighbourhood of Leicester
+Square, though dingy, were such as many noble foreign exiles have
+inhabited. It was not until he refused to join some pleasure-trip which
+we of Lamb Court proposed, honestly confessing his poverty, that we were
+made aware of the Vicomte's little temporary calamity; and, as we became
+more intimate with him, he acquainted us, with great openness, with the
+history of all his fortunes. He described energetically that splendid
+run of luck which had set in at Baden with Clive's loan: his winnings,
+at that fortunate period, had carried him through the winter with
+considerable brilliancy, but bouillotte and Mademoiselle Atala, of the
+Varietes (une ogresse, mon cher, who devours thirty of our young men
+every year in her cavern, in the Rue de Breda), had declared against
+him, and the poor Vicomte's pockets were almost empty when he came to
+London.
+
+He was amiably communicative regarding himself, and told us his virtues
+and his faults (if indeed a passion for play and for women could be
+considered as faults in a gay young fellow of two or three and forty),
+with a like engaging frankness. He would weep in describing his angel
+mother: he would fly off again into tirades respecting the wickedness,
+the wit, the extravagance, the charms of the young lady of the Varietes.
+He would then (in conversation) introduce us to Madame de Florac, nee
+Higg, of Manchesterre. His prattle was incessant, and to my friend Mr.
+Warrington especially he was an object of endless delight and amusement
+and wonder. He would roll and smoke countless paper cigars, talking
+unrestrainedly when we were not busy, silent when we were engaged;
+he would only rarely partake of our meals, and altogether refused
+all offers of pecuniary aid. He disappeared at dinner-time into the
+mysterious purlieus of Leicester Square, and dark ordinaries only
+frequented by Frenchmen. As we walked with him in the Regent Street
+precincts, he would exchange marks of recognition with many dusky
+personages, smoking bravos; and whiskered refugees of his nation.
+
+"That gentleman," he would say, "who has done me the honour to salute
+me, is a coiffeur of the most celebrated; he forms the deuces of our
+table-d'hote. 'Bon jour, mon cher monsieur!' We are friends, though not
+of the same opinion. Monsieur is a republican of the most distinguished;
+conspirator of profession, and at this time engaged in constructing an
+infernal machine to the address of His Majesty, Louis Philippe, King
+of the French." "Who is my friend with the scarlet beard and the white
+paletot? My good Warrington! you do not move in the world; you make
+yourself a hermit, my dear! Not know monsieur!--monsieur is secretary
+to Mademoiselle Caracoline, the lovely rider at the circus of Astley;
+I shall be charmed to introduce you to this amiable society some day at
+our table-d'hote."
+
+Warrington vowed that the company of Florac's friends would be
+infinitely more amusing than the noblest society ever chronicled in the
+Morning Post; but we were neither sufficiently familiar with the French
+language to make conversation in that tongue as pleasant to us as
+talking in our own; and so were content with Florac's description of his
+compatriots, which the Vicomte delivered in that charming French-English
+of which he was a master.
+
+However threadbare in his garments, poor in purse, and eccentric in
+morals our friend was, his manners were always perfectly gentlemanlike,
+and he draped himself in his poverty with the grace of a Spanish
+grandee. It must be confessed, that the grandee loved the estaminet
+where he could play billiards with the first comer; that he had a
+passion for the gambling-house; that he was a loose and disorderly
+nobleman: but, in whatever company he found himself, a certain kindness,
+simplicity, and politeness distinguished him always. He bowed to the
+damsel who sold him a penny cigar, as graciously as to a duchess; he
+crushed a manant's impertinence or familiarity as haughtily as his noble
+ancestors ever did at the Louvre, at Marli, or Versailles. He declined
+to obtemperer to his landlady's request to pay his rent, but he refused
+with a dignity which struck the woman with awe; and King Alfred,
+over the celebrated muffin (on which Gandish and other painters have
+exercised their genius), could not have looked more noble than Florac
+in a robe-de-chambre, once gorgeous, but shady now as became its owner's
+clouded fortunes; toasting his bit of bacon at his lodgings, when the
+fare even of his table-d'hote had grown too dear for him.
+
+As we know from Gandish's work, that better times were in store for the
+wandering monarch, and that the officers came acquainting him that his
+people demanded his presence a grands cris, when of course King Alfred
+laid down the toast and resumed the sceptre; so in the case of Florac,
+two humble gentlemen, inhabitants of Lamb Court, and members of the
+Upper temple, had the good luck to be the heralds as it were,
+nay indeed, the occasion, of the rising fortunes of the Prince de
+Moncontour. Florac had informed us of the death of his cousin the Duc
+d'Ivry, by whose demise the Vicomte's father, the old Count de Florac,
+became the representative of the house of Ivry, and possessor, through
+his relative's bequest, of an old chateau still more gloomy and spacious
+than the count's own house in the Faubourg St. Germain--a chateau, of
+which the woods, domains, and appurtenances had been lopped off by the
+Revolution. "Monsieur le Comte," Florac says, "has not wished to change
+his name at his age; he has shrugged his old shoulder, and said it
+was not the trouble to make to engrave a new card; and for me," the
+philosophical Vicomte added, "of what good shall be a title of prince in
+the position where I find myself?" It is wonderful for us who inhabit a
+country where rank is worshipped with so admirable a reverence, to think
+that there are many gentlemen in France who actually have authentic
+titles and do not choose to bear them.
+
+Mr. George Warrington was hugely amused with this notion of Florac's
+ranks and dignities. The idea of the Prince purchasing penny cigars; of
+the Prince mildly expostulating with his landlady regarding the rent;
+of his punting for half-crowns at a neighbouring hall in Air Street,
+whither the poor gentleman desperately ran when he had money in his
+pocket, tickled George's sense of humour. It was Warrington who gravely
+saluted the Vicomte, and compared him to King Alfred, on that afternoon
+when we happened to call upon him and found him engaged in cooking his
+modest dinner.
+
+We were bent upon an excursion to Greenwich, and on having our friend's
+company on that voyage, and we induced the Vicomte to forgo his bacon,
+and be our guest for once. George Warrington chose to indulge in a great
+deal of ironical pleasantry in the course of the afternoon's excursion.
+As we went down the river, he pointed out to Florac the very window in
+the Tower where the captive Duke of Orleans used to sit when he was an
+inhabitant of that fortress. At Greenwich, which palace Florac informed
+us was built by Queen Elizabeth, George showed the very spot where
+Raleigh laid his cloak down to enable Her Majesty to step over a
+puddle. In a word, he mystified M. de Florac; such was Mr. Warrington's
+reprehensible spirit.
+
+It happened that Mr. Barnes Newcome came to dine at Greenwich on the
+same day when our little party took place. He had come down to meet
+Rooster and one or two other noble friends whose names he took care
+to give us, cursing them at the same time for having thrown him over.
+Having missed his own company, Mr. Barnes condescended to join ours,
+Warrington gravely thanking him for the great honour which he conferred
+upon us by volunteering to take a place at our table. Barnes drank
+freely, and was good enough to resume his acquaintance with Monsieur
+de Florac, whom he perfectly well recollected at Baden, but had thought
+proper to forget on the one or two occasions when they had met in public
+since the Vicomte's arrival in this country. There are few men who can
+drop and resume an acquaintance with such admirable self-possession as
+Barnes Newcome. When, over our dessert, by which time all tongues were
+unloosed and each man talked gaily, George Warrington feelingly thanked
+Barnes in a little mock speech, for his great kindness in noticing us,
+presenting him at the same time to Florac as the ornament of the City,
+the greatest banker of his age, the beloved kinsman of their friend
+Clive, who was always writing about him; Barnes said, with one of his
+accustomed curses, he did not know whether Mr. Warrington was "chaffing"
+him or not, and indeed could never make him out. Warrington replied that
+he never could make himself out: and if ever Mr. Barnes could, George
+would thank him for information on that subject.
+
+Florac, like most Frenchmen very sober in his potations, left us for
+a while over ours, which were conducted after the more liberal English
+manner, and retired to smoke his cigar on the terrace. Barnes then
+freely uttered his sentiments regarding him, which were not more
+favourable than those which the young gentleman generally emitted
+respecting gentlemen whose backs were turned. He had known a little of
+Florac the year before at Baden: he had been mixed up with Kew in that
+confounded row in which Kew was hit; he was an adventurer, a pauper, a
+blackleg, a regular Greek; he had heard Florac was of old family,
+that was true; but what of that? He was only one of those d---- French
+counts; everybody was a count in France confound 'em! The claret was
+beastly--not fit for a gentleman to drink!--He swigged off a great
+bumper as he was making the remark: for Barnes Newcome abuses the
+men and things which he uses, and perhaps is better served than more
+grateful persons.
+
+"Count!" cries Warrington, "what do you mean by talking about beggarly
+counts? Florac's family is one of the noblest and most ancient
+in Europe. It is more ancient than your illustrious friend, the
+barber-surgeon; it was illustrious before the house, ay, or the pagoda
+of Kew was in existence." And he went on to describe how Florac by the
+demise of his kinsman, was now actually Prince de Moncontour, though he
+did not choose to assume that title. Very likely the noble Gascon
+drink in which George had been indulging, imparted a certain warmth and
+eloquence to his descriptions of Florac's good qualities, high birth,
+and considerable patrimony; Barnes looked quite amazed and scared at
+these announcements, then laughed and declared once more that Warrington
+was chaffing him.
+
+"As sure as the Black Prince was lord of Acquitaine--as sure as the
+English were masters of Bordeaux--and why did we ever lose the country?"
+cries George, filling himself a bumper,--"every word I have said about
+Florac is true;" and Florac coming in at this juncture havin just
+finished his cigar, George turned round and made him a fine speech in
+the French language, in which he lauded his constancy and good-humour
+under evil fortune, paid him two or three more cordial compliments, and
+finished by drinking another great bumper to his good health.
+
+Florac took a little wine, replied "with effusion" to the toast which
+his excellent, his noble friend had just carried. We rapped our glasses
+at the end of the speech. The landlord himself seemed deeply touched by
+it as he stood by with a fresh bottle. "It is good wine--it is honest
+wine--it is capital wine" says George, "and honni soit qui mal y pence!
+What business have you, you little beggar, to abuse it? My ancestor
+drank the wine and wore the motto round his leg long before a Newcome
+ever showed his pale face in Lombard Street." George Warrington never
+bragged about his pedigree except under certain influences. I am
+inclined to think that on this occasion he really did find the claret
+very good.
+
+"You don't mean to say," says Barnes, addressing Florac in French, on
+which he piqued himself, "que vous avez un tel manche a votre nom, et
+que vous ne l'usez pas?"
+
+Florac shrugged his shoulders; he at first did not understand that
+familiar figure of English speech, or what was meant by "having a handle
+to your name." "Moncontour cannot dine better than Florac," he said.
+"Florac has two louis in his pocket, and Moncontour exactly forty
+shillings. Florac's proprietor will ask Moncontour to-morrow for five
+weeks' rent; and as for Florac's friends, my dear, they will burst out
+laughing to Moncontour's nose!" "How droll you English are!" this acute
+French observer afterwards said, laughing, and recalling the incident.
+Did you not see how that little Barnes, as soon as he knew my title
+of Prince, changed his manner and became all respect towards me?
+This, indeed, Monsieur de Florac's two friends remarked with no little
+amusement. Barnes began quite well to remember their pleasant days at
+Baden, and talked of their acquaintance there: Barnes offered the Prince
+the vacant seat in his brougham, and was ready to set him down anywhere
+that he wished in town.
+
+"Bah!" says Florac; "we came by the steamer, and I prefer the peniboat."
+But the hospitable Barnes, nevertheless, called upon Florac the next
+day. And now having partially explained how the Prince de Moncontour
+was present at Mr. Barnes Newcome's wedding, let us show how it was that
+Barnes's first-cousin, the Earl of Kew, did not attend that ceremony.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII. Return to Lord Kew
+
+
+We do not propose to describe at length or with precision the
+circumstances of the duel which ended so unfortunately for young Lord
+Kew. The meeting was inevitable: after the public acts and insult of the
+morning, the maddened Frenchman went to it convinced that his antagonist
+had wilfully outraged him, eager to show his bravery upon the body of an
+Englishman, and as proud as if he had been going into actual war. That
+commandment, the sixth in our decalogue, which forbids the doing of
+murder, and the injunction which directly follows on the same table,
+have been repealed by a very great number of Frenchmen for many years
+past; and to take the neighbour's wife, and his life subsequently, has
+not been an uncommon practice with the politest people in the world.
+Castillonnes had no idea but that he was going to the field of honour;
+stood with an undaunted scowl before his enemy's pistol; and discharged
+his own and brought down his opponent with a grim satisfaction, and a
+comfortable conviction afterwards that he had acted en galant homme. "It
+was well for this milor that he fell at the first shot, my dear," the
+exemplary young Frenchman remarked; "a second might have been yet more
+fatal to him; ordinarily I am sure of my coup, and you conceive that in
+an affair so grave it was absolutely necessary that one or other should
+remain on the ground." Nay, should M. de Kew recover from his wound, it
+was M. de Castillonnes' intention to propose a second encounter between
+himself and that nobleman. It had been Lord Kew's determination never
+to fire upon his opponent, a confession which he made not to his second,
+poor scared Lord Rooster, who bore the young Earl to Kehl, but to some
+of his nearest relatives, who happened fortunately to be not far from
+him when he received his wound, and who came with all the eagerness of
+love to watch by his bedside.
+
+We have said that Lord Kew's mother, Lady Walham, and her second son
+were staying at Hombourg, when the Earl's disaster occurred. They had
+proposed to come to Baden to see Kew's new bride, and to welcome her;
+but the presence of her mother-in-law deterred Lady Walham, who gave
+up her heart's wish in bitterness of spirit, knowing very well that
+a meeting between the old Countess and herself could only produce
+the wrath, pain, and humiliation which their coming together always
+occasioned. It was Lord Kew who bade Rooster send for his mother, and
+not for Lady Kew; and as soon as she received those sad tidings, you may
+be sure the poor lady hastened to the bed where her wounded boy lay.
+
+The fever had declared itself, and the young man had been delirious more
+than once. His wan face lighted up with joy when he saw his mother; he
+put his little feverish hand out of the bed to her--"I knew you would
+come, dear," he said, "and you know I never would have fired upon the
+poor Frenchman." The fond mother allowed no sign of terror or grief to
+appear upon her face, so as to disturb her first-born and darling; but
+no doubt she prayed by his side as such loving hearts know how to pray,
+for the forgiveness of his trespass, who had forgiven those who sinned
+against him. "I knew I should be hit, George," said Kew to his brother
+when they were alone; "I always expected some such end as this. My
+life has been very wild and reckless; and you, George, have always been
+faithful to our mother. You will make a better Lord Kew than I have
+been, George. God bless you." George flung himself down with sobs by his
+brother's bedside, and swore Frank had always been the best fellow,
+the best brother, the kindest heart, the warmest friend in the world.
+Love--prayer--repentance, thus met over the young man's bed. Anxious and
+humble hearts, his own the least anxious and the most humble, awaited
+the dread award of life or death; and the world, and its ambition and
+vanities, were shut out from the darkened chamber where the awful issue
+was being tried.
+
+Our history has had little to do with characters resembling this lady.
+It is of the world, and things pertaining to it. Things beyond it, as
+the writer imagines, scarcely belong to the novelist's province. Who is
+he, that he should assume the divine's office; or turn his desk into a
+preacher's pulpit? In that career of pleasure, of idleness, of crime we
+might call it (but that the chronicler of worldly matters had best be
+chary of applying hard names to acts which young men are doing in the
+world every day), the gentle widowed lady, mother of Lord Kew, could but
+keep aloof, deploring the course upon which her dear young prodigal had
+entered; and praying with that saintly love, those pure supplications,
+with which good mothers follow their children, for her boy's repentance
+and return. Very likely her mind was narrow; very likely the precautions
+which she had used in the lad's early days, the tutors and directors
+she had set about him, the religious studies and practices to which she
+would have subjected him, had served only to vex and weary the young
+pupil, and to drive his high spirit into revolt. It is hard to convince
+a woman perfectly pure in her life and intentions, ready to die if need
+were for her own faith, having absolute confidence in the instruction
+of her teachers, that she and they (with all their sermons) may be doing
+harm. When the young catechist yawns over his reverence's discourse,
+who knows but it is the doctor's vanity which is enraged, and not Heaven
+which is offended? It may have been, in the differences which took place
+between her son and her, the good Lady Walham never could comprehend
+the lad's side of the argument; or how his Protestantism against her
+doctrines should exhibit itself on the turf, the gaming-table, or the
+stage of the opera-house; and thus but for the misfortune under which
+poor Kew now lay bleeding, these two loving hearts might have remained
+through life asunder. But by the boy's bedside; in the paroxysms of
+his fever; in the wild talk of his delirium; in the sweet patience
+and kindness with which he received his dear nurse's attentions; the
+gratefulness with which he thanked the servants who waited on him;
+the fortitude with which he suffered the surgeon's dealings with
+his wounds;--the widowed woman had an opportunity to admire with an
+exquisite thankfulness the generous goodness of her son; and in those
+hours, those sacred hours passed in her own chamber, of prayers, fears,
+hopes, recollections, and passionate maternal love, wrestling with
+fate for her darling's life;--no doubt the humbled creature came to
+acknowledge that her own course regarding him had been wrong; and, even
+more for herself than for him, implored forgiveness.
+
+For some time George Barnes had to send but doubtful and melancholy
+bulletins to Lady Kew and the Newcome family at Baden, who were all
+greatly moved and affected by the accident which had befallen poor
+Kew. Lady Kew broke out in wrath, and indignation. We may be sure the
+Duchesse d'Ivry offered to condole with her upon Kew's mishap the day
+after the news arrived at Baden; and, indeed, came to visit her. The
+old lady had just received other disquieting intelligence. She was just
+going out, but she bade her servant to inform the Duchess that she was
+never more at home to the Duchesse d'Ivry. The message was not delivered
+properly, or the person for whom it was intended did not choose to
+understand it, for presently, as the Countess was hobbling across
+the walk on her way to her daughter's residence, she met the Duchesse
+d'Ivry, who saluted her with a demure curtsey and a commonplace
+expression of condolence. The Queen of Scots was surrounded by the chief
+part of her court, saving of course MM. Castillonnes and Punter absent
+on service. "We were speaking of this deplorable affair," said Madame
+d'Ivry (which indeed was the truth, although she said it). "How we
+pity you, madame!" Blackball and Loder, Cruchecassee and Schlangenbad,
+assumed sympathetic countenances.
+
+Trembling on her cane, the old Countess glared out upon Madame d'Ivry.
+"I pray you, madame," she said in French, "never again to address me the
+word. If I had, like you, assassins in my pay, I would have you killed;
+do you hear me?" and she hobbled on her way. The household to which she
+went was in terrible agitation; the kind Lady Anne frightened beyond
+measure, poor Ethel full of dread, and feeling guilty almost as if she
+had been the cause, as indeed she was the occasion, of Kew's misfortune.
+And the family had further cause of alarm from the shock which the news
+had given to Sir Brian. It has been said that he had had illnesses of
+late which caused his friends much anxiety. He had passed two months at
+Aix-la-Chapelle, his physicians dreading a paralytic attack; and Madame
+d'Ivry's party still sauntering on the walk, the men smoking their
+cigars, the women breathing their scandal, now beheld Dr. Finck issuing
+from Lady Anne's apartments, and wearing such a face of anxiety, that
+the Duchesse asked with some emotion, "Had there been a fresh bulletin
+from Kehl?"
+
+"No, there had been no fresh bulletin from Kehl; but two hours since Sir
+Brian Newcome had had a paralytic seizure."
+
+"Is he very bad?"
+
+"No," says Dr. Finck, "he is not very bad."
+
+"How inconsolable M. Barnes will be!" said the Duchesse, shrugging her
+haggard shoulders. Whereas the fact was that Mr. Barnes retained perfect
+presence of mind under both of the misfortunes which had befallen his
+family. Two days afterwards the Duchesse's husband arrived himself, when
+we may presume that exemplary woman was too much engaged with her own
+affairs to be able to be interested about the doings of other people.
+With the Duke's arrival the court of Mary Queen of Scots was broken up.
+Her Majesty was conducted to Lochleven, where her tyrant soon dismissed
+her very last lady-in-waiting, the confidential Irish secretary, whose
+performance had produced such a fine effect amongst the Newcomes.
+
+Had poor Sir Brian Newcome's seizure occurred at an earlier period of
+the autumn, his illness no doubt would have kept him for some months
+confined at Baden; but as he was pretty nearly the last of Dr. Von
+Finck's bath patients, and that eminent physician longed to be off to
+the Residenz, he was pronounced in a fit condition for easy travelling
+in rather a brief period after his attack, and it was determined to
+transport him to Mannheim, and thence by water to London and Newcome.
+
+During all this period of their father's misfortune no sister of charity
+could have been more tender, active, cheerful, and watchful than
+Miss Ethel. She had to wear a kind face, and exhibit no anxiety when
+occasionally the feeble invalid made inquiries regarding poor Kew at
+Baden; to catch the phrases as they came from him; to acquiesce, or not
+to deny, when Sir Brian talked of the marriages--both marriages--taking
+place at Christmas. Sir Brian was especially eager for his daughter's,
+and repeatedly, with his broken words, and smiles, and caresses, which
+were now quite senile, declared that his Ethel would make the prettiest
+countess in England. There came a letter or two from Clive, no doubt, to
+the young nurse in her sick-room. Manly and generous, full of tenderness
+and affection, as those letters surely were, they could give but little
+pleasure to the young lady--indeed, only add to her doubts and pain.
+
+She had told none of her friends as yet of those last words of Kew's,
+which she interpreted as a farewell on the young nobleman's part. Had
+she told them they were likely would not have understood Kew's meaning
+as she did, and persisted in thinking that the two were reconciled.
+At any rate, whilst he and her father were still lying stricken by the
+blows which had prostrated them both, all questions of love and marriage
+had been put aside. Did she love him? She felt such a kind pity for
+his misfortune, such an admiration for his generous gallantry, such a
+remorse for her own wayward conduct and cruel behaviour towards this
+most honest, and kindly, and affectionate gentleman, that the sum of
+regard which she could bestow upon him might surely be said to amount
+to love. For such a union as that contemplated between them, perhaps
+for any marriage, no greater degree of attachment was necessary as the
+common cement. Warm friendship and thorough esteem and confidence (I do
+not say that our young lady calculated in this matter-of-fact way) are
+safe properties invested in the prudent marriage stock, multiplying
+and bearing an increasing value with every year. Many a young couple of
+spendthrifts get through their capital of passion in the first twelve
+months, and have no love left for the daily demands of after life. O me!
+for the day when the bank account is closed, and the cupboard is empty,
+and the firm of Damon and Phyllis insolvent!
+
+Miss Newcome, we say, without doubt, did not make her calculations in
+this debtor and creditor fashion; it was only the gentlemen of that
+family who went to Lombard Street. But suppose she thought that regard,
+and esteem, and, affection being sufficient, she could joyfully, and
+with almost all her heart bring such a portion to Lord Kew; that her
+harshness towards him as contrasted with his own generosity, and above
+all with his present pain, infinitely touched her; and suppose she
+fancied that there was another person in the world to whom, did fates
+permit, she could offer not esteem, affection, pity only, but something
+ten thousand times more precious? We are not in the young lady's
+secrets, but if she has some as she sits by her father's chair and
+bed, who day or night will have no other attendant; and, as she
+busies herself to interpret his wants, silently moves on his errands,
+administers his potions, and watches his sleep, thinks of Clive absent
+and unhappy, of Kew wounded and in danger, she must have subject enough
+of thought and pain. Little wonder that her cheeks are pale and her eyes
+look red; she has her cares to endure now in the world, and her burden
+to bear in it, and somehow she feels she is alone, since that day when
+poor Clive's carriage drove away.
+
+In a mood of more than ordinary depression and weakness Lady Kew must
+have found her granddaughter, upon one of the few occasions after
+the double mishap when Ethel and her elder were together. Sir Brian's
+illness, as it may be imagined, affected a lady very slightly, who was
+of an age when these calamities occasion but small disquiet, and who,
+having survived her own father, her husband, her son, and witnessed
+their lordships' respective demises with perfect composure, could not
+reasonably be called upon to feel any particular dismay at the probable
+departure from this life of a Lombard Street banker, who happened to be
+her daughter's husband. In fact, not Barnes Newcome himself could await
+that event more philosophically. So, finding Ethel in this melancholy
+mood, Lady Kew thought a drive in the fresh air would be of service to
+her, and Sir Brian happening to be asleep, carried the young girl away
+in her barouche.
+
+They talked about Lord Kew, of whom the accounts were encouraging, and
+who is mending in spite of his silly mother and her medicines, "and as
+soon as he is able to move we must go and fetch him, my dear," Lady Kew
+graciously said, "before that foolish woman has made a methodist of him.
+He is always led by the woman who is nearest him, and I know one who
+will make of him just the best little husband in England." Before they
+had come to this delicate point the lady and her grandchild had talked
+Kew's character over, the girl, you may be sure, having spoken feelingly
+and eloquently about his kindness and courage, and many admirable
+qualities. She kindled when she heard the report of his behaviour at
+the commencement of the fracas with M. de Castillonnes, his great
+forbearance and good-nature, and his resolution and magnanimity when the
+moment of collision came.
+
+But when Lady Kew arrived at that period of her discourse in which she
+stated that Kew would make the best little husband in England, poor
+Ethel's eyes filled with tears; we must remember that her high spirit
+was worn down by watching and much varied anxiety, and then she
+confessed that there had been no reconciliation, as all the family
+fancied, between Frank and herself--on the contrary, a parting, which
+she understood to be final; and she owned that her conduct towards her
+cousin had been most captious and cruel, and that she could not expect
+they should ever again come together. Lady Kew, who hated sick-beds and
+surgeons except for herself, who hated her daughter-in-law above all,
+was greatly annoyed at the news which Ethel gave her; made light of if,
+however, and was quite confident that a very few words from her would
+place matters on their old footing, and determined on forthwith setting
+out for Kehl. She would have carried Ethel with her, but that the
+poor Baronet with cries and moans insisted on retaining his nurse, and
+Ethel's grandmother was left to undertake this mission by herself, the
+girl remaining behind acquiescent, not unwilling, owning openly a great
+regard and esteem for Kew, and the wrong which she had done him, feeling
+secretly a sentiment which she had best smother. She had received
+a letter from that other person, and answered it with her mother's
+cognisance, but about this little affair neither Lady Anne nor her
+daughter happened to say a word to the manager of the whole family.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII. In which Lady Kew leaves his Lordship quite convalescent
+
+
+Immediately after Lord Kew's wound, and as it was necessary to apprise
+the Newcome family of the accident which had occurred, the good-natured
+young Kew had himself written a brief note to acquaint his relatives
+with his mishap, and had even taken the precaution to antedate a couple
+of billets to be despatched on future days; kindly forgeries, which
+told the Newcome family and the Countess of Kew, that Lord Kew was
+progressing very favourably, and that his hurt was trifling. The fever
+had set in, and the young patient was lying in great danger, as most of
+the laggards at Baden knew, when his friends there were set at ease
+by this fallacious bulletin. On the third day after the accident, Lady
+Walham arrived with her younger son, to find Lord Kew in the fever which
+ensued after the wound. As the terrible anxiety during the illness
+had been Lady Walham's, so was hers the delight of the recovery. The
+commander-in-chief of the family, the old lady at Baden, showed her
+sympathy by sending couriers, and repeatedly issuing orders to have
+news of Kew. Sick-beds scared her away invariably. When illness befell
+a member of her family she hastily retreated from before the sufferer,
+showing her agitation of mind, however, by excessive ill-humour to all
+the others within her reach.
+
+A fortnight passed, a ball had been found and extracted, the fever
+was over, the wound was progressing favourably, the patient advancing
+towards convalescence, and the mother, with her child once more under
+her wing, happier than she had been for seven years past, during which
+her young prodigal had been running the thoughtless career of which he
+himself was weary, and which had occasioned the fond lady such anguish.
+Those doubts which perplex many a thinking man, and, when formed and
+uttered, give many a fond and faithful woman pain so exquisite, had most
+fortunately never crossed Kew's mind. His early impressions were such
+as his mother had left them, and he came back to her, as she would
+have him, as a little child; owning his faults with a hearty humble
+repentance, and with a thousand simple confessions, lamenting the errors
+of his past days. We have seen him tired and ashamed of the pleasures
+which he was pursuing, of the companions who surrounded him, of the
+brawls and dissipations which amused him no more; in those hours of
+danger and doubt, when he had lain, with death perhaps before him,
+making up his account of the vain life which probably he would be called
+upon to surrender, no wonder this simple, kindly, modest, and courageous
+soul thought seriously of the past and of the future; and prayed, and
+resolved, if a future were awarded to him, it should make amends for the
+days gone by; and surely as the mother and son read together the beloved
+assurance of the divine forgiveness, and of that joy which angels feel
+in heaven for a sinner repentant, we may fancy in the happy mother's
+breast a feeling somewhat akin to that angelic felicity, a gratitude
+and joy of all others the loftiest, the purest, the keenest. Lady Walham
+might shrink with terror at the Frenchman's name, but her son could
+forgive him, with all his heart, and kiss his mother's hand, and thank
+him as the best friend of his life.
+
+During all the days of his illness, Kew had never once mentioned Ethel's
+name, and once or twice as his recovery progressed, when with doubt and
+tremor his mother alluded to it, he turned from the subject as one
+that was disagreeable and painful. Had she thought seriously on certain
+things? Lady Walham asked. Kew thought not, "but those who are bred up
+as you would have them, mother, are often none the better," the humble
+young fellow said. "I believe she is a very good girl. She is very
+clever, she is exceedingly handsome, she is very good to her parents and
+her brothers and sisters; but--" he did not finish the sentence. Perhaps
+he thought, as he told Ethel afterwards, that she would have agreed with
+Lady Walham even worse than with her imperious old grandmother.
+
+Lady Walham then fell to deplore Sir Brian's condition, accounts of
+whose seizure of course had been despatched to the Kehl party, and to
+lament that a worldly man as he was should have such an affliction, so
+near the grave and so little prepared for it. Here honest Kew, however,
+held out. "Every man for himself, mother," says he. "Sir Brian was bred
+up very strictly, perhaps too strictly as a young man. Don't you know
+that that good Colonel, his elder brother, who seems to me about the
+most honest and good old gentleman I ever met in my life, was driven
+into rebellion and all sorts of wild courses by old Mrs. Newcome's
+tyranny over him? As for Sir Brian, he goes to church every Sunday: has
+prayers in the family every day: I'm sure has led a hundred times better
+life than I have, poor old Sir Brian. I often have thought, mother, that
+though our side was wrong, you could not be altogether right, because I
+remember how my tutor, and Mr. Bonner, and Dr. Laud, when they used to
+come down to us at Kewbury, used to make themselves so unhappy about
+other people." So the widow withdrew her unhappiness about Sir Brian;
+she was quite glad to hope for the best regarding that invalid.
+
+With some fears yet regarding her son,--for many of the books with which
+the good lady travelled could not be got to interest him; at some he
+would laugh outright,--with fear mixed with the maternal joy that he
+was returned to her, and had quitted his old ways; with keen feminine
+triumph, perhaps, that she had won him back, and happiness at his daily
+mending health, all Lady Walham's hours were passed in thankful and
+delighted occupation. George Barnes kept the Newcomes acquainted with
+the state of his brother's health. The skilful surgeon from Strasbourg
+reported daily better and better of him, and the little family were
+living in great peace and contentment, with one subject of dread,
+however, hanging over the mother of the two young men, the arrival of
+Lady Kew, as she was foreboding, the fierce old mother-in-law who had
+worsted Lady Walham in many a previous battle.
+
+It was what they call the summer of St. Martin, and the weather was
+luckily very fine; Kew could presently be wheeled into the garden of
+the hotel, whence he could see the broad turbid current of the swollen
+Rhine: the French bank fringed with alders, the vast yellow fields
+behind them, the great avenue of poplars stretching away to the Alsatian
+city, and its purple minster yonder. Good Lady Walham was for improving
+the shining hour by reading amusing extracts from her favourite volumes,
+gentle anecdotes of Chinese and Hottentot converts, and incidents from
+missionary travel. George Barnes, a wily young diplomatist, insinuated
+Galignani, and hinted that Kew might like a novel; and a profane work
+called Oliver Twist having appeared about this time, which George read
+out to his family with admirable emphasis, it is a fact that Lady Walham
+became so interested in the parish boy's progress, that she took his
+history into her bedroom (where it was discovered, under Blatherwick's
+Voice from Mesopotamia, by her ladyship's maid), and that Kew laughed so
+immensely at Mr. Bumble, the Beadle, as to endanger the reopening of his
+wound.
+
+While, one day, they were so harmlessly and pleasantly occupied, a great
+whacking of whips, blowing of horns, and whirring of wheels was heard in
+the street without. The wheels stopped at their hotel gate; Lady Walham
+started up; ran through the garden door, closing it behind her; and
+divined justly who had arrived. The landlord was bowing; the courier
+pushing about; waiters in attendance; one of them, coming up to
+pale-faced Lady Walham; said, "Her Excellency the Frau Graefinn von Kew
+is even now absteiging."
+
+"Will you be good enough to walk into our salon, Lady Kew?" said
+the daughter-in-law, stepping forward and opening the door of that
+apartment. The Countess, leaning on her staff, entered that darkened
+chamber. She ran up towards an easy-chair, where she supposed Lord Kew
+was. "My dear Frank!" cries the old lady; "my dear boy, what a pretty
+fright you have given us all! They don't keep you in this horrid noisy
+room facing that----Ho--what is this?" cries the Countess, closing her
+sentence abruptly.
+
+"It is not Frank. It is only a bolster, Lady Kew, and I don't keep him
+in a noisy room towards the street," said Lady Walham.
+
+"Ho! how do you do? This is the way to him, I suppose;" and she went to
+another door--it was a cupboard full of the relics of Frank's illness,
+from which Lady Walham's mother-in-law shrunk back aghast. "Will you
+please to see that I have a comfortable room, Maria; and one for my
+maid, next me? I will thank you to see yourself," the Empress of Kew
+said, pointing with her stick, before which many a time the younger lady
+had trembled.
+
+This time Lady Walham only rang the bell. "I don't speak German; and
+have never been on any floor of the house but this. Your servant had
+better see to your room, Lady Kew. That next is mine; and I keep the
+door, which you are trying, locked on other side."
+
+"And I suppose Frank is locked up there!" cried the old lady, "with a
+basin of gruel and a book of Watts's hymns." A servant entered at this
+moment, answering Lady Walham's summons. "Peacock, the Countess of Kew
+says that she proposes to stay here this evening. Please to ask the
+landlord to show her ladyship rooms," said Lady Walham; and by this time
+she had thought of a reply to Lady Kew's last kind speech.
+
+"If my son were locked up in my room, madam, his mother is surely the
+best nurse for him. Why did you not come to him three weeks sooner, when
+there was nobody with him?"
+
+Lady Kew said nothing, but glared and showed her teeth--those pearls set
+in gold.
+
+"And my company may not amuse Lord Kew--"
+
+"He-e-e!" grinned the elder, savagely.
+
+"--But at least it is better than some to which you introduced my son,"
+continued Lady Kew's daughter-in-law, gathering force and wrath as she
+spoke. "Your ladyship may think lightly of me, but you can hardly think
+so ill of me as of the Duchesse d'Ivry, I should suppose, to whom you
+sent my boy, to form him, you said; about whom, when I remonstrated--for
+though I live out of the world I hear of it sometimes--you were
+pleased to tell me that I was a prude and a fool. It is you I thank for
+separating my child from me--yes, you--for so many years of my life;
+and for bringing me to him when he was bleeding and almost a corpse, but
+that God preserved him to the widow's prayers;--and you, you were by,
+and never came near him."
+
+"I--I did not come to see you--or--or--for this kind of scene, Lady
+Walham," muttered the other. Lady Kew was accustomed to triumph, by
+attacking in masses, like Napoleon. Those who faced her routed her.
+
+"No; you did not come for me, I know very well," the daughter went on.
+"You loved me no better than you loved your son, whose life, as long
+as you meddled with it, you made wretched. You came here for my boy.
+Haven't you done him evil enough? And now God has mercifully preserved
+him, you want to lead him back again into ruin and crime. It shall not
+be so, wicked woman! bad mother! cruel, heartless parent!--George!"
+(Here her younger son entered the room, and she ran towards him with
+fluttering robes and seized his hands.) "Here is your grandmother; here
+is the Countess of Kew, come from Baden at last; and she wants--she
+wants to take Frank from us, my dear, and to--give--him--back to
+the--Frenchwoman again. No, no! Oh, my God! Never! never!" And she flung
+herself into George Barnes's arms, fainting with an hysteric burst of
+tears.
+
+"You had best get a strait-waistcoat for your mother, George Barnes,"
+Lady Kew said, scorn and hatred in her face. (If she had been Iago's
+daughter, with a strong likeness to her sire, Lord Steyne's sister could
+not have looked more diabolical.) "Have you had advice for her? Has
+nursing poor Kew turned her head? I came to see him. Why have I been
+left alone for half an hour with this madwoman? You ought not to trust
+her to give Frank medicine. It is positively----"
+
+"Excuse me," said George, with a bow; "I don't think the complaint has
+as yet exhibited itself in my mother's branch of the family. (She always
+hated me," thought George; "but if she had by chance left me a legacy,
+there it goes.) You would like, ma'am, to see the rooms upstairs? Here
+is the landlord to conduct your ladyship. Frank will be quite ready
+to receive you when you come down. I am sure I need not beg of your
+kindness that nothing may be said to agitate him. It is barely three
+weeks since M. de Castillonnes's ball was extracted; and the doctors
+wish he should be kept as quiet as possible."
+
+Be sure that the landlord, the courier, and the persons engaged in
+showing the Countess of Kew the apartments above spent an agreeable time
+with Her Excellency the Frau Graefinn von Kew. She must have had better
+luck in her encounter with these than in her previous passages with her
+grandson and his mother; for when she issued from her apartment in a
+new dress and fresh cap, Lady Kew's face wore an expression of perfect
+serenity. Her attendant may have shook her fist behind her, and her
+man's eyes and face looked Blitz and Donnerwetter; but their mistress's
+features wore that pleased look which they assumed when she had been
+satisfactorily punishing somebody. Lord Kew had by this time got back
+from the garden to his own room, where he awaited grandmamma. If the
+mother and her two sons had in the interval of Lady Kew's toilette tried
+to resume the history of Bumble the Beadle, I fear they could not have
+found it very comical.
+
+"Bless me, my dear child! How well you look! Many a girl would give the
+world to have such a complexion. There is nothing like a mother for a
+nurse! Ah, no! Maria, you deserve to be the Mother Superior of a House
+of Sisters of Charity, you do. The landlord has given me a delightful
+apartment, thank you. He is an extortionate wretch; but I have no doubt
+I shall be very comfortable. The Dodsburys stopped here, I see by the
+travellers' book-quite right, instead of sleeping at that odious buggy
+Strasbourg. We have had a sad, sad time, my dears, at Baden. Between
+anxiety about poor Sir Brian, and about you, you naughty boy, I am sure
+I wonder how I have got through it all. Doctor Finck would not let me
+come away to-day; would I would come."
+
+"I am sure it was uncommonly kind, ma'am," says poor Kew, with a rueful
+face.
+
+"That horrible woman against whom I always warned but you--but young
+men will not take the advice of old grandmammas--has gone away these
+ten days. Monsieur le Duc fetched her; and if he locked her up at
+Moncontour, and kept her on bread-and-water; for the rest of her life,
+I am sure he would serve her right. When a woman once forgets religious
+principles, Kew, she is sure to go wrong. The Conversation-room is shut
+up. The Dorkings go on Tuesday. Clara is really a dear little artless
+creature; one that you will like, Maria--and as for Ethel, I really
+think she is an angel. To see her nursing her poor father is the most
+beautiful sight; night after night she has sate up with him. I know
+where she would like to be, the dear child. And if Frank falls ill
+again, Maria, he won't need a mother or useless old grandmother to nurse
+him. I have got some pretty messages to deliver from her; but they are
+for your private ears, my lord; not even mammas and brothers may hear
+them."
+
+"Do not go, mother! Pray stay, George!" cried the sick man (and again
+Lord Steyne's sister looked uncommonly like that lamented marquis). "My
+cousin is a noble young creature," he went on. "She has admirable good
+qualities, which I appreciate with all my heart; and her beauty, you
+know how I admire it. I have thought of her a great deal as I was lying
+on the bed yonder" (the family look was not so visible in Lady Kew's
+face), "and--and--I wrote to her this very morning; she will have the
+letter by this time, probably."
+
+"Bien! Frank!" Lady Kew smiled (in her supernatural way) almost as much
+as her portrait, by Harlowe, as you may see it at Kewbury to this very
+day. She is represented seated before an easel, painting a miniature of
+her son, Lord Walham.
+
+"I wrote to her on the subject of the last conversation we had
+together," Frank resumed, in rather a timid voice, "the day before my
+accident. Perhaps she did not tell you, ma'am, of what passed between
+us. We had had a quarrel; one of many. Some cowardly hand, which we both
+of us can guess at, had written to her an account of my past life, and
+she showed me the letter. Then I told her, that if she loved me she
+never would have showed it me: without any other words of reproof. I
+bade her farewell. It was not much, the showing that letter; but it was
+enough. In twenty differences we have had together, she had been unjust
+and captious, cruel towards me, and too eager, as I thought, for other
+people's admiration. Had she loved me, it seemed to me Ethel would
+have shown less vanity and better temper. What was I to expect in life
+afterwards from a girl who before her marriage used me so? Neither she
+nor I could be happy. She could be gentle enough, and kind, and anxious
+to please any man whom she loves, God bless her! As for me, I suppose,
+I'm not worthy of so much talent and beauty, so we both understood that
+that was a friendly farewell; and as I have been lying on my bed yonder,
+thinking, perhaps, I never might leave it, or if I did, that I should
+like to lead a different sort of life to that which ended in sending me
+there, my resolve of last month was only confirmed. God forbid that she
+and I should lead the lives of some folks we know; that Ethel should
+marry without love, perhaps to fall into it afterwards; and that I,
+after this awful warning I have had, should be tempted to back into that
+dreary life I was leading. It was wicked, ma'am, I knew it was; many and
+many a day I used to say so to myself, and longed to get rid of it. I am
+a poor weak devil, I know, I am only too easily led into temptation, and
+I should only make matters worse if I married a woman who cares for the
+world more than for me, and would not make me happy at home."
+
+"Ethel care for the world!" gasped out Lady Kew; "a most artless,
+simple, affectionate creature; my dear Frank, she----"
+
+He interrupted her, as a blush came rushing over his pale face. "Ah!"
+said he, "if I had been the painter, and young Clive had been Lord Kew,
+which of us do you think she would have chosen? And she was right. He is
+a brave, handsome, honest young fellow, and is a thousand times cleverer
+and better than I am."
+
+"Not better, dear, thank God," cried his mother, coming round to the
+other side of his sofa, and seizing her son's hand.
+
+"No, I don't think he is better, Frank," said the diplomatist, walking
+away to the window. And as for grandmamma at the end of this little
+speech and scene, her ladyship's likeness to her brother, the late
+revered Lord Steyne, was more frightful than ever.
+
+After a minute's pause, she rose up on her crooked stick, and said, "I
+really feel I am unworthy to keep company with so much exquisite virtue.
+It will be enhanced, my lord, by the thought of the pecuniary
+sacrifice which you are making, for I suppose you know that I have been
+hoarding--yes, and saving, and pinching,--denying myself the necessities
+of life, in order that my grandson might one day have enough to support
+his rank. Go and live and starve in your dreary old house, and marry a
+parson's daughter, and sing psalms with your precious mother; and I have
+no doubt you and she--she who has thwarted me all through life, and
+whom I hated,--yes, I hated from the moment she took my son from me, and
+brought misery into my family, will be all the happier when she thinks
+that she has made a poor, fond, lonely old woman more lonely and
+miserable. If you please, George Barnes, be good enough to tell my
+people that I shall go back to Baden," and waving her children away from
+her, the old woman tottered out of the room on her crutch.
+
+So the wicked fairy drove away disappointed in the chariot with the very
+dragons which had brought her away in the morning, and just had time
+to get their feed of black bread. I wonder whether they were the horses
+Clive and J. J. and Jack Belsize had used when they passed on their road
+to Switzerland? Black Care sits behind all sorts of horses, and gives
+a trinkgelt to postillions all over the map. A thrill of triumph may be
+permitted to Lady Walham after her victory over her mother-in-law. What
+Christian woman does not like to conquer another? and if that other were
+a mother-in-law, would the victory be less sweet? Husbands and wives
+both will be pleased that Lady Walham has had the better of this bout:
+and you, young boys and virgins, when your turn comes to be married, you
+will understand the hidden meaning of this passage. George Barnes got
+Oliver Twist out, and began to read therein. Miss Nancy and Fanny again
+were summoned before this little company to frighten and delight them.
+I dare say even Fagin and Miss Nancy failed with the widow, so absorbed
+was she with the thoughts of the victory which she had just won. For the
+evening service, in which her sons rejoiced her fond heart by joining,
+she lighted on a psalm which was as a Te Deum after the battle--the
+battle of Kehl by Rhine, where Kew's soul, as his mother thought, was
+the object of contention between the enemies. I have said, this book is
+all about the world and a respectable family dwelling in it. It is not a
+sermon, except where it cannot help itself, and the speaker pursuing the
+destiny of his narrative finds such a homily before him. O friend, in
+your life and mine, don't we light upon such sermons daily?--don't we
+see at home as well as amongst our neighbours that battle betwixt Evil
+and Good? Here on one side is Self and Ambition and Advancement;
+and Right and Love on the other. Which shall we let to triumph for
+ourselves--which for our children?
+
+The young men were sitting smoking the vesper cigar. (Frank would do
+it, and his mother actually lighted his cigar for him now, enjoining
+him straightway after to go to bed.) Kew smoked and looked at a
+star--shining above in the heaven. "Which is that star?" he asked: and
+the accomplished young diplomatist answered it was Jupiter.
+
+"What a lot of things you know, George!" cries the senior, delighted;
+"you ought to have been the elder, you ought, by Jupiter! But you have
+lost your chance this time."
+
+"Yes, thank God!" says George.
+
+"And I am going to be all right--and to turn over a new leaf, old
+boy--and paste down the old ones, eh? I wrote to Martins this morning
+to have all my horses sold; and I'll never beg--so help me--so help me,
+Jupiter. I made a vow--a promise to myself, you see, that I wouldn't
+if I recovered. And I wrote to Cousin Ethel this morning.--As I thought
+over the matter yonder, I felt quite certain I was right, and that we
+could never, never pull together. Now the Countess is gone, I wonder
+whether I was right--to give up sixty thousand pounds, and the prettiest
+girl in London?"
+
+"Shall I take horses and go after her? My mother's gone to bed, she
+won't know," asked George. "Sixty thousand is a lot of money to lose."
+
+Kew laughed. "If you were to go and tell our grandmother that I could
+not live the night through, and that you would be Lord Kew in the
+morning, and your son Viscount Walham, I think the Countess would make
+up a match between you and the sixty thousand pounds, and the prettiest
+girl in England: she would, by--by Jupiter. I intend only to swear by
+the heathen gods now, Georgy.--No, I am not sorry I wrote to Ethel.
+What a fine girl she is!--I don't mean her beauty merely, but such
+a noble-bred one! And to think that there she is in the market to
+be knocked down to--I say, I was going to call that three-year-old,
+Ethelinda.--We must christen her over again for Tattersall's, Georgy."
+
+A knock is heard through an adjoining door, and a maternal voice cries,
+"It is time to go to bed." So the brothers part, and, let us hope, sleep
+soundly.
+
+The Countess of Kew, meanwhile, has returned to Baden; where, though it
+is midnight when she arrives, and the old lady has had two long bootless
+journeys, you will be grieved to hear, that she does not sleep a single
+wink. In the morning she hobbles over to the Newcome quarters; and Ethel
+comes down to her pale and calm. How is her father? He has had a good
+night: he is a little better, speaks more clearly, has a little more the
+use of his limbs.
+
+"I wish I had had a good night!" groans out the Countess.
+
+"I thought you were going to Lord Kew, at Kehl," remarked her
+granddaughter.
+
+"I did go, and returned with wretches who would not bring me more than
+five miles an hour! I dismissed that brutal grinning courier; and I have
+given warning to that fiend of a maid."
+
+"And Frank is pretty well, grandmamma?"
+
+"Well! He looks as pink as a girl in her first season! I found him,
+and his brother George, and their mamma. I think Maria was hearing them
+their catechism," cries the old lady.
+
+"N. and M. together! Very pretty," says Ethel, gravely. "George has
+always been a good boy, and it is quite time for my Lord Kew to begin."
+
+The elder lady looked at her descendant, but Miss Ethel's glance was
+impenetrable. "I suppose you can fancy, my dear, why I came back?" said
+Lady Kew.
+
+"Because you quarrelled with Lady Walham, grandmamma. I think I have
+heard that there used to be differences between you." Miss Newcome was
+armed for defence and attack; in which cases we have said Lady Kew did
+not care to assault her. "My grandson told me that he had written to
+you," the Countess said.
+
+"Yes: and had you waited but half an hour yesterday, you might have
+spared me the humiliation of that journey."
+
+"You--the humiliation--Ethel!"
+
+"Yes, me," Ethel flashed out. "Do you suppose it is none to have me
+bandied about from bidder to bidder, and offered for sale to a gentleman
+who will not buy me? Why have you and all my family been so eager to get
+rid of me? Why should you suppose or desire that Lord Kew should like
+me? Hasn't he the Opera; and such friends as Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry,
+to whom your ladyship introduced him in early life? He told me so: and
+she was good enough to inform me of the rest. What attractions have I
+in comparison with such women? And to this man from whom I am parted
+by good fortune; to this man who writes to remind me that we are
+separated--your ladyship must absolutely go and entreat him to give
+me another trial! It is too much, grandmamma. Do please to let me stay
+where I am; and worry me with no more schemes for my establishment in
+life. Be contented with the happiness which you have secured for Clara
+Pulleyn and Barnes; and leave me to take care of my poor father. Here
+I know I am doing right. Here, at least, there is no such sorrow, and
+doubt, and shame, for me, as my friends have tried to make me endure.
+There is my father's bell. He likes me to be with him at breakfast and
+to read his paper to him."
+
+"Stay a little, Ethel," cried the Countess, with a trembling voice. "I
+am older than your father, and you owe me a little obedience--that is,
+if children do owe any obedience to their parents nowadays. I don't
+know. I am an old woman--the world perhaps has changed since my time;
+and it is you who ought to command, I dare say, and we to follow.
+Perhaps I have been wrong all through life, and in trying to teach my
+children to do as I was made to do. God knows I have had very little
+comfort from them: whether they did or whether they didn't. You
+and Frank I had set my heart on; I loved you out of all my
+grandchildren--was it very unnatural that I should wish to see you
+together? For that boy I have been saving money these years past. He
+flies back to the arms of his mother, who has been pleased to hate me as
+only such virtuous people can; who took away my own son from me; and now
+his son--towards whom the only fault I ever committed was to spoil
+him and be too fond of him. Don't leave me too, my child. Let me have
+something that I can like at my years. And I like your pride, Ethel, and
+your beauty, my dear; and I am not angry with your hard words; and if I
+wish to see you in the place in life which becomes you--do I do wrong?
+No. Silly girl! There--give me the little hand. How hot it is! Mine is
+as cold as a stone--and shakes, doesn't it?--Eh! it was a pretty hand
+once! What did Anne--what did your mother say to Frank's letter.
+
+"I did not show it to her," Ethel answered.
+
+"Let me see it, my dear," whispered Lady Kew, in a coaxing way.
+
+"There it is," said Ethel pointing to the fireplace, where there lay
+some torn fragments and ashes of paper. It was the same fireplace at
+which Clive's sketches had been burned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX. Amongst the Painters
+
+
+When Clive Newcome comes to be old, no doubt he will remember his Roman
+days as amongst the happiest which fate ever awarded him. The simplicity
+of the student's life there, the greatness and friendly splendour of the
+scenes surrounding him, the delightful nature of the occupation in which
+he is engaged, the pleasant company of comrades, inspired by a like
+pleasure over a similar calling, the labour, the meditation, the holiday
+and the kindly feast afterwards, should make the Art-students the
+happiest of youth, did they but know their good fortune. Their work is
+for the most part delightfully easy. It does not exercise the brain too
+much, but gently occupies it, and with a subject most agreeable to the
+scholar. The mere poetic flame, or jet of invention, needs to be lighted
+up but very seldom, namely, when the young painter is devising his
+subject, or settling the composition thereof. The posing of figures
+and drapery; the dexterous copying of the line; the artful processes
+of cross-hatching, of stumping, of laying on lights, and what not; the
+arrangement of colour, and the pleasing operations of glazing and the
+like, are labours for the most part merely manual. These, with the
+smoking of a proper number of pipes, carry the student through his day's
+work. If you pass his door you will very probably hear him singing at
+his easel. I should like to know what young lawyer, mathematician, or
+divinity scholar can sing over his volumes, and at the same time advance
+with his labour? In every city where Art is practised there are old
+gentlemen who never touched a pencil in their lives, but find the
+occupation and company of artists so agreeable that they are never out
+of the studios; follow one generation of painters after another; sit
+by with perfect contentment while Jack is drawing his pifferaro, or Tom
+designing his cartoon, and years afterwards when Jack is established
+in Newman Street, and Tom a Royal Academician, shall still be found in
+their rooms, occupied now by fresh painters and pictures, telling the
+youngsters, their successors, what glorious fellows Jack and Tom were.
+A poet must retire to privy places and meditate his rhymes in secret; a
+painter can practise his trade in the company of friends. Your splendid
+chef d'ecole, a Rubens or a Horace Vernet, may sit with a secretary
+reading to him; a troop of admiring scholars watching the master's hand;
+or a company of court ladies and gentlemen (to whom he addresses a few
+kind words now and again) looking on admiringly; whilst the humblest
+painter, be he ever so poor, may have a friend watching at his easel, or
+a gentle wife sitting by with her work in her lap, and with fond smiles
+or talk or silence cheering his labour.
+
+Amongst all ranks and degrees of painters assembled at Rome, Mr. Clive
+found companions and friends. The cleverest man was not the best
+artist very often: the ablest artist not the best critic nor the best
+companion. Many a man could give no account of the faculty within him,
+but achieved success because he could not help it; and did, in an hour
+and without effort, that which another could not effect with half a
+life's labour. There were young sculptors who had never read a line of
+Homer, who took on themselves nevertheless to interpret and continue the
+heroic Greek art. There were young painters with the strongest natural
+taste for low humour, comic singing, and Cyder-Cellar jollifications,
+who would imitate nothing under Michael Angelo, and whose canvases
+teemed with tremendous allegories of fates, furies, genii of death and
+battle. There were long-haired lads who fancied the sublime lay in
+the Peruginesque manner, and depicted saintly personages with crisp
+draperies, crude colours, and haloes of gold-leaf. Our friend marked all
+these practitioners of Art with their various oddities and tastes, and
+was welcomed in the ateliers of all of them, from the grave dons and
+seniors, the senators of the French and English Academy, down to the
+jovial students who railed at the elders over their cheap cups at the
+Lepre. What a gallant, starving, generous, kindly life, many of them
+led! What fun in their grotesque airs, what friendship and gentleness
+in their poverty! How splendidly Carlo talked of the marquis his cousin,
+and the duke his intimate friend! How great Federigo was on the subject
+of his wrongs, from the Academy at home, a pack of tradesmen who could
+not understand high art, and who had never seen a good picture! With
+what haughtiness Augusto swaggered about at Sir John's soirees, though
+he was known to have borrowed Fernando's coat, and Luigi's dress-boots!
+If one or the other was ill, how nobly and generously his companions
+flocked to comfort him, took turns to nurse the sick man through nights
+of fever, contributed out of their slender means to help him through his
+difficulty. Max, who loves fine dresses and the carnival so, gave up
+a costume and a carriage so as to help Paul, when he sold his picture
+(through the agency of Pietro, with whom he had quarrelled, and who
+recommended him to a patron), gave a third of the money back to Max, and
+took another third portion to Lazaro, with his poor wife and children,
+who had not got a single order all that winter--and so the story went
+on. I have heard Clive tell of two noble young Americans who came to
+Europe to study their art; of whom the one fell sick, whilst the other
+supported his penniless comrade, and out of sixpence a day absolutely
+kept but a penny for himself, giving the rest to his sick companion. "I
+should like to have known that good Samaritan, Sir," our Colonel said,
+twirling his mustachios, when we saw him again, and his son told him
+that story.
+
+J. J., in his steady silent way, worked on every day, and for many hours
+every day. When Clive entered their studio of a morning, he found J. J.
+there, and there he left him. When the Life Academy was over, at night,
+and Clive went out to his soirees, J. J. lighted his lamp and continued
+his happy labour. He did not care for the brawling supper-parties of his
+comrades; liked better to stay at home than to go into the world, and
+was seldom abroad of a night except during the illness of Luigi before
+mentioned, when J. J. spent constant evenings at the other's bedside. J.
+J. was fortunate as well as skilful: people in the world took a liking
+to the modest young man, and he had more than one order for pictures.
+The Artists' Club, at the Lepre, set him down as close with his money;
+but a year after he left Rome, Lazaro and his wife, who still remained
+there, told a different tale. Clive Newcome, when he heard of their
+distress, gave them something--as much as he could spare; but J. J. gave
+more, and Clive was as eager in acknowledging and admiring his friend's
+generosity as he was in speaking of his genius. His was a fortunate
+organisation indeed. Study was his chief amusement. Self-denial came
+easily to him. Pleasure, or what is generally called so, had little
+charm for him. His ordinary companions were pure and sweet thoughts; his
+out-door enjoyment the contemplation of natural beauty; for recreation,
+the hundred pleasant dexterities and manipulations of his craft were
+ceaselessly interesting to him: he would draw every knot in an oak
+panel, or every leaf in an orange-tree, smiling, and taking a gay
+delight over the simple feats of skill: whenever you found him he seemed
+watchful and serene, his modest virgin-lamp always lighted and trim. No
+gusts of passion extinguished it; no hopeless wandering in the darkness
+afterwards led him astray. Wayfarers through the world, we meet now and
+again with such purity; and salute it, and hush whilst it passes on.
+
+We have it under Clive Newcome's own signature, that he intended to pass
+a couple of years in Italy, devoting himself exclusively to the study of
+his profession. Other besides professional reasons were working secretly
+in the young man's mind, causing him to think that absence from England
+was the best cure for a malady under which he secretly laboured. But
+change of air may cure some sick people more speedily than the sufferers
+ever hoped; and also it is on record, that young men with the very best
+intentions respecting study, do not fulfil them, and are led away from
+their scheme by accident, or pleasure, or necessity, or some good cause.
+Young Clive worked sedulously two or three months at his vocation
+at Rome, secretly devouring, no doubt, the pangs of sentimental
+disappointment under which he laboured; and he drew from his models, and
+he sketched round about everything that suited his pencil on both sides
+of Tiber; and he laboured at the Life Academy of nights--a model himself
+to other young students. The symptoms of his sentimental malady began
+to abate. He took an interest in the affairs of Jack, and Tom, and
+Harry round about him: Art exercised its great healing influence on his
+wounded spirit, which to be sure had never given in. The meeting of
+the painters at the Cafe Greco, and at their private houses, was very
+jovial, pleasant, and lively. Clive smoked his pipe, drank his glass of
+Marsala, sang his song, and took part in the general chorus as gaily as
+the jolliest of the boys. He was the cock of the whole painting school,
+the favourite of all; and to be liked by the people, you may be pretty
+sure that we for our parts must like them.
+
+Then, besides the painters, he had, as he has informed us, the other
+society of Rome. Every winter there is a gay and pleasant English colony
+in that capital, of course more or less remarkable for rank, fashion,
+and agreeability with every varying year. In Clive's year some very
+pleasant folks set up their winter quarters in the usual foreigners'
+resort round about the Piazza di Spagna. I was amused to find, lately,
+looking over the travels of the respectable M. de Poellnitz, that, a
+hundred and twenty years ago, the same quarter, the same streets
+and palaces, scarce changed from those days, were even then polite
+foreigners' resort. Of one or two of the gentlemen Clive had made the
+acquaintance in the hunting-field; others he had met during his brief
+appearance in the London world. Being a youth of great personal agility,
+fitted thereby to the graceful performance of polkas, etc.; having good
+manners, and good looks, and good credit with Prince Poloni, or some
+other banker, Mr. Newcome was thus made very welcome to the Anglo-Roman
+society; and as kindly received in genteel houses, where they drank tea
+and danced the galop, as in those dusky taverns and retired lodgings
+where his bearded comrades, the painters held their meetings.
+
+Thrown together every day, and night after night; flocking to the
+same picture-galleries, statue-galleries, Pincian drives, and church
+functions, the English colonists at Rome perforce became intimate, and
+in many cases friendly. They have an English library where the various
+meets for the week are placarded: on such a day the Vatican galleries
+are open: the next is the feast of Saint So-and-so: on Wednesday there
+will be music and vespers at the Sistine Chapel--on Thursday, the Pope
+will bless the animals--sheep, horses, and what-not: and flocks of
+English accordingly rush to witness the benediction of droves of
+donkeys. In a word, the ancient city of the Caesars, the august fanes
+of the Popes, with their splendour and ceremony, are all mapped out and
+arranged for English diversion; and we run in a crowd to high mass at
+St. Peter's, or to the illumination on Easter Day, as we run when the
+bell rings to the Bosjesmen at Cremorne, or the fireworks at Vauxhall.
+
+Running to see fireworks alone, rushing off to examine Bosjesmen by
+one's self, is a dreary work: I should think very few men would have the
+courage to do it unattended, and personally would not prefer a pipe in
+their own rooms. Hence if Clive went to see all these sights, as he did,
+it is to be concluded that he went in company; and if he went in company
+and sought it, we may suppose that little affair which annoyed him at
+Baden no longer tended to hurt his peace of mind very seriously. The
+truth is, our countrymen are pleasanter abroad than at home; most
+hospitable, kindly, and eager to be pleased and to please. You see a
+family half a dozen times in a week in the little Roman circle, whom
+you shall not meet twice in a season afterwards in the enormous London
+round. When Easter is over and everybody is going away at Rome, you and
+your neighbour shake hands, sincerely sorry to part: in London we are
+obliged to dilute our kindness so that there is hardly any smack of the
+original milk. As one by one the pleasant families dropped off with whom
+Clive had spent his happy winter; as Admiral Freeman's carriage drove
+away, whose pretty girls he had caught at St. Peter's kissing St.
+Peter's toe; as Dick Denby's family ark appeared with all Denby's sweet
+young children kissing farewells to him out of the window; as those
+three charming Miss Baliols with whom he had that glorious day in the
+Catacombs; as friend after friend quitted the great city with kind
+greetings, warm pressures of the hand, and hopes of meeting in a yet
+greater city on the banks of the Thames, young Clive felt a depression
+of spirit. Rome was Rome, but it was pleasanter to see it in company;
+our painters are smoking still at the Oafs Greco, but a society all
+smoke and all painters did not suit him. If Mr. Clive is not a Michael
+Angelo or a Beethoven, if his genius is not gloomy, solitary, gigantic,
+shining alone, like a lighthouse, a storm round about him, and breakers
+dashing at his feet, I cannot help myself: he is as Heaven made him,
+brave, honest, gay, and friendly, and persons of a gloomy turn must not
+look to him as a hero.
+
+So Clive and his companion worked away with all their hearts from
+November until far into April when Easter came, and the glorious gala
+with which the Roman Church celebrates that holy season. By this time
+Clive's books were full of sketches. Ruins, imperial and mediaeval;
+peasants and bagpipemen; Passionists with shaven polls; Capuchins and
+the equally hairy frequenters of the Cafe Greco; painters of all nations
+who resort there; Cardinals and their queer equipages and attendants;
+the Holy Father himself (it was Gregory sixteenth of the name); the
+dandified English on the Pincio and the wonderful Roman members of the
+hunt--were not all these designed by the young man and admired by his
+friends in after-days? J. J.'s sketches were few, but he had painted two
+beautiful little pictures, and sold them for so good a price that Prince
+Polonia's people were quite civil to him. He had orders for yet more
+pictures, and having worked very hard, thought himself authorised to
+accompany Mr. Clive upon a pleasure-trip to Naples, which the latter
+deemed necessary after his own tremendous labours. He for his part had
+painted no pictures, though he had commenced a dozen and turned them to
+the wall; but he had sketched, and dined, and smoked, and danced, as we
+have seen. So the little britzska was put behind horses again, and
+our two friends set out on their tour, having quite a crowd of
+brother-artists to cheer them, who had assembled and had a breakfast for
+the purpose at that comfortable osteria near the Lateran Gate. How the
+fellows flung their hats up, and shouted, "Lebe wohl," and "Adieu," and
+"God bless you, old boy," in many languages! Clive was the young swell
+of the artists of that year, and adored by the whole of the jolly
+company. His sketches were pronounced on all hands to be admirable: it
+was agreed that if he chose he might do anything.
+
+So with promises of a speedy return they left behind them the noble
+city, which all love who once have seen it, and of which we think
+afterwards ever with the kindness and the regard of home. They dashed
+across the Campagna and over the beautiful hills of Albano, and sped
+through the solemn Pontine Marshes, and stopped to roost at Terracing
+(which was not at all like Fra Diavolo's Terracing at Covent Garden,
+as J. J. was distressed to remark), and so, galloping onwards through
+a hundred ancient cities that crumble on the shores of the beautiful
+Mediterranean, behold, on the second day as they ascended a hill about
+noon. Vesuvius came in view, its great shape shimmering blue in the
+distant haze, its banner of smoke in the cloudless sky. And about five
+o'clock in the evening (as everybody will who starts from Terracing
+early and pays the postboy well), the travellers came to an ancient city
+walled and fortified, with drawbridges over the shining moats.
+
+"Here is CAPUA," says J. J., and Clive burst out laughing: thinking of
+his Capua which he had left--how many months--years it seemed ago! From
+Capua to Naples is a fine straight road, and our travellers were landed
+at the latter place at suppertime; where, if they had quarters at the
+Vittoria Hotel, they were as comfortable as any gentlemen painters need
+wish to be in this world.
+
+The aspect of the place was so charming and delightful to Clive:--the
+beautiful sea stretched before his eyes when waking, Capri a fairy
+island in the distance, in the amethyst rocks of which Sirens might be
+playing--that fair line of cities skirting the shore glittering white
+along the purple water--over the whole brilliant scene Vesuvius rising
+with cloudlets playing round its summit, and the country bursting out
+into that glorious vegetation with which sumptuous nature decorates
+every spring--this city and scene of Naples were so much to Clive's
+liking that I have a letter from him dated a couple of days after the
+young man's arrival, in which he announces his intention of staying
+there for ever, and gives me an invitation to some fine lodgings in a
+certain palazzo, on which he has cast his eye. He is so enraptured with
+the place, that he says to die and be buried there even would be quite a
+treat, so charming is the cemetery where the Neapolitan dead repose.
+
+The Fates did not, however, ordain that Clive Newcome should pass all
+his life at Naples. His Roman banker presently forwarded a few letters
+to his address; some which had arrived after his departure, others which
+had been lying at the Poste Restante, with his name written in perfectly
+legible characters, but which the authorities of the post, according to
+their custom, would not see when Clive sent for them.
+
+It was one of these letters which Clive clutched the most eagerly. It
+had been lying since October, actually, at the Roman post, though Clive
+had asked for letters there a hundred times. It was that little letter
+from Ethel, in reply to his own, whereof we have made mention in a
+previous chapter. There was not much in the little letter. Nothing, of
+course, that Virtue or Grandmamma might not read over the young writer's
+shoulder. It was affectionate, simple, rather melancholy; described in a
+few words Sir Brian's seizure and present condition; spoke of Lord
+Kew, who was mending rapidly, as if Clive, of course, was aware of his
+accident; of the children, of Clive's father, and ended with a hearty
+"God bless you," to Clive, from his sincere Ethel.
+
+"You boast of its being over. You see it is not over," says Clive's
+monitor and companion. "Else, why should you have dashed at that letter
+before all the others, Clive?" J. J. had been watching, not without
+interest, Clive's blank face as he read the young lady's note.
+
+"How do you know who wrote the letter?" asks Clive.
+
+"I can read the signature in your face," says the other; "and I could
+almost tell the contents of the note. Why have you such a tell-tale
+face, Clive?"
+
+"It is over; but when a man has once, you know, gone through an affair
+like that," says Clive, looking very grave, "he--he's anxious to hear of
+Alice Grey, and how she's getting on, you see, my good friend." And he
+began to shout out as of old--
+
+ "Her heart it is another's, she--never--can--be--mine;"
+
+and to laugh at the end of the song. "Well, well," says he; "it is a
+very kind note, a very proper little note; the expression elegant, J.
+J., the sentiment is most correct. All the little t's most properly
+crossed, and all the little i's have dots over their little heads.
+It's a sort of a prize note, don't you see; and one such, as in the
+old spelling-book story, the good boy received a plum-cake for writing.
+Perhaps you weren't educated on the old spelling-book, J. J.? My good
+old father taught me to read out of his--I say, I think it was a shame
+to keep the old boy waiting whilst I have been giving an audience to
+this young lady. Dear old father!" and he apostrophised the letter. "I
+beg your pardon, sir; Miss Newcome requested five minutes' conversation,
+and I was obliged, from politeness, you know, to receive. There's
+nothing between us; nothing but what's most correct, upon my honour and
+conscience." And he kissed his father's letter, and calling out again,
+"Dear old father!" proceeded to read as follows:--
+
+"'Your letters, my dearest Clive, have been the greatest comfort to
+me. I seem to hear you as I read them. I can't but think that this, the
+modern and natural style, is a great progress upon the old-fashioned
+manner of my day, when we used to begin to our fathers, 'Honoured
+Father,' or even 'Honoured Sir' some precisians used to write still from
+Mr. Lord's Academy, at Tooting, where I went before Grey Friars--though
+I suspect parents were no more honoured in those days than nowadays. I
+know one who had rather be trusted than honoured; and you may call me
+what you please, so as you do that.
+
+"'It is not only to me your letters give pleasure. Last week I took
+yours from Baden Baden, No. 3, September 15, into Calcutta, and could
+not help showing it at Government House, where I dined. Your sketch
+of the old Russian Princess and her little boy, gambling, was capital.
+Colonel Buckmaster, Lord Bagwig's private secretary, knew her, and says
+it is to a T. And I read out to some of my young fellows what you said
+about play, and how you had given it over. I very much fear some of the
+young rogues are at dice and brandy-pawnee before tiffin. What you
+say of young Ridley, I take cum grano. His sketches I thought very
+agreeable; but to compare them to a certain gentleman's----Never mind,
+I shall not try to make him think too well of himself. I kissed dear
+Ethel's hand in your letter. I write her a long letter by this mail.
+
+"'If Paul de Florac in any way resembles his mother, between you and him
+there ought to be a very warm regard. I knew her when I was a boy, long
+before you were born or thought of; and in wandering forty years
+through the world since, I have seen no woman in my eyes so good or so
+beautiful. Your cousin Ethel reminded me of her; as handsome, but not so
+lovely. Yes, it was that pale lady you saw at Paris, with eyes full of
+care, and hair streaked with grey. So it will be the turn of you young
+folks, come eight more lustres, and your heads will be bald like mine,
+or grey like Madame de Florac's, and bending over the ground where we
+are lying in quiet. I understand from you that young Paul is not in
+very flourishing circumstances. If he still is in need, mind and be his
+banker, and I will be yours. Any child of hers must never want when I
+have a spare guinea. I do not mind telling you, sir, that I cared for
+her more than millions of guineas once; and half broke my heart about
+her when I went to India, as a young chap. So, if any such misfortunes
+happen to you, consider, my boy, you are not the only one.
+
+"'Binnie writes me word that he has been ailing. I hope you are a good
+correspondent with him. What made me turn to him just after speaking of
+unlucky love affairs? Could I be thinking about little Rosie Mackenzie?
+She is a sweet little lass, and James will leave her a pretty piece of
+money. Verbum sap. I should like you to marry; but God forbid you should
+marry for a million of gold mohurs.
+
+"'And gold mohurs bring me to another subject. Do you know I narrowly
+missed losing half a lakh of rupees which I had at an agent's here? And
+who do you think warned me about him? Our friend Rummun Loll, who
+has lately been in England, and with whom I made the voyage from
+Southampton. He is a man of wonderful tact and observation. I used to
+think meanly of the honesty of natives and treat them haughtily, as
+I recollect doing this very gentleman at your Uncle Newcome's in
+Bryanstone Square. He heaped coals of fire on my head by saving my money
+for me; and I have placed it with interest in his house. If I would but
+listen to him, my capital might be trebled in a year, he says, and the
+interest immensely increased. He enjoys the greatest esteem among the
+moneyed men here; keeps a splendid establishment and house here in
+Barrackpore; is princely in his benefactions. He talks to me about the
+establishment of a bank, of which the profits are so enormous and the
+scheme so (seemingly) clear, that I don't know whether I mayn't be
+tempted to take a few shares. Nous verrons. Several of my friends are
+longing to have a finger in it; but be sure this, I shall do nothing
+rashly and without the very best advice.
+
+"'I have not been frightened yet by your draughts upon me. Draw as many
+of these as you please. You know I don't half like the other kind of
+drawing, except as a delassement: but if you chose to be a weaver, like
+my grandfather, I should not say you nay. Don't stint yourself of money
+or of honest pleasure. Of what good is money, unless we can make those
+we love happy with it? There would be no need for me to save, if you
+were to save too. So, and as you know as well as I what our means are,
+in every honest way use them. I should like you not to pass the whole
+of next year in Italy, but to come home and pay a visit to honest James
+Binnie. I wonder how the old barrack in Fitzroy Square looks without
+me? Try and go round by Paris on your way home, and pay your visit, and
+carry your father's fond remembrances to Madame la Comtesse de Florac.
+I don't say remember me to my brother, as I write Brian by this mail.
+Adieu, mon fils! je t'embrasse!--and am always my Clive's affectionate
+father, T. N.'"
+
+"Isn't he a noble old trump?" That point had been settled by the young
+men any time these three years. And now Mr. J. J. remarked that when
+Clive had read his father's letter once, then he read Ethel's over
+again, and put it in his breast-pocket, and was very disturbed in mind
+that day, pishing and pshawing at the statue-gallery which they went to
+see at the Museo.
+
+"After all," says Clive, "what rubbish these second-rate statues are!
+what a great hulking abortion is this brute of a Farnese Hercules!
+There's only one bit in the whole gallery that is worth a
+twopenny-piece."
+
+It was the beautiful fragment called Psyche. J. J. smiled as his comrade
+spoke in admiration of this statue--in the slim shape, in the delicate
+formation of the neck, in the haughty virginal expression, the Psyche is
+not unlike the Diana of the Louvre--and the Diana of the Louvre we have
+said was like a certain young lady.
+
+"After all," continues Clive, looking up at the great knotted legs of
+that clumsy caricatured porter which Glykon the Athenian sculptured
+in bad times of art surely,--"she could not write otherwise than she
+did--don't you see? Her letter is quite kind and affectionate. You see
+she says she shall always hear of me with pleasure: hopes I'll come back
+soon, and bring some good pictures with me, since pictures I will do.
+She thinks small beer of painters, J. J.--well, we don't think small
+beer of ourselves, my noble friend. I--I suppose it must be over by this
+time, and I may write to her as the Countess of Kew." The custode of
+the apartment had seen admiration and wonder expressed by hundreds of
+visitors to his marble Giant: but he had never known Hercules occasion
+emotion before, as in the case of the young stranger; who, after staring
+a while at the statue, dashed his hand across his forehead with a groan,
+and walked away from before the graven image of the huge Strongman, who
+had himself been made such a fool by women.
+
+"My father wants me to go and see James and Madame de Florac," says
+Clive, as they stride down the street to the Toledo.
+
+J. J. puts his arm through his companion's, which is deep the pocket
+of his velvet paletot. "You must not go home till you hear it is over,
+Clive," whispers J. J.
+
+"Of course not, old boy," says the other, blowing tobacco out of his
+shaking head.
+
+Not very long after their arrival, we may be sure they went to Pompeii,
+of which place, as this is not an Italian tour, but a history of Clive
+Newcome, Esquire, and his most respectable family, we shall offer
+to give no description. The young man had read Sir Bulwer Lytton's
+delightful story, which has become the history of Pompeii, before they
+came thither, and Pliny's description, apud the Guide-Book. Admiring the
+wonderful ingenuity with which the English writer had illustrated the
+place by his text, as if the houses were so many pictures to which he
+had appended a story, Clive, the wag, who was always indulging his vein
+for caricature, was proposing that that they should take the same place,
+names, people, and make a burlesque story: "What would be a better
+figure," says he, "than Pliny's mother, whom the historian describes as
+exceedingly corpulent, and walking away from the catastrophe with
+slaves holding cushions behind her, to shield her plump person from the
+cinders! Yes, old Mrs Pliny shall be my heroine!" says Clive. A picture
+of her on a dark grey paper and touched up with red at the extremities,
+exists in Clive's album to the present day.
+
+As they were laughing, rattling, wondering, mimicking, the cicerone
+attending them with his nasal twaddle, anon pausing and silent, yielding
+to the melancholy pity and wonder which the aspect of that strange and
+smiling place inspires,--behold they come upon another party of English,
+two young men accompanying a lady.
+
+"What, Clive!" cries one.
+
+"My dear, dear Lord Kew!" shouts the other; and as the young man rushes
+up and grasps the two hands of the other, they begin to blush----
+
+Lord Kew and his family resided in a neighbouring hotel on the Chiafa at
+Naples; and that very evening on returning from the Pompeian excursion,
+the two painters were invited to take tea by those friendly persons. J.
+J. excused himself, and sate at home drawing all night. Clive went,
+and passed a pleasant evening; in which all sorts of future tours and
+pleasure-parties were projected by the young men. They were to visit
+Paestum, Capri, Sicily; why not Malta and the East? asked Lord Kew.
+
+Lady Walham was alarmed. Had not Kew been in the East already? Clive was
+surprised and agitated too. Could Kew think of going to the East, and
+making long journeys when he had--he had other engagements that would
+necessitate his return home? No, he must not go to the East, Lord Kew's
+mother avowed; Kew had promised to stay with her during the summer
+at Castellammare, and Mr. Newcome must come and paint their portraits
+there--all their portraits. She would like to have an entire
+picture-gallery of Kews, if her son would remain at home during the
+sittings.
+
+At an early hour Lady Walham retired to rest, exacting Clive's promise
+to come to Castellammare; and George Barnes disappeared to array himself
+in an evening costume, and to pay his round of visits as became a young
+diplomatist. This part of diplomatic duty does not commence until after
+the opera at Naples; and society begins when the rest of the world has
+gone to bed.
+
+Kew and Clive sate till one o'clock in the morning, when the latter
+returned to his hotel. Not one of those fine parties at Paestum, Sicily,
+etc. was carried out. Clive did not go to the East at all, and it was
+J. J, who painted Lord Kew's portrait that summer at Castellammare.
+The next day Clive went for his passport to the embassy; and a steamer
+departing direct for Marseilles on that very afternoon, behold Mr.
+Newcome was on board of her; Lord Kew and his brother and J. J. waving
+their hats to him as the vessel left the shore.
+
+Away went the ship cleaving swiftly through the azure waters; but not
+swiftly enough for Clive. J. J. went back with a sigh to his sketchbook
+and easels. I suppose the other young disciple of Art had heard
+something which caused him to forsake his sublime mistress for one who
+was much more capricious and earthly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL. Returns from Rome to Pall Mall
+
+
+One morning in the month of July, when there was actually sunshine in
+Lamb Court, and the two gentlemen who occupied the third-floor chambers
+there in partnership, were engaged, as their custom was, over their
+pipes, and their manuscripts, and their Times newspaper, behold a fresh
+sunshine burst into their room in the person of a young Clive, with
+a bronzed face, and a yellow beard and mustachios, and those bright
+cheerful eyes, the sight of which was always so welcome to both of us.
+"What, Clive! What, the young one! What, Benjamin!" shout Pendennis and
+Warrington. Clive had obtained a very high place indeed in the latter's
+affections, so much so, that if I could have found it in my heart to be
+jealous of such a generous brave fellow, I might have grudged him his
+share of Warrington's regard. He blushed up with pleasure to see us
+again. Pidgeon, our boy, introduced him with a jubilant countenance; and
+Flanagan, the laundress, came smirking out of the bedroom, eager to
+get a nod of recognition from him, and bestow a smile of welcome upon
+everybody's favourite, Clive.
+
+In two minutes an arm-chair full of magazines, slips of copy, and books
+for review, was emptied over the neighbouring coal-scuttle, and Clive
+was in the seat, a cigar in his mouth, as comfortable as if he had
+never been away. When did he come? Last night. He was back in Charlotte
+Street, at his old lodgings: he had been to breakfast in Fitzroy Square
+that morning; James Binnie chirped for joy at seeing him. His father had
+written to him desiring him to come back and see James Binnie; pretty
+Miss Rosey was very well, thank you: and Mrs. Mack? Wasn't Mrs.
+Mackenzie delighted to behold him? "Come, sir, on your honour and
+conscience, didn't the widow give you a kiss on your return?" Clive
+sends an uncut number of the Pall Mall Gazette flying across the room
+at the head of the inquirer; but blushes as sweetly, that I have very
+little doubt some such pretty meeting had taken place.
+
+What a pity it is he had not been here a short while since for a
+marriage in high life, to give away his dear Barnes, and sign the book,
+along with the other dignitaries! We described that ceremony to him,
+and announced the promotion of his friend, Florac, now our friend also,
+Director of the Great Anglo-Gallic Railway, the Prince de Moncontour.
+Then Clive told us of his deeds during the winter; of the good fun he
+had had at Rome, and the jolly fellows he had met there. Was he going
+to astonish the world by some grand pictures? He was not. The more he
+worked, the more discontented he was with his performances somehow: but
+J. J. was coming out very strong, J. J. was going to be a stunner. We
+turned with pride and satisfaction to that very number of the Pall Mall
+Gazette which the youth had flung at us, and showed him a fine article
+by F. Bayham, Esq., in which the picture sent home by J. J. was
+enthusiastically lauded by the great critic.
+
+So he was back amongst us, and it seemed but yesterday he had quitted
+us. To Londoners everything seems to have happened but yesterday; nobody
+has time to miss his neighbour who goes away. People go to the Cape,
+or on a campaign, or on a tour round the world, or to India, and return
+with a wife and two or three children, and we fancy it was only the
+other day they left us, so engaged is every man in his individual
+speculations, studies, struggles; so selfish does our life make
+us:--selfish but not ill-natured. We are glad to see an old friend,
+though we do not weep when he leaves us. We humbly acknowledge, if fate
+calls us away likewise, that we are no more missed than any other atom.
+
+After talking for a while, Mr. Clive must needs go into the City,
+whither I accompanied him. His interview with Messrs. Jolly and Baines,
+at the house in Fog Court, must have been very satisfactory; Clive came
+out of the parlour with a radiant countenance. "Do you want any money,
+old boy?" says he; "the dear old governor has placed a jolly sum to my
+account, and Mr. Baines has told me how delighted Mrs. Baines and the
+girls will be to see me at dinner. He says my father has made a lucky
+escape out of one house in India, and a famous investment in another.
+Nothing could be more civil; how uncommonly kind and friendly everybody
+is in London! Everybody!" Then bestowing ourselves in a hansom cab,
+which had probably just deposited some other capitalist in the City, we
+made for the West End of the town, where Mr. Clive had some important
+business to transact with his tailors. He discharged his outstanding
+little account with easy liberality, blushing as he pulled out of his
+pocket a new chequebook, page 1 of which he bestowed on the delighted
+artist. From Mr. B.'s shop to Mr. Truefitt's, is but a step. Our young
+friend was induced to enter the hairdresser's, and leave behind him a
+great portion of the flowing locks and the yellow beard, which he had
+brought with him from Rome. With his mustachios he could not be
+induced to part; painters and cavalry officers having a right to those
+decorations. And why should not this young fellow wear smart clothes,
+and a smart moustache, and look handsome, and take his pleasure, and
+bask in his sun when it shone? Time enough for flannel and a fire when
+the winter comes; and for grey hair and cork-soled boots in the natural
+decline of years.
+
+Then we went to pay a visit at a hotel in Jermyn Street to our friend
+Florac who was now magnificently lodged there. A powdered giant lolling
+in the hall, his buttons emblazoned with prodigious coronets, took our
+cards up to the Prince. As the door of an apartment on the first floor
+opened, we heard a cry as of joy; and that nobleman in a magnificent
+Persian dressing-gown, rushing from the room, plunged down the stairs,
+and began kissing Clive, to the respectful astonishment of the Titan in
+livery.
+
+"Come that I present you, my friends," our good little Frenchman
+exclaimed "to Madame la--to my wife!" We entered the drawing-room; a
+demure little little lady, of near sixty years of age, was seated there,
+and we were presented in form to Madame Princesse de Moncontour, nee
+Higg, of Manchester. She made us a stiff little curtsey, but looked not
+ill-natured; indeed, few women could look at Clive Newcome's gallant
+figure and brave smiling countenance and keep a frown on their own very
+long.
+
+"I have 'eard of you from somebodys else besides the Prince," said the
+lady, with rather a blush "Your uncle has spoke to me hoften about you,
+Mr. Clive, and about your good father."
+
+"C'est son Directeur," whispers Florac to me. I wondered which of the
+firm of Newcome had taken that office upon him.
+
+"Now you are come to England," the lady continued (whose Lancashire
+pronunciation being once indicated, we shall henceforth, out of respect
+to the Princess's rank generally pretermit),--"now you are come to
+England we hope to see you often. Not here in this noisy hotel, which
+I can't bear, but in the country. Our house is only three miles from
+Newcome--not such a grand place as your uncle's; but I hope we shall see
+you there a great deal, and your friend Mr Pendennis, if he is passing
+that way." The invitation to Mr. Pendennis, I am bound to say, was
+given in terms by no means so warm as those in which the Princess's
+hospitality to Clive were professed.
+
+"Shall we meet you at your Huncle 'Obson's?" the lady continued to
+Clive; "his wife is a most charming, well-informed woman, has been most
+kind and civil and we dine there to-day. Barnes and his wife is gone to
+spend the honeymoon at Newcome. Lady Clara is a sweet dear thing, and
+her pa and ma most affable, I am sure. What a pity Sir Brian couldn't
+attend the marriage! There was everybody there in London, a'most. Sir
+Harvey Diggs says he is mending very slowly. In life we are in death,
+Mr. Newcome! Isn't it sad to think of him, in the midst of all his
+splendour and prosperity, and he so infirm and unable to enjoy them! But
+let us hope for the best, and that his health will soon come round!"
+
+With these and similar remarks, in which poor Florac took but a very
+small share (for he seemed dumb and melancholy in the company of the
+Princess, his elderly spouse), the visit sped on. Mr. Pendennis, to whom
+very little was said, having leisure to make his silent observations
+upon the person to whom he had been just presented.
+
+As there lay on the table two neat little packages, addressed "The
+Princess de Moncontour"--an envelope to the same address, with "The
+Prescription, No. 9396," further inscribed on the paper, and a sheet of
+notepaper, bearing cabalistic characters, and the signature of that most
+fashionable physician, Sir Harvey Diggs, I was led to believe that
+the lady of Moncontour was, or fancied herself, in a delicate state
+of health. By the side of the physic for the body was medicine for the
+soul--a number of pretty little books in middle-age bindings, in
+antique type many of theist, adorned with pictures of the German
+school, representing demure ecclesiastics, with their heads on one side,
+children in long starched nightgowns, virgins bearing lilies, and so
+forth, from which it was to be concluded that the owner of the volumes
+was not so hostile to Rome as she had been at an earlier period of her
+religious life; and that she had migrated (in spirit) from Clapham to
+Knightsbridge--so many wealthy mercantile families have likewise done in
+the body. A long strip of embroidery, of the Gothic pattern, furthermore
+betrayed her present inclinations; and the person observing these
+things, whilst nobody was taking any notice of him, was amused when the
+accuracy of his conjectures was confirmed by the reappearance of the
+gigantic footman, calling out "'Oneyman," in a loud voice, and preceding
+that divine into the room.
+
+"C'est le Directeur. Venez fumer dans ma chambre, Pen," growled Florac
+as Honeyman came sliding over the carpet, his elegant smile changing to
+a blush when he beheld Clive, his nephew, seated by the Princess's side.
+This, then, was the uncle who had spoken about Clive and his father to
+Madame de Florac. Charles seemed in the best condition. He held out
+two bran-new lavender-coloured kid gloves to shake hands with his dear
+Clive; Florac and Mr. Pendennis vanished out of the room as he appeared,
+so that no precise account can be given of this affecting interview.
+
+When I quitted the hotel, a brown brougham, with a pair of beautiful
+horses, the harness and panels emblazoned with the neatest little ducal
+coronets you ever saw, and a cypher under each crown as easy to read as
+the arrow-headed inscriptions on one of Mr. Layard's Assyrian chariots,
+was in waiting, and I presumed that Madame la Princesse was about to
+take an airing.
+
+Clive had passed the avuncular banking-house in the City, without caring
+to face his relatives there. Mr. Newcome was now in sole command, Mr.
+Barnes being absent at Newcome, the Baronet little likely ever to enter
+bank-parlour again. But his bounden duty was to wait on the ladies; and
+of course, only from duty's sake, he went the very first day and called
+in Park Lane.
+
+"The family was habsent ever since the marriage simminery last week,"
+the footman, who had accompanied the party to Baden, informed Clive when
+he opened the door, and recognised that gentleman. "Sir Brian pretty
+well, thank you, sir. The family was at Brighting. That is Miss Newcome
+is in London staying with her grandmamma in Queen Street, Mayfear,
+sir." The varnished doors closed upon Jeames within; the brazen knockers
+grinned their familiar grin at Clive, and he went down the blank steps
+discomfited. Must it be owned that he went to a Club, and looked in
+the Directory for the number of Lady Kew's house in Queen Street? Her
+ladyship had a furnished house for the season. No such noble name to be
+found among the inhabitants of Queen Street.
+
+Mr. Hobson was from home; that is, Thomas had orders not to admit
+strangers on certain days, or before certain hours; so that Aunt Hobson
+saw Clive without being seen by the young man. I cannot say how much he
+regretted that mischance. His visits of propriety were thus all paid;
+and he went off to dine dutifully with James Binnie, after which meal he
+came to a certain rendezvous given to him by some bachelors friends for
+the evening.
+
+James Binnie's eyes lightened up with pleasure on beholding his young
+Clive; the youth, obedient to his father's injunction, had hastened
+to Fitzroy Square immediately after taking possession of his old
+lodgings--his, during the time of his absence. The old properties and
+carved cabinets, the picture of his father looking melancholy out of
+the canvas, greeted Clive strangely on the afternoon of his arrival. No
+wonder he was glad to get away from a solitude peopled with a number of
+dismal recollections, to the near hospitality of Fitzroy Square and his
+guardian and friend there.
+
+James had not improved in health during Clive's ten months' absence. He
+had never been able to walk well, or take his accustomed exercise, after
+his fall. He was no more used to riding than the late Mr. Gibbon, whose
+person James's somewhat resembled, and of whose philosophy our Scottish
+friend was an admiring scholar. The Colonel gone, James would have
+arguments with Mr. Honeyman over their claret, bring down the famous
+XVth and XVIth chapters of the Decline and Fall upon him, and quite get
+the better of the clergyman. James, like many other sceptics, was very
+obstinate, and for his part believed that almost all parsons had as
+much belief as the Roman augurs in their ceremonies. Certainly, poor
+Honeyman, in their controversies, gave up one article after another,
+flying from James's assault; but the battle over, Charles Honeyman would
+pick up these accoutrements which he had flung away in his retreat, wipe
+them dry, and put them on again.
+
+Lamed by his fall, and obliged to remain much within doors, where
+certain society did not always amuse him, James Binnie sought excitement
+in the pleasures of the table, partaking of them the more freely now
+that his health could afford them the less. Clive, the sly rogue,
+observed a great improvement in the commissariat since his good father's
+time, ate his dinner with thankfulness, and made no remarks. Nor did
+he confide to us for a while his opinion that Mrs. Mack bored the
+good gentleman most severely; that he pined away under her kindnesses;
+sneaked off to bis study-chair and his nap; was only too glad when some
+of the widow's friends came, or she went out; seeming to breathe more
+freely when she was gone, and drink his wine more cheerily when rid of
+the intolerable weight of her presence.
+
+I protest the great ills of life are nothing--the loss of your fortune
+is a mere flea-bite; the loss of your wife--how many men have supported
+it and married comfortably afterwards? It is not what you lose, but what
+you have daily to bear that is hard. I can fancy nothing more cruel,
+after a long easy life of bachelorhood, than to have to sit day after
+day with a dull, handsome woman opposite; to have to answer her speeches
+about the weather, housekeeping and what not; to smile appropriately
+when she is disposed to be lively (that laughing at the jokes is
+the hardest part), and to model your conversation so as to suit
+her intelligence, knowing that a word used out of its downright
+signification will not be understood by your fair breakfast-maker. Women
+go through this simpering and smiling life, and bear it quite easily.
+Theirs is a life of hypocrisy. What good woman does not laugh at her
+husband's or father's jokes and stories time after time, and would not
+laugh at breakfast, lunch, and dinner, if he told them? Flattery is
+their nature--to coax, flatter and sweetly befool some one is every
+woman's business. She is none if she declines this office. But men are
+not provided with such powers of humbug or endurance--they perish
+and pine away miserably when bored--or they shrink off to the club or
+public-house for comfort. I want to say as delicately as I can, and
+never liking to use rough terms regarding a handsome woman, that Mrs.
+Mackenzie, herself being in the highest spirits and the best humour,
+extinguished her half-brother, James Binnie, Esq.; that she was as a
+malaria to him, poisoning his atmosphere, numbing his limbs, destroying
+his sleep--that day after day as he sate down at breakfast, and she
+levelled commonplaces at her dearest James, her dearest James became
+more wretched under her. And no one could see what his complaint was. He
+called in the old physicians at the Club. He dosed himself with poppy,
+and mandragora and blue pill--lower and lower went poor James's mercury.
+If he wanted to move to Brighton or Cheltenham, well and good. Whatever
+were her engagements, or whatever pleasures darling Rosey might have in
+store, dear thing!--at her age, my dear Mrs. Newcome, would not one
+do all to make a young creature happy?--under no circumstances could I
+think of leaving my poor brother.
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie thought herself a most highly principled woman, Mrs.
+Newcome had also a great opinion of her. These two ladies had formed a
+considerable friendship in the past months, the captain's widow having
+an unaffected reverence for the banker's lady and thinking her one of
+the best informed and most superior women in the world. When she had a
+high opinion of a person Mrs. Mack always wisely told it. Mrs. Newcome
+in her turn thought Mrs. Mackenzie a very clever, agreeable, ladylike
+woman,--not accomplished, but one could not have everything. "No, no, my
+dear," says simple Hobson, "never would do to have every woman as clever
+as you are, Maria. Women would have it all their own way then."
+
+Maria, as her custom was, thanked God for being so virtuous and clever,
+and graciously admitted Mrs. and Miss Mackenzie into the circle of
+adorers of that supreme virtue and talent. Mr. Newcome took little
+Rosey and her mother to some parties. When any took place in Bryanstone
+Square, they were generally allowed to come to tea.
+
+When on the second day of his arrival the dutiful Clive went to dine
+with Mr. James, the ladies, in spite of their raptures at his return and
+delight at seeing him, were going in the evening to his aunt. Their talk
+was about the Princess all dinner-time. The Prince and Princess were to
+dine in Bryanstone Square. The Princess had ordered such and such things
+at the jeweller's--the Princess would take rank over an English Earl's
+daughter--over Lady Anne Newcome, for instance. "Oh, dear! I wish the
+Prince and Princess were smothered in the Tower," growled James Binnie;
+"since you have got acquainted with 'em I have never heard of anything
+else."
+
+Clive, like a wise man, kept his counsel about the Prince and Princess,
+with whom we have seen that he had had the honour of an interview that
+very day. But after dinner Rosey came round and whispered to her mamma,
+and after Rosey's whisper mamma flung her arms round Rosey's neck and
+kissed her, and called her a thoughtful darling. "What do you think
+this creature says, Clive?" says Mrs. Mack, still holding her darling's
+little hand. "I wonder I had not thought of it myself."
+
+"What is it, Mrs. Mackenzie?" asks Clive, laughing.
+
+"She says why should not you come to your aunt's with us? We are sure
+Mrs. Newcome would be most happy to see you."
+
+Rosey, with a little hand put to mamma's mouth, said, "Why did you
+tell?--you naughty mamma! Isn't she a naughty mamma, Uncle James?" More
+kisses follow after this sally, of which Uncle James receives one with
+perfect complacency: mamma crying out as Rosey retires to dress, "That
+darling child is always thinking of others--always!"
+
+Clive says, "he will sit and smoke a cheroot with Mr. Binnie, if they
+please." James's countenance falls. "We have left off that sort of thing
+here, my dear Clive, a long time," cries Mrs. Mackenzie, departing from
+the dining-room.
+
+"But we have improved the claret, Clive, my boy!" whispers Uncle James.
+"Let us have another bottle, and we will drink to the dear Colonel's
+good health and speedy return--God bless him! I say, Clive, Tom seems
+to have had a most fortunate escape out of Winter's house--thanks to our
+friend Rummun Loll, and to have got into a capital good thing with this
+Bundelcund bank. They speak famously of it at Hanover Square, and I see
+the Hurkara quotes the shares at a premium already."
+
+Clive did not know anything about the Bundelcund bank, except a few
+words found in a letter from his father, which he had in the City this
+morning, "and an uncommonly liberal remittance the governor has sent me
+home, sir." Upon which they fill another bumper to the Colonel's health.
+
+Mamma and Rosey come and show their pretty pink dresses before going to
+Mrs. Newcome's, and Clive lights a cigar in the hall--and isn't there a
+jubilation at the Haunt when the young fellow's face appears above the
+smoke-clouds there?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI. An Old Story
+
+
+Many of Clive's Roman friends were by this time come to London, and
+the young man renewed his acquaintance with them, and had speedily a
+considerable circle of his own. He thought fit to allow himself a good
+horse or two, and appeared in the Park among other young dandies. He
+and Monsieur de Moncontour were sworn allies. Lord Fareham, who had
+purchased J. J.'s picture, was Clive's very good friend: Major Pendennis
+himself pronounced him to be a young fellow of agreeable manners, and
+very favourably vu (as the Major happened to know) in some very good
+quarters.
+
+Ere many days Clive had been to Brighton to see Lady Anne and Sir Brian,
+and good Aunt Honeyman, in whose house the Baronet was lodged: and I
+suppose he found out, by some means or other, where Lady Kew lived in
+Mayfair.
+
+But her ladyship was not at home, nor was she at home on the second day,
+nor did there come any note from Ethel to her cousin. She did not ride
+in the Park as of old. Clive, bien vu as he was, did not belong to that
+great world as yet, in which he would be pretty sure to meet her every
+night at one of those parties where everybody goes. He read her name in
+the paper morning after morning, as having been present at Lady This's
+entertainment and Lady That's ministerial reunion. At first he was too
+shy to tell what the state of the case was, and took nobody into his
+confidence regarding his little tendre.
+
+There he was riding through Queen Street, Mayfair, attired in splendid
+raiment: never missing the Park; actually going to places of worship in
+the neighbourhood; and frequenting the opera--a waste of time which one
+would never have expected in a youth of his nurture. At length a certain
+observer of human nature remarking his state, rightly conjectured that
+he must be in love, and taxed him with the soft impeachment--on which
+the young man, no doubt anxious to open his heart to some one, poured
+out all that story which has before been narrated; and told how he
+thought his passion cured, and how it was cured; but when he heard from
+Kew at Naples that the engagement was over between him and Miss Newcome,
+Clive found his own flame kindle again with new ardour. He was wild to
+see her. He dashed off from Naples instantly on receiving the news that
+she was free. He had been ten days in London without getting a glimpse
+of her. "That Mrs. Mackenzie bothers me so I hardly know where to turn,"
+said poor Clive, "and poor little Rosey is made to write me a note about
+something twice a day. She's a good dear little thing--little Rosey--and
+I really had thought once of--of--oh, never mind that! Oh, Pen! I'm up
+another tree now! and a poor miserable young beggar I am!" In fact, Mr.
+Pendennis was installed as confidant, vice J. J.--absent on leave.
+
+This is a part, which, especially for a few days, the present biographer
+has always liked well enough. For a while, at least, I think almost
+every man or woman is interesting when in love. If you know of two
+or three such affairs going on in any soiree to which you may be
+invited--is not the party straightway amusing? Yonder goes Augustus
+Tomkins, working his way through the rooms to that far corner where
+demure Miss Hopkins is seated, to whom the stupid grinning Bumpkins
+thinks he is making himself agreeable. Yonder sits Miss Fanny distraite,
+and yet trying to smile as the captain is talking his folly the parson
+his glib compliments. And see, her face lights up all of a sudden: her
+eyes beam with delight at the captain's stories, and at that delightful
+young clergyman likewise. It is because Augustus has appeared; their
+eyes only meet for one semi-second, but that is enough for Miss Fanny.
+Go on, captain, with your twaddle!--Proceed, my reverend friend, with
+your smirking commonplaces! In the last two minutes the world has
+changed for Miss Fanny. That moment has come for which she has been
+fidgeting and longing and scheming all day! How different an interest,
+I say, has a meeting of people for a philosopher who knows of a few such
+little secrets, to that which your vulgar looker-on feels who comes but
+to eat the ices, and stare at the ladies' dresses and beauty! There are
+two frames of mind under which London society is bearable to a man--to
+be an actor in one of those sentimental performances above hinted at;
+or to be a spectator and watch it. But as for the mere dessus de
+cartes--would not an arm-chair and the dullest of books be better than
+that dull game?
+
+So I not only became Clive's confidant in this affair, but took a
+pleasure in extracting the young fellow's secrets from him, or rather
+in encouraging him to pour them forth. Thus was the great part of the
+previous tale revealed to me: thus Jack Belsize's misadventures, of the
+first part of which we had only heard in London (and whither he returned
+presently to be reconciled to his father, after his elder brother's
+death). Thus my Lord Kew's secret history came into my possession;
+let us hope for the public's future delectation, and the chronicler's
+private advantage. And many a night until daylight did appear has poor
+Clive stamped his chamber or my own, pouring his story out to me, his
+griefs and raptures; recalling, in his wild young way, recollections
+of Ethel's sayings and doings; uttering descriptions of her beauty, and
+raging against the cruelty which she exhibited towards him.
+
+As soon as the new confidant heard the name of the young lover's
+charmer, to do Mr. Pendennis justice, he endeavoured to fling as much
+cold water upon Clive's flame as a small private engine could be brought
+to pour on such a conflagration. "Miss Newcome! my dear Clive," says
+the confidant, "do you know what you are aspiring to? For the last
+three months Miss Newcome has been the greatest lioness in London: the
+reigning beauty winning the horse: the first favourite out of the whole
+Belgravian harem. No young woman of this year has come near her:
+those of past seasons she has distanced and utterly put to shame. Miss
+Blackcap, Lady Blanch Blackcap's daughter, was (as perhaps you are not
+aware) considered by her mamma the great beauty of last season; and it
+was considered rather shabby of the young Marquis of Farintosh to leave
+town without offering to change Miss Blackcap's name. Heaven bless you!
+this year Farintosh will not look at Miss Blackcap! He finds people at
+home when (ha! I see you wince, my suffering innocent!)--when he calls
+in Queen Street; yes, and Lady Kew, who is one of the cleverest women
+in England, will listen for hours to Lord Farintosh's conversation;
+than whom the Rotten Row of Hyde Park cannot show a greater booby. Miss
+Blackcap may retire, like Jephthah's daughter, for all Farintosh will
+relieve her. Then, my dear fellow, there were, as possibly you do not
+know, Lady Hermengilde and Lady Yseult, Lady Rackstraw's lovely twins,
+whose appearance created such a sensation at Lady Hautbois' first--was
+it her first or was it her second?--yes, it was her second--breakfast.
+Whom weren't they going to marry? Crackthorpe as mad, they said, about
+both.--Bustington, Sir John Fobsby, the young Baronet with the immense
+Northern property--the Bishop of Windsor was actually said to be smitten
+with one of them, but did not like to offer, as her present M--y, like
+Qu--n El-z-b-th of gracious memory, is said to object to bishops, as
+bishops, marrying. Where is Bustington? Where is Crackthorpe? Where is
+Fobsby, the young Baronet of the North? My dear fellow, when those two
+girls come into a room now, they make no more sensation than you or
+I. Miss Newcome has carried their admirers away from them: Fobsby has
+actually, it is said, proposed for her: and the real reason of that
+affair between Lord Bustington and Captain Crackthorpe of the Royal
+Horse Guards Green, was a speech of Bustington's, hinting that Miss
+Newcome had not behaved well in throwing Lord Kew over. Don't you know
+what old Lady Kew will do with this girl, Clive? She will marry
+Miss Newcome to the best man. If a richer and better parti than Lord
+Farintosh presents himself--then it will be Farintosh's turn to find
+that Lady Kew is not at home. Is there any young man in the Peerage
+unmarried and richer than Farintosh? I forget. Why does not some one
+publish a list of the young male nobility and baronetage, their
+names, weights, and probable fortunes? I don't mean for the matrons of
+Mayfair--they have the list by heart and study it in secret--but for
+young men in the world; so that they may know what their chances are,
+and who naturally has the pull over them. Let me see--there is young
+Lord Gaunt, who will have a great fortune, and is desirable because you
+know his father is locked up--but he is only ten years old--no--they can
+scarcely bring him forward as Farintosh's rival.
+
+"You look astonished, my poor boy? You think it is wicked in me to talk
+in this brutal way about bargain and sale; and say that your heart's
+darling is, at this minute, being paced up and down the Mayfair market
+to be taken away by the best bidder. Can you count purses with Sultan
+Farintosh? Can you compete even with Sir John Fobsby of the North? What
+I say is wicked and worldly, is it? So it is; but it is true, as true as
+Tattersall's--as true as Circassia or Virginia. Don't you know that the
+Circassian girls are proud of their bringing up, and take rank according
+to the prices which they fetch? And you go and buy yourself some
+new clothes, and a fifty-pound horse, and put a penny rose in your
+button-hole, and ride past her window, and think to win this prize? Oh,
+you idiot! A penny rosebud! Put money in your purse. A fifty-pound hack
+when a butcher rides as good a one!--Put money in your purse. A
+brave young heart, all courage and love and honour! Put money in thy
+purse--t'other coin don't pass in the market--at least, where old Lady
+Kew has the stall."
+
+By these remonstrances, playful though serious, Clive's adviser sought
+to teach him wisdom about his love affair; and the advice was received
+as advice upon those occasions usually is.
+
+After calling thrice and writing to Miss Newcome, there came a little
+note from that young lady, saying, "Dear Clive,--We were so sorry we
+were out when you called. We shall be at home to-morrow at lunch, when
+Lady Kew hopes you will come, and see yours ever, E. N."
+
+Clive went--poor Clive! He had the satisfaction of shaking Ethel's hand
+and a finger of Lady Kew; of eating a mutton-chop in Ethel's presence;
+of conversing about the state of art at Rome with Lady Kew, and
+describing the last works of Gibson and Macdonald. The visit lasted
+but for half an hour. Not for one minute was Clive allowed to see Ethel
+alone. At three o'clock Lady Kew's carriage was announced, and our young
+gentleman rose to take his leave, and had the pleasure of seeing the
+most noble Peer, Marquis of Farintosh and Earl of Rossmont, descend
+from his lordship's brougham and enter at Lady Kew's door, followed by a
+domestic bearing a small stack of flowers from Covent Garden.
+
+It befell that the good-natured Lady Fareham had a ball in these
+days; and meeting Clive in the Park, her lord invited him to the
+entertainment. Mr. Pendennis had also the honour of a card. Accordingly
+Clive took me up at Bays's, and we proceeded to the ball together.
+
+The lady of the house, smiling upon all her guests, welcomed with
+particular kindness her young friend from Rome. "Are you related to the
+Miss Newcome, Lady Anne Newcome's daughter? Her cousin? She will be here
+to-night." Very likely Lady Fareham did not see Clive wince and blush at
+this announcement, her ladyship having to occupy herself with a thousand
+other people. Clive found a dozen of his Roman friends in the room,
+ladies young and middle-aged, plain and handsome, all glad to see his
+kind face. The house was splendid; the ladies magnificently dressed; the
+ball beautiful, though it appeared a little dull until that event took
+place whereof we treated two pages back (in the allegory of Mr. Tomkins
+and Miss Hopkins), and Lady Kew and her granddaughter made their
+appearance.
+
+That old woman, who began to look more and more like the wicked fairy of
+the stories, who is not invited to the Princess's Christening Feast,
+had this advantage over her likeness, that she was invited everywhere;
+though how she, at her age, could fly about to so many parties, unless
+she was a fairy, no one could say. Behind the fairy, up the marble
+stairs, came the most noble Farintosh, with that vacuous leer which
+distinguishes his lordship. Ethel seemed to be carrying the stack
+of flowers which the Marquis had sent to her. The noble Bustington
+(Viscount Bustington, I need scarcely tell the reader, is the heir
+of the house of Podbury), the Baronet of the North, the gallant
+Crackthorpe, the first men in town, in a word, gathered round the young
+beauty, forming her court; and little Dick Hitchin, who goes everywhere,
+you may be sure was near her with a compliment and a smile. Ere
+this arrival, the twins had been giving themselves great airs in the
+room--the poor twins! when Ethel appeared they sank into shuddering
+insignificance, and had to put up with the conversation and attentions
+of second-rate men, belonging to second-rate clubs in heavy dragoon
+regiments. One of them actually walked with a dancing barrister; but
+he was related to a duke, and it was expected the Lord Chancellor would
+give him something very good.
+
+Before he saw Ethel, Clive vowed he was aware of her. Indeed, had not
+Lady Fareham told him Miss Newcome was coming? Ethel, on the contrary,
+not expecting him, or not having the prescience of love, exhibited signs
+of surprise when she beheld him, her eyebrows arching, her eyes darting
+looks of pleasure. When grandmamma happened to be in another room, she
+beckoned Clive to her, dismissing Crackthorpe and Fobsby, Farintosh and
+Bustington, the amorous youth who around her bowed, and summoning Mr.
+Clive to an audience with the air of a young princess.
+
+And so she was a princess; and this the region of her special dominion.
+The wittiest and handsomest, she deserved to reign in such a place, by
+right of merit and by general election. Clive felt her superiority, and
+his own shortcomings: he came up to her as to a superior person. Perhaps
+she was not sorry to let him see how she ordered away grandees and
+splendid Bustingtons, informing them, with a superb manner, that she
+wished to speak to her cousin--that handsome young man with the light
+moustache yonder.
+
+"Do you know many people? This is your first appearance in society?
+Shall I introduce you to some nice girls to dance with?" What very
+pretty buttons!"
+
+"Is that what you wanted to say?" asked Clive, rather bewildered.
+
+"What does one say at a ball? One talks conversation suited to the
+place. If I were to say to Captain Crackthorpe, 'What pretty buttons!'
+he would be delighted. But you--you have a soul above buttons, I
+suppose."
+
+"Being, as you say, a stranger in this sort of society, you see I am not
+accustomed to--to the exceeding brilliancy of its conversation," said
+Clive.
+
+"What! you want to go away, and we haven't seen each other for near a
+year!" cries Ethel, in quite a natural voice. "Sir John Fobsby, I'm very
+sorry--but do let me off this dance. I have just met my cousin, whom I
+have not seen for a whole year, and I want to talk to him."
+
+"It was not my fault that you did not see me sooner. I wrote to you
+that I only got your letter a month ago. You never answered the second I
+wrote you from Rome. Your letter lay there at the post ever so long, and
+was forwarded to me at Naples."
+
+"Where?" asked Ethel.
+
+"I saw Lord Kew there." Ethel was smiling with all her might, and
+kissing her hand to the twins, who passed at that moment with their
+mamma. "Oh, indeed, you saw--how do you do?--Lord Kew."
+
+"And, having seen him, I came over to England," said Clive.
+
+Ethel looked at him, gravely. "What am I to understand by that,
+Clive?--You came over because it was very hot at Naples, and because you
+wanted to see your friends here, n'est-ce pas? How glad mamma was to see
+you! You know she loves you as if you were her own son."
+
+"What, as much as that angel, Barnes!" cries Clive, bitterly;
+"impossible."
+
+Ethel looked once more. Her present mood and desire was to treat Clive
+as a chit, as a young fellow without consequence--a thirteenth younger
+brother. But in his looks and behaviour there was that which seemed to
+say not too many liberties were to be taken with him.
+
+"Why weren't you here a month sooner, and you might have seen the
+marriage? It was a very pretty thing. Everybody was there. Clara, and so
+did Barnes really, looked quite handsome."
+
+"It must have been beautiful," continued Clive; "quite a touching sight,
+I am sure. Poor Charles Belsize could not be present because his brother
+was dead; and----"
+
+"And what else, pray, Mr. Newcome!" cries Miss, in great wrath, her pink
+nostrils beginning to quiver. "I did not think, really, that when we
+met after so many months, I was to be insulted; yes, insulted, by the
+mention of that name."
+
+"I most humbly ask pardon," said Clive, with a grave bow. "Heaven forbid
+that I should wound your sensibility, Ethel! It is, as you say, my first
+appearance in society. I talk about things or persons that I should
+not mention. I should talk about buttons, should I? which you were good
+enough to tell me was the proper subject of conversation. Mayn't I even
+speak of connexions of the family? Mr. Belsize, through this marriage,
+has the honour of being connected with you; and even I, in a remote
+degree, may boast of a sort of an ever--so--distant cousinship with him.
+What an honour for me!"
+
+"Pray, what is the meaning of all this?" cries Miss Ethel, surprised,
+and perhaps alarmed. Indeed, Clive scarcely knew. He had been chafing
+all the while he talked with her; smothering anger as he saw the young
+men round about her; revolting against himself for the very humility of
+his obedience, and angry at the eagerness and delight with which he had
+come at her call.
+
+"The meaning is, Ethel"--he broke out, seizing the opportunity--"that
+when a man comes a thousand miles to see you, and shake your hand, you
+should give it him a little more cordially than you choose to do to me;
+that when a kinsman knocks at your door, time after time, you should try
+and admit him; and that when you meet him you should treat him like an
+old friend not as you treated me when my Lady Kew vouchsafed to give me
+admittance; not as you treat these fools that are fribbling round about
+you," cries Mr. Clive, in a great rage, folding his arms, and glaring
+round on a number of the most innocent young swells; and he continued
+looking as if he would like to knock a dozen of their heads together.
+"Am I keeping Miss Newcome's admirers from her?"
+
+"That is not for me to say," she said, quite gently. He was; but to see
+him angry did not displease Miss Newcome.
+
+"That young man who came for you just now," Clive went on--"that Sir
+John----"
+
+"Are you angry with me because I sent him away?" said Ethel, putting out
+a hand. "Hark! there is the music. Take me in and waltz with me. Don't
+you know it is not my door at which you knocked?" she said, looking
+up into his face as simply and kindly as of old. She whirled round the
+dancing-room with him in triumph, the other beauties dwindling before
+her: she looked more and more beautiful with each rapid move of the
+waltz, her colour heightening and her eyes seeming to brighten. Not
+till the music stopped did she sink down on a seat, panting, and smiling
+radiant--as many many hundred years ago I remember to have seen Taglioni
+after a conquering pas seul. She nodded a "thank you" to Clive. It
+seemed that there was a perfect reconciliation. Lady Kew came in just at
+the end of the dance, scowling when she beheld Ethel's partner; but in
+reply to her remonstrances, Ethel shrugged her fair shoulders, with a
+look which seemed to say je le veux, gave an arm to her grandmother, an
+walked off, saucily protecting her.
+
+Clive's friend had been looking on observingly and curiously as the
+scene between them had taken place, and at the dance with which the
+reconciliation had been celebrated. I must tell you that this arch young
+creature had formed the object of my observation for some months past,
+and that I watched her as I have watched a beautiful panther at the
+Zoological Gardens, so bright of eye, so sleek of coat, so slim in form,
+so sweet and agile in her spring.
+
+A more brilliant young coquette than Miss Newcome, in her second season,
+these eyes never looked upon, that is the truth. In her first year,
+being engaged to Lord Kew, she was perhaps a little more reserved and
+quiet. Besides, her mother went out with her that first season, to whom
+Miss Newcome except for a little occasional flightiness, was invariably
+obedient and ready to come to call. But when Lady Kew appeared as her
+duenna, the girl's delight seemed to be to plague the old lady, and she
+would dance with the very youngest sons merey to put grandmamma in a
+passion. In this way poor young Cubley (who has two hundred a year of
+allowance, besides eighty, and an annual rise of five in the Treasury)
+actually thought that Ethel was in love with him, and consulted with the
+young men in his room in Downing Street, whether two hundred and eighty
+a year, with five pound more next year, would be enough for them to keep
+house on? Young Tandy of the Temple, Lord Skibbereen's younger son, who
+sate in the House for some time on the Irish Catholic side, was also
+deeply smitten, and many a night in our walks home from the parties at
+the other end of the town, would entertain me with his admiration and
+passion for her.
+
+"If you have such a passion for her, why not propose?" it was asked of
+Mr. Tandy.
+
+"Propose! propose to a Russian Archduchess," cries young Tandy. "She's
+beautiful, she's delightful, she's witty. I have never seen anything
+like her eyes; they send me wild--wild," says Tandy--(slapping his
+waistcoat under Temple Bar)--"but a more audacious little flirt never
+existed since the days of Cleopatra."
+
+With this opinion likewise in my mind, I had been looking on during
+Clive's proceedings with Miss Ethel--not, I say, without admiration
+of the young lady who was leading him such a dance. The waltz over, I
+congratulated him on his own performance. His Continental practice had
+greatly improved him. "And as for your partner, it is delightful to see
+her," I went on. "I always like to be by when Miss Newcome dances. I had
+sooner see her than anybody since Taglioni. Look at her now, with her
+neck up, and her little foot out, just as she is preparing to start!
+Happy Lord Bustington!"
+
+"You are angry with her because she cut you," growls Clive. "You know
+you said she cut you, or forgot you; and your vanity's wounded, that is
+why you are so satirical."
+
+"How can Miss Newcome remember all the men who are presented to her?"
+says the other. "Last year she talked to me because she wanted to know
+about you. This year she doesn't talk: because I suppose she doesn't
+want to know about you any more."
+
+"Hang it. Do--on't, Pen," cries Clive, as a schoolboy cries out to
+another not to hit him.
+
+"She does not pretend to observe: and is in full conversation with the
+amiable Bustington. Delicious interchange of noble thoughts! But she is
+observing us talking, and knows that we are talking about her. If ever
+you marry her, Clive, which is absurd, I shall lose you for a friend.
+You will infallibly tell her what I think of her: and she will order you
+to give me up." Clive had gone off in a brown study, as his interlocutor
+continued. "Yes, she is a flirt. She can't help her nature. She tries
+to vanquish every one who comes near her. She is a little out of breath
+from waltzing, and so she pretends to be listening to poor Bustington,
+who is out of breath too, but puffs out his best in order to make
+himself agreeable, with what a pretty air she appears to listen! Her
+eyes actually seem to brighten."
+
+"What?" says Clive, with a start.
+
+I could not comprehend the meaning of the start: nor did I care much
+to know: supposing that the young man was waking up from some lover's
+reverie: and the evening sped away, Clive not quitting the ball
+until Miss Newcome and the Countess of Kew had departed. No further
+communication appeared to take place between the cousins that evening. I
+think it was Captain Crackthorpe who gave the young lady an arm into
+her carriage; Sir John Fobsby having the happiness to conduct the old
+Countess, and carrying the pink bag for the shawls, wrappers, etc., on
+which her ladyship's coronet and initials are emblazoned. Clive may have
+made a movement as if to step forward, but a single finger from Miss
+Newcome warned him back.
+
+Clive and his two friends in Lamb Court had made an engagement for the
+next Saturday to dine at Greenwich; but on the morning of that day there
+came a note from him to say that he thought of going down to see his
+aunt, Miss Honeyman, and begged to recall his promise to us. Saturday
+is a holiday with gentlemen of our profession. We had invited F. Bayham,
+Esquire, and promised ourselves a merry evening, and were unwilling to
+baulk ourselves of the pleasure on account of the absence of our young
+Roman. So we three went to London Bridge Station at an early hour,
+proposing to breathe the fresh air of Greenwich Park before dinner. And,
+at London Bridge, by the most singular coincidence, Lady Kew's carriage
+drove up to the Brighton entrance, and Miss Ethel and her maid stepped
+out of the brougham.
+
+When Miss Newcome and her maid entered the Brighton station, did Mr.
+Clive, by another singular coincidence, happen also to be there? What
+more natural and dutiful than that he should go and see his aunt, Miss
+Honeyman? What more proper than that Miss Ethel should pass the Saturday
+and Sunday with her sick father; and take a couple of wholesome nights'
+rest after those five weary past evenings, for each of which we may
+reckon a couple of soirees and a ball? And that relations should travel
+together, the young lady being protected by her femme-de-chambre; that
+surely, as every one must allow, was perfectly right and proper.
+
+That a biographer should profess to know everything which passes, even
+in a confidential talk in a first-class carriage between two lovers,
+seems perfectly absurd; not that grave historians do not pretend to
+the same wonderful degree of knowledge--reporting meetings of the most
+occult of conspirators; private interviews between monarchs and their
+ministers, even the secret thoughts and motives of those personages,
+which possibly the persons themselves did not know;--all for which the
+present writer will pledge his known character for veracity is, that on
+a certain day certain parties had a conversation, of which the upshot
+was so-and-so. He guesses, of course, at a great deal of what took
+place; knowing the characters, and being informed at some time of their
+meeting. You do not suppose that I bribed the femme-de-chambre, or
+that those two City gents, who sate in the same carriage with our young
+friends, and could not hear a word they said, reported their talk to
+me? If Clive and Ethel had had a coupe to themselves, I would yet boldly
+tell what took place, but the coupe was taken by other three young City
+gents who smoked the whole way.
+
+"Well, then," the bonnet begins close up to the hat, "tell me, sir, is
+it true that you were so very much epris of the Miss Freemans at Rome;
+and that afterwards you were so wonderfully attentive to the third Miss
+Baliol? Did you draw her portrait? You know you drew her portrait. You
+painters always pretend to admire girls with auburn hair, because Titian
+and Raphael painted it. Has the Fornarina red hair? Why, we are at
+Croydon, I declare!"
+
+"The Fornarina"--the hat replies to the bonnet, "if that picture at the
+Borghese Palace be an original, or a likeness of her--is not a
+handsome woman, with vulgar eyes and mouth, and altogether a most
+mahogany-coloured person. She is so plain, in fact, I think that very
+likely it is the real woman; for it is with their own fancies that men
+fall in love,--or rather every woman is handsome to the lover. You know
+how old Helen must have been."
+
+"I don't know any such thing, or anything about her. Who was Helen?"
+asks the bonnet; and indeed she did not know.
+
+"It's a long story, and such an old scandal now, that there is no use in
+repeating it," says Clive.
+
+"You only talk about Helen because you wish to turn away the
+conversation from Miss Freeman," cries the young lady--"from Miss
+Baliol, I mean."
+
+"We will talk about whichever you please. Which shall we begin to pull
+to pieces?" says Clive. You see, to be in this carriage--to be actually
+with her--to be looking into those wonderful lucid eyes--to see
+her sweet mouth dimpling, and hear her sweet voice ringing with its
+delicious laughter--to have that hour and a half his own, in spite of
+all the world-dragons, grandmothers, convenances, the future--made the
+young fellow so happy, filled his whole frame and spirit with a delight
+so keen, that no wonder he was gay, and brisk, and lively.
+
+"And so you knew of my goings-on?" he asked. O me! they were at Reigate
+by this time; there was Gatton Park flying before them on the wings of
+the wind.
+
+"I know of a number of things," says the bonnet, nodding with ambrosial
+curls.
+
+"And you would not answer the second letter I wrote to you?
+
+"We were in great perplexity. One cannot be always answering young
+gentlemen's letters. I had considerable doubt about answering a note
+I got from Charlotte Street, Fitzroy Square," says the lady's chapeau.
+"No, Clive, we must not write to one another," she continued more
+gravely, "or only very, very seldom. Nay, my meeting you here to-day is
+by the merest chance, I am sure; for when I mentioned at Lady Fareham's
+the other evening that I was going to see papa at Brighton to-day, I
+never for one moment thought of seeing you in the train. But as you
+are here, it can't be helped; and I may as well tell you that there are
+obstacles."
+
+"What, other obstacles?" Clive gasped out.
+
+"Nonsense--you silly boy! No other obstacles but those which always have
+existed, and must. When we parted--that is, when you left us at Baden,
+you knew it was for the best. You had your profession to follow,
+and could not go on idling about--about a family of sick people and
+children. Every man has his profession, and you yours, as you would have
+it. We are so nearly allied that we may--we may like each other like
+brother and sister almost. I don't know what Barnes would say if he
+heard me! Wherever you and your father are, how can I ever think of
+you but--but you know how? I always shall, always. There are certain
+feelings we have which I hope never can change; though, if you please,
+about them I intend never to speak any more. Neither you nor I can alter
+our conditions, but must make the best of them. You shall be a fine
+clever painter; and I,--who knows what will happen to me? I know what
+is going to happen to-day; I am going to see papa and mamma, and be as
+happy as I can till Monday morning."
+
+"I know what I wish would happen now," said Clive,--they were going
+screaming through a tunnel.
+
+"What?" said the bonnet in the darkness: and the engine was roaring so
+loudly, that he was obliged to put his head quite close to say--
+
+"I wish the tunnel would fall in and close upon us, or that we might
+travel on for ever and ever."
+
+Here there was a great jar of the carriage, and the lady's-maid, and
+I think Miss Ethel, gave a shriek. The lamp above was so dim that
+the carriage was almost totally dark. No wonder the lady's-maid was
+frightened! but the daylight came streaming in, and all poor Clive's
+wishes of rolling and rolling on for ever were put an end to by the
+implacable sun in a minute.
+
+Ah, why was it the quick train? Suppose it had been the parliamentary
+train?--even that too would have come to an end. They came and said,
+"Tickets, please," and Clive held out the three of their party--his, and
+Ethel's, and her maid's. I think for such a ride as that he was right
+to give up Greenwich. Mr. Kuhn was in waiting with a carriage for Miss
+Ethel. She shook hands with Clive, returning his pressure.
+
+"I may come and see you?" he said.
+
+"You may come and see mamma--yes."
+
+"And where are you staying?"
+
+"Bless my soul--they were staying at Miss Honeyman's!" Clive burst into
+a laugh. Why, he was going there too! Of course Aunt Honeyman had no
+room for him, her house being quite full with the other Newcomes.
+
+It was a most curious coincidence their meeting; but altogether Lady
+Anne thought it was best to say nothing about the circumstance to
+grandmamma. I myself am puzzled to say which would have been the better
+course to pursue under the circumstances; there were so many courses
+open. As they had gone so far, should they go on farther together?
+Suppose they were going to the same house at Brighton, oughtn't they
+to have gone in the same carriage, with Kuhn and the maid of course?
+Suppose they met by chance at the station, ought they to have travelled
+in separate carriages? I ask any gentleman and father of a family, when
+he was immensely smitten with his present wife, Mrs. Brown, if he had
+met her travelling with her maid, in the mail, when there was a vacant
+place, what would he himself have done?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII. Injured Innocence
+
+
+From Clive Newcome, Esq., to Lieut.-Col. Newcome, C.B.
+
+"Brighton, June 12, 18--.
+
+"My Dearest Father,--As the weather was growing very hot at Naples,
+and you wished I should come to England to see Mr. Binnie, I came
+accordingly, and have been here three weeks, and write to you from Aunt
+Honeyman's parlour at Brighton, where you ate your last dinner before
+embarking for India. I found your splendid remittance calling in Fog
+Court, and have invested a part of the sum in a good horse to ride, upon
+which I take my diversion with other young dandies in the Park. Florac
+is in England, but he has no need of your kindness. Only think! he is
+Prince de Moncontour now, the second title of the Duc d'Ivry's family;
+and M. le Comte de Florac is Duc d'Ivry in consequence of the demise
+of t'other old gentleman. I believe the late duke's wife shortened
+his life. Oh, what a woman! She caused a duel between Lord Kew and
+a Frenchman, which has in its turn occasioned all sorts of evil and
+division in families, as you shall hear.
+
+"In the first place, in consequence of the duel and of incompatibility
+of temper, the match between Kew and E. N. has been broken off. I met
+Lord Kew at Naples with his mother and brother, nice quiet people as you
+would like them. Kew's wound and subsequent illness have altered him
+a good deal. He has become much more serious than he used to be; not
+ludicrously so at all, but he says he thinks his past life has been
+useless and even criminal, and he wishes to change it. He has sold
+his horses, and sown his wild oats. He has turned quite a sober quiet
+gentleman.
+
+"At our meeting he told me of what had happened between him and Ethel,
+of whom he spoke most kindly and generously, but avowing his opinion
+that they never could have been happy in married life. And now I think
+my dear old father will see that there may be another reason besides my
+desire to see Mr. Binnie, which has brought me tumbling back to England
+again. If need be to speak, I never shall have, I hope, any secrets
+from you. I have not said much about one which has given me the deuce's
+disquiet for ten months past, because there was no good in talking about
+it, or vexing you needlessly with reports of my griefs and woes.
+
+"Well, when we were at Baden in September last, and E. and I wrote those
+letters in common to you, I dare say you can fancy what my feelings
+might have been towards such a beautiful young creature, who has a
+hundred faults, for which I love her just as much as for the good that
+is in her. I became dreadfully smitten indeed, and knowing that she was
+engaged to Lord Kew, I did as you told me you did once when the enemy
+was too strong for you--I ran away. I had a bad time of it for two or
+three months. At Rome, however, I began to take matters more easily, my
+naturally fine appetite returned, and at the end of the season I found
+myself uncommonly happy in the society of the Miss Baliols and the Miss
+Freemans; but when Kew told me at Naples of what had happened, there was
+straightway a fresh eruption in my heart, and I was fool enough to come
+almost without sleep to London in order to catch a glimpse of the bright
+eyes of E. N.
+
+"She is now in this very house upstairs with one aunt, whilst the other
+lets lodgings to her. I have seen her but very seldom indeed since I
+came to London, where Sir Brian and Lady Anne do not pass the season,
+and Ethel goes about to a dozen parties every week with old Lady Kew,
+who neither loves you nor me. Hearing E. say she was coming down to
+her parents at Brighton, I made so bold as to waylay her at the
+train (though I didn't tell her that I passed three hours in the
+waiting-room); and we made the journey together, and she was very kind
+and beautiful; and though I suppose I might just as well ask the Royal
+Princess to have me, I can't help hoping and longing and hankering after
+her. And Aunt Honeyman must have found out that I am fond of her, for
+the old lady has received me with a scolding. Uncle Charles seems to
+be in very good condition again. I saw him in full clerical feather--at
+Madame de Moncontour's, a good-natured body who drops her h's, though
+Florac is not aware of their absence. Pendennis and Warrington, I know,
+would send you their regards. Pen is conceited, but much kinder in
+reality than he has the air of being. Fred Bayham is doing well, and
+prospering in his mysterious way.
+
+"Mr. Binnie is not looking at all well: and Mrs. Mack--well, as I know
+you never attack a lady behind her lovely back, I won't say a word of
+Mrs. Mack--but she has taken possession of Uncle James, and seems to me
+to weigh upon him somehow. Rosey is as pretty and good-natured as
+ever, and has learned two new songs; but you see, with my sentiments
+in another quarter, I feel as it were guilty and awkward in company of
+Rosey and her mamma. They have become the very greatest friends with
+Bryanstone Square, and Mrs. Mack is always citing Aunt Hobson as
+the most superior of women, in which opinion, I daresay, Aunt Hobson
+concurs.
+
+"Good-bye, my dearest father; my sheet is full; I wish I could put my
+arm in yours and pace up and down the pier with you, and tell you more
+and more. But you know enough now, and that I am your affectionate son
+always, C. N."
+
+In fact, when Mr. Clive appeared at Steyne Gardens stepping out of the
+fly, and handing Miss Ethel thence, Miss Honeyman of course was very
+glad to see her nephew, and saluted him with a little embrace to show
+her sense of pleasure at his visit. But the next day, being Sunday, when
+Clive, with a most engaging smile on his countenance, walked over to
+breakfast from his hotel, Miss Honeyman would scarcely speak to him
+during the meal, looked out at him very haughtily from under her Sunday
+cap, and received his stories about Italy with "Oh! ah! indeed!" in
+a very unkind manner. And when breakfast was over, and she had done
+washing her age chins, she fluttered up to Clive with such an agitation
+of plumage, redness of craw, and anger of manner, as a maternal hen
+shows if she has reason to think you menace her chickens. She fluttered
+up to Clive, I say, and cried out, "Not in this house, Clive,--not in
+this house, I beg you to understand that!"
+
+Clive, looking amazed, said, "Certainly not, ma'am; I never did do it
+in the house, as I know you don't like it. I was going into the Square."
+The young man meaning that he was about to smoke, and conjecturing that
+his aunt's anger applied to that practice.
+
+"You know very well what I mean, sir! Don't try to turn me off in that
+highty-tighty way. My dinner to-day is at half-past one. You can dine or
+not as you like," and the old lady flounced out of the room.
+
+Poor Clive stood rolling his cigar in sad perplexity of spirit, until
+Mrs. Honeyman's servant Hannah entered, who, for her part, grinned and
+looked particularly sly. "In the name of goodness, Hannah, what is the
+row about?" cries Mr. Clive. "What is my aunt scolding at? What are you
+grinning at, you old Cheshire cat?"
+
+"Git long, Master Clive," says Hannah, patting the cloth.
+
+"Get along! why get along, and where am I to get along to?"
+
+"Did 'ee do ut really now, Master Clive?" cries Mrs. Honeyman's
+attendant, grinning with the utmost good-humour. "Well, she be as pretty
+a young lady as ever I saw; and as I told my missis, 'Miss Martha,' says
+I, 'there's a pair on 'em.' Though missis was mortal angry to be sure.
+She never could bear it."
+
+"Bear what? you old goose!" cries Clive, who by these playful names had
+been wont to designate Hannah these twenty years past.
+
+"A young gentleman and a young lady a kissing of each other in the
+railway coach," says Hannah, jerking up with her finger to the ceiling,
+as much as to say, "There she is! Lar, she be a pretty young creature,
+that she be! and so I told Miss Martha." Thus differently had the news
+which had come to them on the previous night affected the old lady and
+her maid.
+
+The news was, that Miss Newcome's maid (a giddy thing from the county,
+who had not even learned as yet to hold her tongue) had announced with
+giggling delight to Lady Anne's maid, who was taking tea with Mrs.
+Hicks, that Mr. Clive had given Miss Ethel a kiss in the tunnel, and
+she supposed it was a match. This intelligence Hannah Hicks took to her
+mistress, of whose angry behaviour to Clive the next morning you may now
+understand the cause.
+
+Clive did not know whether to laugh or to be in a rage. He swore that he
+was as innocent of all intention of kissing Miss Ethel as of embracing
+Queen Elizabeth. He was shocked to think of his cousin, walking above,
+fancy-free in maiden meditation, whilst this conversation regarding her
+was carried on below. How could he face her, or her mother, or even her
+maid, now he had cognisance of this naughty calumny? "Of course Hannah
+had contradicted it?" "Of course I have a done no such indeed," replied
+Master Clive's old friend; "of course I have set 'em down a bit; for
+when little Trimmer said it, and she supposed it was all settled between
+you, seeing how it had been a going on in foreign parts last year, Mrs.
+Pincott says, 'Hold your silly tongue, Trimmer,' she says; 'Miss Ethel
+marry a painter, indeed, Trimmer!' says she, 'while she has refused to
+be a Countess,' she says; 'and can be a Marchioness any day, and will
+be a Marchioness. Marry a painter, indeed!' Mrs. Pincott says; 'Trimmer,
+I'm surprised at your impidence.' So, my dear, I got angry at that,"
+Clive's champion continued, "and says I, if my young master ain't good
+enough for any young lady in this world, says I, I'd like you to show
+her to me: and if his dear father, the Colonel, says I, ain't as good
+as your old gentleman upstairs, says I, who has gruel and dines upon
+doctor's stuff, the Mrs. Pincott, says I, my name isn't what it is,
+says I. Those were my very words, Master Clive, my dear; and then Mrs.
+Pincott says, Mrs. Hicks, she says, you don't understand society, she
+says; you don't understand society, he! he!" and the country lady, with
+considerable humour, gave an imitation of the town lady's manner.
+
+At this juncture Miss Honeyman re-entered the parlour, arrayed in her
+Sunday bonnet, her stiff and spotless collar, her Cashmere shawl, and
+Agra brooch, and carrying her Bible and Prayer-Book each stitched in its
+neat cover of brown silk. "Don't stay chattering here, you idle woman,"
+she cried to her attendant with extreme asperity. "And you, sir, if you
+wish to smoke your cigar, you had best walk down to the cliff where the
+Cockneys are!" she added, glowering at Clive.
+
+"Now I understand it all," Clive said, trying to deprecate her anger.
+"My dear good aunt, it's a most absurd mistake; upon my honour, Miss
+Ethel is as innocent as you are."
+
+"Innocent or not, this house is not intended for assignations, Clive! As
+long as Sir Brian Newcome lodges here, you will be pleased to keep away
+from it, sir; and though I don't approve of Sunday travelling, I think
+the very best thing you can do is to put yourself in the train and go
+back to London."
+
+And now, young people, who read my moral pages, you will see how highly
+imprudent it is to sit with your cousins in railway carriages; and how,
+though you may not mean the slightest harm in the world, a great deal
+may be attributed to you; and how, when you think you are managing your
+little absurd love-affairs ever so quietly, Jeames and Betsy in the
+servants'-hall are very likely talking about them, and you are putting
+yourself in the power of those menials. If the perusal of these lines
+has rendered one single young couple uncomfortable, surely my amiable
+end is answered, and I have written not altogether in vain.
+
+Clive was going away, innocent though he was, yet quivering under his
+aunt's reproof, and so put out of countenance that he had not even
+thought of lighting the great cigar which he stuck into his foolish
+mouth; when a shout of "Clive! Clive!" from half a dozen little voices
+roused him, and presently as many little Newcomes came toddling down the
+stairs, and this one clung round his knees, and that at the skirts of
+his coat, and another took his hand and said, he must come and walk with
+them on the beach.
+
+So away went Clive to walk with his cousins, and then to see his old
+friend Miss Cann, with whom and the elder children he walked to church,
+and issuing thence greeted Lady Anne and Ethel (who had also attended
+the service) in the most natural way in the world.
+
+While engaged in talking with these, Miss Honeyman came out of the
+sacred edifice, crisp and stately in the famous Agra brooch and Cashmere
+shawls. The good-natured Lady Anne had a smile and a kind word for her
+as for everybody. Clive went up to his maternal aunt to offer his arm.
+"You must give him up to us for dinner, Miss Honeyman, if you please to
+be so very kind. He was so good-natured in escorting Ethel down," Lady
+Anne said.
+
+"Hm! my lady," says Miss Honeyman, perking her head up in her collar.
+Clive did not know whether to laugh or not, but a fine blush illuminated
+his countenance. As for Ethel, she was and looked perfectly unconscious.
+So, rustling in her stiff black silk, Martha Honeyman walked with
+her nephew silent by the shore of the much-sounding sea. The idea of
+courtship, of osculatory processes, of marrying and giving in marriage,
+made this elderly virgin chafe and fume, she never having, at any period
+of her life, indulged in any such ideas or practices, and being angry
+against them, as childless wives will sometimes be angry and testy
+against matrons with their prattle about their nurseries. Now, Miss Cann
+was a different sort of spinster, and loved a bit of sentiment with
+all her heart from which I am led to conclude--but, pray, is this the
+history of Miss Cann or of the Newcomes?
+
+All these Newcomes then entered into Miss Honeyman's house, where a
+number of little knives and forks were laid for them. Ethel was cold and
+thoughtful; Lady Anne was perfectly good-natured as her wont was. Sir
+Brian came in on the arm of his valet presently, wearing that look
+of extra neatness which invalids have, who have just been shaved and
+combed, and made ready by their attendants to receive company. He was
+voluble: though there was a perceptible change in his voice: he talked
+chiefly of matters which had occurred forty years ago, and especially of
+Clive's own father, when he was a boy, in a manner which interested the
+young man and Ethel. "He threw me down in a chaise--sad chap--always
+reading Orme's History of India--wanted marry Frenchwoman. He wondered
+Mrs. Newcome didn't leave Tom anything--'pon my word, quite s'prise."
+The events of to-day, the House of Commons, the City, had little
+interest for him. All the children went up and shook him by the hand,
+with awe in their looks, and he patted their yellow heads vacantly and
+kindly. He asked Clive (several times) where he had been? and said
+he himself had had a slight 'tack--vay slight--was getting well ev'y
+day--strong as a horse--go back to Parliament d'rectly. And then he
+became a little peevish with Parker, his man, about his broth. The man
+retired, and came back presently, with profound bows and gravity, to
+tell Sir Brian dinner was ready, and he went away quite briskly at this
+news, giving a couple of fingers to Clive before he disappeared into the
+upper apartments. Good-natured Lady Anne was as easy about this as
+about the other events of this world. In later days, with what a strange
+feeling we remember that last sight we have of the old friend; that
+nod of farewell, and shake of the hand, that last look of the face and
+figure as the door closes on him, or the coach drives away! So the roast
+mutton was ready, and all the children dined very heartily.
+
+The infantile meal had not been long concluded, when servants announced
+"the Marquis of Farintosh;" and that nobleman made his appearance to
+pay his respects to Miss Newcome and Lady Anne. He brought the very last
+news of the very last party in London, where "Really, upon my honour,
+now, it was quite a stupid party, because Miss Newcome wasn't there. It
+was now, really."
+
+Miss Newcome remarked, "If he said so upon his honour, of course she was
+satisfied."
+
+"As you weren't there," the young nobleman continued, "the Miss
+Rackstraws came out quite strong; really they did now, upon my honour.
+It was quite a quiet thing. Lady Merriborough hadn't even got a new gown
+on. Lady Anne, you shirk London society this year, and we miss you: we
+expected you to give us two or three things this season; we did now,
+really. I said to Tufthunt, only yesterday, Why has not Lady Anne
+Newcome given anything? You know Tufthunt? They say he's a clever
+fellow, and that--but he's a low little beast, and I hate him."
+
+Lady Anne said, "Sir Brian's bad state of health prevented her from
+going out this season, or receiving at home."
+
+"It don't prevent your mother from going out, though," continued my
+lord. "Upon my honour, I think unless she got two or three things every
+night, I think she'd die. Lady Kew's like one of those horses, you know,
+that unless they go they drop."
+
+"Thank you for my mother," said Lady Anne.
+
+"She is, upon my honour. Last night I know she was at ever so many
+places. She dined at the Bloxams', for I was there. Then she said
+she was going to sit with old Mrs. Crackthorpe, who has broke her
+collar-bone (that Crackthorpe in the Life Guards, her grandson, is a
+brute, and I hope she won't leave him a shillin'); and then she came on
+to Lady Hawkstone's, where I heard her say she had been at the--at the
+Flowerdales', too. People begin to go to those Flowerdales'. Hanged--if
+I know where they won't go next. Cotton-spinner, wasn't he?"
+
+"So were we, my lord," says Miss Newcome.
+
+"Oh, yes, I forgot! But you're of an old family--very old family."
+
+"We can't help it," said Miss Ethel, archly. Indeed, she thought she
+was.
+
+"Do you believe in the barber-surgeon?" asked Clive. And my lord looked
+at him with a noble curiosity, as much as to say, "Who the deuce was the
+barber-surgeon? and who the devil are you?"
+
+"Why should we disown our family?" Miss Ethel said, simply. "In those
+early days I suppose people did--did all sorts of things, and it was
+not considered at all out of the way to be surgeon to William the
+Conqueror."
+
+"Edward the Confessor," interposed Clive. "And it must be true, because
+I have seen a picture of the barber-surgeon, a friend of mine, M'Collop,
+did the picture, and I dare say it is for sale still"
+
+Lady Anne said "she should be delighted to see it." Lord Farintosh
+remembered that the M'Collop had the moor next to his in Argyleshire,
+but did not choose to commit himself with the stranger, and preferred
+looking at his own handsome face and admiring it in the glass until the
+last speaker had concluded his remarks.
+
+As Clive did not offer any further conversation, but went back to a
+table, where he began to draw the barber-surgeon, Lord Farintosh resumed
+the delightful talk. "What infernal bad glasses these are in these
+Brighton lodging-houses! They make a man look quite green, really they
+do--and there's nothing green in me, is there, Lady Anne?"
+
+"But you look very unwell, Lord Farintosh; indeed you do," Miss Newcome
+said, gravely. "I think late hours, and smoking, and going to that
+horrid Platt's, where I dare say you go----"
+
+"Go? Don't I? But don't call it horrid; really, now, don't call it
+horrid!" cried the noble Marquis.
+
+"Well--something has made you look far from well. You know how very
+well Lord Farintosh used to look, mamma--and to see him now, in only his
+second season--oh, it is melancholy!"
+
+"God bless my soul, Miss Newcome! what do you mean? I think I look
+pretty well," and the noble youth passed his hand through his hair.
+"It is a hard life, I know; that tearin' about night after night, and
+sittin' up till ever so much o'clock; and then all these races, you
+know, comin' one after another--it's enough to knock up any fellow. I'll
+tell you what I'll do, Miss Newcome. I'll go down to Codlington, to my
+mother; I will, upon my honour, and lie quiet all July, and then I'll go
+to Scotland--and you shall see whether I don't look better next season."
+
+"Do, Lord Farintosh!" said Ethel, greatly amused, as much, perhaps, at
+the young Marquis as at her cousin Clive, who sat whilst the other was
+speaking, fuming with rage, at his table.
+
+"What are you doing, Clive?" she asks.
+
+"I was trying to draw; Lord knows who--Lord Newcome, who was killed at
+the battle of Bosworth," said the artist, and the girl ran to look at
+the picture.
+
+"Why, you have made him like Punch!" cries the young lady.
+
+"It's a shame caricaturing one's own flesh and blood, isn't it?" asked
+Clive, gravely.
+
+"What a droll, funny picture!" exclaims Lady Anne. "Isn't it capital,
+Lord Farintosh?"
+
+"I dare say--I confess I don't understand that sort of thing," says
+his lordship. "Don't, upon my honour. There's Odo Carton, always making
+those caricatures--I don't understand 'em. You'll come up to town
+to-morrow, won't you? And you're goin' to Lady Hm's, and to Hm and Hm's,
+ain't you?" (The names of these aristocratic places of resort were quite
+inaudible.) "You mustn't let Miss Blackcap have it all her own way, you
+know, that you mustn't."
+
+"She won't have it all her own way," says Miss Ethel. "Lord Farintosh,
+will you do me a favour? Lady Innishowan is your aunt?"
+
+"Of course she is my aunt."
+
+"Will you be so very good as to get a card for her party on Tuesday, for
+my cousin, Mr. Clive Newcome? Clive, please be introduced to the Marquis
+of Farintosh."
+
+The young Marquis perfectly well recollected those mustachios and their
+wearer on a former night, though he had not thought fit to make any sign
+of recognition. "Anything you wish, Miss Newcome," he said; "delighted,
+I'm sure;" and turning to Clive--In the army, I suppose?"
+
+"I am an artist," says Clive, turning very red.
+
+"Oh, really, I didn't know!" cries the nobleman; and my lord bursting
+out laughing presently as he was engaged in conversation with Miss Ethel
+on the balcony, Clive thought, very likely with justice, "He is making
+fun of my mustachios. Confound him! I should like to pitch him over into
+the street." But this was only a kind wish on Mr. Newcome's part; not
+followed out by any immediate fulfilment.
+
+As the Marquis of Farintosh seemed inclined to prolong his visit, and
+his company was exceedingly disagreeable to Clive, the latter took his
+departure for an afternoon walk, consoled to think that he should
+have Ethel to himself at the evening's dinner, when Lady Anne would be
+occupied about Sir Brian, and would be sure to be putting the children
+to bed, and, in a word, would give him a quarter of an hour of
+delightful tete-a-tete with the beautiful Ethel.
+
+Clive's disgust was considerable when he came to dinner at length,
+and found Lord Farintosh, likewise invited, and sprawling in the
+drawing-room. His hopes of a tete-a-tete were over. Ethel and Lady Anne
+and my lord talked, as all people will, about their mutual acquaintance:
+what parties were coming off, who was going to marry whom, and so forth.
+And as the persons about whom they conversed were in their own station
+of life, and belonged to the fashionable world, of which Clive had but
+a slight knowledge, he chose to fancy that his cousin was giving herself
+airs, and to feel sulky and uneasy during their dialogue.
+
+Miss Newcome had faults of her own, and was worldly enough as perhaps
+the reader has begun to perceive; but in this instance no harm, sure,
+was to be attributed to her. If two gossips in Aunt Honeyman's parlour
+had talked over the affairs of Mr. Jones and Mr. Brown, Clive would not
+have been angry; but a young man of spirit not unfrequently mistakes
+his vanity for independence: and it is certain that nothing is more
+offensive to us of the middle class than to hear the names of great
+folks constantly introduced into conversation.
+
+So Clive was silent and ate no dinner, to the alarm of Martha, who had
+put him to bed many a time, and always had a maternal eye over him. When
+he actually refused currant and raspberry tart, and custard, the chef
+d'oeuvre of Miss Honeyman, for which she had seen him absolutely cry in
+his childhood, the good Martha was alarmed.
+
+"Law, Master Clive!" she said, "do 'ee eat some. Missis made it, you
+know she did;" and she insisted on bringing back the tart to him.
+
+Lady Anne and Ethel laughed at this eagerness on the worthy old woman's
+part. "Do 'ee eat some, Clive," says Ethel, imitating honest Mrs. Hicks,
+who had left the room.
+
+"It's doosid good," remarked Lord Farintosh.
+
+"Then do 'ee eat some more," said Miss Newcome: on which the young
+nobleman, holding out his plate, observed with much affability, that the
+cook of the lodgings was really a stunner for tarts.
+
+"The cook! dear me, it's not the cook!" cries Miss Ethel. "Don't you
+remember the princess in the Arabian Nights, who was such a stunner for
+tarts, Lord Farintosh?"
+
+Lord Farintosh couldn't say that he did.
+
+"Well, I thought not; but there was a princess in Arabia or China, or
+somewhere, who made such delicious tarts and custards that nobody's
+could compare with them; and there is an old lady in Brighton who has
+the same wonderful talent. She is the mistress of this house."
+
+"And she is my aunt, at your lordship's service," said Mr. Clive, with
+great dignity.
+
+"Upon my honour! did you make 'em, Lady Anne?" asked my lord.
+
+"The Queen of Hearts made tarts!" cried out Miss Newcome, rather
+eagerly, and blushing somewhat.
+
+"My good old aunt, Miss Honeyman, made this one," Clive would go on to
+say.
+
+"Mr. Honeyman's sister, the preacher, you know, where we go on Sunday,"
+Miss Ethel interposed.
+
+"The Honeyman pedigree is not a matter of very great importance," Lady
+Anne remarked gently. "Kuhn, will you have the goodness to take away
+these things? When did you hear of Colonel Newcome, Clive?"
+
+An air of deep bewilderment and perplexity had spread over Lord
+Farintosh's fine countenance whilst this talk about pastry had been
+going on. The Arabian Princess, the Queen of Hearts making tarts,
+Miss Honeyman? Who the deuce were all these? Such may have been his
+lordship's doubts and queries. Whatever his cogitations were he did not
+give utterance to them, but remained in silence for some time, as did
+the rest of the little party. Clive tried to think he had asserted his
+independence by showing that he was not ashamed of his old aunt; but the
+doubt may be whether there was any necessity for presenting her in this
+company, and whether Mr. Clive had not much better have left the tart
+question alone.
+
+Ethel evidently thought so: for she talked and rattled in the most
+lively manner with Lord Farintosh for the rest of the evening, and
+scarcely chose to say a word to her cousin. Lady Anne was absent with
+Sir Brian and her children for the most part of the time: and thus Clive
+had the pleasure of listening to Miss Newcome uttering all sorts of odd
+little paradoxes, firing the while sly shots at Mr. Clive, and, indeed,
+making fun of his friends, exhibiting herself in not the most agreeable
+light. Her talk only served the more to bewilder Lord Farintosh, who did
+not understand a tithe of her allusions: for Heaven, which had endowed
+the young Marquis with personal charms, a large estate, an ancient title
+and the pride belonging to it, had not supplied his lordship with a
+great quantity of brains, or a very feeling heart.
+
+Lady Anne came back from the upper regions presently, with rather a
+grave face, and saying that Sir Brian was not so well this evening,
+upon which the young men rose to depart. My lord said he had "a most
+delightful dinner and a most delightful tart, 'pon his honour," and was
+the only one of the little company who laughed at his own remark. Miss
+Ethel's eyes flashed scorn at Mr. Clive when that unfortunate subject
+was introduced again.
+
+My lord was going back to London to-morrow. Was Miss Newcome going back?
+Wouldn't he like to go back in the train with her!--another unlucky
+observation. Lady Anne said, "it would depend on the state of Sir
+Brian's health the next morning whether Ethel would return; and both of
+you gentlemen are too young to be her escort," added the kind lady. Then
+she shook hands with Clive, as thinking she had said something too for
+him.
+
+Farintosh in the meantime was taking leave of Miss Newcome. "Pray,
+pray," said his lordship, "don't throw me over at Lady Innishowan's.
+You know I hate balls and never go to 'em, except when you go. I hate
+dancing, I do, 'pon my honour."
+
+"Thank you," said Miss Newcome, with a curtsey.
+
+"Except with one person--only one person, upon my honour. I'll remember
+and get the invitation for your friend. And if you would but try that
+mare, I give you my honour I bred her at Codlington. She's a beauty to
+look at, and as quiet as a lamb."
+
+"I don't want a horse like a lamb," replied the young lady.
+
+"Well--she'll go like blazes now: and over timber she's splendid now.
+She is, upon my honour."
+
+"When I come to London perhaps you may trot her out," said Miss Ethel,
+giving him her hand and a fine smile.
+
+Clive came up biting his lips. "I suppose you don't condescend to ride
+Bhurtpore any more now?" he said.
+
+"Poor old Bhurtpore! The children ride him now," said Miss Ethel--giving
+Clive at the same time a dangerous look of her eyes, as though to see
+if her shot had hit. Then she added, "No--he has not been brought up to
+town this year: he is at Newcome, and I like him very much." Perhaps she
+thought the shot had struck too deep.
+
+But if Clive was hurt he did not show his wound. "You have had him these
+four years--yes, it's four years since my father broke him for you. And
+you still continue to like him? What a miracle of constancy! You use
+him sometimes in the country--when you have no better horse--what a
+compliment to Bhurtpore!"
+
+"Nonsense!" Miss Ethel here made Clive a sign in her most imperious
+manner to stay a moment when Lord Farintosh had departed.
+
+But he did not choose to obey this order. "Good night," he said. "Before
+I go I must shake hands with my aunt downstairs." And he was gone,
+following close upon Lord Farintosh, who I dare say thought, "Why
+the deuce can't he shake hands with his aunt up here?" and when
+Clive entered Miss Honeyman's back-parlour, making a bow to the young
+nobleman, my lord went away more perplexed than ever: and the next day
+told friends at White's what uncommonly queer people those Newcomes
+were. "I give you my honour there was a fellow at Lady Anne's whom they
+call Clive, who is a painter by trade--his uncle is a preacher--his
+father is a horse-dealer, and his aunt lets lodgings and cooks the
+dinner."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII. Returns to some Old Friends
+
+
+The haggard youth burst into my chambers, in the Temple, on the very
+next morning, and confided to me the story which has been just here
+narrated. When he had concluded it, with many ejaculations regarding
+the heroine of the tale, "I saw her, sir," he added, "walking with the
+children and Miss Cann as I drove round in the fly to the station--and
+didn't even bow to her."
+
+"Why did you go round by the cliff?" asked Clive's friend.
+
+"That is not the way from the Steyne Arms to the railroad."
+
+"Hang it," says Clive, turning very red, "I wanted to pass just under
+her windows, and if I saw her, not to see her: and that's what I did."
+
+"Why did she walk on the cliff?" mused Clive's friend, "at that early
+hour? Not to meet Lord Farintosh, I should think, he never gets up
+before twelve. It must have been to see you. Didn't you tell her you
+were going away in the morning?"
+
+"I tell you what she does with me," continues Mr. Clive. "Sometimes
+she seems to like me, and then she leaves me. Sometimes she is quite
+kind--kind she always is--I mean, you know, Pen--you know what I mean;
+and then up comes the old Countess, or a young Marquis, or some fellow
+with a handle to his name, and she whistles me off till the next
+convenient opportunity."
+
+"Women are like that, my ingenuous youth," says Clive's counsellor.
+
+"I won't stand it. I won't be made a fool of!" he continues. "She seems
+to expect everybody to bow to her, and moves through the world with her
+imperious airs. Oh, how confoundedly handsome she is with them! I tell
+you what. I feel inclined to tumble down and feel one of her pretty
+little feet on my neck and say, There! Trample my life out. Make a slave
+of me. Let me get a silver collar and mark 'Ethel' on it, and go through
+the world with my badge."
+
+"And a blue ribbon for a footman to hold you by; and a muzzle to wear in
+the dog-days. Bow! wow!" says Mr. Pendennis.
+
+(At this noise Mr. Warrington puts his head in from the neighbouring
+bedchamber, and shows a beard just lathered for shaving. "We are talking
+sentiment! Go back till you are wanted!" says Mr. Pendennis. Exit he of
+the soap-suds.)
+
+"Don't make fun of a fellow," Clive continues, laughing ruefully. "You
+see I must talk about it to somebody. I shall die if I don't. Sometimes,
+sir, I rise up in my might and I defy her lightning. The sarcastic dodge
+is the best: I have borrowed that from you Pen, old boy. That puzzles
+her: that would beat her if I could but go on with it. But there comes a
+tone of her sweet voice, a look out of those killing grey eyes, and all
+my frame is in a thrill and a tremble. When she was engaged to Lord Kew
+I did battle with the confounded passion--and I ran away from it like
+an honest man, and the gods rewarded me with ease of mind after a while.
+But now the thing rages worse than ever. Last night, I give you my
+honour, I heard every one of the confounded hurs toll, except the last,
+when I was dreaming of my father, and the chambermaid woke me with a hot
+water jug."
+
+"Did she scald you? What a cruel chambermaid! I see you have shaven the
+mustachios off."
+
+"Farintosh asked me whether I was going in the army," said Clive, "and
+she laughed. I thought I had best dock them. Oh, I would like to cut my
+head off as well as my hair!"
+
+"Have you ever asked her to marry you?" asked Clive's friend.
+
+"I have seen her but five times since my return from abroad," the lad
+went on; "there has been always somebody by. Who am I? a painter with
+five hundred a year for an allowance. Isn't she used to walk up on
+velvet and dine upon silver; and hasn't she got marquises and barons,
+and all sorts of swells, in her train? I daren't ask her----"
+
+Here his friend hummed Montrose's lines--"He either fears his fate too
+much, or his desert is small, who dares not put it to the touch, and win
+or lose it all."
+
+"I own I dare not ask her. If she were to refuse me, I know I should
+never ask again. This isn't the moment, when all Swelldom is at her
+feet, for me to come forward and say, 'Maiden, I have watched thee
+daily, and I think thou lovest me well.' I read that ballad to her at
+Baden, sir. I drew a picture of the Lord of Burleigh wooing the maiden,
+and asked what she would have done?"
+
+"Oh, you did? I thought, when we were at Baden, we were so modest that
+we did not even whisper our condition?"
+
+"A fellow can't help letting it be seen and hinting it," says Clive,
+with another blush. "They can read it in our looks fast enough; and what
+is going on in our minds, hang them! I recollect she said, in her grave,
+cool way, that after all the Lord and Lady of Burleigh did not seem to
+have made a very good marriage, and that the lady would have been much
+happier in marrying one of her own degree."
+
+"That was a very prudent saying for a young lady of eighteen," remarks
+Clive's friend.
+
+"Yes; but it was not an unkind one. Say Ethel thought--thought what was
+the case; and being engaged herself, and knowing how friends of mine had
+provided a very pretty little partner for me--she is a dear, good
+little girl, little Rosey; and twice as good, Pen, when her mother is
+away--knowing this and that, I say, suppose Ethel wanted to give me a
+hint to keep quiet, was she not right in the counsel she gave me? She
+is not fit to be a poor man's wife. Fancy Ethel Newcome going into the
+kitchen and making pies like Aunt Honeyman!"
+
+"The Circassian beauties don't sell under so many thousand purses,"
+remarked Mr. Pendennis. "If there's a beauty in a well-regulated
+Georgian family, they fatten her; they feed her with the best Racahout
+des Arabes. They give her silk robes, and perfumed baths; have her
+taught to play on the dulcimer and dance and sing; and when she is quite
+perfect, send her down to Constantinople for the Sultan's inspection.
+The rest of the family think never of grumbling, but eat coarse meat,
+bathe in the river, wear old clothes, and praise Allah for their
+sister's elevation. Bah! Do you suppose the Turkish system doesn't
+obtain all over the world? My poor Clive, this article in the Mayfair
+Market is beyond your worship's price. Some things in this world are
+made for our betters, young man. Let Dives say grace for his dinner, and
+the dogs and Lazarus be thankful for the crumbs. Here comes Warrington,
+shaven and smart as if he was going out a-courting."
+
+Thus it will be seen, that in his communication with certain friends who
+approached nearer to his own time of life, Clive was much more eloquent
+and rhapsodical than in the letter which he wrote to his father,
+regarding his passion for Miss Ethel. He celebrated her with pencil
+and pen. He was for ever drawing the outline of her head, the solemn
+eyebrow, the nose (that wondrous little nose), descending from the
+straight forehead, the short upper lip, and chin sweeping in a full
+curve to the neck, etc. etc. A frequenter of his studio might see a
+whole gallery of Ethels there represented: when Mrs. Mackenzie visited
+that place, and remarked one face and figure repeated on a hundred
+canvases and papers, grey, white, and brown, I believe she was told that
+the original was a famous Roman model, from whom Clive had studied a
+great deal during his residence in Italy; on which Mrs. Mack gave it as
+her opinion that Clive was a sad wicked young fellow. The widow thought
+rather the better of him for being a sad wicked young fellow; and as for
+Miss Rosey, she, was of course of mamma's way of thinking. Rosey went
+through the world constantly smiling at whatever occurred. She was
+good-humoured through the dreariest long evenings at the most stupid
+parties; sate good-humouredly for hours at Shoolbred's whilst mamma was
+making purchases; heard good-humouredly those old old stories of her
+mother's day after day; bore an hour's joking or an hour's scolding with
+equal good-humour; and whatever had been the occurrences of her simple
+day, whether there was sunshine or cloudy weather, or flashes of
+lightning and bursts of rain, I fancy Miss Mackenzie slept after them
+quite undisturbedly, and was sure to greet the morrow's dawn with a
+smile.
+
+Had Clive become more knowing in his travels, had Love or Experience
+opened his eyes, that they looked so differently now upon objects which
+before used well enough to please them? It is a fact that, until he went
+abroad, he thought widow Mackenzie a dashing, lively, agreeable woman:
+he used to receive her stories about Cheltenham, the colonies, the balls
+at Government House, the observations which the bishop made, and the
+peculiar attention of the Chief Justice to Mrs. Major M'Shane, with the
+Major's uneasy behaviour--all these to hear at one time did Clive not
+ungraciously incline. "Our friend, Mrs. Mack," the good old Colonel used
+to say, "is a clever woman of the world, and has seen a great deal of
+company." That story of Sir Thomas Sadman dropping a pocket-handkerchief
+in his court at Colombo, which the Queen's Advocate O'Goggarty picked
+up, and on which Laura MacS. was embroidered, whilst the Major was
+absolutely in the witness-box giving evidence against a native servant
+who had stolen one of his cocked-hats--that story always made good
+Thomas Newcome laugh, and Clive used to enjoy it too, and the widow's
+mischievous fun in narrating it; and now, behold, one day when Mrs.
+Mackenzie recounted the anecdote in her best manner to Messrs. Pendennis
+and Warrington, and Frederick Bayham, who had been invited to meet Mr.
+Clive in Fitzroy Square--when Mr. Binnie chuckled, when Rosey, as in
+duty bound, looked discomposed and said, "Law, mamma!"--not one sign of
+good-humour, not one ghost of a smile, made its apparition on Clive's
+dreary face. He painted imaginary portraits with a strawberry stalk; he
+looked into his water-glass as though he would plunge and drown there;
+and Bayham had to remind him that the claret jug was anxious to have
+another embrace from its constant friend, F. B. When Mrs. Mack went away
+distributing smiles, Clive groaned out, "Good heavens! how that story
+does bore me!" and lapsed into his former moodiness, not giving so
+much as a glance to Rosey, whose sweet face looked at him kindly for a
+moment, as she followed in the wake of her mamma.
+
+"The mother's the woman for my money," I heard F. B. whisper to
+Warrington. "Splendid figure-head, sir--magnificent build, sir, from
+bows to stern--I like 'em of that sort. Thank you, Mr. Binnie, I will
+take a back-hander, as Clive don't seem to drink. The youth, sir, has
+grown melancholy with his travels; I'm inclined to think some noble
+Roman has stolen the young man's heart. Why did you not send us over
+a picture of the charmer, Clive? Young Ridley, Mr. Binnie, you will
+be happy to hear, is bidding fair to take a distinguished place in the
+world of arts. His picture has been greatly admired; and my good friend
+Mrs. Ridley tells me that Lord Todmorden has sent him over an order to
+paint him a couple of pictures at a hundred guineas apiece."
+
+"I should think so. J. J.'s pictures will be worth five times a hundred
+guineas ere five years are over," says Clive.
+
+"In that case it wouldn't be a bad speculation for our friend Sherrick,"
+remarked F. B., "to purchase a few of the young man's works. I would,
+only I haven't the capital to spare. Mine has been vested in an Odessa
+venture, sir, in a large amount of wild oats, which up to the present
+moment make me no return. But it will always be a consolation to me to
+think that I have been the means--the humble means--of furthering that
+deserving young man's prospects in life."
+
+"You, F. B.! and how?" we asked.
+
+"By certain humble contributions of mine to the press," answered Bayham,
+majestically. "Mr. Warrington, the claret happens to stand with you;
+and exercise does it good, sir. Yes, the articles, trifling as they may
+appear, have attracted notice," continued F. B., sipping his wine with
+great gusto. "They are noticed, Pendennis, give me leave to say, by
+parties who don't value so much the literary or even the political part
+of the Pall Mall Gazette, though both, I am told by those who read them,
+are conducted with considerable--consummate ability. John Ridley sent a
+hundred pounds over to his father, the other day, who funded it in
+his son's name. And Ridley told the story to Lord Todmorden, when the
+venerable nobleman congratulated him on having such a child. I wish F.
+B. had one of the same sort, sir." In which sweet prayer we all of us
+joined with a laugh.
+
+One of us had told Mrs. Mackenzie (let the criminal blush to own that
+quizzing his fellow-creatures used at one time to form part of his
+youthful amusement) that F. B. was the son of a gentleman of most
+ancient family and vast landed possessions, and as Bayham was
+particularly attentive to the widow, and grandiloquent in his remarks,
+she was greatly pleased by his politeness, and pronounced him a most
+distinque man--reminding her, indeed, of General Hopkirk, who commanded
+in Canada. And she bade Rosey sing for Mr. Bayham, who was in a
+rapture at the young lady's performances, and said no wonder such an
+accomplished daughter came from such a mother, though how such a
+mother could have a daughter of such an age he, F. B., was at a loss
+to understand. Oh, sir! Mrs. Mackenzie was charmed and overcome at this
+novel compliment. Meanwhile the little artless Rosey warbled on her
+pretty ditties.
+
+"It is a wonder," growled out Mr. Warrington, "that that sweet girl can
+belong to such a woman. I don't understand much about women, but that
+one appears to me to be--hum!"
+
+"What, George?" asked Warrington's friend.
+
+"Well, an ogling, leering, scheming, artful old campaigner," grumbled
+the misogynist. "As for the little girl, I should like to have her to
+sing to me all night long. Depend upon it she would make a much better
+wife for Clive than that fashionable cousin of his he is hankering
+after. I heard him bellowing about her the other day in chambers, as I
+was dressing. What the deuce does the boy want with a wife at all?"
+And Rosey's song being by this time finished, Warrington went up with
+a blushing face and absolutely paid a compliment to Miss Mackenzie--an
+almost unheard-of effort on George's part.
+
+"I wonder whether it is every young fellow's lot," quoth George, as we
+trudged home together, "to pawn his heart away to some girl that's not
+worth the winning? Psha! it's all mad rubbish this sentiment. The women
+ought not to be allowed to interfere with us: married if a man must be,
+a suitable wife should be portioned out to him, and there an end of it.
+Why doesn't the young man marry this girl, and get back to his business
+and paint his pictures? Because his father wishes it--and the old
+Nabob yonder, who seems a kindly-disposed, easy-going, old heathen
+philosopher. Here's a pretty little girl: money I suppose in
+sufficiency--everything satisfactory, except, I grant you, the
+campaigner. The lad might daub his canvases, christen a child a year,
+and be as happy as any young donkey that browses on this common of
+ours--but he must go and heehaw after a zebra forsooth! a lusus naturae
+is she! I never spoke to a woman of fashion, thank my stars--I don't
+know the nature of the beast; and since I went to our race-balls, as a
+boy, scarcely ever saw one; as I don't frequent operas and parties in
+London like you young flunkeys of the aristocracy. I heard you talking
+about this one; I couldn't help it, as my door was open and the young
+one was shouting like a madman. What! does he choose to hang on on
+sufferance and hope to be taken, provided Miss can get no better? Do
+you mean to say that is the genteel custom, and that women in your
+confounded society do such things every day? Rather than have such a
+creature I would take a savage woman, who should nurse my dusky brood;
+and rather than have a daughter brought up to the trade I would bring
+her down from the woods and sell her in Virginia." With which burst of
+indignation our friend's anger ended for that night.
+
+Though Mr. Clive had the felicity to meet his cousin Ethel at a party
+or two in the ensuing weeks of the season, every time he perused the
+features of Lady Kew's brass knocker in Queen Street, no result came of
+the visit. At one of their meetings in the world Ethel fairly told him
+that her grandmother would not receive him. "You know, Clive, I can't
+help myself: nor would it be proper to make you signs out of the
+window. But you must call for all that: grandmamma may become more
+good-humoured: or if you don't come she may suspect I told you not to
+come: and to battle with her day after day is no pleasure, sir, I assure
+you. Here is Lord Farintosh coming to take me to dance. You must not
+speak to me all the evening, mind that, sir," and away goes the young
+lady in a waltz with the Marquis.
+
+On the same evening--as he was biting his nails, or cursing his fate,
+or wishing to invite Lord Farintosh into the neighbouring garden of
+Berkeley Square, whence the policeman might carry to the station-house
+the corpse of the survivor,--Lady Kew would bow to him with perfect
+graciousness; on other nights her ladyship would pass and no more
+recognise him than the servant who opened the door.
+
+If she was not to see him at her grandmother's house, and was not
+particularly unhappy at his exclusion, why did Miss Newcome encourage
+Mr. Clive so that he should try and see her? If Clive could not get
+into the little house in Queen Street, why was Lord Farintosh's enormous
+cab-horse looking daily into the first-floor windows of that street? Why
+were little quiet dinners made for him, before the opera, before going
+to the play, upon a half-dozen occasions, when some of the old old Kew
+port was brought out of the cellar, where cobwebs had gathered round it
+ere Farintosh was born? The dining-room was so tiny that not more than
+five people could sit at the little round table: that is, not more than
+Lady Kew and her granddaughter, Miss Crochet, the late vicar's daughter,
+at Kewbury, one of the Miss Toadins, and Captain Walleye, or Tommy
+Henchman, Farintosh's kinsman, and admirer, who were of no consequence,
+or old Fred Tiddler, whose wife was an invalid, and who was always ready
+at a moment's notice? Crackthorpe once went to one of these dinners,
+but that young soldier being a frank and high-spirited youth, abused the
+entertainment and declined more of them. "I tell you what I was wanted
+for," the Captain told his mess and Clive at the Regent's Park barracks
+afterwards, "I was expected to go as Farintosh's Groom of the Stole,
+don't you know, to stand, or if I could sit, in the back seat of the
+box, whilst his Royal Highness made talk with the Beauty; to go out
+and fetch the carriage, and walk downstairs with that d---- crooked old
+dowager, that looks as if she usually rode on a broomstick, by Jove,
+or else with that bony old painted sheep-faced companion, who's raddled
+like an old bell-wether. I think, Newcome, you seem rather hit by
+the Belle Cousine--so was I last season; so were ever so many of the
+fellows. By Jove, sir! there's nothing I know more comfortable or
+inspiritin' than a younger son's position, when a marquis cuts in
+with fifteen thousand a year! We fancy we've been making running, and
+suddenly we find ourselves nowhere. Miss Mary, or Miss Lucy, or Miss
+Ethel, saving your presence, will no more look at us, than my dog will
+look at a bit of bread, when I offer her this cutlet. Will you--old
+woman! no, you old slut, that you won't!" (to Mag, an Isle of Skye
+terrier, who, in fact, prefers the cutlet, having snuffed disdainfully
+at the bread)--"that you won't, no more than any of your sex. Why, do
+you suppose, if Jack's eldest brother had been dead--Barebones Belsize
+they used to call him (I don't believe he was a bad fellow, though he
+was fond of psalm-singing)--do you suppose that Lady Clara would have
+looked at that cock-tail Barney Newcome? Beg your pardon, if he's your
+cousin--but a more odious little snob I never saw."
+
+"I give you up Barnes," said Clive, laughing; "anybody may shy at him
+and I shan't interfere."
+
+"I understand, but at nobody else of the family. Well, what I mean is,
+that that old woman is enough to spoil any young girl she takes in hand.
+She dries 'em up, and poisons 'em, sir; and I was never more glad than
+when I heard that Kew had got out of her old clutches. Frank is a fellow
+that will always be led by some woman or another; and I'm only glad it
+should be a good one. They say his mother's serious, and that; but why
+shouldn't she bet?" continues honest Crackthorpe, puffing his cigar
+with great energy. "They say the old dowager doesn't believe in God nor
+devil: but that she's in such a funk to be left in the dark that she
+howls, and raises the doose's own delight if her candle goes out.
+Toppleton slept next room to her at Groningham, and heard her; didn't
+you, Top?"
+
+"Heard her howling like an old cat on the tiles," says
+Toppleton,--"thought she was at first. My man told me that she used to
+fling all sorts of things--boot-jacks and things, give you my honour--at
+her maid, and that the woman was all over black and blue."
+
+"Capital head that is Newcome has done of Jack Belsize!" says
+Crackthorpe, from out of his cigar.
+
+"And Kew's too--famous likeness! I say, Newcome, if you have 'em printed
+the whole brigade'll subscribe. Make your fortune, see if you won't,"
+cries Toppleton.
+
+"He's such a heavy swell, he don't want to make his fortune," ejaculates
+Butts.
+
+"Butts, old boy, he'll paint you for nothing, and send you to the
+Exhibition, where some widow will fall in love with you, and you shall
+be put as frontispiece for the 'Book of Beauty,' by Jove," cries another
+military satirist--to whom Butts:
+
+"You hold your tongue, you old Saracen's Head; they're going to have you
+done on the bear's-grease pots. I say, I suppose Jack's all right now.
+When did he write to you last, Cracky?"
+
+"He wrote from Palermo--a most jolly letter from him and Kew. He hasn't
+touched a card for nine months; is going to give up play. So is Frank,
+too, grown quite a good boy. So will you, too, Butts, you old miscreant,
+repent of your sins, pay your debts, and do something handsome for
+that poor deluded milliner in Albany Street. Jack says Kew's mother
+has written over to Lord Highgate a beautiful letter--and the old boy's
+relenting, and they'll come together again--Jack's eldest son now, you
+know. Bore for Lady Susan only having girls."
+
+"Not a bore for Jack, though," cries another. And what a good fellow
+Jack was; and what a trump Kew is; how famously he stuck by him: went to
+see him in prison and paid him out! and what good fellows we all are,
+in general, became the subject of the conversation, the latter part of
+which took place in the smoking-room of the Regent's Park Barracks,
+then occupied by that regiment of Life Guards of which Lord Kew and Mr.
+Belsize had been members. Both were still fondly remembered by their
+companions; and it was because Belsize had spoken very warmly of Clive's
+friendliness to him that Jack's friend the gallant Crackthorpe had
+been interested in our hero, and found an opportunity of making his
+acquaintance.
+
+With these frank and pleasant young men Clive soon formed a considerable
+intimacy: and if any of his older and peaceful friends chanced to take
+their afternoon airing in the Park, and survey the horsemen there, we
+might have the pleasure of beholding Mr. Newcome in Rotten Row, riding
+side by side with other dandies who had mustachios blonde or jet, who
+wore flowers in their buttons (themselves being flowers of spring), who
+rode magnificent thoroughbred horses, scarcely touching their stirrups
+with the tips of their varnished boots, and who kissed the most
+beautiful primrose-coloured kid gloves to lovely ladies passing them in
+the Ride. Clive drew portraits of half the officers of the Life Guards
+Green; and was appointed painter in ordinary to that distinguished
+corps. His likeness of the Colonel would make you die with laughing: his
+picture of the Surgeon was voted a masterpiece. He drew the men in the
+saddle, in the stable, in their flannel dresses, sweeping their flashing
+swords about, receiving lancers, repelling infantry,--nay, cutting--a
+sheep in two, as some of the warriors are known to be able to do at one
+stroke. Detachments of Life Guardsmen made their appearance in Charlotte
+Street, which was not very distant from their barracks; the most
+splendid cabs were seen prancing before his door; and curly-whiskered
+youths, of aristocratic appearance, smoking cigars out of his
+painting-room window. How many times did Clive's next-door neighbour,
+little Mr Finch, the miniature-painter, run to peep through his parlour
+blinds, hoping that a sitter was coming, and "a carriage-party"
+driving up! What wrath Mr. Scowler, A.R.A., was in, because a young
+hop-o'-my-thumb dandy, who wore gold chains and his collars turned down,
+should spoil the trade and draw portraits for nothing! Why did none
+of the young men come to Scowler? Scowler was obliged to own that
+Mr. Newcome had considerable talent, and a good knack at catching
+a likeness. He could not paint a bit, to be sure, but his heads in
+black-and-white were really tolerable; his sketches of horses very
+vigorous and lifelike. Mr. Gandish said if Clive would come for three
+or four years into his academy he could make something of him. Mr. Smee
+shook his head, and said he was afraid, that kind of loose, desultory
+study, that keeping of aristocratic company, was anything but favourable
+to a young artist--Smee, who would walk five miles to attend an evening
+party of ever so little a great man!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV. In which Mr. Charles Honeyman appears in an Amiable Light
+
+
+Mr. Frederick Bayham waited at Fitzroy Square while Clive was yet
+talking with his friends there, and favoured that gentleman with his
+company home to the usual smoky refreshment. Clive always rejoiced in F.
+B.'s society, whether he was in a sportive mood, or, as now, in a solemn
+and didactic vein. F. B. had been more than ordinarily majestic all
+the evening. "I dare say you find me a good deal altered, Clive," he
+remarked; "I am a good deal altered. Since that good Samaritan, your
+kind father, had compassion on a poor fellow fallen among thieves
+(though I don't say, mind you, he was much better than his company), F.
+B. has mended some of his ways. I am trying a course of industry, sir.
+Powers, perhaps naturally great, have been neglected over the wine-cup
+and the die. I am beginning to feel my way; and my chiefs yonder, who
+have just walked home with their cigars in their mouths, and without as
+much as saying, F. B., my boy, shall we go to the Haunt and have a cool
+lobster and a glass of table-beer,--which they certainly do not consider
+themselves to be,--I say, sir, the Politician and the Literary
+Critic" (there was a most sarcastic emphasis laid on these phrases,
+characterising Messrs. Warrington and Pendennis) "may find that there is
+a humble contributor to the Pall Mall Gazette, whose name, may be, the
+amateur shall one day reckon even higher than their own. Mr. Warrington
+I do not say so much--he is an able man, sir, an able man;--but there
+is that about your exceedin self-satisfied friend, Mr. Arthur Pendennis,
+which--well, well--let time show. You did not--get the--hem--paper at
+Rome and Naples, I suppose?"
+
+"Forbidden by the Inquisition," says Clive, delighted; "and at Naples
+the king furious against it."
+
+"I don't wonder they don't like it at Rome, sir. There's serious matter
+in it which may set the prelates of a certain Church rather in a tremor.
+You haven't read--the--ahem--the Pulpit Pencillings in the P. M. G.?
+Slight sketches, mental and corporeal, of our chief divines now in
+London--and signed Latimer?"
+
+"I don't do much in that way," said Clive.
+
+"So much the worse for you, my young friend. Not that I mean to judge
+any other fellow harshly--I mean any other fellow sinner harshly--or
+that I mean that those Pulpit Pencillings would be likely to do you
+any great good. But, such as they are, they have been productive of
+benefit.--Thank you, Mary, and my dear, the tap is uncommonly good, and
+I drink to your future husband's good health.--A glass of good sound
+beer refreshes after all that claret. Well, sir, to return to the
+Pencillings, pardon my vanity in saying, that though Mr. Pendennis
+laughs at them, they have been of essential service to the paper. They
+give it a character, they rally round it the respectable classes. They
+create correspondence. I have received many interesting letters, chiefly
+from females, about the Pencillings. Some complain that their favourite
+preachers are slighted; others applaud because the clergymen they sit
+under are supported by F. B. I am Laud Latimer, sir,--though I have
+heard the letters attributed to the Rev. Mr. Bunker, and to a Member of
+Parliament eminent in the religious world."
+
+"So you are the famous Laud Latimer?" cries Clive, who had, in fact,
+seen letters signed by those right reverend names in our paper.
+
+"Famous is hardly the word. One who scoffs at everything--I need not say
+I allude to Mr. Arthur Pendennis--would have had the letters signed--the
+Beadle, of the Parish. He calls me the Venerable Beadle sometimes--it
+being, I grieve to say, his way to deride grave subjects. You wouldn't
+suppose now, my young Clive, that the same hand which pens the Art
+criticisms, occasionally, when His Highness Pendennis is lazy, takes
+a minor theatre, or turns the sportive epigram, or the ephemeral
+paragraph, should adopt a grave theme on a Sunday, and chronicle the
+sermons of British divines? For eighteen consecutive Sunday evenings,
+Clive, in Mrs. Ridley's front parlour, which I now occupy, vice Miss
+Cann promoted, I have written the Pencillings--scarcely allowing a
+drop of refreshment, except under extreme exhaustion, to pass my lips.
+Pendennis laughs at the Pencillings. He wants to stop them; and says
+they bore the public.--I don't want to think a man is jealous, who was
+himself the cause of my engagement at the P. M. G.,--perhaps my powers
+were not developed then."
+
+"Pen thinks he writes better now than when he began," remarked Clive; "I
+have heard him say so."
+
+"His opinion of his own writings is high, whatever their date. Mine,
+sir, are only just coming into notice. They begin to know F. B., sir, in
+the sacred edifices of his metropolitan city. I saw the Bishop of London
+looking at me last Sunday week, and am sure his chaplain whispered him,
+'It's Mr. Bayham, my lord, nephew of your lordship's right reverend
+brother, the Lord Bishop of Bullocksmithy.' And last Sunday being at
+church--at Saint Mungo the Martyr's, Rev. Sawders--by Wednesday I got in
+a female hand--Mrs. Sawders's, no doubt--the biography of the Incumbent
+of St. Mungo; an account of his early virtues; a copy of his poems; and
+a hint that he was the gentleman destined for the vacant Deanery.
+
+"Ridley is not the only man I have helped in this world," F. B.
+continued. "Perhaps I should blush to own it--I do blush: but I feel
+the ties of early acquaintance, and I own that I have puffed your uncle,
+Charles Honeyman, most tremendously. It was partly for the sake of the
+Ridleys and the tick he owes 'em: partly for old times' sake. Sir, are
+you aware that things are greatly changed with Charles Honeyman, and
+that the poor F. B. has very likely made his fortune?"
+
+"I am delighted to hear it," cried Clive; "and how, F. B., have you
+wrought this miracle?"
+
+"By common sense and enterprise, lad--by a knowledge of the world and a
+benevolent disposition. You'll see Lady Whittlesea's Chapel bears a very
+different aspect now. That miscreant Sherrick owns that he owes me a
+turn, and has sent me a few dozen of wine--without any stamped paper on
+my part in return--as an acknowledgment of my service. It chanced, sir,
+soon after your departure for Italy, that going to his private residence
+respecting a little bill to which a heedless friend had put his hand,
+Sherrick invited me to partake of tea in the bosom of his family. I was
+thirsty--having walked in from Jack Straw's Castle at Hampstead, where
+poor Kitely and I had been taking a chop--and accepted the proffered
+entertainment. The ladies of the family gave us music after the domestic
+muffin--and then, sir, a great idea occurred to me. You know how
+magnificently Miss Sherrick and the mother sing? Thy sang Mozart, sir.
+Why, I asked of Sherrick, should those ladies who sing Mozart to a
+piano, not sing Handel to an organ?
+
+"'Dash it, you don't mean a hurdy-gurdy?'"
+
+"'Sherrick,' says I, 'you are no better than a heathen ignoramus. I mean
+why shouldn't they sing Handes Church Music, and Church Music in general
+in Lady Whittlesea's Chapel? Behind the screen up in the organ-loft
+what's to prevent 'em? By Jingo! Your singing-boys have gone to the Cave
+of Harmody; you and your choir have split--why should not these ladies
+lead it?' He caught at the idea. You never heard the chants more finely
+given--and they would be better still if the congregation would but hold
+their confounded tongues. It was an excellent though a harmless dodge,
+sir: and drew immensely, to speak profanely. They dress the part, sir,
+to admiration--a sort of nunlike costume they come in: Mrs. Sherrick has
+the soul of an artist still--by Jove, sir, when they have once smelt
+the lamps, the love of the trade never leaves 'em. The ladies actually
+practised by moonlight in the Chapel, and came over to Honeyman's to an
+oyster afterwards. The thing took, sir. People began to take box-seats,
+I mean, again:--and Charles Honeyman, easy in his mind through your
+noble father's generosity, perhaps inspirited by returning good fortune,
+has been preaching more eloquently than ever. He took some lessons of
+Husler, of the Haymarket, sir. His sermons are old, I believe; but so to
+speak, he has got them up with new scenery, dresses, and effects, sir.
+They have flowers, sir, about the buildin'--pious ladies are supposed to
+provide 'em, but, entre nous, Sherrick contracts for them with Nathan,
+or some one in Covent Garden. And--don't tell this now, upon your
+honour!"
+
+"Tell what, F. B.?" asks Clive.
+
+"I got up a persecution against your uncle for Popish practices summoned
+a meetin' at the Running Footman, in Bolingbroke Street. Billings the
+butterman; Sharwood, the turner and blacking-maker; and the Honourable
+Phelin O'Curragh, Lord Scullabogue's son, made speeches. Two or three
+respectable families (your aunt, Mrs. What-d'-you-call-'em Newcome,
+amongst the number) quitted the Chapel in disgust--I wrote an article of
+controversial biography in the P. M. G.; set the business going in the
+daily press; and the thing was done, sir. That property is a paying
+one to the Incumbent, and to Sherrick over him. Charles's affairs are
+getting all right, sir. He never had the pluck to owe much, and if it be
+a sin to have wiped his slate clean, satisfied his creditors, and made
+Charles easy--upon my conscience, I must confess that F. B. has done it.
+I hope I may never do anything worse in this life, Clive. It ain't bad
+to see him doing the martyr, sir: Sebastian riddled with paper pellets;
+Bartholomew on a cold gridiron. Here comes the lobster. Upon my word,
+Mary, a finer fish I've seldom seen."
+
+Now surely this account of his uncle's affairs and prosperity was enough
+to send Clive to Lady Whittlesea's Chapel, and it was not because Miss
+Ethel had said that she and Lady Kew went there that Clive was induced
+to go there too? He attended punctually on the next Sunday, and in the
+incumbent's pew, whither the pew-woman conducted him, sate Mr. Sherrick
+in great gravity, with large gold pins, who handed him, at the anthem, a
+large, new, gilt hymn-book.
+
+An odour of millefleurs rustled by them as Charles Honeyman accompanied
+by his ecclesiastical valet, passed the pew from the vestry, and took
+his place at the desk. Formerly he used to wear a flaunting scarf over
+his surplice, which was very wide and full; and Clive remembered when as
+a boy he entered the sacred robing-room, how his uncle used to pat and
+puff out the scarf and the sleeves of his vestment, and to arrange the
+natty curl on his forehead and take his place, a fine example of florid
+church decoration. Now the scarf was trimmed down to be as narrow as
+your neckcloth, and hung loose and straight over the back; the ephod was
+cut straight and as close and short as might be,--I believe there was a
+little trimming of lace to the narrow sleeves, and a slight arabesque
+of tape, or other substance, round the edge of the surplice. As for the
+curl on the forehead, it was no more visible than the Maypole in the
+Strand, or the Cross at Charing. Honeyman's hair was parted down the
+middle, short in front, and curling delicately round his ears and the
+back of his head. He read the service in a swift manner, and with a
+gentle twang. When the music began, he stood with head on one side, and
+two slim fingers on the book, as composed as a statue in a mediaeval
+niche. It was fine to hear Sherrick, who had an uncommonly good
+voice, join in the musical parts of the service. The produce of the
+market-gardener decorated the church here and there; and the impresario
+of the establishment, having picked up a Flemish painted window from
+old Moss in Wardour Street, had placed it in his chapel. Labels of faint
+green and gold, with long Gothic letters painted thereon, meandered over
+the organ-loft and galleries, and strove to give as mediaeval a look to
+Lady Whittlesea's as the place was capable of assuming.
+
+In the sermon Charles dropped the twang with the surplice, and the
+priest gave way to the preacher. He preached short stirring discourses
+on the subjects of the day. It happened that a noble young prince, the
+hope of a nation, and heir of a royal house, had just then died by a
+sudden accident. Absalom, the son of David, furnished Honeyman with a
+parallel. He drew a picture of the two deaths, of the grief of kings, of
+the fate that is superior to them. It was, indeed, a stirring discourse,
+and caused thrills through the crowd to whom Charles imparted it.
+"Famous, ain't it?" says Sherrick, giving Clive a hand when the rite
+was over. "How he's come out, hasn't he? Didn't think he had it in him."
+Sherrick seemed to have become of late impressed with the splendour of
+Charles's talents, and spoke of him--was it not disrespectful?--as a
+manager would of a successful tragedian. Let us pardon Sherrick: he
+had been in the theatrical way. "That Irishman was no go at all," he
+whispered to Mr. Newcome, "got rid of him,--let's see, at Michaelmas."
+
+On account of Clive's tender years, and natural levity, a little
+inattention may be allowed to the youth, who certainly looked about him
+very eagerly during the service. The house was filled by the ornamental
+classes, the bonnets of the newest Parisian fashion. Away in a darkling
+corner, under the organ, sate a squad of footmen. Surely that powdered
+one in livery wore Lady Kew's colours? So Clive looked under all the
+bonnets, and presently spied old Lady Kew's face, as grim and yellow as
+her brass knocker, and by it Ethel's beauteous countenance. He dashed
+out of church when the congregation rose to depart. "Stop and see
+Honeyman, won't you?" asked Sherrick, surprised.
+
+"Yes, yes; come back again," said Clive, and was gone.
+
+He kept his word, and returned presently. The young Marquis and an
+elderly lady were in Lady Kew's company. Clive had passed close under
+Lady Kew's venerable Roman nose without causing that organ to bow in
+ever so slight a degree towards the ground. Ethel had recognised
+him with a smile and a nod. My lord was whispering one of his noble
+pleasantries in her ear. She laughed at the speech or the speaker.
+The steps of a fine belozenged carriage were let down with a bang. The
+Yellow One had jumped up behind it, by the side of his brother Giant
+Canary. Lady Kew's equipage had disappeared, and Mrs. Canterton's was
+stopping the way.
+
+Clive returned to the chapel by the little door near to the Vestiarium.
+All the congregation had poured out by this time. Only two ladies were
+standing near the pulpit; and Sherrick, with his hands rattling his
+money in his pockets, was pacing up and down the aisle.
+
+"Capital house, Mr. Newcome, wasn't it? I counted no less than fourteen
+nobs. The Princess of Moncontour and her husband, I suppose, that chap
+with the beard, who yawns so during the sermon. I'm blessed, if I didn't
+think he'd have yawned his head off. Countess of Kew, and her daughter;
+Countess of Canterton, and the Honourable Miss Fetlock--no, Lady
+Fetlock. A Countess's daughter is a lady, I'm dashed if she ain't. Lady
+Glenlivat and her sons; the most noble the Marquis of Farintosh,
+and Lord Enry Roy; that makes seven--no, nine--with the Prince and
+Princess.--Julia, my dear, you came out like a good un to-day. Never
+heard you in finer voice. Remember Mr. Clive Newcome?"
+
+Mr. Clive made bows to the ladies, who acknowledged him by graceful
+curtsies. Miss Sherrick was always looking to the vestry-door.
+
+"How's the old Colonel? The best feller--excuse my calling him a
+feller--but he is, and a good one too. I went to see Mr. Binnie, my
+other tenant. He looks a little yellow about the gills, Mr. Binnie. Very
+proud woman that is who lives with him--uncommon haughty. When will you
+come down and take your mutton in the Regent's Park, Mr. Clive? There's
+some tolerable good wine down there. Our reverend gent drops in and
+takes a glass, don't he, missis?"
+
+"We shall be most 'appy to see Mr. Newcome, I'm sure," says the handsome
+and good-natured Mrs. Sherrick. "Won't we, Julia?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," says Julia, who seems rather absent. And behold, at
+this moment the reverend gent enters from the vestry. Both the ladies
+run towards him, holding forth their hands.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Honeyman! What a sermon! Me and Julia cried so up in the
+organ-loft; we thought you would have heard us. Didn't we, Julia?"
+
+"Oh, yes," says Julia, whose hand the pastor is now pressing.
+
+"When you described the young man, I thought of my poor boy, didn't I,
+Julia?" cries the mother, with tears streaming down her face.
+
+"We had a loss more than ten years ago," whispers Sherrick to Clive
+gravely. "And she's always thinking of it. Women are so."
+
+Clive was touched and pleased by this exhibition of kind feeling.
+
+"You know his mother was an Absalom," the good wife continues, pointing
+to her husband. "Most respectable diamond merchants in----"
+
+"Hold your tongue, Betsy, and leave my poor old mother alone; do now,"
+says Mr. Sherrick darkly. Clive is in his uncle's fond embrace by this
+time, who rebukes him for not having called in Walpole Street.
+
+"Now, when will you two gents come up to my shop to 'ave a family
+dinner?" asks Sherrick.
+
+"Ah, Mr. Newcome, do come," says Julia in her deep rich voice, looking
+up to him with her great black eyes. And if Clive had been a vain fellow
+like some folks, who knows but he might have thought he had made an
+impression on the handsome Julia?
+
+"Thursday, now make it Thursday, if Mr. H. is disengaged. Come along,
+girls, for the flies bites the ponies when they're a-standing still and
+makes 'em mad this weather. Anything you like for dinner? Cut of salmon
+and cucumber? No, pickled salmon's best this weather."
+
+"Whatever you give me, you know I'm thankful!" says Honeyman, in a sweet
+sad voice, to the two ladies, who were standing looking at him, the
+mother's hand clasped in the daughter's.
+
+"Should you like that Mendelssohn for the Sunday after next? Julia sings
+it splendid!"
+
+"No, I don't, ma."
+
+"You do, dear! She's a good, good dear, Mr. H., that's what she is."
+
+"You must not call--a--him, in that way. Don't say Mr. H., ma," says
+Julia.
+
+"Call me what you please!" says Charles, with the most heart-rending
+simplicity; and Mrs. Sherrick straightway kisses her daughter. Sherrick
+meanwhile has been pointing out the improvement of the chapel to Clive
+(which now has indeed a look of the Gothic Hall at Rosherville), and has
+confided to him the sum for which he screwed the painted window out of
+old Moss. "When he come to see it up in this place, sir, the old man was
+mad, I give you my word! His son ain't no good: says he knows you. He's
+such a screw, that chap, that he'll overreach himself, mark my words.
+At least, he'll never die rich. Did you ever hear of me screwing? No,
+I spend my money like a man. How those girls are a-goin' on about their
+music with Honeyman! I don't let 'em sing in the evening, or him do duty
+more than once a day; and you can calc'late how the music draws, because
+in the evenin' there ain't half the number of people here. Rev. Mr.
+Journyman does the duty now--quiet Hogford man--ill, I suppose, this
+morning. H. sits in his pew, where we was; and coughs; that's to say,
+I told him to cough. The women like a consumptive parson, sir. Come,
+gals!"
+
+Clive went to his uncle's lodgings, and was received by Mr. and Mrs.
+Ridley with great glee and kindness. Both of those good people had made
+it a point to pay their duty to Mr. Clive immediately on his return
+to England, and thank him over and over again for his kindness to John
+James. Never, never would they forget his goodness, and the Colonel's,
+they were sure. A cake, a heap of biscuits, a pyramid of jams, six
+frizzling mutton-chops, and four kinds of hot wine, came bustling up
+to Mr. Honeyman's room twenty minutes after Clive had entered it,--as a
+token of the Ridleys' affection for him.
+
+Clive remarked, with a smile, the Pall Mall Gazette upon a side-table,
+and in the chimney-glass almost as many cards as in the time of
+Honeyman's early prosperity. That he and his uncle should be very
+intimate together, was impossible, from the nature of the two men; Clive
+being frank, clear-sighted, and imperious; Charles, timid, vain, and
+double-faced, conscious that he was a humbug, and that most people found
+him out, so that he would quiver and turn away, and be more afraid of
+young Clive and his direct straightforward way, than of many older men.
+Then there was the sense of the money transactions between him and the
+Colonel, which made Charles Honeyman doubly uneasy. In fine, they did
+not like each other; but, as he is a connection of the most respectable
+Newcome family, surely he is entitled to a page or two in these their
+memoirs.
+
+Thursday came, and with it Mr. Sherrick's entertainment, to which also
+Mr. Binnie and his party had been invited to meet Colonel Newcome's son.
+Uncle James and Rosey brought Clive in their carriage; Mrs. Mackenzie
+sent a headache as an apology. She chose to treat Uncle James's landlord
+with a great deal of hauteur, and to be angry with her brother for
+visiting such a person. "In fact, you see how fond I must be of dear
+little Rosey, Clive, that I put up with all mamma's tantrums for her
+sake," remarks Mr. Binnie.
+
+"Oh, uncle!" says little Rosey, and the old gentleman stopped her
+remonstrances with a kiss.
+
+"Yes," says he, "your mother does have tantrums, miss; and though you
+never complain, there's no reason why I shouldn't. You will not tell
+on me" (it was "Oh, uncle!" again); "and Clive won't, I am sure.--This
+little thing, sir," James went on, holding Rosey's pretty little hand
+and looking fondly in her pretty little face, "is her old uncle's only
+comfort in life. I wish I had had her out to India to me, and never come
+back to this great dreary town of yours. But I was tempted home by Tom
+Newcome; and I'm too old to go back, sir. Where the stick falls let it
+lie. Rosey would have been whisked out of my house, in India, in a month
+after I had her there. Some young fellow would have taken her away from
+me; and now she has promised never to leave her old Uncle James, hasn't
+she?"
+
+"No, never, uncle," said Rosey.
+
+"We don't want to fall in love, do we, child? We don't want to be
+breaking our hearts like some young folks, and dancing attendance at
+balls night after night, and capering about in the Park to see if we can
+get a glimpse of the beloved object, eh, Rosey?"
+
+Rosey blushed. It was evident that she and Uncle James both knew of
+Clive's love affair. In fact, the front seat and back seat of the
+carriage both blushed. And as for the secret, why Mrs. Mackenzie and
+Mrs. Hobson had talked it a hundred times over.
+
+"This little Rosey, sir, has promised to take care of me on this side of
+Styx," continued Uncle James; "and if she could but be left alone and
+to do it without mamma--there, I won't say a word more against her--we
+should get on none the worse."
+
+"Uncle James, I must make a picture of you, for Rosey," said Clive,
+good-humouredly. And Rosey said, "Oh, thank you, Clive," and held out
+that pretty little hand, and looked so sweet and kind and happy, that
+Clive could not but be charmed at the sight of so much innocence and
+candour.
+
+"Quasty peecoly Rosiny," says James, in a fine Scotch Italian, "e la piu
+bella, la piu cara, ragazza ma la mawdry e il diav----"
+
+"Don't, uncle!" cried Rosey, again; and Clive laughed at Uncle James's
+wonderful outbreak in a foreign tongue.
+
+"Eh! I thought ye didn't know a word of the sweet language, Rosey!
+It's just the Lenguy Toscawny in Bocky Romawny that I thought to try
+in compliment to this young monkey who has seen the world." And by this
+time Saint John's Wood was reached, and Mr. Sherrick's handsome villa,
+at the door of which the three beheld the Rev. Charles Honeyman stepping
+out of a neat brougham.
+
+The drawing-room contained several pictures of Mrs. Sherrick when she
+was in the theatrical line; Smee's portrait of her, which was never half
+handsome enough--for my Betsy, Sherrick said indignantly; the print of
+her in Artaxerxes, with her signature as Elizabeth Folthorpe (not in
+truth a fine specimen of calligraphy) the testimonial presented to her
+on the conclusion of the triumphal season of 18--, at Drury Lane, by her
+ever grateful friend Adolphus Smacker, Lessee, who, of course, went to
+law with her next year; and other Thespian emblems. But Clive remarked,
+with not a little amusement, that the drawing-room tables were now
+covered with a number of those books which he had seen at Madame de
+Moncontour's, and many French and German ecclesiastical gimcracks, such
+as are familiar to numberless readers of mine. These were the Lives of
+St. Botibol of Islington and St. Willibald of Bareacres, with pictures
+of those confessors. Then there was the Legend of Margery Dawe, Virgin
+and Martyr, with a sweet double frontispiece, representing (1) the
+sainted woman selling her feather-bed for the benefit of the poor; and
+(2) reclining upon straw, the leanest of invalids. There was Old
+Daddy Longlegs, and how he was brought to say his Prayers; a Tale for
+Children, by a Lady, with a preface dated St. Chad's Eve, and signed "C.
+H." The Rev. Charles Honeyman's Sermons, delivered at Lady Whittlesea's
+Chapel. Poems of Early Days, by Charles Honeyman, A.M. The Life of good
+Dame Whittlesea, by do, do. Yes, Charles had come out in the literary
+line; and there in a basket was a strip of Berlin work, of the very same
+Gothic pattern which Madame de Moncontour was weaving; and which you
+afterwards saw round the pulpit of Charles's chapel. Rosey was welcomed
+most kindly by the kind ladies; and as the gentlemen sat over their wine
+after dinner in the summer evening, Clive beheld Rosey and Julia pacing
+up and down the lawn, Miss Julia's arm around her little friend's waist:
+he thought they would make a pretty little picture.
+
+"My girl ain't a bad one to look at, is she?" said the pleased father.
+"A fellow might look far enough, and see not prettier than them two."
+
+Charles sighed out that there was a German print, the "Two Leonoras,"
+which put him in mind of their various styles of beauty.
+
+"I wish I could paint them," said Clive.
+
+"And why not, sir?" asks his host. "Let me give you your first
+commission now, Mr Clive; I wouldn't mind paying a good bit for a
+picture of my Julia. I forget how much old Smee got for Betsy's, the old
+humbug!"
+
+Clive said it was not the will, but the power that was deficient. He
+succeeded with men, but the ladies were too much for him as yet.
+
+"Those you've done up at Albany Street Barracks are famous: I've seen
+'em," said Mr. Sherrick; and remarking that his guest looked rather
+surprised at the idea of his being in such company, Sherrick said,
+"What, you think they are too great swells for me? Law bless you, I
+often go there. I've business with several of 'em; had with Captain
+Belsize, with the Earl of Kew, who's every inch the gentleman--one of
+nature's aristocracy, and paid up like a man. The Earl and me has had
+many dealings together:"
+
+Honeyman smiled faintly, and nobody complying with Mr. Sherrick's
+boisterous entreaties to drink more, the gentlemen quitted the
+dinner-table, which had been served in a style of prodigious splendour,
+and went to the drawing-room for a little music.
+
+This was all of the gravest and best kind; so grave indeed, that James
+Binnie might be heard in a corner giving an accompaniment of little
+snores to the singers and the piano. But Rosey was delighted with the
+performance, and Sherrick remarked to Clive, "That's a good gal, that
+is; I like that gal; she ain't jealous of Julia cutting her out in the
+music, but listens as pleased as any one. She's a sweet little pipe of
+her own, too. Miss Mackenzie, if ever you like to go to the opera, send
+a word either to my West End or my City office. I've boxes every week,
+and you're welcome to anything I can give you."
+
+So all agreed that the evening had been a very pleasant one; and they
+of Fitzroy Square returned home talking in a most comfortable friendly
+way--that is, two of them, for Uncle James fell asleep again, taking
+possession of the back seat; and Clive and Rosey prattled together. He
+had offered to try and take all the young ladies' likenesses. "You know
+what a failure the last was, Rosey?"--he had very nearly said "dear
+Rosey."
+
+"Yes, but Miss Sherrick is so handsome, that you will succeed better
+with her than with my round face, Mr. Newcome."
+
+"Mr. What?" cries Clive.
+
+"Well, Clive, then," says Rosey, in a little voice.
+
+He sought for a little hand which was not very far away. "You know we
+are like brother and sister, dear Rosey?" he said this time.
+
+"Yes," said she, and gave a little pressure of the hand. And then Uncle
+James woke up; and it seemed as if the whole drive didn't occupy a
+minute, and they shook hands very very kindly at the door of Fitzroy
+Square.
+
+Clive made a famous likeness of Miss Sherrick, with which Mr. Sherrick
+was delighted, and so was Mr. Honeyman, who happened to call upon his
+nephew once or twice when the ladies happened to be sitting. Then Clive
+proposed to the Rev. Charles Honeyman to take his head off; and made an
+excellent likeness in chalk of his uncle--that one, in fact, from which
+the print was taken which you may see any day at Hogarth's, in the
+Haymarket, along with a whole regiment of British divines. Charles
+became so friendly, that he was constantly coming to Charlotte Street,
+once or twice a week.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Sherrick came to look at the drawing, were charmed with it;
+and when Rosey was sitting, they came to see her portrait, which again
+was not quite so successful. One Monday, the Sherricks and Honeyman too
+happened to call to see the picture of Rosey, who trotted over with her
+uncle to Clive's studio, and they all had a great laugh at a paragraph
+in the Pall Mall Gazette, evidently from F. B.'s hand, to the following
+effect:--
+
+"Conversion In High Life.--A foreign nobleman of princely rank, who
+has married an English lady, and has resided among us for some time,
+is likely, we hear and trust, to join the English Church. The Prince de
+M-nc-nt-r has been a constant attendant at Lady Whittlesea's Chapel,
+of which the Rev. C. Honeyman is the eloquent incumbent; and it is
+said this sound and talented divine has been the means of awakening the
+prince to a sense of the erroneous doctrines in which he has been bred.
+His ancestors were Protestant, and fought by the side of Henry IV.
+at Ivry. In Louis XIV.'s time, they adopted the religion of that
+persecuting monarch. We sincerely trust that the present heir of the
+house of Ivry will see fit to return to the creed which his forefathers
+so unfortunately abjured."
+
+The ladies received this news with perfect gravity; and Charles uttered
+a meek wish that it might prove true. As they went away, they offered
+more hospitalities to Clive and Mr. Binnie and his niece. They liked the
+music: would they not come and hear it again?
+
+When they had departed with Mr. Honeyman, Clive could not help saying to
+Uncle James, "Why are those people always coming here; praising me; and
+asking me to dinner? Do you know, I can't help thinking that they rather
+want me as a pretender for Miss Sherrick?"
+
+Binnie burst into a loud guffaw, and cried out, "O vanitas vanitawtum!"
+Rosa laughed too.
+
+"I don't think it any joke at all," said Clive.
+
+"Why, you stupid lad, don't you see it is Charles Honeyman the girl's in
+love with?" cried Uncle James. "Rosey saw it in the very first instant
+we entered their drawing-room three weeks ago."
+
+"Indeed, and how?" asked Clive.
+
+"By--by the way she looked at him," said little Rosey.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV. A Stag of Ten
+
+
+The London season was very nearly come to an end, and Lord Farintosh had
+danced I don't know how many times with Miss Newcome, had drunk several
+bottles of the old Kew port, had been seen at numerous breakfasts,
+operas, races, and public places by the young lady's side, and had
+not as yet made any such proposal as Lady Kew expected for her
+granddaughter. Clive going to see his military friends in the Regent's
+Park once, and finish Captain Butts's portrait in barracks, heard two or
+three young men talking, and one say to another, "I bet you three to two
+Farintosh don't marry her, and I bet you even that he don't ask
+her." Then as he entered Mr. Butts's room, where these gentlemen were
+conversing, there was a silence and an awkwardness. The young fellows
+were making an "event" out of Ethel's marriage, and sporting their money
+freely on it.
+
+To have an old countess hunting a young marquis so resolutely that all
+the world should be able to look on and speculate whether her game would
+be run down by that staunch toothless old pursuer--that is an amusing
+sport, isn't it? and affords plenty of fun and satisfaction to those who
+follow the hunt. But for a heroine of a story, be she ever so clever,
+handsome, and sarcastic, I don't think for my part, at this present
+stage of the tale, Miss Ethel Newcome occupies a very dignified
+position. To break her heart in silence for Tomkins who is in love with
+another; to suffer no end of poverty, starvation, capture by ruffians,
+ill-treatment by a bullying husband, loss of beauty by the small-pox,
+death even at the end of the volume; all these mishaps a young heroine
+must endure (and has endured in romances over and over again), without
+losing the least dignity, or suffering any diminution of the sentimental
+reader's esteem. But a girl of great beauty, high temper, and strong
+natural intellect, who submits to be dragged hither and thither in an
+old grandmother's leash, and in pursuit of a husband who will run away
+from the couple, such a person, I say, is in a very awkward position as
+a heroine; and I declare if I had another ready to my hand (and unless
+there were extenuating circumstances) Ethel should be deposed at this
+very sentence.
+
+But a novelist must go on with his heroine, as a man with his wife, for
+better or worse, and to the end. For how many years have the Spaniards
+borne with their gracious queen, not because she was faultless, but
+because she was there? So Chambers and grandees cried, God save her.
+Alabarderos turned out: drums beat, cannons fired, and people saluted
+Isabella Segunda, who was no better than the humblest washerwoman of her
+subjects. Are we much better than our neighbours? Do we never yield to
+our peculiar temptation, our pride, or our avarice or our vanity, or
+what not? Ethel is very wrong certainly. But recollect, she is very
+young. She is in other people's hands. She has been bred up and governed
+by a very worldly family, and taught their traditions. We would hardly,
+for instance, the staunchest Protestant in England would hardly be angry
+with poor Isabella Segunda for being a Catholic. So if Ethel worships
+at a certain image which a great number of good folks in England bow
+to, let us not be too angry with her idolatry, and bear with our queen a
+little before we make our pronunciamiento.
+
+No, Miss Newcome, yours is not a dignified position in life, however you
+may argue that hundreds of people in the world are doing like you. O
+me! what a confession it is, in the very outset of life and blushing
+brightness of youth's morning, to own that the aim with which a young
+girl sets out, and the object of her existence, is to marry a rich man;
+that she was endowed with beauty so that she might buy wealth, and a
+title with it; that as sure as she has a soul to be saved, her business
+here on earth is to try and get a rich husband. That is the career for
+which many a woman is bred and trained. A young man begins the world
+with some aspirations at least; he will try to be good and follow the
+truth; he will strive to win honours for himself, and never do a base
+action; he will pass nights over his books, and forgo ease and pleasure
+so that he may achieve a name. Many a poor wretch who is worn-out now
+and old, and bankrupt of fame and money too, has commenced life at
+any rate with noble views and generous schemes, from which weakness,
+idleness, passion, or overpowering hostile fortune have turned him away.
+But a girl of the world, bon Dieu! the doctrine with which she begins
+is that she is to have a wealthy husband: the article of faith in her
+catechism is, "I believe in elder sons, and a house in town, and a house
+in the country!" They are mercenary as they step fresh and blooming
+into the world out of the nursery. They have been schooled there to keep
+their bright eyes to look only on the prince and the duke, Croesus and
+Dives. By long cramping and careful process, their little natural hearts
+have been squeezed up, like the feet of their fashionable little sisters
+in China. As you see a pauper's child, with an awful premature knowledge
+of the pawnshop, able to haggle at market with her wretched halfpence,
+and battle bargains at hucksters' stalls, you shall find a young beauty,
+who was a child in the schoolroom a year since, as wise and knowing as
+the old practitioners on that exchange; as economical of her smiles, as
+dexterous in keeping back or producing her beautiful wares; as skilful
+in setting one bidder against another; as keen as the smartest merchant
+in Vanity Fair.
+
+If the young gentlemen of the Life Guards Green who were talking about
+Miss Newcome and her suitors, were silent when Clive appeared amongst
+them, it was because they were aware not only of his relationship to the
+young lady, but his unhappy condition regarding her. Certain men there
+are who never tell their love, but let concealment, like a worm in
+the bud, feed on their damask cheeks; others again must be not always
+thinking, but talking, about the darling object. So it was not very
+long before Captain Crackthorpe was taken into Clive's confidence, and
+through Crackthorpe very likely the whole mess became acquainted with
+his passion. These young fellows, who had been early introduced into
+the world, gave Clive small hopes of success, putting to him, in their
+downright phraseology, the point of which he was already aware, that
+Miss Newcome was intended for his superiors, and that he had best not
+make his mind uneasy by sighing for those beautiful grapes which were
+beyond his reach.
+
+But the good-natured Crackthorpe, who had a pity for the young painter's
+condition, helped him so far (and gained Clive's warmest thanks for
+his good offices), by asking admission for Clive to entertain evening
+parties of the beau-monde, where he had the gratification of meeting
+his charmer. Ethel was surprised and pleased, and Lady Kew surprised and
+angry, at meeting Clive Newcome at these fashionable houses; the girl
+herself was touched very likely at his pertinacity in following her.
+As there was no actual feud between them, she could not refuse now and
+again to dance with her cousin; and thus he picked up such small crumbs
+of consolation as a youth in his state can get; lived upon six words
+vouchsafed to him in a quadrille, or brought home a glance of the eyes
+which she had presented to him in a waltz, or the remembrance of a
+squeeze of the hand on parting or meeting. How eager he was to get
+a card to this party or that! how attentive to the givers of such
+entertainments! Some friends of his accused him of being a tuft-hunter
+and flatterer of the aristocracy, on account of his politeness to
+certain people; the truth was, he wanted to go wherever Miss Ethel was;
+and the ball was blank to him which she did not attend.
+
+This business occupied not only one season, but two. By the time of the
+second season, Mr. Newcome had made so many acquaintances that he
+needed few more introductions into society. He was very well known as a
+good-natured handsome young man, and a very good waltzer, the only son
+of an Indian officer of large wealth, who chose to devote himself to
+painting, and who was supposed to entertain an unhappy fondness for his
+cousin the beautiful Miss Newcome. Kind folks who heard of this little
+tendre, and were sufficiently interested in Mr. Clive, asked him to
+their houses in consequence. I dare say those people who were good
+to him may have been themselves at one time unlucky in their own
+love-affairs.
+
+When the first season ended without a declaration from my lord, Lady Kew
+carried off her young lady to Scotland, where it also so happened that
+Lord Farintosh was going to shoot, and people made what surmises they
+chose upon this coincidence. Surmises, why not? You who know the world,
+know very well that if you see Mrs. So-and-so's name in the list of
+people at an entertainment, on looking down the list you will presently
+be sure to come on Mr. What-d'-you-call-'em's. If Lord and Lady of
+Suchandsuch Castle, received a distinguished circle (including Lady
+Dash), for Christmas or Easter, without reading farther the names of the
+guests, you may venture on any wager that Captain Asterisk is one of
+the company. These coincidences happen every day; and some people are
+so anxious to meet other people, and so irresistible is the magnetic
+sympathy, I suppose, that they will travel hundreds of miles in the
+worst of weather to see their friends, and break your door open almost,
+provided the friend is inside it.
+
+I am obliged to own the fact, that for many months Lady Kew hunted after
+Lord Farintosh. This rheumatic old woman went to Scotland, where, as he
+was pursuing the deer, she stalked his lordship: from Scotland she went
+to Paris, where he was taking lessons in dancing at the Chaumiere; from
+Paris to an English country-house, for Christmas, where he was expected,
+but didn't come--not being, his professor said, quite complete in the
+polka, and so on. If Ethel were privy to these manoeuvres, or anything
+more than an unwittingly consenting party, I say we would depose
+her from her place of heroine at once. But she was acting under her
+grandmother's orders, a most imperious, irresistible, managing old
+woman, who exacted everybody's obedience, and managed everybody's
+business in her family. Lady Anne Newcome being in attendance on
+her sick husband, Ethel was consigned to the Countess of Kew, her
+grandmother, who hinted that she should leave Ethel her property when
+dead, and whilst alive expected the girl should go about with her. She
+had and wrote as many letters as a Secretary of State almost. She was
+accustomed to set off without taking anybody's advice, or announcing her
+departure until within an hour or two of the event. In her train moved
+Ethel, against her own will, which would have led her to stay at home
+with her father, but at the special wish and order of her parents. Was
+such a sum as that of which Lady Kew had the disposal (Hobson Brothers
+knew the amount of it quite well) to be left out of the family? Forbid
+it, all ye powers! Barnes--who would have liked the money himself, and
+said truly that he would live with his grandmother anywhere she liked
+if he could get it,--Barnes joined most energetically with Sir Brian
+and Lady Anne in ordering Ethel's obedience to Lady Kew. You know how
+difficult it is for one young woman not to acquiesce when the family
+council strongly orders. In fine, I hope there was a good excuse for the
+queen of this history, and that it was her wicked domineering old prime
+minister who led her wrong. Otherwise I say, we would have another
+dynasty. Oh, to think of a generous nature, and the world, and nothing
+but the world, to occupy it!--of a brave intellect, and the milliner's
+bandboxes, and the scandal of the coteries, and the fiddle-faddle
+etiquette of the Court for its sole exercise! of the rush and hurry
+from entertainment to entertainment; of the constant smiles and cares
+of representation; of the prayerless rest at night, and the awaking to
+a godless morrow! This was the course of life to which Fate, and not
+her own fault altogether, had for awhile handed over Ethel Newcome. Let
+those pity her who can feel their own weakness and misgoing; let those
+punish her who are without fault themselves.
+
+Clive did not offer to follow her to Scotland, he knew quite well
+that the encouragement he had had was only of the smallest; that as a
+relation she received him frankly and kindly enough; but checked him
+when he would have adopted another character. But it chanced that they
+met in Paris, whither he went in the Easter of the ensuing year, having
+worked to some good purpose through the winter, and despatched as on a
+former occasion his three or four pictures, to take their chance at the
+Exhibition.
+
+Of these it is our pleasing duty to be able to corroborate to some
+extent, Mr. F. Bayham's favourable report. Fancy sketches and historical
+pieces our young man had eschewed; having convinced himself either that
+he had not an epic genius, or that to draw portraits of his friends, was
+a much easier task than that which he had set himself formerly. Whilst
+all the world was crowding round a pair of J. J,.'s little pictures,
+a couple of chalk heads were admitted into the Exhibition (his great
+picture of Captain Crackthorpe on horseback, in full uniform, I must
+admit was ignominiously rejected), and the friends of the parties had
+the pleasure of recognising in the miniature room, No. 1246, "Picture of
+an Officer,"--viz., Augustus Butts, Esq., of the Life Guards Green; and
+"Portrait of the Rev. Charles Honeyman," No. 1272. Miss Sherrick
+the hangers refused; Mr. Binnie, Clive had spoiled, as usual, in the
+painting; the heads, however, before-named, were voted to be faithful
+likenesses, and executed in a very agreeable and spirited manner. F.
+Bayham's criticism on these performances, it need not be said, was
+tremendous. "Since the days of Michael Angelo you would have thought
+there never had been such drawings." In fact, F. B., as some other
+critics do, clapped his friends so boisterously on the back, and
+trumpeted their merits with such prodigious energy, as to make his
+friends themselves sometimes uneasy.
+
+Mr. Clive, whose good father was writing home more and more wonderful
+accounts of the Bundelcund Bank, in which he had engaged, and who was
+always pressing his son to draw for more money, treated himself to
+comfortable rooms at Paris, in the very same hotel where the young
+Marquis of Farintosh occupied lodgings much more splendid, and where he
+lived, no doubt, so as to be near the professor, who was still teaching
+his lordship the polka. Indeed, it must be said that Lord Farintosh made
+great progress under this artist, and that he danced very much better
+in his third season than in the first and second years after he had come
+upon the town. From the same instructor the Marquis learned the latest
+novelties in French conversation, the choicest oaths and phrases (for
+which he was famous), so that although his French grammar was naturally
+defective, he was enabled to order a dinner at Philippe's, and to bully
+a waiter, or curse a hackney-coachman with extreme volubility. A young
+nobleman of his rank was received with the distinction which was his
+due, by the French sovereign of that period; and at the Tuileries, and
+the houses of the French nobility, which he visited, Monsieur le Marquis
+de Farintosh excited considerable remark, by the use of some of the
+phrases which his young professor had taught to him. People even went so
+far as to say that the Marquis was an awkward and dull young man, of the
+very worst manners.
+
+Whereas the young Clive Newcome--and it comforted the poor fellow's
+heart somewhat, and be sure pleased Ethel, who was looking on at his
+triumphs--was voted the most charming young Englishman who had been seen
+for a long time in our salons. Madame de Florac, who loved him as a son
+of her own, actually went once or twice into the world in order to see
+his debut. Madame de Moncontour inhabited a part of the Hotel de Florac,
+and received society there. The French people did not understand what
+bad English she talked, though they comprehended Lord Farintosh's French
+blunders. "Monsieur Newcome is an artist! What a noble career!" cries a
+great French lady, the wife of a Marshal to the astonished Miss Newcome.
+"This young man is the cousin, of the charming mees? You must be proud
+to possess such a nephew, madame!" says another French lady to the
+Countess of Kew (who, you may be sure, is delighted to have such a
+relative). And the French lady invites Clive to her receptions expressly
+in order to make herself agreeable to the old Comtesse. Before the
+cousins have been three minutes together in Madame de Florac's salon,
+she sees that Clive is in love with Ethel Newcome. She takes the boy's
+hand and says, "J'ai votre secret, mon ami;" and her eyes regard him for
+a moment as fondly, as tenderly, as ever they looked at his father.
+Oh, what tears have they shed, gentle eyes! Oh, what faith has it kept,
+tender heart! If love lives through all life; and survives through all
+sorrow; and remains steadfast with us through all changes; and in all
+darkness of spirit burns brightly; and, if we die, deplores us for ever,
+and loves still equally; and exists with the very last gasp and throb of
+the faithful bosom--whence it passes with the pure soul, beyond death;
+surely it shall be immortal? Though we who remain are separated from
+it, is it not ours in Heaven? If we love still those we lose, can we
+altogether lose those we love? Forty years have passed away. Youth and
+dearest memories revisit her, and Hope almost wakes up again out of its
+grave, as the constant lady holds the young man's hand, and looks at the
+son of Thomas Newcome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI. The Hotel de Florac
+
+
+Since the death of the Duc d'Ivry, the husband of Mary Queen of Scots,
+the Comte de Florac, who is now the legitimate owner of the ducal title,
+does not choose to bear it, but continues to be known in the world by
+his old name. The old Count's world is very small. His doctor, and his
+director, who comes daily to play his game of piquet; his daughter's
+children, who amuse him by their laughter, and play round his chair in
+the garden of his hotel; his faithful wife, and one or two friends as
+old as himself, form his society. His son the Abbe is with them but
+seldom. The austerity of his manners frightens his old father, who can
+little comprehend the religionism of the new school. After going to
+hear his son preach through Lent at Notre-Dame, where the Abbe de Florac
+gathered a great congregation, the old Count came away quite puzzled at
+his son's declamations. "I do not understand your new priests," he says;
+"I knew my son had become a Cordelier; I went to hear him, and found
+he was a Jacobin. Let me make my salut in quiet, my good Leonore. My
+director answers for me, and plays a game at trictrac into the bargain
+with me." Our history has but little to do with this venerable nobleman.
+He has his chamber looking out into the garden of his hotel; his
+faithful old domestic to wait upon him; his House of Peers to attend
+when he is well enough, his few acquaintances to help him to pass the
+evening. The rest of the hotel he gives up to his son, the Vicomte de
+Florac, and Madame la Princesse de Moncontour, his daughter-in-law.
+
+When Florac has told his friends of the Club why it is he has assumed
+a new title--as a means of reconciliation (a reconciliation all
+philosophical, my friends) with his wife nee Higg of Manchester,
+who adores titles like all Anglaises, and has recently made a great
+succession, everybody allows that the measure was dictated by prudence,
+and there is no more laughter at his change of name. The Princess takes
+the first floor of the hotel at the price paid for it by the American
+General, who has returned to his original pigs at Cincinnati. Had not
+Cincinnatus himself pigs on his farm, and was he not a general and
+member of Congress too? The honest Princess has a bedchamber, which, to
+her terror, she is obliged to open of reception-evenings, when gentlemen
+and ladies play cards there. It is fitted up in the style of Louis XVI.
+In her bed is an immense looking-glass, surmounted by stucco cupids:
+it is an alcove which some powdered Venus, before the Revolution, might
+have reposed in. Opposite that looking-glass, between the tall windows,
+at some forty feet distance, is another huge mirror, so that when the
+poor Princess is in bed, in her prim old curl-papers, she sees a vista
+of elderly princesses twinkling away into the dark perspective; and
+is so frightened that she and Betsy, her Lancashire maid, pin up the
+jonquil silk curtains over the bed-mirror after the first night; though
+the Princess never can get it out of her head that her image is still
+there, behind the jonquil hangings, turning as she turns, waking as she
+wakes, etc. The chamber is so vast and lonely that she has a bed made
+for Betsy in the room. It is, of course, whisked away into a closet on
+reception-evenings. A boudoir, rose-tendre, with more cupids and nymphs
+by Boucher, sporting over door-panels--nymphs who may well shock old
+Betsy and her old mistress--is the Pricess's morning-room. "Ah, mum,
+what would Mr. Humper at Manchester, Mr. Jowls of Newcome" (the minister
+whom, in early days, Miss Higg used to sit under) "say if they was
+browt into this room?" But there is no question of Jowls and Mr. Humper,
+excellent dissenting divines, who preached to Miss Higg, being brought
+into the Princesse de Moncontour's boudoir.
+
+That paragraph, respecting a conversion in high life, which F. B. in his
+enthusiasm inserted in the Pall Mall Gazette, caused no small excitement
+in the Florac family. The Florac family read the Pall Mall Gazette,
+knowing that Clive's friends were engaged in that periodical. When
+Madame de Florac, who did not often read newspapers, happened to cast
+her eye upon that poetic paragraph of F. B.'s, you may fancy, with what
+a panic it filled the good and pious lady. Her son become a Protestant!
+After all the grief and trouble his wildness had occasioned to her, Paul
+forsake his religion! But that her husband was so ill and aged as not to
+be able to bear her absence, she would have hastened to London to
+rescue her son out of that perdition. She sent for her younger son, who
+undertook the embassy; and the Prince and Princesse de Moncontour, in
+their hotel at London, were one day surprised by the visit of the Abbe
+de Florac.
+
+As Paul was quite innocent of any intention of abandoning his religion,
+the mother's kind heart was very speedily set at rest by her envoy. Far
+from Paul's conversion to Protestantism, the Abbe wrote home the most
+encouraging accounts of his sister-in-law's precious dispositions. He
+had communications with Madame de Moncontour's Anglican director, a man
+of not powerful mind, wrote M. l'Abbe, though of considerable repute for
+eloquence in his Sect. The good dispositions of his sister-in-law were
+improved by the French clergyman, who could be most captivating and
+agreeable when a work of conversion was in hand. The visit reconciled
+the family to their English relative, in whom good-nature and many other
+good qualities were to be seen now that there were hopes of reclaiming
+her. It was agreed that Madame de Moncontour should come and inhabit the
+Hotel de Florac at Paris: perhaps the Abbe tempted the worthy lady by
+pictures of the many pleasures and advantages she would enjoy in that
+capital. She was presented at her own court by the French ambassadress
+of that day: and was received at the Tuileries with a cordiality which
+flattered and pleased her.
+
+Having been presented herself, Madame la Princesse in turn presented
+to her august sovereign Mrs. T. Higg and Miss Higg, of Manchester, Mrs.
+Samuel Higg, of Newcome; the husbands of those ladies (the Princess's
+brothers) also sporting a court-dress for the first time. Sam Higg's
+neighbour, the member for Newcome; Sir Brian Newcome, Bart., was too
+ill to act as Higg's sponsor before majesty; but Barnes Newcome was
+uncommonly civil to the two Lancashire gentlemen; though their politics
+were different to his, and Sam had voted against Sir Brian at his
+last election. Barnes took them to dine at a club--recommended his
+tailor--and sent Lady Clara Pulleyn to call on Mrs. Higg--who pronounced
+her to be a pretty young woman and most haffable. The Countess of
+Dorking would have been delighted to present these ladies had the
+Princess not luckily been in London to do that office. The Hobson
+Newcomes were very civil to the Lancashire party, and entertained them
+splendidly at dinner. I believe Mrs. and Mr. Hobson themselves went to
+court this year, the latter in a deputy-lieutenant's uniform.
+
+If Barnes Newcome was so very civil to the Higg family we may suppose
+he had good reason. The Higgs were very strong in Newcome, and it was
+advisable to conciliate them. They were very rich, and their account
+would not be disagreeable at the bank. Madame de Moncontour's--a large
+easy private account--would be more pleasant still. And, Hobson Brothers
+having entered largely into the Anglo-Continental Railway, whereof
+mention has been made, it was a bright thought of Barnes to place the
+Prince of Moncontour, etc. etc., on the French Direction of the Railway;
+and to take the princely prodigal down to Newcome with his new title,
+and reconcile him to his wife and the Higg family. Barnes we may say
+invented the principality: rescued the Vicomte de Florac out of his
+dirty lodgings in Leicester Square, and sent the Prince of Moncontour
+back to his worthy middle-aged wife again. The disagreeable dissenting
+days were over. A brilliant young curate of Doctor Bulders, who also
+wore long hair, straight waistcoats, and no shirt-collars, had already
+reconciled the Vicomtesse de Florac to the persuasion, whereof the
+ministers are clad in that queer uniform. The landlord of their hotel
+at St. James's got his wine from Sherrick, and sent his families to
+Lady Whittlesea's Chapel. The Rev. Charles Honeyman's eloquence and
+amiability were appreciated by his new disciple--thus the historian has
+traced here step by step how all these people became acquainted.
+
+Sam Higg, whose name was very good on 'Change in Manchester and London,
+joined the direction of the Anglo-Continental. A brother had died
+lately, leaving his money amongst them, and his wealth had added
+considerably to Madame de Florac's means; his sister invested a portion
+of her capital in the railway in her husband's name. The shares were at
+a premium, and gave a good dividend. The Prince de Moncontour took
+his place with great gravity at the Paris board, whither Barnes made
+frequent flying visits. The sense of capitalism sobered and dignified
+Paul de Florac: at the age of five-and-forty he was actually giving
+up being a young man, and was not ill pleased at having to enlarge his
+waistcoats, and to show a little grey in his moustache. His errors
+were forgotten: he was bien vu by the Government. He might have had
+the Embassy Extraordinary to Queen Pomare; but the health of Madame la
+Princesse was delicate. He paid his wife visits every morning: appeared
+at her parties and her opera box, and was seen constantly with her in
+public. He gave quiet little dinners still, at which Clive was present
+sometimes: and had a private door and key to his apartments, which
+were separated by all the dreary length of the reception-rooms from the
+mirrored chamber and jonquil couch where the Princess and Betsy reposed.
+When some of his London friends visited Paris he showed us these rooms
+and introduced us duly to Madame la Princesse. He was as simple and as
+much at home in the midst of these splendours, as in the dirty little
+lodgings in Leicester Square, where he painted his own boots, and cooked
+his herring over the tongs. As for Clive, he was the infant of the
+house: Madame la Princesse could not resist his kind face; and Paul was
+as fond of him in his way as Paul's mother in hers. Would he live at the
+Hotel de Florac? There was an excellent atelier in the pavilion, with a
+chamber for his servant. "No! you will be most at ease in apartments
+of your own. You will have here but the society of women. I do not rise
+till late: and my affairs, my board, call me away for the greater part
+of the day. Thou wilt but be ennuyd to play trictrac with my old father.
+My mother waits on him. My sister au second is given up entirely to
+her children, who always have the pituite. Madame la Princesse is not
+amusing for a young man. Come and go when thou wilt, Clive, my garcon,
+my son: thy cover is laid. Wilt thou take the portraits of all the
+family? Hast thou want of money? I had at thy age and almost ever since,
+mon ami: but now we swim in gold, and when there is a louis in my purse,
+there are ten francs for thee." To show his mother that he did not think
+of the Reformed Religion, Paul did not miss going to mass with her
+on Sunday. Sometimes Madame Paul went too, between whom and her
+mother-in-law there could not be any liking, but there was now great
+civility. They saw each other once a day: Madame Paul always paid
+her visit to the Comte de Florac: and Betsy, her maid, made the old
+gentleman laugh by her briskness and talk. She brought back to her
+mistress the most wonderful stories which the old man told her about his
+doings during the emigration--before he married Madame la Comtesse--when
+he gave lessons in dancing, parbleu! There was his fiddle still, a
+trophy of those old times. He chirped, and coughed, and sang, in his
+cracked old voice, as he talked about them. "Lor! bless you, mum," says
+Betsy, "he must have been a terrible old man!" He remembered the times
+well enough, but the stories he sometimes told over twice or thrice in
+an hour. I am afraid he had not repented sufficiently of those wicked
+old times: else why did he laugh and giggle so when he recalled them? He
+would laugh and giggle till he was choked with his old cough: and old
+S. Jean, his man, came and beat M. le Comte on the back, and made M. le
+Comte take a spoonful of his syrup.
+
+Between two such women as Madame de Florac and Lady Kew, of course there
+could be little liking or sympathy. Religion, love, duty, the family,
+were the French lady's constant occupation,--duty and the family,
+perhaps, Lady Kew's aim too,--only the notions of duty were different
+in either person. Lady Kew's idea of duty to her relatives being to push
+them on in the world: Madame de Florac's to soothe, to pray, to attend
+them with constant watchfulness, to strive to mend them with pious
+counsel. I don't know that one lady was happier than the other. Madame
+de Florac's eldest son was a kindly prodigal: her second had given his
+whole heart to the Church: her daughter had centred hers on her own
+children, and was jealous if their grandmother laid a finger on them.
+So Leonore de Florac was quite alone. It seemed as if Heaven had turned
+away all her children's hearts from her. Her daily business in life was
+to nurse a selfish old man, into whose service she had been forced in
+early youth, by a paternal decree which she never questioned; giving
+him obedience, striving to give him respect,--everything but her heart,
+which had gone out of her keeping. Many a good woman's life is no more
+cheerful; a spring of beauty, a little warmth and sunshine of love, a
+bitter disappointment, followed by pangs and frantic tears, then a long
+monotonous story of submission. "Not here, my daughter, is to be your
+happiness," says the priest; "whom Heaven loves it afflicts." And he
+points out to her the agonies of suffering saints of her sex; assures
+her of their present beatitudes and glories; exhorts her to bear her
+pains with a faith like theirs; and is empowered to promise her a like
+reward.
+
+The other matron is not less alone. Her husband and son are dead,
+without a tear for either,--to weep was not in Lady Kew's nature. Her
+grandson, whom she had loved perhaps more than any human being, is
+rebellious and estranged from her; her children, separated from her,
+save one whose sickness and bodily infirmity the mother resents as
+disgraces to herself. Her darling schemes fail somehow. She moves from
+town to town, and ball to ball, and hall to castle, for ever uneasy
+and always alone. She sees people scared at her coming; is received by
+sufferance and fear rather than by welcome; likes perhaps the terror
+which she inspires, and to enter over the breach rather than through the
+hospitable gate. She will try and command wherever she goes; and trample
+over dependants and society, with a grim consciousness that it dislikes
+her, a rage at its cowardice, and an unbending will to domineer. To be
+old, proud, lonely, and not have a friend in the world--that is her lot
+in it. As the French lady may be said to resemble the bird which the
+fables say feeds her young with her blood; this one, if she has a little
+natural liking for her brood, goes hunting hither and thither and robs
+meat for them; And so, I suppose, to make the simile good, we must
+compare the Marquis of Farintosh to a lamb for the nonce, and Miss Ethel
+Newcome to a young eaglet. Is it not a rare provision of nature
+(or fiction of poets, who have their own natural history) that the
+strong-winged bird can soar to the sun and gaze at it, and then come
+down from heaven and pounce on a piece of carrion?
+
+After she became acquainted with certain circumstances, Madame de Florac
+was very interested about Ethel Newcome, and strove in her modest way to
+become intimate with her. Miss Newcome and Lady Kew attended Madame
+de Moncontour's Wednesday evenings. "It is as well, my dear, for the
+interests of the family that we should be particularly civil to these
+people," Lady Kew said; and accordingly she came to the Hotel de
+Florac, and was perfectly insolent to Madame la Princesse every Thursday
+evening. Towards Madame de Florac, even Lady Kew could not be rude. She
+was so gentle as to give no excuse for assault: Lady Kew vouchsafed you
+to pronounce that Madame de Florac was "tres grande dame;"--"of the sort
+which is almost impossible to find nowadays," Lady Kew said, who thought
+she possessed this dignity in her own person. When Madame de Florac,
+blushing, asked Ethel to come and see her, Ethel's grandmother consented
+with the utmost willingness. "She is very devote, I have heard, and will
+try and convert you. Of course you will hold your own about that sort of
+thing; and have the good sense to keep off theology. There is no Roman
+Catholic parti in England or Scotland that is to be thought for a
+moment. You will see they will marry young Lord Derwenwater to an
+Italian princess; but he is only seventeen, and his directors never lose
+sight of him. Sir Bartholomew Bawkes will have a fine property when Lord
+Campion dies, unless Lord Campion leaves the money to the convent where
+his daughter is--and, of the other families, who is there? I made every
+inquiry purposely--that is, of course, one is anxious to know about the
+Catholics as about one's own people: and little Mr. Rood, who was one of
+my poor brother Steyne's lawyers, told me there is not one young man of
+that party at this moment who can be called a desirable person. Be very
+civil to Madame de Florac; she sees some of the old legitimists, and you
+know I am brouillee with that party of late years."
+
+"There is the Marquis de Montluc, who has a large fortune for France,"
+said Ethel, gravely; "he has a humpback, but he is very spiritual.
+Monsieur de Cadillan paid me some compliments the other night, and even
+asked George Barnes what my dot was, He is a widower, and has a wig and
+two daughters. Which do you think would be the greatest encumbrance,
+grandmamma,--a humpback, or a wig and two daughters? I like Madame de
+Florac; for the sake of the borough, I must try and like poor Madame de
+Moncontour, and I will go and see them whenever you please."
+
+So Ethel went to see Madame de Florac. She was very kind to Madame de
+Preville's children, Madame de Florac's grandchildren; she was gay and
+gracious with Madame de Moncontour. She went again and again to the
+Hotel de Florac, not caring for Lady Kew's own circle of statesmen and
+diplomatists, Russian, and Spanish, and French, whose talk about the
+courts of Europe,--who was in favour at St. Petersburg, and who was
+in disgrace at Schoenbrunn,--naturally did not amuse the lively young
+person. The goodness of Madame de Florac's life, the tranquil grace and
+melancholy kindness with which the French lady received her, soothed
+and pleased Miss Ethel. She came and reposed in Madame de Florac's quiet
+chamber, or sate in the shade in the sober old garden of her hotel;
+away from all the trouble and chatter of the salons, the gossip of the
+embassies, the fluttering ceremonial of the Parisian ladies' visits
+in their fine toilettes, the fadaises of the dancing dandies, and the
+pompous mysteries of the old statesmen who frequented her grandmother's
+apartment. The world began for her at night; when she went in the train
+of the old Countess from hotel to hotel, and danced waltz after waltz
+with Prussian and Neapolitan secretaries, with princes' officers of
+ordonnance,--with personages even more lofty very likely,--for the court
+of the Citizen King was then in its splendour; and there must surely
+have been a number of nimble young royal highnesses who would like to
+dance with such a beauty as Miss Newcome. The Marquis of Farintosh had
+a share in these polite amusements. His English conversation was not
+brilliant as yet, although his French was eccentric; but at the court
+balls, whether he appeared in his uniform of the Scotch Archers, or in
+his native Glenlivat tartar there certainly was not in his own or the
+public estimation a handsomer young nobleman in Paris that season. It
+has been said that he was greatly improved in dancing; and, for a young
+man of his age, his whiskers were really extraordinarily large and
+curly.
+
+Miss Newcome, out of consideration for her grandmother's strange
+antipathy to him, did not inform Lady Kew that a young gentleman by the
+name of Clive occasionally came to visit the Hotel de Florac. At first,
+with her French education, Madame de Florac never would have thought of
+allowing the cousins to meet in her house; but with the English it was
+different. Paul assured her that in the English chateaux, les meess
+walked for entire hours with the young men, made parties of the fish,
+mounted to horse with them, the whole with the permission of the
+mothers. "When I was at Newcome, Miss Ethel rode with me several times,"
+Paul said; "a preuve that we went to visit an old relation of the
+family, who adores Clive and his father." When Madame de Florac
+questioned her son about the young Marquis to whom it was said Ethel
+was engaged, Florac flouted the idea. "Engaged! This young Marquis is
+engaged to the Theatre des Varietes, my mother. He laughs at the notion
+of an engagement." When one charged him with it of late at the club; and
+asked how Mademoiselle Louqsor--she is so tall, that they call her the
+Louqsor--she is an Odalisque Obelisque, ma mere; when one asked how the
+Louqsor would pardon his pursuit of Miss Newcome, my Ecossois permitted
+himself to say in full club, that it was Miss Newcome pursued him,--that
+nymph, that Diane, that charming and peerless young creature! On which,
+as the others laughed, and his friend Monsieur Walleye applauded, I
+dared to say in my turn, "Monsieur le Marquis, as a young man, not
+familiar with our language, you have said what is not true, milor, and
+therefore luckily not mischievous. I have the honour to count of my
+friends the parents of the young lady of whom you have spoken. You
+never could have intended to say that a young miss who lives under the
+guardianship of her parents, and is obedient to them, whom you meet in
+society all the nights, and at whose door your carriage is to be seen
+every day, is capable of that with which you charge her so gaily. These
+things say themselves, monsieur, in the coulisses of the theatre, of
+women from whom you learn our language; not of young persons pure and
+chaste, Monsieur de Farintosh! Learn to respect your compatriots; to
+honour youth and innocence everywhere, monsieur! and when you forget
+yourself, permit one who might be your father to point where you are
+wrong."
+
+"And what did he answer?" asked the Countess.
+
+"I attended myself to a soufflet," replied Florac; "but his reply was
+much more agreeable. The young insulary, with many blushes and a gros
+juron, as his polite way is, said he had not wished to say a word
+against that person. 'Of whom the name,' cried I, 'ought never to be
+spoken in these places.' Herewith our little dispute ended."
+
+So, occasionally, Mr. Clive had the good luck to meet with his cousin
+at the Hotel de Florac, where, I dare say, all the inhabitants wished he
+should have his desire regarding this young lady. The Colonel had talked
+early to Madame de Florac about this wish of his life, impossible then
+to gratify, because Ethel was engaged to Lord Kew. Clive, in the fulness
+of his heart, imparted his passion to Florac, and in answer to Paul's
+offer to himself, had shown the Frenchman that kind letter in which
+his father bade him carry aid to "Leonore de Florac's son," in case he
+should need it. The case was all clear to the lively Paul. "Between my
+mother and your good Colonel there must have been an affair of the heart
+in the early days during the emigration." Clive owned his father
+had told him as much, at least that he himself had been attached to
+Mademoiselle de Blois. "It is for that that her heart yearns towards
+thee, that I have felt myself entrained toward thee since I saw
+thee"--Clive momentarily expected to be kissed again. "Tell thy father
+that I feel--am touched by his goodness with an eternal gratitude, and
+love every one that loves my mother." As far as wishes went, these
+two were eager promoters of Clive's little love-affair; and Madame
+la Princesse became equally not less willing. Clive's good looks and
+good-nature had had their effects upon that good-natured woman, and
+he was as great a favourite with her as with her husband. And thus
+it happened that when Miss Ethel came to pay her visit, and sate with
+Madame de Florac and her grandchildren in the garden, Mr. Newcome would
+sometimes walk up the avenue there, and salute the ladies.
+
+If Ethel had not wanted to see him, would she have come? Yes; she used
+to say she was going to Madame de Preville's, not Madame de Florac's,
+and would insist, I have no doubt, that it was Madame de Preville whom
+she went to see (whose husband was a member of the Chamber of Deputies,
+a Conseiller d'etat; or other French bigwig), and that she had no idea
+of going to meet Clive, or that he was more than a casual acquaintance
+at the Hotel de Florac. There was no part of her conduct in all her
+life, which this lady, when it was impugned, would defend more strongly
+than this intimacy at the Hotel de Florac. It is not with this I
+quarrel especially. My fair young readers, who have seen a half-dozen
+of seasons, can you call to mind the time when you had such a friendship
+for Emma Tomkins, that you were always at the Tomkins's, and notes were
+constantly passing between your house and hers? When her brother, Paget
+Tomkins, returned to India, did not your intimacy with Emma fall off? If
+your younger sister is not in the room, I know you will own as much
+to me. I think you are always deceiving yourselves and other people. I
+think the motive you put forward is very often not the real one; though
+you will confess, neither to yourself, nor to any human being, what
+the real motive is. I think that what you desire you pursue, and are as
+selfish in your way as your bearded fellow-creatures are. And as for the
+truth being in you, of all the women in a great acquaintance, I protest
+there are but--never mind. A perfectly honest woman, a woman who never
+flatters, who never manages, who never cajoles, who never conceals,
+who never uses her eyes, who never speculates on the effect which she
+produces, who never is conscious of unspoken admiration, what a monster,
+I say, would such a female be! Miss Hopkins, you have been a coquette
+since you were a year old; you worked on your papa's friends in the
+nurse's arms by the fascination of your lace frock and pretty new sash
+and shoes; when you could just toddle, you practised your arts upon
+other children in the square, poor little lambkins sporting among the
+daisies; and nunc in ovilia, mox in reluctantes dracones, proceeding
+from the lambs to reluctant dragoons, you tried your arts upon Captain
+Paget Tomkins, who behaved so ill, and went to India without--without
+making those proposals which of course you never expected. Your intimacy
+was with Emma. It has cooled. Your sets are different. The Tomkins's are
+not quite etc. etc. You believe Captain Tomkins married a Miss O'Grady,
+etc. etc. Ah, my pretty, my sprightly Miss Hopkins, be gentle in your
+judgment of your neighbours!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII. Contains two or three Acts of a Little Comedy
+
+
+All this story is told by one, who, if he was not actually present at
+the circumstances here narrated, yet had information concerning them,
+and could supply such a narrative of facts and conversations as is,
+indeed, not less authentic than the details we have of other histories.
+How can I tell the feelings in a young lady's mind; the thoughts in a
+young gentleman's bosom?--As Professor Owen or Professor Agassiz takes a
+fragment of a bone, and builds an enormous forgotten monster out of it,
+wallowing in primeval quagmires, tearing down leaves and branches of
+plants that flourished thousands of years ago, and perhaps may be coal
+by this time--so the novelist puts this and that together: from the
+footprint finds the foot; from the foot, the brute who trod on it; from
+the brute, the plant he browsed on, the marsh in which he swam--and
+thus in his humble way a physiologist too, depicts the habits, size,
+appearance of the beings whereof he has to treat;--traces this slimy
+reptile through the mud, and describes his habits filthy and rapacious;
+prods down this butterfly with a pin, and depicts his beautiful coat and
+embroidered waistcoat; points out the singular structure of yonder more
+important animal, the megatherium of his history.
+
+Suppose then, in the quaint old garden of the Hotel de Florac, two young
+people are walking up and down in an avenue of lime-trees, which are
+still permitted to grow in that ancient place. In the centre of that
+avenue is a fountain, surmounted by a Triton so grey and moss-eaten,
+that though he holds his conch to his swelling lips, curling his tail
+in the arid basin, his instrument has had a sinecure for at least fifty
+years; and did not think fit even to play when the Bourbons, in whose
+time he was erected, came back from their exile. At the end of the
+lime-tree avenue is a broken-nosed damp Faun, with a marble panpipe,
+who pipes to the spirit ditties which I believe never had any tune.
+The perron of the hotel is at the other end of the avenue; a couple of
+Caesars on either side of the door-window, from which the inhabitants
+of the hotel issue into the garden--Caracalla frowning over his mouldy
+shoulder at Nerva, on to whose clipped hair the roofs of the grey
+chateau have been dribbling for ever so many long years. There are more
+statues gracing this noble place. There is Cupid, who has been at the
+point of kissing Psyche this half-century at least, though the delicious
+event has never come off, through all those blazing summers and dreary
+winters: there is Venus and her Boy under the damp little dome of a
+cracked old temple. Through the alley of this old garden, in which their
+ancestors have disported in hoops and powder, Monsieur de Florac's chair
+is wheeled by St. Jean, his attendant; Madame de Preville's children
+trot about, and skip, and play at cache-cache. The R. P. de Florac (when
+at home) paces up and down and meditates his sermons; Madame de Florac
+sadly walks sometimes to look at her roses; and Clive and Ethel Newcome
+are marching up and down; the children, and their bonne of course being
+there, jumping to and fro; and Madame de Florac, having just been called
+away to Monsieur le Comte, whose physician has come to see him.
+
+Ethel says, "How charming and odd this solitude is: and how pleasant
+to hear the voices of the children playing in the neighbouring Convent
+garden," of which they can see the new chapel rising over the trees.
+
+Clive remarks that "the neighbouring hotel has curiously changed its
+destination. One of the members of the Directory had it; and, no doubt,
+in the groves of its garden, Madame Tallien, and Madame Recamier, and
+Madame Beauharnais have danced under the lamps. Then a Marshal of the
+Empire inhabited it. Then it was restored to its legitimate owner,
+Monsieur le Marquis de Bricquabracque, whose descendants, having a
+lawsuit about the Bricquabracque succession, sold the hotel to the
+Convent."
+
+After some talk about nuns, Ethel says, "There were convents in England.
+She often thinks she would like to retire to one;" and she sighs as if
+her heart were in that scheme.
+
+Clive, with a laugh, says, "Yes. If you could retire after the season,
+when you were very weary of the balls, a convent would be very nice.
+At Rome he had seen San Pietro in Montorio and Sant Onofrio, that
+delightful old place where Tasso died: people go and make a retreat
+there. In the ladies' convents, the ladies do the same thing--and he
+doubts whether they are much more or less wicked after their retreat,
+than gentlemen and ladies in England or France."
+
+Ethel. Why do you sneer at all faith? Why should not a retreat do people
+good? Do you suppose the world is so satisfactory, that those who are
+in it never wish for a while to leave it'd (She heaves a sigh and looks
+down towards a beautiful new dress of many flounces, which Madame de
+Flouncival, the great milliner, has sent her home that very day.)
+
+Clive. I do not know what the world is, except from afar off. I am like
+the Peri who looks into Paradise and sees angels within it. I live
+in Charlotte Street, Fitzroy Square: which is not within the gates of
+Paradise. I take the gate to be somewhere in Davies Street, leading
+out of Oxford Street into Grosvenor Square. There's another gate in Hay
+Hill: and another in Bruton Street, Bond----
+
+Ethel. Don't be a goose.
+
+Clive. Why not? It is as good to be a goose, as to be a lady--no, a
+gentleman of fashion. Suppose I were a Viscount, an Earl, a Marquis, a
+Duke, would you say Goose? No, you would say Swan.
+
+Ethel. Unkind and unjust!--ungenerous to make taunts which common people
+make: and to repeat to me those silly sarcasms which your low Radical
+literary friends are always putting in their books! Have I ever made
+any difference to you? Would I not sooner see you than the fine people?
+Would I talk with you, or with the young dandies most willingly? Are we
+not of the same blood, Clive; and of all the grandees I see about, can
+there be a grander gentleman than your dear old father? You need not
+squeeze my hand so.--Those little imps are look--that has nothing to do
+with the question. Viens, Leonore! Tu connois bien, monsieur, n'est-ce
+pas? qui te fait de si jolis dessins?
+
+Leonore. Ah, oui! Vous m'en ferez toujours, n'est-ce pas Monsieur Clive?
+des chevaux, et puis des petites filles avec leurs gouvernantes, et puis
+des maisons--et puis--et puis des maisons encore--ou est bonne maman?
+
+ [Exit little LEONORE down an alley.
+
+Ethel. Do you remember when we were children, and you used to make
+drawings for us? I have some now that you did--in my geography book,
+which I used to read and read with Miss Quigley.
+
+Clive. I remember all about our youth, Ethel.
+
+Ethel. Tell me what you remember?
+
+Clive. I remember one of the days, when I first saw you, I had been
+reading the Arabian Nights at school--and you came in in a bright
+dress of shot silk, amber, and blue--and I thought you were like that
+fairy-princess who came out of the crystal box--because----
+
+Ethel. Because why?
+
+Clive. Because I always thought that fairy somehow must be the most
+beautiful creature in all the world--that is "why and because." Do not
+make me Mayfair curtsies. You know whether you are good-looking or not:
+and how long I have thought you so. I remember when I thought I would
+like to be Ethel's knight, and that if there was anything she would have
+me do, I would try and achieve it in order to please her. I remember
+when I was so ignorant I did not know there was any difference in rank
+between us.
+
+Ethel. Ah, Clive!
+
+Clive. Now it is altered. Now I know the difference between a poor
+painter and a young lady of the world. Why haven't I a title and a great
+fortune? Why did I ever see you, Ethel; or, knowing the distance which
+it seems fate has placed between us, why have I seen you again?
+
+Ethel (innocently). Have I ever made any difference between us? Whenever
+I may see you, am I not too glad? Don't I see you sometimes when I
+should not--no--I do not say when I should not; but when others, whom
+I am bound to obey, forbid me? What harm is there in my remembering old
+days? Why should I be ashamed of our relationship?--no, not ashamed--shy
+should I forget it? Don't do that, sir; we have shaken hands twice
+already. Leonore! Xavier!
+
+Clive. At one moment you like me: and at the next you seem to repent it.
+One day you seem happy when I come; and another day you are ashamed of
+me. Last Tuesday, when you came with those fine ladies to the Louvre,
+you seemed to blush when you saw me copying at my picture; and that
+stupid young lord looked quite alarmed because you spoke to me. My lot
+in life is not very brilliant; but I would not change it against that
+young man's--no, not with all his chances.
+
+Ethel. What do you mean with all his chances?
+
+Clive. You know very well. I mean I would not be as selfish or as dull,
+or as ill educated--I won't say worse of him--not to be as handsome,
+or as wealthy, or as noble as he is. I swear I would not now change my
+place against his, or give up being Clive Newcome to be my Lord Marquis
+of Farintosh, with all his acres and titles of nobility.
+
+Ethel. Why are you for ever harping about Lord Farintosh and his
+titles? I thought it was only women who were jealous--you gentlemen say
+so.--(Hurriedly.) I am going to-night with grandmamma to the Minister
+of the Interior, and then to the Russian ball; and to-morrow to the
+Tuileries. We dine at the Embassy first; and on Sunday, I suppose, we
+shall go to the Rue d'Aguesseau. I can hardly come here before Mon---.
+Madam de Florac! Little Leonore is very like you--resembles you very
+much. My cousin says he longs to make a drawing of her.
+
+Madame de Florac. My husband always likes that I should be present at
+his dinner. Pardon me, young people, that I have been away from you for
+a moment.
+
+ [Exeunt CLIVE, ETHEL, and Madame DE F. into the house.
+
+
+CONVERSATION II.-SCENE I. Miss Newcome arrives in Lady Kew's carriage,
+which enters the court of the Hotel de Florac.
+
+Saint Jean. Mademoiselle--Madame la Comtesse is gone out but madame
+has charged me to say, that she will be at home to the dinner of M. le
+Comte, as to the ordinary.
+
+Miss Newcome. Madame de Preville is at home?
+
+Saint Jean. Pardon me, madame is gone out with M. le Baron, and M.
+Xavier, and Mademoiselle de Preville. They are gone, miss, I believe,
+to visit the parents of Monsieur le Baron; of whom it is probably to-day
+the fete: for Mademoiselle Leonore carried a bouquet--no doubt for her
+grandpapa. Will it please mademoiselle to enter? I think Monsieur the
+Count sounds me. (Bell rings.)
+
+Miss Newcome. Madame la Prince--Madame la Vicomtesse is at home,
+Monsieur St. Jean?
+
+Saint Jean. I go to call the people of Madame la Vicomtesse.
+
+ [Exit Old SAINT JEAN to the carriage: a Lackey comes presently
+ in a gorgeous livery, with buttons like little cheese plates.
+
+The Lackey. The Princess is at home, miss, and will be most appy to see
+you, miss. (Miss trips up the great stair: a gentleman out of livery
+has come forth to the landing, and introduces her to the apartments of
+Madame la Princesse.)
+
+The Lackey to the Servants on the box. Good morning, Thomas. How dy' do,
+old Backystopper?
+
+Backystopper. How de do, Jim? I say, you couldn't give a feller a drink
+of beer, could yer, Muncontour? It was precious wet last night, I can
+tell you. 'Ad to stop for three hours at the Napolitum Embassy, when we
+was a dancing. Me and some chaps went into Bob Parsom's and had a drain.
+Old Cat came out and couldn't find her carriage, not by no means, could
+she, Tommy? Blest if I didn't nearly drive her into a wegetable-cart.
+I was so uncommon scruey! Who's this a-hentering at your pot-coshare?
+Billy, my fine feller!
+
+Clive Newcome (by the most singular coincidence). Madame la Princesse?
+
+Lackey. We, munseer. (He rings a bell: the gentleman in black appears as
+before on the landing-place up the stair.)
+
+ [Exit Clive.
+
+Backystopper. I say, Bill: is that young chap often a-coming about here?
+They'd run pretty in a curricle, wouldn't they? Miss N. and Master N.
+Quiet, old woman! Jest look to that mare's ead, will you, Billy? He's
+a fine young feller, that is. He gave me a covering the other night.
+Whenever I sor him in the Park, he was always riding an ansum hanimal.
+What is he? They said in our 'all he was a hartis. I can 'ardly think
+that. Why, there used to be a hartis come to our club, and painted two
+or three of my 'osses, and my old woman too.
+
+Lackey. There's hartises and hartises, Backystopper. Why, there's some
+on 'em comes here with more stars on their coats than Dukes has got.
+Have you never 'eard of Mossyer Verny, or Mossyer Gudang?
+
+Backystopper. They say this young gent is sweet on Miss N.; which, I
+guess, I wish he may git it.
+
+Tommy. He! he! he!
+
+Backystopper. Brayvo, Tommy. Tom ain't much of a man for conversation,
+but he's a precious one to drink. Do you think the young gent is sweet
+on her, Tommy? I sor him often prowling about our 'ouse in Queen Street,
+when we was in London.
+
+Tommy. I guess he wasn't let in in Queen Street. I guess hour little
+Buttons was very near turned away for saying we was at home to him--I
+guess a footman's place is to keep his mouth hopen--no, his heyes
+hopen--and his mouth shut. (He lapses into silence.)
+
+Lackey. I think Thomis is in love, Thomis is. Who was that young woman I
+saw you a-dancing of at the Showmier, Thomis? How the young Marquis was
+a-cuttin' of it about there! The pleace was obliged to come up and stop
+him dancing. His man told old Buzfuz upstairs, that the Marquis's
+goings on is hawful. Up till four or five every morning; blind hookey,
+shampaign, the dooce's own delight. That party have had I don't know how
+much in diamonds--and they quarrel and swear at each other, and fling
+plates: it's tremendous.
+
+Tommy. Why doesn't the Marquis man mind his own affairs? He's a
+supersellious beast: and will no more speak to a man, except he's
+out-a-livery, than he would to a chimbly-swip. He! Cuss him, I'd fight
+'im for 'alf-a-crown.
+
+Lackey. And we'd back you, Tommy. Buzfuz upstairs ain't supersellious;
+nor is the Prince's walet nether. That old Sangjang's a rum old
+guvnor. He was in England with the Count, fifty years ago--in the
+hemigration--in Queen Hann's time, you know. He used to support the old
+Count. He says he remembers a young Musseer Newcome then, that used to
+take lessons from the Shevallier, the Countess' father--there's my bell.
+
+ [Exit Lackey.
+
+Backystopper. Not a bad chap that. Sports his money very free--sings an
+uncommon good song.
+
+Thomas. Pretty voice, but no cultiwation.
+
+Lackey (who re-enters). Be here at two o'clock for Miss N. Take
+anything? Come round the corner.--There's a capital shop round the
+corner.
+
+ [Exeunt Servants.
+
+
+SCENE II. Ethel. I can't think where Madame de Moncontour has gone. How
+very odd it was that you should come here--that we should both come here
+to-day! How surprised I was to see you at the Minister's! Grandmamma was
+so angry! "That boy pursues us wherever we go," she said. I am sure I
+don't know why we shouldn't meet, Clive. It seems to be wrong even
+my seeing you by chance here. Do you know, sir, what a scolding I had
+about--about going to Brighton with you? My grandmother did not hear of
+it till we were in Scotland, when that foolish maid of mine talked of it
+to her maid; and, there was oh, such a tempest! If there were a Bastile
+here, she would like to lock you into it. She says that you are always
+upon our way--I don't know how, I am sure. She says, but for you I
+should have been--you know what I should have been: but I am thankful
+that I wasn't, and Kew has got a much nicer wife in Henrietta Pulleyn,
+than I could ever have been to him. She will be happier than Clara,
+Clive. Kew is one of the kindest creatures in the world--not very wise;
+not very strong: but he is just such a kind, easy, generous little man,
+as will make a girl like Henrietta quite happy.
+
+Clive. But not you, Ethel?
+
+Ethel. No, nor I him. My temper is difficult, Clive, and I fear few men
+would bear with me. I feel, somehow, always very lonely. How old am I?
+Twenty--I feel sometimes as if I was a hundred; and in the midst of all
+these admirations and fetes and flatteries, so tired, oh, so tired! And
+yet if I don't have them, I miss them. How I wish I was religious like
+Madame de Florac: there is no day that she does not go to church. She
+is for ever busy with charities, clergymen, conversions; I think the
+Princess will be brought over ere long--that dear old Madame de Florac!
+and yet she is no happier than the rest of us. Hortense is an empty
+little thing, who thinks of her prosy fat Camille with spectacles, and
+of her two children, and of nothing else in the world besides. Who is
+happy? Clive!
+
+Clive. You say Barnes's wife is not.
+
+Ethel. We are like brother and sister, so I may talk to you. Barnes is
+very cruel to her. At Newcome, last winter, poor Clara used to come into
+my room with tears in her eyes morning after morning. He calls her a
+fool; and seems to take a pride in humiliating her before company. My
+poor father has luckily taken a great liking to her: and before him,
+for he has grown very very hot-tempered since his illness, Barnes leaves
+poor Clara alone. We were in hopes that the baby might make matters
+better, but as it is a little girl, Barnes chooses to be very much
+disappointed. He wants papa to give up his seat in Parliament, but he
+clings to that more than anything. Oh, dear me! who is happy in the
+world? What a pity Lord Highgate's father had not died sooner! He and
+Barnes have been reconciled. I wonder my brother's spirit did not revolt
+against it. The old lord used to keep a great sum of money at the bank,
+I believe: and the present one does so still: he has paid all his debts
+off: and Barnes is actually friends with him. He is always abusing
+the Dorkings, who want to borrow money from the bank, he says. This
+eagerness for money is horrible. If I had been Barnes I would never have
+been reconciled with Mr. Belsize, never, never! And yet they say he was
+quite right: and grandmamma is even pleased that Lord Highgate should
+be asked to dine in Park Lane. Poor papa is there: come to attend his
+parliamentary duties as he thinks. He went to a division the other
+night; and was actually lifted out of his carriage and wheeled into the
+lobby in a chair. The ministers thanked him for coming. I believe he
+thinks he will have his peerage yet. Oh, what a life of vanity ours is!
+
+Enter Madame de Moncontour. What are you young folks a-talkin'
+about--balls and operas? When first I was took to the opera I did not
+like it--and fell asleep. But now, oh, it's 'eavenly to hear Grisi sing!
+
+The Clock. Ting, ting!
+
+Ethel. Two o'clock already! I must run back to grandmamma. Good-bye,
+Madame de Moncontour; I am so sorry I have not been able to see dear
+Madame de Florac. I will try and come to her on Thursday--please tell
+her. Shall we meet you at the American minister's to-night, or at Madame
+de Brie's to-morrow? Friday is your own night--I hope grandmamma will
+bring me. How charming your last music was! Good-bye, mon cousin! You
+shall not come downstairs with me, I insist upon it, sir: and had much
+best remain here, and finish your drawing of Madame de Moncontour.
+
+Princess. I've put on the velvet, you see, Clive--though it's very 'ot
+in May. Good-bye, my dear.
+
+ [Exit ETHEL.
+As far as we can judge from the above conversation, which we need not
+prolong--as the talk between Madame de Moncontour and Monsieur Clive,
+after a few complimentary remarks about Ethel, had nothing to do with
+the history of the Newcomes--as far as we can judge, the above little
+colloquy took place on Monday: and about Wednesday, Madame la Comtesse
+de Florac received a little note from Clive, in which he said, that one
+day when she came to the Louvre, where he was copying, she had admired a
+picture of a Virgin and Child, by Sasso Ferrato, since when he had been
+occupied in making a water-colour drawing after the picture, and hoped
+she would be pleased to accept the copy from her affectionate and
+grateful servant, Clive Newcome. The drawing would be done the next
+day, when he would call with it in his hand. Of course Madame de Florac
+received this announcement very kindly; and sent back by Clive's servant
+a note of thanks to that young gentleman.
+
+Now on Thursday morning, about one o'clock, by one of those singular
+coincidences which, etc. etc., who should come to the Hotel de Florac
+but Miss Ethel Newcome? Madame la Comtesse was at home, waiting to
+receive Clive and his picture: but Miss Ethel's appearance frightened
+the good lady, so much so that she felt quite guilty at seeing the girl,
+whose parents might think--I don't know what they might not think--that
+Madame de Florac was trying to make a match between the young people.
+Hence arose the words uttered by the Countess, after a while, in--
+
+
+CONVERSATION III. Madame de Florac (at work). And so you like to quit
+the world and to come to our triste old hotel. After to-day you will
+find it still more melancholy, my poor child.
+
+Ethel. And why?
+
+Madame de F. Some one who has been here to egager our little meetings
+will come no more.
+
+Ethel. Is the Abbe de Florac going to quit Paris, madam?
+
+Madame de F. It is not of him that I speak, thou knowest it very well,
+my daughter. Thou hast seen my poor Clive twice here. He will come
+once again, and then no more. My conscience reproaches me that I have
+admitted him at all. But he is like a son to me, and was so confided to
+me by his father. Five years ago, when we met, after an absence--of how
+many years!--Colonel Newcome told me what hopes he had cherished for his
+boy. You know well, my daughter, with whom those hopes were connected.
+Then he wrote me that family arrangements rendered his plans
+impossible--that the hand of Miss Newcome was promised elsewhere. When
+I heard from my son Paul how these negotiations were broken, my heart
+rejoiced, Ethel, for my friend's sake. I am an old woman now, who have
+seen the world, and all sorts of men. Men more brilliant no doubt I have
+known, but such a heart as his, such a faith as his, such a generosity
+and simplicity as Thomas Newcome's--never!
+
+Ethel (smiling). Indeed, dear lady, I think with you.
+
+Madame de F. I understand thy smile, my daughter. I can say to thee,
+that when we were children almost, I knew thy good uncle. My poor father
+took the pride of his family into exile with him. Our poverty only made
+his pride the greater. Even before the emigration a contract had been
+passed between our family and the Count de Florac. I could not be
+wanting to the word given by my father. For how many long years have
+I kept it? But when I see a young girl who may be made the victim--the
+subject of a marriage of convenience, as I was--my heart pities her. And
+if I love her, as I love you, I tell her my thoughts. Better poverty,
+Ethel: better a cell in a convent: than a union without love. Is it
+written eternally that men are to make slaves of us? Here in France,
+above all, our fathers sell us every day. And what a society ours is!
+Thou wilt know this when thou art married. There are some laws so cruel
+that nature revolts against theme, and breaks them--or we die in
+keeping them. You smile. I have been nearly fifty years dying--n'est-ce
+pas?--and am here an old woman, complaining to a young girl. It is
+because our recollections of youth are always young: and because I have
+suffered so, that I would spare those I love a like grief. Do you know
+that the children of those who do not love in marriage seem to bear an
+hereditary coldness, and do not love their parents as other children
+do? They witness our differences and our indifferences, hear our
+recriminations, take one side or the other in our disputes, and are
+partisans for father or mother. We force ourselves to be hypocrites, and
+hide our wrongs from them; we speak of a bad father with false praises;
+we wear feint smiles over our tears, and deceive our children--deceive
+them, do we? Even from the exercise of that pious deceit there is no
+woman but suffers in the estimation of her sons. They may shield her as
+champions against their father's selfishness or cruelty. In this case,
+what a war! What a home, where the son sees a tyrant in the father, and
+in the mother but a trembling victim! I speak not for myself--whatever
+may have been the course of our long wedded life, I have not to complain
+of these ignoble storms. But when the family chief neglects his wife,
+or prefers another to her, the children too, courtiers as we are, will
+desert her. You look incredulous about domestic love. Tenez, my child,
+if I may so surmise, I think you cannot have seen it.
+
+Ethel (blushing, and thinking, perhaps, how she esteems her father, how
+her mother, and how much they esteem each other). My father and mother
+have been most kind to all their children, madame; and no one can say
+that their marriage has been otherwise than happy. My mother is the
+kindest and most affectionate mother, and--(Here a vision of Sir Brian
+alone in his room, and nobody really caring for him so much as
+his valet, who loves him to the extent of fifty pounds a year and
+perquisites; or, perhaps, Miss Cann, who reads to him, and plays a good
+deal of evenings, much to Sir Brian's liking--here this vision, we say,
+comes, and stops Miss Ethel's sentence.)
+
+Madame de F. Your father, in his infirmity--and yet he is five years
+younger than Colonel Newcome--is happy to have such a wife and such
+children. They comfort his age; they cheer his sickness; they confide
+their griefs and pleasures to him--is it not so? His closing days are
+soothed by their affection.
+
+Ethel. Oh, no, no! And yet it is not his fault or ours that he is a
+stranger to us. He used to be all day at the bank, or at night in the
+House of Commons, or he and mamma went to parties, and we young ones
+remained with the governess. Mamma is very kind. I have never, almost,
+known her angry; never with us; about us, sometimes, with the servants.
+As children, we used to see papa and mamma at breakfast; and then when
+she was dressing to go out. Since he has been ill, she has given up all
+parties. I wanted to do so too. I feel ashamed in the world, sometimes,
+when I think of my poor father at home, alone. I wanted to stay, but my
+mother and my grandmother forbade me. Grandmamma has a fortune, which
+she says I am to have: since then they have insisted on my being with
+her. She is very clever you know: she is kind too in her way; but she
+cannot live out of society. And I, who pretend to revolt, I like it
+too; and I, who rail and scorn flatterers--oh, I like admiration! I am
+pleased when the women hate me, and the young men leave them for me.
+Though I despise many of these, yet I can't help drawing them towards
+me. One or two of them I have seen unhappy about me, and I like it; and
+if they are indifferent I am angry, and never tire till they come back.
+I love beautiful dresses; I love jewels; I love a great name and a fine
+house--oh, I despise myself, when I think of these things! When I lie
+in bed and say I have been heartless and a coquette, I cry with
+humiliation; and then rebel and say, Why not?--and to-night--yes,
+to-night--after leaving you, I shall be wicked, I know I shall.
+
+Madame de F. (sadly). One will pray for thee, my child.
+
+Ethel (sadly). I thought I might be good once. I used to say my own
+prayers then. Now I speak them but by rote, and feel ashamed--yes,
+ashamed to speak them. Is it not horrid to say them, and next morning
+to be no better than you were last night? Often I revolt at these as
+at other things, and am dumb. The Vicar comes to see us at Newcome, and
+eats so much dinner, and pays us such court, and "Sir Brians" papa,
+and "Your Ladyship's" mamma. With grandmamma I go to hear a fashionable
+preacher--Clive's uncle, whose sister lets lodgings at Brighton; such a
+queer, bustling, pompous, honest old lady. Do you know that Clive's aunt
+lets lodgings at Brighton?
+
+Madame de F. My father was an usher in a school. Monsieur de Florac gave
+lessons in the emigration. Do you know in what?
+
+Ethel. Oh, the old nobility! that is different, you know. That Mr.
+Honeyman is so affected that I have no patience with him!
+
+Madame de F. (with a sigh). I wish you could attend the services of a
+better church. And when was it you thought you might be good, Ethel?
+
+Ethel. When I was a girl. Before I came out. When I used to take long
+rides with my dear Uncle Newcome; and he used to talk to me in his sweet
+simple way; and he said I reminded him of some one he once knew.
+
+Madame de F. Who--who was that, Ethel?
+
+Ethel (looking up at Gerard's picture of the Countess de Florac). What
+odd dresses you wore in the time of the Empire, Madame de Florac! How
+could you ever have such high waists, and such wonderful fraises!
+(MADAME DE FLORAC kisses ETHEL. Tableau.)
+
+Enter SAINT JEAN, preceding a gentleman with a drawing-board under his
+arm.
+
+Saint Jean. Monsieur Claive! [Exit SAINT JEAN.
+
+Clive. How do you do, Madame la Comtesse? Mademoiselle, j'ai l'honneur
+de vous souhaiter le bon jour.
+
+Madame de F. Do you come from the Louvre? Have you finished that
+beautiful copy, mon ami?
+
+Clive. I have brought it for you. It is not very good. There are always
+so many petites demoiselles copying that Sasso Ferrato; and they chatter
+about it so, and hop from one easel to another; and the young artists
+are always coming to give them advice--so that there is no getting a
+good look at the picture. But I have brought you the sketch; and am so
+pleased that you asked for it.
+
+Madame de F. (surveying the sketch). It is charming--charming! What
+shall we give to our painter for his chef-d'oeuvre?
+
+Clive (kisses her hand). There is my pay! And you will be glad to hear
+that two of my portraits have been received at the Exhibition. My uncle,
+the clergyman, and Mr. Butts, of the Life Guards.
+
+Ethel. Mr. Butts--quel nom! Je ne connois aucun M. Butts!
+
+Clive. He has a famous head to draw. They refused Crackthorpe and--and
+one or two other heads I sent in.
+
+Ethel (tossing up hers). Miss Mackenzie's, I suppose!
+
+Clive. Yes, Miss Mackenzie's. It is a sweet little face; too delicate
+for my hand, though.
+
+Ethel. So is a wax-doll's a pretty face. Pink cheeks; china-blue eyes;
+and hair the colour of old Madame Hempenfeld's--not her last hair--her
+last but one. (She goes to a window that looks into the court.)
+
+Clive (to the Countess). Miss Mackenzie speaks more respectfully of
+other people's eyes and hair. She thinks there is nobody in the world to
+compare to Miss Newcome.
+
+Madame de F. (aside). And you, mon ami? This is the last time,
+entendez-vous? You must never come here again. If M. le Comte knew it he
+never would pardon me. Encore? (He kisses her ladyship's hand again.)
+
+Clive. A good action gains to be repeated. Miss Newcome, does the view
+of the courtyard please you? The old trees and the garden are better.
+That dear old Faun without a nose! I must have a sketch of him: the
+creepers round the base are beautiful.
+
+Miss N. I was looking to see if the carriage had come for me. It is time
+that I return home.
+
+Clive. That is my brougham. May I carry you anywhere? I hire him by the
+hour: and I will carry you to the end of the world.
+
+Miss N. Where are you going, Madame de Floras?--to show that sketch to
+M. le Comte? Dear me! I don't fancy that M. de Florac can care for
+such things! I am sure I have seen many as pretty on the quays for
+twenty-five sous. I wonder the carriage is not come for me.
+
+Clive. You can take mine without my company, as that seems not to please
+you.
+
+Miss N. Your company is sometimes very pleasant--when you please.
+Sometimes, as last night, for instance, when you particularly lively.
+
+Clive. Last night, after moving heaven and earth to get an invitation
+to Madame de Brie--I say, heaven and earth, that is a French phrase--I
+arrive there; I find Miss Newcome engaged for almost every dance,
+waltzing with M. de Klingenspohr, galloping with Count de Capri,
+galloping and waltzing with the most noble the Marquis of Farintosh.
+She will scarce speak to me during the evening; and when I wait till
+midnight, her grandmamma whisks her home, and I am left alone for my
+pains. Lady Kew is in one of her high moods, and the only words she
+condescends to say to me are, "Oh, I thought you had returned to
+London," with which she turns her venerable back upon me.
+
+Miss N. A fortnight ago you said you were going to London. You said the
+copies you were about here would not take you another week, and that was
+three weeks since.
+
+Clive. It were best I had gone.
+
+Miss N. If you think so, I cannot but think so.
+
+Clive. Why do I stay and hover about you, and follow you know--I follow
+you? Can I live on a smile vouchsafed twice a week, and no brighter
+than you give to all the world? What I do I get, but to hear your
+beauty praised, and to see you, night after night, happy and smiling and
+triumphant, the partner of other men? Does it add zest to your triumph,
+to think that I behold it? I believe you would like a crowd of us to
+pursue you.
+
+Miss N. To pursue me; and if they find me alone, by chance to compliment
+me with such speeches as you make? That would be pleasure indeed! Answer
+me here in return, Clive. Have I ever disguised from any of my friends
+the regard I have for you? Why should I? Have not I taken your part when
+you were maligned? In former days, when--when Lord Kew asked me, as
+he had a right to do then--I said it was as a brother I held you; and
+always would. If I have been wrong, it has been for two or three times
+in seeing you at all--or seeing you thus; in letting you speak to me as
+you do--injure me as you do. Do you think I have not hard enough words
+said to me about you, but that you must attack me too in turn? Last
+night only, because you were at the ball,--it was very, very wrong of
+me to tell you I was going there,--as we went home, Lady Kew--Go, sir. I
+never thought you would have seen in me this humiliation.
+
+Clive. Is it possible that I should have made Ethel Newcome shed tears?
+Oh, dry them, dry them. Forgive me, Ethel, forgive me! I have no right
+to jealousy, or to reproach you--I know that. If others admire you,
+surely I ought to know that they--they do but as I do: I should be
+proud, not angry, that they admire my Ethel--my sister, if you can be no
+more.
+
+Ethel. I will be that always, whatever harsh things you think or say of
+me. There, sir, I am not going to be so foolish as to cry again. Have
+you been studying very hard? Are your pictures good at the Exhibition?
+I like you with your mustachios best, and order you not to cut them off
+again. The young men here wear them. I hardly knew Charles Beardmore
+when he arrived from Berlin the other day, like a sapper and miner. His
+little sisters cried out, and were quite frightened by his apparition.
+Why are you not in diplomacy? That day, at Brighton, when Lord Farintosh
+asked whether you were in the army, I thought to myself, why is he not?
+
+Clive. A man in the army may pretend to anything, n'est-ce pas? He wears
+a lovely uniform. He may be a General, a K.C.B., a Viscount, an Earl. He
+may be valiant in arms, and wanting a leg, like the lover in the song.
+It is peace-time, you say? so much the worse career for a soldier. My
+father would not have me, he said, for ever dangling in barracks, or
+smoking in country billiard-rooms. I have no taste for law: and as for
+diplomacy, I have no relations in the Cabinet, and no uncles in the
+House of Peers. Could my uncle, who is in Parliament, help me much, do
+you think? or would he, if he could?--or Barnes, his noble son and heir,
+after him?
+
+Ethel (musing). Barnes would not, perhaps, but papa might even still,
+and you have friends who are fond of you.
+
+Clive. No--no one can help me: and my art, Ethel, is not only my choice
+and my love, but my honour too. I shall never distinguish myself in it:
+I may take smart likenesses, but that is all. I am not fit to grind my
+friend Ridley's colours for him. Nor would my father, who loves his
+own profession so, make a good general probably. He always says so.
+I thought better of myself when I began as a boy; and was a conceited
+youngster, expecting to carry it all before me. But as I walked the
+Vatican, and looked at Raphael, and at the great Michael--I knew I was
+but a poor little creature; and in contemplating his genius, shrunk
+up till I felt myself as small as a man looks under the dome of St.
+Peter's. Why should I wish to have a great genius?--Yes, there is one
+reason why I should like to have it.
+
+Ethel. And that is?
+
+Clive. To give it you, if it pleased you, Ethel. But I might wish for
+the roc's egg: there is no way of robbing the bird. I must take a humble
+place, and you want a brilliant one. A brilliant one! Oh, Ethel, what
+a standard we folks measure fame by! To have your name in the Morning
+Post, and to go to three balls every night. To have your dress described
+at the Drawing-Room; and your arrival, from a round of visits in the
+country, at your town-house; and the entertainment of the Marchioness of
+Farin----
+
+Ethel. Sir, if you please, no calling names.
+
+Clive. I wonder at it. For you are in the world, and you love the world,
+whatever you may say. And I wonder that one of your strength of mind
+should so care for it. I think my simple old father is much finer than
+all your grandees: his single-mindedness more lofty than all their
+bowing, and haughtiness, and scheeming. What are you thinking of, as you
+stand in that pretty attitude--like Mnemosyne--with your finger on your
+chin?
+
+Ethel. Mnemosyne! who was she? I think I like you best when you are
+quiet and gentle, and not when you are flaming out and sarcastic, sir.
+And so you think you will never be a famous painter? They are quite
+in society here. I was so pleased, because two of them dined at the
+Tuileries when grandmamma was there; and she mistook one, who was
+covered all over with crosses, for an ambassador, I believe, till the
+Queen call him Monsieur Delaroche. She says there is no knowing people
+in this country. And do you think you will never be able to paint as
+well as M. Delaroche?
+
+Clive. No--never.
+
+Ethel. And--and--you will never give up painting?
+
+Clive. No--never. That would be like leaving your friend who was poor;
+or deserting your mistress because you were disappointed about her
+money. They do those things in the great world, Ethel.
+
+Ethel (with a sigh). Yes.
+
+Clive. If it is so false, and base, and hollow, this great world--if its
+aims are so mean, its successes so paltry, the sacrifices it asks of you
+so degrading, the pleasures it gives you so wearisome, shameful even,
+why does Ethel Newcome cling to it? Will you be fairer, dear, with any
+other name than your own? Will you be happier, after a month, at bearing
+a great title, with a man whom you can't esteem, tied for ever to you,
+to be the father of Ethel's children, and the lord and master of her
+life and actions? The proudest woman in the world consents to bend
+herself to this ignominy, and own that a coronet is a bribe sufficient
+for her honour! What is the end of a Christian life, Ethel; a girl's
+pure nurture?--it can't be this! Last week, as we walked in the garden
+here, and heard the nuns singing in their chapel, you said how hard it
+was that poor women should be imprisoned so, and were thankful that in
+England we had abolished that slavery. Then you cast your eyes to the
+ground, and mused as you paced the walk; and thought, I know, that
+perhaps their lot was better than some others.
+
+Ethel. Yes, I did. I was thinking that almost all women are made slaves
+one way or other, and that these poor nuns perhaps were better off than
+we are.
+
+Clive. I never will quarrel with nun or matron for following her
+vocation. But for our women, who are free, why should they rebel against
+Nature, shut their hearts up, sell their lives for rank and money, and
+forgo the most precious right of their liberty? Look, Ethel, dear. I
+love you so, that if I thought another had your heart, an honest man,
+a loyal gentleman, like--like him of last year even, I think I could go
+back with a God bless you, and take to my pictures again, and work on in
+my own humble way. You seem like a queen to me, somehow; and I am but a
+poor, humble fellow, who might be happy, I think, if you were. In those
+balls, where I have seen you surrounded by those brilliant young men,
+noble and wealthy, admirers like me, I have often thought, "How could
+I aspire to such a creature, and ask her to forgo a palace to share the
+crust of a poor painter?"
+
+Ethel. You spoke quite scornfully of palaces just now, Clive. I won't
+say a word about the--the regard which you express for me. I think you
+have it. Indeed, I do. But it were best not said, Clive; best for me,
+perhaps, not to own that I know it. In your speeches, my poor boy--and
+you will please not to make any more, or I never can see you or speak to
+you again, never--you forgot one part of a girl's duty: obedience to her
+parents. They would never agree to my marrying any one below--any one
+whose union would not be advantageous in a worldly point of view. I
+never would give such pain to the poor father, or to the kind soul who
+never said a harsh word to me since I was born. My grandmamma is kind,
+too, in her way. I came to her of my own free will. When she said she
+would leave me her fortune, do you think it was for myself alone that I
+was glad? My father's passion was to make an estate, and all my brothers
+and sisters will be but slenderly portioned. Lady Kew said she would
+help them if I came to her--and--it is the welfare of those little
+people that depends upon me, Clive. Now, do you see, brother, why you
+must speak to me so no more? There is the carriage. God bless you, dear
+Clive.
+
+(Clive sees the carriage drive away after Miss Newcome has entered it
+without once looking up to the window where he stands. When it is gone
+he goes to the opposite windows of the salon, which are open, towards
+the garden. The chapel music begins to play from the Convent, next door.
+As he hears it he sinks down, his head in his hands.)
+
+Enter Madame de Florac (She goes to him with anxious looks.). What hast
+thou, my child? Hast thou spoken?
+
+Clive (very steadily). Yes.
+
+Madame de F. And she loves thee? I know she loves thee.
+
+Clive. You hear the organ of the convent?
+
+Madame de F. Qu'as tu?
+
+Clive. I might as well hope to marry one of the sisters of yonder
+convent, dear lady. (He sinks down again, and she kisses him.)
+
+Clive. I never had a mother; but you seem like one.
+
+Madame de F. Mon fils! Oh, mon fils!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII. In which Benedick is a Married Man
+
+
+We have all heard of the dying French Duchess, who viewed her coming
+dissolution and subsequent fate so easily, because she said she was sure
+that Heaven must deal politely with a person of her quality;--I
+suppose Lady Kew had some such notions regarding people of rank: her
+long-suffering towards them was extreme; in fact, there were vices which
+the old lady thought pardonable, and even natural, in a young nobleman
+of high station, which she never would have excused in persons of vulgar
+condition.
+
+Her ladyship's little knot of associates and scandal-bearers--elderly
+roues and ladies of the world, whose business it was to know all sorts
+of noble intrigues and exalted tittle-tattle; what was happening among
+the devotees of the exiled court at Frobsdorf; what among the citizen
+princes of the Tuileries; who was the reigning favourite of the Queen
+Mother at Aranjuez; who was smitten with whom at Vienna or Naples;
+and the last particulars of the chroniques scandaleuses of Paris and
+London;--Lady Kew, I say, must have been perfectly aware of my Lord
+Farintosh's amusements, associates, and manner of life, and yet she
+never, for one moment, exhibited any anger or dislike towards that
+nobleman. Her amiable heart was so full of kindness and forgiveness
+towards the young prodigal that, even without any repentance on his
+part, she was ready to take him to her old arms, and give him her
+venerable benediction. Pathetic sweetness of nature! Charming tenderness
+of disposition! With all his faults and wickednesses, his follies
+and his selfishness, there was no moment when Lady Kew would not have
+received the young lord, and endowed him with the hand of her darling
+Ethel.
+
+But the hopes which this fond forgiving creature had nurtured for one
+season, and carried on so resolutely to the next, were destined to
+be disappointed yet a second time, by a most provoking event, which
+occurred in the Newcome family. Ethel was called away suddenly from
+Paris by her father's third and last paralytic seizure. When she reached
+her home, Sir Brian could not recognise her. A few hours after her
+arrival, all the vanities of the world were over for him: and Sir Barnes
+Newcome, Baronet, reigned in his stead. The day after Sir Brian was laid
+in his vault at Newcome--a letter appeared in the local papers addressed
+to the Independent Electors of that Borough, in which his orphan son,
+feelingly alluding to the virtue, the services, and the political
+principles of the deceased, offered himself as a candidate for the seat
+in Parliament now vacant. Sir Barnes announced that he should speedily
+pay his respects in person to the friends and supporters of his lamented
+father. That he was a staunch friend of our admirable constitution
+need not be said. That he was a firm, but conscientious upholder of our
+Protestant religion, all who knew Barnes Newcome must be aware. That he
+would do his utmost to advance the interests of this great agricultural,
+this great manufacturing county and borough, we may be sure he avowed;
+as that he would be (if returned to represent Newcome in Parliament) the
+advocate of every rational reform, the unhesitating opponent of every
+reckless innovation. In fine, Barnes Newcome's manifesto to the Electors
+of Newcome was as authentic a document and gave him credit for as many
+public virtues, as that slab over poor Sir Brian's bones in the chancel
+of Newcome church, which commemorated the good qualities of the defunct,
+and the grief of his heir.
+
+In spite of the virtues, personal and inherited, of Barnes, his seat for
+Newcome was not got without a contest. The dissenting interest and the
+respectable Liberals of the borough wished to set up Samuel Higg, Esq.;
+against Sir Barnes Newcome: and now it was that Barnes's civilities of
+the previous year, aided by Madame de Moncontour's influence over her
+brother, bore their fruit. Mr. Higg declined to stand against Sir Barnes
+Newcome, although Higg's political principles were by no means those of
+the honourable Baronet; and the candidate from London, whom the Newcome
+extreme Radicals set up against Barnes, was nowhere on the poll when the
+day of election came. So Barnes had the desire of his heart; and, within
+two months after his father's demise, he sate in Parliament as Member
+for Newcome.
+
+The bulk of the late Baronet's property descended, of course, to his
+eldest son: who grumbled, nevertheless, at the provision made for his
+brothers and sisters, and that the town-house should have been left to
+Lady Anne, who was too poor to inhabit it. But Park Lane is the best
+situation in London, and Lady Anne's means were greatly improved by the
+annual produce of the house in Park Lane, which, as we all know, was
+occupied by a foreign minister for several subsequent seasons. Strange
+mutations of fortune: old places; new faces; what Londoner does not see
+and speculate upon them every day? Coelia's boudoir, who is dead with
+the daisies over her at Kensal Green, is now the chamber where Delia
+is consulting Dr. Locock, or Julia's children are romping: Florio's
+dining-tables have now Pollio's wine upon them: Calista, being a widow,
+and (to the surprise of everybody who knew Trimalchio, and enjoyed his
+famous dinners) left but very poorly off, lets the house, and the
+rich, chaste, and appropriate planned furniture, by Dowbiggin, and the
+proceeds go to keep her little boys at Eton. The next year, as Mr. Clive
+Newcome rode by the once familiar mansion (whence the hatchment had been
+removed, announcing that there was in Coelo Quies for the late Sir
+Brian Newcome, Bart.), alien faces looked from over the flowers in the
+balconies. He got a card for an entertainment from the occupant of the
+mansion, H.E. the Bulgarian minister; and there was the same crowd in
+the reception-room and on the stairs, the same grave men from Gunter's
+distributing the refreshments in the dining-room, the same old Smee, R.
+A. (always in the room where the edibles were), cringing and flattering
+to the new occupants; and the same effigy of poor Sir Brian, in
+his deputy-lieutenant's uniform, looking blankly down from over the
+sideboard, at the feast which his successors were giving. A dreamy old
+ghost of a picture. Have you ever looked at those round George IV.'s
+banqueting-hall at Windsor? Their frames still hold them, but they smile
+ghostly smiles, and swagger in robes and velvets which are quite faint
+and faded: their crimson coats have a twilight tinge: the lustre of
+their stars has twinkled out: they look as if they were about to flicker
+off the wall and retire to join their originals in limbo.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+Nearly three years had elapsed since the good Colonel's departure for
+India, and during this time certain changes had occurred in the lives
+of the principal actors and the writer of this history. As regards the
+latter, it must be stated that the dear old firm of Lamb Court had been
+dissolved, the junior member having contracted another partnership. The
+chronicler of these memoirs was a bachelor no longer. My wife and I had
+spent the winter at Rome (favourite resort of young married couples);
+and had heard from the artists there Clive's name affectionately
+repeated; and many accounts of his sayings and doings, his merry
+supper-parties, and the talents of young Ridley, his friend. When we
+came to London in the spring, almost our first visit was to Clive's
+apartments in Charlotte Street, whither my wife delightedly went to give
+her hand to the young painter.
+
+But Clive no longer inhabited that quiet region. On driving to the house
+we found a bright brass plate, with the name of Mr. J. J. Ridley on the
+door, and it was J. J.'s hand which I shook (his other being engaged
+with a great palette, and a sheaf of painting-brushes) when we entered
+the well-known quarters. Clive's picture hung over the mantelpiece,
+where his father's head used to hang in our time--a careful and
+beautifully executed portrait of the lad in a velvet coat and a Roman
+hat, with that golden beard which was sacrificed to the exigencies
+of London fashion. I showed Laura the likeness until she could become
+acquainted with the original. On her expressing her delight at the
+picture, the painter was pleased to say, in his modest blushing way,
+that he would be glad to execute my wife's portrait too, nor, as I
+think, could any artist find a subject more pleasing.
+
+After admiring others of Mr. Ridley's works, our talk naturally reverted
+to his predecessor. Clive had migrated to much more splendid quarters.
+Had we not heard? he had become a rich man, a man of fashion. "I fear
+he is very lazy about the arts," said J. J., with regret on his
+countenance; "though I begged and prayed him to be faithful to his
+profession. He would have done very well in it, in portrait-painting
+especially. Look here, and here, and here!" said Ridley, producing fine
+vigorous sketches of Clive's. "He had the art of seizing the likeness,
+and of making all his people look like gentlemen, too. He was improving
+every day, when this abominable bank came in the way, and stopped him."
+
+What bank? I did not know the new Indian bank of which the Colonel was
+a director. Then, of course, I was aware that the mercantile affair in
+question was the Bundelcund Bank, about which the Colonel had written to
+me from India more than a year since, announcing that fortunes were to
+be made by it, and that he had reserved shares for me in the
+company. Laura admired all Clive's sketches, which his affectionate
+brother-artist showed to her with the exception of one representing the
+reader's humble servant; which, Mrs. Pendennis considered, by no means
+did justice to the original.
+
+Bidding adieu to the kind J. J., and leaving him to pursue his art, in
+that silent serious way in which he daily laboured at it, we drove to
+Fitzroy Square hard by, where I was not displeased to show the good old
+hospitable James Binnie the young lady who bore my name. But here, too,
+we were disappointed. Placards wafered in the windows announced that
+the old house was to let. The woman who kept it brought a card in Mrs.
+Mackenzie's frank handwriting, announcing Mr. James Binnie's address was
+"Poste-restante, Pau, in the Pyrenees," and that his London agents were
+Messrs. So-and-so. The woman said she believed the gentleman had been
+unwell. The house, too, looked very pale, dismal, and disordered. We
+drove away from the door, grieving to think that ill-health, or any
+other misfortunes, had befallen good old James.
+
+Mrs. Pendennis drove back to our lodgings, Brixham's, in Jermyn Street,
+while I sped to the City, having business in that quarter. It has been
+said that I kept a small account with Hobson Brothers, to whose bank I
+went, and entered the parlour with that trepidation which most poor men
+feel on presenting themselves before City magnates and capitalists.
+Mr. Hobson Newcome shook hands most jovially and good-naturedly,
+congratulated me on my marriage, and so forth, and presently Sir Barnes
+Newcome made his appearance, still wearing his mourning for his deceased
+father.
+
+Nothing could be more kind, pleasant, and cordial than Sir Barnes's
+manner. He seemed to know well about my affairs; complimented me on
+every kind of good fortune; had heard that I had canvassed the borough
+in which I lived; hoped sincerely to see me in Parliament and on the
+right side; was most anxious to become acquainted with Mrs. Pendennis,
+of whom Lady Rockminster said all sorts of kind things; and asked for
+our address, in order that Lady Clara Newcome might have the pleasure of
+calling on my wife. This ceremony was performed soon afterwards; and
+an invitation to dinner from Sir Barnes and Lady Clara Newcome speedily
+followed it.
+
+Sir Barnes Newcome, Bart., M.P., I need not say, no longer inhabited the
+small house which he had occupied immediately after his marriage: but
+dwelt in a much more spacious mansion in Belgravia, where he entertained
+his friends. Now that he had come into his kingdom, I must say
+that Barnes was by no means so insufferable as in the days of his
+bachelorhood. He had sown his wild oats, and spoke with regret and
+reserve of that season of his moral culture. He was grave, sarcastic,
+statesmanlike; did not try to conceal his baldness (as he used before
+his father's death, by bringing lean wisps of hair over his forehead
+from the back of his head); talked a great deal about the House; was
+assiduous in his attendance there and in the City; and conciliating with
+all the world. It seemed as if we were all his constituents, and though
+his efforts to make himself agreeable were rather apparent, the effect
+succeeded pretty well. We met Mr. and Mrs. Hobson Newcome, and Clive,
+and Miss Ethel looking beautiful in her black robes. It was a family
+party, Sir Barnes said, giving us to understand, with a decorous
+solemnity in face and voice, that no large parties as yet could be
+received in that house of mourning.
+
+To this party was added, rather to my surprise, my Lord Highgate, who
+under the sobriquet of Jack Belsize has been presented to the reader of
+this history. Lord Highgate gave Lady Clara his arm to dinner, but
+went and took a place next Miss Newcome, on the other side of her; that
+immediately by Lady Clara being reserved for a guest who had not as yet
+made his appearance.
+
+Lord Highgate's attentions to his neighbour, his laughing and talking,
+were incessant; so much so that Clive, from his end of the table,
+scowled in wrath at Jack Belsize's assiduities: it was evident that the
+youth, though hopeless, was still jealous and in love with his charming
+cousin.
+
+Barnes Newcome was most kind to all his guests: from Aunt Hobson to your
+humble servant, there was not one but the of master the house had an
+agreeable word for him. Even for his cousin Samuel Newcome, a gawky
+youth with an eruptive countenance, Barnes had appropriate words of
+conversation, and talked about King's College, of which the lad was an
+ornament, with the utmost affability. He complimented that institution
+and young Samuel, and by that shot knocked not only over Sam but his
+mamma too. He talked to Uncle Hobson about his crops; to Clive about his
+pictures; to me about the great effect which a certain article in the
+Pall Mall Gazette had produced in the House, where the Chancellor of
+the Exchequer was perfectly livid with fury, and Lord John bursting out
+laughing at the attack: in fact, nothing could be more amiable than our
+host on this day. Lady Clara was very pretty--grown a little stouter
+since her marriage; the change only became her. She was a little silent,
+but then she had Uncle Hobson on her left-hand side, between whom and
+her ladyship there could not be much in common, and the place at the
+right hand was still vacant. The person with whom she talked most freely
+was Clive, who had made a beautiful drawing of her and her little girl,
+for which the mother and the father too, as it appeared, were very
+grateful.
+
+What had caused this change in Barnes's behaviour? Our particular merits
+or his own private reform? In the two years over which this narrative
+has had to run in the course of as many chapters, the writer had
+inherited a property so small that it could not occasion a banker's
+civility; and I put down Sir Barnes Newcome's politeness to a sheer
+desire to be well with me. But with Lord Highgate and Clive the case was
+different, as you must now hear.
+
+Lord Highgate, having succeeded to his father's title and fortune, had
+paid every shilling of his debts, and had sowed his wild oats to the
+very last corn. His lordship's account at Hobson Brothers was
+very large. Painful events of three years' date, let us hope, were
+forgotten--gentlemen cannot go on being in love and despairing, and
+quarrelling for ever. When he came into his funds, Highgate behaved with
+uncommon kindness to Rooster, who was always straitened for money: and
+when the late Lord Dorking died and Rooster succeeded to him, there was
+a meeting at Chanticlere between Highgate and Barnes Newcome and his
+wife, which went off very comfortably. At Chanticlere the Dowager Lady
+Kew and Miss Newcome were also staying, when Lord Highgate announced his
+prodigious admiration for the young lady; and, it was said, corrected
+Farintosh, as a low-minded, foul-tongued young cub, for daring to speak
+disrespectfully of her. Nevertheless, vous concevez, when a man of the
+Marquis's rank was supposed to look with the eyes of admiration upon a
+young lady, Lord Highgate would not think of spoiling sport, and he left
+Chanticlere declaring that he was always destined to be unlucky in love.
+When old Lady Kew was obliged to go to Vichy for her lumbago, Highgate
+said to Barnes, "Do ask your charming sister to come to you in London;
+she will bore herself to death with the old woman at Vichy, or with her
+mother at Rugby" (whither Lady Anne had gone to get her boys educated),
+and accordingly Miss Newcome came on a visit to her brother and sister,
+at whose house we have just had the honour of seeing her.
+
+When Rooster took his seat in the House of Lords, he was introduced by
+Highgate and Kew, as Highgate had been introduced by Kew previously.
+Thus these three gentlemen all rode in gold coaches; had all got
+coronets on their heads; as you will, my respected young friend, if
+you are the eldest son of a peer who dies before you. And now they were
+rich, they were all going to be very good boys, let us hope. Kew, we
+know, married one of the Dorking family, that second Lady Henrietta
+Pulleyn, whom we described as frisking about at Baden, and not in the
+least afraid of him. How little the reader knew, to whom we introduced
+the girl in that chatty offhand way, that one day the young creature
+would be a countess! But we knew it all the while--and, when she was
+walking about with the governess, or romping with her sisters; and
+when she had dinner at one o'clock; and when she wore a pinafore very
+likely--we secretly respected her as the future Countess of Kew, and
+mother of the Viscount Walham.
+
+Lord Kew was very happy with his bride, and very good to her. He took
+Lady Kew to Paris, for a marriage trip; but they lived almost altogether
+at Kewbury afterwards, where his lordship sowed tame oats now after his
+wild ones, and became one of the most active farmers of his county. He
+and the Newcomes were not very intimate friends; for Lord Kew was heard
+to say that he disliked Barnes more after his marriage than before. And
+the two sisters, Lady Clara and Lady Kew, had a quarrel on one occasion,
+when the latter visited London just before the dinner at which we have
+just assisted--nay, at which we are just assisting, took place,--a
+quarrel about Highgate's attentions to Ethel, very likely. Kew was
+dragged into it, and hot words passed between him and Jack Belsize; and
+Jack did not go down to Kewbury afterwards, though Kew's little boy was
+christened after him. All these interesting details about people of the
+very highest rank, we are supposed to whisper in the reader's ear as
+we are sitting at a Belgravian dinner-table. My dear Barmecide friend,
+isn't it pleasant to be in such fine company?
+
+And now we must tell how it is that Clive Newcome, Esq., whose eyes are
+flashing fire across the flowers of the table at Lord Highgate, who is
+making himself so agreeable to Miss Ethel--now we must tell how it is
+that Clive and his cousin Barnes have grown to be friends again.
+
+The Bundelcund Bank, which had been established for four years, had
+now grown to be one of the most flourishing commercial institutions in
+Bengal. Founded, as the prospectus announced, at a time when all private
+credit was shaken by the failure of the great Agency Houses, of which
+the downfall had carried dismay and ruin throughout the Presidency, the
+B. B. had been established on the only sound principle of commercial
+prosperity--that is association. The native capitalists, headed by the
+great firm of Rummun Loll and Co., of Calcutta, had largely embarked
+in the B. B., and the officers of the two services and the European
+mercantile body of Calcutta had been invited to take shares in an
+institution which, to merchants, native and English, civilian and
+military men, was alike advantageous and indispensable. How many young
+men of the latter services had been crippled for life by the ruinous
+cost of agencies, of which the profits to the agents themselves were so
+enormous! The shareholders of the B. B. were their own agents; and
+the greatest capitalist in India as well as the youngest ensign in the
+service might invest at the largest and safest premium, and borrow at
+the smallest interest, by becoming according to his means, a shareholder
+in the B. B. Their correspondents were established in each presidency
+and in every chief city of India, as well as at Sydney, Singapore,
+Canton, and, of course. London. With China they did, an immense
+opium-trade, of which the profits were so great, that it was only in
+private sittings of the B. B. managing committee that the details and
+accounts of these operations could be brought forward. Otherwise the
+books of the bank were open to every shareholder; and the ensign or
+the young civil servant was at liberty at any time to inspect his own
+private account as well as the common ledger. With New South Wales they
+carried on a vast trade in wool, supplying that great colony with goods,
+which their London agents enabled them to purchase in such a way as to
+give them the command of the market. As if to add to their prosperity,
+coppermines were discovered on lands in the occupation of the B. Banking
+Company, which gave the most astonishing returns. And throughout the
+vast territories of British India, through the great native firm of
+Rummun Loll and Co., the Bundelcund Banking Company had possession of
+the native markets. The order from Birmingham for idols alone (made with
+their copper and paid in their wool) was enough to make the Low Church
+party in England cry out; and a debate upon this subject actually took
+place in the House of Commons, of which the effect was to send up the
+shares of the Bundelcund Banking Company very considerably upon the
+London Exchange.
+
+The fifth half-yearly dividend was announced at twelve and a quarter per
+cent of the paid-up capital: the accounts from the copper-mine sent
+the dividend up to a still greater height, and carried the shares to an
+extraordinary premium. In the third year of the concern, the house of
+Hobson Brothers, of London, became the agents of the Bundelcund
+Banking Company of India and amongst our friends, James Binnie, who
+had prudently held out for some time and Clive Newcome, Esq., became
+shareholders, Clive's good father having paid the first instalments
+of the lad's shares up in Calcutta, and invested every rupee he could
+himself command in this enterprise. When Hobson Brothers joined it, no
+wonder James Binnie was convinced; Clive's friend, the Frenchman, and
+through that connexion the house of Higg, of Newcome and Manchester,
+entered into the affair; and amongst the minor contributors in England
+we may mention Miss Cann, who took a little fifty-pound-note share and
+dear old Miss Honeyman; and J. J., and his father, Ridley, who brought a
+small bag of saving--all knowing that their Colonel, who was eager that
+his friends should participate in his good fortune, would never lead
+them wrong. To Clive's surprise Mrs. Mackenzie, between whom and himself
+there was a considerable coolness, came to his chambers, and with a
+solemn injunction that the matter between them should be quite private,
+requested him to purchase 1500 pounds worth of Bundelcund shares for
+her and her darling girls, which he did, astonished to find the thrifty
+widow in possession of so much money. Had Mr. Pendennis's mind not been
+bent at this moment on quite other subjects, he might have increased his
+own fortune by the Bundelcund Bank speculation; but in these two years
+I was engaged in matrimonial affairs (having Clive Newcome, Esq., as my
+groomsman on a certain interesting occasion). When we returned from our
+tour abroad the India Bank shares were so very high that I did not care
+to purchase, though I found an affectionate letter from our good Colonel
+(enjoining me to make my fortune) awaiting me at the agent's, and my
+wife received a pair of beautiful Cashmere shawls from the same kind
+friend.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX. Contains at least six more Courses and two Desserts
+
+
+The banker's dinner-party over, we returned to our apartments, having
+dropped Major Pendennis at his lodgings, and there, as the custom is
+amongst most friendly married couples, talked over the company and the
+dinner. I thought my wife would naturally have liked Sir Barnes Newcome,
+who was very attentive to her, took her to dinner as the bride, and
+talked ceaselessly to her during the whole entertainment.
+
+Laura said No--she did not know why--could there be any better reason?
+There was a tone about Sir Barnes Newcome she did not like--especially
+in his manner to women.
+
+I remarked that he spoke sharply and in a sneering manner to his wife,
+and treated one or two remarks which she made as if she was an idiot.
+
+Mrs. Pendennis flung up her head as much as to say, "and so she is."
+
+Mr. Pendennis. What, the wife too, my dear Laura! I should have thought
+such a pretty, simple, innocent young woman, with just enough good looks
+to make her pass muster, who is very well bred and not brilliant at
+all,--I should have thought such a one might have secured a sister's
+approbation.
+
+Mrs. Pendennis. You fancy we are all jealous of one another. No protests
+of ours can take that notion out of your heads. My dear Pen, I do not
+intend to try. We are not jealous of mediocrity: we are not patient
+of it. I dare say we are angry because we see men admire it so. You
+gentlemen, who pretend to be our betters, give yourselves such airs of
+protection, and profess such a lofty superiority over us, prove it by
+quitting the cleverest woman in the room for the first pair of bright
+eyes and dimpled cheeks that enter. It was those charms which attracted
+you in Lady Clara, sir.
+
+Pendennis. I think she is very pretty, and very innocent, and artless.
+
+Mrs. P. Not very pretty, and perhaps not so very artless.
+
+Pendennis. How can you tell, you wicked woman? Are you such a profound
+deceiver yourself, that you can instantly detect artifice in others? O
+Laura!
+
+Mrs. P. We can detect all sorts of things. The inferior animals have
+instincts, you know. (I must say my wife is always very satirical upon
+this point of the relative rank of the sexes.) One thing I am sure of
+is, that she is not happy; and oh, Pen! that she does not care much for
+her little girl.
+
+Pendennis. How do you know that, my dear?
+
+Mrs. P. We went upstairs to see the child after dinner. It was at my
+wish. The mother did not offer to go. The child was awake and crying.
+Lady Clara did not offer to take it. Ethel--Miss Newcome took it, rather
+to my surprise, for she seems very haughty; and the nurse, who I suppose
+was at supper, came running up at the noise, and then the poor little
+thing was quiet.
+
+Pendennis. I remember we heard the music as the dining-room door
+was open; and Newcome said, "That is what you will have to expect,
+Pendennis."
+
+Mrs. P. Hush, sir! If my baby cries, I think you must expect me to run
+out of the room. I liked Miss Newcome after seeing her with the poor
+little thing. She looked so handsome as she walked with it! I longed to
+have it myself.
+
+Pendennis. Tout vient a fin, a qui sait----
+
+Mrs. P. Don't be silly. What a dreadful dreadful place this great world
+of yours is, Arthur; where husbands do not seem to care for their wives;
+where mothers do not love their children; where children love their
+nurses best; where men talk what they call gallantry!
+
+Pendennis. What?
+
+Mrs. P. Yes, such as that dreary, languid, pale, bald, cadaverous,
+leering man whispered to me. Oh, how I dislike him! I am sure he is
+unkind to his wife. I am sure he has a bad temper; and if there is any
+excuse for----
+
+Pendennis. For what?
+
+Mrs. P. For nothing. But you heard yourself that he had a bad temper,
+and spoke sneeringly to his wife. What could make her marry him?
+
+Pendennis. Money, and the desire of papa and mamma. For the same reason
+Clive's flame, poor Miss Newcome, was brought out to-day; that vacant
+seat at her side was for Lord Farintosh, who did not come. And the
+Marquis not being present, the Baron took his innings. Did you not see
+how tender he was to her, and how fierce poor Clive looked?
+
+Mrs. P. Lord Highgate was very attentive to Miss Newcome, was he?
+
+Pendennis. And some years ago, Lord Highgate was breaking his heart
+about whom do you think? about Lady Clara Pulleyn, our hostess of last
+night. He was Jack Belsize then, a younger son, plunged over head
+and ears in debt; and of course there could be no marriage. Clive was
+present at Baden when a terrible scene took place, and carried off poor
+Jack to Switzerland and Italy, where he remained till his father died,
+and he came into the title in which he rejoices. And now he is off with
+the old love, Laura, and on with the new. Why do you look at me so? Are
+you thinking that other people have been in love two or three times too?
+
+Mrs. P. I am thinking that I should not like to live in London, Arthur.
+
+And this was all that Mrs. Laura could be brought to say. When this
+young woman chooses to be silent, there is no power that can extract a
+word from her. It is true that she is generally in the right; but that
+is only the more aggravating. Indeed, what can be more provoking, after
+a dispute with your wife, than to find it is you, and not she, who has
+been in the wrong?
+
+
+Sir Barnes Newcome politely caused us to understand that the
+entertainment of which we had just partaken was given in honour of the
+bride. Clive must needs not be outdone in hospitality; and invited us
+and others to a fine feast at the Star and Garter at Richmond, where
+Mrs. Pendennis was placed at his right hand. I smile as I think how much
+dining has been already commemorated in these veracious pages; but the
+story is an everyday record; and does not dining form a certain part of
+the pleasure and business of every day? It is at that pleasant hour
+that our set has the privilege of meeting the other. The morning man and
+woman alike devote to business; or pass mainly in the company of their
+own kind. John has his office; Jane her household, her nursery, her
+milliner, her daughters and their masters. In the country he has his
+hunting, his fishing, his farming, his letters; she her schools, her
+poor, her garden, or what not. Parted through the shining hours, and
+improving them, let us trust, we come together towards sunset only, we
+make merry and amuse ourselves. We chat with our pretty neighbour, or
+survey the young ones sporting; we make love and are jealous; we dance,
+or obsequiously turn over the leaves of Cecilia's music-book; we play
+whist, or go to sleep in the arm-chair, according to our ages and
+conditions. Snooze gently in thy arm-chair, thou easy bald-head! play
+your whist, or read your novel, or talk scandal over your work, ye
+worthy dowagers and fogies! Meanwhile the young ones frisk about, or
+dance, or sing, or laugh; or whisper behind curtains in moonlit windows;
+or shirk away into the garden, and come back smelling of cigars; nature
+having made them so to do.
+
+Nature at this time irresistibly impelled Clive Newcome towards
+love-making. It was pairing-season with him. Mr. Clive was now some
+three-and-twenty years old: enough has been said about his good looks,
+which were in truth sufficient to make him a match for the young lady
+on whom he had set his heart, and from whom, during this entertainment
+which he gave to my wife, he could never keep his eyes away for three
+minutes. Laura's did not need to be so keen as they were in order to
+see what poor Clive's condition was. She did not in the least grudge the
+young fellow's inattention to herself; or feel hurt that he did not seem
+to listen when she spoke; she conversed with J. J., her neighbour, who
+was very modest and agreeable; while her husband, not so well pleased,
+had Mrs. Hobson Newcome for his partner during the chief part of the
+entertainment. Mrs. Hobson and Lady Clara were the matrons who gave
+the sanction of their presence to this bachelor-party. Neither of their
+husbands could come to Clive's little fete; had they not the City and
+the House of Commons to attend? My uncle, Major Pendennis, was another
+of the guests; who for his part found the party was what you young
+fellows call very slow. Dreading Mrs. Hobson and her powers of
+conversation, the old gentleman nimbly skipped out of her neighbourhood,
+and fell by the side of Lord Highgate, to whom the Major was inclined
+to make himself very pleasant. But Lord Highgate's broad back was
+turned upon his neighbour, who was forced to tell stories to Captain
+Crackthorpe, which had amused dukes and marquises in former days,
+and were surely quite good enough for any baron in this realm. "Lord
+Highgate sweet upon la belle Newcome, is he?" said the testy Major
+afterwards. "He seemed to me to talk to Lady Clara the whole time. When
+I awoke in the garden after dinner, as Mrs. Hobson was telling one of
+her confounded long stories, I found her audience was diminished to
+one. Crackthorpe, Lord Highgate, and Lady Clara, we had all been sitting
+there when the bankeress cut in (in the mid of a very good story I
+was telling them, which entertained them very much), and never ceased
+talking till I fell off into a doze. When I roused myself, begad, she
+was still going on. Crackthorpe was off, smoking a cigar on the terrace:
+my Lord and Lady Clara were nowhere; and you four, with the little
+painter, were chatting cosily in another arbour. Behaved himself very
+well, the little painter. Doosid good dinner Ellis gave us. But as for
+Highgate being aux soins with la belle Banquiere, trust me, my boy,
+he is--upon my word, my dear, it seemed to me his thoughts went quite
+another way. To be sure, Lady Clara is a belle Banquiere too now. He,
+he, he! How could he say he had no carriage to go home in? He came
+down in Crackthorpe's cab, who passed us just now, driving back young
+What-dye-call the painter."
+
+Thus did the Major discourse, as we returned towards the City. I could
+see in the open carriage which followed us (Lady Clara Newcome's) Lord
+Highgate's white hat, by Clive's on the back seat.
+
+Laura looked at her husband. The same thought may have crossed their
+minds, though neither uttered it; but although Sir Barnes and Lady
+Clara Newcome offered us other civilities during our stay in London,
+no inducements could induce Laura to accept the proffered friendship
+of that lady. When Lady Clara called, my wife was not at home; when she
+invited us, Laura pleaded engagements. At first she bestowed on Miss
+Newcome, too, a share of this haughty dislike, and rejected the advances
+which that young lady, who professed to like my wife very much, made
+towards an intimacy. When I appealed to her (for Newcome's house was
+after all a very pleasant one, and you met the best people there), my
+wife looked at me with an expression of something like scorn, and
+said: "Why don't I like Miss Newcome? Of course because I am jealous of
+her--all women, you know, Arthur, are jealous of such beauties." I could
+get for a long while no better explanation than these sneers, for my
+wife's antipathy towards this branch of the Newcome family; but an event
+presently came which silenced my remonstrances, and showed to me, that
+Laura had judged Barnes and his wife only too well.
+
+Poor Mrs. Hobson Newcome had reason to be sulky at the neglect which all
+the Richmond party showed her, for nobody, not even Major Pendennis, as
+we have seen, would listen to her intellectual conversation; nobody, not
+even Lord Highgate, would drive back to town in her carriage, though
+the vehicle was large and empty, and Lady Clara's barouche, in which
+his lordship chose to take a place, had already three occupants within
+it:--but in spite of these rebuffs and disappointments the virtuous lady
+of Bryanstone Square was bent upon being good-natured and hospitable;
+and I have to record, in the present chapter, yet one more feast
+of which Mr. and Mrs. Pendennis partook at the expense of the most
+respectable Newcome family.
+
+Although Mrs. Laura here also appeared, and had the place of honour in
+her character of bride, I am bound to own my opinion that Mrs. Hobson
+only made us the pretext of her party, and that in reality it was given
+to persons of a much more exalted rank. We were the first to arrive,
+our good old Major, the most punctual of men, bearing us company. Our
+hostess was arrayed in unusual state and splendour; her fat neck was
+ornamented with jewels, rich bracelets decorated her arms, and this
+Bryanstone Square Cornelia had likewise her family jewels distributed
+round her, priceless male and female Newcome gems, from the King's
+College youth, with whom we have made a brief acquaintance, and his
+elder sister, now entering into the world, down to the last little
+ornament of the nursery, in a prodigious new sash, with ringlets hot and
+crisp from the tongs of a Marylebone hairdresser, We had seen the cherub
+faces of some of these darlings pressed against the drawing-room
+windows as our carriage drove up to the door; when, after a few minutes'
+conversation, another vehicle arrived, away they dashed to the windows
+again, the innocent little dears crying out, "Here's the Marquis;"
+and in sadder tones, "No, it isn't the Marquis," by which artless
+expressions they showed how eager they were to behold an expected guest
+of a rank only inferior to Dukes in this great empire.
+
+Putting two and two together, as the saying is, it was not difficult
+for me to guess who the expected Marquis was--and, indeed, the King's
+College youth set that question at once to rest, by wagging his head at
+me, and winking his eye, and saying, "We expect Farintosh."
+
+"Why, my dearest children," Matronly Virtue exclaimed, "this anxiety
+to behold the young Marquis of Farintosh, whom we expect at our modest
+table, Mrs. Pendennis, to-day? Twice you have been at the window in your
+eagerness to look for him. Louisa, you silly child, do you imagine that
+his lordship will appear in his robes and coronet? Rodolf, you absurd
+boy, do you think that a Marquis is other than a man? I have never
+admired aught but intellect, Mrs. Pendennis; that, let us be thankful,
+is the only true title to distinction in our country nowadays."
+
+"Begad, sir," whispers the old Major to me, "intellect may be a doosid
+fine thing, but in my opinion, a Marquisate and eighteen or twenty
+thousand a year--I should say the Farintosh property, with the Glenlivat
+estate and the Roy property in England, must be worth nineteen thousand
+a year at the very lowest figure and I remember when this young man's
+father was only Tom Roy, of the 42nd, with no hope of succeeding to the
+title, and doosidly out at elbows too--I say what does the bankeress
+mean by chattering about intellect? Hang me, a Marquis is a Marquis; and
+Mrs. Newcome knows it as well as I do." My good Major was growing
+old, and was not unnaturally a little testy at the manner in which his
+hostess received him. Truth to tell, she hardly took any notice of him
+and cut down a couple of the old gentleman's stories before he had been
+five minutes in the room.
+
+To our party presently comes the host in a flurried countenance, with a
+white waistcoat, holding in his hand an open letter, towards which
+his wife looks with some alarm. "How dy' doo, Lady Clara, how dy' doo,
+Ethel?" he says, saluting those ladies, whom the second carriage had
+brought to us. "Sir Barnes is not coming, that's one place vacant;
+that, Lady Clara, you won't mind, you see him at home: but here's a
+disappointment for you, Miss Newcome, Lord Farintosh can't come."
+
+At this, two of the children cry out "Oh! oh!" with such a melancholy
+accent that Miss Newcome and Lady Clara burst out laughing.
+
+"Got a dreadful toothache," said Mr. Hobson; "here's his letter."
+
+"Hang it, what a bore!" cries artless young King's College.
+
+"Why a bore, Samuel? A bore, as you call it, for Lord Farintosh, I
+grant; but do you suppose that the high in station are exempt from
+the ills of mortality? I know nothing more painful than a toothache,"
+exclaims a virtuous matron, using the words of philosophy, but showing
+the countenance of anger.
+
+"Hang it, why didn't he have it out?" says Samuel.
+
+Miss Ethel laughed. "Lord Farintosh would not have that tooth out for
+the world, Samuel," she cried, gaily. "He keeps it in on purpose, and it
+always aches when he does not want to go out to dinner."
+
+"I know one humble family who will never ask him again," Mrs. Hobson
+exclaims, rustling in all her silks, and tapping her fan and her foot.
+The eclipse, however, passes off her countenance and light is restored;
+when at this moment, a cab having driven up during the period of
+darkness, the door is flung open, and Lord Highgate is announced by a
+loud-voiced butler.
+
+My wife, being still the bride on this occasion, had the honour of
+being led to the dinner-table by our banker and host. Lord Highgate was
+reserved for Mrs. Hobson, who, in an engaging manner, requested poor
+Clive to conduct his cousin Maria to dinner, handing over Miss Ethel
+to another guest. Our Major gave his arm to Lady Clara, and I perceived
+that my wife looked very grave as he passed the place where she sat, and
+seated Lady Clara in the next chair to that which Lord Highgate chanced
+to occupy. Feeling himself en vein, and the company being otherwise
+rather mum and silent, my uncle told a number of delightful anecdotes
+about the beau-monde of his time, about the Peninsular war, the Regent,
+Brummell, Lord Steyne, Pea Green Payne, and so forth. He said the
+evening was very pleasant, though some others of the party, as it
+appeared to me, scarcely seemed to think so. Clive had not a word for
+his cousin Maria, but looked across the table at Ethel all dinner-time.
+What could Ethel have to say to her partner, old Colonel Sir Donald
+M'Craw, who gobbled and drank, as his wont is, and if he had a remark
+to make, imparted it to Mrs. Hobson, at whose right hand he was sitting,
+and to whom, during the whole course, or courses, of the dinner, my Lord
+Highgate scarcely uttered one single word?
+
+His lordship was whispering all the while into the ringlets of
+Lady Clara; they were talking a jargon which their hostess scarcely
+understood, of people only known to her by her study of the Peerage.
+When we joined the ladies after dinner, Lord Highgate again made way
+towards Lady Clara, and at an order from her, as I thought, left her
+ladyship, and strove hard to engage in a conversation with Mrs. Newcome.
+I hope he succeeded in smoothing the frowns in that round little face.
+Mrs. Laura, I own, was as grave as a judge all the evening; very grave
+even and reserved with my uncle, when the hour for parting came, and we
+took him home.
+
+"He, he!" said the old man, coughing, and nodding his old head and
+laughing in his senile manner, when I saw him on the next day; "that was
+a pleasant evening we had yesterday; doosid pleasant, and I think my
+two neighbours seemed to be uncommonly pleased with each other; not an
+amusing fellow, that young painter of yours, though he is good-looking
+enough, but there's no conversation in him. Do you think of giving a
+little dinner, Arthur, in return for these hospitalities? Greenwich,
+hey, or something of that sort? I'll go you halves, sir, and we'll ask
+the young banker and bankeress--not yesterday's Amphitryon nor his wife;
+no, no, hang it! but Barnes Newcome is a devilish clever, rising man,
+and moves in about as good society as any in London. We'll ask him
+and Lady Clara and Highgate, and one or two more, and have a pleasant
+party."
+
+But to this proposal, when the old man communicated it to her, in a very
+quiet, simple, artful way, Laura, with a flushing face said No quite
+abruptly, and quitted the room, rustling in her silks, and showing at
+once dignity and indignation.
+
+
+Not many more feasts was Arthur Pendennis, senior, to have in this
+world. Not many more great men was he to flatter, nor schemes to wink
+at, nor earthly pleasures to enjoy. His long days were well-nigh ended:
+on his last couch, which Laura tended so affectionately, with his last
+breath almost, he faltered out to me. "I had other views for you, my
+boy, and once hoped to see you in a higher position in life; but I begin
+to think now, Arthur, that I was wrong; and as for that girl, sir, I am
+sure she is an angel."
+
+May I not inscribe the words with a grateful heart? Blessed he--blessed
+though maybe undeserving--who has the love of a good woman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L. Clive in New Quarters
+
+
+My wife was much better pleased with Clive than with some of his
+relatives to whom I had presented her. His face carried a recommendation
+with it that few honest people could resist. He was always a welcome
+friend in our lodgings, and even our uncle the Major signified his
+approval of the lad as a young fellow of very good manners and feelings,
+who, if he chose to throw himself away and be a painter, ma foi, was
+rich enough no doubt to follow his own caprices. Clive executed a
+capital head of Major Pendennis, which now hangs in our drawing-room
+at Fairoaks, and reminds me of that friend of my youth. Clive occupied
+ancient lofty chambers in Hanover Square now. He had furnished them in
+an antique manner, with hangings, cabinets, carved work, Venice glasses,
+fine prints, and water-colour sketches of good pictures by his own and
+other hands. He had horses to ride, and a liberal purse full of paternal
+money. Many fine equipages drew up opposite to his chambers: few artists
+had such luck as young Mr. Clive. And above his own chambers were other
+three which the young gentleman had hired, and where, says he, "I hope
+ere very long my dear old father will be lodging with me. In another
+year he says he thinks he will be able to come home; when the affairs
+of the Bank are quite settled. You shake your head! why? The shares are
+worth four times what we gave for them. We are men of fortune, Pen, I
+give you my word. You should see how much they make of me at Baynes and
+Jolly's, and how civil they are to me at Hobson Brothers'! I go into the
+City now and then, and see our manager, Mr. Blackmore. He tells me
+such stories about indigo, and wool, and copper, and sicca rupees,
+and Company's rupees. I don't know anything about the business, but my
+father likes me to go and see Mr. Blackmore. Dear cousin Barnes is for
+ever asking me to dinner; I might call Lady Clara Clara if I liked, as
+Sam Newcome does in Bryanstone Square. You can't think how kind they
+are to me there. My aunt reproaches me tenderly for not going there
+oftener--it's not very good fun dining in Bryanstone Square, is it? And
+she praises my cousin Maria to me--you should hear my aunt praise her! I
+have to take Maria down to dinner; to sit by the piano and listen to her
+songs in all languages. Do you know Maria can sing Hungarian and Polish,
+besides your common German, Spanish, and Italian? Those I have at our
+other agents', Baynes and Jolly's--Baynes's that is in the Regent's
+Park, where the girls are prettier and just as civil to me as at Aunt
+Hobson's." And here Clive would amuse us by the accounts which he gave
+us of the snares which the Misses Baynes, those young sirens of Regent's
+Park, set for him; of the songs which they sang to enchant him, the
+albums in which they besought him to draw--the thousand winning ways
+which they employed to bring him into their cave in York Terrace. But
+neither Circe's smiles nor Calypso's blandishments had any effect on
+him; his ears were stopped to their music, and his eyes rendered dull to
+their charms by those of the flighty young enchantress with whom my wife
+had of late made acquaintance.
+
+Capitalist though he was, our young fellow was still very affable. He
+forgot no old friends in his prosperity; and the lofty antique chambers
+would not unfrequently be lighted up at nights to receive F. B. and some
+of the old cronies of the Haunt, and some of the Gandishites, who,
+if Clive had been of a nature that was to be spoiled by flattery, had
+certainly done mischief to the young man. Gandish himself, when Clive
+paid a visit to that illustrious artist's Academy, received his former
+pupil as if the young fellow had been a sovereign prince almost,
+accompanied him to his horse; and would have held his stirrup as he
+mounted; whilst the beautiful daughters of the house waved adieus to
+him from the parlour-window. To the young men assembled in his Gandish
+studio, was never tired of talking about Clive. The Professor would
+take occasion to inform them that he had been to visit his distinguished
+young friend, Mr. Newcome, son of Colonel Newcome; that last evening
+he had been present at an elegant entertainment at Mr. Newcome's news
+apartments. Clive's drawings were hung up in Gandish's gallery,
+and pointed out to visitors by the worthy Professor. On one or two
+occasions, I was allowed to become a bachelor again, and participate
+in these jovial meetings. How guilty my coat was on my return home; how
+haughty the looks of the mistress of my house, as she bade Martha carry
+away the obnoxious garment! How grand F. B. used to be as president of
+Clive's smoking-party, where he laid down the law, talked the most talk,
+sang the jolliest song, and consumed the most drink of all the jolly
+talkers and drinkers! Clive's popularity rose prodigiously; not only
+youngsters, but old practitioners of the fine arts, lauded his talents.
+What a shame that his pictures were all refused this year at the
+Academy! Alfred Smee, Esq., R.A., was indignant at their rejection, but
+J. J. confessed with a sigh, and Clive owned good-naturedly, that he had
+been neglecting his business, and that his pictures were not so good as
+those of two years before. I am afraid Mr. Clive went to too many balls
+and parties, to clubs and jovial entertainments, besides losing yet more
+time in that other pursuit we wot of. Meanwhile J. J. went steadily on
+with his work, no day passed without a line: and Fame was not very
+far off, though this he heeded but little; and Art, his sole mistress,
+rewarded him for his steady and fond pursuit of her.
+
+"Look at him," Clive would say with a sigh. "Isn't he the mortal of all
+others the most to be envied! He is so fond of his art that in all the
+world there is no attraction like it for him. He runs to his easel
+at sunrise, and sits before it caressing his picture all day till
+nightfall. He takes leave of it sadly when dark comes, spends the night
+in a Life Academy, and begins next morning da capo. Of all the pieces of
+good fortune which can befall a man, is not this the greatest: to have
+your desire, and then never tire of it? I have been in such a rage with
+my own shortcomings that I have dashed my foot through the canvases, and
+vowed I would smash my palette and easel. Sometimes I succeed a little
+better in my work, and then it will happen for half an hour that I am
+pleased, but pleased at what? pleased at drawing Mr. Muggins's head
+rather like Mr. Muggins. Why, a thousand fellows can do better, and when
+one day I reach my very best, yet thousands will be able to do better
+still. Ours is a trade for which nowadays there is no excuse unless one
+can be great in it: and I feel I have not the stuff for that. No. 666.
+'Portrait of Joseph Muggins, Esq., Newcome, Great George Street.' No.
+979. 'Portrait of Mrs. Muggins, on her grey pony, Newcome.' No. 579.
+'Portrait of Joseph Muggins Esq.'s dog Toby, Newcome'--this is--what
+I'm fit for. These are the victories I have set myself on achieving. Oh,
+Mrs. Pendennis, isn't it humiliating? Why isn't there a war? Why can't
+I go and distinguish myself somewhere and be a general? Why haven't I a
+genius? I say, Pen, sir, why haven't I a genius? There is a painter who
+lives hard by, and who sends sometimes, to beg me to come and look at
+his work. He is in the Muggins line too. He gets his canvases with a
+good light upon them: excludes the contemplation of all other objects,
+stands beside his pictures in an attitude himself, and thinks that he
+and they are masterpieces. Masterpieces! Oh me, what drivelling wretches
+we are! Fame!--except that of just the one or two--what's the use of
+it? I say, Pen, would you feel particularly proud now if you had written
+Hayley's poems? And as for a second place in painting, who would care
+to be Caravaggio or Caracci? I wouldn't give a straw to be Caracci or
+Caravaggio. I would just as soon be yonder artist who is painting up
+Foker's Entire over the public-house at the corner. He will have his
+payment afterwards, five shillings a day, and a pot of beer. Your head
+a little more to the light, Mrs. Pendennis, if you please. I am tiring
+you, I dare say, but then, oh, I am doing it so badly!"
+
+I, for my part, thought Clive was making a very pretty drawing of my
+wife, and having affairs of my own to attend to, would often leave her
+at his chambers as a sitter, or find him at our lodgings visiting her.
+They became the very greatest friends. I knew the young fellow could
+have no better friend than Laura; and not being ignorant of the malady
+under which he was labouring, concluded naturally and justly that Clive
+grew so fond of my wife, not for her sake entirely, but for his own,
+because he could pour his heart out to her, and her sweet kindness and
+compassion would soothe him in his unhappy condition.
+
+Miss Ethel, I have said, also professed a great fondness for Mrs.
+Pendennis; and there was that charm in the young lady's manner which
+speedily could overcome even female jealousy. Perhaps Laura determined
+magnanimously to conquer it; perhaps she hid it so as to vex me and
+prove the injustice of my suspicions: perhaps, honestly, she was
+conquered by the young beauty, and gave her a regard and admiration
+which the other knew she could inspire whenever she had the will.
+My wife was fairly captivated by her at length. The untameable young
+creature was docile and gentle in Laura's presence; modest, natural,
+amiable, full of laughter and spirits, delightful to see and to hear;
+her presence cheered our quiet little household; her charm fascinated my
+wife as it had subjugated poor Clive. Even the reluctant Farintosh was
+compelled to own her power, and confidentially told his male friends,
+that, hang it, she was so handsome, and so clever, and so confoundedly
+pleasant and fascinating, and that--that he had been on the point of
+popping the fatal question ever so many times, by Jove. "And hang it,
+you know," his lordship would say, "I don't want to marry until I have
+had my fling, you know." As for Clive, Ethel treated him like a boy,
+like a big brother. She was jocular, kind, pert, pleasant with him,
+ordered him on her errands, accepted his bouquets and compliments,
+admired his drawings, liked to hear him praised, and took his part in
+all companies; laughed at his sighs, and frankly owned to Laura her
+liking for him and her pleasure in seeing him. "Why," said she, "should
+not I be happy as long as the sunshine lasts? To-morrow, I know, will be
+glum and dreary enough. When grandmamma comes back I shall scarcely
+be able to come and see you. When I am settled in life--eh! I shall be
+settled in life! Do not grudge me my holiday, Laura. Oh, if you knew
+how stupid it is to be in the world, and how much pleasanter to come and
+talk, and laugh, and sing, and be happy with you, than to sit in that
+dreary Eaton Place with poor Clara!"
+
+"Why do you stay in Eaton Place?" asks Laura.
+
+"Why? because I must go out with somebody. What an unsophisticated
+little country creature you are! Grandmamma is away, and I cannot go
+about to parties by myself."
+
+"But why should you go to parties, and why not go back to your mother?"
+says Mrs. Pendennis, gently.
+
+"To the nursery, and my little sisters, and Miss Cann? I like being in
+London best, thank you. You look grave? You think a girl should like to
+be with her mother and sisters best? My dear mamma wishes me to be here,
+and I stay with Barnes and Clara by grandmamma's orders. Don't you know
+that I have been made over to Lady Kew, who has adopted me? Do you
+think a young lady of my pretensions can stop at home in a damp house in
+Warwickshire and cut bread-and-butter for little schoolboys? Don't look
+so very grave and shake your head so, Mrs. Pendennis! If you had been
+bred as I have, you would be as I am. I know what you are thinking,
+madam."
+
+"I am thinking," said Laura, blushing and bowing her head--"I am
+thinking, if it pleases God to give me children, I should like to live
+at home at Fairoaks." My wife's thoughts, though she did not utter them,
+and a certain modesty and habitual awe kept her silent upon subjects so
+very sacred, went deeper yet. She had been bred to measure her actions
+by a standard which the world may nominally admit, but which it leaves
+for the most part unheeded. Worship, love, duty, as taught her by the
+devout study of the Sacred Law which interprets and defines it--if these
+formed the outward practice of her life, they were also its constant
+and secret endeavours and occupation. She spoke but very seldom of her
+religion, though it filled her heart and influenced all her behaviour.
+Whenever she came to that sacred subject, her demeanour appeared to her
+husband so awful that he scarcely dared to approach it in her company,
+and stood without as this pure creature entered into the Holy of Holies.
+What must the world appear to such a person? Its ambitious rewards,
+disappointments, pleasures, worth how much? Compared to the possession
+of that priceless treasure and happiness unspeakable, a perfect faith,
+what has Life to offer? I see before me now her sweet grave face, as
+she looks out from the balcony of the little Richmond villa we occupied
+during the first happy year after our marriage, following Ethel Newcome,
+who rides away, with a staid groom behind her, to her brother's summer
+residence, not far distant. Clive had been with us in the morning, and
+had brought us stirring news. The good Colonel was by this time on his
+way home. "If Clive could tear himself away from London," the good man
+wrote (and we thus saw he was acquainted with the state of the young
+man's mind), "why should not Clive go and meet his father at Malta?" He
+was feverish and eager to go; and his two friends strongly counselled
+him to take the journey. In the midst of our talk Miss Ethel came among
+us. She arrived flushed and in high spirits; she rallied Clive upon his
+gloomy looks; she turned rather pale, as it seemed to us, when she heard
+the news. Then she coldly told him she thought the voyage must be a
+pleasant one, and would do him good: it was pleasanter than that journey
+she was going to take herself with her dreary grandmother, to those
+German springs which the old Countess frequented year after year. Mr.
+Pendennis having business, retired to his study, whither presently Mrs.
+Laura followed, having to look for her scissors, or a book she wanted,
+or upon some pretext or other. She sate down in the conjugal study; not
+one word did either of us say for a while about the young people left
+alone in the drawing-room yonder. Laura talked about our own home at
+Fairoaks, which our tenants were about to vacate. She vowed and
+declared that we must live at Fairoaks; that Clavering, with all its
+tittle-tattle and stupid inhabitants, was better than this wicked
+London. Besides, there were some new and very pleasant families settled
+in the neighbourhood. Clavering Park was taken by some delightful
+people--"and you know, Pen, you were always very fond of fly-fishing,
+and may fish the Brawl, as you used in old days, when--" The lips of the
+pretty satirist who alluded to these unpleasant bygones were silenced
+as they deserved to be by Mr. Pendennis. "Do you think, sir, I did not
+know," says the sweetest voice in the world, "when you went out on your
+fishing excursions with Miss Amory?" Again the flow of words is checked
+by the styptic previously applied.
+
+"I wonder," says Mr. Pendennis, archly, bending over his wife's fair
+hand--"I wonder whether this kind of thing is taking place in the
+drawing-room?"
+
+"Nonsense, Arthur. It is time to go back to them. Why, I declare, I have
+been three-quarters of an hour away!"
+
+"I don't think they will much miss you, my dear," says the gentleman.
+
+"She is certainly very fond of him. She is always coming here. I am sure
+it is not to hear you read Shakspeare, Arthur; or your new novel, though
+it is very pretty. I wish Lady Kew and her sixty thousand pounds were at
+the bottom of the sea."
+
+"But she says she is going to portion her younger brothers with a part
+of it; she told Clive so," remarks Mr. Pendennis.
+
+"For shame! Why does not Barnes Newcome portion his younger brothers? I
+have no patience with that----Why! Goodness! There is Clive going
+away, actually! Clive! Mr. Newcome!" But though my wife ran to the
+study-window and beckoned our friend, he only shook his head, jumped on
+his horse, and rode away gloomily.
+
+"Ethel had been crying when I went into the room," Laura afterwards told
+me. "I knew she had; but she looked up from some flowers over which she
+was bending, began to laugh and rattle, would talk about nothing but
+Lady Hautboi's great breakfast the day before, and the most insufferable
+Mayfair jargon; and then declared it was time to go home and dress for
+Mrs. Booth's dejeuner, which was to take place that afternoon."
+
+And so Miss Newcome rode away--back amongst the roses and the
+rouges--back amongst the fiddling, flirting, flattery, falseness--and
+Laura's sweet serene face looked after her departing. Mrs. Booth's was
+a very grand dejeuner. We read in the newspapers a list of the greatest
+names there. A Royal Duke and Duchess; a German Highness, a Hindoo
+Nabob, etc.; and, amongst the Marquises, Farintosh; and, amongst the
+Lords, Highgate; and Lady Clara Newcome, and Miss Newcome, who looked
+killing, our acquaintance Captain Crackthorpe informs us, and who was
+in perfectly stunning spirits. "His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke
+of Farintosh is wild about her," the Captain said, "and our poor young
+friend Clive may just go and hang himself. Dine with us at the Gar and
+Starter? Jolly party. Oh! I forgot! married man now!" So saying, the
+Captain entered the hostelry near which I met him, leaving this present
+chronicler to return to his own home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI. An Old Friend
+
+
+I might open the present chapter as a contemporary writer of Romance
+is occasionally in the habit of commencing his tales of Chivalry, by
+a description of a November afternoon falling leaves, tawny forests,
+gathering storms, and other autumnal phenomena; and two horsemen winding
+up the romantic road which leads from--from Richmond Bridge to the Star
+and Garter. The one rider is youthful, and has a blonde moustache. The
+cheek of the other has been browned by foreign suns; it is easy to see
+by the manner in which he bestrides his powerful charger that he
+has followed the profession of arms. He looks as if he had faced his
+country's enemies on many a field of Eastern battle. The cavaliers
+alight before the gate of a cottage on Richmond Hill, where a gentleman
+receives them with eager welcome. Their steeds are accommodated at a
+neighbouring hostelry,--I pause in the midst of the description, for the
+reader has made the acquaintance of our two horsemen long since. It is
+Clive returned from Malta, from Gibraltar, from Seville, from Cadiz, and
+with him our dear old friend the Colonel. His campaigns are over, his
+sword is hung up, he leaves Eastern suns and battles to warm younger
+blood. Welcome back to England, dear Colonel and kind friend! How
+quickly the years have passed since he has been gone! There is a streak
+or two more silver in his hair. The wrinkles about his honest eyes
+are somewhat deeper, but their look is as steadfast and kind as in the
+early, almost boyish days when first we knew them.
+
+We talk a while about the Colonel's voyage home, the pleasures of the
+Spanish journey, the handsome new quarters in which Clive has installed
+his father and himself, my own altered condition in life, and what not.
+During the conversation a little querulous voice makes itself audible
+above-stairs, at which noise Mr. Clive begins to laugh, and the Colonel
+to smile. It is for the first time in his life Mr. Clive listens to the
+little voice; indeed, it is only since about six weeks that that small
+organ has been heard in the world at all. Laura Pendennis believes
+its tunes to be the sweetest, the most interesting, the most
+mirth-inspiring, the most pitiful and pathetic, that ever baby uttered;
+which opinions, of course, are backed by Mrs. Hokey, the confidential
+nurse. Laura's husband is not so rapturous; but, let us trust, behaves
+in a way becoming a man and a father. We forgo the description of
+his feelings as not pertaining to the history at present under
+consideration. A little while before the dinner is served, the lady of
+the cottage comes down to greet her husband's old friends.
+
+And here I am sorely tempted to a third description, which has nothing
+to do with the story, to be sure, but which, if properly his off might
+fill half a page very prettily. For is not a young mother one of the
+sweetest sights which life shows us? If she has been beautiful before,
+does not her present pure joy give a character of refinement and
+sacredness almost to her beauty, touch her sweet cheeks with fairer
+blushes, and impart I know not what serene brightness to her eyes? I
+give warning to the artist who designs the pictures for this veracious
+story, to make no attempt at this subject. I never would be satisfied
+with it were his drawing ever so good.
+
+When Sir Charles Grandison stepped up and made his very beautifullest
+bow to Miss Byron, I am sure his gracious dignity never exceeded that of
+Colonel Newcome's first greeting to Mrs. Pendennis. Of course from the
+very moment they beheld one another they became friends. Are not most of
+our likings thus instantaneous? Before she came down to see him, Laura
+had put on one of the Colonel's shawls--the crimson one, with the red
+palm-leaves and the border of many colours. As for the white one, the
+priceless, the gossamer, the fairy web, which might pass through a ring,
+that, every lady must be aware, was already appropriated to cover the
+cradle, or what I believe is called the bassinet, of Master Pendennis.
+
+So we all became the very best of friends; and during the winter months
+whilst we still resided at Richmond, the Colonel was my wife's constant
+visitor. He often came without Clive. He did not care for the world
+which the young gentleman frequented, and was more pleased and at home
+by my wife's fireside than at more noisy and splendid entertainments.
+And, Laura being a sentimental person interested in pathetic novels and
+all unhappy attachments, of course she and the Colonel talked a great
+deal about Mr. Clive's little affair, over which they would have such
+deep confabulations that even when the master of the house appeared,
+Pater Familias, the man whom, in the presence of the Rev. Dr. Portman,
+Mrs. Laura had sworn to love and honour these two guilty ones would be
+silent, or change the subject of conversation, not caring to admit such
+an unsympathising person as myself into their conspiracy.
+
+From many a talk which they have had together since the Colonel and his
+son embraced at Malta, Clive's father had been led to see how strongly
+the passion which our friend had once fought and mastered, had now
+taken possession of the young man. The unsatisfied longing left him
+indifferent to all other objects of previous desire or ambition. The
+misfortune darkened the sunshine of his spirit, and clouded the world
+before his eyes. He passed hours in his painting-room, though he tore up
+what he did there. He forsook his usual haunts, or appeared amongst his
+old comrades moody and silent. From cigar-smoking, which I own to be
+a reprehensible practice, he plunged into still deeper and darker
+dissipation; for I am sorry to say, he took to pipes and the strongest
+tobacco, for which there is no excuse. Our young man was changed. During
+the last fifteen or twenty months, the malady had been increasing on
+him, of which we have not chosen to describe at length the stages;
+knowing very well that the reader (the male reader at least) does not
+care a fig about other people's sentimental perplexities, and is not
+wrapped up heart and soul in Clive's affairs like his father, whose rest
+was disturbed if the boy had a headache, or who would have stripped the
+coat off his back to keep his darling's feet warm.
+
+The object of this hopeless passion had, meantime, returned to the
+custody of the dark old duenna, from which she had been liberated for a
+while. Lady Kew had got her health again, by means of the prescriptions
+of some doctors, or by the efficacy of some baths; and was again on foot
+and in the world, tramping about in her grim pursuit of pleasure. Lady
+Julia, we are led to believe, had retired upon half-pay, and into an
+inglorious exile at Brussels, with her sister, the outlaw's wife, by
+whose bankrupt fireside she was perfectly happy. Miss Newcome was now
+her grandmother's companion, and they had been on a tour of visits in
+Scotland, and were journeying from country-house to country-house about
+the time when our good Colonel returned to his native shores.
+
+The Colonel loved his nephew Barnes no better than before, perhaps,
+though we must say that since his return from India the young Baronet's
+conduct had been particularly friendly. "No doubt marriage had improved
+him; Lady Clara seemed a good-natured young woman enough; besides," says
+the Colonel, wagging his good old head knowingly, "Tom Newcome, of the
+Bundelcund Bank, is a personage to be conciliated; whereas Tom Newcome,
+of the Bengal Cavalry, was not worth Master Barnes's attention. He
+has been very good and kind on the whole; so have his friends been
+uncommonly civil. There was Clive's acquaintance, Mr. Belsize that was,
+Lord Highgate who is now, entertained our whole family sumptuously last
+week--wants us and Barnes and his wife to go to his country-house at
+Christmas--is as hospitable, my dear Mrs. Pendennis, as man can be. He
+met you at Barnes's, and as soon as we are alone," says the Colonel,
+turning round to Laura's husband, "I will tell you in what terms Lady
+Clara speaks of your wife. Yes. She is a good-natured, kind little
+woman, that Lady Clara." Here Laura's face assumed that gravity and
+severeness, which it always wore when Lady Clara's name was mentioned,
+and the conversation took another turn.
+
+Returning home from London one afternoon, I met the Colonel, who hailed
+me on the omnibus, and rode on his way towards the City, I knew, of
+course, that he had been colloquying with my wife; and taxed that young
+woman with these continued flirtations. "Two or three times a week,
+Mrs. Laura, you dare to receive a Colonel of Dragoons. You sit for hours
+closeted with the young fellow of sixty; you change the conversation
+when your own injured husband enters the room, and pretend to talk about
+the weather, or the baby. You little arch hypocrite, you know you do.
+Don't try to humbug me, miss; what will Richmond, what will society,
+what will Mrs. Grundy in general say to such atrocious behaviour?"
+
+"Oh! Pen," says my wife, closing my mouth in a way which I do not
+choose further to particularise; "that man is the best, the dearest,
+the kindest creature. I never knew such a good man; you ought to put him
+into a book. Do you know, sir, that I felt the very greatest desire to
+give him a kiss when he went away; and that one which you had just now,
+was intended for him.
+
+"Take back thy gift, false girl!" says Mr Pendennis; and then, finally,
+we come to the particular circumstance which had occasioned so much
+enthusiasm on Mrs. Laura's part.
+
+Colonel Newcome had summoned heart of grace, and in Clive's behalf had
+regularly proposed him to Barnes, as a suitor to Ethel, taking an artful
+advantage of his nephew Barnes Newcome, and inviting that Barnes to
+a private meeting, where they were to talk about the affairs of the
+Bundelcund Banking Company.
+
+Now this Bundelcund Banking Company, in the Colonel's eyes, was in
+reality his son Clive. But for Clive there might have been a hundred
+banking companies established, yielding a hundred per cent, in as many
+districts of India, and Thomas Newcome, who had plenty of money for his
+own wants, would never have thought of speculation. His desire was to
+see his boy endowed with all the possible gifts of fortune. Had he built
+a palace for Clive, and been informed that a roc's egg was required to
+complete the decoration of the edifice, Tom Newcome would have travelled
+to the world's end in search of the wanting article. To see Prince
+Clive ride in a gold coach with a princess beside him, was the kind old
+Colonel's ambition; that done, he would be content to retire to a garret
+in the prince's castle, and smoke his cheroot there in peace. So the
+world is made. The strong and eager covet honour and enjoyment for
+themselves; the gentle and disappointed (once, they may have been strong
+and eager, too) desire these gifts for their children. I think Clive's
+father never liked or understood the lad's choice of a profession. He
+acquiesced in it as he would in any of his son's wishes. But, not being
+a poet himself, he could not see the nobility of that calling; and
+felt secretly that his son was demeaning himself by pursuing the art of
+painting. "Had he been a soldier, now," thought Thomas Newcome, "(though
+I prevented that) had he been richer than he is, he might have married
+Ethel, instead of being unhappy as he now is, God help him! I remember
+my own time of grief well enough: and what years it took before my wound
+wound was scarred over."
+
+So with these things occupying his brain Thomas Newcome artfully invited
+Barnes, his nephew, to dinner under pretence of talking of the affairs
+of the great B. B. C. With the first glass of wine at dessert, and
+according to the Colonel's good old-fashioned custom of proposing
+toasts, they drank the health of the B. B. C. Barnes drank the toast
+with all his generous heart. The B. B. C. sent to Hobson Brothers and
+Newcome a great deal of business, was in a most prosperous condition,
+kept a great balance at the bank, a balance that would not be overdrawn,
+as Sir Barnes Newcome very well knew. Barnes was for having more of
+these bills, provided there were remittances to meet the same. Barnes
+was ready to do any amount of business with the Indian bank, or with any
+bank, or with any individual, Christian or heathen, white or black, who
+could do good to the firm of Hobson Brothers and Newcome. He spoke upon
+this subject with great archness and candour: of course as a City man he
+would be glad to do a profitable business anywhere, and the B. B. C.'s
+business was profitable. But the interested motive which he admitted
+frankly as a man of the world, did not prevent other sentiments more
+agreeable. "My dear Colonel," says Barnes, "I am happy, most happy, to
+think that our house and our name should have been useful, as I know
+they have been, in the establishment of a concern in which one of our
+family is interested; one whom we all so sincerely respect and regard."
+And he touched his glass with his lips and blushed a little, as he bowed
+towards his uncle. He found himself making a little speech, indeed; and
+to do so before one single person seems rather odd. Had there been a
+large company present Barnes would not have blushed at all, but have
+tossed off his glass, struck his waistcoat possibly, and looked straight
+in the face of his uncle as the chairman; well, he did very likely
+believe that he respected and regarded the Colonel.
+
+The Colonel said--"Thank you, Barnes, with all my heart. It is always
+good for men to be friends, much more for blood relations, as we are."
+
+"A relationship which honours me, I'm sure!" says Barnes, with a tone of
+infinite affability. You see, he believed that Heaven had made him the
+Colonel's superior.
+
+"And I am very glad," the elder went on, "that you and my boy are good
+friends."
+
+"Friends! of course. It would be unnatural if such near relatives were
+otherwise than good friends."
+
+"You have been hospitable to him, and Lady Clara very kind, and he wrote
+to me telling me of your kindness. Ahem! this is tolerable claret. I
+wonder where Clive gets it?"
+
+"You were speaking about that indigo, Colonel!" here Barnes interposes.
+"Our house has done very little in that way, to be sure but I suppose
+that our credit is about as good as Battie's and Jolly's, and if----"
+but the Colonel is in a brown study.
+
+"Clive will have a good bit of money when I die," resumes Clive's
+father.
+
+"Why, you are a hale man--upon my word, quite a young man, and may marry
+again, Colonel," replies the nephew fascinatingly.
+
+"I shall never do that," replies the other. "Ere many years are gone, I
+shall be seventy years old, Barnes."
+
+"Nothing in this country, my dear sir! positively nothing. Why, there
+was Titus, my neighbour in the country--when will you come down to
+Newcome?--who married a devilish pretty girl, of very good family,
+too, Miss Burgeon, one of the Devonshire Burgeons. He looks, I am sure,
+twenty years older than you do. Why should not you do likewise?"
+
+"Because I like to remain single, and want to leave Clive a rich man.
+Look here, Barnes, you know the value of our bank shares, now?"
+
+"Indeed I do; rather speculative; but of course I know what some sold
+for last week," says Barnes.
+
+"Suppose I realise now. I think I am worth six lakhs. I had nearly two
+from my poor father. I saved some before and since I invested in this
+affair; and could sell out to-morrow with sixty thousand pounds."
+
+"A very pretty sum of money, Colonel," says Barnes.
+
+"I have a pension of a thousand a year."
+
+"My dear Colonel, you are a capitalist! we know it very well," remarks
+Sir Barnes.
+
+"And two hundred a year is as much as I want for myself," continues
+the capitalist, looking into the fire, and jingling his money in
+his pockets. "A hundred a year for a horse; a hundred a year for
+pocket-money, for I calculate, you know, that Clive will give me a
+bedroom and my dinner."
+
+"He! he! If your son won't, your nephew will, my dear Colonel!" says the
+affable Barnes, smiling sweetly.
+
+"I can give the boy a handsome allowance, you see," resumes Thomas
+Newcome.
+
+"You can make him a handsome allowance now, and leave him a good fortune
+when you die!" says the nephew, in a noble and courageous manner,--and
+as if he said Twelve times twelve are a hundred and forty-four and you
+have Sir Barnes Newcome's authority--Sir Barnes Newcome's, mind you--to
+say so.
+
+"Not when I die, Barnes," the uncle goes on. "I will give him every
+shilling I am worth to-morrow morning, if he marries as I wish him."
+
+"Tant mieux pour lui!" cries the nephew; and thought to himself, "Lady
+Clara must ask Clive to dinner instantly. Confound the fellow. I hate
+him--always have; but what luck he has!"
+
+"A man with that property may pretend to a good wife, as the French say;
+hey Barnes?" asks the Colonel, rather eagerly looking up in his nephew's
+face.
+
+That countenance was lighted up with a generous enthusiasm. "To any
+woman, in any rank--to a nobleman's daughter, my dear sir!" exclaims Sir
+Barnes.
+
+"I want your sister; I want dear Ethel for him, Barnes," cries Thomas
+Newcome, with a trembling voice, and a twinkle in his eyes. "That was
+the hope I always had till my talk with your poor father stopped it.
+Your sister was engaged to my Lord Kew then; and my wishes of course
+were impossible. The poor boy is very much cut up, and his whole heart
+is bent upon possessing her. She is not, she can't be, indifferent to
+him. I am sure she would not be, if her family in the least encouraged
+him. Can either of these young folks have a better chance of happiness
+again offered to them in life? There's youth, there's mutual liking,
+there's wealth for them almost--only saddled with the encumbrance of
+an old dragoon, who won't be much in their way. Give us your good word,
+Barnes, and let them come together; and upon my word the rest of my days
+will be made happy if I can eat my meal at their table."
+
+Whilst the poor Colonel was making his appeal, Barnes had time to
+collect his answer; which, since in our character of historians we take
+leave to explain gentlemen's motives as well as record their speeches
+and actions, we may thus interpret. "Confound the young beggar!" thinks
+Barnes, then. "He will have three or four thousand a year, will he? Hang
+him, but it's a good sum of money. What a fool his father is to give it
+away! Is he joking? No, he was always half crazy--the Colonel. Highgate
+seemed uncommonly sweet on her, and was always hanging about our house.
+Farintosh has not been brought to book yet; and perhaps neither of them
+will propose for her. My grandmother, I should think, won't hear of her
+making a low marriage, as this certainly is: but it's a pity to throw
+away four thousand a year, ain't it?" All these natural calculations
+passed briskly through Barnes Newcome's mind, as his uncle, from the
+opposite side of the fireplace, implored him in the above little speech.
+
+"My dear Colonel," said Barnes, "my dear, kind Colonel! I needn't
+tell you that your proposal flatters us, as much as your extraordinary
+generosity surprises me. I never heard anything like it--never. Could I
+consult my own wishes I would at once--I would, permit me to say, from
+sheer admiration of your noble character, say yes, with all my heart, to
+your proposal. But, alas, I haven't that power."
+
+"Is--is she engaged?" asks the Colonel, looking as blank and sad as
+Clive himself when Ethel had conversed with him.
+
+"No--I cannot say engaged--though a person of the very highest rank has
+paid her the most marked attention. But my sister has, in a way, gone
+from our family, and from my influence as the head of it--an influence
+which I, I am sure, had most gladly exercised in your favour. My
+grandmother, Lady Kew, has adopted her; purposes, I believe, to leave
+Ethel the greater part of her fortune, upon certain conditions; and, of
+course, expects the--the obedience, and so forth, which is customary in
+such cases. By the way, Colonel, is our young soupirant aware that papa
+is pleading his cause for him?"
+
+The Colonel said no; and Barnes lauded the caution which his uncle had
+displayed. It was quite as well for the young man's interests (which Sir
+Barnes had most tenderly at heart) that Clive Newcome should not himself
+move in the affair, or present himself to Lady Kew. Barnes would take
+the matter in hand at the proper season; the Colonel might be sure it
+would be most eagerly, most ardently pressed. Clive came home at this
+juncture, whom Barnes saluted affectionately. He and the Colonel had
+talked over their money business; their conversation had been most
+satisfactory, thank you. "Has it not, Colonel?" The three parted the
+very best of friends.
+
+As Barnes Newcome professed that extreme interest for his cousin and
+uncle, it is odd he did not tell them that Lady Kew and Miss Ethel
+Newcome were at that moment within a mile of them, at her ladyship's
+house in Queen Street, Mayfair. In the hearing of Clive's servant,
+Barnes did not order his brougham to drive to Queen Street, but waited
+until he was in Bond Street before he gave the order.
+
+And, of course, when he entered Lady Kew's house, he straightway asked
+for his sister, and communicated to her the generous offer which the
+good Colonel had made.
+
+You see, Lady Kew was in town, and not in town. Her ladyship was but
+passing through, on her way from a tour of visits in the North, to
+another tour of visits somewhere else. The newspapers were not even off
+the blinds. The proprietor of the house cowered over a bed-candle and a
+furtive teapot in the back drawing-room. Lady Kew's gens were not here.
+The tall canary ones with white polls, only showed their plumage and
+sang in spring. The solitary wretch who takes charge of London houses,
+and the two servants specially affected to Lady Kew's person, were the
+only people in attendance. In fact, her ladyship was not in town. And
+that is why, no doubt, Barnes Newcome said nothing about her being
+there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII. Family Secrets
+
+
+The figure cowering over the furtive teapot glowered grimly at Barnes as
+he entered; and an old voice said--"Ho, it's you!"
+
+"I have brought you the notes, ma'am," says Barnes, taking a packet of
+those documents from his pocket-book. "I could not come sooner, I have
+been engaged upon bank business until now."
+
+"I dare say! You smell of smoke like a courier."
+
+"A foreign capitalist: he would smoke. They will, ma'am. I didn't smoke,
+upon my word."
+
+"I don't see why you shouldn't, if you like it. You will never get
+anything out of me whether you do or don't. How is Clara? Is she gone to
+the country with the children? Newcome is the best place for her."
+
+"Doctor Bambury thinks she can move in a fortnight. The boy has had a
+little----"
+
+"A little fiddlestick! I tell you it is she who likes to stay, and makes
+that fool, Bambury, advise her not going away. I tell you to send her to
+Newcome. The air is good for her."
+
+"By that confounded smoky town, my dear Lady Kew?"
+
+"And invite your mother and little brothers and sisters to stay
+Christmas there. The way in which you neglect them is shameful, it is,
+Barnes."
+
+"Upon my word, ma'am, I propose to manage my own affairs without your
+ladyship's assistance," cries Barnes, starting up, "and did not come at
+this time of night to hear this kind of----"
+
+"Of good advice. I sent for you to give it you. When I wrote to you to
+bring me the money I wanted it was but a pretext; Barkins might have
+fetched it from the City in the morning. I want you to send Clara and
+the children to Newcome. They ought to go, sir. That is why I sent for
+you; to tell you that. Have you been quarrelling as much as usual?"
+
+"Pretty much as usual," says Barnes, drumming on his hat.
+
+"Don't beat that devil's tattoo; you agacez my poor old nerves. When
+Clara was given to you she was as well broke a girl as any in London."
+
+Sir Barnes responded by a groan.
+
+"She was as gentle and amenable to reason, as good-natured a girl as
+could be; a little vacant and silly, but you men like dolls for your
+wives; and now in three years you have utterly spoiled her. She is
+restive, she is artful, she flies into rages, she fights you and beats
+you. He! he! and that comes of your beating her!"
+
+"I didn't come to hear this, ma'am," says Barnes, livid with rage
+
+"You struck her, you know you did, Sir Barnes Newcome. She rushed over
+to me last year on the night you did it, you know she did."
+
+"Great God, ma'am! You know the provocation," screams Barnes.
+
+"Provocation or not, I don't say. But from that moment she has beat you.
+You fool, to write her a letter and ask her pardon. If I had been a man
+I would rather have strangled my wife, than have humiliated myself so
+before her. She will never forgive that blow."
+
+"I was mad when I did it; and she drove me mad," says Barnes. "She has
+the temper of a fiend, and the ingenuity of the devil. In two years an
+entire change has come over her. If I had used a knife to her I should
+not have been surprised. But it is not with you to reproach me about
+Clara. Your ladyship found her for me."
+
+"And you spoilt her after she was found, sir. She told me part of her
+story that night she came to me. I know it is true, Barnes. You have
+treated her dreadfully, sir."
+
+"I know that she makes my life miserable, and there is no help for it,"
+says Barnes, grinding a curse between his teeth. "Well, well, no more
+about this. How is Ethel? Gone to sleep after her journey? What do you
+think, ma'am, I have brought for her? A proposal."
+
+"Bon Dieu! You don't mean to say Charles Belsize was in earnest!" cries
+the dowager. "I always thought it was a----"
+
+"It is not from Lord Highgate, ma'am," Sir Barnes said, gloomily. "It
+is some time since I have known that he was not in earnest; and he knows
+that I am now."
+
+"Gracious goodness! come to blows with him, too? You have not? That
+would be the very thing to make the world talk," says the dowager, with
+some anxiety.
+
+"No," answers Barnes. "He knows well enough that there can be no open
+rupture. We had some words the other day at a dinner he gave at his own
+house; Colonel Newcome and that young beggar, Clive, and that fool, Mr.
+Hobson, were there. Lord Highgate was confoundedly insolent. He told me
+that I did not dare to quarrel with him because of the account he kept
+at our house. I should like to have massacred him! She has told him that
+I struck her,--the insolent brute--he says he will tell it at my clubs;
+and threatens personal violence to me, there, if I do it again. Lady
+Kew, I'm not safe from that man and that woman," cries poor Barnes, in
+an agony of terror.
+
+"Fighting is Jack Belsize's business, Barnes Newcome; banking is yours,
+luckily," said the dowager. "As old Lord Highgate was to die and his
+eldest son, too, it is a pity certainly they had not died a year or two
+earlier, and left poor Clara and Charles to come together. You should
+have married some woman in the serious way; my daughter Walham could
+have found you one. Frank, I am told, and his wife go on very sweetly
+together; her mother-in-law governs the whole family. They have turned
+the theatre back into a chapel again: they have six little ploughboys
+dressed in surplices to sing the service; and Frank and the Vicar of
+Kewbury play at cricket with them on holidays. Stay, why should not
+Clara go to Kewbury?"
+
+"She and her sister have quarrelled about this very affair with Lord
+Highgate. Some time ago it appears they had words about it and when I
+told Kew that bygones had best be bygones, that Highgate was very sweet
+upon Ethel now, and that I did not choose to lose such a good account as
+his, Kew was very insolent to me; his conduct was blackguardly, ma'am,
+quite blackguardly, and you may be sure but for our relationship I would
+have called him to----"
+
+Here the talk between Barnes and his ancestress was interrupted by the
+appearance of Miss Ethel Newcome, taper in hand, who descended from the
+upper regions enveloped in a shawl.
+
+"How do you do, Barnes? How is Clara? I long to see my little nephew. Is
+he like his pretty papa?" cries the young lady, giving her fair cheek to
+her brother.
+
+"Scotland has agreed with our Newcome rose," says Barnes, gallantly. "My
+dear Ethel, I never saw you in greater beauty."
+
+"By the light of one bedroom candle! what should I be if the whole
+room were lighted? You would see my face then was covered all over
+with wrinkles, and quite pale and woebegone, with the dreariness of the
+Scotch journey. Oh, what a time we have spent! haven't we, grandmamma? I
+never wish to go to a great castle again; above all, I never wish to
+go to a little shooting-box. Scotland may be very well for men; but
+for women--allow me to go to Paris when next there is talk of a Scotch
+expedition. I had rather be in a boarding-school in the Champs Elysees
+than in the finest castle in the Highlands. If it had not been for a
+blessed quarrel with Fanny Follington, I think I should have died at
+Glen Shorthorn. Have you seen my dear, dear uncle, the Colonel? When did
+he arrive?"
+
+"Is he come? Why is he come?" asks Lady Kew.
+
+"Is he come? Look here, grandmamma! did you ever see such a darling
+shawl! I found it in a packet in my room."
+
+"Well, it is beautiful," cries the Dowager, bending her ancient nose
+over the web. "Your Colonel is a galant homme. That must be said of him;
+and in this does not quite take after the rest of the family. Hum! hum!
+is he going away again soon?"
+
+"He has made a fortune, a very considerable fortune for a man in that
+rank in life," says Sir Barnes. "He cannot have less than sixty thousand
+pounds."
+
+"Is that much?" asks Ethel.
+
+"Not in England, at our rate of interest; but his money is in India,
+where he gets a great percentage. His income must be five or six
+thousand pounds, ma'am," says Barnes, turning to Lady Kew.
+
+"A few of the Indians were in society in my time, my dear," says Lady
+Kew, musingly. "My father has often talked to me about Barbell of
+Stanstead, and his house in St. James's Square; the man who ordered more
+curricles when there were not carriages enough for his guests. I was
+taken to Mr. Hastings's trial. It was very stupid and long. The young
+man, the painter, I suppose will leave his paint-pots now, and set up as
+a gentleman. I suppose they were very poor, or his father would not have
+put him to such a profession. Barnes, why did you not make him a clerk
+in the bank, and save him from the humiliation?"
+
+"Humiliation! why, he is proud of it. My uncle is as proud as a
+Plantagenet; though he is as humble as--as what! Give me a simile
+Barnes. Do you know what my quarrel with Fanny Follington was about? She
+said we were not descended from the barber-surgeon, and laughed at the
+Battle of Bosworth. She says our great-grandfather was a weaver. Was he
+a weaver?"
+
+"How should I know? and what on earth does it matter, my child? Except
+the Gaunts, the Howards, and one or two more, there is scarcely any good
+blood in England. You are lucky in sharing some of mine. My poor Lord
+Kew's grandfather was an apothecary at Hampton Court, and founded the
+family by giving a dose of rhubarb to Queen Caroline. As a rule, nobody
+is of a good family. Didn't that young man, that son of the Colonel's,
+go about last year? How did he get in society? Where did we meet him?
+Oh! at Baden, yes; when Barnes was courting, and my grandson--yes, my
+grandson, acted so wickedly." Here she began to cough, and to tremble
+so, that her old stick shook under her hand. "Ring the bell for Ross.
+Ross, I will go to bed. Go you too, Ethel. You have been travelling
+enough to-day."
+
+"Her memory seems to fail her a little," Ethel whispered to her brother;
+"or she will only remember what she wishes. Don't you see that she has
+grown very much older?"
+
+"I will be with her in the morning. I have business with her," said
+Barnes.
+
+"Good night. Give my love to Clara, and kiss the little ones for me.
+Have you done what you promised me, Barnes?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"To be--to be kind to Clara. Don't say cruel things to her. She has a
+high spirit, and she feels them, though she says nothing."
+
+"Doesn't she?" said Barnes, grimly.
+
+"Ah, Barnes, be gentle with her. Seldom as I saw you together, when I
+lived with you in the spring, I could see that you were harsh, though
+she affected to laugh when she spoke of your conduct to her. Be kind.
+I am sure it is the best, Barnes; better than all the wit in the world.
+Look at grandmamma, how witty she was and is; what a reputation she had,
+how people were afraid of her; and see her now--quite alone."
+
+"I'll see her in the morning quite alone, my dear," says Barnes, waving
+a little gloved hand. "Bye-bye!" and his brougham drove away. While
+Ethel Newcome had been under her brother's roof, where I and friend
+Clive, and scores of others, had been smartly entertained, there had
+been quarrels and recriminations, misery and heart-burning, cruel words
+and shameful struggles, the wretched combatants in which appeared before
+the world with smiling faces, resuming their battle when the feast was
+concluded and the company gone.
+
+On the next morning, when Barnes came to visit his grandmother, Miss
+Newcome was gone away to see her sister-in-law, Lady Kew said, with
+whom she was going to pass the morning; so Barnes and Lady Kew had an
+uninterrupted tete-a-tete, in which the former acquainted the old lady
+with the proposal which Colonel Newcome had made to him on the previous
+night.
+
+Lady Kew wondered what the impudence of the world's would come to. An
+artist propose for Ethel! One of her footmen might propose next, and she
+supposed Barnes would bring the message. "The father came and proposed
+for this young painter, and you didn't order him out of the room!"
+
+Barnes laughed. "The Colonel is one of my constituents. I can't afford
+to order the Bundelcund Banking Company out of its own room."
+
+"You did not tell Ethel this pretty news, I suppose?"
+
+"Of course I didn't tell Ethel. Nor did I tell the Colonel that Ethel
+was in London. He fancies her in Scotland with your ladyship at this
+moment."
+
+"I wish the Colonel were at Calcutta, and his son with him. I wish he
+was in the Ganges, I wish he was under Juggernaut's car," cried the old
+lady. "How much money has the wretch really got? If he is of importance
+to the bank, of course you must keep well with him. Five thousand a
+year, and he says he will settle it all on his son? He must be crazy.
+There is nothing some of these people will not do, no sacrifice they
+will not make, to ally themselves with good families. Certainly you must
+remain on good terms with him and his bank. And we must say nothing of
+the business to Ethel, and trot out of town as quickly as we can. Let
+me see? We go to Drummington on Saturday. This is Tuesday. Barkins, you
+will keep the front drawing-room shutters shut, and remember we are not
+in town, unless Lady Glenlivat or Lord Farintosh should call."
+
+"Do you think Farintosh will--will call, ma'am?" asked Sir Barnes
+demurely.
+
+"He will be going through to Newmarket. He has been where we have
+been at two or three places in Scotland," replies the lady, with equal
+gravity. "His poor mother wishes him to give up his bachelor's life--as
+well she may--for you young men are terribly dissipated. Rossmont is
+quite a regal place. His Norfolk house is not inferior. A young man of
+that station ought to marry, and live at his places, and be an example
+to his people, instead of frittering away his time at Paris and Vienna
+amongst the most odious company."
+
+"Is he going to Drummington?" asks the grandson.
+
+"I believe he has been invited. We shall go to Paris for November: he
+probably will be there," answered the Dowager casually; "and tired of
+the dissipated life he has been leading, let us hope he will mend his
+ways, and find a virtuous, well-bred young woman to keep him right."
+With this her ladyship's apothecary is announced, and her banker and
+grandson takes his leave.
+
+Sir Barnes walked into the City with his umbrella, read his letters,
+conferred with his partners and confidential clerks; was for a while
+not the exasperated husband, or the affectionate brother, or the amiable
+grandson, but the shrewd, brisk banker, engaged entirely with his
+business. Presently he had occasion to go on 'Change, or elsewhere, to
+confer with brother-capitalists, and in Cornhill behold he meets his
+uncle, Colonel Newcome, riding towards the India House, a groom behind
+him.
+
+The Colonel springs off his horse, and Barnes greets him in the blandest
+manner. "Have you any news for me, Barnes?" cries the officer.
+
+"The accounts from Calcutta are remarkably good. That cotton is of
+admirable quality really. Mr. Briggs, of our house, who knows cotton as
+well as any man in England, says----"
+
+"It's not the cotton, my dear Sir Barnes," cries the other.
+
+"The bills are perfectly good; there is no sort of difficulty about
+them. Our house will take half a million of 'em, if----"
+
+"You are talking of bills, and I am thinking of poor Clive," the Colonel
+interposes. "I wish you could give me good news for him, Barnes."
+
+"I wish I could. I heartily trust that I may some day. My good wishes
+you know are enlisted in your son's behalf," cries Barnes, gallantly.
+"Droll place to talk sentiment in--Cornhill, isn't it? But Ethel, as I
+told you, is in the hands of higher powers, and we must conciliate Lady
+Kew if we can. She has always spoken very highly of Clive; very."
+
+"Had I not best go to her?" asks the Colonel.
+
+"Into the North, my good sir? She is--ah--she is travelling about. I
+think you had best depend upon me, Good morning. In the City we have
+no hearts, you know, Colonel. Be sure you shall hear from me as soon as
+Lady Kew and Ethel come to town."
+
+And the banker hurried away, shaking his finger-tips to his uncle, and
+leaving the good Colonel utterly surprised at his statements. For the
+fact is, the Colonel knew that Lady Kew was in London, having been
+apprised of the circumstance in the simplest manner in the world,
+namely, by a note from Miss Ethel, which billet he had in his pocket,
+whilst he was talking with the head of the house of Hobson Brothers:--
+
+"My dear uncle" (the note said), "how glad I shall be to see you!
+How shall I thank you for the beautiful shawl, and the kind, kind
+remembrance of me? I found your present yesterday evening, on our
+arrival from the North. We are only here en passant, and see nobody in
+Queen Street but Barnes, who has just been about business, and he does
+not count, you know. I shall go and see Clara to-morrow, and make her
+take me to see your pretty friend, Mrs. Pendennis. How glad I should be
+if you happened to pay Mrs. P. a visit about two! Good-night. I thank
+you a thousand times, and am always your affectionate E."
+
+"Queen Street. Tuesday night. Twelve o'clock."
+
+This note came to Colonel Newcome's breakfast-table, and he smothered
+the exclamation of wonder which was rising to his lips, not choosing to
+provoke the questions of Clive, who sate opposite to him. Clive's father
+was in a woeful perplexity all that forenoon. "Tuesday night, twelve
+o'clock," thought he. "Why, Barnes must have gone to his grandmother
+from my dinner-table; and he told me she was out of town, and said so
+again just now when we met in the City." (The Colonel was riding towards
+Richmond at this time.) "What cause had the young man to tell me these
+lies? Lady Kew may not wish to be at home for me, but need Barnes
+Newcome say what is untrue to mislead me? The fellow actually went away
+simpering, and kissing his hand to me, with a falsehood on his
+lips! What a pretty villain! A fellow would deserve, and has got, a
+horse-whipping for less. And to think of a Newcome doing this to his own
+flesh and blood; a young Judas!" Very sad and bewildered, the Colonel
+rode towards Richmond, where he was to happen to call on Mrs. Pendennis.
+
+It was not much of a fib that Barnes had told. Lady Kew announcing that
+she was out of town, her grandson, no doubt, thought himself justified
+in saying so, as any other of her servants would have done. But if he
+had recollected how Ethel came down with the Colonel's shawl on her
+shoulders, how it was possible she might have written to thank her
+uncle, surely Barnes Newcome would not have pulled that unlucky
+long-bow. The banker had other things to think of than Ethel and her
+shawl.
+
+When Thomas Newcome dismounted at the door of Honeymoon Cottage,
+Richmond, the temporary residence of A. Pendennis, Esq., one of the
+handsomest young women in England ran into the passage with outstretched
+arms, called him her dear old uncle, and gave him two kisses, that I
+dare say brought blushes on his lean sunburnt cheeks. Ethel clung always
+to his affection. She wanted that man, rather than any other in the
+whole world, to think well of her. When she was with him, she was the
+amiable and simple, the loving impetuous creature of old times. She
+chose to think of no other. Worldliness, heartlessness, eager scheming,
+cold flirtations, marquis-hunting and the like, disappeared for a
+while--and were not, as she sate at that honest man's side. O me! that
+we should have to record such charges against Ethel Newcome!
+
+"He was come home for good now? He would never leave that boy he spoiled
+so, who was a good boy, too: she wished she could see him oftener. At
+Paris, at Madame de Florac's--I found out all about Madame de Florac,
+sir," says Miss Ethel, with a laugh--"we used often to meet there; and
+here, sometimes, in London. But in London it was different. You know
+what peculiar notions some people have; and as I live with grandmamma,
+who is most kind to me and my brothers, of course I must obey her, see
+her," etc. etc. That the young lady went on talking, defending
+herself, whom nobody attacked, protesting her dislike to gaiety and
+dissipation--you would have fancied her an artless young country lass,
+only longing to trip back to her village, milk her cows at sunrise, and
+sit spinning of winter evenings by the fire.
+
+"Why do you come and spoil my tete-a-tete with my uncle, Mr. Pendennis?"
+cries the young lady to the master of the house, who happens to enter
+"Of all the men in the world the one I like best to talk to! Does he not
+look younger than when he went to India? When Clive marries that pretty
+little Miss Mackenzie, you will marry again, uncle, and I will be
+jealous of your wife."
+
+"Did Barnes tell you that we had met last night, my dear?" asks the
+Colonel.
+
+"Not one word. Your shawl and your dear kind note told me you were come.
+Why did not Barnes tell us? Why do you look so grave?"
+
+"He has not told her that I was here, and would have me believe her
+absent," thought Newcome, as his countenance fell. "Shall I give her my
+own message, and plead my poor boy's cause with her?" I know not whether
+he was about to lay his suit before her; he said himself subsequently
+that his mind was not made up; but at this juncture, a procession of
+nurses and babies made their appearance, followed by the two mothers,
+who had been comparing their mutual prodigies (each lady having her own
+private opinion)--Lady Clara and my wife--the latter for once gracious
+to Lady Clara Newcome, in consideration of the infantine company with
+which she came to visit Mrs. Pendennis.
+
+Luncheon was served presently. The carriage of the Newcomes drove away,
+my wife smilingly pardoning Ethel for the assignation which the young
+person had made at our house. And when those ladies were gone, our good
+Colonel held a council of war with us his two friends, and told us what
+had happened between him and Barnes on that morning and the previous
+night. His offer to sacrifice every shilling of his fortune to young
+Clive seemed to him to be perfectly simple (though the recital of the
+circumstance brought tears into my wife's eyes)--he mentioned it by the
+way, and as a matter that was scarcely to call for comment, much less
+praise.
+
+Barnes's extraordinary statements respecting Lady Kew's absence puzzled
+the elder Newcome; and he spoke of his nephew's conduct with much
+indignation. In vain I urged that her ladyship desiring to be considered
+absent from London, her grandson was bound to keep her secret. "Keep
+her secret, yes! Tell me lies, no!" cries out the Colonel. Sir Barnes's
+conduct was in fact indefensible, though not altogether unusual--the
+worst deduction to be drawn from it, in my opinion, was, that Clive's
+chance with the young lady was but a poor one, and that Sir Barnes
+Newcome, inclined to keep his uncle in good-humour, would therefore give
+him no disagreeable refusal.
+
+Now this gentleman could no more pardon a lie than he could utter one.
+He would believe all and everything a man told him until deceived once,
+after which he never forgave. And wrath being once roused in his simple
+mind and distrust firmly fixed there, his anger and prejudices gathered
+daily. He could see no single good quality in his opponent; and hated
+him with a daily increasing bitterness.
+
+As ill luck would have it, that very same evening, at his return to
+town, Thomas Newcome entered Bays's club, of which, at our request, he
+had become a member during his last visit to England, and there was Sir
+Barnes, as usual, on his way homewards from the City. Barnes was writing
+at a table, and sealing and closing a letter, as he saw the Colonel
+enter; he thought he had been a little inattentive and curt with
+his uncle in the morning; had remarked, perhaps, the expression of
+disapproval on the Colonel's countenance. He simpered up to his uncle as
+the latter entered the clubroom, and apologised for his haste when they
+met in the City in the morning--all City men were so busy! "And I have
+been writing about that little affair, just as you came in," he said;
+"quite a moving letter to Lady Kew, I assure you, and I do hope and
+trust we shall have a favourable answer in a day or two."
+
+"You said her ladyship was in the North, I think?" said the Colonel,
+drily.
+
+"Oh, yes--in the North, at--at Lord Wallsend's--great coal-proprietor,
+you know."
+
+"And your sister is with her?"
+
+"Ethel is always with her."
+
+"I hope you will send her my very best remembrances," said the Colonel.
+
+"I'll open the letter, and add 'em in a postscript," said Barnes.
+
+"Confounded liar?" cried the Colonel, mentioning the circumstance to me
+afterwards, "why does not somebody pitch him out of the bow-window?"
+
+If we were in the secret of Sir Barnes Newcome's correspondence, and
+could but peep into that particular letter to his grandmother, I dare
+say we should read that he had seen the Colonel, who was very anxious
+about his darling youth's suit, but, pursuant to Lady Kew's desire,
+Barnes had stoutly maintained that her ladyship was still in the North,
+enjoying the genial hospitality of Lord Wallsend. That of course he
+should say nothing to Ethel, except with Lady Kew's full permission:
+that he wished her a pleasant trip to ----, and was, etc. etc.
+
+Then if we could follow him, we might see him reach his Belgravian
+mansion, and fling an angry word to his wife as she sits alone in the
+darkling drawing-room, poring over the embers. He will ask her, probably
+with an oath, why the ---- she is not dressed? and if she always intends
+to keep her company waiting? An hour hence, each with a smirk, and the
+lady in smart raiment, with flowers in her hair, will be greeting their
+guests as they arrive. Then will come dinner and such conversation as
+it brings. Then at night Sir Barnes will issue forth, cigar in mouth; to
+return to his own chamber at his own hour; to breakfast by himself; to
+go Citywards, money-getting. He will see his children once a fortnight,
+and exchange a dozen sharp words with his wife twice in that time.
+
+More and more sad does the Lady Clara become from day to day; liking
+more to sit lonely over the fire; careless about the sarcasms of her
+husband; the prattle of her children. She cries sometimes over the
+cradle of the young heir. She is aweary, aweary. You understand, the
+man to whom her parents sold her does not make her happy, though she has
+been bought with diamonds, two carriages, several large footmen, a fine
+country-house with delightful gardens, and conservatories, and with all
+this she is miserable--is it possible?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII. In which Kinsmen fall out
+
+
+Not the least difficult part of Thomas Newcome's present business was
+to keep from his son all knowledge of the negotiation in which he was
+engaged on Clive's behalf. If my gentle reader has had sentimental
+disappointments, he or she is aware that the friends who have given
+him most sympathy under these calamities have been persons who have
+had dismal histories of their own at some time of their lives, and
+I conclude Colonel Newcome in his early days must have suffered very
+cruelly in that affair of which we have a slight cognisance, or he would
+not have felt so very much anxiety about Clive's condition.
+
+A few chapters back and we described the first attack, and Clive's
+manful cure: then we had to indicate the young gentleman's relapse, and
+the noisy exclamations of the youth under this second outbreak of fever.
+Calling him back after she had dismissed him, and finding pretext after
+pretext to see him,--why did the girl encourage him, as she certainly
+did? I allow, with Mrs. Grundy and most moralists, that Miss Newcome's
+conduct in this matter was highly reprehensible; that if she did not
+intend to marry Clive she should have broken with him--altogether;
+that a virtuous young woman of high principle, etc. etc., having once
+determined to reject a suitor, should separate from him utterly then and
+there--never give him again the least chance of a hope, or reillume the
+extinguished fire in the wretch's bosom.
+
+But coquetry, but kindness, but family affection, and a strong, very
+strong partiality for the rejected lover--are these not to be taken in
+account, and to plead as excuses for her behaviour to her cousin? The
+least unworthy part of her conduct, some critics will say, was that
+desire to see Clive and be well with him: as she felt the greatest
+regard for him, the showing it was not blameable; and every flutter
+which she made to escape out of the meshes which the world had cast
+about her was but the natural effort at liberty. It was her prudence
+which was wrong; and her submission wherein she was most culpable. In
+the early church story, do we not read how young martyrs constantly had
+to disobey worldly papas and mammas, who would have had them silent, and
+not utter their dangerous opinions? how their parents locked them up,
+kept them on bread-and-water, whipped and tortured them in order to
+enforce obedience?--nevertheless they would declare the truth: they
+would defy the gods by law established, and deliver themselves up to the
+lions or the tormentors. Are not there Heathen Idols enshrined among us
+still? Does not the world worship them, and persecute those who refuse
+to kneel? Do not many timid souls sacrifice to them; and other bolder
+spirits rebel and, with rage at their hearts, bend down their stubborn
+knees at their altars? See! I began by siding with Mrs. Grundy and the
+world, and at the next turn of the see-saw have lighted down on Ethel's
+side, and am disposed to think that the very best part of her conduct
+has been those escapades which--which right-minded persons most justly
+condemn. At least, that a young beauty should torture a man with
+alternate liking and indifference; allure, dismiss, and call him back
+out of banishment; practise arts to please upon him, and ignore them
+when rebuked for her coquetry--these are surely occurrences so common in
+young women's history as to call for no special censure; and if on these
+charges Miss Newcome is guilty, is she, of all her sex, alone in her
+criminality?
+
+So Ethel and her duenna went away upon their tour of visits to mansions
+so splendid, and among hosts and guests so polite, that the present
+modest historian does not dare to follow them. Suffice it to say that
+Duke This and Earl That were, according to their hospitable custom,
+entertaining a brilliant circle of friends at their respective castles,
+all whose names the Morning Post gave; and among them those of the
+Dowager Countess of Kew and Miss Newcome.
+
+During her absence, Thomas Newcome grimly awaited the result of his
+application to Barnes. That Baronet showed his uncle a letter, or rather
+a postscript, from Lady Kew, which probably had been dictated by Barnes
+himself, in which the Dowager said she was greatly touched by Colonel
+Newcome's noble offer; that though she owned she had very different
+views for her granddaughter, Miss Newcome's choice of course lay with
+herself. Meanwhile, Lady K. and Ethel were engaged in a round of visits
+to the country, and there would be plenty of time to resume this subject
+when they came to London for the season. And, lest dear Ethel's feelings
+should be needlessly agitated by a discussion of the subject, and the
+Colonel should take a fancy to write to her privately, Lady Kew gave
+orders that all letters from London should be despatched under cover to
+her ladyship, and carefully examined the contents of the packet before
+Ethel received her share of the correspondence.
+
+To write to her personally on the subject of the marriage, Thomas
+Newcome had determined was not a proper course for him to pursue. "They
+consider themselves," says he, "above us, forsooth, in their rank of
+life (oh, mercy! what pigmies we are! and don't angels weep at the brief
+authority in which we dress ourselves up!) and of course the approaches
+on our side must be made in regular form, and the parents of the young
+people must act for them. Clive is too honourable a man to wish to
+conduct the affair in any other way. He might try the influence of his
+beaux yeux, and run off to Gretna with a girl who had nothing; but the
+young lady being wealthy, and his relation, sir, we must be on the point
+of honour; and all the Kews in Christendom shan't have more pride than
+we in this matter."
+
+All this time we are keeping Mr. Clive purposely in the background.
+His face is so woebegone that we do not care to bring it forward in
+the family picture. His case is so common that surely its lugubrious
+symptoms need not be described at length. He works away fiercely at his
+pictures, and in spite of himself improves in his art. He sent a "Combat
+of Cavalry," and a picture of "Sir Brian the Templar carrying off
+Rebecca," to the British Institution this year; both of which pieces
+were praised in other journals besides the Pall Mall Gazette. He did not
+care for the newspaper praises. He was rather surprised when a dealer
+purchased his "Sir Brian the Templar." He came and went from our house a
+melancholy swain. He was thankful for Laura's kindness and pity. J. J.'s
+studio was his principal resort; and I dare say, as he set up his own
+easel there, and worked by his friend's side, he bemoaned his lot to his
+sympathising friend.
+
+Sir Barnes Newcome's family was absent from London during the winter.
+His mother, and his brothers and sisters, his wife and his two children,
+were gone to Newcome for Christmas. Some six weeks after seeing him,
+Ethel wrote her uncle a kind, merry letter. They had been performing
+private theatricals at the country-house where she and Lady Kew were
+staying. "Captain Crackthorpe made an admirable Jeremy Diddler in
+'Raising the Wind.' Lord Farintosh broke down lamentably as Fusbos in
+'Bombastes Furioso.'" Miss Ethel had distinguished herself in both of
+these facetious little comedies. "I should like Clive to paint me as
+Miss Plainways," she wrote. "I wore a powdered front, painted my face
+all over wrinkles, imitated old Lady Griffin as well as I could, and
+looked sixty at least."
+
+Thomas Newcome wrote an answer to his fair niece's pleasant letter;
+"Clive," he said, "would be happy to bargain to paint her, and nobody
+else but her, all the days of his life; and," the Colonel was sure,
+"would admire her at sixty as much as he did now, when she was forty
+years younger." But, determined on maintaining his appointed line of
+conduct respecting Miss Newcome, he carried his letter to Sir Barnes,
+and desired him to forward it to his sister. Sir Barnes took the note,
+and promised to despatch it. The communications between him and his
+uncle had been very brief and cold, since the telling of these little
+fibs concerning old Lady Kew's visits to London, which the Baronet
+dismissed from his mind as soon as they were spoken, and which the good
+Colonel never could forgive. Barnes asked his uncle to dinner once or
+twice, but the Colonel was engaged. How was Barnes to know the reason of
+the elder's refusal? A London man, a banker, and a Member of Parliament,
+has a thousand things to think of; and no time to wonder that friends
+refuse his invitations to dinner. Barnes continued to grin and smile
+most affectionately when he met the Colonel; to press his hand, to
+congratulate him on the last accounts from India, unconscious of the
+scorn and distrust with which his senior mentally regarded him. "Old
+boy is doubtful about the young cub's love-affair," the Baronet may have
+thought. "We'll ease his old mind on that point some time hence." No
+doubt Barnes thought he was conducting the business very smartly and
+diplomatically.
+
+I heard myself news at this period from the gallant Crackthorpe, which,
+being interested in my young friend's happiness, filled me with some
+dismay. "Our friend the painter and glazier has been hankering about our
+barracks at Knightsbridge" (the noble Life Guards Green had now pitched
+their tents in that suburb), "and pumping me about la belle cousin. I
+don't like to break it to him--I don't really, now. But it's all up with
+his chance, I think. Those private theatricals at Fallowfield have done
+Farintosh's business. He used to rave about the Newcomes to me, as we
+were riding home from hunting. He gave Bob Henchman the lie, who told
+a story which Bob got from his man, who had it from Miss Newcome's
+lady's-maid, about--about some journey to Brighton, which the cousins
+took." Here Mr. Crackthorpe grinned most facetiously. "Farintosh swore
+he'd knock Henchman down; and vows he will be the death of--will murder
+our friend Clive when he comes to town. As for Henchman, he was in a
+desperate way. He lives on the Marquis, you know, and Farintosh's anger
+or his marriage will be the loss of free quarters, and ever so many
+good dinners a year to him." I did not deem it necessary to impart
+Crackthorpe's story to Clive, or explain to him the reason why Lord
+Farintosh scowled most fiercely upon the young painter, and passed
+him without any other sign of recognition one day as Clive and I were
+walking together in Pall Mall. If my lord wanted a quarrel, young Clive
+was not a man to balk him; and would have been a very fierce customer to
+deal with, in his actual state of mind.
+
+A pauper child in London at seven years old knows how to go to market,
+to fetch the beer, to pawn father's coat, to choose the largest fried
+fish or the nicest ham-bone, to nurse Mary Jane of three,--to conduct a
+hundred operations of trade or housekeeping, which a little Belgravian
+does not perhaps acquire in all the days of her life. Poverty and
+necessity force this precociousness on the poor little brat. There are
+children who are accomplished shoplifters and liars almost as soon as
+they can toddle and speak. I dare say little Princes know the laws of
+etiquette as regards themselves, and the respect due to their rank, at
+a very early period of their royal existence. Every one of us, according
+to his degree, can point to the Princekins of private life who are
+flattered and worshipped, and whose little shoes grown men kiss as soon
+almost as they walk upon ground.
+
+It is a wonder what human nature will support: and that, considering the
+amount of flattery some people are crammed with from their cradles, they
+do not grow worse and more selfish than they are. Our poor little pauper
+just mentioned is dosed with Daffy's Elixir, and somehow survives
+the drug. Princekin or lordkin from his earliest days has nurses,
+dependants, governesses, little friends, schoolfellows, schoolmasters,
+fellow-collegians, college tutors, stewards and valets, led captains of
+his suite, and women innumerable flattering him and doing him honour.
+The tradesman's manner, which to you and me is decently respectful,
+becomes straightway frantically servile before Princekin. Honest folks
+at railway stations whisper to their families, "That's the Marquis of
+Farintosh," and look hard at him as he passes. Landlords cry, "This
+way, my lord; this room for your lordship." They say at public schools
+Princekin is taught the beauties of equality, and thrashed into
+some kind of subordination. Psha! Toad-eaters in pinafores surround
+Princekin. Do not respectable people send their children so as to be at
+the same school with him; don't they follow him to college, and eat his
+toads through life?
+
+And as for women--oh, my dear friends and brethren in this vale of
+tears--did you ever see anything so curious, monstrous, and amazing
+as the way in which women court Princekin when he is marriageable, and
+pursue him with their daughters? Who was the British nobleman in old
+old days who brought his three daughters to the King of Mercia, that
+His Majesty might choose one after inspection? Mercia was but a petty
+province, and its king in fact a Princekin. Ever since those extremely
+ancient and venerable times the custom exists not only in Mercia, but
+in all the rest of the provinces inhabited by the Angles, and before
+Princekins the daughters of our nobles are trotted out.
+
+There was no day of his life which our young acquaintance, the Marquis
+of Farintosh, could remember on which he had not been flattered; and
+no society which did not pay him court. At a private school he could
+recollect the master's wife stroking his pretty curls and treating him
+furtively to goodies; at college he had the tutor simpering and bowing
+as he swaggered over the grass-plat; old men at clubs would make way
+for him and fawn on him--not your mere pique-assiettes and penniless
+parasites, but most respectable toad-eaters, fathers of honest families,
+gentlemen themselves of good station, who respected this young gentleman
+as one of the institutions of their country, and the admired wisdom of
+the nation that set him to legislate over us. When Lord Farintosh walked
+the streets at night, he felt himself like Haroun Alraschid--(that is,
+he would have felt so had he ever heard of the Arabian potentate)--a
+monarch in disguise affably observing and promenading the city. And let
+us be sure there was a Mesrour in his train to knock at the doors for
+him and run the errands of this young caliph. Of course he met with
+scores of men in life who neither flattered him nor would suffer his
+airs; but he did not like the company of such, or for the sake of truth
+undergo the ordeal of being laughed at; he preferred toadies, generally
+speaking. "I like," says he, "you know, those fellows who are always
+saying pleasant things, you know, and who would run from here to
+Hammersmith if I asked 'em--much better than those fellows who are
+always making fun of me, you know." A man of his station who likes
+flatterers need not shut himself up; he can get plenty of society.
+
+As for women, it was his lordship's opinion that every daughter of Eve
+was bent on marrying him. A Scotch marquis, an English earl, of the best
+blood in the empire, with a handsome person, and a fortune of fifteen
+thousand a year, how could the poor creatures do otherwise than long for
+him? He blandly received their caresses; took their coaxing and cajolery
+as matters of course; and surveyed the beauties of his time as the
+Caliph the moonfaces of his harem. My lord intended to marry certainly.
+He did not care for money, nor for rank; he expected consummate beauty
+and talent, and some day would fling his handkerchief to the possessor
+of these, and place her by his side upon the Farintosh throne.
+
+At this time there were but two or three young ladies in society endowed
+with the necessary qualifications, or who found favour in his eyes. His
+lordship hesitated in his selection from these beauties. He was not in
+a hurry, he was not angry at the notion that Lady Kew (and Miss Newcome
+with her) hunted him. What else should they do but pursue an object so
+charming? Everybody hunted him. The other young ladies, whom we need not
+mention, languished after him still more longingly. He had little
+notes from these; presents of purses worked by them, and cigar-cases
+embroidered with his coronet. They sang to him in cosy boudoirs--mamma
+went out of the room, and sister Ann forgot something in the
+drawing-room. They ogled him as they sang. Trembling they gave him a
+little foot to mount them, that they might ride on horseback with him.
+They tripped along by his side from the Hall to the pretty country
+church on Sundays. They warbled hymns: sweetly looking at him the while
+mamma whispered confidentially to him, "What an angel Cecilia is!" And
+so forth, and so forth--with which chaff our noble bird was by no means
+to be caught. When he had made up his great mind, that the time was come
+and the woman, he was ready to give a Marchioness of Farintosh to the
+English nation.
+
+
+Miss Newcome has been compared ere this to the statue of "Huntress
+Diana" at the Louvre, whose haughty figure and beauty the young lady
+indeed somewhat resembled. I was not present when Diana and Diana's
+grandmother hunted the noble Scottish stag of whom we have just been
+writing; nor care to know how many times Lord Farintosh escaped, and how
+at last he was brought to bay and taken by his resolute pursuers. Paris,
+it appears, was the scene of his fall and capture. The news was no doubt
+well known amongst Lord Farintosh's brother-dandies, among exasperated
+matrons and virgins in Mayfair, and in polite society generally, before
+it came to simple Tom Newcome and his son. Not a word on the subject had
+Sir Barnes mentioned to the Colonel: perhaps not choosing to speak till
+the intelligence was authenticated; perhaps not wishing to be the bearer
+of tidings so painful.
+
+Though the Colonel may have read in his Pall Mall Gazette a paragraph
+which announced an approaching MARRIAGE IN HIGH LIFE, "between a noble
+young marquis and an accomplished and beautiful young lady, daughter and
+sister of a Northern baronet," he did not know who were the fashionable
+persons about to be made happy, nor, until he received a letter from an
+old friend who lived at Paris, was the fact conveyed to him. Here is the
+letter preserved by him along with all that he ever received from the
+same hand:--
+
+"Rue St. Dominique, St. Germain,
+
+"Paris, 10 Fev.
+
+"So behold you of return, my friend! you quit for ever the sword and
+those arid plains where you have passed so many years of your life,
+separated from those to whom, at the commencement, you held very nearly.
+Did it not seem once as if two hands never could unlock, so closely were
+they enlaced together? Ah, mine are old and feeble now; forty years have
+passed since the time when you used to say they were young and fair. How
+well I remember me of every one of those days, though there is a death
+between me and them, and it is as across a grave I review them! Yet
+another parting, and tears and regrets are finished. Tenez, I do not
+believe them when they say there is no meeting for us afterwards, there
+above. To what good to have seen you, friend, if we are to part here,
+and in Heaven too? I have not altogether forgotten your language, is it
+not so? I remember it because it was yours, and that of my happy days. I
+radote like an old woman as I am. M. de Florac has known my history from
+the commencement. May I not say that after so many of years I have been
+faithful to him and to all my promises? When the end comes with its
+great absolution, I shall not be sorry. One supports the combats of
+life, but they are long, and one comes from them very wounded; ah, when
+shall they be over?
+
+"You return and I salute you with wishes for parting. How much egotism!
+I have another project which I please myself to arrange. You know how
+I am arrived to love Clive as own my child. I very quick surprised his
+secret, the poor boy, when he was here it is twenty months. He looked
+so like you as I repeal me of you in the old time! He told me he had no
+hope of his beautiful cousin. I have heard of the fine marriage that one
+makes her. Paul, my son, has been at the English Ambassade last night
+and has made his congratulations to M. de Farintosh. Paul says him
+handsome, young, not too spiritual, rich, and haughty, like all, all
+noble Montagnards.
+
+"But it is not of M. de Farintosh I write, whose marriage, without
+doubt, has been announced to you. I have a little project; very foolish,
+perhaps. You know Mr. the Duke of Ivry has left me guardian of his
+little daughter Antoinette, whose affreuse mother no one sees more.
+Antoinette is pretty and good, and soft, and with an affectionate heart.
+I love her already as my infant. I wish to bring her up, and that Clive
+should marry her. They say you are returned very rich. What follies are
+these I write! In the long evenings of winter, the children escaped
+it is a long time from the maternal nest, a silent old man my only
+company,--I live but of the past; and play with its souvenirs as the
+detained caress little birds, little flowers, in their prisons. I was
+born for the happiness; my God! I have learned it in knowing you. In
+losing you I have lost it. It is not against the will of Heaven I oppose
+myself. It is man, who makes himself so much of this evil and misery,
+this slavery, these tears, these crimes, perhaps.
+
+"This marriage of the young Scotch Marquis and the fair Ethel (I love
+her in spite of all, and shall see her soon and congratulate her, for,
+do you see, I might have stopped this fine marriage, and did my best and
+more than my duty for our poor Clive) shall make itself in London next
+spring, I hear. You shall assist scarcely at the ceremony; he, poor boy,
+shall not care to be there. Bring him to Paris to make the court to my
+little Antoinette: bring him to Paris to his good friend, Comtesse de
+Florac."
+
+"I read marvels of his works in an English journal, which one sends me."
+
+
+Clive was not by when this letter reached his father. Clive was in his
+painting-room, and lest he should meet his son, and in order to devise
+the best means of breaking the news to the lad, Thomas Newcome retreated
+out of doors; and from the Oriental he crossed Oxford Street, and from
+Oxford Street he stalked over the roomy pavements of Gloucester Place,
+and there he bethought him how he had neglected Mrs. Hobson Newcome of
+late, and the interesting family of Bryanstone Square. So he went to
+leave his card at Maria's door: her daughters, as we have said, are
+quite grown girls. If they have been lectured, and learning, and
+back-boarded, and practising, and using the globes, and laying in a
+store of 'ologies, ever since, what a deal they must know! Colonel
+Newcome was admitted to see his nieces, and Consummate Virtue, their
+parent. Maria was charmed to see her brother-in-law; she greeted him
+with reproachful tenderness: "Why, why," her fine eyes seemed to say,
+"have you so long neglected us? Do you think because I am wise, and
+gifted, and good, and you are, it must be confessed, a poor creature
+with no education, I am not also affable? Come, let the prodigal be
+welcomed by his virtuous relatives: come and lunch with us, Colonel!" He
+sate down accordingly to the family tiffin.
+
+When the meal was over, the mother, who had matter of importance to
+impart to him, besought him to go to the drawing-room, and there poured
+out such a eulogy upon her children's qualities as fond mothers know how
+to utter. They knew this and they knew that. They were instructed by
+the most eminent professors; "that wretched Frenchwoman, whom you may
+remember here, Mademoiselle Lenoir," Maria remarked parenthetically,
+"turned out, oh, frightfully! She taught the girls the worst accent, it
+appears. Her father was not a colonel; he was--oh! never mind! It is a
+mercy I got rid of that fiendish woman, and before my precious ones knew
+what she was!" And then followed details of the perfections of the two
+girls, with occasional side-shots at Lady Anne's family, just as in the
+old time. "Why don't you bring your boy, whom I have always loved as a
+son, and who avoids me? Why does not Clive know his cousins? They are
+very different from others of his kinswomen, who think best of the
+heartless world."
+
+"I fear, Maria, there is too much truth in what you say," sighs the
+Colonel, drumming on a book on the drawing-room table, and looking down
+sees it is a great, large, square, gilt Peerage, open at FARINTOSH,
+MARQUIS OF.--Fergus Angus Malcolm Mungo Roy, Marquis of Farintosh, Earl
+of Glenlivat, in the peerage of Scotland; also Earl of Rossmont, in that
+of the United Kingdom. Son of Angus Fergus Malcolm, Earl of Glenlivat,
+and grandson and heir of Malcolm Mungo Angus, first Marquis of
+Farintosh, and twenty-fifth Earl, etc. etc.
+
+"You have heard the news regarding Ethel?" remarks Hobson.
+
+"I have just heard," says the poor Colonel.
+
+"I have a letter from Anne this morning," Maria continues. "They are of
+course delighted with the match. Lord Farintosh is wealthy, handsome;
+has been a little wild, I hear; is not such a husband as I would choose
+for my darlings, but poor Brian's family have been educated to love the
+world; and Ethel no doubt is flattered by the prospects before her. I
+have heard that some one else was a little epris in that quarter. How
+does Clive bear the news, my dear Colonel?"
+
+"He has long expected it," says the Colonel, rising: "and I left him
+very cheerful at breakfast this morning."
+
+"Send him to see us, the naughty boy!" cries Maria. "We don't change;
+we remember old times, to us he will ever be welcome!" And with this
+confirmation of Madame de Florac's news, Thomas Newcome walked sadly
+homewards.
+
+And now Thomas Newcome had to break the news to his son; who received
+the shot in such a way as caused his friends and confidants to
+admire his high spirit. He said he had long been expecting some such
+announcement: it was many months since Ethel had prepared him for
+it. Under her peculiar circumstances he did not see how she could
+act otherwise than she had done. And he narrated to the Colonel the
+substance of the conversation which the two young people had had
+together several months before, in Madame de Florac's garden.
+
+Clive's father did not tell his son of his own bootless negotiation with
+Barnes Newcome. There was no need to recall that now; but the Colonel's
+wrath against his nephew exploded in conversation with me, who was the
+confidant of father and son in this business. Ever since that luckless
+day when Barnes thought proper to--to give a wrong address for Lady
+Kew, Thomas Newcome's anger had been growing. He smothered it yet for a
+while, sent a letter to Lady Anne Newcome, briefly congratulating her
+on the choice which he had heard Miss Newcome had made; and in
+acknowledgment of Madame de Florac's more sentimental epistle he wrote a
+reply which has not been preserved, but in which he bade her rebuke Miss
+Newcome for not having answered him when he wrote to her, and not having
+acquainted her old uncle with her projected union.
+
+To this message, Ethel wrote back a brief, hurried reply; it said:--
+
+"I saw Madame de Florac last night at her daughter's reception, and she
+gave me my dear uncle's messages. Yes, the news is true which you have
+heard from Madame de Florac, and in Bryanstone Square. I did not like
+to write it to you, because I know one whom I regard as a brother (and
+a great, great deal better), and to whom I know it will give pain. He
+knows that I have done my duty, and why I have acted as I have done. God
+bless him and his dear father!
+
+"What is this about a letter which I never answered? Grandmamma knows
+nothing about a letter. Mamma has enclosed to me that which you wrote
+to her, but there has been no letter from T. N. to his sincere and
+affectionate E. N.
+
+"Rue de Rivoli. Friday."
+
+
+This was too much, and the cup of Thomas Newcome's wrath overflowed.
+Barnes had lied about Ethel's visit to London: Barnes had lied in saying
+that he delivered the message with which his uncle charged him: Barnes
+had lied about the letter which he had received, and never sent. With
+these accusations firmly proven in his mind against his nephew, the
+Colonel went down to confront that sinner.
+
+Wherever he should find Barnes, Thomas Newcome was determined to tell
+him his mind. Should they meet on the steps of a church, on the flags of
+'Change, or in the newspaper-room at Bays's, at evening-paper time, when
+men most do congregate, Thomas the Colonel was determined upon exposing
+and chastising his father's grandson. With Ethel's letter in his
+pocket, he took his way into the City, penetrated into the unsuspecting
+back-parlour of Hobson's bank, and was disappointed at first at only
+finding his half-brother Hobson there engaged over his newspaper. The
+Colonel signified his wish to see Sir Barnes Newcome. "Sir Barnes was
+not come in yet. You've heard about the marriage," says Hobson. "Great
+news for the Barnes's, ain't it? The head of the house is as proud as
+a peacock about it. Said he was going out to Samuels, the diamond
+merchants; going to make his sister some uncommon fine present. Jolly to
+be uncle to a marquis, ain't it, Colonel? I'll have nothing under a
+duke for my girls. I say, I know whose nose is out of joint. But young
+fellows get over these things, and Clive won't die this time, I dare
+say."
+
+While Hobson Newcome made these satiric and facetious remarks, his
+half-brother paced up and down the glass parlour, scowling over the
+panes into the bank where the busy young clerks sate before their
+ledgers. At last he gave an "Ah!" as of satisfaction. Indeed, he had
+seen Sir Barnes Newcome enter into the bank.
+
+The Baronet stopped and spoke with a clerk, and presently entered,
+followed by that young gentleman into his private parlour. Barnes
+tried to grin when he saw his uncle, and held out his hand to greet
+the Colonel; but the Colonel put both his behind his back--that which
+carried his faithful bamboo cane shook nervously. Barnes was aware that
+the Colonel had the news. "I was going to--to write to you this morning,
+with--with some intelligence that I am--very--very sorry to give."
+
+"This young gentleman is one of your clerks?" asked Thomas Newcome,
+blandly.
+
+"Yes; Mr. Boltby, who has your private account. This is Colonel Newcome,
+Mr. Boltby," says Sir Barnes, in some wonder.
+
+"Mr. Boltby, brother Hobson, you heard what Sir Barnes Newcome said just
+now respecting certain intelligence which he grieved to give me?"
+
+At this the three other gentlemen respectively wore looks of amazement.
+
+"Allow me to say in your presence, that I don't believe one single word
+Sir Barnes Newcome says, when he tells me that he is very sorry for
+some intelligence he has to communicate. He lies, Mr. Boltby; he is very
+glad. I made up my mind that in whatsoever company I met him, and on
+the very first day I found him--hold your tongue, sir; you shall speak
+afterwards and tell more lies when I have done--I made up my mind, I
+say, that on the very first occasion I would tell Sir Barnes Newcome
+that he was a liar and a cheat. He takes charge of letters and keeps
+them back. Did you break the seal, sir? There was nothing to steal in my
+letter to Miss Newcome. He tells me people are out of town, when he goes
+to see in the next street, after leaving my table, and whom I see myself
+half an hour before he lies to me about their absence."
+
+"D--n you, go out, and don't stand staring there, you booby!" screams
+out Sir Barnes to the clerk. "Stop, Boltby. Colonel Newcome, unless you
+leave this room I shall--I shall----"
+
+"You shall call a policeman. Send for the gentleman, and I will tell
+the Lord Mayor what I think of Sir Barnes Newcome, Baronet. Mr. Boltby,
+shall we have the constable in?"
+
+"Sir, you are an old man, and my father's brother, or you know very well
+I would----"
+
+"You would what, Sir? Upon my word, Barnes Newcome" (here the Colonel's
+two hands and the bamboo cane came from the rear and formed in front),
+"but that you are my father's grandson, after a menace like that,
+I would take you out and cane you in the presence of your clerks. I
+repeat, sir, that I consider you guilty of treachery, falsehood, and
+knavery. And if I ever see you at Bays's Club, I will make the same
+statement to your acquaintance at the west end of the town. A man of
+your baseness ought to be known, sir; and it shall be my business to
+make men of honour aware of your character. Mr. Boltby, will you have
+the kindness to make out my account? Sir Barnes Newcome, for fear of
+consequences that I should deplore, I recommend you to keep a wide berth
+of me, sir." And the Colonel twirled his mustachios, and waved his cane
+in an ominous manner, and Barnes started back spontaneously out of its
+dangerous circle.
+
+What Mr. Boltby's sentiments may have been regarding this extraordinary
+scene in which his principal cut so sorry a figure;--whether he narrated
+the conversation to other gentlemen connected with the establishment of
+Hobson Brothers, or prudently kept it to himself, I cannot say, having
+no means of pursuing Mr. B.'s subsequent career. He speedily quitted his
+desk at Hobson Brothers; and let us presume that Barnes thought Mr. B.
+had old all the other clerks of the avuncular quarrel. That conviction
+will make us imagine Barnes still more comfortable. Hobson Newcome no
+doubt was rejoiced at Barnes's discomfiture; he had been insolent and
+domineering beyond measure of late to his vulgar good-natured uncle,
+whereas after the above interview with the Colonel he became very humble
+and quiet in his demeanour, and for a long, long time never said a rude
+word. Nay, I fear Hobson must have carried an account of the transaction
+to Mrs. Hobson and the circle in Bryanstone Square; for Sam Newcome,
+now entered at Cambridge, called the Baronet "Barnes" quite familiarly;
+asked after Clara and Ethel; and requested a small loan of Barnes.
+
+Of course the story did not get wind at Bays's; of course Tom Eaves
+did not know all about it, and say that Sir Barnes had been beaten
+black-and-blue. Having been treated very ill by the committee in a
+complaint which he made about the Club cookery, Sir Barnes Newcome never
+came to Bays's, and at the end of the year took off his name from the
+lists of the Club.
+
+Sir Barnes, though a little taken aback in the morning, and not ready
+with an impromptu reply to the Colonel and his cane, could not allow the
+occurrence to pass without a protest; and indited a letter which Thomas
+Newcome kept along with some others previously quoted by the compiler of
+the present memoirs.
+
+It is as follows:--
+
+
+Belgrave St., Feb. 15, 18--.
+
+"Colonel Newcome, C..B., private.
+
+"SIR--The incredible insolence and violence of your behaviour to-day
+(inspired by whatever causes or mistakes of your own), cannot be passed
+without some comment, on my part. I laid before a friend of your own
+profession, a statement of the words which you applied to me in the
+presence of my partner and one of my clerks this morning; and my adviser
+is of opinion, that considering the relationship unhappily subsisting
+between us, I can take no notice of insults for which you knew when you
+uttered them, I could not call you to account."
+
+"There is some truth in that," said the Colonel. "He couldn't fight, you
+know; but then he was such a liar I could not help speaking my mind."
+
+"I gathered from the brutal language which you thought fit to employ
+towards a disarmed man, the ground of one of your monstrous accusations
+against me, that I deceived you in stating that my relative, Lady Kew,
+was in the country, when in fact she was at her house in London.
+
+"To this absurd charge I at once plead guilty. The venerable lady in
+question was passing through London, where she desired to be free from
+intrusion. At her ladyship's wish I stated that she was out of town;
+and would, under the same circumstances, unhesitatingly make the same
+statement. Your slight acquaintance with the person in question did
+not warrant that you should force yourself on her privacy, as you would
+doubtless know were you more familiar with the customs of the society in
+which she moves.
+
+"I declare upon my honour as a gentleman, that I gave her the message
+which I promised to deliver from you, and also that I transmitted a
+letter with which you entrusted me; and repel with scorn and indignation
+the charges which you were pleased to bring against me, as I treat with
+contempt the language and the threats which you thought fit to employ.
+
+"Our books show the amount of xl. xs. xd. to your credit, which you will
+be good enough to withdraw at your earliest convenience; as of course
+all intercourse must cease henceforth between you and--Yours, etc.
+
+"B. Newcome Newcome."
+
+
+"I think, sir, he doesn't make out a bad case," Mr. Pendennis remarked
+to the Colonel, who showed him this majestic letter.
+
+"It would be a good case if I believed a single word of it, Arthur,"
+replied my friend, placidly twirling the old grey moustache. "If you
+were to say so-and-so, and say that I had brought false charges against
+you, I should cry mea culpa and apologise with all my heart. But as I
+have a perfect conviction that every word this fellow says is a lie,
+what is the use of arguing any more about the matter? I would not
+believe him if he brought twenty as witnesses, and if he lied till he
+was black in the other liars' face. Give me the walnuts. I wonder who
+Sir Barnes's military friend was."
+
+Barnes's military friend was our gallant acquaintance General Sir George
+Tufto, K.C.B., who a short while afterwards talked over the quarrel with
+the Colonel, and manfully told him that (in Sir George's opinion) he
+was wrong. "The little beggar behaved very well, I thought, in the first
+business. You bullied him so, and in the front of his regiment, too,
+that it was almost past bearing; and when he deplored, with tears in
+his eyes, almost, the little humbug! that his relationship prevented him
+calling you out, ecod, I believed him! It was in the second affair that
+poor little Barnes showed he was a cocktail."
+
+"What second affair?" asked Thomas Newcome.
+
+"Don't you know? He! he! this is famous!" cries Sir George. "Why, sir,
+two days after your business, he comes to me with another letter and a
+face as long as my mare's, by Jove. And that letter, Newcome, was from
+your young 'un. Stop, here it is!" and from his padded bosom General Sir
+George Tufto drew a pocket-book, and from the pocket-book a copy of a
+letter, inscribed, "Clive Newcome, Esq., to Sir B. N. Newcome." "There's
+no mistake about your fellow, Colonel. No,----him!" and the man of war
+fired a volley of oaths as a salute to Clive.
+
+And the Colonel, on horseback, riding by the other cavalry officer's
+side read as follows:--
+
+
+"George Street, Hanover Square, February 16.
+
+"SIR--Colonel Newcome this morning showed me a letter bearing your
+signature, in which you state--1. That Colonel Newcome has uttered
+calumnious and insolent charges against you. 2. That Colonel Newcome so
+spoke, knowing that you could take no notice of his charges of falsehood
+and treachery, on account of the relationship subsisting between you.
+
+"Your statements would evidently imply that Colonel Newcome has been
+guilty of ungentlemanlike conduct, and of cowardice towards you.
+
+"As there can be no reason why we should not meet in any manner that you
+desire, I here beg leave to state, on my own part, that I fully coincide
+with Colonel Newcome in his opinion that you have been guilty of
+falsehood and treachery, and that the charge of cowardice which you dare
+to make against a gentleman of his tried honour and courage, is another
+wilful and cowardly falsehood on your part.
+
+"And I hope you will refer the bearer of this note, my friend, Mr.
+George Warrington, of the Upper Temple, to the military gentleman whom
+you consulted in respect to the just charges of Colonel Newcome. Waiting
+a prompt reply, believe me, sir--Your obedient servant, Clive Newcome.
+
+"Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, Bart., M. P., etc."
+
+
+"What a blunderhead I am!" cries the Colonel, with delight on his
+countenance, spite of his professed repentance. "It never once entered
+my head that the youngster would take any part in the affair. I showed
+him his cousin's letter casually, just to amuse him, I think, for he has
+been deuced low lately, about--about a young man's scrape that he
+has got into. And he must have gone off and despatched his challenge
+straightway. I recollect he appeared uncommonly brisk at breakfast the
+next morning. And so you say, General, the Baronet did not like the
+poulet?"
+
+"By no means; never saw a fellow show such a confounded white feather.
+At first I congratulated him, thinking your boy's offer must please him,
+as it would have pleased any fellow in our time to have a shot.
+Dammy! but I was mistaken in my man. He entered into some confounded
+long-winded story about a marriage you wanted to make with that infernal
+pretty sister of his, who is going to marry young Farintosh, and how you
+were in a rage because the scheme fell to the ground, and how a family
+duel might occasion unpleasantries to Miss Newcome; though I showed him
+how this could be most easily avoided, and that the lady's name need
+never appear in the transaction. 'Confound it, Sir Barnes,' says I, 'I
+recollect this boy, when he was a youngster throwing a glass of wine
+in your face! We'll put it upon that, and say it's an old feud between
+you.' He turned quite pale, and he said your fellow had apologised for
+the glass of wine."
+
+"Yes," said the Colonel, sadly, "my boy apologised for the glass of
+wine. It is curious how we have disliked that Barnes ever since we set
+eyes on him."
+
+"Well, Newcome," Sir George resumed, as his mettled charger suddenly
+jumped and curvetted, displaying the padded warrior's cavalry-seat to
+perfection. "Quiet, old lady!--easy, my dear! Well, when I found the
+little beggar turning tail in this way I said to him, 'Dash me, sir, if
+you don't want me, why the dash do you send for me, dash me? Yesterday
+you talked as if you would bite the Colonel's head off, and to-day, when
+his son offers you every accommodation, by dash, sir, you're afraid to
+meet him. It's my belief you had better send for a policeman. A 22 is
+your man, Sir Barnes Newcome.' And with that I turned on my heel and
+left him. And the fellow went off to Newcome that very night."
+
+"A poor devil can't command courage, General," said the Colonel, quite
+peaceably, "any more than he can make himself six feet high."
+
+"Then why the dash did the beggar send for me?" called out General
+Sir George Tufto, in a loud and resolute voice; and presently the two
+officers parted company.
+
+When the Colonel reached home, Mr. Warrington and Mr. Pendennis happened
+to be on a visit to Clive, and all three were in the young fellow's
+painting-room. We knew our lad was unhappy, and did our little best to
+amuse and console him. The Colonel came in. It was in the dark February
+days: we lighted the gas in the studio. Clive had made a sketch from
+some favourite verses of mine and George's: those charming lines of
+Scott's:--
+
+ "He turned his charger as he spake,
+ Beside the river shore;
+ He gave his bridle-rein a shake,
+ With adieu for evermore,
+ My dear!
+ Adieu for evermore!"
+
+Thomas Newcome held up a finger at Warrington, and he came up to the
+picture and looked at it; and George and I trolled out:
+
+ "Adieu for evermore,
+ My dear!
+ Adieu for evermore!"
+
+From the picture the brave old Colonel turned to the painter, regarding
+his son with a look of beautiful inexpressible affection. And he laid
+his hand on his son's shoulder, and smiled, and stroked Clive's yellow
+moustache.
+
+"And--and did Barnes send no answer to that letter you wrote him?" he
+said, slowly.
+
+Clive broke out into a laugh that was almost a sob. He took both his
+father's hands. "My dear, dear old father!" says he, "what a--what
+an--old--trump you are!" My eyes were so dim I could hardly see the two
+men as they embraced.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV. Has a Tragical Ending
+
+
+Clive presently answered the question which his father put to him in the
+last chapter, by producing from the ledge of his easel a crumpled paper,
+full of Cavendish now, but on which was written Sir Barnes Newcome's
+reply to his cousin's polite invitation. Sir Barnes Newcome wrote, "that
+he thought a reference to a friend was quite unnecessary, in the most
+disagreeable and painful dispute in which Mr. Clive desired to interfere
+as a principal; that the reasons which prevented Sir Barnes from taking
+notice of Colonel Newcome's shameful and ungentlemanlike conduct applied
+equally, as Mr. Clive Newcome very well knew, to himself; that if
+further insult was offered, or outrage attempted, Sir Barnes should
+resort to the police for protection; that he was about to quit London,
+and certainly should not delay his departure on account of Mr. Clive
+Newcome's monstrous proceedings; and that he desired to take leave of
+an odious subject, as of an individual whom he had striven to treat
+with kindness, but from whom, from youth upwards, Sir Barnes Newcome had
+received nothing but insolence, enmity, and ill-will."
+
+"He is an ill man to offend," remarked Mr. Pendennis. "I don't think he
+has ever forgiven that claret, Clive."
+
+"Pooh! the feud dates from long before that," said Clive; "Barnes wanted
+to lick me when I was a boy, and I declined: in fact, I think he had
+rather the worst of it; but then I operated freely on his shins, and
+that wasn't fair in war, you know."
+
+"Heaven forgive me," cries the Colonel; "I have always felt the fellow
+was my enemy: and my mind is relieved now war is declared. It has been
+a kind of hypocrisy with me to shake his hand and eat his dinner. When
+I trusted him it was against my better instinct; and I have been
+struggling against it these ten years, thinking it was a wicked
+prejudice, and ought to be overcome."
+
+"Why should we overcome such instincts?" asks Mr. Warrington. "Why
+shouldn't we hate what is hateful in people and scorn what is mean? From
+what friend Pen has described to me, and from some other accounts which
+have come to my ears, your respectable nephew is about as loathsome
+a little villain as crawls on the earth. Good seems to be out of his
+sphere, and away from his contemplation. He ill-treats every one he
+comes near; or, if, gentle to them, it is that they may serve some base
+purpose. Since my attention has been drawn to the creature, I have been
+contemplating his ways with wonder and curiosity. How much superior
+Nature's rogues are, Pen, to the villains you novelists put into your
+books! This man goes about his life business with a natural propensity
+to darkness and evil--as a bug crawls, and stings, and stinks. I don't
+suppose the fellow feels any more remorse than a cat that runs away
+with a mutton-chop. I recognise the Evil Spirit, sir, and do honour to
+Ahrimanes, in taking off my hat to this young man. He seduced a poor
+girl in his father's country town--is it not natural? Deserted her and
+her children--don't you recognise the beast? married for rank--could
+you expect otherwise from him? invites my Lord Highgate to his house in
+consideration of his balance at the bank;--sir, unless somebody's heel
+shall crunch him on the way, there is no height to which this aspiring
+vermin mayn't crawl. I look to see Sir Barnes Newcome prosper more and
+more. I make no doubt he will die an immense capitalist, and an exalted
+Peer of this realm. He will have a marble monument, and a pathetic
+funeral sermon. There is a divine in your family, Clive, that shall
+preach it. I will weep respectful tears over the grave of Baron Newcome,
+Viscount Newcome, Earl Newcome; and the children whom he has deserted,
+and who, in the course of time, will be sent by a grateful nation to New
+South Wales, will proudly say to their brother convicts,--'Yes, the Earl
+was our honoured father.'"
+
+"I fear he is no better than he should be, Mr. Warrington," says the
+Colonel, shaking his head. "I never heard the story about the deserted
+children."
+
+"How should you, O you guileless man!" cries Warrington.
+
+"I am not in the ways of scandal-hearing myself much: but this tale I
+had from Sir Barnes Newcome's own country. Mr. Batters of the Newcome
+Independent is my esteemed client. I write leading articles for his
+newspaper, and when he was in town last spring he favoured me with the
+anecdote; and proposed to amuse the Member for Newcome by publishing it
+in his journal. This kind of writing is not much in my line: and, out of
+respect to you and your young one, I believe--I strove with Mr. Batters,
+and--entreated him and prevailed with him, not to publish the story.
+That is how I came to know it."
+
+I sate with the Colonel in the evening, when he commented on
+Warrington's story and Sir Barnes's adventures in his simple way. He
+said his brother Hobson had been with him the morning after the dispute,
+reiterating Barnes's defence of his conduct: and professing on his own
+part nothing but goodwill towards his brother. "Between ourselves the
+young Baronet carries matters with rather a high hand sometimes, and I
+am not sorry that you gave him a little dressing. But you were too hard
+upon him, Colonel--really you were." "Had I known that child-deserting
+story I would have given it harder still, sir," says Thomas Newcome,
+twirling his mustachios: "but my brother had nothing to do with the
+quarrel, and very rightly did not wish to engage in it. He has an eye to
+business, has Master Hobson too," my friend continued: "for he brought
+me a cheque for my private account, which of course, he said, could not
+remain after my quarrel with Barnes. But the Indian bank account, which
+is pretty large, he supposed need not be taken away? and indeed why
+should it? So that, which is little business of mine, remains where it
+was; and brother Hobson and I remain perfectly good friends.
+
+"I think Clive is much better since he has been quite put out of his
+suspense. He speaks with a great deal more kindness and good-nature
+about the marriage than I am disposed to feel regarding it: and depend
+on it has too high a spirit to show that he is beaten. But I know he
+is a good deal cut up, though he says nothing; and he agreed willingly
+enough to take a little journey, Arthur, and be out of the way when
+this business takes place. We shall go to Paris: I don't know where else
+besides. These misfortunes do good in one way, hard as they are to bear:
+they unite people who love each other. It seems to me my boy has been
+nearer to me, and likes his old father better than he has done of late."
+And very soon after this talk our friends departed.
+
+The Crimean minister having been recalled, and Lady Anne Newcome's house
+in park Lane being vacant, her ladyship and her family came to occupy
+the mansion for this eventful season, and sate once more in the dismal
+dining-room under the picture of the defunct Sir Brian. A little of
+the splendour and hospitality of old days was revived in the house:
+entertainments were given by Lady Anne: and amongst other festivities
+a fine ball took place, when pretty Miss Alice, Miss Ethel's younger
+sister, made her first appearance in the world, to which she was
+afterwards to be presented by the Marchioness of Farintosh. All the
+little sisters were charmed, no doubt, that the beautiful Ethel was to
+become a beautiful Marchioness, who, as they came up to womanhood one
+after another, would introduce them severally to amiable young earls,
+dukes, and marquises, when they would be married off and wear
+coronets and diamonds of their own right. At Lady Anne's ball I saw my
+acquaintance, young Mumford, who was going to Oxford next October, and
+about to leave Rugby, where he was at the head of the school, looking
+very dismal as Miss Alice whirled round the room dancing in Viscount
+Bustington's arms;--Miss Alice, with whose mamma he used to take tea at
+Rugby, and for whose pretty sake Mumford did Alfred Newcome's verses for
+him and let him off his thrashings. Poor Mumford! he dismally went about
+under the protection of young Alfred, a fourth-form boy--not one soul
+did he know in that rattling London ballroom; his young face--as white
+as the large white tie, donned two hours since at the Tavistock with
+such nervousness and beating of heart!
+
+With these lads, and decorated with a tie equally splendid, moved about
+young Sam Newcome, who was shirking from his sister and his mamma. Mrs.
+Hobson had actually assumed clean gloves for this festive occasion.
+Sam stared at all the "Nobs:" and insisted upon being introduced to
+"Farintosh," and congratulated his lordship with much graceful ease: and
+then pushed about the rooms perseveringly hanging on to Alfred's jacket.
+"I say, I wish you wouldn't call me Al'," I heard Mr. Alfred say to his
+cousin. Seeing my face, Mr. Samuel ran up to claim acquaintance. He was
+good enough to say he thought Farintosh seemed devilish haughty. Even my
+wife could not help saying, that Mr. Sam was an odious little creature.
+
+So it was for young Alfred, and his brothers and sisters, who would want
+help and protection in the world, that Ethel was about to give up her
+independence, her inclination perhaps, and to bestow her life on yonder
+young nobleman. Looking at her as a girl devoting herself to her family,
+her sacrifice gave her a melancholy interest in our eyes. My wife and
+I watched her, grave and beautiful, moving through the rooms, receiving
+and returning a hundred greetings, bending to compliments, talking with
+this friend and that, with my lord's lordly relations, with himself,
+to whom she listened deferentially; faintly smiling as he spoke now and
+again; doing the honours of her mother's house. Lady after lady of
+his lordship's clan and kinsfolk complimented the girl and her pleased
+mother. Old Lady Kew was radiant (if one can call radiance the glances
+of those darkling old eyes). She sate in a little room apart, and
+thither people went to pay their court to her. Unwillingly I came in
+on this levee with my wife on my arm: Lady Kew scowled at me over her
+crutch, but without a sign of recognition. "What an awful countenance
+that old woman has!" Laura whispered as we retreated out of that gloomy
+presence.
+
+And Doubt (as its wont is) whispered too a question in my ear, "Is
+it for her brothers and sisters only that Miss Ethel is sacrificing
+herself? Is it not for the coronet, and the triumph, and the fine
+houses?" "When two motives may actuate a friend, we surely may try and
+believe in the good one," says Laura. "But, but I am glad Clive does
+not marry her--poor fellow--he would not have been happy with her. She
+belongs to this great world: she has spent all her life in it: Clive
+would have entered into it very likely in her train; and you know, sir,
+it is not good that we should be our husbands' superiors," adds Mrs.
+Laura, with a curtsey.
+
+She presently pronounced that the air was very hot in the rooms, and in
+fact wanted to go home to see her child. As we passed out, we saw Sir
+Barnes Newcome, eagerly smiling, smirking, bowing, and in the fondest
+conversation with his sister and Lord Farintosh. By Sir Barnes presently
+brushed Lieutenant-General Sir George Tufto, K.C.B., who, when he saw
+on whose foot he had trodden, grunted out, "H'm, beg your pardon!" and
+turning his back on Barnes, forthwith began complimenting Ethel and the
+Marquis. "Served with your lordship's father in Spain; glad to make your
+lordship's acquaintance," says Sir George. Ethel bows to us as we pass
+out of the rooms, and we hear no more of Sir George's conversation.
+
+In the cloak-room sits Lady Clara Newcome, with a gentleman bending over
+her, just in such an attitude as the bride is in Hogarth's "Marriage a
+la Mode" as the counsellor talks to her. Lady Clara starts up as a crowd
+of blushes come into her wan face, and tries to smile, and rises to
+greet my wife, and says something about its being so dreadfully hot
+in the upper rooms, and so very tedious waiting for the carriages. The
+gentleman advances towards me with a military stride, and says, "How do
+you do, Mr. Pendennis? How's our young friend, the painter?" I answer
+Lord Highgate civilly enough, whereas my wife will scarce speak a word
+in reply to Lady Clara Newcome.
+
+Lady Clara asked us to her ball, which my wife declined altogether to
+attend. Sir Barnes published a series of quite splendid entertainments
+on the happy occasion of his sister's betrothal. We read the names of
+all the clan Farintosh in the Morning Post, as attending these banquets.
+Mr. and Mrs. Hobson Newcome, in Bryanstone Square, gave also signs of
+rejoicing at their niece's marriage. They had a grand banquet followed
+by a tea, to which latter amusement the present biographer was invited.
+Lady Anne, and Lady Kew and her granddaughter, and the Baronet and his
+wife, and my Lord Highgate and Sir George Tufto attended the dinner; but
+it was rather a damp entertainment. "Farintosh," whispers Sam Newcome,
+"sent word just before dinner that he had a sore throat, and Barnes was
+as sulky as possible. Sir George wouldn't speak to him, and the Dowager
+wouldn't speak to Lord Highgate. Scarcely anything was drank," concluded
+Mr. Sam, with a slight hiccup. "I say, Pendennis, how sold Clive will
+be!" And the amiable youth went off to commune with others of his
+parents' guests.
+
+Thus the Newcomes entertained the Farintoshes, and the Farintoshes
+entertained the Newcomes. And the Dowager Countess of Kew went from
+assembly to assembly every evening, and to jewellers and upholsterers
+and dressmakers every morning; and Lord Farintosh's town-house was
+splendidly re-decorated in the newest fashion; and he seemed to grow
+more and more attentive as the happy day approached, and he gave away
+all his cigars to his brother Rob; and his sisters were delighted with
+Ethel, and constantly in her company, and his mother was pleased with
+her, and thought a girl of her spirit and resolution would make a good
+wife for her son: and select crowds flocked to see the service of plate
+at Handyman's, and the diamonds which were being set for the lady; and
+Smee, R.A., painted her portrait, as a souvenir for mamma when Miss
+Newcome should be Miss Newcome no more; and Lady Kew made a will leaving
+all she could leave to her beloved granddaughter, Ethel, daughter of
+the late Sir Brian Newcome, Baronet; and Lord Kew wrote an affectionate
+letter to his cousin, congratulating her, and wishing her happiness with
+all his heart; and I was glancing over The Times newspaper at breakfast
+one morning; when I laid it down with an exclamation which caused my
+wife to start with surprise.
+
+"What is it?" cries Laura, and I read as follows:--
+
+"'Death of the Countess Dowager of Kew.--We regret to have to announce
+the awfully sudden death of this venerable lady. Her ladyship, who had
+been at several parties of the nobility the night before last, seemingly
+in perfect health, was seized with a fit as she was waiting for her
+carriage, and about to quit Lady Pallgrave's assembly. Immediate medical
+assistance was procured, and her ladyship was carried to her own house,
+in Queen Street, Mayfair. But she never rallied, or, we believe, spoke,
+after the first fatal seizure, and sank at eleven o'clock last evening,
+The deceased, Louisa Joanna Gaunt, widow of Frederic, first Earl of Kew,
+was daughter of Charles, Earl of Gaunt, and sister of the late and
+aunt of the present Marquis of Steyne. The present Earl of Kew is her
+ladyship's grandson, his lordship's father, Lord Walham, having died
+before his own father, the first earl. Many noble families are placed in
+mourning by this sad event. Society has to deplore the death of a lady
+who has been its ornament for more than half a century, and who
+was known, we may say, throughout Europe for her remarkable sense,
+extraordinary memory, and brilliant wit.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV. Barnes's Skeleton Closet
+
+
+The demise of Lady Kew of course put a stop for a while to the
+matrimonial projects so interesting to the house of Newcome. Hymen blew
+his torch out, put it into the cupboard for use on a future day,
+and exchanged his garish saffron-coloured robe for decent temporary
+mourning. Charles Honeyman improved the occasion at Lady Whittlesea's
+Chapel hard by; and "Death at the Festival" was one of his most
+thrilling sermons; reprinted at the request of some of the congregation.
+There were those of his flock, especially a pair whose quarter of the
+fold was the organ-loft, who were always charmed with the piping of that
+melodious pastor.
+
+Shall we too, while the coffin yet rests on the earth's outer surface,
+enter the chapel whither these void remains of our dear sister departed
+are borne by the smug undertaker's gentlemen, and pronounce an elegy
+over that bedizened box of corruption? When the young are stricken down,
+and their roses nipped in an hour by the destroying blight, even the
+stranger can sympathise, who counts the scant years on the gravestone,
+or reads the notice in the newspaper corner. The contrast forces
+itself on you. A fair young creature, bright and blooming yesterday,
+distributing smiles, levying homage, inspiring desire, conscious of her
+power to charm, and gay with the natural enjoyment of her conquests--who
+in his walk through the world has not looked on many such a one; and, at
+the notion of her sudden call away from beauty, triumph, pleasure; her
+helpless outcries during her short pain; her vain pleas for a little
+respite; her sentence, and its execution; has not felt a shock of pity?
+When the days of a long life come to its close, and a white head sinks
+to rise no more, we bow our own with respect as the mourning train
+passes, and salute the heraldry and devices of yonder pomp, as symbols
+of age, wisdom, deserved respect and merited honour; long experience
+of suffering and action. The wealth he may have achieved is the harvest
+which he sowed; the titles on his hearse, fruits of the field he bravely
+and laboriously wrought in. But to live to fourscore years, and be found
+dancing among the idle virgins! to have had near a century of allotted
+time, and then be called away from the giddy notes of a Mayfair fiddle!
+To have to yield your roses too, and then drop out of the bony clutch of
+your old fingers a wreath that came from a Parisian bandbox! One fancies
+around some graves unseen troops of mourners waiting; many and many a
+poor pensioner trooping to the place; many weeping charities; many kind
+actions; many dear friends beloved and deplored, rising up at the toll
+of that bell to follow the honoured hearse; dead parents waiting above,
+and calling, "Come, daughter!" lost children, heaven's fondlings,
+hovering round like cherubim, and whispering, "Welcome, mother!" Here
+is one who reposes after a long feast where no love has been; after
+girlhood without kindly maternal nurture; marriage without affection;
+matronhood without its precious griefs and joys; after fourscore years
+of lonely vanity. Let us take off our hats to that procession too as it
+passes, admiring the different lots awarded to the children of men, and
+the various usages to which Heaven puts its creatures.
+
+Leave we yonder velvet-palled box, spangled with fantastic heraldry, and
+containing within the aged slough and envelope of a soul gone to render
+its account. Look rather at the living audience standing round the
+shell;--the deep grief on Barnes Newcome's fine countenance; the sadness
+depicted in the face of the most noble the Marquis of Farintosh; the
+sympathy of her ladyship's medical man (who came in the third mourning
+carriage); better than these, the awe, and reverence, and emotion,
+exhibited in the kind face of one of the witnesses of this scene, as he
+listens to those words which the priest rehearses over our dead. What
+magnificent words! what a burning faith, what a glorious triumph; what
+a heroic life, death, hope, they record! They are read over all of us
+alike; as the sun shines on just and unjust. We have all of us heard
+them; and I have fancied, for my part, that they fell and smote like the
+sods on the coffin.
+
+The ceremony over, the undertaker's gentlemen clamber on the roof of
+the vacant hearse, into which palls, tressels, trays of feathers, are
+inserted, and the horses break out into a trot, and the empty carriages,
+expressing the deep grief of the deceased lady's friends, depart
+homeward. It is remarked that Lord Kew hardly has any communication with
+his cousin, Sir Barnes Newcome. His lordship jumps into a cab, and goes
+to the railroad. Issuing from the cemetery, the Marquis of Farintosh
+hastily orders that thing to be taken off his hat, and returns to
+town in his brougham, smoking a cigar. Sir Barnes Newcome rides in the
+brougham beside Lord Farintosh as far as Oxford Street, where he gets
+a cab, and goes to the City. For business is business, and must be
+attended to, though grief be ever so severe.
+
+A very short time previous to her demise, Mr. Rood (that was Mr.
+Rood--that other little gentleman in black, who shared the third
+mourning coach along with her ladyship's medical man) had executed a
+will by which almost all the Countess's property was devised to her
+granddaughter, Ethel Newcome. Lady Kew's decease of course delayed
+the marriage projects for a while. The young heiress returned to her
+mother's house in Park Lane. I dare say the deep mourning habiliments in
+which the domestics of that establishment appeared, were purchased out
+of the funds left in his hands, which Ethel's banker and brother had at
+her disposal.
+
+Sir Barnes Newcome, who was one of the trustees of his sister's
+property, grumbled no doubt because his grandmother had bequeathed to
+him but a paltry recompense of five hundred pounds for his pains and
+trouble of trusteeship; but his manner to Ethel was extremely bland and
+respectful: an heiress now, and to be a marchioness in a few months,
+Sir Barnes treated her with a very different regard to that which he was
+accustomed to show to other members of his family. For while this worthy
+Baronet would contradict his mother at every word she uttered, and take
+no pains to disguise his opinion that Lady Anne's intellect was of the
+very poorest order, he would listen deferentially to Ethel's smallest
+observations, exert himself to amuse her under her grief, which he chose
+to take for granted was very severe, visit her constantly, and show the
+most charming solicitude for her general comfort and welfare.
+
+During this time my wife received constant notes from Ethel Newcome, and
+the intimacy between the two ladies much increased. Laura was so unlike
+the women of Ethel's circle, the young lady was pleased to say, that to
+be with her was Ethel's greatest comfort. Miss Newcome was now her own
+mistress, had her carriage, and would drive day after day to our
+cottage at Richmond. The frigid society of Lord Farintosh's sisters, the
+conversation of his mother, did not amuse Ethel, and she escaped from
+both with her usual impatience of control. She was at home every day
+dutifully to receive my lord's visits; but though she did not open her
+mind to Laura as freely regarding the young gentleman as she did when
+the character and disposition of her future mother and sisters-in-law
+was the subject of their talk, I could see, from the grave look of
+commiseration which my wife's face bore after her young friend's visits,
+that Mrs. Pendennis augured rather ill of the future happiness of this
+betrothed pair. Once, at Miss Newcome's special request, I took my wife
+to see her in Park Lane, where the Marquis of Farintosh found us. His
+lordship and I had already a half-acquaintance, which was not, however,
+improved after my regular presentation to him by Miss Newcome: he
+scowled at me with a countenance indicative of anything but welcome, and
+did not seem in the least more pleased when Ethel entreated her friend
+Laura not to take her bonnet, not to think of going away so soon. She
+came to see us the very next day, stayed much longer with us than
+usual, and returned to town quite late in the evening, in spite of the
+entreaties of the inhospitable Laura, who would have had her leave us
+long before. "I am sure," says clear-sighted Mrs. Laura, "she is come
+out of bravado, and after we went away yesterday that there were words
+between her and Lord Farintosh on our account."
+
+"Confound the young man," breaks out Mr. Pendennis in a fume; "what does
+he mean by his insolent airs?"
+
+"He may think we are partisans de l'autre," says Mrs. Pendennis, with a
+smile first, and a sigh afterwards, as she said "poor Clive!"
+
+"Do you ever talk about Clive?" asks the husband.
+
+"Never. Once, twice, perhaps, in the most natural manner in the world
+we mentioned where he is; but nothing further passes. The subject is
+a sealed one between us. She often looks at his drawings in my album
+(Clive had drawn our baby there and its mother in a great variety of
+attitudes), and gazes at his sketch of his dear old father: but of him
+she never says a word."
+
+"So it is best," says Mr. Pendennis.
+
+"Yes--best," echoes Laura, with a sigh.
+
+"You think, Laura," continues the husband, "you think she----"
+
+"She what?" What did Mr. Pendennis mean? Laura his wife certainly
+understood him, though upon my conscience the sentence went no
+further--for she answered at once:
+
+"Yes--I think she certainly did, poor boy! But that, of course, is over
+now: and Ethel, though she cannot help being a worldly woman, has such
+firmness and resolution of character, that if she has once determined to
+conquer any inclination of that sort I am sure she will master it, and
+make Lord Farintosh a very good wife."
+
+"Since the Colonel's quarrel with Sir Barnes," cries Mr. Pendennis,
+adverting by a natural transition from Ethel to her amiable brother,
+"our banking friend does not invite us any more: Lady Clara sends you no
+cards. I have a great mind to withdraw my account."
+
+Laura, who understands nothing about accounts, did not perceive the
+fine irony of this remark: but her face straightway put on the severe
+expression which it chose to assume whenever Sir Barnes's family was
+mentioned, and she said, "My dear, I am very glad indeed that Lady Clara
+sends us no more of her invitations. You know very well why I disliked
+them."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I hear baby crying," says Laura. Oh, Laura, Laura! how could you tell
+your husband such a fib?--and she quits the room without deigning to
+give any answer to that "Why?"
+
+Let us pay a brief visit to Newcome in the north of England, and there
+we may get some answer to the question of which Mr. Pendennis had
+just in vain asked a reply from his wife. My design does not include a
+description of that great and flourishing town of Newcome, and of
+the manufactures which caused its prosperity; but only admits of the
+introduction of those Newcomites who are concerned in the affairs of the
+family which has given its respectable name to these volumes.
+
+Thus in previous pages we have said nothing about the Mayor and
+Corporation of Newcome the magnificent bankers and manufacturers who had
+their places of business in the town, and their splendid villas outside
+its smoky precincts; people who would give their thousand guineas for a
+picture or a statue, and write you off a cheque for ten times the amount
+any day; people who, if there was a talk of a statue to the Queen or
+the Duke, would come down to the Town All and subscribe their one, two,
+three undred apiece (especially if in the neighbouring city of SLOWCOME
+they were putting up a statue to the Duke or the Queen)--not of such men
+have I spoken, the magnates of the place; but of the humble Sarah Mason
+in Jubilee Row--of the Reverend Dr. Bulders the Vicar, Mr. Vidler the
+apothecary, Mr. Puff the baker--of Tom Potts, the jolly reporter of the
+Newcome Independent, and ------ Batters, Esq., the proprietor of that
+journal--persons with whom our friends have had already, or will be
+found presently to have, some connexion. And it is from these that we
+shall arrive at some particulars regarding the Newcome family, which
+will show us that they have a skeleton or two in their closets, as well
+as their neighbours.
+
+Now, how will you have the story? Worthy mammas of families--if you do
+not like to have your daughters told that bad husbands will make bad
+wives; that marriages begun in indifference make homes unhappy; that men
+whom girls are brought to swear to love and honour are sometimes false,
+selfish, and cruel; and that women forget the oaths which they have been
+made to swear--if you will not hear of this, ladies, close the book, and
+send for some other. Banish the newspaper out of your houses, and shut
+your eyes to the truth, the awful truth, of life and sin. Is the world
+made of Jennies and Jessamies; and passion the play of schoolboys and
+schoolgirls, scribbling valentines and interchanging lollipops? Is life
+all over when Jenny and Jessamy are married; and are there no subsequent
+trials, griefs, wars, bitter heart-pangs, dreadful temptations, defeats,
+remorses, sufferings to bear, and dangers to overcome? As you and I,
+friend, kneel with our children round about us, prostrate before the
+Father of us all, and asking mercy for miserable sinners, are the young
+ones to suppose the words are mere form, and don't apply to us?--to some
+outcasts in the free seats probably, or those naughty boys playing in
+the churchyard? Are they not to know that we err too, and pray with all
+our hearts to be rescued from temptation? If such a knowledge is wrong
+for them, send them to church apart. Go you and worship in private; or
+if not too proud, kneel humbly in the midst of them, owning your wrong,
+and praying Heaven to be merciful to you a sinner.
+
+When Barnes Newcome became the reigning Prince of the Newcome family,
+and after the first agonies of grief for his father's death had
+subsided, he made strong attempts to conciliate the principal persons in
+the neighbourhood, and to render himself popular in the borough. He gave
+handsome entertainments to the townsfolk and to the county gentry; he
+tried even to bring those two warring classes together. He endeavoured
+to be civil to the Newcome Independent, the Opposition paper, as well as
+to the Newcome Sentinel that true old Uncompromising Blue. He asked the
+Dissenting clergyman to dinner, and the Low Church clergyman, as well
+as the orthodox Doctor Bulders and his curates. He gave a lecture at
+the Newcome Athenaeum, which everybody said was very amusing, and
+which Sentinel and Independent both agreed in praising. Of course he
+subscribed to that statue which the Newcomites were raising; to the
+philanthropic missions which Reverend Low Church gentlemen were engaged
+in; to the (for the young Newcomite manufacturers are as sporting as
+any gents in the North), to the hospital, the People's Library, the
+restoration of the rood-screen and the great painted window in Newcome
+Old Church (Rev. J. Bulders), and he had to pay in fine a most awful
+price for his privilege of sitting in Parliament as representative of
+his native place--as he called it in his speeches "the cradle of his
+forefathers, the home of his race," etc., though Barnes was in fact born
+at Clapham.
+
+Lady Clara could not in the least help this young statesman in his
+designs upon Newcome and the Newcomites. After she came into Barnes's
+hands, a dreadful weight fell upon her. She would smile and simper,
+and talk kindly and gaily enough at first, during Sir Brian's life; and
+among women, when Barnes was not present. But as soon as he joined the
+company, it was remarked that his wife became silent, and looked eagerly
+towards him whenever he ventured to speak. She blundered, her eyes
+filled with tears; the little wit she had left her in her husband's
+presence: he grew angry, and tried to hide his anger with a sneer,
+or broke out with gibe and an oath, when he lost patience, and Clara,
+whimpering, would leave the room. Everybody at Newcome knew that Barnes
+bullied his wife.
+
+People had worse charges against Barnes than wife-bullying. Do you
+suppose that little interruption which occurred at Barnes's marriage
+was not known in Newcome? His victim had been a Newcome girl, the man to
+whom she was betrothed was in a Newcome factory. When Barnes was a young
+man, and in his occasional visits to Newcome, lived along with those
+dashing young blades Sam Jollyman (Jollyman Brothers and Bowcher), Bob
+Homer, Cross Country Bill, Al Rackner (for whom his father had to pay
+eighteen thousand pounds after the Leger, the year Toggery won it) and
+that wild lot, all sorts of stories were told of them, and of Barnes
+especially. Most of them were settled, and steady business men by this
+time. Al, it was known had become very serious, besides making his
+fortune in cotton. Bob Homer managed the Bank; and as for S. Jollyman,
+Mrs. S. J. took uncommon good care that he didn't break out of bounds
+any more; why, he was not even allowed to play a game at billiards;
+or to dine out without her----I could go on giving you interesting
+particulars of a hundred members of the Newcome aristocracy, were not
+our attention especially directed to one respectable family.
+
+All Barnes's endeavours at popularity were vain, partly from his own
+fault, and partly from the nature of mankind, and of the Newcome folks
+especially, whom no single person could possibly conciliate. Thus,
+suppose he gave the advertisements to the Independent; the old Blue
+paper the Sentinel was very angry: suppose he asked Mr. Hunch, the
+Dissenting minister, to bless the tablecloth after dinner, as he had
+begged Dr. Bulders to utter a benediction on the first course, Hunch and
+Bulders were both angry. He subscribed to the races--what heathenism!
+to the missionaries--what sanctimonious humbug! And the worst was that
+Barnes being young at that time, and not able to keep his tongue in
+order, could not help saying not to but of such and such a man, that he
+was an infernal ass, or a confounded old idiot, and so forth--peevish
+phrases, which undid in a moment the work of a dozen dinners, countless
+compliments, and months of grinning good-humour.
+
+Now he is wiser. He is very proud of being Newcome of Newcome, and quite
+believes that the place is his hereditary principality. But still, he
+says, his father was a fool for ever representing the borough. "Dammy,
+sir," cries Sir Barnes, "never sit for a place that lies at your
+park-gates, and above all never try to conciliate 'em. Curse 'em! Hate
+'em well, sir! Take a line, and flog the fellows on the other side.
+Since I have sate in Parliament for another place, I have saved myself I
+don't know how much a year. I never go to High Church or Low; don't give
+a shillin' to the confounded races, or the infernal souptickets, or to
+the miserable missionaries; and at last live in quiet."
+
+So, in spite of all his subscriptions, and his coaxing of the various
+orders of Newcomites, Sir Barnes Newcome was not popular among them; and
+while he had enemies on all sides, had sturdy friends not even on his
+own. Scarce a man but felt Barnes was laughing at him; Bulders in his
+pulpit, Holder who seconded him in his election, the Newcome society;
+and the ladies, even more than the men, were uneasy under his ominous
+familiarity, and recovered their good-humour when he left them. People
+felt as if it was a truce only, and not an alliance with him, and always
+speculated on the possibility of war: when he turned his back on them in
+the market, men felt relieved, and, as they passed his gate, looked with
+no friendly glances over his park-wall.
+
+What happened within was perfectly familiar to many persons. Our friend
+was insolent to all his servants; and of course very well served,
+but very much disliked, in consequence. The butler was familiar with
+Taplow--the housekeeper had a friend at Newcome; Mrs Taplow, in fact,
+of the King's Arms--one of the grooms at Newcome Park kept company with
+Mrs. Bulder's maid: the incomings and outgoings, the quarrels and tears,
+the company from London, and all the doings of the folks at Newcome Park
+were thus known to the neighbourhood round about. The apothecary brought
+an awful story back from Newcome. He had been called to Lady Clara in
+strong hysterical fits. He found her ladyship with a bruise on her face.
+When Sir Barnes approached her (he would not allow the medical man to
+see her except in his presence) she screamed and bade him not come near
+her. These things did Mr. Vidler weakly impart to Mrs. Vidler: these,
+under solemn vows of secrecy, Mrs. Vidler told to one or two friends.
+Sir Barnes and Lady Clara were seen shopping together very graciously in
+Newcome a short time afterwards; persons who dined at the Park said the
+Baronet and his wife seemed on very good terms; but--but that story of
+the bruised cheek remained in the minds of certain people, and lay by at
+compound interest as such stories will.
+
+Now, say people quarrel and make it up; or don't make it up, but wear a
+smirking face to society, and call each other "my dear" and "my love,"
+and smooth over their countenances before John, who enters with the
+coals as they are barking and biting, or who announces the dinner as
+they are tearing each other's eyes out? Suppose a woman is ever so
+miserable, and yet smiles, and doesn't show her grief? "Quite right,"
+say her prudent friends, and her husband's relations above all. "My
+dear, you have too much propriety to exhibit your grief before the
+world, or above all, before the darling children." So to lie is your
+duty, to lie to your friends, to yourself if you can, to your children.
+
+Does this discipline of hypocrisy improve any mortal woman? Say she
+learns to smile after a blow, do you suppose in this matter alone she
+will be a hypocrite? Poor Lady Clara! I fancy a better lot for you than
+that to which fate handed you over. I fancy there need have been no
+deceit in your fond simple little heart, could it but have been given
+into other keeping. But you were consigned to a master, whose scorn and
+cruelty terrified you; under whose sardonic glances your scared eyes
+were afraid to look up, and before whose gloomy coldness you dared
+not be happy. Suppose a little plant, very frail and delicate from the
+first, but that might have bloomed sweetly and borne fair flowers, had
+it received warm shelter and kindly nurture; suppose a young creature
+taken out of her home, and given over to a hard master whose caresses
+are as insulting as his neglect; consigned to cruel usage; to weary
+loneliness; to bitter, bitter recollections of the past; suppose her
+schooled into hypocrisy by tyranny--and then, quick, let us hire
+an advocate to roar out to a British jury the wrongs of her injured
+husband, to paint the agonies of his bleeding heart (if Mr. Advocate
+gets plaintiff's brief in time, and before defendant's attorney has
+retained him), and to show Society injured through him. Let us console
+that martyr, I say, with thumping damages; and as for the woman--the
+guilty wretch!--let us lead her out and stone her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI. Rosa quo locorum sera moratur
+
+
+Clive Newcome bore his defeat with such a courage and resolution as
+those who knew the young fellow's character were sure he would display.
+It was whilst he had a little lingering hope still that the poor lad was
+in the worst condition; as a gambler is restless and unhappy whilst his
+last few guineas remain with him, and he is venturing them against the
+overpowering chances of the bank. His last piece, however, gone, our
+friend rises up from that unlucky table beaten at the contest but not
+broken in spirit. He goes back into the world again and withdraws
+from that dangerous excitement; sometimes when he is alone or wakeful,
+tossing in his bed at nights, he may recall the fatal game, and think
+how he might have won it--think what a fool he was ever to have
+played it at all--but these cogitations Clive kept for himself. He was
+magnanimous enough not even to blame Ethel much, and to take her side
+against his father, who it must be confessed now exhibited a violent
+hostility against that young lady and her belongings. Slow to anger and
+utterly beyond deceit himself, when Thomas Newcome was once roused, or
+at length believed that he was cheated woe to the offender! From that
+day forth, Thomas believed no good of him. Every thought or action of
+his enemy's life seemed treason to the worthy Colonel. If Barnes gave
+a dinner-party, his uncle was ready to fancy that the banker wanted
+to poison somebody; if he made a little speech in the House of Commons
+(Barnes did make little speeches in the House of Commons), the Colonel
+was sure some infernal conspiracy lay under the villain's words. The
+whole of that branch of the Newcomes fared little better at their
+kinsman's hands--they were all deceitful, sordid, heartless,
+worldly;--Ethel herself no better now than the people who had bred her
+up. People hate, as they love, unreasonably. Whether is it the more
+mortifying to us, to feel that we are disliked or liked undeservedly?
+
+Clive was not easy until he had the sea between him and his misfortune:
+and now Thomas Newcome had the chance of making that tour with his son,
+which in early days had been such a favourite project with the good man.
+They travelled Rhineland and Switzerland together--they crossed into
+Italy--went from Milan to Venice (where Clive saluted the greatest
+painting in the world--the glorious 'Assumption' of Titian)--they went
+to Trieste and over the beautiful Styrian Alps to Vienna--they beheld
+Danube, and the plain where the Turk and Sobieski fought. They travelled
+at a prodigious fast pace. They did not speak much to one another. They
+were a pattern pair of English travellers: I dare say many persons whom
+they met smiled to observe them; and shrugged their shoulders at
+the aspect of ces Anglais. They did not know the care in the young
+traveller's mind; and the deep tenderness and solicitude of the elder.
+Clive wrote to say it was a very pleasant tour, but I think I should not
+have liked to join it. Let us dismiss it in this single sentence. Other
+gentlemen have taken the same journey, and with sorrow perhaps as their
+silent fellow-traveller. How you remember the places afterwards, and the
+thoughts which pursued you! If in after days, when your grief is dead
+and buried, you revisit the scenes in which it was your companion, how
+its ghost rises and shows itself again! Suppose this part of Mr. Clive's
+life were to be described at length in several chapters, and not in a
+single brief sentence, what dreary pages they would be! In two or three
+months our friends saw a number of men, cities, mountains, rivers, and
+what not. It was yet early autumn when they were back in France again,
+and September found them at Brussels, where James Binnie, Esq., and his
+family were established in comfortable quarters, and where we may be
+sure Clive and his father were very welcome.
+
+Dragged abroad at first sorely against his will, James Binnie had found
+the Continental life pretty much to his liking. He had passed a winter
+at Pau, a summer at Vichy, where the waters had done him good. His
+ladies had made several charming foreign acquaintances. Mrs. Mackenzie
+had quite a list of counts and marchionesses among her friends. The
+excellent Captain Goby, wandered about the country with them. Was it
+to Rosey, was it to her mother, the Captain was most attached?
+Rosey received him as a godpapa; Mrs. Mackenzie as a wicked, odious,
+good-for-nothing, dangerous, delightful creature. Is it humiliating, is
+it consolatory, to remark, with what small wit some of our friends are
+amused? The jovial sallies of Goby appeared exquisite to Rosey's mother,
+and to the girl probably; though that young Bahawder of a Clive Newcome
+chose to wear a grave face (confound his insolent airs!) at the very
+best of the Goby jokes.
+
+In Goby's train was his fervent admirer and inseparable young friend,
+Clarence Hoby. Captain Hoby and Captain Goby travelled the world
+together, visited Hombourg and Baden, Cheltenham and Leamington, Paris
+and Brussels, in company, belonged to the same club in London--the
+centre of all pleasure, fashion, and joy, for the young officer and the
+older campaigner. The jokes at the Flag, the dinners at the Flag, the
+committee of the Flag, were the theme of their constant conversation.
+Goby fifty years old, unattached, and with dyed moustaches, was the
+affable comrade of the youngest member of his club: when absent, a
+friend wrote him the last riddle from the smoking-room; when present,
+his knowledge of horses, of cookery, wines, and cigars, and military
+history, rendered him a most acceptable companion. He knew the history
+and achievements of every regiment in the army; of every general and
+commanding officer. He was known to have been 'out' more than once
+himself, and had made up a hundred quarrels. He was certainly not a man
+of an ascetic life or a profound intellectual culture: but though poor
+he was known to be most honourable; though more than middle-aged he was
+cheerful, busy, and kindly; and though the youngsters called him Old
+Goby, he bore his years very gaily and handsomely, and I dare say
+numbers of ladies besides Mrs. Mackenzie thought him delightful. Goby's
+talk and rattle perhaps somewhat bored James Binnie, but Thomas Newcome
+found the Captain excellent company; and Goby did justice to the good
+qualities of the Colonel.
+
+Clive's father liked Brussels very well. He and his son occupied very
+handsome quarters, near the spacious apartments in the Park which James
+Binnie's family inhabited. Waterloo was not far off, to which the Indian
+officer paid several visits with Captain Goby for a guide; and many of
+Marlborough's battlefields were near, in which Goby certainly took but
+a minor interest; but on the other hand Clive beheld these with the
+greatest pleasure, and painted more than one dashing piece, in which
+Churchill and Eugene, Cutts and Cadogan, were the heroes; whose flowing
+periwigs, huge boots, and thundering Flemish chargers were, he thought,
+more novel and picturesque than the Duke's surtout, and the French
+Grenadiers' hairy caps, which so many English and French artists have
+portrayed.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Pendennis were invited by our kind Colonel to pass a
+month--six months if they chose--at Brussels, and were most splendidly
+entertained by our friends in that city. A suite of handsome rooms was
+set apart for us. My study communicated with Clive's atelier. Many
+an hour did we pass, and many a ride and walk did we take together. I
+observed that Clive never mentioned Miss Newcome's name, and Laura and I
+agreed that it was as well not to recall it. Only once, when we read the
+death of Lady Glenlivat, Lord Farintosh's mother, in the newspaper, I
+remember to have said, "I suppose that marriage will be put off again."
+
+"Qu'est ce que cela me fait?" says Mr. Clive gloomily, over his
+picture--a cheerful piece representing Count Egmont going to execution;
+in which I have the honour to figure as a halberdier, Captain Hoby as
+the Count, and Captain Goby as the Duke of Alva, looking out of window.
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie was in a state of great happiness and glory during this
+winter. She had a carriage, and worked that vehicle most indefatigably.
+She knew a great deal of good company at Brussels. She had an evening
+for receiving. She herself went to countless evening-parties, and had
+the joy of being invited to a couple of court balls, at which I am bound
+to say her daughter and herself both looked very handsome. The Colonel
+brushed up his old uniform and attended these entertainments. M. Newcome
+fils, as I should judge, was not the worst-looking man in the room; and,
+as these young people waltzed together (in which accomplishment Clive
+was very much more skilful than Captain Goby) I dare say many people
+thought he and Rosey made a pretty couple.
+
+Most persons, my wife included, difficult as that lady is to please,
+were pleased with the pretty little Rosey. She sang charmingly now,
+and looked so while singing. If her mother would but have omitted that
+chorus, which she cackled perseveringly behind her daughter's pretty
+back: about Rosey's angelic temper; about the compliments Signor
+Polonini paid her; about Sir Horace Dash, our minister, insisting upon
+her singing "Batti Batti" over again, and the Archduke clapping his
+hands and saying, "Oh, yes!" about Count Vanderslaapen's attentions to
+her, etc. etc.; but for these constant remarks of Mrs. Mack's, I am
+sure no one would have been better pleased with Miss Rosey's singing and
+behaviour than myself. As for Captain Hoby, it was easy to see how he
+was affected towards Miss Rosalind's music and person.
+
+And indeed few things could be pleasanter than to watch the behaviour
+of this pretty little maid with her Uncle James and his old chum the
+Colonel. The latter was soon as fond of her as James Binnie himself,
+whose face used to lighten with pleasure whenever it turned towards
+hers. She seemed to divine his wants, as she would trip across the room
+to fulfil them. She skipped into the carriage and covered his feet with
+a shawl. James was lazy and chilly now, when he took his drive. She
+sate opposite to him and smiled on him; and, if he dozed, quick, another
+handkerchief was round his neck. I do not know whether she understood
+his jokes, but she saluted them always with a sweet kind smile. How she
+kissed him, and how delighted she was if he bought her a bouquet for her
+ball that night! One day, upon occasion of one of these balls, James
+and Thomas, those two old boys, absolutely came into Mrs. Mackenzie's
+drawing-room with a bouquet apiece for Miss Rosey; and there was a fine
+laughing.
+
+"Oh, you little Susanna!" says James, after taking his usual payment;
+"now go and pay t'other elder." Rosey did not quite understand at first,
+being, you see, more ready to laugh at jokes than to comprehend them:
+but when she did, I promise you she looked uncommonly pretty as she
+advanced to Colonel Newcome and put that pretty fresh cheek of hers up
+to his grizzled moustache.
+
+"I protest I don't know which of you blushes the most," chuckles James
+Binnie--and the truth is, the old man and the young girl had both hung
+out those signals of amiable distress.
+
+On this day, and as Miss Rosey was to be overpowered by flowers, who
+should come presently to dinner but Captain Hoby, with another bouquet?
+on which Uncle James said Rosey should go to the ball like an American
+Indian with her scalps at her belt.
+
+"Scalps!" cries Mrs. Mackenzie.
+
+"Scalps! Oh law, uncle!" exclaims Miss Rosey. "What can you mean by
+anything so horrid?"
+
+Goby recalls to Mrs. Mack, Hook-ee-ma-goosh the Indian chief, whom she
+must have seen when the Hundred and Fiftieth were at Quebec, and who had
+his lodge full of them; and who used to lie about the barracks so drunk,
+and who used to beat his poor little European wife: and presently Mr.
+Clive Newcome joins this company, when the chirping, tittering, joking,
+laughing, cease somehow.
+
+Has Clive brought a bouquet too? No. He has never thought about a
+bouquet. He is dressed in black, with long hair, a long moustache,
+and melancholy imperial. He looks very handsome, but as glum as an
+undertaker. And James Binnie says, "Egad, Tom, they used to call you
+the knight of the woeful countenance, and Clive has just inherited the
+paternal mug." Then James calls out in a cheery voice, "Dinner, dinner!"
+and trots off with Mrs. Pendennis under his arm; Rosey nestles up
+against the Colonel; Goby and Mrs. Mack walk away arm-in-arm very
+contentedly; and I don't know with which of her three nosegays pretty
+Rosey appears at the ball.
+
+Our stay with our friends at Brussels could not be prolonged beyond
+a month, for at the end of that period we were under an engagement to
+other friends in England, who were good enough to desire the presence
+of Mrs. Pendennis and her suite of baby, nurse, and husband. So we
+presently took leave of Rosey and the Campaigner, of the two stout
+elders, and our melancholy young Clive, who bore us company to Antwerp,
+and who won Laura's heart by the neat way in which he took her child on
+board ship. Poor fellow! how sad he looked as he bowed to us and took
+off his hat! His eyes did not seem to be looking at us, though they and
+his thoughts were turned another way. He moved off immediately, with his
+head down, puffing his eternal cigar, and lost in his own meditations;
+our going or our staying was of very little importance to the lugubrious
+youth.
+
+"I think it was a great pity they came to Brussels," says Laura, as we
+sate on the deck, while her unconscious infant was cheerful, and while
+the water of the lazy Scheldt as yet was smooth.
+
+"Who? The Colonel and Clive? They are very handsomely lodged. They have
+a good maitre d'hotel. Their dinners, I am sure, are excellent; and your
+child, madam, is as healthy as it possibly can be."
+
+"Blessed darling! Yes!" (Blessed darling crows, moos, jumps in his
+nurse's arms, and holds out a little mottled hand for a biscuit of
+Savoy, which mamma supplies.) "I can't help thinking, Arthur, that
+Rosey would have been much happier as Mrs. Hoby than she will be as Mrs.
+Newcome."
+
+"Who thinks of her being Mrs. Newcome?"
+
+"Her mother, her uncle, and Clive's father, Since the Colonel has been
+so rich, I think Mrs. Mackenzie sees a great deal of merit in Clive.
+Rosey will do anything her mother bids her. If Clive can be brought to
+the same obedience, Uncle James and the Colonel will be delighted. Uncle
+James has set his heart on this marriage. (He and his sister agree upon
+this point.) He told me, last night, that he would sing 'Nunc dimittis,'
+could he but see the two children happy; and that he should lie easier
+in purgatory if that could be brought about."
+
+"And what did you say, Laura?"
+
+"I laughed, and told Uncle James I was of the Hoby faction. He is very
+good-natured, frank, honest, and gentlemanlike, Mr. Hoby. But Uncle
+James said he thought Mr. Hoby was so--well, so stupid--that his Rosey
+would be thrown away upon the poor Captain. So I did not tell Uncle
+James that, before Clive's arrival, Rosey had found Captain Hoby far
+from stupid. He used to sing duets with her; he used to ride with her
+before Clive came. Last winter, when they were at Pau, I feel certain
+Miss Rosey thought Captain Hoby very pleasant indeed. She thinks she was
+attached to Clive formerly, and now she admires him, and is dreadfully
+afraid of him. He is taller and handsomer, and richer and cleverer than
+Captain Hoby, certainly."
+
+"I should think so, indeed," breaks out Mr. Pendennis. "Why, my dear,
+Clive is as fine a fellow as one can see on a summer's day. It does one
+good to look at him. What a frank pair of bright blue eyes he has, or
+used to have, till this mishap overclouded them! What a pleasant laugh
+he has! What a well-built, agile figure it is--what pluck, and spirit,
+and honour, there is about my young chap! I don't say he is a genius of
+the highest order, but he is the staunchest, the bravest, the cheeriest,
+the most truth-telling, the kindest heart. Compare him and Hoby! Why,
+Clive is an eagle, and yonder little creature a mousing owl!"
+
+"I like to hear you speak so," cries Mrs. Laura, very tenderly. "People
+say that you are always sneering, Arthur; but I know my husband better.
+We know papa better, don't we, baby?" (Here my wife kisses the infant
+Pendennis with great effusion, who has come up dancing on his nurse's
+arms.) "But," says she, coming back and snuggling by her husband's side
+again--"But suppose your favourite Clive is an eagle, Arthur, don't you
+think he had better have an eagle for a mate? If he were to marry little
+Rosey, I dare say he would be very good to her; but I think neither
+he nor she would be very happy. My dear, she does not care for his
+pursuits; she does not understand him when he talks. The two captains,
+and Rosey and I, and the campaigner, as you call her, laugh and talk,
+and prattle, and have the merriest little jokes with one another, and we
+all are as quiet as mice when you and Clive come in."
+
+"What, am I an eagle, too? I have no aquiline pretensions at all, Mrs.
+Pendennis."
+
+"No. Well, we are not afraid of you. We are not afraid of papa, are
+we, darling?" this young woman now calls out to the other member of her
+family; who, if you will calculate, has just had time to be walked twice
+up and down the deck of the steamer, whilst Laura has been making her
+speech about eagles. And soon the mother, child, and attendant descend
+into the lower cabins: and then dinner is announced: and Captain Jackson
+treats us to champagne from his end of the table and yet a short while,
+and we are at sea, and conversation becomes impossible: and morning
+sees us under the grey London sky, and amid the million of masts in the
+Thames.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII. Rosebury and Newcome
+
+
+The friends to whom we were engaged in England were Florac and his wife,
+Madame la Princesse de Moncontour, who were determined to spend the
+Christmas holidays at the Princess's country seat. It was for the first
+time since their reconciliation, that the Prince and Princess dispensed
+their hospitalities at the latter's chateau. It is situated, as the
+reader has already been informed, at some five miles from the town of
+Newcome; away from the chimneys and smoky atmosphere of that place, in a
+sweet country of rural woodlands; over which quiet villages, grey church
+spires, and ancient gabled farmhouses are scattered: still wearing the
+peaceful aspect which belonged to them when Newcome was as yet but an
+antiquated country town, before mills were erected on its river-banks,
+and dyes and cinders blackened its stream. Twenty years since Newcome
+Park was the only great house in that district; now scores of fine
+villas have sprung up in the suburb lying between the town and park.
+Newcome New Town, as everybody knows, has grown round the park-gates,
+and the New Town Hotel (where the railway station is) is a splendid
+structure in the Tudor style, more ancient in appearance than the park
+itself; surrounded by little antique villas with spiked gables, stacks
+of crooked chimneys, and plate-glass windows looking upon trim lawns;
+with glistening hedges of evergreens, spotless gravel walks, and
+Elizabethan gig-houses. Under the great railway viaduct of the New Town,
+goes the old tranquil winding London highroad, once busy with a score of
+gay coaches, and ground by innumerable wheels: but at a few miles
+from the New Town Station the road has become so mouldy that the grass
+actually grows on it; and Rosebury, Madame de Moncontour's house, stands
+at one end of a village-green, which is even more quiet now than it was
+a hundred years ago.
+
+When first Madame de Florac bought the place, it scarcely ranked amongst
+the country-houses; and she, the sister of manufacturers at Newcome and
+Manchester, did not of course visit the county families. A homely little
+body, married to a Frenchman from whom she was separated, may or may not
+have done a great deal of good in her village, have had pretty gardens,
+and won prizes at the Newcome flower and fruit shows; but, of course,
+she was nobody in such an aristocratic county as we know ------shire
+is. She had her friends and relatives from Newcome. Many of them were
+Quakers--many were retail shopkeepers. She even frequented the little
+branch Ebenezer, on Rosebury Green; and it was only by her charities
+and kindness at Christmas-time, that the Rev. Dr. Potter, the rector
+at Rosebury, knew her. The old clergy, you see, live with the county
+families. Good little Madame de Florac was pitied and patronised by the
+Doctor, treated with no little superciliousness by Mrs. Potter, and
+the young ladies, who only kept the first society. Even when her rich
+brother died, and she got her share of all that money Mrs. Potter said
+poor Madame de Florac did well in not trying to move out of her natural
+sphere (Mrs. P. was the daughter of a bankrupt hatter in London, and had
+herself been governess in a noble family, out of which she married Mr.
+P., who was private tutor). Madame de Florac did well, she said, not to
+endeavour to leave her natural sphere, and that The County never would
+receive her. Tom Potter, the rector's son, with whom I had the good
+fortune to be a fellow-student at Saint Boniface College, Oxbridge--a
+rattling, forward, and it must be owned, vulgar youth--asked me whether
+Florac was not a billiard-marker by profession? and was even so kind
+as to caution his sisters not to speak of billiards before the lady of
+Rosebury. Tom was surprised to learn that Monsieur Paul de Florac was a
+gentleman of lineage incomparably better than that of any, except two
+or three families in England (including your own, my dear and respected
+reader, of course, if you hold to your pedigree). But the truth is,
+heraldically speaking, that union with the Higgs of Manchester was the
+first misalliance which the Florac family had made for long long years.
+Not that I would wish for a moment to insinuate that any nobleman
+is equal to an English nobleman; nay, that an English snob, with a
+coat-of-arms bought yesterday, or stolen out of Edmonton, or a pedigree
+purchased from a peerage-maker, has not a right to look down upon any of
+your paltry foreign nobility.
+
+One day the carriage-and-four came in state from Newcome Park, with the
+well-known chaste liveries of the Newcomes, and drove up Rosebury Green,
+towards the parsonage gate, when Mrs. and the Miss Potters happened to
+be standing, cheapening fish from a donkey-man, with whom they were in
+the habit of dealing. The ladies were in their pokiest old head-gear
+and most dingy gowns, when they perceived the carriage approaching; and
+considering, of course, that the visit of the Park people was intended
+for them, dashed into the rectory to change their clothes, leaving
+Rowkins, the costermonger, in the very midst of the negotiation about
+the three mackerel. Mamma got that new bonnet out of the bandbox; Lizzy
+and Liddy skipped up to their bedroom, and brought out those dresses
+which they wore at the dejeuner at the Newcome Athenaeum, when Lord
+Leveret came down to lecture; into which they no sooner had hooked their
+lovely shoulders, than they reflected with terror that mamma had
+been altering one of papa's flannel waistcoats and had left it in the
+drawing-room, when they were called out by the song of Rowkins, and the
+appearance of his donkey's ears over the green gate of the rectory. To
+think of the Park people coming, and the drawing-room in that dreadful
+state!
+
+But when they came downstairs the Park people were not in the room--the
+woollen garment was still on the table (how they plunged it into the
+chiffonier!)--and the only visitor was Rowkins, the costermonger,
+grinning at the open French windows, with the three mackerel, and
+crying, "Make it sixpence, miss--don't say fippens, maam, to a pore
+fellow that has a wife and family." So that the young ladies had to
+cry--"Impudence!" "Get away, you vulgar insolent creature!--Go round,
+sir, to the back door!" "How dare you?" and the like; fearing lest Lady
+Anne Newcome, and Young Ethel, and Barnes should enter in the midst of
+this ignoble controversy.
+
+They never came at all--those Park people. How very odd! They passed the
+rectory gate; they drove on to Madame de Florac's lodge. They went in.
+They stayed for half an hour; the horses driving round and round the
+gravel road before the house; and Mrs. Potter and the girls speedily
+going to the upper chambers, and looking out of the room where the maids
+slept, saw Lady Anne, Ethel, and Barnes walking with Madame de Florac,
+going into the conservatories, issuing thence with MacWhirter, the
+gardener, bearing huge bunches of grapes and large fasces of flowers;
+they saw Barnes talking in the most respectful manner to Madame
+de Florac: and when they went downstairs and had their work before
+them--Liddy her gilt music-book, Lizzy her embroidered altar-cloth,
+mamma her scarlet cloak for one of the old women--they had the agony
+of seeing the barouche over the railings whisk by, with the Park people
+inside, and Barnes driving the four horses.
+
+It was on that day when Barnes had determined to take up Madame de
+Florac; when he was bent upon reconciling her to her husband. In spite
+of all Mrs. Potter's predictions, the county families did come and visit
+the manufacturer's daughter; and when Madame de Florac became Madame la
+Princesse de Moncontour, when it was announced that she was coming
+to stay at Rosebury for Christmas, I leave you to imagine whether the
+circumstance was or was not mentioned in the Newcome Sentinel and the
+Newcome Independent; and whether Rev. G. Potter, D.D., and Mrs. Potter
+did or did not call on the Prince and Princess. I leave you to imagine
+whether the lady did or did not inspect all the alterations which
+Vineer's people from Newcome were making at Rosebury House--the chaste
+yellow satin and gold of the drawing-room--the carved oak for the
+dining-room--the chintz for the bedrooms--the Princess's apartment--the
+Prince's apartment--the guests' apartments--the smoking-room, gracious
+goodness!--the stables (these were under Tom Potter's superintendence),
+"and I'm finished," says he one day, "if here doesn't come a
+billiard-table!"
+
+The house was most comfortably and snugly appointed from top to bottom;
+and thus it will be seen that Mr. and Mrs. Pendennis were likely to be
+in very good quarters for Christmas of 184-.
+
+Tom Potter was so kind as to call on me two days after our arrival; and
+to greet me in the Princess's pew at church on the previous day. Before
+desiring to be introduced to my wife, he requested me to present him to
+my friend the Prince. He called him your Highness. His Highness, who had
+behaved with exemplary gravity, save once when he shrieked an "ah!" as
+Miss Liddy led off the children in the organ-loft in a hymn, and the
+whole pack went woefully out of tune, complimented Monsieur Tom on
+the sermon of monsieur his father. Tom walked with us to Rosebury
+lodge-gate. "Will you not come in, and make a party of billiard with
+me?" says His Highness. "Ah Pardon! I forgot, you do not play the
+billiard the Sunday!" "Any other day, Prince, I shall be delighted,"
+says Tom; and squeezed His Highness's hand tenderly at parting. "Your
+comrade of college was he?" asks Florac. "My dear, what men are these
+comrades of college! What men are you English! My word of honour, there
+are some of them here--if I were to say to them wax my boots, they would
+take them and wax them! Didst thou see how the Reverend eyed us during
+the sermon? He regarded us over his book, my word of honour!"
+
+Madame de Florac said simply, she wished the Prince would go and
+hear Mr. Jacob at the Ebenezer. Mr. Potter was not a good preacher,
+certainly.
+
+"Savez-vows qu'elle est furieusement belle, la fille du Reverend?"
+whispered His Highness to me. "I have made eyes at her during the
+sermon. They will be of pretty neighbours these meess!" and Paul looked
+unutterably roguish and victorious as he spoke. To my wife, I am
+bound to say, Monsieur de Moncontour showed a courtesy, a respect
+and kindness, that could not be exceeded. He admired her. He paid her
+compliments innumerable, and gave me I am sure sincere congratulations
+at possessing such a treasure. I do not think he doubted about his power
+of conquering her, or any other of the daughters of women. But I was the
+friend of his misfortunes--his guest; and he spared me.
+
+I have seen nothing more amusing, odd, and pleasant than Florac at this
+time of his prosperity. We arrived, as this veracious chronicle has
+already asserted, on a Saturday evening. We were conducted to our most
+comfortable apartments; with crackling fires blazing on the hearths, and
+every warmth of welcome. Florac expanded and beamed with good-nature.
+He shook me many times by the hand; he patted me; he called me his
+good--his brave.
+
+He cried to his maitre d'hotel, "Frederic, remember monsieur is master
+here! Run before his orders. Prostrate thyself to him. He was good to
+me in the days of my misfortune. Hearest thou, Frederic? See that
+everything be done for Monsieur Pendennis--for madame sa charmante
+lady--for her angelic infant, and the bonne. None of thy garrison tricks
+with that young person, Frederic! vieux scelerat! Garde-toi de la,
+Frederic; si non, je t'envoie a Botani Bay; je te traduis devant le Lord
+Mare!"
+
+"En Angleterre je me fais Anglais, vois-tu, mon ami," continued the
+Prince. "Demain c'est Sunday, et tu vas voir! I hear the bell, dress
+thyself for the dinner--my friend!"; Here there was another squeeze of
+both hands from the good-natured fellow. "It do good to my art to ave
+you in my ouse! Heuh!" He hugged his guest; he had tears in his eyes as
+he performed this droll, this kind embrace. Not less kind in her way,
+though less expensive and embracive, was Madame de Moncontour to my
+wife, as I found on comparing notes with that young woman, when the
+day's hospitalities were ended. The little Princess trotted from
+bedchamber to nursery to see that everything was made comfortable for
+her guests. She sate and saw the child washed and put to bed. She had
+never beheld such a little angel. She brought it a fine toy to play
+with. She and her grim old maid frightened the little creature at first,
+but it was very speedily reconciled to their countenances. She was in
+the nursery almost as early as the child's mother. "Ah!" sighed the poor
+little woman, "how happy you must be to have one!" In fine, my wife was
+quite overcome by her goodness and welcome.
+
+Sunday morning arrived in the course of time, and then Florac appeared
+as a most wonderful Briton indeed! He wore top-boots and buckskins;
+and after breakfast, when we went to church, a white great-coat with a
+little cape, in which garment he felt that his similarity to an English
+gentleman was perfect. In conversation with his grooms and servants he
+swore freely,--not that he was accustomed to employ oaths in his
+own private talk, but he thought the employment of these expletives
+necessary as an English country gentleman. He never dined without a
+roast-beef, and insisted that the piece of meat should be bleeding, "as
+you love it, you others." He got up boxing-matches: and kept birds
+for combats of cock. He assumed the sporting language with admirable
+enthusiasm--drove over to cover with a steppere--rode across countri
+like a good one--was splendid in the hunting-field in his velvet cap
+and Napoleon boots, and made the Hunt welcome at Rosebury where his
+good-natured little wife was as kind to the gentlemen in scarlet as she
+used to be of old to the stout Dissenting gentlemen in black, who sang
+hymns and spake sermons on her lawn. These folks, scared at the change
+which had taken place in the little Princess's habits of life, lamented
+her falling away: but in the county she and her husband got a great
+popularity, and in Newcome town itself they were not less liked, for
+her benefactions were unceasing, and Paul's affability the theme of all
+praise. The Newcome Independent and the Newcome Sentinel both paid him
+compliments; the former journal contrasting his behaviour with that of
+Sir Barnes, their member. Florac's pleasure was to drive his Princess
+with four horses into Newcome. He called his carriage his "trappe," his
+"drague." The street-boys cheered and hurrayed the Prince as he
+passed through the town. One haberdasher had a yellow stock called the
+"Moncontour" displayed in his windows; another had a pink one marked
+"The Princely," and as such recommended it to the young Newcome gents.
+
+The drague conveyed us once to the neighbouring house of Newcome,
+whither my wife accompanied Madame de Moncontour at that lady's own
+request, to whom Laura very properly did not think fit to confide her
+antipathy for Lady Clara Newcome. Coming away from a great house, how
+often she and I, egotistical philosophers, thanked our fates that our
+own home was a small one! How long will great houses last in this
+world? Do not their owners now prefer a lodging at Brighton, or a little
+entresol on the Boulevard, to the solitary ancestral palace in a park
+barred round with snow? We were as glad to get out of Newcome as out of
+a prison. My wife and our hostess skipped into the carriage, and began
+to talk freely as the lodge-gates closed after us. Would we be lords
+of such a place under the penalty of living in it? We agreed that the
+little angle of earth called Fairoaks was dearer to us than the clumsy
+Newcome-pile of Tudor masonry. The house had been fitted up in the time
+of George IV. and the quasi-Gothic revival. We were made to pass
+through Gothic dining-rooms, where there was now no hospitality,--Gothic
+drawing-rooms shrouded in brown hollands, to one little room at the end
+of the dusky suite, where Lady Clara sate alone, or in the company of
+the nurses and children. The blank gloom of the place had fallen upon
+the poor lady. Even when my wife talked about children (good-natured
+Madame de Moncontour vaunting ours as a prodigy) Lady Clara did not
+brighten up! Her pair of young ones was exhibited and withdrawn. A
+something weighed upon the woman. We talked about Ethel's marriage.
+She said it was fixed for the new year, she believed. She did not know
+whether Glenlivat had been very handsomely fitted up. She had not seen
+Lord Farintosh's house in London. Sir Barnes came down once--twice--of a
+Saturday sometimes, for three or four days to hunt, to amuse himself, as
+all men do she supposed. She did not know when he was coming again. She
+rang languidly when we rose to take leave, and sank back on her sofa,
+where lay a heap of French novels. "She has chosen some pretty books,"
+says Paul, as we drove through the sombre avenues through the grey
+park, mists lying about the melancholy ornamental waters, dingy herds
+of huddled sheep speckling the grass here and there; no smoke rising up
+from the great stacks of chimneys of the building we were leaving behind
+us, save one little feeble thread of white which we knew came from the
+fire by which the lonely mistress of Newcome was seated. "Ouf!" cries
+Florac, playing his whip, as the lodge-gates closed on us, and his team
+of horses rattled merrily along the road, "what a blessing it is to be
+out of that vault of a place! There is something fatal in this house--in
+this woman. One smells misfortune there."
+
+The hotel which our friend Florac patronised on occasion of his visits
+to Newcome was the King's Arms, and it happened, one day, as we entered
+that place of entertainment in company, that a visitor of the house
+was issuing through the hall, to whom Florac seemed as if he would
+administer one of his customary embraces, and to whom the Prince
+called out "Jack," with great warmth and kindness as he ran towards the
+stranger.
+
+Jack did not appear to be particularly well pleased on beholding us; he
+rather retreated from before the Frenchman's advances.
+
+"My dear Jack, my good, my brave Ighgate! I am delighted to see you!"
+Florac continues, regardless of the stranger's reception, or of the
+landlord's looks towards us, who was bowing the Prince into his very
+best room.
+
+"How do you do, Monsieur de Florac?" growls the new comer, surlily;
+and was for moving on after this brief salutation; but having a second
+thought seemingly, turned back and followed Florac into the apartment
+where our host conducted us. "A la bonne heure!" Florac renewed his
+cordial greetings to Lord Highgate. "I knew not, mon bon, what fly
+had stung you," says he to my lord. The landlord, rubbing his hands,
+smirking and bowing, was anxious to know whether the Prince would take
+anything after his drive. As the Prince's attendant and friend, the
+lustre of his reception partially illuminated me. When the chief was not
+by, I was treated with great attention (mingled with a certain degree of
+familiarity) by my landlord.
+
+Lord Highgate waited until Mr. Taplow was out of the room; and then said
+to Florac, "Don't call me by my name here, please, Florac, I am here
+incog."
+
+"Plait-il?" asks Florac. "Where is incog.?" He laughed when the word
+was interpreted to him. Lord Highgate had turned to me. "There was no
+rudeness, you understand, intended, Mr. Pendennis, but I am down here
+on some business, and don't care to wear the handle to my name. Fellows
+work it so, don't you understand? never leave you at rest in a country
+town--that sort of thing. Heard of our friend Clive lately?"
+
+"Whether you ave andle or no andle, Jack, you are always the bien venu
+to me. What is thy affair? Old monster! I wager----"
+
+"No, no, no such nonsense," says Jack, rather eagerly. "I give you my
+honour, I--I want to--to raise a sum of money--that is, to invest some
+in a speculation down here--deuced good the speculations down here;
+and, by the way, if the landlord asks you, I'm Mr. Harris--I'm a civil
+engineer--I'm waiting for the arrival of the Canada at Liverpool from
+America, and very uneasy about my brother who is on board."
+
+"What does he recount to us there? Keep these stories for the landlord,
+Jack; to us 'tis not the pain to lie. My good Mr. Harris, why have we
+not seen you at Rosebury? The Princess will scold me if you do not come;
+and you must bring your dear brother when he arrive too. Do you hear?"
+The last part of this sentence was uttered for Mr. Taplow's benefit, who
+had re-entered the George bearing a tray of wine and biscuit.
+
+The Master of Rosebury and Mr. Harris went out presently to look at a
+horse which was waiting the former's inspection in the stableyard of the
+hotel. The landlord took advantage of his business, to hear a bell which
+never was rung, and to ask me questions about the guest who had been
+staying at his house for a week past. Did I know that party? Mr.
+Pendennis said, "Yes, he knew that party."
+
+"Most respectable party, I have no doubt," continues Boniface. "Do you
+suppose the Prince of Moncontour knows any but respectable parties?"
+asks Mr. Pendennis--a query of which the force was so great as to
+discomfit and silence our landlord, who retreated to ask questions
+concerning Mr. Harris of Florac's grooms.
+
+What was Highgate's business here? Was it mine to know? I might have
+suspicions, but should I entertain them or communicate them, and had I
+not best keep them to myself? I exchanged not a word on the subject of
+Highgate with Florac, as we drove home: though from the way in which we
+looked at one another each saw that the other was acquainted with that
+unhappy gentleman's secret. We fell to talking about Madame la Duchesse
+d'Ivry as we trotted on; and then of English manners by way of contrast,
+of intrigues, elopements, Gretna Grin, etc., etc. "You are a droll
+nation!" says Florac. "To make love well, you must absolutely have a
+chaise-de-poste, and a scandal afterwards. If our affairs of this kind
+made themselves on the grand route, what armies of postillions we should
+need!"
+
+I held my peace. In that vision of Jack Belsize I saw misery, guilt,
+children dishonoured, homes deserted,--ruin for all the actors and
+victims of the wretched conspiracy. Laura marked my disturbance when we
+reached home. She even divined the cause of it, and charged me with it
+at night, when we sate alone by our dressing-room fire, and had taken
+leave of our kind entertainers. Then, under her cross-examination, I own
+that I told what I had seen--Lord Highgate, under a feigned name staying
+at Newcome. It might be nothing. "Nothing! Gracious heavens! Could
+not this crime and misery be stopped?" "It might be too late," Laura's
+husband said sadly, bending down his head into the fire.
+
+She was silent too for a while. I could see she was engaged where pious
+women ever will betake themselves in moments of doubt, of grief, of
+pain, of separation, of joy even, or whatsoever other trial. They have
+but to will, and as it were an invisible temple rises round them; their
+hearts can kneel down there; and they have an audience of the great,
+the merciful untiring Counsellor and Consoler. She would not have been
+frightened at Death near at hand. I have known her to tend the poor
+round about us, or to bear pain--not her own merely, but even her
+children's and mine, with a surprising outward constancy and calm. But
+the idea of this crime being enacted close at hand, and no help for
+it--quite overcame her. I believe she lay awake all that night; and rose
+quite haggard and pale after the bitter thoughts which had deprived her
+of rest.
+
+She embraced her own child with extraordinary tenderness that morning,
+and even wept over it, calling it by a thousand fond names of maternal
+endearment "Would I leave you, my darling--could I ever, ever, ever quit
+you, my blessing, and treasure!" The unconscious little thing, hugged
+to his mother's bosom, and scared at her tones and tragic face, clung
+frightened and weeping round Laura's neck. Would you ask what the
+husband's feelings were as he looked at that sweet love, that sublime
+tenderness, that pure Saint blessing the life of him unworthy? Of all
+the gifts of Heaven to us below, that felicity is the sum and the chief.
+I tremble as I hold it lest I should lose it, and be left alone in the
+blank world without it: again, I feel humiliated to think that I possess
+it; as hastening home to a warm fireside and a plentiful table, I
+feel ashamed sometimes before the poor outcast beggar shivering in the
+street.
+
+Breakfast was scarcely over when Laura asked for a pony carriage, and
+said she was bent on a private visit. She took her baby and nurse with
+her. She refused our company, and would not even say whither she was
+bound until she had passed the lodge-gate. I may have suspected what the
+object was of her journey. Florac and I did not talk of it. We rode out
+to meet the hounds of a cheery winter morning: on another day I might
+have been amused with my host--the splendour of his raiment, the
+neatness of his velvet cap, the gloss of his hunting-boots; the cheers,
+shouts, salutations, to dog and man; the oaths and outcries of this
+Nimrod, who shouted louder than the whole field and the whole pack
+too--but on this morning--I was thinking of the tragedy yonder enacting,
+and came away early from the hunting-field, and found my wife already
+returned to Rosebury.
+
+Laura had been, as I suspected, to Lady Clara. She did not know why,
+indeed. She scarce knew what she should say when she arrived--how she
+could say what she had in her mind. "I hoped, Arthur, that I should have
+something--something told me to say," whispered Laura, with her head on
+my shoulder; and as I lay awake last night thinking of her, prayed--that
+is, hoped, I might find a word of consolation for that poor lady. Do you
+know, I think she has hardly ever heard a kind word? She said so; she
+was very much affected after we had talked together a little.
+
+"At first she was very indifferent; cold and haughty in her manner;
+asked what had caused the pleasure of this visit, for I would go in,
+though at the lodge they told me her ladyship was unwell, and they
+thought received no company. I said I wanted to show our boy to
+her--that the children ought to be acquainted--I don't know what I said.
+She seemed more and more surprised--then all of a sudden--I don't
+know how--I said, 'Lady Clara, I have had a dream about you and your
+children, and I was so frightened that I came over to you to speak
+about it.' And I had the dream, Pen; it came to me absolutely as I was
+speaking to her.
+
+"She looked a little scared, and I went on telling her the dream. 'My
+dear' I said, 'I dreamed that I saw you happy with those children.'
+
+"'Happy!' says she--the three were playing in the conservatory into
+which her sitting-room opens.
+
+"'And that a bad spirit came and tore them from you, and drove you
+out into the darkness; and I saw you wandering about quite lonely and
+wretched, and looking back into the garden where the children were
+playing. And you asked and implored to see them; and the Keeper at the
+gate said 'No, never.' And then--then I thought they passed by you, and
+they did not know you.'
+
+"'Ah!' said Lady Clara.
+
+"'And then I thought, as we do in dreams, you know, that it was my child
+who was separated from me, and who would not know me: and oh, what a
+pang that was! Fancy that! Let us pray God it was only a dream. And
+worse than that, when you, when I implored to come to the child, and
+the man said, 'No, never,' I thought there came a spirit--an angel that
+fetched the child to heaven, and you said, 'Let me come too; oh, let me
+come too, I am so miserable.' And the angel said, 'No, never, never.'
+
+"By this time Lady Clara was looking very pale. 'What do you mean?' she
+asked of me," Laura continued.
+
+"'Oh, dear lady, for the sake of the little ones, and Him who calls
+them to Him, go you with them. Never, never part from them! Cling to His
+knees, and take shelter there.' I took her hands, and I said more to her
+in this way, Arthur, that I need not, that I ought not to speak again.
+But she was touched at length when I kissed her; and she said I was very
+kind to her, and no one had ever been so, and that she was quite alone
+in the world and had no friend to fly to; and would I go and stay with
+her? and I said 'yes;' and we must go, my dear. I think you should see
+that person at Newcome--see him, and warn him," cried Laura, warming as
+she spoke, "and pray God to enlighten and strengthen him, and to keep
+him from this temptation, and implore him to leave this poor, weak,
+frightened, trembling creature; if he has the heart of a gentleman and
+the courage of a man, he will, I know he will."
+
+"I think he would, my dearest," I said, "if he but heard the
+petitioner." Laura's cheeks were blushing, her eyes brightened, her
+voice rang with a sweet pathos of love that vibrates through my whole
+being sometimes. It seems to me as if evil must give way, and bad
+thoughts retire before that purest creature.
+
+"Why has she not some of her family with her, poor thing!" my wife
+continued. "She perishes in that solitude. Her husband prevents her,
+I think--and--oh--I know enough of him to know what his life is. I
+shudder, Arthur, to see you take the hand of that wicked, selfish man.
+You must break with him, do you hear, sir?"
+
+"Before or after going to stay at his house, my love?" asks Mr.
+Pendennis.
+
+"Poor thing! she lighted up at the idea of any one coming. She ran and
+showed me the rooms we were to have. It will be very stupid; and you
+don't like that. But you can write your book, and still hunt and shoot
+with our friends here. And Lady Anne Newcome must be made to come back
+again. Sir Barnes quarrelled with his mother and drove her out of the
+house on her last visit--think of that! The servants here know it.
+Martha brought me the whole story from the housekeeper's room. This Sir
+Barnes Newcome is a dreadful creature, Arthur. I am so glad I loathed
+him from the very first moment I saw him."
+
+"And into this ogre's den you propose to put me and my family, madam!"
+says the husband. "Indeed, where won't I go if you order me? Oh, who
+will pack my portmanteau?"
+
+Florac and the Princess were both in desolation when, at dinner, we
+announced our resolution to go away--and to our neighbours at Newcome!
+that was more extraordinary. "Que diable goest thou to do in this
+galley?" asks our host as we sat alone over our wine.
+
+But Laura's intended visit to Lady Clara was never to have a fulfilment,
+for on this same evening, as we sate at our dessert, comes a messenger
+from Newcome, with a note for my wife from the lady there:--
+
+
+"Dearest, kindest Mrs. Pendennis," Lady Clara wrote, with many italics,
+and evidently in much distress of mind. "Your visit is not to be.
+I spoke about it to Sir B., who arrived this afternoon, and who has
+already begun to treat me in his usual way. Oh, I am so unhappy! Pray,
+pray do not be angry at this rudeness--though indeed it is only a
+kindness to keep you from this wretched place! I feel as if I cannot
+bear this much longer. But, whatever happens, I shall always remember
+your goodness, your beautiful goodness and kindness; and shall worship
+you as an angel deserves to be worshipped. Oh, why had I not such a
+friend earlier! But alas! I have none--only this odious family thrust
+upon me for companions to the wretched, lonely, C. N.
+
+"P.S.--He does not know of my writing. Do not be surprised if you get
+another note from me in the morning, written in a ceremonious style and
+regretting that we cannot have the pleasure of receiving Mr. and Mrs.
+Pendennis for the present at Newcome.
+
+"P.S.--The hypocrite!"
+
+
+This letter was handed to my wife at dinner-time, and she gave it to me
+as she passed out of the room with the other ladies.
+
+I told Florac that the Newcomes could not receive us, and that we would
+remain, if he willed it, his guests for a little longer. The kind fellow
+was only too glad to keep us. "My wife would die without Bebi," he said.
+"She becomes quite dangerous about Bebi." It was gratifying that the
+good old lady was not to be parted as yet from the innocent object of
+her love.
+
+My host knew as well as I the terms upon which Sir Barnes and his wife
+were living. Their quarrels were the talk of the whole county; one side
+brought forward his treatment of her, and his conduct elsewhere, and
+said that he was so bad that honest people should not know him. The
+other party laid the blame upon her, and declared that Lady Clara was a
+languid, silly, weak, frivolous creature; always crying out of season;
+who had notoriously taken Sir Barnes for his money and who as certainly
+had had an attachment elsewhere. Yes, the accusations were true on both
+sides. A bad, selfish husband had married a woman for her rank: a weak,
+thoughtless girl had been sold to a man for his money; and the union,
+which might have ended in a complete indifference, had taken an ill turn
+and resulted in misery, cruelty, fierce mutual recriminations, bitter
+tears shed in private, husband's curses and maledictions, and open
+scenes of wrath and violence for servants to witness and the world to
+sneer at. We arrange such matches every day; we sell or buy beauty, or
+rank, or wealth; we inaugurate the bargain in churches with sacramental
+services, in which the parties engaged call upon Heaven to witness their
+vows--we know them to be lies, and we seal them with God's name. "I,
+Barnes, promise to take you, Clara, to love and honour till death do
+us part" "I Clara, promise to take you, Barnes," etc, etc. Who has not
+heard the ancient words; and how many of us have uttered them, knowing
+them to be untrue: and is there a bishop on the bench that has not
+amen'd the humbug in his lawn sleeves and called a blessing over the
+kneeling perjurers?
+
+"Does Mr. Harris know of Newcome's return?" Florac asked, when I
+acquainted him with this intelligence. "Ce scelerat de Highgate--Va!"
+
+"Does Newcome know that Lord Highgate is here?" I thought within myself,
+admiring my wife's faithfulness and simplicity, and trying to believe
+with that pure and guileless creature that it was not yet too late to
+save the unhappy Lady Clara.
+
+"Mr. Harris had best be warned," I said to Florac; "will you write him a
+word, and let us send a messenger to Newcome?"
+
+At first Florac said, "Parbleu! No;" the affair was none of his, he
+attended himself always to this result of Lady Clara's marriage. He had
+even complimented Jack upon it years before at Baden, when scenes enough
+tragic, enough comical, ma foi, had taken place apropos of this affair.
+Why should he meddle with it now?
+
+"Children dishonoured," said I, "honest families made miserable; for
+Heaven's sake, Florac, let us stay this catastrophe if we can." I spoke
+with much warmth, eagerly desirous to avert this calamity if possible,
+and very strongly moved by the tale which I had heard only just before
+dinner from that noble and innocent creature, whose pure heart had
+already prompted her to plead the cause of right and truth, and to try
+and rescue an unhappy desperate sister trembling on the verge of ruin.
+
+"If you will not write to him," said I, in some heat, "if your grooms
+don't like to go out of a night" (this was one of the objections which
+Florac had raised), "I will walk." We were talking over the affair
+rather late in the evening, the ladies having retreated to their
+sleeping apartments, and some guests having taken leave, whom our
+hospitable host and hostess had entertained that night, and before whom
+I naturally did not care to speak upon a subject so dangerous.
+
+"Parbleu, what virtue, my friend! what a Joseph!" cries Florac, puffing
+his cigar. "One sees well that your wife had made you the sermon. My
+poor Pendennis! You are henpecked, my pauvre bon! You become the husband
+model. It is true my mother writes that thy wife is an angel!"
+
+"I do not object to obey such a woman when she bids me do right," I
+said; and would indeed at that woman's request have gone out upon
+the errand, but that we here found another messenger. On days when
+dinner-parties were held at Rosebury, certain auxiliary waiters used to
+attend from Newcome whom the landlord of the King's Arms was accustomed
+to supply; indeed, it was to secure these, and make other necessary
+arrangements respecting fish, game, etc., that the Prince de Moncontour
+had ridden over to Newcome on the day when we met Lord Highgate, alias
+Mr. Harris, before the bar of the hotel. Whilst we were engaged in the
+above conversation a servant enters, and says, "My lord, Jenkins and the
+other man is going back to Newcome in their cart, and is there anything
+wanted?"
+
+"It is the Heaven which sends him," says Florac, turning round to me
+with a laugh; "make Jenkins to wait five minutes, Robert; I have to
+write to a gentleman at the King's Arms." And so saying, Florac wrote a
+line which he showed me, and having sealed the note, directed it to Mr.
+Harris at the King's Arms. The cart, the note, and the assistant waiters
+departed on their way to Newcome. Florac bade me go to rest with a clear
+conscience. In truth, the warning was better given in that way than any
+other, and a word from Florac was more likely to be effectual than an
+expostulation from me. I had never thought of making it, perhaps; except
+at the expressed desire of a lady whose counsel in all the difficult
+circumstances of life I own I am disposed to take.
+
+Mr. Jenkins's horse no doubt trotted at a very brisk pace, as
+gentlemen's horses will of a frosty night, after their masters have
+been regaled with plentiful supplies of wine and ale. I remember in my
+bachelor days that my horses always trotted quicker after I had had a
+good dinner; the champagne used to communicate itself to them somehow,
+and the claret get into their heels. Before midnight the letter for Mr.
+Harris was in Mr. Harris's hands in the King's Arms.
+
+It has been said that in the Boscawen Room at the Arms, some of the
+jolly fellows of Newcome had a club, of which Parrot the auctioneer, Tom
+Potts the talented reporter, now editor of the Independent, Vidler the
+apothecary, and other gentlemen, were members.
+
+When we first had occasion to mention that society, it was at an early
+stage of this history, long before Clive Newcome's fine moustache had
+grown. If Vidler the apothecary was old and infirm then, he is near ten
+years older now; he has had various assistants, of course, and one of
+them of late years had his become his partner, though the firm continues
+to be known by Viller's ancient and respectable name. A jovial fellow
+was this partner--a capital convivial member of the Jolly Britons, where
+he used to sit very late, so as to be in readiness for any night-work
+that might come in.
+
+So the Britons were all sitting, smoking, drinking, and making merry, in
+the Boscawen Room, when Jenkins enters with a note, which he straightway
+delivers to Mr. Vidler's partner. "From Rosebury? The Princess ill
+again, I suppose," says the surgeon, not sorry to let the company know
+that he attends her. "I wish the old girl would be ill in the daytime.
+Confound it," says he, "what's this----" and he reads out, "'Sir Newcome
+est de retour. Bon voyage, mon ami.--F.' What does this mean?"
+
+"I thought you knew French, Jack Harris," says Tom Potts; "you're always
+bothering us with your French songs."
+
+"Of course I know French," says the other; "but what's the meaning of
+this?"
+
+"Screwcome came back by the five o'clock train. I was in it, and his
+royal highness would scarcely speak to me. Took Brown's fly from the
+station. Brown won't enrich his family much by the operation," says Mr.
+Potts.
+
+"But what do I care?" cries Jack Harris; "we don't attend him, and we
+don't lose much by that. Howell attends him, ever since Vidler and he
+had that row."
+
+"Hulloh! I say, it's a mistake," cries Mr. Taplow, smoking in his chair.
+"This letter is for the party in the Benbow. The gent which the Prince
+spoke to him, and called him Jack the other day when he was here. Here's
+a nice business, and the seal broke, and all. Is the Benbow party
+gone to bed? John, you must carry him in this here note." John, quite
+innocent of the note and its contents, for he that moment had entered
+the clubroom with Mr. Potts's supper, took the note to the Benbow,
+from which he presently returned to his master with a very scared
+countenance. He said the gent in the Benbow was a most harbitrary gent.
+He had almost choked John after reading the letter, and John wouldn't
+stand it; and when John said he supposed that Mr. Harris in the
+Boscawen--that Mr. Jack Harris, had opened the letter, the other gent
+cursed and swore awful.
+
+"Potts," said Taplow, who was only too communicative on some occasions
+after he had imbibed too much of his own brandy-and-water, "it's my
+belief that that party's name is no more Harris than mine is. I have
+sent his linen to the wash, and there was two white pocket-handkerchiefs
+with H. and a coronet."
+
+On the next day we drove over to Newcome, hoping perhaps to find that
+Lord Highgate had taken the warning sent to him and quitted the place.
+But we were disappointed. He was walking in front of the hotel, where a
+thousand persons might see him as well as ourselves.
+
+We entered into his private apartment with him, and there expostulated
+upon his appearance in the public street, where Barnes Newcome or any
+passer-by might recognise him. He then told us of the mishap which had
+befallen Florac's letter on the previous night.
+
+"I can't go away now, whatever might have happened previously: by this
+time that villain knows that I am here. If I go, he will say I was
+afraid of him, and ran away. Oh, how I wish he would come and find me!"
+He broke out with a savage laugh.
+
+"It is best to run away," one of us interposed sadly.
+
+"Pendennis," he said with a tone of great softness, "your wife is a good
+woman. God bless her! God bless her for all she has said and done--would
+have done, if that villain had let her! Do you know the poor thing
+hasn't a single friend in the world, not one, one--except me, and that
+girl they are selling to Farintosh, and who does not count for much. He
+has driven away all her friends from her: one and all turn upon her. Her
+relations, of course; when did they ever fail to hit a poor fellow or
+a poor girl when she was down? The poor angel! The mother who sold her
+comes and preaches at her; Kew's wife turns up her little cursed nose
+and scorns her; Rooster, forsooth, must ride high the horse, now he
+is married and lives at Chanticlere, and give her warning to avoid my
+company or his! Do you know the only friend she ever had was that old
+woman with the stick--old Kew; the old witch whom they buried four
+months ago after nobbling her money for the beauty of the family? She
+used to protect her--that old woman; heaven bless her for it, wherever
+she is now, the old hag--a good word won't do her any harm. Ha! ha!" His
+laughter was cruel to hear.
+
+"Why did I come down?" he continued in reply to our sad queries. "Why
+did I come down, do you ask? Because she was wretched, and sent for me.
+Because if I was at the end of the world, and she was to say, 'Jack,
+come!' I'd come."
+
+"And if she bade you go?" asked his friends.
+
+"I would go; and I have gone. If she told me to jump into the sea, do
+you think I would not do it? But I go; and when she is alone with him,
+do you know what he does? He strikes her. Strikes that poor little
+thing! He has owned to it. She fled from him and sheltered with the old
+woman who's dead. He may be doing it now. Why did I ever shake hands
+with him? that's humiliation sufficient, isn't it? But she wished it;
+and I'd black his boots, curse him, if she told me. And because he
+wanted to keep my money in his confounded bank; and because he knew he
+might rely upon my honour and hers, poor dear child, he chooses to shake
+hands with me--me, whom he hates worse than a thousand devils--and quite
+right too. Why isn't there a place where we can go and meet, like man
+to man, and have it over! If I had a ball through my brains I shouldn't
+mind, I tell you. I've a mind to do it for myself, Pendennis. You don't
+understand me, Viscount."
+
+"Il est vrai," said Florac, with a shrug, "I comprehend neither the
+suicide nor the chaise-de-poste. What will you? I am not yet enough
+English, my friend. We make marriages of convenance in our country,
+que diable, and what follows follows; but no scandal afterwards! Do not
+adopt our institutions a demi, my friend. Vous ne me comprenez pas non
+plus, men pauvre Jack!"
+
+"There is one way still, I think," said the third of the speakers in
+this scene. "Let Lord Highgate come to Rosebury in his own name, leaving
+that of Mr. Harris behind him. If Sir Barnes Newcome wants you, he can
+seek you there. If you will go, as go you should, and God speed you, you
+can go, and in your own name, too."
+
+"Parbleu, c'est ca," cries Florac, "he speaks like a book--the
+romancier!" I confess, for my part, I thought that a good woman might
+plead with him, and touch that manly not disloyal heart now trembling on
+the awful balance between evil and good.
+
+"Allons! let us make to come the drague!" cries Florac. "Jack, thou
+returnest with us, my friend! Madame Pendennis, an angel, my friend, a
+quakre the most charming, shall roucoule to thee the sweetest sermons.
+My wife shall tend thee like a mother--a grandmother. Go make thy
+packet!"
+
+Lord Highgate was very much pleased and relieved seemingly. He shook our
+hands, he said he should never forget our kindness, never! In truth, the
+didactic part of our conversation was carried on at much greater length
+than as here noted down: and he would come that evening, but not with
+us, thank you; he had a particular engagement, some letters he must
+write. Those done, he would not fail us, and would be at Rosebury by
+dinner-time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII. "One more Unfortunate"
+
+
+The Fates did not ordain that the plan should succeed which Lord
+Highgate's friends had devised for Lady Clara's rescue or respite. He
+was bent upon one more interview with the unfortunate lady; and in that
+meeting the future destiny of their luckless lives was decided. On the
+morning of his return home, Barnes Newcome had information that Lord
+Highgate, under a feigned name, had been staying in the neighbourhood
+of his house, and had repeatedly been seen in the company of Lady Clara.
+She may have gone out to meet him but for one hour more. She had taken
+no leave of her children on the day when she left her home, and, far
+from making preparations for her own departure, had been engaged in
+getting the house ready for the reception of members of the family,
+whose arrival her husband announced as speedily to follow his own. Ethel
+and Lady Anne and some of the children were coming. Lord Farintosh's
+mother and sisters were to follow. It was to be a reunion previous to
+the marriage which was closer to unite the two families. Lady Clara said
+Yes to her husband's orders; rose mechanically to obey his wishes and
+arrange for the reception of the guests; and spoke tremblingly to
+the housekeeper as her husband gibed at her. The little ones had been
+consigned to bed early and before Sir Barnes's arrival. He did not think
+fit to see them in their sleep; nor did their mother. She did not know,
+as the poor little creatures left her room in charge of their nurses,
+that she looked on them for the last time. Perhaps, had she gone to
+their bedsides that evening, had the wretched panic-stricken soul been
+allowed leisure to pause, and to think, and to pray, the fate of the
+morrow might have been otherwise, and the trembling balance of the scale
+have inclined to right's side. But the pause was not allowed her. Her
+husband came and saluted her with his accustomed greetings of scorn,
+and sarcasm, and brutal insult. On a future day he never dared to call a
+servant of his household to testify to his treatment of her; though many
+were ready to attend to prove his cruelty and her terror. On that very
+last night, Lady Clara's maid, a country girl from her father's house at
+Chanticlere, told Sir Barnes in the midst of a conjugal dispute that
+her lady might bear his conduct but she could not, and that she would no
+longer live under the roof of such a brute. The girl's interference was
+not likely to benefit her mistress much: the wretched Lady Clara passed
+the last night under the roof of her husband and children, unattended
+save by this poor domestic who was about to leave her, in tears and
+hysterical outcries, and then in moaning stupor. Lady Clara put to sleep
+with laudanum, her maid carried down the story of her wrongs to the
+servants' quarters; and half a dozen of them took in their resignation
+to Sir Barnes as he sat over his breakfast the next morning--in
+his ancestral hall--surrounded by the portraits of his august
+forefathers--in his happy home.
+
+Their mutiny of course did not add to their master's good-humour; and
+his letters brought him news which increased Barnes's fury. A messenger
+arrived with a letter from his man of business at Newcome, upon the
+receipt of which be started up with such an execration as frightened
+the servant waiting on him, and letter in hand he ran to Lady Clara's
+sitting-room. Her ladyship was up. Sir Barnes breakfasted rather late on
+the first morning after an arrival at Newcome. He had to look over the
+bailiff's books, and to look about him round the park and grounds; to
+curse the gardeners; to damn the stable and kennel grooms; to yell at
+the woodman for clearing not enough or too much; to rail at the poor old
+workpeople brooming away the fallen leaves, etc. So Lady Clara was up
+and dressed when her husband went to her room, which lay at the end of
+the house as we have said, the last of a suite of ancestral halls.
+
+The mutinous servant heard high voices and curses within; then Lady
+Clara's screams; then Sir Barnes Newcome burst out of the room, locking
+the door and taking the key with him, and saluting with more curses
+James, the mutineer, over whom his master ran.
+
+"Curse your wife, and don't curse me, Sir Barnes Newcome!" said James,
+the mutineer; and knocked down a hand which the infuriated Baronet
+raised against him, with an arm that was twice as strong as Barnes's
+own. This man and maid followed their mistress in the sad journey upon
+which she was bent. They treated her with unalterable respect. They
+never could be got to see that her conduct was wrong. When Barnes's
+counsel subsequently tried to impugn their testimony, they dared him;
+and hurt the plaintiff's case very much. For the balance had weighed
+over; and it was Barnes himself who caused what now ensued; and what we
+learned in a very few hours afterwards from Newcome, where it was the
+talk of the whole neighbourhood.
+
+Florac and I, as yet ignorant of all that was occurring, met Barnes
+near his own lodge-gate riding in the direction of Newcome, as we were
+ourselves returning to Rosebury. The Prince de Moncontour, who
+was driving, affably saluted the Baronet, who gave us a scowling
+recognition, and rode on, his groom behind him. "The figure of the
+garcon," says Florac, as our acquaintance passed, "is not agreeable. Of
+pale, he has become livid. I hope these two men will not meet, or evil
+will come!" Evil to Barnes there might be, Florac's companion thought,
+who knew the previous little affairs between Barnes and his uncle and
+cousin; and that Lord Highgate was quite able to take care of himself.
+
+In half an hour after Florac spoke, that meeting between Barnes and
+Highgate actually had taken place--in the open square of Newcome, within
+four doors of the King's Arms inn, close to which lives Sir Barnes
+Newcome's man of business; and before which, Mr. Harris, as he was
+called, was walking, and waiting till a carriage which he had ordered
+came round from the inn yard. As Sir Barnes Newcome rode into the place
+many people touched their hats to him, however little they loved him. He
+was bowing and smirking to one of these, when he suddenly saw Belsize.
+
+He started back, causing his horse to back with him on to the pavement,
+and it may have been rage and fury, or accident and nervousness merely,
+but at this instant Barnes Newcome, looking towards Lord Highgate, shook
+his whip.
+
+"You cowardly villain!" said the other, springing forward. "I was going
+to your house."
+
+"How dare you, sir," cries Sir Barnes, still holding up that unlucky
+cane, "how dare you to--to----"
+
+"Dare, you scoundrel!" said Belsize. "Is that the cane you strike your
+wife with, you ruffian!" Belsize seized and tore him out of the saddle,
+flinging him screaming down on the pavement. The horse, rearing and
+making way for himself, galloped down the clattering street; a hundred
+people were round Sir Barnes in a moment.
+
+The carriage which Belsize had ordered came round at this very juncture.
+Amidst the crowd, shrinking, bustling, expostulating, threatening, who
+pressed about him, he shouldered his way. Mr. Taplow, aghast, was one of
+the hundred spectators of the scene.
+
+"I am Lord Highgate," said Barnes's adversary. "If Sir Barnes Newcome
+wants me, tell him I will send him word where he may hear of me."
+And getting into the carriage, he told the driver to go "to the usual
+place."
+
+Imagine the hubbub in the town, the conclaves at the inns, the talks
+in the counting-houses, the commotion amongst the factory people, the
+paragraphs in the Newcome papers, the bustle of surgeons and lawyers,
+after this event. Crowds gathered at the King's Arms, and waited round
+Mr. Speers the lawyer's house, into which Sir Barnes was carried. In
+vain policemen told them to move on; fresh groups gathered after the
+seceders. On the next day, when Barnes Newcome, who was not much hurt,
+had a fly to go home, a factory man shook his fist in at the carriage
+window, and, with a curse, said, "Serve you right, you villain." It was
+the man whose sweetheart this Don Juan had seduced and deserted years
+before; whose wrongs were well known amongst his mates, a leader in the
+chorus of hatred which growled round Barnes Newcome.
+
+Barnes's mother and sister Ethel had reached Newcome shortly before the
+return of the master of the house. The people there were in disturbance.
+Lady Anne and Miss Newcome came out with pallid looks to greet him. He
+laughed and reassured them about his accident: indeed his hurt had been
+trifling; he had been bled by the surgeon, a little jarred by the fall
+from his horse; but there was no sort of danger. Still their pale and
+doubtful looks continued. What caused them? In the open day, with a
+servant attending her Lady Clara Newcome had left her husband's house;
+and a letter was forwarded to him that same evening from my Lord
+Highgate, informing Sir Barnes Newcome that Lady Clara Pulleyn could
+bear his tyranny no longer, and had left his roof; that Lord Highgate
+proposed to leave England almost immediately, but would remain long
+enough to afford Sir Barnes Newcome the opportunity for an interview,
+in case he should be disposed to demand one: and a friend (of Lord
+Highgate's late regiment) was named who would receive letters and act in
+any way necessary for his lordship.
+
+The debates of the House of Lords must tell what followed afterwards in
+the dreary history of Lady Clara Pulleyn. The proceedings in the
+Newcome Divorce Bill filled the usual number of columns in the
+papers,--especially the Sunday papers. The witnesses were examined by
+learned peers whose business--nay, pleasure--it seems to be to enter
+into such matters; and, for the ends of justice and morality, doubtless,
+the whole story of Barnes Newcome's household was told to the British
+public. In the previous trial in the Court of Queen's Bench, how grandly
+Serjeant Rowland stood up for the rights of British husbands! with
+what pathos he depicted the conjugal paradise, the innocent children
+prattling round their happy parents, the serpent, the destroyer,
+entering into that Belgravian Eden; the wretched and deserted husband
+alone by his desecrated hearth, and calling for redress on his country!
+Rowland wept freely during his noble harangue. At not a shilling under
+twenty thousand pounds would he estimate the cost of his client's
+injuries. The jury was very much affected: the evening papers gave
+Rowland's address in extenso, with some pretty sharp raps at the
+aristocracy in general. The Day, the principal morning journal of that
+period, came out with a leading article the next morning, in which every
+party concerned and every institution was knocked about. The disgrace of
+the peerage, the ruin of the monarchy (with a retrospective view of the
+well-known case of Gyges and Candaules), the monstrosity of the crime,
+and the absurdity of the tribunal and the punishment, were all set forth
+in the terrible leading article of the Day.
+
+But when, on the next day, Serjeant Rowland was requested to call
+witnesses to prove that connubial happiness which he had depicted so
+pathetically, he had none at hand.
+
+Oliver, Q.C., now had his innings. A man, a husband, and a father,
+Mr. Oliver could not attempt to defend the conduct of his unfortunate
+client; but if there could be any excuse for such conduct, that excuse
+he was free to confess the plaintiff had afforded, whose cruelty and
+neglect twenty witnesses in court were ready to prove--neglect so
+outrageous, cruelty so systematic, that he wondered the plaintiff had
+not been better advised than to bring this trial, with all its degrading
+particulars, to a public issue. On the very day when the ill-omened
+marriage took place, another victim of cruelty had interposed as
+vainly--as vainly as Serjeant Rowland himself interposed in Court to
+prevent this case being made known--and with piteous outcries, in the
+name of outraged neglected woman, of castaway children pleading in vain
+for bread, had besought the bride to pause, and the bridegroom to look
+upon the wretched beings who owed him life. Why had not Lady Clara
+Pulleyn's friends listened to that appeal? And so on, and so on, between
+Rowland and Oliver the battle waged fiercely that day. Many witnesses
+were mauled and slain. Out of that combat scarce anybody came well,
+except the two principal champions, Rowland, Serjeant, and Oliver, Q.C.
+The whole country looked on and heard the wretched story, not only of
+Barnes's fault and Highgate's fault, but of the private peccadilloes of
+their suborned footmen and conspiring housemaids. Mr. Justice C. Sawyer
+charged the jury at great length--those men were respectable men and
+fathers of families themselves--of course they dealt full measure to
+Lord Highgate for his delinquencies; consoled the injured husband with
+immense damages, and left him free to pursue the further steps for
+releasing himself altogether from the tie which had been bound with
+affecting episcopal benediction at St. George's, Hanover Square.
+
+So Lady Clara flies from the custody of her tyrant, but to what a
+rescue! The very man who loves her, and gives her asylum, pities and
+deplores her. She scarce dares to look out of the windows of her new
+home upon the world, lest it should know and reproach her. All the
+sisterhood of friendship is cut off from her. If she dares to go abroad
+she feels the sneer of the world as she goes through it; and knows
+that malice and scorn whisper behind her. People, as criminal but
+undiscovered, make room for her, as if her touch were pollution. She
+knows she has darkened the lot and made wretched the home of the man
+whom she loves best; that his friends who see her, treat her with but
+a doubtful respect; and the domestics who attend her, with a suspicious
+obedience. In the country lanes, or the streets of the county town,
+neighbours look aside as the carriage passes in which she sits splendid
+and lonely. Rough hunting companions of her husband's come to her table:
+he is driven perforce to the company of flatterers and men of inferior
+sort; his equals, at least in his own home, will not live with him. She
+would be kind, perhaps, and charitable to the cottagers round about
+her, but she fears to visit them lest they too should scorn her. The
+clergyman who distributes her charities, blushes and looks awkward on
+passing her in the village, if he should be walking with his wife or
+one of his children. Shall they go to the Continent, and set up a grand
+house at Paris or at Florence? There they can get society, but of what
+a sort! Our acquaintances of Baden,--Madame Schlangenbad, and Madame
+de Cruchecassee, and Madame d'Ivry, and Messrs. Loder, and Punter, and
+Blackball, and Deuceace, will come, and dance, and flirt, and quarrel,
+and gamble, and feast round about her; but what in common with such wild
+people has this poor, timid, shrinking soul? Even these scorn her. The
+leers and laughter on those painted faces are quite unlike her own sad
+countenance. She has no reply to their wit. Their infernal gaiety scares
+her more than the solitude at home. No wonder that her husband does not
+like home, except for a short while in the hunting season. No wonder
+that he is away all day; how can he like a home which she has made so
+wretched? In the midst of her sorrow, and doubt, and misery, a child
+comes to her: how she clings to it! how her whole being, and hope, and
+passion centres itself on this feeble infant!----but she no more belongs
+to our story; with the new name she has taken, the poor lady passes out
+of the history of the Newcomes.
+
+If Barnes Newcome's children meet yonder solitary lady, do they know
+her? If her once-husband thinks upon the unhappy young creature whom his
+cruelty drove from him, does his conscience affect his sleep at night?
+Why should Sir Barnes Newcome's conscience be more squeamish than his
+country's, which has put money in his pocket for having trampled on the
+poor weak young thing, and scorned her, and driven her to ruin? When
+the whole of the accounts of that wretched bankruptcy are brought up
+for final Audit, which of the unhappy partners shall be shown to be most
+guilty? Does the Right Reverend Prelate who did the benedictory business
+for Barnes and Clara his wife repent in secret? Do the parents who
+pressed the marriage, and the fine folks who signed the book, and ate
+the breakfast, and applauded the bridegroom's speech, feel a little
+ashamed? O Hymen Hymenaee! The bishops, beadles, clergy, pew-openers,
+and other officers of the temple dedicated to Heaven under the
+invocation of St. George, will officiate in the same place at scores
+and scores more of such marriages: and St. George of England may behold
+virgin after virgin offered up to the devouring monster, Mammon (with
+many most respectable female dragons looking on)--may see virgin after
+virgin given away, just as in the Soldan of Babylon's time, but with
+never a champion to come to the rescue!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX. In which Achilles loses Briseis
+
+
+Although the years of the Marquis of Farintosh were few, he had spent
+most of them in the habit of command; and, from his childhood upwards,
+had been obeyed by all persons round about him. As an infant he had but
+to roar, and his mother and nurses were as much frightened as though he
+had been a Libyan lion. What he willed and ordered was law amongst
+his clan and family. During the period of his London and Parisian
+dissipations his poor mother did not venture to remonstrate with her
+young prodigal, but shut her eyes, not daring to open them on his wild
+courses. As for the friends of his person and house, many of whom were
+portly elderly gentlemen, their affection for the young Marquis was so
+extreme that there was no company into which their fidelity would not
+lead them to follow him; and you might see him dancing at Mabille with
+veteran aides-de-camp looking on, or disporting with opera-dancers at a
+Trois Freres banquet, which some old gentleman of his father's age had
+taken the pains to order. If his lordship Count Almaviva wants a friend
+to carry the lanthorn or to hold the ladder; do you suppose there are
+not many most respectable men in society who will act Figaro? When
+Farintosh thought fit, in the fulness of time and the blooming pride of
+manhood, to select a spouse, and to elevate a marchioness to his throne,
+no one dared gainsay him. When he called upon his mother and sisters,
+and their ladyships' hangers-on and attendants; upon his own particular
+kinsmen, led captains, and toadies; to bow the knee and do homage to the
+woman whom he delighted to honour, those duteous subjects trembled
+and obeyed; in fact, he thought that the position of a Marchioness of
+Farintosh was under heaven, and before men, so splendid, that, had he
+elevated a beggar-maid to that sublime rank, the inferior world was
+bound to worship her.
+
+So my lord's lady-mother, and my lord's sisters, and his captains, and
+his players of billiards, and the toadies of his august person, all
+performed obeisance to his bride-elect, and never questioned the will of
+the young chieftain. What were the private comments of the ladies of the
+family we had no means of knowing; but it may naturally be supposed that
+his lordship's gentlemen-in-waiting, Captain Henchman, Jack Todhunter,
+and the rest, had many misgivings of their own respecting their patrons
+change in life, and could not view without anxiety the advent of a
+mistress who might reign over him and them, who might possibly not like
+their company, and might exert her influence over her husband to oust
+these honest fellows from places in which they were very comfortable.
+The jovial rogues had the run of my lord's kitchen, stables, cellars,
+and cigar-boxes. A new marchioness might hate hunting, smoking, jolly
+parties, and toad-eaters in general, or might bring into the house
+favourites of her own. I am sure any kind-hearted man of the world must
+feel for the position of these faithful, doubtful, disconsolate vassals,
+and have a sympathy for their rueful looks and demeanour as they eye the
+splendid preparations for the ensuing marriage, the grand furniture sent
+to my lord's castles and houses, the magnificent plate provided for his
+tables--tables at which they may never have a knife and fork; castles
+and houses of which the poor rogues may never be allowed to pass the
+doors.
+
+When, then, "the elopement in High Life," which has been described in
+the previous pages, burst upon the town in the morning papers, I can
+fancy the agitation which the news occasioned in the faithful bosoms of
+the generous Todhunter, and the attached Henchman. My lord was not in
+his own house as yet. He and his friends still lingered on in the little
+house in Mayfair, the dear little bachelor's quarters, where they had
+enjoyed such good dinners, such good suppers, such rare doings, such
+a jolly time. I fancy Hench coming down to breakfast, and reading the
+Morning Post. I imagine Tod dropping in from his bedroom over the way,
+and Hench handing the paper over to Tod, and the conversation which
+ensued between those worthy men. Elopement in high life--excitement
+in N--come, and flight of Lady Cl-- N--come, daughter of the late and
+sister of the present Earl of D-rking, with Lord H---gate; personal
+rencontre between Lord H---gate and Sir B--nes N---come. Extraordinary
+disclosures. I say, I can fancy Hench and Tod over this awful piece of
+news.
+
+"Pretty news, ain't it, Toddy?" says Henchman, looking up from a
+Perigord-pie, which the faithful creature is discussing.
+
+"Always expected it," remarks the other. "Anybody who saw them together
+last season must have known it. The Chief himself spoke of it to me."
+
+"It'll cut him up awfully when he reads it. Is it in the Morning Post?
+He has the Post in his bedroom. I know he has rung his bell: I heard it.
+Bowman, has his lordship read his paper yet?"
+
+Bowman, the valet, said, "I believe you, he have read his paper. When
+he read it, he jumped out of bed and swore most awful. I cut as soon as
+I could," continued Mr. Bowman, who was on familiar--nay contemptuous
+terms with the other two gentlemen.
+
+"Enough to make any man swear," says Toddy to Henchman; and both were
+alarmed in their noble souls, reflecting that their chieftain was now
+actually getting up and dressing himself; that he would speedily, and in
+course of nature, come downstairs; and, then, most probably, would begin
+swearing at them.
+
+The most noble Mungo Malcolm Angus was in an awful state of mind when,
+at length, he appeared in the breakfast-room. "Why the dash do you make
+a taproom of this?" he cries. The trembling Henchman, who has begun
+to smoke--as he has done a hundred times before in this bachelor's
+hall--flings his cigar into the fire.
+
+"There you go--nothing like it! Why don't you fling some more in?
+You can get 'em at Hudson's for five guineas a pound." bursts out the
+youthful peer.
+
+"I understand why you are out of sorts, old boy," says Henchman,
+stretching out his manly hand. A tear of compassion twinkled in his
+eyelid, and coursed down his mottled cheek. "Cut away at old Frank,
+Farintosh,--a fellow who has been attached to you since before you could
+speak. It's not when a fellow's down and cut up, and riled--naturally
+riled--as you are--I know you are, Marquis; it's not then that I'm going
+to be angry with you. Pitch into old Frank Henchman--hit away, my young
+one." And Frank put himself into an attitude as of one prepared to
+receive a pugilistic assault. He bared his breast, as it were, and
+showed his scars, and said, "Strike!" Frank Henchman was a florid toady.
+My uncle, Major Pendennis, has often laughed with me about the fellow's
+pompous flatteries and ebullient fidelity.
+
+"You have read this confounded paragraph?" says the Marquis. "We have
+read it: and were deucedly cut up, too," says Henchman, "for your sake,
+my dear boy."
+
+"I remembered what you said, last year, Marquis," cries Todhunter
+(not unadroitly). "You, yourself, pointed out, in this very room, I
+recollect, at this very table--that night Coralie and the little
+Spanish dancer and her mother supped here, and there was a talk about
+Highgate--you, yourself, pointed out what was likely to happen. I
+doubted it; for I have dined at the Newcomes', and seen Highgate and her
+together in society often. But though you are a younger bird, you have
+better eyes than I have--and you saw the thing at once--at once, don't
+you remember I and Coralie said how glad she was, because Sir Barnes
+ill-treated her friend. What was the name of Coralie's friend, Hench?"
+
+"How should I know her confounded name?" Henchman briskly answers.
+"What do I care for Sir Barnes Newcome and his private affairs? He is
+no friend of mine. I never said he was a friend of mine. I never said
+I liked him. Out of respect for the Chief here, I held my tongue about
+him, and shall hold my tongue. Have some of this pate, Chief! No? Poor
+old boy! I know you haven't got an appetite. I know this news cuts you
+up. I say nothing, and make no pretence of condolence; though I feel
+for you--and you know you can count on old Frank Henchman--don't you,
+Malcolm?" And again he turns away to conceal his gallant sensibility and
+generous emotion.
+
+"What does it matter to me?" bursts out the Marquis, garnishing his
+conversation with the usual expletives which adorned his eloquence
+when he was strongly moved. "What do I care for Barnes Newcome, and his
+confounded affairs and family? I never want to see him again, but in the
+light of a banker, when I go to the City, where he keeps my account. I
+say, I have nothing to do with him, or all the Newcomes under the sun.
+Why, one of them is a painter, and will paint my dog, Ratcatcher, by
+Jove! or my horse, or my groom, if I give him the order. Do you think I
+care for any one of the pack? It's not the fault of the Marchioness of
+Farintosh that her family is not equal to mine. Besides two others in
+England and Scotland, I should like to know what family is? I tell
+you what, Hench. I bet you five to two, that before an hour is over my
+mother will be here, and down on her knees to me, begging me to break
+off this engagement."
+
+"And what will you do, Farintosh?" asks Henchman, slowly, "Will you
+break it off?"
+
+"No!" shouts the Marquis. "Why shall I break off with the finest girl in
+England--and the best-plucked one, and the cleverest and wittiest, and
+the most beautiful creature, by Jove, that ever stepped, for no fault
+of hers, and because her sister-in-law leaves her brother, who I know
+treated her infernally? We have talked this matter over at home before.
+I wouldn't dine with the fellow; though he was always asking me; nor
+meet, except just out of civility, any of his confounded family. Lady
+Anne is different. She is a lady, she is. She is a good woman: and Kew
+is a most respectable man, though he is only a peer of George III.'s
+creation, and you should hear how he speaks of Miss Newcome, though she
+refused him. I should like to know who is to prevent me marrying Lady
+Anne Newcome's daughter?"
+
+"By Jove, you are a good-plucked fellow, Farintosh--give me your hand,
+old boy," says Henchman.
+
+"Heh! am I? You would have said, give me your hand, old boy, whichever
+way I determined, Hench! I tell you, I ain't intellectual, and that sort
+of thing. But I know my rank, and I know my place; and when a man of
+my station gives his word, he sticks to it, sir; and my lady, and my
+sisters, may go on their knees all round; and, by Jove, I won't flinch."
+
+The justice of Lord Farintosh's views was speedily proved by the
+appearance of his lordship's mother, Lady Glenlivat, whose arrival put
+a stop to a conversation which Captain Francis Henchman has often
+subsequently narrated. She besought to see her son in terms so urgent,
+that the young nobleman could not be denied to his parent; and, no
+doubt, a long and interesting interview took place, in which Lord
+Farintosh's mother passionately implored him to break off a match upon
+which he was as resolutely bent.
+
+Was it a sense of honour, a longing desire to possess this young beauty,
+and call her his own, or a fierce and profound dislike to being balked
+in any object of his wishes, which actuated the young lord? Certainly he
+had borne, very philosophically, delay after delay which had taken place
+in the devised union; and being quite sure of his mistress, had not
+cared to press on the marriage, but lingered over the dregs of his
+bachelor cup complacently still. We all know in what an affecting
+farewell he took leave of the associates of his vie de garcon: the
+speeches made (in both languages), the presents distributed, the tears
+and hysterics of some of the guests assembled; the cigar-boxes given
+over to this friend, the ecrin of diamonds to that, et caetera, et
+caetera, et caetera. Don't we know? If we don't it is not Henchman's
+fault, who has told the story of Farintosh's betrothals a thousand and
+one times at his clubs, at the houses where he is asked to dine, on
+account of his intimacy with the nobility, among the young men of
+fashion, or no fashion, whom this two-bottle Mentor, and burly admirer
+of youth, has since taken upon himself to form. The farewell at
+Greenwich was so affecting that all "traversed the cart," and took
+another farewell at Richmond, where there was crying too, but it was
+Eucharis cried because fair Calypso wanted to tear her eyes out; and
+where not only Telemachus (as was natural to his age), but Mentor
+likewise, quaffed the wine-cup too freely. You are virtuous, O reader!
+but there are still cakes and ale, Ask Henchman if there be not. You
+will find him in the Park any afternoon; he will dine with you if no
+better man ask him in the interval. He will tell you story upon story
+regarding young Lord Farintosh, and his marriage, and what happened
+before his marriage, and afterwards; and he will sigh, weep almost at
+some moments, as he narrates their subsequent quarrel, and Farintosh's
+unworthy conduct, and tells you how he formed that young man. My uncle
+and Captain Henchman disliked each other very much, I am sorry to
+say--sorry to add that it was very amusing to hear either one of them
+speak of the other.
+
+Lady Glenlivat, according to the Captain, then, had no success in the
+interview with her son; who, unmoved by the maternal tears, commands,
+and entreaties, swore he would marry Miss Newcome, and that no power on
+earth should prevent him. "As if trying to thwart that man could ever
+prevent his having his way!" ejaculated his quondam friend.
+
+But on the next day, after ten thousand men in clubs and coteries had
+talked the news over; after the evening had repeated and improved the
+delightful theme of our "morning contemporaries;" after Calypso and
+Eucharis driving together in the Park, and reconciled now, had kissed
+their hands to Lord Farintosh, and made him their compliments--after a
+night of natural doubt, disturbance, defiance, fury--as men whispered
+to each other at the club where his lordship dined, and at the theatre
+where he took his recreation--after an awful time at breakfast in which
+Messrs. Bowman, valet, and Todhunter and Henchman, captains of the
+Farintosh bodyguard, all got their share of kicks and growling--behold
+Lady Glenlivat came back to the charge again; and this time with such
+force that poor Lord Farintosh was shaken indeed.
+
+Her ladyship's ally was no other than Miss Newcome herself; from whom
+Lord Farintosh's mother received, by that day's post, a letter, which
+she was commissioned to read to her son.
+
+
+"Dear Madam" (wrote the young lady in her firmest handwriting)--"Mamma
+is at this moment in a state of such grief and dismay at the cruel
+misfortune and humiliation which has just befallen our family, that she
+is really not able to write to you as she ought, and this task, painful
+as it is, must be mine. Dear Lady Glenlivat, the kindness and confidence
+which I have ever received from you and yours, merit truth, and most
+grateful respect and regard from me. And I feel after the late fatal
+occurrence, what I have often and often owned to myself though I did not
+dare to acknowledge it, that I ought to release Lord F., at once and for
+ever, from an engagement which he could never think of maintaining with
+a family so unfortunate as ours. I thank him with all my heart for his
+goodness in bearing with my humours so long; if I have given him pain,
+as I know I have sometimes, I beg his pardon, and would do so on my
+knees. I hope and pray he may be happy, as I feared he never could
+be with me. He has many good and noble qualities; and, in bidding him
+farewell, I trust I may retain his friendship, and that he will believe
+in the esteem and gratitude of your most sincere, Ethel Newcome."
+
+
+A copy of this farewell letter was seen by a lady who happened to be a
+neighbour of Miss Newcome's when the family misfortune occurred, and to
+whom, in her natural dismay and grief, the young lady fled for comfort
+and consolation. "Dearest Mrs. Pendennis," wrote Miss Ethel to my wife,
+"I hear you are at Rosebury; do, do come to your affectionate E. N." The
+next day, it was--"Dearest Laura--If you can, pray, pray come to Newcome
+this morning. I want very much to speak to you about the poor children,
+to consult you about something most important." Madame de Moncontour's
+pony-carriage was constantly trotting between Rosebury and Newcome in
+these days of calamity.
+
+And my wife, as in duty bound, gave me full reports of all that happened
+in that house of mourning. On the very day of the flight, Lady Anne, her
+daughter, and some others of her family arrived at Newcome. The deserted
+little girl, Barnes's eldest child, ran, with tears and cries of joy,
+to her Aunt Ethel, whom she had always loved better than her mother; and
+clung to her and embraced her; and, in her artless little words, told
+her that mamma had gone away, and that Ethel should be her mamma now.
+Very strongly moved by the misfortune, as by the caresses and affection
+of the poor orphaned creature, Ethel took the little girl to her heart,
+and promised to be a mother to her, and that she would not leave her; in
+which pious resolve I scarcely need say Laura strengthened her, when, at
+her young friend's urgent summons, my wife came to her.
+
+The household at Newcome was in a state of disorganisation after the
+catastrophe. Two of Lady Clara's servants; it has been stated already,
+went away with her. The luckless master of the house was lying wounded
+in the neighbouring town. Lady Anne Newcome, his mother, was terribly
+agitated by the news, which was abruptly broken to her, of the flight of
+her daughter-in-law and her son's danger. Now she thought of flying to
+Newcome to nurse him; and then feared lest she should be ill received by
+the invalid--indeed, ordered by Sir Barnes to go home, and not to bother
+him. So at home Lady Anne remained, where the thoughts of the sufferings
+she had already undergone in that house, of Sir Barnes's cruel behaviour
+to her at her last visit, which he had abruptly requested her to
+shorten, of the happy days which she had passed as mistress of that
+house and wife of the defunct Sir Brian; the sight of that departed
+angel's picture in the dining-room and wheel-chair in the gallery;
+the recollection of little Barnes as a cherub of a child in that very
+gallery, and pulled out of the fire by a nurse in the second year of his
+age, when he was all that a fond mother could wish--these incidents and
+reminiscences so agitated Lady Anne Newcome, that she, for her part,
+went off in a series of hysterical fits, and acted as one distraught:
+her second daughter screamed in sympathy with her and Miss Newcome had
+to take the command of the whole of this demented household, hysterical
+mamma and sister, mutineering servants, and shrieking abandoned nursery,
+and bring young people and old to peace and quiet.
+
+On the morrow after his little concussion Sir Barnes Newcome came home,
+not much hurt in body, but woefully afflicted in temper, and venting his
+wrath upon everybody round about him in that strong language which he
+employed when displeased; and under which his valet, his housekeeper,
+his butler, his farm-bailiff, his lawyer, his doctor, his dishevelled
+mother herself--who rose from her couch and her sal-volatile to fling
+herself round her dear boy's knees--all had to suffer. Ethel Newcome,
+the Baronet's sister, was the only person in his house to whom Sir
+Barnes did not utter oaths or proffer rude speeches. He was afraid of
+offending her or encountering that resolute spirit, and lapsed into a
+surly silence in her presence. Indistinct maledictions growled about Sir
+Barnes's chair when he beheld my wife's pony-carriage drive up; and he
+asked what brought her here? But Ethel sternly told her brother that
+Mrs. Pendennis came at her particular request, and asked him whether he
+supposed anybody could come into that house for pleasure now, or for any
+other motive but kindness? Upon which, Sir Barnes fairly burst out into
+tears, intermingled with execrations against his enemies and his own
+fate, and assertions that he was the most miserable beggar alive. He
+would not see his children: but with more tears he would implore Ethel
+never to leave them, and, anon, would ask what he should do when she
+married, and he was left alone in that infernal house?
+
+T. Potts, Esq., of the Newcome Independent, used to say afterwards
+that the Baronet was in the direst terror of another meeting with Lord
+Highgate, and kept a policeman at the lodge-gate, and a second in the
+kitchen, to interpose in event of a collision. But Mr. Potts made this
+statement in after days, when the quarrel between his party and paper
+and Sir Barnes Newcome was flagrant. Five or six days after the meeting
+of the two rivals in Newcome market-place, Sir Barnes received a letter
+from the friend of Lord Highgate, informing him that his lordship,
+having waited for him according to promise, had now left England, and
+presumed that the differences between them were to be settled by their
+respective lawyers--infamous behaviour on a par with the rest of Lord
+Highgate's villainy, the Baronet said. "When the scoundrel knew I
+could lift my pistol arm," Barnes said, "Lord Highgate fled the
+country;"--thus hinting that death, and not damages, were what he
+intended to seek from his enemy.
+
+After that interview in which Ethel communicated to Laura her farewell
+letter to Lord Farintosh, my wife returned to Rosebury with an
+extraordinary brightness and gaiety in her face and her demeanour. She
+pressed Madame de Moncontour's hands with such warmth, she blushed and
+looked so handsome, she sang and talked so gaily, that our host was
+struck by her behaviour, and paid her husband more compliments regarding
+her beauty, amiability, and other good qualities, than need be set down
+here. It may be that I like Paul de Florac so much, in spite of certain
+undeniable faults of character, because of his admiration for my wife.
+She was in such a hurry to talk to me, that night, that Paul's game and
+Nicotian amusements were cut short by her visit to the billiard-room;
+and when we were alone by the cosy dressing-room fire, she told me
+what had happened during the day. Why should Ethel's refusal of Lord
+Farintosh have so much elated my wife?
+
+"Ah!" cries Mrs. Pendennis, "she has a generous nature, and the world
+has not had time to spoil it. Do you know there are many points that she
+never has thought of--I would say problems that she has to work out for
+herself, only you, Pen, do not like us poor ignorant women to use such a
+learned word as problems? Life and experience force things upon her mind
+which others learn from their parents or those who educate them, but,
+for which she has never had any teachers. Nobody has ever told her,
+Arthur, that it was wrong to marry without love, or pronounce lightly
+those awful vows which we utter before God at the altar. I believe, if
+she knew that her life was futile, it is but of late she has thought
+it could be otherwise, and that she might mend it. I have read (besides
+that poem of Goethe of which you are so fond) in books of Indian
+travels of Bayaderes, dancing-girls brought up by troops round about the
+temples, whose calling is to dance, and wear jewels, and look beautiful;
+I believe they are quite respected in--in Pagoda-land. They perform
+before the priests in the pagodas; and the Brahmins and the Indian
+princes marry them. Can we cry out against these poor creatures, or
+against the custom of their country? It seems to me that young women
+in our world are bred up in a way not very different. What they do they
+scarcely know to be wrong. They are educated for the world, and taught
+to display: their mothers will give them to the richest suitor, as they
+themselves were given before. How can these think seriously, Arthur, of
+souls to be saved, weak hearts to be kept out of temptation, prayers
+to be uttered, and a better world to be held always in view, when the
+vanities of this one are all their thought and scheme? Ethel's simple
+talk made me smile sometimes, do you know, and her strenuous way of
+imparting her discoveries. I thought of the shepherd boy who made a
+watch, and found on taking it into the town how very many watches there
+were, and how much better than his. But the poor child has had to make
+hers for herself, such as it is; and, indeed, is employed now in
+working on it. She told me very artlessly her little history, Arthur;
+it affected me to hear her simple talk, and--and I blessed God for our
+mother, my dear, and that my early days had had a better guide.
+
+"You know that for a long time it was settled that she was to marry her
+cousin, Lord Kew. She was bred to that notion from her earliest youth;
+about which she spoke as we all can about our early days. They were
+spent, she said, in the nursery and schoolroom for the most part. She
+was allowed to come to her mother's dressing-room, and sometimes to see
+more of her during the winter at Newcome. She describes her mother as
+always the kindest of the kind: but from very early times the daughter
+must have felt her own superiority, I think, though she does not speak
+of it. You should see her at home now in their dreadful calamity. She
+seems the only person of the house who keeps her head.
+
+"She told very nicely and modestly how it was Lord Kew who parted from
+her, not she who had dismissed him, as you know the Newcomes used to
+say. I have heard that--oh--that man Sir Barnes say so myself. She says
+humbly that her cousin Kew was a great deal too good for her; and so is
+every one almost, she adds, poor thing!"
+
+"Poor every one! Did you ask about him, Laura?" said Mr. Pendennis.
+
+"No; I did not venture. She looked at me out of her downright eyes, and
+went on with her little tale. 'I was scarcely more than a child then,'
+she continued, 'and though I liked Kew very much--who would not like
+such a generous honest creature? I felt somehow that I was taller
+than my cousin, and as if I ought not to marry him, or should make him
+unhappy if I did. When poor papa used to talk, we children remarked
+that mamma hardly listened to him; and so we did not respect him as we
+should, and Barnes was especially scoffing and odious with him. Why,
+when he was a boy, he used to sneer at papa openly before us younger
+ones. Now Harriet admires everything that Kew says, and that makes her a
+great deal happier at being with him.' And then," added Mrs. Pendennis,
+"Ethel said, 'I hope you respect your husband, Laura: depend on it, you
+will be happier if you do.' Was not that a fine discovery of Ethel's,
+Mr. Pen?
+
+"'Clara's terror of Barnes frightened me when I stayed in the house,'
+Ethel went on. 'I am sure I would not tremble before any man in the
+world as she did. I saw early that she used to deceive him, and tell him
+lies, Laura. I do not mean lies of words alone, but lies of looks and
+actions. Oh! I do not wonder at her flying from him. He was dreadful to
+be with: cruel, and selfish, and cold. He was made worse by marrying a
+woman he did not love; as she was, by that unfortunate union with him.
+Suppose he had found a clever woman who could have controlled him, and
+amused him, and whom he and his friends could have admired, instead of
+poor Clara, who made his home wearisome, and trembled when he entered
+it? Suppose she could have married that unhappy man to whom she was
+attached early? I was frightened, Laura, to think how ill this worldly
+marriage had prospered.
+
+"'My poor grandmother, whenever I spoke upon such a subject, would break
+out into a thousand gibes and sarcasms, and point to many of our friends
+who had made love-matches, and were quarrelling now as fiercely as
+though they had never loved each other. You remember that dreadful case
+in France Duc de ----, who murdered his duchess? That was a love-match,
+and I can remember the sort of screech with which Lady Kew used to speak
+about it; and of the journal which the poor duchess kept, and in which
+she noted down all her husband's ill-behaviour.'"
+
+"Hush, Laura! Do you remember where we are? If the Princess were to
+put down all Florac's culpabilities in an album, what a ledger it would
+be--as big as Dr. Portman's Chrysostom!" But this was parenthetical: and
+after a smile, and a little respite, the young woman proceeded in her
+narration of her friend's history.
+
+"'I was willing enough to listen,' Ethel said, 'to grandmamma then: for
+we are glad of an excuse to do what we like; and I liked admiration, and
+rank, and great wealth, Laura; and Lord Farintosh offered me these. I
+liked to surpass my companions, and I saw them so eager in pursuing
+him! You cannot think, Laura, what meannesses women in the world will
+commit--mothers and daughters too, in the pursuit of a person of
+his great rank. Those Miss Burrs, you should have seen them at the
+country-houses where we visited together, and how they followed him; how
+they would meet him in the parks and shrubberies; how they liked smoking
+though I knew it made them ill; how they were always finding pretexts
+for getting near him! Oh, it was odious!'"
+
+I would not willingly interrupt the narrative, but let the reporter be
+allowed here to state that at this point of Miss Newcome's story (which
+my wife gave with a very pretty imitation of the girl's manner), we both
+burst out laughing so loud that little Madame de Moncontour put her head
+into the drawing-room and asked what we was a-laughing at? We did not
+tell our hostess that poor Ethel and her grandmother had been accused
+of doing the very same thing for which she found fault with the Misses
+Burr. Miss Newcome thought herself quite innocent, or how should she
+have cried out at the naughty behaviour of other people?
+
+"'Wherever we went, however,' resumed my wife's young penitent, 'it was
+easy to see, I think I may say so without vanity, who was the object of
+Lord Farintosh's attention. He followed us everywhere; and we could not
+go upon any visit in England or Scotland but he was in the same house.
+Grandmamma's whole heart was bent upon that marriage, and when he
+proposed for me I do not disown that I was very pleased and vain.
+
+"'It is in these last months that I have heard about him more, and
+learned to know him better--him and myself too, Laura. Some one--some
+one you know, and whom I shall always love as a brother--reproached me
+in former days for a worldliness about which you talk too sometimes. But
+it is not worldly to give yourself up for your family, is it? One cannot
+help the rank in which one is born, and surely it is but natural and
+proper to marry in it. Not that Lord Farintosh thinks me or any one of
+his rank.' (Here Miss Ethel laughed.) 'He is the Sultan, and we, every
+unmarried girl in society, is his humblest slave. His Majesty's opinions
+upon this subject did not suit me, I can assure you: I have no notion of
+such pride!
+
+"'But I do not disguise from you, dear Laura, that after accepting
+him, as I came to know him better, and heard him, and heard of him,
+and talked with him daily, and understood Lord Farintosh's character, I
+looked forward with more and more doubt to the day when I was to become
+his wife. I have not learned to respect him in these months that I have
+known him, and during which there has been mourning in our families. I
+will not talk to you about him; I have no right, have I?--to hear him
+speak out his heart, and tell it to any friend. He said he liked me
+because I did not flatter him. Poor Malcolm! they all do. What was my
+acceptance of him, Laura, but flattery? Yes, flattery, and servility to
+rank, and a desire to possess it. Would I have accepted plain Malcolm
+Roy? I sent away a better than him, Laura.
+
+"'These things have been brooding in my mind for some months past. I
+must have been but an ill companion for him, and indeed he bore with my
+waywardness much more kindly than I ever thought possible; and when four
+days since we came to this sad house, where he was to have joined
+us, and I found only dismay and wretchedness, and these poor children
+deprived of a mother, whom I pity, God help her, for she has been made
+so miserable--and is now and must be to the end of her days; as I lay
+awake, thinking of my own future life, and that I was going to marry, as
+poor Clara had married, but for an establishment and a position in life;
+I, my own mistress, and not obedient by nature, or a slave to others as
+that poor creature was--I thought to myself, why shall I do this?
+Now Clara has left us, and is, as it were, dead to us who made her so
+unhappy, let me be the mother to her orphans. I love the little girl,
+and she has always loved me, and came crying to me that day when we
+arrived, and put her dear little arms round my neck, and said, 'You
+won't go away, will you, Aunt Ethel?' in her sweet voice. And I will
+stay with her; and will try and learn myself that I may teach her; and
+learn to be good too--better than I have been. Will praying help me,
+Laura? I did. I am sure I was right, and that it is my duty to stay
+here.'"
+
+Laura was greatly moved as she told her friend's confession; and when
+the next day at church the clergyman read the opening words of the
+service I thought a peculiar radiance and happiness beamed from her
+bright face.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+Some subsequent occurrences in the history of this branch of the Newcome
+family I am enabled to report from the testimony of the same informant
+who has just given us an account of her own feelings and life. Miss
+Ethel and my wife were now in daily communication, and "my-dearesting"
+each other with that female fervour, which, cold men of the world as
+we are--not only chary of warm expressions of friendship, but averse to
+entertaining warm feelings at all--we surely must admire in persons of
+the inferior sex, whose loves grow up and reach the skies in a night;
+who kiss, embrace, console, call each other by Christian names, in that
+sweet, kindly sisterhood of Misfortune and Compassion who are always
+entering into partnership here in life. I say the world is full of Miss
+Nightingales; and we, sick and wounded in our private Scutaris, have
+countless nurse-tenders. I did not see my wife ministering to the
+afflicted family at Newcome Park; but I can fancy her there amongst the
+women and children, her prudent counsel, her thousand gentle offices,
+her apt pity and cheerfulness, the love and truth glowing in her face,
+and inspiring her words, movements, demeanour.
+
+Mrs. Pendennis's husband for his part did not attempt to console
+Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, Baronet. I never professed to have a
+halfpennyworth of pity at that gentleman's command. Florac, who owed
+Barnes his principality and his present comforts in life, did make some
+futile efforts at condolence, but was received by the Baronet with such
+fierceness, and evident ill-humour, that he did not care to repeat his
+visits, and allowed him to vent his curses and peevishness on his own
+immediate dependents. We used to ask Laura on her return to Rosebury
+from her charity visits to Newcome about the poor suffering master of
+the house. She faltered and stammered in describing him and what she
+heard of him; she smiled, I grieve to say, for this unfortunate lady
+cannot help having a sense of humour; and we could not help laughing
+outright sometimes at the idea of that discomfited wretch, that
+overbearing creature overborne in his turn--which laughter Mrs. Laura
+used to chide as very naughty and unfeeling. When we went into Newcome
+the landlord of the King's Arms looked knowing and quizzical: Tom Potts
+grinned at me and rubbed his hands. "This business serves the paper
+better than Mr. Warrington's articles," says Mr. Potts. "We have sold
+no end of Independents; and if you polled the whole borough, I bet that
+five to one would say Sir Screwcome Screwcome was served right. By the
+way, what's up about the Marquis of Farintosh, Mr. Pendennis? He arrived
+at the Arms last night; went over to the Park this morning, and is gone
+back to town by the afternoon train."
+
+What had happened between the Marquis of Farintosh and Miss Newcome I
+am enabled to know from the report of Miss Newcome's confidante. On the
+receipt of that letter of conge which has been mentioned in a former
+chapter, his lordship must have been very much excited, for he left town
+straightway by that evening's mail, and on the next morning, after a few
+hours of rest at his inn, was at Newcome lodge-gate demanding to see the
+Baronet.
+
+On that morning it chanced that Sir Barnes had left home with Mr Speer,
+his legal adviser; and hereupon the Marquis asked to see Miss Newcome;
+nor could the lodge-keeper venture to exclude so distinguished a person
+from the Park. His lordship drove up to the house, and his name was
+taken to Miss Ethel. She turned very pale when she heard it; and my wife
+divined at once who was her visitor. Lady Anne had not left her room
+as yet. Laura Pendennis remained in command of the little conclave of
+children, with whom the two ladies were sitting when Lord Farintosh
+arrived. Little Clara wanted to go with her aunt as she rose to leave
+the room--the child could scarcely be got to part from her now.
+
+At the end of an hour the carriage was seen driving away, and Ethel
+returned looking as pale as before, and red about the eyes. Miss Clara's
+mutton-chop for dinner coming in at the same time, the child was not
+so presently eager for her aunt's company. Aunt Ethel cut up the
+mutton-chop very neatly, and then, having seen the child comfortably
+seated at her meal, went with her friend into a neighbouring apartment
+(of course, with some pretext of showing Laura a picture, or a piece of
+china, or a new child's frock, or with some other hypocritical pretence
+by which the ingenuous female attendants pretended to be utterly
+blinded), and there, I have no doubt, before beginning her story,
+dearest Laura embraced dearest Ethel, and vice versa.
+
+"He is gone!" at length gasps dearest Ethel.
+
+"Pour toujours? poor young man!" sighs dearest Laura. "Was he very
+unhappy, Ethel?"
+
+"He was more angry," Ethel answers. "He had a right to be hurt, but not
+to speak as he did. He lost his temper quite at last, and broke out
+in the most frantic reproaches. He forgot all respect and even
+gentlemanlike behaviour. Do you know he used words--words such as Barnes
+uses sometimes when he is angry! and dared this language to me! I was
+sorry till then, very sorry, and very much moved; but I know more than
+ever, now, that I was right in refusing Lord Farintosh."
+
+Dearest Laura now pressed for an account of all that had happened, which
+may be briefly told as follows. Feeling very deeply upon the subject
+which brought him to Miss Newcome, it was no wonder that Lord Farintosh
+spoke at first in a way which moved her. He said he thought her letter
+to his mother was very rightly written under the circumstances, and
+thanked her for her generosity in offering to release him from his
+engagement. But the affair--the painful circumstance of Highgate, and
+that--which had happened in the Newcome family, was no fault of
+Miss Newcome's, and Lord Farintosh could not think of holding her
+accountable. His friends had long urged him to marry, and it was by
+his mother's own wish that the engagement was formed, which he was
+determined to maintain. In his course through the world (of which he was
+getting very tired), he had never seen a woman, a lady who was so--you
+understand, Ethel--whom he admired so much, who was likely to make
+so good a wife for him as you are. "You allude," he continued, "to
+differences we have had--and we have had them--but many of them, I own,
+have been from my fault. I have been bred up in a way different to most
+young men. I cannot help it if I have had temptations to which other men
+are not exposed; and have been placed by--by Providence--in a high rank
+of life; I am sure if you share it with me you will adorn it, and be in
+every way worthy of it, and make me much better than I have been. If you
+knew what a night of agony I passed after my mother read that letter to
+me--I know you'd pity me, Ethel,--I know you would. The idea of losing
+you makes me wild. My mother was dreadfully alarmed when she saw the
+state I was in; so was the doctor--I assure you he was. And I had no
+rest at all, and no peace of mind, until I determined to come down to
+you; and say that I adored you, and you only; and that I would hold to
+my engagement in spite of everything--and prove to you that--that no man
+in the world could love you more sincerely than I do." Here the young
+gentleman was so overcome that he paused in his speech, and gave way to
+an emotion, for which, surely no man who has been in the same condition
+with Lord Farintosh will blame him.
+
+Miss Newcome was also much touched by this exhibition of natural
+feeling; and, I dare say, it was at this time that her eyes showed the
+first symptoms of that malady of which the traces were visible an hour
+after.
+
+"You are very generous and kind to me, Lord Farintosh," she said. "Your
+constancy honours me very much, and proves how good and loyal you are;
+but--but do not think hardly of me for saying that the more I have
+thought of what has happened here,--of the wretched consequences of
+interested marriages; the long union growing each day so miserable, that
+at last it becomes intolerable and is burst asunder, as in poor Clara's
+case;--the more I am resolved not to commit that first fatal step of
+entering into a marriage without--without the degree of affection which
+people who take that vow ought to feel for one another."
+
+"Affection! Can you doubt it? Gracious heavens, I adore you! Isn't my
+being here a proof that I do?" cries the young lady's lover.
+
+"But I?" answered the girl. "I have asked my own heart that question
+before now. I have thought to myself,--If he comes after all,--if his
+affection for me survives this disgrace of our family, as it has, and
+every one of us should be thankful to you--ought I not to show at least
+gratitude for so much kindness and honour, and devote myself to one
+who makes such sacrifices for me? But, before all things I owe you the
+truth, Lord Farintosh. I never could make you happy; I know I could not:
+nor obey you as you are accustomed to be obeyed; nor give you such a
+devotion as you have a right to expect from your wife. I thought I might
+once. I can't now! I know that I took you because you were rich, and
+had a great name; not because you were honest, and attached to me as
+you show yourself to be. I ask your pardon for the deceit I practised on
+you.--Look at Clara, poor child, and her misery! My pride, I know, would
+never have let me fall as far as she has done; but oh! I am humiliated
+to think that I could have been made to say I would take the first step
+in that awful career."
+
+"What career, in God's name?" cries the astonished suitor. "Humiliated,
+Ethel? Who's going to humiliate you? I suppose there is no woman in
+England who need be humiliated by becoming my wife. I should like to see
+the one that I can't pretend to--or to royal blood if I like: it's not
+better than mine. Humiliated, indeed! That is news. Ha! ha! You don't
+suppose that your pedigree, which I know all about, and the Newcome
+family, with your barber-surgeon to Edward the Confessor, are equal
+to----"
+
+"To yours? No. It is not very long that I have learned to disbelieve in
+that story altogether. I fancy it was an odd whim of my poor father's,
+and that our family were quite poor people.
+
+"I knew it," said Lord Farintosh. "Do you suppose there was not plenty
+of women to tell it me?"
+
+"It was not because we were poor that I am ashamed," Ethel went on. "That
+cannot be our fault, though some of us seem think it is, as they hide
+the truth so. One of my uncles used to tell me that my grandfather's
+father was a labourer in Newcome: but I was a child then, and liked to
+believe the prettiest story best."
+
+"As if it matters!" cries Lord Farintosh.
+
+"As if it matters in your wife? n'est-ce pas? I never thought that it
+would. I should have told you, as it was my duty to tell you all. It was
+not my ancestors you cared for; and it is you yourself that your wife
+must swear before heaven to love."
+
+"Of course it's me," answers the young man, not quite understanding
+the train of ideas in his companion's mind. "And I've given up
+everything--everything--and have broken off with my old habits and--and
+things, you know--and intend to lead a regular life--and will never go
+to Tattersall's again; nor bet a shilling; nor touch another cigar if
+you like--that is, if you don't like; for I love you so, Ethel--I do,
+with all my heart I do!"
+
+"You are very generous and kind, Lord Farintosh," Ethel said. "It
+is myself, not you, I doubt. Oh, I am humiliated to make such a
+confession!"
+
+"How humiliated?" Ethel withdrew the hand which the young nobleman
+endeavoured to seize.
+
+"If," she continued, "if I found it was your birth, and your name, and
+your wealth that I coveted, and had nearly taken, ought I not to feel
+humiliated, and ask pardon of you and of God? Oh, what perjuries poor
+Clara was made to speak,--and see what has befallen her! We stood by and
+heard her without being shocked. We applauded even. And to what shame
+and misery we brought her! Why did her parents and mine consign her
+to such ruin! She might have lived pure and happy but for us. With her
+example before me--not her flight, poor child--I am not afraid of
+that happening to me--but her long solitude, the misery of her
+wasted years,--my brother's own wretchedness and faults aggravated a
+hundredfold by his unhappy union with her--I must pause while it is yet
+time, and recall a promise which I know I should make you unhappy if I
+fulfilled. I ask your pardon that I deceived you, Lord Farintosh, and
+feel ashamed for myself that I could have consented to do so."
+
+"Do you mean," cried the young Marquis, "that after my conduct to
+you--after my loving you, so that even this--this disgrace in your
+family don't prevent my going on--after my mother has been down on her
+knees to me to break off, and I wouldn't--no, I wouldn't--after all
+White's sneering at me and laughing at me, and all my friends, friends
+of my family, who would go to--go anywhere for me, advising me, and
+saying, 'Farintosh, what a fool you are! break off this match,'--and I
+wouldn't back out, because I loved you so, by Heaven, and because, as a
+man and a gentleman, when I give my word I keep it--do you mean that you
+throw me over? It's a shame--it's a shame!" And again there were tears
+of rage and anguish in Farintosh's eyes.
+
+"What I did was a shame, my lord," Ethel said, humbly; "and again I ask
+your pardon for it. What I do now is only to tell you the truth, and to
+grieve with all my soul for the falsehood--yes the falsehood--which I
+told you, and which has given your kind heart such cruel pain."
+
+"Yes, it was a falsehood!" the poor lad cried out. "You follow a fellow,
+and you make a fool of him, and you make him frantic in love with you,
+and then you fling him over! I wonder you can look me in the face after
+such an infernal treason. You've done it to twenty fellows before, I
+know you have. Everybody said so, and warned me. You draw them on, and
+get them to be in love, and then you fling them away. Am I to go back
+to London and be made the laughing-stock of the whole town--I, who might
+marry any woman in Europe, and who am at the head of the nobility of
+England?"
+
+"Upon my word, if you will believe me after deceiving you once," Ethel
+interposed, still very humbly, "I will never say that it was I who
+withdrew from you, and that it was not you who refused me. What has
+happened here fully authorises you. Let the rupture of the engagement
+come from you, my lord. Indeed, indeed, I would spare you all the pain I
+can. I have done you wrong enough already, Lord Farintosh."
+
+And now the Marquis burst forth with tears and imprecations, wild cries
+of anger, love, and disappointment, so fierce and incoherent that the
+lady to whom they were addressed did not repeat them to her confidante.
+Only she generously charged Laura to remember, if ever she heard the
+matter talked of in the world, that it was Lord Farintosh's family which
+broke off the marriage; but that his lordship had acted most kindly and
+generously throughout the whole affair.
+
+He went back to London in such a state of fury, and raved so wildly
+amongst his friends against the whole Newcome family, that many men knew
+what the case really was. But all women averred that that intriguing
+worldly Ethel Newcome, the apt pupil of her wicked old grandmother, had
+met with a deserved rebuff; that, after doing everything in her power to
+catch the great parti, Lord Farintosh, who had long been tired of her,
+flung her over, not liking the connexion; and that she was living out
+of the world now at Newcome, under the pretence of taking care of that
+unfortunate Lady Clara's children, but really because she was pining
+away for Lord Farintosh, who, as we all know, married six months
+afterwards.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX. In which we write to the Colonel
+
+
+Deeming that her brother Barnes had cares enough of his own presently at
+hand, Ethel did not think fit to confide to him the particulars of her
+interview with Lord Farintosh; nor even was poor Lady Anne informed that
+she had lost a noble son-in-law. The news would come to both of them
+soon enough, Ethel thought; and indeed, before many hours were over, it
+reached Sir Barnes Newcome in a very abrupt and unpleasant way. He had
+dismal occasion now to see his lawyers every day; and on the day after
+Lord Farintosh's abrupt visit and departure, Sir Barnes, going into
+Newcome upon his own unfortunate affairs, was told by his attorney, Mr.
+Speers, how the Marquis of Farintosh had slept for a few hours at the
+King's Arms, and returned to town the same evening by the train. We may
+add, that his lordship had occupied the very room in which Lord Highgate
+had previously slept; and Mr. Taplow recommends the bed accordingly, and
+shows pride it with to this very day.
+
+Much disturbed by this intelligence, Sir Barnes was making his way to
+his cheerless home in the evening, when near his own gate he overtook
+another messenger. This was the railway porter, who daily brought
+telegraphic messages from his uncle and the London bank. The message of
+that day was,--"Consols, so-and-so. French Rentes, so much. Highgate's
+and Farintosh's accounts withdrawn." The wretched keeper of the lodge
+owned, with trembling, in reply to the curses and queries of his
+employer, that a gentleman, calling himself the Marquis of Farintosh,
+had gone up to the house the day before, and come away an hour
+afterwards,--did not like to speak to Sir Barnes when he came home, Sir
+Barnes looked so bad like.
+
+Now, of course, there could be no concealment from her brother, and
+Ethel and Barnes had a conversation, in which the latter expressed
+himself with that freedom of language which characterised the head of
+the house of Newcome. Madame de Moncontour's pony-chaise was in waiting
+at the hall door, when the owner of the house entered it; and my wife
+was just taking leave of Ethel and her little people when Sir Barnes
+Newcome entered the lady's sitting-room.
+
+The livid scowl with which Barnes greeted my wife surprised that lady,
+though it did not induce her to prolong her visit to her friend. As
+Laura took leave, she heard Sir Barnes screaming to the nurses to "take
+those little beggars away," and she rightly conjectured that some more
+unpleasantries had occurred to disturb this luckless gentleman's temper.
+
+On the morrow, dearest Ethel's usual courier, one of the boys from the
+lodge, trotted over on his donkey to dearest Laura at Rosebury, with
+one of those missives which were daily passing between the ladies. This
+letter said:--
+
+
+"Barnes m'a fait une scene terrible hier. I was obliged to tell him
+everything about Lord F., and to use the plainest language. At first,
+he forbade you the house. He thinks that you have been the cause of F.'s
+dismissal, and charged me, most unjustly, with a desire to bring back
+poor C. N. I replied as became me, and told him fairly I would leave the
+house if odious insulting charges were made against me, if my friends
+were not received. He stormed, he cried, he employed his usual
+language,--he was in a dreadful state. He relented and asked pardon. He
+goes to town to-night by the mail-train. Of course you come as usual,
+dear, dear Laura. I am miserable without you; and you know I cannot
+leave poor mamma. Clarykin sends a thousand kisses to little Arty; and I
+am his mother's always affectionate--E. N.
+
+"Will the gentlemen like to shoot our pheasants? Please ask the Prince
+to let Warren know when. I sent a brace to poor dear old Mrs. Mason, and
+had such a nice letter from her!"
+
+
+"And who is poor dear Mrs. Mason" asks Mr. Pendennis, as yet but
+imperfectly acquainted with the history of the Newcomes.
+
+And Laura told me--perhaps I had heard before, and forgotten--that Mrs.
+Mason was an old nurse and pensioner of the Colonel's, and how he had
+been to see her for the sake of old times; and how she was a great
+favourite with Ethel; and Laura kissed her little son, and was
+exceedingly bright, cheerful, and hilarious that evening, in spite of
+the affliction under which her dear friends at Newcome were labouring.
+
+People in country-houses should be exceedingly careful about their
+blotting-paper. They should bring their own portfolios with them. If
+any kind readers will bear this simple little hint in mind, how much
+mischief may they save themselves,--nay, enjoy possibly, by looking at
+the pages of the next portfolio in the next friend's bedroom in which
+they sleep. From such a book I once cut out, in Charles Slyboots'
+well-known and perfectly clear handwriting, the words, "Miss Emily
+Hartington, James Street, Backingham Gate, London," and produced as
+legibly on the blotting-paper as on the envelope which the postman
+delivered. After showing the paper round to the company, I enclosed it
+in a note and sent it to Mr. Slyboots, who married Miss Hartington three
+months afterwards. In such a book at the club I read, as plainly as you
+may read this page, a holograph page of the Right Honourable the Earl
+of Bareacres, which informed the whole club of a painful and private
+circumstance, and said, "My dear Green,--I am truly sorry that I shall
+not be able to take up the bill for eight hundred and fifty-six pounds,
+which becomes due next Tu----" and upon such a book, going to write a
+note in Madame de Moncontour's drawing-room at Rosebury, what should
+I find but proofs that my own wife was engaged in a clandestine
+correspondence with a gentleman residing abroad!
+
+"Colonel Newcome, C.B., Montagne de la Cour, Brussels," I read, in this
+young woman's handwriting; and asked, turning round upon Laura, who
+entered the room just as I discovered her guilt: "What have you been
+writing to Colonel Newcome about, miss?"
+
+"I wanted him to get me some lace," she said.
+
+"To lace some nightcaps for me, didn't you, my dear? He is such a fine
+judge of lace! If I had known you had been writing, I would have asked
+you to send him a message. I want something from Brussels. Is the
+letter--ahem--gone?" (In this artful way, you see, I just hinted that I
+should like to see letter.).
+
+"The letter is--ahem--gone," says Laura. "What do you want from
+Brussels, Pen?"
+
+"I want some Brussels sprouts, my love--they are so fine in their native
+country."
+
+"Shall I write to him to send the letter back?" palpitates poor little
+Laura; for she thought her husband was offended, by using the ironic
+method.
+
+"No, you dear little woman! You need not send for letter the back: and
+you need not tell me what was in it: and I will bet you a hundred yards
+of lace to a cotton nightcap--and you know whether I, madam, am a man a
+bonnet-de-coton--I will let you that I know what you have been writing
+about, under pretence of a message about lace, to our Colonel."
+
+"He promised to send it me. He really did. Lady Rockminster gave me
+twenty pounds----" gasps Laura.
+
+"Under pretence of lace, you have been sending over a love-message. You
+want to see whether Clive is still of his old mind. You think the coast
+is now clear, and that dearest Ethel may like him. You think Mrs. Mason
+is growing very old and infirm, and the sight of her dear boy would----"
+
+"Pen! Pen! did you open my letter?" cries Laura; and a laugh which could
+afford to be good-humoured (followed by yet another expression of the
+lips) ended this colloquy. No; Mr Pendennis did not see the letter--but
+he knew the writer;--flattered himself that he knew women in general.
+
+"Where did you get your experience of them, sir?" asks Mrs. Laura.
+Question answered in the same manner as the previous demand.
+
+"Well, my dear; and why should not the poor boy be made happy?" Laura
+continues, standing very close up to her husband. "It is evident to
+me that Ethel is fond of him. I would rather see her married to a good
+young man whom she loves, than the mistress of a thousand palaces and
+coronets. Suppose--suppose you had married Miss Amory, sir, what a
+wretched worldly creature you would have been by this time; whereas
+now----"
+
+"Now that I am the humble slave of a good woman there is some chance for
+me," cries this model of husbands. "And all good women are match-makers,
+as we know very well; and you have had this match in your heart ever
+since you saw the two young people together. Now; madam, since I did not
+see your letter to the Colonel--though I have guessed part of it--tell
+me, what have you said in it? Have you by any chance told the Colonel
+that the Farintosh alliance was broken off?"
+
+Laura owned that she had hinted as much.
+
+"You have not ventured to say that Ethel is well inclined to Clive?"
+
+"Oh, no--oh dear, no!" But after much cross-examining and a little
+blushing on Laura's part, she is brought to confess that she has asked
+the Colonel whether he will not come and see Mrs. Mason, who is pining
+to see him, and is growing very old. And I find out that she has been to
+see this Mrs. Mason; that she and Miss Newcome visited the old lady the
+day before yesterday; and Laura thought from the manner in which Ethel
+looked at Clive's picture, hanging up in the parlour of his father's old
+friend, that she really was very much, etc. etc. So, the letter being
+gone, Mrs. Pendennis is most eager about the answer to it, and day after
+day examines the bag, and is provoked that it brings no letter bearing
+the Brussels post-mark.
+
+Madame de Moncontour seems perfectly well to know what Mrs. Laura has
+been doing and is hoping. "What, no letters again to-day? Ain't it
+provoking?" she cries. She is in the conspiracy too; and presently
+Florac is one of the initiated. "These women wish to bacler a marriage
+between the belle miss and le petit Claive," Florac announces to me.
+He pays the highest compliments to Miss Newcome's person, as he speaks
+regarding the marriage. "I continue to adore your Anglaises," he is
+pleased to say. "What of freshness, what of beauty, what roses! And then
+they are so adorably good! Go, Pendennis, thou art a happy coquin!" Mr.
+Pendennis does not say No. He has won the twenty-thousand-pound prize;
+and we know there are worse blanks in that lottery.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI. In which we are introduced to a New Newcome
+
+
+No answer came to Mrs. Pendennis's letter to Colonel Newcome at
+Brussels, for the Colonel was absent from that city, and at the time
+when Laura wrote was actually in London, whither affairs of his own
+had called him. A note from George Warrington acquainted me with this
+circumstance; he mentioned that he and the Colonel had dined together
+at Bays's on the day previous, and that the Colonel seemed to be in the
+highest spirits. High spirits about what? This news put Laura in a
+sad perplexity. Should she write and tell him to get his letters from
+Brussels? She would in five minutes have found some other pretext for
+writing to Colonel Newcome, had not her husband sternly cautioned the
+young woman to leave the matter alone.
+
+The more readily perhaps because he had quarrelled with his nephew
+Sir Barnes, Thomas Newcome went to visit his brother Hobson and his
+sister-in-law; bent on showing that there was no division between him
+and this branch of his family. And you may suppose that the admirable
+woman just named had a fine occasion for her virtuous conversational
+powers in discoursing upon the painful event which had just happened to
+Sir Barnes. When we fail, how our friends cry out for us! Mrs. Hobson's
+homilies must have been awful. How that outraged virtue must have
+groaned and lamented, gathered its children about its knees, wept over
+them and washed them; gone into sackcloth and ashes and tied up the
+knocker; confabulated with its spiritual adviser; uttered commonplaces
+to its husband; and bored the whole house! The punishment of worldliness
+and vanity, the evil of marrying out of one's station, how these points
+must have been explained and enlarged on! Surely the Peerage was taken
+off the drawing-room table and removed to papa's study, where it could
+not open, as it used naturally once, to Highgate, Baron, or Farintosh,
+Marquis of, being shut behind wires and closely jammed in on an upper
+shelf between Blackstone's Commentaries and the Farmer's Magazine! The
+breaking of the engagement with the Marquis of Farintosh was known in
+Bryanstone Square; and you may be sure interpreted by Mrs. Hobson in the
+light the most disadvantageous to Ethel Newcome. A young nobleman--with
+grief and pain Ethel's aunt must own the fact--a young man of
+notoriously dissipated habits but of great wealth and rank, had been
+pursued by the unhappy Lady Kew--Mrs. Hobson would not say by her niece,
+that were too dreadful--had been pursued, and followed, and hunted down
+in the most notorious manner, and finally made to propose! Let Ethel's
+conduct and punishment be a warning to my dearest girls, and let them
+bless Heaven they have parents who are not worldly! After all the
+trouble and pains, Mrs. Hobson did not say disgrace, the Marquis
+takes the very first pretext to break off the match, and leaves the
+unfortunate girl for ever!
+
+And now we have to tell of the hardest blow which fell upon poor Ethel,
+and this was that her good uncle Thomas Newcome believed the charges
+against her. He was willing enough to listen now to anything which
+was said against that branch of the family. With such a traitor,
+double-dealer, dastard as Barnes at its head, what could the rest of the
+race be? When the Colonel offered to endow Ethel and Clive with
+every shilling he had in the world, had not Barnes, the arch-traitor,
+temporised and told him falsehoods, and hesitated about throwing him off
+until the Marquis had declared himself? Yes. The girl he and poor
+Clive loved so was ruined by her artful relatives, was unworthy of his
+affection and his boy's, was to be banished, like her worthless brother,
+out of his regard for ever. And the man she had chosen in preference to
+his Clive!--a roue, a libertine, whose extravagances and dissipations
+were the talk of every club, who had no wit, nor talents, not even
+constancy (for had he not taken the first opportunity to throw her off?)
+to recommend him--only a great title and a fortune wherewith to bribe
+her! For shame, for shame! Her engagement to this man was a blot upon
+her--the rupture only a just punishment and humiliation. Poor unhappy
+girl! let her take care of her wretched brother's abandoned children,
+give up the world, and amend her life.
+
+This was the sentence Thomas Newcome delivered: a righteous and
+tender-hearted man, as we know, but judging in this case wrongly, and
+bearing much too hardly, as we who know her betters must think, upon one
+who had her faults certainly, but whose errors were not all of her own
+making. Who set her on the path she walked in? It was her parents' hands
+which led her, and her parents' voices which commanded her to accept the
+temptation set before her. What did she know of the character of the man
+selected to be her husband? Those who should have known better brought
+him to her, and vouched for him. Noble, unhappy young creature! are you
+the first of your sisterhood who has been bidden to traffic your beauty,
+to crush and slay your honest natural affections, to sell your truth
+and your life for rank and title? But the Judge who sees not the outward
+acts merely, but their causes, and views not the wrong alone, but the
+temptations, struggles, ignorance of erring creatures, we know has a
+different code to ours--to ours, who fall upon the fallen, who fawn
+upon the prosperous so, who administer our praises and punishments so
+prematurely, who now strike so hard, and, anon, spare so shamelessly.
+
+Our stay with our hospitable friends at Rosebury was perforce coming to
+a close, for indeed weeks after weeks had passed since we had been under
+their pleasant roof; and in spite of dearest Ethel's remonstrances it
+was clear that dearest Laura must take her farewell. In these last days,
+besides the visits which daily took place between one and other, the
+young messenger was put in ceaseless requisition, and his donkey must
+have been worn off his little legs with trotting to and fro between the
+two houses, Laura was quite anxious and hurt at not hearing from the
+Colonel; it was a shame that he did not have over his letters from
+Belgium and answer that one which she had honoured him by writing. By
+some information, received who knows how? our host was aware of the
+intrigue which Mrs. Pendennis was carrying on; and his little wife
+almost as much interested in it as my own. She whispered to me in her
+kind way that she would give a guinea, that she would, to see a certain
+couple made happy together; that they were born for one another, that
+they were; she was for having me go off to fetch Clive: but who was I
+to act as Hymen's messenger, or to interpose in such delicate family
+affairs?
+
+All this while Sir Barnes Newcome, Bart., remained absent in London,
+attending to his banking duties there, and pursuing the dismal inquiries
+which ended, in the ensuing Michaelmas term, in the famous suit of
+Newcome v. Lord Highgate. Ethel, pursuing the plan which she had laid
+down for herself from the first, took entire charge of his children and
+house: Lady Anne returned to her own family: never indeed having been of
+much use in her son's dismal household. My wife talked to me of course
+about her pursuits and amusements at Newcome, in the ancestral hall
+which we have mentioned. The children played and ate their dinner (mine
+often partook of his infantine mutton, in company with little Clara and
+the poor young heir of Newcome) in the room which had been called my
+lady's own, and in which her husband had locked her, forgetting that the
+conservatories were open, through which the hapless woman had fled. Next
+to this was the baronial library, a side of which was fitted with the
+gloomy books from Clapham, which old Mrs. Newcome had amassed; rows of
+tracts, and missionary magazines, and dingy quarto volumes of worldly
+travel and history which that lady had admitted into her collection.
+
+Almost on the last day of our stay at Rosebury, the two young ladies
+bethought them of paying a visit to the neighbouring town of Newcome, to
+that old Mrs. Mason who has been mentioned in a foregoing page in some
+yet earlier chapter of our history. She was very old now, very faithful
+to the recollections of her own early time, and oblivious of yesterday.
+Thanks to Colonel Newcome's bounty, she had lived in comfort for many a
+long year past; and he was as much her boy now as in those early days
+of which we have given but an outline. There were Clive's pictures of
+himself and his father over her little mantelpiece, near which she sat
+in comfort and warmth by the winter fire which his bounty supplied.
+
+Mrs. Mason remembered Miss Newcome, prompted thereto by the hints of her
+little maid, who was much younger, and had a more faithful memory than
+her mistress. Why, Sarah Mason would have forgotten the pheasants
+whose very tails decorated the chimney-glass, had not Keziah, the maid,
+reminded her that the young lady was the donor. Then she recollected her
+benefactor, and asked after her father, the Baronet; and wondered, for
+her part, why her boy, the Colonel, was not made baronet, and why his
+brother had the property? Her father was a very good man; though Mrs.
+Mason had heard he was not much liked in those parts. "Dead and gone,
+was he, poor man?" (This came in reply to a hint from Keziah, the
+attendant, bawled in the old lady's ears, who was very deaf.) "Well,
+well, we must all go; and if we were all good, like the Colonel, what
+was the use of staying? I hope his wife will be good. I am sure such a
+good man deserves one," added Mrs. Mason.
+
+The ladies thought the old woman doting, led thereto by the remark of
+Keziah, the maid, that Mrs. Mason have a lost her memory. And she asked
+who the other bonny lady was, and Ethel told her that Mrs. Pendennis was
+a friend of the Colonel's and Clive's.
+
+"Oh, Clive's friend! Well, she was a pretty lady, and he was a dear
+pretty boy. He drew those pictures; and he took off me in my cap, with
+my old cat and all--my poor old cat that's buried this ever so long
+ago."
+
+"She has had a letter from the Colonel, miss," cries out Keziah.
+"Haven't you had a letter from the Colonel, mum? It came only
+yesterday." And Keziah takes out the letter and shows it to the ladies.
+They read as follows:--
+
+
+"London, Feb. 12, 184-.
+
+"My Dear Old Mason--I have just heard from a friend of mine who has been
+staying in your neighbourhood, that you are well and happy, and that you
+have been making inquiries after your young scapegrace, Tom Newcome, who
+is well and happy too, and who proposes to be happier still before any
+very long time is over.
+
+"The letter which was written to me about you was sent to me in Belgium,
+at Brussels, where I have been living--a town near the place where
+the famous Battle of Waterloo was fought; and as I had run away from
+Waterloo it followed me to England.
+
+"I cannot come to Newcome just now to shake my dear old friend and nurse
+by the hand. I have business in London; and there are those of my name
+living in Newcome who would not be very happy to see me and mine.
+
+"But I promise you a visit before very long, and Clive will come with
+me; and when we come I shall introduce a new friend to you, a very
+pretty little daughter-in-law, whom you must promise to love very
+much. She is a Scotch lassie, niece of my oldest friend, James Binnie,
+Esquire, of the Bengal Civil Service, who will give her a pretty bit of
+siller, and her present name is Miss Rosa Mackenzie.
+
+"We shall send you a wedding cake soon, and a new gown for Keziah (to
+whom remember me), and when I am gone, my grandchildren after me will
+hear what a dear friend you were to your affectionate Thomas Newcome."
+
+
+Keziah must have thought that there was something between Clive and my
+wife, for when Laura had read the letter she laid it down on the table,
+and sitting down by it, and hiding her face in her hands, burst into
+tears.
+
+Ethel looked steadily at the two pictures of Clive and his father. Then
+she put her hand on her friend's shoulder. "Come, my dear," she said,
+"it is growing late, and I must go back to my children." And she saluted
+Mrs. Mason and her maid in a very stately manner, and left them, leading
+my wife away, who was still exceedingly overcome.
+
+We could not stay long at Rosebury after that. When Madame de Moncontour
+heard the news, the good lady cried too. Mrs. Pendennis's emotion
+was renewed as we passed the gates of Newcome Park on our way to the
+railroad.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXII. Mr. and Mrs. Clive Newcome
+
+
+The friendship between Ethel and Laura, which the last narrated
+sentimental occurrences had so much increased, subsists very little
+impaired up to the present day. A lady with many domestic interests and
+increasing family, etc. etc., cannot be supposed to cultivate female
+intimacies out of doors with that ardour and eagerness which young
+spinsters exhibit in their intercourse; but Laura, whose kind heart
+first led her to sympathise with her young friend in the latter's days
+of distress and misfortune, has professed ever since a growing esteem
+for Ethel Newcome, and says, that the trials and perhaps grief which the
+young lady now had to undergo have brought out the noblest qualities
+of her disposition. She is a very different person from the giddy and
+worldly girl who compelled our admiration of late in the days of her
+triumphant youthful beauty, of her wayward generous humour, of her
+frivolities and her flirtations.
+
+Did Ethel shed tears in secret over the marriage which had caused
+Laura's gentle eyes to overflow? We might divine the girl's grief, but
+we respected it. The subject was never mentioned by the ladies between
+themselves, and even in her most intimate communications with her
+husband that gentleman is bound to say his wife maintained a tender
+reserve upon the point, nor cared to speculate upon a subject which
+her friend held sacred. I could not for my part but acquiesce in this
+reticence; and, if Ethel felt regret and remorse, admire the dignity
+of her silence, and the sweet composure of her now changed and saddened
+demeanour.
+
+The interchange of letters between the two friends was constant, and in
+these the younger lady described at length the duties, occupations,
+and pleasures of her new life. She had quite broken with the world, and
+devoted herself entirely to the nurture and education of her brother's
+orphan children. She educated herself in order to teach them. Her
+letters contain droll yet touching confessions of her own ignorance and
+her determination to overcome it. There was no lack of masters of all
+kinds in Newcome. She set herself to work like a schoolgirl. The little
+piano in the room near the conservatory was thumped by Aunt Ethel until
+it became quite obedient to her, and yielded the sweetest music under
+her fingers. When she came to pay us a visit at Fairoaks some two years
+afterwards she played for our dancing children (our third is named
+Ethel, our second Helen, after one still more dear), and we were in
+admiration of her skill. There must have been the labour of many
+lonely nights when her little charges were at rest, and she and her sad
+thoughts sat up together, before she overcame the difficulties of the
+instrument so as to be able to soothe herself and to charm and delight
+her children.
+
+When the divorce was pronounced, which came in due form, though we know
+that Lady Highgate was not much happier than the luckless Lady Clara
+Newcome had been, Ethel's dread was lest Sir Barnes should marry again,
+and by introducing a new mistress into his house should deprive her of
+the care of her children.
+
+Miss Newcome judged her brother rightly in that he would try to marry,
+but a noble young lady to whom he offered himself rejected him, to his
+surprise and indignation, for a beggarly clergyman with a small
+living, on which she elected to starve; and the wealthy daughter of
+a neighbouring manufacturer whom he next proposed to honour with his
+gracious hand, fled from him with horror to the arms of her father,
+wondering how such a man as that should ever dare to propose marriage to
+an honest girl. Sir Barnes Newcome was much surprised at this outbreak
+of anger; he thought himself a very ill-used and unfortunate man, a
+victim of most cruel persecutions, which we may be sure did not improve
+his temper or tend to the happiness of his circle at home. Peevishness,
+and selfish rage, quarrels with servants and governesses, and other
+domestic disquiet, Ethel had of course to bear from her brother, but not
+actual personal ill-usage. The fiery temper of former days was subdued
+in her, but the haughty resolution remained, which was more than a match
+for her brother's cowardly tyranny: besides, she was the mistress of
+sixty thousand pounds, and by many wily hints and piteous appeals to his
+sister Sir Barnes sought to secure this desirable sum of money for his
+poor dear unfortunate children.
+
+He professed to think that she was ruining herself for her younger
+brothers, whose expenses the young lady was defraying, this one at
+college, that in the army, and whose maintenance he thought might
+be amply defrayed out of their own little fortunes and his mother's
+jointure: and, by ingeniously proving that a vast number of his
+household expenses were personal to Miss Newcome and would never have
+been incurred but for her residence in his house, he subtracted for
+his own benefit no inconsiderable portion of her income. Thus the
+carriage-horses were hers, for what need had he, a miserable bachelor,
+of anything more than a riding-horse and a brougham? A certain number of
+the domestics were hers, and as he could get no scoundrel of his own to
+stay with him, he took Miss Newcome's servants. He would have had
+her pay the coals which burned in his grate, and the taxes due to our
+sovereign lady the Queen; but in truth, at the end of the year, with
+her domestic bounties and her charities round about Newcome, which daily
+increased as she became acquainted with her indigent neighbours, Miss
+Ethel, the heiress, was as poor as many poorer persons.
+
+Her charities increased daily with her means of knowing the people round
+about her. She gave much time to them and thought; visited from house
+to house, without ostentation; was awestricken by that spectacle of the
+poverty which we have with us always, of which the sight rebukes
+our selfish griefs into silence, the thought compels us to charity,
+humility, and devotion. The priests of our various creeds, who elsewhere
+are doing battle together continually, lay down their arms in its
+presence and kneel before it; subjugated by that overpowering master.
+Death, never dying out; hunger always crying; and children born to it
+day after day,--our young London lady, flying from the splendours and
+follies in which her life had been past, found herself in the presence
+of these; threading darkling alleys which swarmed with wretched life;
+sitting by naked beds, whither by God's blessing she was sometimes
+enabled to carry a little comfort and consolation; or whence she came
+heart-stricken by the overpowering misery, or touched by the patient
+resignation of the new friends to whom fate had directed her. And here
+she met the priest upon his shrift, the homely missionary bearing his
+words of consolation, the quiet curate pacing his round; and was known
+to all these, and enabled now and again to help their people in trouble.
+"Oh! what good there is in this woman!" my wife would say to me, as she
+laid one of Miss Ethel's letters aside; "who would have thought this was
+the girl of your glaring London ballroom? If she has had grief to bear,
+how it has chastened and improved her!"
+
+And now I have to confess that all this time, whilst Ethel Newcome has
+been growing in grace with my wife, poor Clive has been lapsing sadly
+out of favour. She has no patience with Clive. She drubs her little foot
+when his name is mentioned and turns the subject. Whither are all the
+tears and pities fled now? Mrs. Laura has transferred all her regard to
+Ethel, and when that lady's ex-suitor writes to his old friend, or other
+news is had of him, Laura flies out in her usual tirades against the
+world, the horrid wicked selfish world, which spoils everybody who comes
+near it. What has Clive done, in vain his apologist asks, that an old
+friend should be so angry with him?
+
+She is not angry with him--not she. She only does not care about him.
+She wishes him no manner of harm--not the least, only she has lost all
+interest in him. And the Colonel too, the poor good old Colonel, was
+actually in Mrs. Pendennis' black books, and when he sent her the
+Brussels veil which we have heard of, she did not think it was a bargain
+at all--not particularly pretty, in fact, rather dear at the money. When
+we met Mr. and Mrs. Clive Newcome in London, whither they came a few
+months after their marriage, and where Rosey appeared as pretty,
+happy, good-humoured a little blushing bride as eyes need behold, Mrs.
+Pendennis's reception of her was quite a curiosity of decorum. "I, not
+receive her well?" cried Laura. "How on earth would you have me receive
+her? I talked to her about everything, and she only answered yes or
+no. I showed her the children, and she did not seem to care. Her only
+conversation was about millinery and Brussels balls, and about her dress
+at the drawing-room. The drawing-room! What business has she with such
+follies?"
+
+The fact is, that the drawing-room was Tom Newcome's affair, not his
+son's, who was heartily ashamed of the figure he cut in that astounding
+costume, which English private gentlemen are made to sport when they
+bend the knee before their gracious Sovereign.
+
+Warrington roasted poor Clive upon the occasion, and complimented him
+with his usual gravity, until the young fellow blushed and his father
+somewhat testily signified to our friend that his irony was not
+agreeable. "I suppose," says the Colonel, with great hauteur, "that
+there is nothing ridiculous in an English gentleman entertaining
+feelings of loyalty and testifying his respect to his Queen: and I
+presume that Her Majesty knows best, and has a right to order in what
+dress her subjects shall appear before her and I don't think it's kind
+of you, George, I say, I don't think it's kind of you to quiz my boy for
+doing his duty to his Queen and to his father too, sir,--for it was at
+my request that Clive went, and we went together, sir--to the levee and
+then to the drawing-room afterwards with Rosey, who was presented by the
+lady of my old friend, Sir George Tufto, a lady of rank herself, and the
+wife of as brave an officer as ever drew a sword."
+
+Warrington stammered an apology for his levity, but no explanations were
+satisfactory, and it was clear George had wounded the feelings of our
+dear simple old friend.
+
+After Clive's marriage, which was performed at Brussels, Uncle James and
+the lady, his sister, whom we have sometimes flippantly ventured to call
+the Campaigner, went off to perform that journey to Scotland which James
+had meditated for ten years past; and, now little Rosey was made happy
+for life, to renew acquaintance with little Josey. The Colonel and his
+son and daughter-in-law came to London, not to the bachelor quarters,
+where we have seen them, but to an hotel, which they occupied until
+their new house could be provided for them, a sumptuous mansion in the
+Tyburnian district, and one which became people of their station.
+
+We have been informed already what the Colonel's income was, and have
+the gratification of knowing that it was very considerable. The simple
+gentleman who would dine off a crust, and wear a coat for ten years,
+desired that his children should have the best of everything: ordered
+about upholsterers, painters, carriage-makers, in his splendid Indian
+way; presented pretty Rosey with brilliant jewels for her introduction
+at Court, and was made happy by the sight of the blooming young creature
+decked in these magnificences, and admired by all his little circle. The
+old boys, the old generals, the old colonels, the old qui-his from the
+club, came and paid her their homage; the directors' ladies, and the
+generals' ladies, called upon her, and feasted her at vast banquets
+served on sumptuous plate. Newcome purchased plate and gave banquets in
+return for these hospitalities. Mrs. Clive had a neat close carriage for
+evenings, and a splendid barouche to drive in the Park. It was pleasant
+to see this equipage at four o'clock of an afternoon, driving up to
+Bays's, with Rosey most gorgeously attired reclining within; and to
+behold the stately grace of the old gentleman as he stepped out to
+welcome his daughter-in-law, and the bow he made before he entered her
+carriage. Then they would drive round the Park; round and round and
+round; and the old generals, and the old colonels, and old fogies, and
+their ladies and daughters, would nod and smile out of their carriages
+as they crossed each other upon this charming career of pleasure.
+
+I confess that a dinner at the Colonel's, now he appeared in all his
+magnificence, was awfully slow. No peaches could look fresher than
+Rosey's cheeks,--no damask was fairer than her pretty little shoulders.
+No one, I am sure, could be happier than she, but she did not impart
+her happiness to her friends; and replied chiefly by smiles to the
+conversation of the gentlemen at her side. It is true that these were
+for the most part elderly dignitaries, distinguished military officers
+with blue-black whiskers, retired old Indian judges, and the like,
+occupied with their victuals, and generally careless to please. But
+that solemn happiness of the Colonel, who shall depict it:--that look of
+affection with which he greeted his daughter as she entered, flounced
+to the waist, twinkling with innumerable jewels, holding a dainty
+pocket-handkerchief, with smiling eyes, dimpled cheeks, and golden
+ringlets! He would take her hand, or follow her about from group to
+group, exchanging precious observations about the weather, the Park, the
+exhibition, nay, the opera, for the old man actually went to the opera
+with his little girl, and solemnly snoozed by her side in a white
+waistcoat.
+
+Very likely this was the happiest period of Thomas Newcome's life. No
+woman (save one perhaps fifty years ago) had ever seemed so fond of him
+as that little girl. What pride he had in her, and what care he took of
+her! If she was a little ailing, what anxiety and hurrying for doctors!
+What droll letters came from James Binnie, and how they laughed over
+them: with what respectful attention he acquainted Mrs. Mack with
+everything that took place: with what enthusiasm that Campaigner
+replied! Josey's husband called a special blessing upon his head in the
+church at Musselburgh; and little Jo herself sent a tinful of Scotch
+bun to her darling sister, with a request from her husband that he might
+have a few shares in the famous Indian Company.
+
+The Company was in a highly flourishing condition, as you may suppose,
+when one of its directors, who at the same time was one of the honestest
+men alive, thought it was his duty to live in the splendour in which
+we now behold him. Many wealthy City men did homage to him. His brother
+Hobson, though the Colonel had quarrelled with the chief of the firm,
+yet remained on amiable terms with Thomas Newcome, and shared and
+returned his banquets for a while. Charles Honeyman we may be sure was
+present at many of them, and smirked a blessing over the plenteous
+meal. The Colonel's influence was such with Mr. Sherrick that he
+pleaded Charles's cause with that gentleman, and actually brought to
+a successful termination that little love-affair in which we have seen
+Miss Sherrick and Charles engaged. Mr. Sherrick was not disposed to
+part with much money during his lifetime--indeed, he proved to Colonel
+Newcome that he was not so rich as the world supposed him. But, by the
+Colonel's interest, the chaplaincy of Boggley Wollah was procured for
+the Rev. C. Honeyman, who now forms the delight of that flourishing
+station.
+
+All this while we have said little about Clive, who in truth was somehow
+in the background in this flourishing Newcome group. To please the best
+father in the world; the kindest old friend who endowed his niece with
+the best part of his savings; to settle that question about marriage
+and have an end of it;--Clive Newcome had taken a pretty and fond young
+girl, who respected and admired him beyond all men, and who heartily
+desired to make him happy. To do as much would not his father have
+stripped his coat from his back,--have put his head under Juggernaut's
+chariot-wheel, have sacrificed any ease, comfort, or pleasure for the
+youngster's benefit? One great passion he had had and closed the
+account of it: a worldly ambitious girl--how foolishly worshipped and
+passionately beloved no matter--had played with him for years; had flung
+him away when a dissolute suitor with a great fortune and title had
+offered himself. Was he to whine and despair because a jilt had fooled
+him? He had too much pride and courage for any such submission; he would
+accept the lot in life which was offered to him, no undesirable one
+surely; he would fulfil the wish of his father's heart, and cheer his
+kind declining years. In this way the marriage was brought about. It was
+but a whisper to Rosey in the drawing-room, a start and a blush from the
+little girl as he took the little willing hand, a kiss for her from her
+delighted old father-in-law, a twinkle in good old James's eyes,
+and double embrace from the Campaigner as she stood over them in a
+benedictory attitude;--expressing her surprise at an event for which she
+had been jockeying ever since she set eyes on young Newcome; and calling
+upon Heaven to bless her children. So, as a good thing when it is to
+be done had best be done quickly, these worthy folks went off almost
+straightway to a clergyman, and were married out of hand--to the
+astonishment of Captains Hoby and Goby when they came to hear of the
+event. Well, my gallant young painter and friend of my boyhood! if my
+wife chooses to be angry at your marriage, shall her husband not wish
+you happy?
+
+Suppose we had married our first loves, others of us, were we the
+happier now? Ask Mr. Pendennis, who sulked in his tents when his
+Costigan, his Briseis, was ravished from him. Ask poor George
+Warrington, who had his own way, Heaven help him! There was no need why
+Clive should turn monk because number one refused him; and, that charmer
+removed, why he should not take to his heart number two. I am bound to
+say, that when I expressed these opinions to Mrs. Laura, she was more
+angry and provoked than ever.
+
+It is in the nature of such a simple soul as Thomas Newcome, to see but
+one side of a question, and having once fixed Ethel's worldliness in his
+mind, and her brother's treason, to allow no argument of advocates of
+the other side to shake his displeasure. Hence the one or two appeals
+which Laura ventured to make on behalf of her friend, were checked by
+the good Colonel with a stern negation. If Ethel was not guiltless, she
+could not make him see at least that she was not guilty. He dashed away
+all excuses and palliations. Exasperated as he was, he persisted in
+regarding the poor girl's conduct in its most unfavourable light. "She
+was rejected, and deservedly rejected, by the Marquis of Farintosh," he
+broke out to me once, who was not indeed authorised to tell all I knew
+regarding the story; "the whole town knows it; all the clubs ring with
+it. I blush, sir, to think that my brother's child should have brought
+such a stain upon our name." In vain, I told him that my wife, who
+knew all the circumstances much better, judged Miss Newcome far more
+favourably, and indeed greatly esteemed and loved her. "Pshaw! sir,"
+breaks out the indignant Colonel, "your wife is an innocent creature,
+who does not know the world as we men of experience do,--as I do, sir;"
+and would have no more of the discussion. There is no doubt about it,
+there was a coolness between my old friend's father and us.
+
+As for Barnes Newcome, we gave up that worthy, and the Colonel showed
+him no mercy. He recalled words used by Warrington, which I have
+recorded in a former page, and vowed that he only watched for an
+opportunity to crush the miserable reptile. He hated Barnes as a
+loathsome traitor, coward, and criminal; he made no secret of his
+opinion; and Clive, with the remembrance of former injuries, of dreadful
+heart-pangs; the inheritor of his father's blood, his honesty of nature,
+and his impetuous enmity against wrong; shared to the full his sire's
+antipathy against his cousin, and publicly expressed his scorn and
+contempt for him. About Ethel he would not speak. "Perhaps what you
+say, Pen, is true," he said. "I hope it is. Pray God it is." But his
+quivering lips and fierce countenance, when her name was mentioned or
+her defence attempted, showed that he too had come to think ill of her.
+"As for her brother, as for that scoundrel," he would say, clenching his
+fist, "if ever I can punish him I will. I shouldn't have the soul of
+a dog, if ever I forgot the wrongs that have been done me by that
+vagabond. Forgiveness? Pshaw! Are you dangling to sermons, Pen, at your
+wife's leading-strings? Are you preaching that cant? There are some
+injuries that no honest man should forgive, and I shall be a rogue on
+the day I shake hands with that villain."
+
+"Clive has adopted the Iroquois ethics," says George Warrington, smoking
+his pipe sententiously, "rather than those which are at present received
+among us. I am not sure that something is not to be said, as against
+the Eastern, upon the Western, or Tomahawk, or Ojibbeway side of the
+question. I should not like," he added, "to be in a vendetta or feud,
+and to have you, Clive, and the old Colonel engaged against me."
+
+"I would rather," I said, "for my part, have half a dozen such enemies
+as Clive and the Colonel, than one like Barnes. You never know where or
+when that villain may hit you." And before a very short period was over,
+Sir Barnes Newcome, Bart., hit his two hostile kinsmen such a blow, as
+one might expect from such a quarter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIII. Mrs. Clive at Home
+
+
+Clive and his father did not think fit to conceal their opinions
+regarding their kinsman, Barnes Newcome, and uttered them in many public
+places when Sir Barnes's conduct was brought into question, we may be
+sure that their talk came to the Baronet's ears, and did not improve his
+already angry feeling towards those gentlemen. For a while they had the
+best of the attack. The Colonel routed Barnes out of his accustomed club
+at Bays's; where also the gallant Sir George Tufto expressed himself
+pretty openly with respect to the poor Baronet's want of courage: the
+Colonel had bullied and browbeaten Barnes in the parlour of his own
+bank, and the story was naturally well known in the City; where it
+certainly was not pleasant for Sir Barnes, as he walked to 'Change, to
+meet sometimes the scowls of the angry man of war, his uncle, striding
+down to the offices of the Bundelcund Bank, and armed with that terrible
+bamboo cane.
+
+But though his wife had undeniably run away after notorious
+ill-treatment from her husband; though he had shown two white feathers
+in those unpleasant little affairs with his uncle and cousin; though Sir
+Barnes Newcome was certainly neither amiable nor popular in the City
+of London, his reputation as a most intelligent man of business still
+stood; the credit of his house was deservedly high, and people banked
+with him, and traded with him, in spite of faithless wives and hostile
+colonels.
+
+When the outbreak between Colonel Newcome and his nephew took place, it
+may be remembered that Mr. Hobson Newcome, the other partner of the firm
+of Hobson Brothers, waited upon Colonel Newcome, as one of the principal
+English directors of the B. B. C., and hoped that although private
+differences would, of course, oblige Thomas Newcome to cease all
+personal dealings with the bank of Hobson, the affairs of the Company
+in which he was interested ought not to suffer on this account; and that
+the Indian firm should continue dealing with Hobsons on the same footing
+as before. Mr. Hobson Newcome represented to the Colonel, in his jolly
+frank way, that whatever happened between the latter and his nephew
+Barnes, Thomas Newcome had still one friend in the house; that
+the transactions between it and the Indian Company were mutually
+advantageous; finally, that the manager of the Indian bank might
+continue to do business with Hobsons as before. So the B. B. C. sent
+its consignments to Hobson Brothers, and drew its bills, which were duly
+honoured by that firm.
+
+More than one of Colonel Newcome's City acquaintances, among them his
+agent, Mr. Jolly, and his ingenuous friend, Mr. Sherrick, especially,
+hinted to Thomas Newcome to be very cautious in his dealings with Hobson
+Brothers, and keep a special care lest that house should play him an
+evil turn. They both told him that Barnes Newcome had said more than
+once, in answer to reports of the Colonel's own speeches against Barnes.
+"I know that hot-headed, blundering Indian uncle of mine is furious
+against me, on account of an absurd private affair and misunderstanding,
+which he is too obstinate to see in the proper light. What is my return
+for the abuse and rant which he lavishes against me? I cannot forget
+that he is my grandfather's son, an old man, utterly ignorant both
+of society and business here; and as he is interested in this Indian
+Banking Company, which must be preciously conducted when it appointed
+him as the guardian and overseer of its affairs in England, I do my
+very best to serve the Company, and I can tell you, its blundering,
+muddleheaded managers, black and white, owe no little to the assistance
+which they have had from our house. If they don't like us, why do they
+go on dealing with us? We don't want them and their bills. We were a
+leading house fifty years before they were born, and shall continue to
+be so long after they come to an end." Such was Barnes's case, as
+stated by himself. It was not a very bad one, or very unfairly stated,
+considering the advocate. I believe he has always persisted in thinking
+that he never did his uncle any wrong.
+
+Mr. Jolly and Mr. Sherrick, then, both entreated Thomas Newcome to use
+his best endeavours, and bring the connexion of the B. B. C. and Hobson
+Brothers to a speedy end. But Jolly was an interested party; he and
+his friends would have had the agency of the B. B. C., and the profits
+thereof, which Hobsons had taken from them. Mr. Sherrick was an outside
+practitioner, a guerilla amongst regular merchants. The opinions of
+one and the other, though submitted by Thomas Newcome duly to his
+co-partners, the managers and London board of directors of the
+Bundelcund Banking Company, were overruled by that assembly.
+
+They had their establishment and apartments in the City; they had
+their clerks and messengers, their managers' room and board-room, their
+meetings, where no doubt great quantities of letters were read, vast
+ledgers produced; where Tom Newcome was voted into the chair, and voted
+out with thanks; where speeches were made, and the affairs of the B.
+B. C. properly discussed. These subjects are mysterious, terrifying,
+unknown to me. I cannot pretend to describe them. Fred Bayham, I
+remember, used to be great in his knowledge of the affairs of the
+Bundelcund Banking Company. He talked of cotton, wool, copper, opium,
+indigo, Singapore, Manilla, China, Calcutta, Australia, with prodigious
+eloquence and fluency. His conversation was about millions. The most
+astounding paragraphs used to appear in the Pall Mall Gazette, regarding
+the annual dinner at Blackwall, which the directors gave, and to which
+he, and George, and I, as friends of the court, were invited. What
+orations were uttered, what flowing bumpers emptied in the praise of
+this great Company; what quantities of turtle and punch did Fred devour
+at its expense! Colonel Newcome was the kindly old chairman at
+these banquets; the prince, his son, taking but a modest part in the
+ceremonies, and sitting with us, his old cronies.
+
+All the gentlemen connected with the board, all those with whom the B.
+B. C. traded in London, paid Thomas Newcome extraordinary respect. His
+character for wealth was deservedly great, and of course multiplied by
+the tongue of Rumour. F. B. knew to a few millions of rupees, more or
+less, what the Colonel possessed, and what Clive would inherit. Thomas
+Newcome's distinguished military services, his high bearing, lofty
+courtesy, simple but touching garrulity;--for the honest man talked much
+more now than he had been accustomed to do in former days, and was not
+insensible to the flattery which his wealth brought him,--his reputation
+as a keen man of business, who had made his own fortune by operations
+equally prudent and spirited, and who might make the fortunes of
+hundreds of other people, brought the worthy Colonel a number of
+friends, and I promise you that the loudest huzzahs greeted his health
+when it was proposed at the Blackwall dinners. At the second annual
+dinner after Clive's marriage some friends presented Mrs. Clive Newcome
+with a fine testimonial. There was a superb silver cocoa-nut tree,
+whereof the leaves were dexterously arranged for holding candle and
+pickles; under the cocoa-nut was an Indian prince on a camel, giving his
+hand to a cavalry officer on horseback--a howitzer, a plough, a loom, a
+bale of cotton, on which were the East India Company's arms, a Brahmin,
+Britannia, and Commerce with a cornucopia were grouped round the
+principal figures: and if you would see a noble account of this chaste
+and elegant specimen of British art, you are referred to the pages of
+the Pall Mall Gazette of that year, as well as to Fred Bayham's noble
+speech in the course of the evening, when it was exhibited. The East and
+its wars, and its heroes, Assaye and Seringapatam ("and Lord Lake and
+Laswaree too," calls out the Colonel greatly elated), tiger-hunting,
+palanquins, Juggernaut, elephants, the burning of widows--all passed
+before us in F. B.'s splendid oration. He spoke of the product of the
+Indian forest, the palm-tree, the cocoa-nut tree, the banyan-tree. Palms
+the Colonel had already brought back with him, the palms of valour, won
+in the field of war (cheers). Cocoa-nut trees he had never seen, though
+he had heard wonders related regarding the milky contents of their
+fruit. Here at any rate was one tree of the kind, under the branches of
+which he humbly trusted often to repose--and, if he might be so bold as
+to carry on the Eastern metaphor, he would say, knowing the excellence
+of the Colonel's claret and the splendour of his hospitality, that he
+would prefer a cocoa-nut day at the Colonel's to a banyan day anywhere
+else. Whilst F. B.'s speech went on, I remember J. J. eyeing the trophy,
+and the queer expression of his shrewd face. The health of British
+Artists was drunk a propos of this splendid specimen of their skill, and
+poor J. J. Ridley, Esq., A.R.A., had scarce a word to say in return. He
+and Clive sat by one another, the latter very silent and gloomy. When J.
+J. and I met in the world, we talked about our friend, and it was easy
+for both of us to see that neither was satisfied with Clive's condition.
+
+The fine house in Tyburnia was completed by this time, as gorgeous as
+money could make it. How different it was from the old Fitzroy Square
+mansion with its ramshackle furniture, and spoils of brokers' shops,
+and Tottenham Court Road odds and ends! An Oxford Street upholsterer had
+been let loose in the yet virgin chambers; and that inventive genius had
+decorated them with all the wonders his fancy could devise. Roses and
+cupids quivered on the ceilings, up to which golden arabesques crawled
+from the walls; your face (handsome or otherwise) was reflected by
+countless looking-glasses, so multiplied and arranged as, as it were, to
+carry you into the next street. You trod on velvet, pausing with respect
+in the centre of the carpet, where Rosey's cypher was worked in the
+sweet flowers which bear her name. What delightful crooked legs the
+chairs had! What corner cupboards there were filled with Dresden
+gimcracks, which it was a part of this little woman's business in life
+to purchase! What etageres, and bonbonnieres, and chiffonnieres! What
+awfully bad pastels there were on the walls! What frightful Boucher
+and Lancret shepherds and shepherdesses leered over the portieres! What
+velvet-bound volumes, mother-of-pearl albums, inkstands representing
+beasts of the field, prie-dieu chairs, and wonderful knick-knacks I can
+recollect! There was the most magnificent piano, though Rosey seldom
+sang any of her six songs now; and when she kept her couch at a certain
+most interesting period, the good Colonel, ever anxious to procure
+amusement for his darling, asked whether she would not like a
+barrel-organ grinding fifty or sixty favourite pieces, which a bearer
+could turn? And he mentioned how Windus, of their regiment, who loved
+music exceedingly, had a very fine instrument of this kind out to
+Barrackpore in the year 1810, and relays of barrels by each ship with
+all the new tunes from Europe. The Testimonial took its place in the
+centre of Mrs. Clive's table, surrounded by satellites of plate. The
+delectable parties were constantly gathered together, the grand barouche
+rolling in the Park, or stopping at the principal shops. Little Rosey
+bloomed in millinery, and was still the smiling little pet of her
+father-in-law, and poor Clive, in the midst of all these splendours, was
+gaunt, and sad, and silent; listless at most times, bitter and savage at
+others, pleased only when he was out of the society which bored him, and
+in the company of George and J. J., the simple friends of his youth.
+
+His careworn look and altered appearance mollified my wife towards
+him--who had almost taken him again into favour. But she did not care
+for Mrs. Clive, and the Colonel, somehow, grew cool towards us, and to
+look askance upon the little band of Clive's friends. It seemed as if
+there were two parties in the house. There was Clive's set--J. J., the
+shrewd, silent little painter; Warrington, the cynic; and the author
+of the present biography, who was, I believe, supposed to give himself
+contemptuous airs; and to have become very high and mighty since his
+marriage. Then there was the great, numerous, and eminently respectable
+set, whose names were all registered in little Rosey's little
+visiting-book, and to whose houses she drove round, duly delivering the
+cards of Mr. and Mrs. Clive Newcome, and Colonel Newcome;--the generals
+and colonels, the judges and the fogies. The only man who kept well
+with both sides of the house was F. Bayham, Esq., who, having got into
+clover, remained in the enjoyment of that welcome pasture; who really
+loved Clive and the Colonel too, and had a hundred pleasant things and
+funny stories (the droll old creature!) to tell to the little lady
+for whom we others could scarcely find a word. The old friends of the
+student-days were not forgotten, but they did not seem to get on in the
+new house. The Miss Gandishes came to one of Mrs. Clive's balls, still
+in blue crape, still with ringlets on their wizened old foreheads,
+accompanying papa, with his shirt-collars turned down--who gazed in mute
+wonder on the splendid scene. Warrington actually asked Miss Gandish to
+dance, making woeful blunders, however, in the quadrille, while Clive,
+with something like one of his old smiles on his face, took out Miss Zoe
+Gandish, her sister. We made Gandish overeat and overdrink himself in
+the supper-room, and Clive cheered him by ordering a full length of Mrs.
+Clive Newcome from his distinguished pencil. Never was seen a grander
+exhibition of white satin and jewels. Smee, R.A., was furious at the
+preference shown to his rival.
+
+We had Sandy M'Collop, too, at the party, who had returned from Rome,
+with his red beard, and his picture of the murder of the Red Comyn,
+which made but a dim effect in the Octagon Room of the Royal Academy,
+where the bleeding agonies of the dying warrior were veiled in an unkind
+twilight. On Sandy and his brethren little Rosey looked rather coldly.
+She tossed up her little head in conversation with me, and gave me to
+understand that this party was only an omnium gatherum, not one of the
+select parties, from which Heaven defend us. "We are Poins, and Nym, and
+Pistol," growled out George Warrington, as he strode away to finish
+the evening in Clive's painting- and smoking-room. "Now Prince Hal is
+married, and shares the paternal throne, his Princess is ashamed of his
+brigand associates of former days." She came and looked at us with a
+feeble little smile, as we sat smoking, and let the daylight in on us
+from the open door, and hinted to Mr. Clive that it was time to go to
+bed.
+
+So Clive Newcome lay in a bed of down and tossed and tumbled there. He
+went to fine dinners, and sat silent over them; rode fine horses, and
+black Care jumped up behind the moody horseman. He was cut off in a
+great measure from the friends of his youth, or saw them by a kind of
+stealth and sufferance; was a very lonely, poor fellow, I am afraid,
+now that people were testimonialising his wife, and many an old comrade
+growling at his haughtiness and prosperity.
+
+In former days, when his good father recognised the difference which
+fate, and time, and temper, had set between him and his son, we have
+seen with what a gentle acquiescence the old man submitted to his
+inevitable fortune, and how humbly he bore that stroke of separation
+which afflicted the boy lightly enough, but caused the loving sire so
+much pain. Then there was no bitterness between them, in spite of the
+fatal division; but now, it seemed as if there was anger on Thomas
+Newcome's part, because, though come together again, they were not
+united, though with every outward appliance of happiness Clive was not
+happy. What young man on earth could look for more? a sweet young wife,
+a handsome home, of which the only encumbrance was an old father, who
+would give his last drop of blood in his son's behalf. And it was to
+bring about this end that Thomas Newcome had toiled and had amassed a
+fortune. Could not Clive, with his talents and education, go down once
+or twice a week to the City and take a decent part in the business by
+which his wealth was secured? He appeared at the various board-rooms
+and City conclaves, yawned at the meetings, and drew figures on the
+blotting-paper of the Company; had no interest in its transactions,
+no heart in its affairs; went away and galloped his horse alone; or
+returned to his painting-room, put on his old velvet jacket, and worked
+with his palettes and brushes. Palettes and brushes! Could he not give
+up these toys when he was called to a much higher station in the world?
+Could he not go talk with Rosey;--drive with Rosey, kind little soul,
+whose whole desire was to make him happy? Such thoughts as these, no
+doubt, darkened the Colonel's mind, and deepened the furrows round his
+old eyes. So it is, we judge men by our own standards; judge our nearest
+and dearest often wrong.
+
+Many and many a time did Clive try and talk with the little Rosey, who
+chirped and prattled so gaily to his father. Many a time would she come
+and sit by his easel, and try her little powers to charm him, bring him
+little tales about their acquaintances, stories about this ball and
+that concert, practise artless smiles upon him, gentle little bouderies,
+tears, perhaps, followed by caresses and reconciliation. At the end of
+which he would return to his cigar; and she, with a sigh and a heavy
+heart, to the good old man who had bidden her to go and talk with him.
+He used to feel that his father had sent her; the thought came across
+him in their conversations, and straightway his heart would shut up and
+his face grew gloomy. They were not made to mate with one another. This
+was the truth; the shoe was a very pretty little shoe, but Clive's foot
+was too big for it.
+
+Just before the testimonial, Mr. Clive was in constant attendance at
+home, and very careful and kind and happy with his wife, and the whole
+family party went very agreeably. Doctors were in constant attendance at
+Mrs. Clive Newcome's door; prodigious care was taken by the good Colonel
+in wrapping her and in putting her little feet on sofas, and in leading
+her to her carriage. The Campaigner came over in immense flurry from
+Edinburgh (where Uncle James was now very comfortably lodged in Picardy
+Place with the most agreeable society round about him), and all this
+circle was in a word very close and happy and intimate; but woe is me,
+Thomas Newcome's fondest hopes were disappointed this time: his little
+grandson lived but to see the light and leave it: and sadly, sadly,
+those preparations were put away, those poor little robes and caps,
+those delicate muslins and cambrics over which many a care had been
+forgotten, many a fond prayer thought, if not uttered. Poor little
+Rosey! she felt the grief very keenly; but she rallied from it very
+soon. In a very few months, her cheeks were blooming and dimpling
+with smiles again, and she was telling us how her party was an omnium
+gatherum.
+
+The Campaigner had ere this returned to the scene of her northern
+exploits; not, I believe, entirely of the worthy woman's own free will.
+Assuming the command of the household, whilst her daughter kept her
+sofa, Mrs. Mackenzie had set that establishment into uproar and mutiny.
+She had offended the butler, outraged the housekeeper, wounded the
+sensibilities of the footmen, insulted the doctor, and trampled on the
+inmost corns of the nurse. It was surprising what a change appeared
+in the Campaigner's conduct, and how little, in former days, Colonel
+Newcome had known her. What the Emperor Napoleon the First said
+respecting our Russian enemies, might be applied to this lady,
+Grattez-la, and she appeared a Tartar. Clive and his father had a little
+comfort and conversation in conspiring against her. The old man never
+dared to try, but was pleased with the younger's spirit and gallantry in
+the series of final actions which, commencing over poor little Rosey's
+prostrate body in the dressing-room, were continued in the drawing-room,
+resumed with terrible vigour on the enemy's part in the dining-room, and
+ended, to the triumph of the whole establishment, at the outside of the
+hall-door.
+
+When the routed Tartar force had fled back to its native north, Rosey
+made a confession, which Clive told me afterwards, bursting with bitter
+laughter. "You and papa seem to be very much agitated," she said. (Rosey
+called the Colonel papa in the absence of the Campaigner.) "I do not
+mind it a bit, except just at first, when it made me a little nervous.
+Mamma used always to be so; she used to scold and scold all day, both
+me and Josey, in Scotland, till grandmamma sent her away; and then in
+Fitzroy Square, and then in Brussels, she used to box my ears, and go
+into such tantrums; and I think," adds Rosey, with one of her sweetest
+smiles, "she had quarrelled with Uncle James before she came to us."
+
+"She used to box Rosey's ears," roars out poor Clive, "and go into such
+tantrums, in Fitzroy Square and Brussels afterwards, and the pair
+would come down with their arms round each other's waists, smirking and
+smiling as if they had done nothing but kiss each other all their mortal
+lives! This is what we know about women--this is what we get, and find
+years afterwards, when we think we have married a smiling, artless young
+creature! Are you all such hypocrites, Mrs. Pendennis?" and he pulled
+his mustachios in his wrath.
+
+"Poor Clive!" says Laura, very kindly. "You would not have had her tell
+tales of her mother, would you?"
+
+"Oh, of course not," breaks out Clive; "that is what you all say, and so
+you are hypocrites out of sheer virtue."
+
+It was the first time Laura had called him Clive for many a day. She
+was becoming reconciled to him. We had our own opinion about the young
+fellow's marriage.
+
+And, to sum up all, upon a casual rencontre with the young gentleman in
+question, whom we saw descending from a hansom at the steps of the Flag,
+Pall Mall, I opined that dark thoughts of Hoby had entered into Clive
+Newcome's mind. Othello-like, he scowled after that unconscious Cassio
+as the other passed into the club in his lacquered boots.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIV. Absit Omen
+
+
+At the first of the Blackwall festivals, Hobson Newcome was present, in
+spite of the quarrel which had taken place between his elder brother
+and the chief of the firm of Hobson Brothers and Newcome. But it was
+the individual Barnes and the individual Thomas who had had a difference
+together; the Bundelcund Bank was not at variance with its chief house
+of commission in London; no man drank prosperity to the B. B. C., upon
+occasion of this festival, with greater fervour than Hobson Newcome, and
+the manner in which he just slightly alluded, in his own little speech
+of thanks, to the notorious differences between Colonel Newcome and his
+nephew, praying that these might cease some day, and, meanwhile, that
+the confidence between the great Indian establishment and its
+London agents might never diminish, was appreciated and admired by
+six-and-thirty gentlemen, all brimful of claret and enthusiasm, and in
+that happy state of mind in which men appreciate and admire everything.
+
+At the second dinner, when the testimonial was presented, Hobson was not
+present. Nor did his name figure amongst those engraven on the trunk
+of Mr. Newcome's allegorical silver cocoa-nut tree. As we travelled
+homewards in the omnibus, Fred Bayham noticed the circumstance to me.
+"I have looked over the list of names," says he, "not merely that on the
+trunk, sir, but the printed list; it was rolled up and placed in one of
+the nests on the top of the tree. Why is Hobson's name not there?--Ha!
+it mislikes me, Pendennis."
+
+F. B., who was now very great about City affairs, discoursed about
+stocks and companies with immense learning, and gave me to understand
+that he had transacted one or two little operations in Capel Court
+on his own account, with great present, and still larger prospective,
+advantages to himself. It is a fact that Mr. Ridley was paid, and that
+F. B.'s costume, though still eccentric, was comfortable, cleanly, and
+variegated. He occupied the apartments once tenanted by the amiable
+Honeyman. He lived in ease and comfort there. "You don't suppose," says
+he, "that the wretched stipend I draw from the Pall Mall Gazette enables
+me to maintain this kind of thing? F. B., sir, has a station in the
+world; F. B. moves among moneyers and City nobs, and eats cabobs with
+wealthy nabobs. He may marry, sir, and settle in life." We cordially
+wished every worldly prosperity to the brave F. B.
+
+Happening to descry him one day in the Park, I remarked that his
+countenance wore an ominous and tragic appearance, which seemed to
+deepen as he neared me. I thought he had been toying affably with
+a nursery-maid the moment before, who stood with some of her little
+charges watching the yachts upon the Serpentine. Howbeit, espying my
+approach, F. B. strode away from the maiden and her innocent companions,
+and advanced to greet his old acquaintance, enveloping his face with
+shades of funereal gloom.
+
+"Yon were the children of my good friend Colonel Huckaback of the Bombay
+Marines! Alas! unconscious of their doom, the little infants play. I
+was watching them at their sports. There is a pleasing young woman in
+attendance upon the poor children. They were sailing their little boats
+upon the Serpentine; racing and laughing, and making merry; and as
+I looked on, Master Hastings Huckaback's boat went down! Absit omen,
+Pendennis! I was moved by the circumstance. F. B. hopes that the child's
+father's argosy may not meet with shipwreck!"
+
+"You mean the little yellow-faced man whom we met at Colonel Newcome's?"
+says Mr. Pendennis.
+
+"I do, sir," growled F. B. "You know that he is a brother director with
+our Colonel in the Bundelcund Bank?"
+
+"Gracious Heavens!" I cried, in sincere anxiety, "nothin has happened, I
+hope, to the Bundelcund Bank?"
+
+"No," answers the other, "nothing has happened, the good ship is safe,
+sir, as yet. But she has narrowly escaped a great danger, Pendennis,"
+cries F. B., gripping my arm with great energy, "there was a traitor in
+her crew--she has weathered the storm nobly--who would have sent her on
+the rocks, sir, who would have scuttled her at midnight."
+
+"Pray drop your nautical metaphors, and tell me what you mean," cries F.
+B.'s companion, and Bayham continued his narration.
+
+"Were you in the least conversant with City affairs," he said, "or did
+you deign to visit the spot where merchants mostly congregate, you
+would have heard the story, which was over the whole City yesterday, and
+spread dismay from Threadneedle Street to Leadenhall. The story is, that
+the firm of Hobson Brothers and Newcome, yesterday refused acceptance of
+thirty thousand pounds' worth of bills of the Bundelcund Banking Company
+of India.
+
+"The news came like a thunderclap upon the London Board of Directors,
+who had received no notice of the intentions of Hobson Brothers, and
+caused a dreadful panic amongst the shareholders of the concern. The
+board-room was besieged by colonels and captains, widows and orphans;
+within an hour after protest of bills were taken up, and you will see,
+in the City article of the Globe this very evening, an announcement
+that henceforward the house of Baines and Jolly, of Job Court, will meet
+engagements of the Bundelcund Banking Company of India, being provided
+with ample funds to do honour to every possible liability of that
+Company. But the shares fell, sir, in consequence of the panic. I hope
+they will rally. I trust and believe they will rally. For our good
+Colonel's sake and that of his friends, for the sake of the innocent
+children sporting by the Serpentine yonder.
+
+"I had my suspicions when they gave that testimonial," said F. B. "In
+my experience of life, sir, I always feel rather shy about testimonials,
+and when a party gets one, somehow look out to hear of his smashing the
+next month. Absit omen! I will say again. I like not the going down of
+yonder little yacht."
+
+The Globe sure enough contained a paragraph that evening announcing the
+occurrence which Mr. Bayham had described, and the temporary panic which
+it had occasioned, and containing an advertisement stating that Messrs.
+Baines and Jolly would henceforth act as agents of the Indian Company.
+Legal proceedings were presently threatened by the solicitors of the
+Company against the banking firm which had caused so much mischief. Mr.
+Hobson Newcome was absent abroad when the circumstance took place, and
+it was known that the protest of the bills was solely attributable to
+his nephew and partner. But after the break between the two firms,
+there was a rupture between Hobson's family and Colonel Newcome. The
+exasperated Colonel vowed that his brother and his nephew were traitors
+alike, and would have no further dealings with one or the other. Even
+poor innocent Sam Newcome, coming up to London from Oxford, where he
+had been plucked, and offering a hand to Clive, was frowned away by our
+Colonel, who spoke in terms of great displeasure to his son for taking
+the least notice of the young traitor.
+
+Our Colonel was changed, changed in his heart, changed in his whole
+demeanour towards the world, and above all towards his son, for whom he
+had made so many kind sacrifices in his old days. We have said how,
+ever since Clive's marriage, a tacit strife had been growing up between
+father and son. The boy's evident unhappiness was like a reproach to
+his father. His very silence angered the old man. His want of confidence
+daily chafed and annoyed him. At the head of a large fortune, which he
+rightly persisted in spending, he felt angry with himself because he
+could not enjoy it, angry with his son, who should have helped him
+in the administration of his new estate, and who was but a listless,
+useless member of the little confederacy, a living protest against all
+the schemes of the good man's past life. The catastrophe in the City
+again brought father and son together somewhat, and the vindictiveness
+of both was roused by Barnes's treason. Time was when the Colonel
+himself would have viewed his kinsman more charitably, but fate
+and circumstance had angered that originally friendly and gentle
+disposition; hate and suspicion had mastered him, and if it cannot be
+said that his new life had changed him, at least it had brought out
+faults for which there had hitherto been no occasion, and qualities
+latent before. Do we know ourselves, or what good or evil circumstance
+may bring from us? Did Cain know, as he and his younger brother played
+round their mother's knee, that the little hand which caressed Abel
+should one day grow larger, and seize a brand to slay him? Thrice
+fortunate he, to whom circumstance is made easy: whom fate visits with
+gentle trial, and kindly Heaven keeps out of temptation.
+
+In the stage which the family feud now reached, and which the biographer
+of the Newcomes is bound to describe, there is one gentle moralist who
+gives her sentence decidedly against Clive's father; whilst on the other
+hand a rough philosopher and friend of mine, whose opinions used to have
+some weight with me, stoutly declares that they were right. "War and
+justice are good things," says George Warrington, rattling his clenched
+fist on the table. "I maintain them, and the common sense of the world
+maintains them, against the preaching of all the Honeymans that ever
+puled from the pulpit. I have not the least objection in life to a rogue
+being hung. When a scoundrel is whipped I am pleased, and say, serve him
+right. If any gentleman will horsewhip Sir Barnes Newcome, Baronet, I
+shall not be shocked, but, on the contrary, go home and order an extra
+mutton-chop for dinner."
+
+"Ah! revenge is wrong, Pen," pleads the other counsellor.
+
+"Let alone that the wisest and best of all Judges has condemned it. It
+blackens the hearts of men. It distorts their views of right. It sets
+them to devise evil. It causes them to think unjustly of others. It is
+not the noblest return for injury, not even the bravest way of meeting
+it. The greatest courage is to bear persecution, not to answer when you
+are reviled, and when wrong has been done you to forgive. I am sorry
+for what you call the Colonel's triumph and his enemy's humiliation.
+Let Barnes be as odious as you will, he ought never to have humiliated
+Ethel's brother; but he is weak. Other gentlemen as well are weak, Mr.
+Pen, although you are so much cleverer than women. I have no patience
+with the Colonel, and I beg you to tell him, whether he asks you or not
+that he has lost my good graces, and that I for one will not huzzah
+at what his friends and flatterers call his triumphs, and that I don't
+think in this instance he has acted like the dear Colonel, and the good
+Colonel, and the good Christian that I once thought him."
+
+We must now tell what the Colonel and Clive had been doing, and what
+caused two such different opinions respecting their conduct from the two
+critics just named. The refusal of the London Banking House to accept
+the bills of the Great Indian Company of course affected very much the
+credit of that Company in this country. Sedative announcements were
+issued by the Directors in London; brilliant accounts of the Company's
+affairs abroad were published; proof incontrovertible was given that the
+B. B. C. was never in so flourishing a state as at that time when Hobson
+Brothers had refused its drafts; there could be no question that the
+Company had received a severe wound and was deeply if not vitally
+injured by the conduct of the London firm.
+
+The propensity to sell out became quite epidemic amongst the
+shareholders. Everybody was anxious to realise. Why, out of the thirty
+names inscribed on poor Mrs. Clive's cocoa-nut tree no less than twenty
+deserters might be mentioned, or at least who would desert could they
+find an opportunity of doing so with arms and baggage. Wrathfully the
+good Colonel scratched the names of those faithless ones out of his
+daughter's visiting-book: haughtily he met them in the street; to desert
+the B. B. C. at the hour of peril was, in his idea, like applying for
+leave of absence on the eve of an action. He would not see that the
+question was not one of sentiment at all, but of chances and arithmetic;
+he would not hear with patience of men quitting the ship, as he called
+it. "They may go, sir," says he, "but let them never more be officers of
+mine." With scorn and indignation he paid off one or two timid friends,
+who were anxious to fly, and purchased their shares out of his own
+pocket. But his purse was not long enough for this kind of amusement.
+What money he had was invested in the Company already, and his name
+further pledged for meeting the engagements from which their late London
+bankers had withdrawn.
+
+Those gentlemen, in the meanwhile, spoke of their differences with
+the Indian Bank as quite natural, and laughed at the absurd charges of
+personal hostility which poor Thomas Newcome publicly preferred. "Here
+is a hot-headed old Indian dragoon," says Sir Barnes, "who knows no more
+about business than I do about cavalry tactics or Hindostanee; who gets
+into a partnership along with other dragoons and Indian wiseacres,
+with some uncommonly wily old native practitioners; and they pay great
+dividends, and they set up a bank. Of course we will do these people's
+business as long as we are covered, but I have always told their manager
+that we would run no risks whatever, and close the account the very
+moment it did not suit us to keep it: and so we parted company six weeks
+ago, since when there has been a panic in the Company, a panic which has
+been increased by Colonel Newcome's absurd swagger and folly. He says I
+am his enemy; enemy indeed! So I am in private life, but what has that
+to do with business? In business, begad, there are no friends and no
+enemies at all. I leave all my sentiment on the other side of Temple
+Bar."
+
+So Thomas Newcome, and Clive the son of Thomas, had wrath in their
+hearts against Barnes, their kinsman, and desired to be revenged upon
+him, and were eager after his undoing, and longed for an opportunity
+when they might meet him and overcome him, and put him to shame.
+
+When men are in this frame of mind, a certain personage is said always
+to be at hand to help them and give them occasion for indulging in
+their pretty little passion. What is sheer hate seems to the individual
+entertaining the sentiment so like indignant virtue, that he often
+indulges in the propensity to the full, nay, lauds himself for the
+exercise of it. I am sure if Thomas Newcome in his present desire for
+retaliation against Barnes, had known the real nature of his sentiments
+towards that worthy, his conduct would have been different, and we
+should have heard of no such active hostilities as ensued.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXV. In which Mrs. Clive comes into her Fortune
+
+
+Speaking of the affairs of B. B. C., Sir Barnes Newcome always took
+care to maintain his candid surprise relating to the proceedings of that
+Company. He set about evil reports against it! He endeavour to do it
+a wrong--absurd! If a friend were to ask him (and it was quite curious
+what a number did manage to ask him) whether he thought the Company was
+an advantageous investment, of course he would give an answer. He could
+not say conscientiously he thought so--never once had said so--in the
+time of their connexion, which had been formed solely with a view of
+obliging his amiable uncle. It was a quarrelsome Company; a dragoon
+Company; a Company of gentlemen accustomed to gunpowder, and fed on
+mulligatawny. He, forsooth, be hostile to it! There were some Companies
+that required no enemies at all, and would be pretty sure to go to the
+deuce their own way.
+
+Thus, and with this amiable candour, spake Barnes, about a commercial
+speculation, the merits of which he had a right to canvass as well as
+any other citizen. As for Uncle Hobson, his conduct was characterised
+by a timidity which one would scarcely have expected from a gentleman
+of his florid, jolly countenance, active habits, and generally manly
+demeanour. He kept away from the cocoa-nut feast, as we have seen: he
+protested privily to the Colonel that his private goodwill continued
+undiminished but he was deeply grieved at the B. B. C. affair, which
+took place while he was on the Continent--confound the Continent,
+my wife would go--and which was entirely without his cognisance. The
+Colonel received his brother's excuses, first with awful bows and
+ceremony, and finally with laughter. "My good Hobson," said he, with the
+most insufferable kindness, "of course you intended to be friendly; of
+course the affair was done without your knowledge. We understand that
+sort of thing. London bankers have no hearts--for these last fifty years
+past that I have known you and your brother, and my amiable nephew, the
+present commanding officer, has there been anything in your conduct that
+has led me to suppose you had?" and herewith Colonel Newcome burst out
+into a laugh. It was not a pleasant laugh to hear. Worthy Hobson took
+his hat, and walked away, brushing it round and round, and looking very
+confused. The Colonel strode after him downstairs, and made him an awful
+bow at the hall door. Never again did Hobson Newcome set foot in that
+Tyburnian mansion.
+
+During the whole of that season of the testimonial the cocoa-nut figured
+in an extraordinary number of banquets. The Colonel's hospitalities
+were more profuse than ever, and Mrs. Clive's toilettes more brilliant.
+Clive, in his confidential conversations with his friends, was very
+dismal and gloomy. When I asked City news of our well-informed friend
+F. B., I am sorry to say, his countenance became funereal. The B. B. C.
+shares, which had been at an immense premium twelve months since, were
+now slowly falling, falling.
+
+"I wish," said Mr. Sherrick to me, "the Colonel would realise, even now,
+like that Mr. Ratray who has just come out of the ship, and brought a
+hundred thousand pounds with him."
+
+"Come out of the ship! You little know the Colonel, Mr. Sherrick, if you
+think he will ever do that."
+
+Mr. Ratray, though he had returned to Europe, gave the most cheering
+accounts of the B. B. C. It was in the most flourishing state. Shares
+sure to get up again. He had sold out entirely on account of his liver.
+Must come home--the doctor said so.
+
+Some months afterwards, another director, Mr. Hedges, came home. Both
+of these gentlemen, as we know, entertained the fashionable world, got
+seats in Parliament, purchased places in the country, and were greatly
+respected. Mr. Hedges came out, but his wealthy partner, Mr. M'Gaspey,
+entered into the B. B. C. The entry of Mr. M'Gaspey into the affairs of
+the Companyt did not seem to produce very great excitement in England.
+The shares slowly fell. However, there was a prodigious indigo crop. The
+London manager was in perfect good-humour. In spite of this and that,
+of defections, of unpleasantries, of unfavourable whispers, and doubtful
+friends--Thomas Newcome kept his head high, and his face was always kind
+and smiling, except when certain family enemies were mentioned, and he
+frowned like Jove in anger.
+
+We have seen how very fond little Rosey was of her mamma, of her uncle,
+James Binnie, and now of her papa, as she affectionately styled Thomas
+Newcome. This affection, I am sure, the two gentlemen returned with all
+their hearts, and but that they were much too generous and simple-minded
+to entertain such a feeling. It may be wondered that the two good old
+boys were not a little jealous of one another. Howbeit it does
+not appear that they entertained such a feeling; at least it never
+interrupted the kindly friendship between them, and Clive was regarded
+in the light of a son by both of them, and each contented himself with
+his moiety of the smiling little girl's affection.
+
+As long as they were with her, the truth is, little Mrs. Clive was very
+fond of people, very docile, obedient, easily pleased, brisk, kind, and
+good-humoured. She charmed her two old friends with little songs, little
+smiles,--little kind offices, little caresses; and having administered
+Thomas Newcome's cigar to him in the daintiest, prettiest way, she would
+trip off to drive with James Binnie, or sit at his dinner, if he was
+indisposed, and be as gay, neat-handed, watchful, and attentive a child
+as any old gentleman could desire.
+
+She did not seem to be very sorry to part with mamma, a want of feeling
+which that lady bitterly deplored in her subsequent conversation with
+her friends about Mrs. Clive Newcome. Possibly there were reasons why
+Rosey should not be very much vexed at quitting mamma; but surely she
+might have dropped a little tear as she took leave of kind, good old
+James Binnie. Not she. The gentleman's voice faltered, but hers did
+not in the least. She kissed him on the face, all smiles, blushes, and
+happiness, and tripped into the railway carriage with her husband and
+father-in-law, leaving the poor old uncle very sad. Our women said,
+I know not why, that little Rosey had no heart at all. Women are
+accustomed to give such opinions respecting the wives of their newly
+married friends. I am bound to add (and I do so during Mr. Clive
+Newcome's absence from England, otherwise I should not like to venture
+upon the statement), that some men concur with the ladies' opinion
+of Mrs. Clive. For instance, Captains Goby and Hoby declare that her
+treatment of the latter, her encouragement, and desertion of him when
+Clive made his proposals, were shameful.
+
+At this time Rosey was in a pupillary state. A good, obedient little
+girl, her duty was to obey the wishes of her dear mamma. How show her
+sense of virtue and obedience better than by promptly and cheerfully
+obeying mamma, and at the orders of that experienced Campaigner, giving
+up Bobby Hoby, and going to England to a fine house, to be presented at
+Court, to have all sorts of pleasure with a handsome young husband and a
+kind father-in-law by her side? No wonder Rosey was not in a very active
+state of grief at parting from Uncle James. He strove to console himself
+with these considerations when he had returned to the empty house, where
+she had danced, and smiled, and warbled; and he looked at the chair she
+sat in; and at the great mirror which had so often reflected her fresh
+pretty face;--the great callous mirror, which now only framed upon its
+shining sheet the turban, and the ringlets, and the plump person, and
+the resolute smile of the old Campaigner.
+
+After that parting with her uncle at the Brussels railway, Rosey never
+again beheld him. He passed into the Campaigner's keeping, from which
+alone he was rescued by the summons of pallid death. He met that
+summons like a philosopher; rejected rather testily all the mortuary
+consolations which his nephew-in-law, Josey's husband, thought proper
+to bring to his bedside; and uttered opinions which scandalised that
+divine. But as he left Mrs. M'Craw only 500 pounds, thrice that sum to
+his sister, and the remainder of his property to his beloved niece,
+Rosa Mackenzie, now Rosa Newcome, let us trust that Mr. M'Craw, hurt
+and angry at the ill-favour shown to his wife, his third young wife, his
+best-beloved Josey, at the impatience with which the deceased had always
+received his, Mr. M'Craw's, own sermons;--let us hope, I say, that the
+reverend gentleman was mistaken in his views respecting the present
+position of Mr. James Binnie's soul; and that Heaven may have some
+regions yet accessible to James, which Mr. M'Craw's intellect has not
+yet explored. Look, gentlemen! Does a week pass without the announcement
+of the discovery of a new comet in the sky, a new star in the heaven,
+twinkling dimly out of a yet farther distance, and only now becoming
+visible to human ken though existent for ever and ever? So let us hope
+divine truths may be shining, and regions of light and love extant,
+which Geneva glasses cannot yet perceive, and are beyond the focus of
+Roman telescopes.
+
+I think Clive and the Colonel were more affected by the news of James's
+death than Rosey, concerning whose wonderful strength of mind good
+Thomas Newcome discoursed to my Laura and me, when, fancying that my
+friend's wife needed comfort and consolation, Mrs. Pendennis went to
+visit her. "Of course we shall have no more parties this year," sighed
+Rosey. She looked very pretty in her black dress. Clive, in his hearty
+way, said a hundred kind feeling things about the departed friend.
+Thomas Newcome's recollections of him, and regret, were no less tender
+and sincere. "See," says he, "how that dear child's sense of duty makes
+her hide her feelings! Her grief is most deep, but she wears a calm
+countenance. I see her looking sad in private, but I no sooner speak
+than she smiles." "I think," said Laura, as we came away, "that Colonel
+Newcome performs all the courtship part in the marriage, and Clive, poor
+Clive, though he spoke very nobly and generously about Mr. Binnie, I
+am sure it is not his old friend's death merely, which makes him so
+unhappy."
+
+Poor Clive, by right of his wife, was now rich Clive; the little lady
+having inherited from her kind relative no inconsiderable sum of money.
+In a very early part of this story, mention has been made of a small sum
+producing one hundred pounds a year, which Clive's father had made over
+to the lad when he sent him from India. This little sum Mr. Clive had
+settled upon his wife before his marriage, being indeed all he had of
+his own; for the famous bank shares which his father presented to him,
+were only made over formally when the young man came to London after
+his marriage, and at the paternal request and order appeared as a
+most inefficient director of the B. B. C. Now Mrs. Newcome, of her
+inheritance, possessed not only B. B. C. shares, but moneys in bank, and
+shares in East India Stock, so that Clive in the right of his wife had
+a seat in the assembly of East India shareholders, and a voice in the
+election of directors of that famous company. I promise you Mrs. Clive
+was a personage of no little importance. She carried her little head
+with an aplomb and gravity which amused some of us. F. B. bent his most
+respectfully down before her; she sent him on messages, and deigned to
+ask him to dinner. He once more wore a cheerful countenance; the clouds
+which gathered o'er the sun of Newcome were in the bosom of the ocean
+buried, Bayham said, by James Binnie's brilliant behaviour to his niece.
+
+Clive was a proprietor of East India Stock, and had a vote in electing
+the directors of that Company; and who so fit to be a director of his
+affairs as Thomas Newcome, Esq., Companion of the Bath, and so long a
+distinguished officer in its army? To hold this position of director,
+used, up to very late days, to be the natural ambition of many East
+Indian gentlemen. Colonel Newcome had often thought of offering himself
+as a candidate, and now openly placed himself on the lists, and publicly
+announced his intention. His interest was rather powerful through the
+Indian bank, of which he was a director, and many of the shareholders of
+which were proprietors of the East India Company. To have a director of
+the B. B. C. also a member of the parliament in Leadenhall Street, would
+naturally be beneficial to the former institution. Thomas Newcome's
+prospectuses were issued accordingly, and his canvass received with
+tolerable favour.
+
+Within a very short time another candidate appeared in the field--a
+retired Bombay lawyer, of considerable repute and large means--and at
+the head of this gentleman's committee appeared the names of Hobson
+Brothers and Newcome, very formidable personages at the East India
+House, with which the bank of Hobson Brothers have had dealings for half
+a century past, and where the old lady, who founded or consolidated that
+family, had had three stars before her own venerable name, which had
+descended upon her son Sir Brian, and her grandson, Sir Barnes.
+
+War was thus openly declared between Thomas Newcome and his nephew. The
+canvass on both sides was very hot and eager. The number of promises
+was pretty equal. The election was not to come off yet for a while; for
+aspirants to the honourable office of director used to announce their
+wishes years before they could be fulfilled, and returned again and
+again to the contest before they finally won it. Howbeit, the Colonel's
+prospects were very fair, and a prodigious indigo crop came in to favour
+the B. B. C., with the most brilliant report from the board at Calcutta.
+The shares, still somewhat sluggish, rose again, the Colonel's hopes
+with them, and the courage of gentlemen at home who had invested their
+money in the transaction.
+
+We were sitting one day round the Colonel's dinner-table; it was not one
+of the cocoa-nut-tree days; that emblem was locked up in the butler's
+pantry, and only beheld the lamps on occasions of state. It was a snug
+family party in the early part of the year, When scarcely anybody was in
+town; only George Warrington, and F. B., and Mr. and Mrs. Pendennis;
+and the ladies having retired, We were having such a talk as we used to
+enjoy in quiet old days, before marriages and cares and divisions had
+separated us.
+
+F. B. led the conversation. The Colonel received his remarks with great
+gravity, and thought him an instructive personage. Others considered him
+rather as amusing than instructive, and so his eloquence was generally
+welcome. The canvass for the directorship was talked over. The improved
+affairs of a certain great Banking Company, which shall be nameless, but
+one which F. B. would take the liberty to state, would, in his opinion,
+for ever unite the mother country to our great Indian possessions;--the
+prosperity of this great Company was enthusiastically drunk by Mr.
+Bayham in some of the very best claret. The conduct of the enemies of
+that Company was characterised in terms of bitter, but not undeserved,
+satire. F. B. rather liked to air his oratory, and neglected few
+opportunities for making speeches after dinners.
+
+The Colonel admired his voice and sentiments not the less, perhaps,
+because the latter were highly laudatory of the good man. And not from
+interest, at least, as far as he himself knew--not from any mean or
+selfish motives, did F. B. speak. He called Colonel Newcome his friend,
+his benefactor: kissed the hem of his garment: he wished fervently that
+he could have been the Colonel's son: he expressed, repeatedly, a desire
+that some one would speak ill of the Colonel, so that he, F. B., might
+have the opportunity of polishing that individual off in about two
+seconds. He covered the Colonel with all his heart; nor is any gentleman
+proof altogether against this constant regard and devotion from another.
+
+The Colonel used to wag his head wisely, and say Mr. Bayham's
+suggestions were often exceedingly valuable, as indeed the fact was,
+though his conduct was no more of a piece with his opinions than those
+of some other folks occasionally are.
+
+"What the Colonel ought to do, sir, to help him in the direction," says
+F. B., "is to get into Parliament. The House of Commons would aid him
+into the Court of Directors, and the Court of Directors would help him
+in the House of Commons."
+
+"Most wisely said," says Warrington.
+
+The Colonel declined. "I have long had the House of Commons in my eye,"
+he said; "but not for me. I wanted my boy to go there. It would be a
+proud day for me if I could see him there."
+
+"I can't speak," says Clive, from his end of the table. "I don't
+understand about parties, like F. B. here."
+
+"I believe I do know a thing or two," Mr. Bayham here interposes.
+
+"And politics do not interest me in the least," Clive sighs out, drawing
+pictures with his fork on his napkin, and not heeding the other's
+interruption.
+
+"I wish I knew what would interest him," his father whispers to me,
+who happened to be at his side. "He never cares to be out of his
+painting-room; and he doesn't seem to be very happy even in there. I
+wish to God, Pen, I knew what had come over the boy." I thought I knew;
+but what was the use of telling, now there was no remedy?
+
+"A dissolution is expected every day," continued F. B. "The papers are
+full of it. Ministers cannot go on with this majority--cannot possibly
+go on, sir. I have it on the best authority; and men who are anxious
+about their seats are writing to their constituents, or are subscribing
+at missionary meetings, or are gone down to lecturing at Athenaeums, and
+that sort of thing."
+
+Here Warrington burst out into a laughter much louder than the occasion
+of the speech of F. B. seemed to warrant; and the Colonel, turning round
+with some dignity, asked the cause of George's amusement.
+
+"What do you think your darling, Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, has
+been doing during the recess?" cries Warrington. "I had a letter this
+morning, from my liberal and punctual employer, Thomas Potts, Esquire,
+of the Newcome Independent, who states, in language scarcely respectful,
+that Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome is trying to come the religious dodge,
+as Mr. Potts calls it. He professes to be stricken down by grief on
+account of late family circumstances; wears black, and puts on the most
+piteous aspect, and asks ministers of various denominations to tea with
+him; and the last announcement is the most stupendous of all. Stop, I
+have it in my greatcoat;" and, ringing the bell, George orders a servant
+to bring him a newspaper from his great-coat pocket. "Here it is,
+actually in print," Warrington continues, and reads to us:--"'Newcome
+Athenaeum. 1, for the benefit of the Newcome Orphan Children's Home, and
+2, for the benefit of the Newcome Soup Association, without distinction
+of denomination. Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, Bart., proposes to give two
+lectures, on Friday the 23rd, and Friday the 30th, instant. No. 1, The
+Poetry of Childhood: Doctor Watts, Mrs. Barbauld, Jane Taylor, No.
+2, The Poetry of Womanhood, and the Affections: Mrs. Hemans, L. E. L.
+Threepence will be charged at the doors, which will go to the use of the
+above two admirable Societies.' Potts wants me to go down and hear him.
+He has an eye to business. He has had a quarrel with Sir Barnes, and
+wants me to go down and hear him, and smash him, he kindly says. Let
+us go down, Clive. You shall draw your cousin as you have drawn his
+villainous little mug a hundred times before; and I will do the smashing
+part, and we will have some fun out of the transaction."
+
+"Besides, Florac will be in the country; going to Rosebury is a journey
+worth the taking, I can tell you; and we have old Mrs. Mason to go and
+see, who sighs after you, Colonel. My wife went to see her," remarks Mr.
+Pendennis, "and----"
+
+"And Miss Newcome, I know," says the Colonel.
+
+"She is away at Brighton, with her little charges, for sea air. My wife
+heard from her to-day."
+
+"Oh, indeed. Mrs. Pendennis corresponds with her?" says our host,
+darkling under his eyebrows; and, at this moment, my neighbour, F. B.,
+is kind enough to scrunch my foot under the table with the weight of
+his heel, as much as to warn me, by an appeal to my own corns, to avoid
+treading on so delicate a subject in that house. "Yes," said I, in
+spite, perhaps in consequence, of this interruption. "My wife does
+correspond with Miss Ethel, who is a noble creature, and whom those who
+know her know how to love and admire. She is very much changed since you
+knew her, Colonel Newcome; since the misfortunes in Sir Barnes's family,
+and the differences between you and him. Very much changed and very
+much improved. Ask my wife about her, who knows her most intimately, and
+hears from her constantly."
+
+"Very likely, very likely," cried the Colonel, hurriedly, "I hope she is
+improved, with all my heart. I am sure there was room for it. Gentlemen,
+shall we go up to the ladies and have some coffee?" And herewith the
+colloquy ended, and the party ascended to the drawing-room.
+
+The party ascended to the drawing-room, where no doubt both the ladies
+were pleased by the invasion which ended their talk. My wife and the
+Colonel talked apart, and I saw the latter looking gloomy, and the
+former pleading very eagerly, and using a great deal of action, as the
+little hands are wont to do, when the mistress's heart is very much
+moved. I was sure she was pleading Ethel's cause with her uncle.
+
+So indeed she was. And Mr. George, too, knew what her thoughts were.
+"Look at her!" he said to me. "Don't you see what she is doing? She
+believes in that girl whom you all said Clive took a fancy to before he
+married his present little placid wife; a nice little simple creature,
+who is worth a dozen Ethels."
+
+"Simple certainly," says Mr. P., with a shrug of the shoulders.
+
+"A simpleton of twenty is better than a roue of twenty. It is better
+not to have thought at all, than to have thought such things as must go
+through a girl's mind whose life is passed in jilting and being jilted;
+whose eyes, as soon as they are opened, are turned to the main chance,
+and are taught to leer at earl, to languish at a marquis, and to grow
+blind before a commoner. I don't know much about fashionable life.
+Heaven help us (you young Brummell! I see the reproach in your face!)
+Why, sir, it absolutely appears to me as if this little hop-o'-my-thumb
+of a creature has begun to give herself airs since her marriage and her
+carriage. Do you know, I rather thought she patronised me? Are all women
+spoiled by their contact with the world, and their bloom rubbed off in
+the market? I know one who seems to me to remain pure! to be sure, I
+only know her, and this little person, and Mrs. Flanagan our laundress,
+and my sisters at home, who don't count. But that Miss Newcome to whom
+once you introduced me? Oh, the cockatrice! only that poison don't
+affect your wife, the other would kill her. I hope the Colonel will not
+believe a word which Laura says." And my wife's tete-a-tete with our
+host coming to an end about this time, Mr. Warrington in high spirits
+goes up to the ladies, recapitulates the news of Barnes's lecture,
+recites "How doth the little busy bee," and gives a quasi-satirical
+comment upon that well-known poem, which bewilders Mrs. Clive, until,
+set on by the laughter of the rest of the audience, she laughs very
+freely at that odd man, and calls him "you droll satirical creature
+you!" and says "she never was so much amused in her life. Were you, Mrs.
+Pendennis?"
+
+Meanwhile Clive, who has been sitting apart moodily biting his nails,
+not listening to F. B.'s remarks, has broken into a laugh once or twice,
+and gone to a writing-book, on which, whilst George is still disserting,
+Clive is drawing.
+
+At the end of the other's speech, F. B. goes up to the draughtsman,
+looks over his shoulder, makes one or two violent efforts as of inward
+convulsion, and finally explodes in an enormous guffaw. "It's capital!
+By Jove, it's capital! Sir Barnes would never dare to face his
+constituents with that picture of him hung up in Newcome!"
+
+And F. B. holds up the drawing, at which we all laugh except Laura. As
+for the Colonel, he paces up and down the room, holding the sketch close
+to his eyes, holding it away from him, patting it, clapping his son
+delightedly on the shoulder. "Capital! capital! We'll have the picture
+printed, by Jove, sir; show vice it's own image; and shame the viper in
+his own nest, sir. That's what we will."
+
+Mrs. Pendennis came away with rather a heavy heart from this party. She
+chose to interest herself about the right or wrong of her friends;
+and her mind was disturbed by the Colonel's vindictive spirit. On
+the subsequent day we had occasion to visit our friend J. J. (who was
+completing the sweetest little picture, No. 263 in the Exhibition,
+"Portrait of a Lady and Child"), and we found that Clive had been with
+the painter that morning likewise; and that J. J. was acquainted with
+his scheme. That he did not approve of it we could read in the artist's
+grave countenance. "Nor does Clive approve of it either!" cried Ridley,
+with greater eagerness than he usually displayed, and more openness than
+he was accustomed to exhibit in judging unfavourably of his friends.
+
+"Among them they have taken him away from his art," Ridley said. "They
+don't understand him when he talks about it; they despise him for
+pursuing it. Why should I wonder at that? my parents despised it
+too, and my father was not a grand gentleman like the Colonel, Mrs.
+Pendennis. Ah! why did the Colonel ever grow rich? Why had not Clive to
+work for his bread as have? He would have done something that was worthy
+of him then; now his time must be spent in dancing attendance at balls
+land operas, and yawning at City board-rooms. They call that business:
+they think he is idling when he comes here, poor fellow! As if life was
+long enough for our art; and the best labour we can give, good enough
+for it! He went away groaning this morning, and quite saddened in
+spirits. The Colonel wants to set up himself for Parliament, or to
+set Clive up; but he says he won't. I hope he won't; do not you, Mrs.
+Pendennis?"
+
+The painter turned as he spoke; and the bright northern light which fell
+upon the sitter's head was intercepted, and lighted up his own as he
+addressed us. Out of that bright light looked his pale thoughtful face,
+and long locks and eager brown eyes. The palette on his arm was a great
+shield painted of many colours: he carried his mall-stick and a sheaf
+of brushes along with the weapons of his glorious but harmless war. With
+these he achieves conquests, wherein none are wounded save the
+envious: with that he shelters him against how much idleness, ambition,
+temptations! Occupied over that consoling work, idle thoughts cannot
+gain mastery over him: selfish wishes or desires are kept at bay. Art is
+truth: and truth is religion: and its study and practice a daily work of
+pious duty. What are the world's struggles, brawls, successes, to that
+calm recluse pursuing his calling? See, twinkling in the darkness round
+his chamber, numberless beautiful trophies of the graceful victories
+which he has won:--sweet flowers of fancy reared by him:--kind shapes
+of beauty which he has devised and moulded. The world enters into the
+artist's studio, and scornfully bids him a price for his genius, or
+makes dull pretence to admire it. What know you of his art? You cannot
+read the alphabet of that sacred book, good old Thomas Newcome! What can
+you tell of its glories, joys, secrets, consolations? Between his
+two best-beloved mistresses, poor Clive's luckless father somehow
+interposes; and with sorrowful, even angry protests. In place of Art the
+Colonel brings him a ledger; and in lieu of first love, shows him Rosey.
+
+No wonder that Clive hangs his head; rebels sometimes, desponds always:
+he has positively determined to refuse to stand for Newcome, Ridley
+says. Laura is glad of his refusal, and begins to think of him once more
+as of the Clive of old days.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVI. In which the Colonel and the Newcome Athenaeum are both lectured
+
+
+At breakfast with his family, on the morning after the little
+entertainment to which we were bidden, in the last chapter, Colonel
+Newcome was full of the projected invasion of Barnes's territories, and
+delighted to think that there was an opportunity of at last humiliating
+that rascal.
+
+"Clive does not think he is a rascal at all, papa," cries Rosey, from
+behind her tea-urn; "that is, you said you thought papa judged him too
+harshly; you know you did, this morning!" And from her husband's angry
+glances, she flies to his father's for protection. Those were even
+fiercer than Clive's. Revenge flashed from beneath Thomas Newcome's
+grizzled eyebrows, and glanced in the direction where Clive sat. Then
+the Colonel's face flushed up, and he cast his eyes down towards his
+tea-cup, which he lifted with a trembling hand. The father and son loved
+each other so, that each was afraid of the other. A war between two
+such men is dreadful; pretty little pink-faced Rosey, in a sweet little
+morning cap and ribbons, her pretty little fingers twinkling with a
+score of rings, sat simpering before her silver tea-urn, which reflected
+her pretty little pink baby face. Little artless creature! what did she
+know of the dreadful wounds which her little words inflicted in the one
+generous breast and the other?
+
+"My boy's heart is gone from me," thinks poor Thomas Newcome; "our
+family is insulted, our enterprises ruined, by that traitor, and my son
+is not even angry! he does not care for the success of our plans--for
+the honour of our name even; I make him a position of which any young
+man in England might be proud, and Clive scarcely deigns to accept it."
+
+"My wife appeals to my father," thinks poor Clive; "it is from him she
+asks counsel, and not from me. Be it about the ribbon in her cap, or any
+other transaction in our lives, she takes her colour from his opinion,
+and goes to him for advice, and I have to wait till it is given, and
+conform myself to it. If I differ from the dear old father, I wound him;
+if I yield up my opinion, as I do always, it is with a bad grace, and I
+wound him still. With the best intentions in the world, what a slave's
+life it is that he has made for me!"
+
+"How interested you are in your papers!" resumes the sprightly nosey.
+"What can you find in those horrid politics?" Both gentlemen are looking
+at their papers with all their might, and no doubt cannot see one single
+word which those brilliant and witty leading articles contain.
+
+"Clive is like you, Rosey," says the Colonel, laying his paper down,
+"and does not care for politics."
+
+"He only cares for pictures, papa," says Mrs. Clive. "He would not drive
+with me yesterday in the Park, but spent hours in his room, while you
+were toiling in the City, poor papa!--spent hours painting a horrid
+beggar-man dressed up as a monk. And this morning, he got up quite
+early, quite early, and has been out ever so long, and only came in for
+breakfast just now! just before the bell rung."
+
+"I like a ride before breakfast," says Clive.
+
+"A ride! I know where you have been, sir! He goes away morning after
+morning, to that little Mr. Ridley's--his chums, papa, and he comes back
+with his hands all over horrid paint. He did this morning; you know you
+did, Clive."
+
+"I did not keep any one waiting, Rosa," says Clive. "I like to have two
+or three hours at my painting when I can spare time." Indeed, the poor
+fellow used so to run away of summer meetings for Ridley's instructions,
+and gallop home again, so as to be in time for the family meal.
+
+"Yes," cries Rosey, tossing up the cap and ribbons, "he gets up so
+early in the morning, that at night he falls asleep after dinner; very
+pleasant and polite, isn't he, papa?"
+
+"I am up betimes too, my dear," says the Colonel (many and many a time
+he must have heard Clive as he left the house); "I have a great many
+letters to write, affairs of the greatest importance to examine and
+conduct. Mr. Betts from the City is often with me for hours before I
+come down to your breakfast-table. A man who has the affairs of such
+a great bank as ours to look to, must be up with the lark. We are all
+early risers in India."
+
+"You dear kind papa!" says little Rosey, with unfeigned admiration; and
+she puts out one of the plump white little jewelled hands, and pats the
+lean brown paw of the Colonel which is nearest to her.
+
+"Is Ridley's picture getting on well, Clive?" asks the Colonel, trying
+to interest himself about Ridley and his picture.
+
+"Very well; it is beautiful; he has sold it for a great price; they must
+make him an Academician next year," replies Clive.
+
+"A most industrious and meritorious young man; he deserves every honour
+that may happen to him," says the old soldier. "Rosa, my dear, it is
+time that you should ask Mr. Ridley to dinner, and Mr. Smee, and some of
+those gentlemen. We will drive this afternoon and see your portrait."
+
+"Clive does not go to sleep after dinner when Mr. Ridley comes here,"
+cries Rosa.
+
+"No; I think it is my turn then," says the Colonel, with a glance of
+kindness. The anger has disappeared from under his brows; at that moment
+the menaced battle is postponed.
+
+"And yet I know that it must come," says poor Clive, telling me the
+story as he hangs on my arm, and we pace through the Park. "The Colonel
+and I are walking on a mine, and that poor little wife of mine is
+perpetually flinging little shells to fire it. I sometimes wish it were
+blown up, and I were done for, Pen. I don't think my widow would break
+her heart about me. No; I have no right to say that; it's a shame to say
+that; she tries her very best to please me, poor little dear. It's the
+fault of my temper, perhaps, that she can't. But they neither understand
+me, don't you see? the Colonel can't help thinking I am a degraded
+being, because I am fond of painting. Still, dear old boy, he patronises
+Ridley; a man of genius, whom those sentries ought to salute, by Jove,
+sir, when he passes. Ridley patronised by an old officer of Indian
+dragoons, a little bit of a Rosey, and a fellow who is not fit to lay
+his palette for him! I want sometimes to ask J. J.'s pardon, after the
+Colonel has been talking to him in his confounded condescending way,
+uttering some awful bosh about the fine arts. Rosey follows him, and
+trips round J. J.'s studio, and pretends to admire, and says, 'How soft;
+how sweet!' recalling some of mamma-in-law's dreadful expressions, which
+make me shudder when I hear them. If my poor old father had a confidant
+into whose arm he could hook his own, and whom he could pester with his
+family griefs as I do you, the dear old boy would have his dreary story
+to tell too. I hate banks, bankers, Bundelcund, indigo, cotton, and
+the whole business. I go to that confounded board, and never hear one
+syllable that the fellows are talking about. I sit there because he
+wishes me to sit there; don't you think he sees that my heart is out
+of the business; that I would rather be at home in my painting-room?
+We don't understand each other, but we feel each other, as it were
+by instinct. Each thinks in his own way, but knows what the other is
+thinking. We fight mute battles, don't you see, and, our thoughts,
+though we don't express them, are perceptible to one another, and come
+out from our eyes, or pass out from us somehow, and meet, and fight, and
+strike, and wound."
+
+Of course Clive's confidant saw how sore and unhappy the poor fellow
+was, and commiserated his fatal but natural condition. The little ills
+of life are the hardest to bear, as we all very well know. What would
+the possession of a hundred thousand a year, or fame, and the applause
+of one's countrymen, or the loveliest and best-beloved woman,--of
+any glory, and happiness, or good-fortune avail to a gentleman, for
+instance, who was allowed to enjoy them only with the condition of
+wearing a shoe with a couple of nails or sharp pebbles inside it? All
+fame and happiness would disappear, and plunge down that shoe. All life
+would rankle round those little nails. I strove, by such philosophic
+sedatives as confidants are wont to apply on these occasions, to soothe
+my poor friend's anger and pain; and I dare say the little nails hurt
+the patient just as much as before.
+
+Clive pursued his lugubrious talk through the Park, and continued it as
+far as the modest-furnished house which we then occupied in the Pimlico
+region. It so happened that the Colonel and Mrs. Clive also called upon
+us that day, and found this culprit in Laura's drawing-room, when they
+entered it, descending out of that splendid barouche in which we have
+already shown Mrs. Clive to the public.
+
+"He has not been here for months before; nor have you Rosa; nor have
+you, Colonel; though we have smothered our indignation, and been to dine
+with you, and to call, ever so many times!" cries Laura.
+
+The Colonel pleaded his business engagements; Rosa, that little woman of
+the world, had a thousand calls to make, and who knows how much to
+do? since she came out. She had been to fetch papa, at Bays's, and the
+porter had told the Colonel that Mr. Clive and Mr. Pendennis had just
+left the club together.
+
+"Clive scarcely ever drives with me," says Rosa; "papa almost always
+does."
+
+"Rosey's is such a swell carriage, that I feel ashamed," says Clive.
+
+"I don't understand you young men. I don't see why you need be ashamed
+to go on the Course with your wife in her carriage, Clive," remarks the
+Colonel.
+
+"The Course! the Course is at Calcutta, papa!" cries Rosey. "We drive in
+the Park."
+
+"We have a park at Barrackpore too, my dear," says papa.
+
+"And he calls his grooms saices! He said he was going to send away a
+saice for being tipsy, and I did not know in the least what he could
+mean, Laura!"
+
+"Mr. Newcome! you must go and drive on the Course with Rosa now; and the
+Colonel must sit and talk with me, whom he has not been to see for such
+a long time." Clive presently went off in state by Rosey's side, and
+then Laura showed Colonel Newcome his beautiful white Cashmere shawl
+round a successor of that little person who had first been wrapped in
+that web, now a stout young gentleman whose noise could be clearly heard
+in the upper regions.
+
+"I wish you could come down with us, Arthur, upon our electioneering
+visit."
+
+"That of which you were talking last night? Are you bent upon it?"
+
+"Yes, I am determined on it."
+
+Laura heard a child's cry at this moment, and left the room with a
+parting glance at her husband, who in fact had talked over the matter
+with Mrs. Pendennis, and agreed with her in opinion.
+
+As the Colonel had opened the question, I ventured to make a respectful
+remonstrance against the scheme. Vindictiveness on the part of a man
+so simple and generous, so fair and noble in all his dealings as Thomas
+Newcome, appeared in my mind unworthy of him. Surely his kinsman
+had sorrow and humiliation enough already at home. Barnes's further
+punishment, we thought, might be left to time, to remorse, to the Judge
+of right and wrong; Who better understands than we can do, our causes
+and temptations towards evil actions, Who reserves the sentence for His
+own tribunal. But when angered, the best of us mistake our own motives,
+as we do those of the enemy who inflames us. What may be private
+revenge, we take to be indignant virtue and just revolt against wrong.
+The Colonel would not hear of counsels of moderation, such as I bore him
+from a sweet Christian pleader. "Remorse!" he cried out with a laugh,
+"that villain will never feel it until he is tied up and whipped at the
+cart's tail! Time change that rogue! Unless he is wholesomely punished,
+he will grow a greater scoundrel every year. I am inclined to think,
+sir," says he, his honest brows darkling as he looked towards me,
+"that you too are spoiled by this wicked world, and these heartless,
+fashionable, fine people. You wish to live well with the enemy, and with
+us too, Pendennis. It can't be. He who is not with us is against us.
+I very much fear, sir, that the women, the women, you understand, have
+been talking you over. Do not let us speak any more about this subject,
+for I don't wish that my son, and my son's old friend, should have a
+quarrel." His face became red, his voice quivered with agitation, and he
+looked with glances which I was pained to behold in those kind old
+eyes: not because his wrath and suspicion visited myself, but because
+an impartial witness, nay, a friend to Thomas Newcome in that family
+quarrel, I grieved to think that a generous heart was led astray, and
+to see a good man do wrong. So with no more thanks for his interference
+than a man usually gets who meddles in domestic strifes, the present
+luckless advocate ceased pleading.
+
+To be sure, the Colonel and Clive had other advisers, who did not take
+the peaceful side. George Warrington was one of these; he was for war
+a l'outrance with Barnes Newcome; for keeping no terms with such a
+villain. He found a pleasure in hunting him, and whipping him. "Barnes
+ought to be punished," George said, "for his poor wife's misfortune; it
+was Barnes's infernal cruelty, wickedness, selfishness, which had driven
+her into misery and wrong." Mr. Warrington went down to Newcome, and
+was present at that lecture whereof mention has been made in a previous
+chapter. I am afraid his behaviour was very indecorous; he laughed at
+the pathetic allusions of the respected Member for Newcome; he sneered
+at the sublime passages; he wrote an awful critique in the Newcome
+Independent two days after, whereof the irony was so subtle, that half
+the readers of the paper mistook his grave scorn for respect, and his
+gibes for praise.
+
+Clive, his father, and Frederick Bayham, their faithful aide-de-camp,
+were at Newcome likewise when Sir Barnes's oration was delivered. At
+first it was given out at Newcome that the Colonel visited the place for
+the purpose of seeing his dear old friend and pensioner, Mrs. Mason, who
+was now not long to enjoy his bounty, and so old, as scarcely to know
+her benefactor. Only after her sleep, or when the sun warmed her and
+the old wine with which he supplied her, was the good old woman able to
+recognise her Colonel. She mingled father and son together in her mind.
+A lady who now often came in to her, thought she was wandering in her
+talk, when the poor old woman spoke of a visit she had had from her boy;
+and then the attendant told Miss Newcome that such a visit had actually
+taken place, and that but yesterday Clive and his father had been in
+that room, and occupied the chair where she sat. "The young lady was
+taken quite ill, and seemed ready to faint almost," Mrs. Mason's servant
+and spokeswoman told Colonel Newcome when that gentleman arrived shortly
+after Ethel's departure, to see his old nurse. "Indeed! he was very
+sorry." The maid told many stories about Miss Newcome's goodness and
+charity; how she was constantly visiting the poor now; how she was for
+ever engaged in good works for the young, the sick, and the aged. She
+had had a dreadful misfortune in love; she was going to be married to a
+young marquis; richer even than Prince de Moncontour down at Rosebury;
+but it was all broke off on account of that dreadful affair at the Hall.
+
+Was she very good to the poor? did she come often to see her
+grandfather's old friend? it was no more than she ought "to do," Colonel
+Newcome said; without, however, thinking fit to tell his informant that
+he had himself met his niece Ethel, five minutes before he had entered
+Mrs. Mason's door.
+
+The poor thing was in discourse with Mr. Harris, the surgeon, and
+talking (as best she might, for no doubt the news which she had just
+heard had agitated her), talking about blankets, and arrowroot, wine,
+and medicaments for her poor, when she saw her uncle coming towards her.
+She tottered a step or two forwards to meet him; held both her hands
+out, and called his name; but he looked her sternly in the face, took
+off his hat and bowed, and passed on. He did not think fit to mention
+the meeting even to his son, Clive; but we may be sure Mr. Harris, the
+surgeon, spoke of the circumstance that night after the lecture, at the
+club, where a crowd of gentlemen were gathered together, smoking
+their cigars, and enjoying themselves according to their custom, and
+discussing Sir Barnes Newcome's performance.
+
+According to established usage in such cases, our esteemed
+representative was received by the committee of the Newcome Athenaeum,
+assembled in their committee-room, and thence marshalled by the chairman
+and vice-chairman to his rostrum in the lecture-hall, round about which
+the magnates of the institution and the notabilities of the town were
+rallied on this public occasion. The Baronet came in some state from
+his own house, arriving at Newcome in his carriage with four horses,
+accompanied by my lady his mother, and Miss Ethel his beautiful sister,
+who now was mistress at the Hall. His little girl was brought--five
+years old now; she sate on her aunt's knee, and slept during a greater
+part of the performance. A fine bustle, we may be sure, was made on
+the introduction of these personages to their reserved seats on the
+platform, where they sate encompassed by others of the great ladies of
+Newcome, to whom they and the lecturer were especially gracious at this
+season. Was not Parliament about to be dissolved, and were not the folks
+at Newcome Park particularly civil at that interesting period? So
+Barnes Newcome mounts his pulpit, bows round to the crowded assembly
+in acknowledgment of their buzz of applause or recognition, passes his
+lily-white pocket-handkerchief across his thin lips, and dashes off into
+his lecture about Mrs. Hemans and the poetry of the affections. A public
+man, a commercial man as we well know, yet his heart is in his home, and
+his joy in his affections; the presence of this immense assembly here
+this evening; of the industrious capitalists; of the intelligent middle
+class; of the pride and mainstay of England, the operatives of Newcome;
+these, surrounded by their wives and their children (a graceful bow
+to the bonnets to the right of the platform), show that they too have
+hearts to feel, and homes to cherish; that they, too, feel the love of
+women, the innocence of children, the love of song! Our lecturer then
+makes a distinction between man's poetry and woman's poetry, charging
+considerably in favour of the latter. We show that to appeal to the
+affections is after all the true office of the bard; to decorate the
+homely threshold, to wreathe flowers round the domestic hearth, the
+delightful duty of the Christian singer. We glance at Mrs. Hemans's
+biography, and state where she was born, and under what circumstances
+she must have at first, etc. etc. Is this a correct account of Sir
+Barnes Newcome's lecture? I was not present, and did not read the
+report. Very likely the above may be a reminiscence of that mock lecture
+which Warrington delivered in anticipation of the Baronet's oration.
+
+After he had read for about five minutes, it was remarked the Baronet
+suddenly stopped and became exceedingly confused over his manuscript:
+betaking himself to his auxiliary glass of water before he resumed his
+discourse, which for a long time was languid, low, and disturbed in
+tone. This period of disturbance, no doubt, must have occurred when
+Sir Barnes saw before him F. Bayham and Warrington seated in the
+amphitheatre; and, by the side of those fierce scornful countenances,
+Clive Newcome's pale face.
+
+Clive Newcome was not looking at Barnes. His eyes were fixed upon the
+lady seated not far from the lecturer--upon Ethel, with her arm round
+her little niece's shoulder, and her thick black ringlets drooping down
+over a face paler than Clive's own.
+
+Of course she knew that Clive was present. She was aware of him as she
+entered the hall; saw him at the very first moment; saw nothing but
+him, I dare say, though her eyes were shut and her head was turned
+now towards her mother, and now bent down on the little niece's golden
+curls. And the past and its dear histories, and youth and its hopes and
+passions, and tones and looks for ever echoing in the heart, and present
+in the memory--these, no doubt, poor Clive saw and heard as he looked
+across the great gulf of time, and parting, and grief, and beheld
+the woman he had loved for many years. There she sits; the same, but
+changed: as gone from him as if she were dead; departed indeed into
+another sphere, and entered into a kind of death. If there is no love
+more in yonder heart, it is but a corpse unburied. Strew round it the
+flowers of youth. Wash it with tears of passion. Wrap it and envelop
+it with fond devotion. Break heart, and fling yourself on the bier, and
+kiss her cold lips and press her hand! It falls back dead on the cold
+breast again. The beautiful lips have never a blush or a smile. Cover
+them and lay them in the ground, and so take thy hatband off, good
+friend, and go to thy business. Do you suppose you are the only man who
+has had to attend such a funeral? You will find some men smiling and
+at work the day after. Some come to the grave now and again out of the
+world, and say a brief prayer, and a "God bless her!" With some men, she
+gone, and her viduous mansion your heart to let, her successor, the new
+occupant, poking in all the drawers and corners, and cupboards of the
+tenement, finds her miniature and some of her dusty old letters hidden
+away somewhere, and says--Was this the face he admired so? Why, allowing
+even for the painter's flattery, it is quite ordinary, and the eyes
+certainly do not look straight. Are these the letters you thought so
+charming? Well, upon my word, I never read anything more commonplace
+in my life! See, here's a line half blotted out. Oh, I suppose she
+was crying then--some of her tears, idle tears--Hark, there is Barnes
+Newcome's eloquence still plapping on like water from a cistern--and our
+thoughts, where have they wandered? far away from the lecture--as far
+away as Clive's almost. And now the fountain ceases to trickle; the
+mouth from which issued that cool and limpid flux ceases to smile; the
+figure is seen to bow and retire; a buzz, a hum, a whisper, a scuffle, a
+meeting of bonnets and wagging of feathers and rustling of silks ensues.
+"Thank you! delightful, I am sure!" "I really was quite overcome;"
+"Excellent;" "So much obliged," are rapid phrases heard amongst the
+polite on the platform. While down below, "Yaw! quite enough of that;"
+"Mary Jane, cover your throat up, and don't kitch cold, and don't push
+me, please, sir;" "Arry! coom along and ave a pint a ale," etc., are the
+remarks heard, or perhaps not heard, by Clive Newcome, as he watches at
+the private entrance of the Athenaeum, where Sir Barnes's carriage is
+waiting with its flaming lamps, and domestics in state liveries. One of
+them comes out of the building bearing the little girl in his arms, and
+lays her in the carriage. Then Sir Barnes, and Lady Anne, and the Mayor;
+then Ethel issues forth, and as she passes under the lamps, beholds
+Clive's face as pale and sad as her own.
+
+Shall we go visit the lodge-gates of Newcome Park the moon shining on
+their carving? Is there any pleasure in walking by miles of grey paling,
+and endless palisades of firs? Oh, you fool, what do you hope to see
+behind that curtain? Absurd fugitive, whither would you run? Can you
+burst the tether of fate: and is not poor dear little Rosey Mackenzie
+sitting yonder waiting for you by the stake? Go home, sir; and don't
+catch cold. So Mr. Clive returns to the King's Arms, and goes up to his
+bedroom, and he hears Mr. F. Bayham's deep voice as he passes by the
+Boscawen Room, where the Jolly Britons are as usual assembled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVII. Newcome and Liberty
+
+
+We have said that the Baronet's lecture was discussed in the midnight
+senate assembled at the King's Arms, where Mr. Tom Potts showed the
+orator no mercy. The senate of the King's Arms was hostile to Sir Barnes
+Newcome. Many other Newcomites besides were savage and inclined to
+revolt against the representative of their borough. As these patriots
+met over their cups, and over the bumper of friendship uttered the
+sentiments of freedom, they had often asked of one another, where should
+a man be found to rid Newcome of its dictator? Generous hearts writhed
+under the oppression: patriotic eyes scowled when Barnes Newcome went
+by: with fine satire, Tom Potts at Brown the hatter's shop, who made
+the hats for Sir Barnes Newcome's domestics, proposed to take one of the
+beavers--a gold-laced one with a cockade and a cord--and set it up in
+the market-place and bid all Newcome come bow to it, as to the hat of
+Gessler. "Don't you think, Potts," says F. Bayham, who of course was
+admitted into the King's Arms club, and ornamented that assembly by his
+presence and discourse, "Don't you think the Colonel would make a good
+William Tell to combat against that Gessler?" Ha! Proposal received with
+acclamation--eagerly adopted by Charles Tucker, Esq., Attorney-at-Law,
+who would not have the slightest objection to conduct Colonel Newcome's,
+or any other gentleman's electioneering business in Newcome or
+elsewhere.
+
+Like those three gentlemen in the plays and pictures of William Tell,
+who conspire under the moon, calling upon liberty and resolving to elect
+Tell as their especial champion--like Arnold, Melchthal, and Werner--Tom
+Potts, Fred Bayham, and Charles Tucker, Esqs., conspired round a
+punch-bowl, and determined that Thomas Newcome should be requested to
+free his country. A deputation from the electors of Newcome, that is
+to say, these very gentlemen waited on the Colonel in his apartment the
+very next morning, and set before him the state of the borough; Barnes
+Newcome's tyranny, under which it groaned; and the yearning of all
+honest men to be free from that usurpation. Thomas Newcome received the
+deputation with great solemnity and politeness, crossed his legs, folded
+his arms, smoked his cheroot, and listened moat decorously, as now
+Potts, now Tucker, expounded to him; Bayham giving the benefit of his
+emphatic "hear, hear," to their statements, and explaining dubious
+phrases to the Colonel in the most affable manner.
+
+Whatever the conspirators had to say against Barnes, Colonel Newcome was
+only too ready to believe. He had made up his mind that that criminal
+ought to be punished and exposed. The lawyer's covert innuendoes, who
+was ready to insinuate any amount of evil against Barnes which could
+safely be uttered, were by no means strong enough for Thomas Newcome.
+"'Sharp practice! exceedingly alive to his own interests--reported
+violence of temper and tenacity of money'--say swindling at once,
+sir--say falsehood and rapacity--say cruelty and avarice," cries the
+Colonel. "I believe, upon my honour and conscience, that unfortunate
+young man to be guilty of every one of those crimes."
+
+Mr. Bayham remarks to Mr. Potts that our friend the Colonel, when he
+does utter an opinion, takes care that there shall be no mistake about
+it.
+
+"And I took care there should be no mistake before I uttered it at all,
+Bayham!" cries F. B.'s patron. "As long as I was in any doubt about this
+young man, I gave the criminal the benefit of it, as a man who admires
+our glorious constitution should do, and kept my own counsel, sir."
+
+"At least," remarks Mr. Tucker, "enough is proven to show that Sir
+Barnes Newcome Newcome, Baronet, is scarce a fit person to represent
+this great borough in Parliament."
+
+"Represent Newcome in Parliament! It is a disgrace to that noble
+institution the English House of Commons, that Barnes Newcome should
+sit in it. A man whose word you cannot trust; a man stained with
+every private crime. What right has he to sit in the assembly of the
+legislators of the land, sir?" cries the Colonel, waving his hand as if
+addressing a chamber of deputies.
+
+"You are for upholding the House of Commons?" inquires the lawyer.
+
+"Of course, sir, of course."
+
+"And for increasing the franchise, Colonel Newcome, I should hope?"
+continues Mr. Tucker.
+
+"Every man who can read and write ought to have a vote, sir; that is my
+opinion!" cries the Colonel.
+
+"He's a Liberal to the backbone," says Potts to Tucker.
+
+"To the backbone!" responds Tucker to Potts. "The Colonel will do for
+us, Potts."
+
+"We want such a man, Tucker; the Independent has been crying out
+for such a man for years past. We ought to have a Liberal as second
+representative of this great town--not a sneaking half-and-half
+Ministerialist like Sir Barnes, a fellow with one leg in the Carlton and
+the other in Brookes's. Old Mr. Bunce we can't touch. His place is safe;
+he is a good man of business: we can't meddle with Mr. Bunce--I know
+that, who know the feeling of the country pretty well."
+
+"Pretty well! Better than any man in Newcome, Potts!" cries Mr. Tucker.
+
+"But a good man like the Colonel,--a good Liberal like the Colonel,--a
+man who goes in for household suffrage----"
+
+"Certainly, gentlemen."
+
+"And the general great Liberal principles--we know, of course--such
+a man would assuredly have a chance against Sir Barnes Newcome at the
+coming election! could we find such a man! a real friend of the people!"
+
+"I know a friend of the people if ever there was one," F. Bayham
+interposes.
+
+"A man of wealth, station, experience; a man who has fought for his
+country; a man who is beloved in this place as you are, Colonel Newcome:
+for your goodness is known, sir--You are not ashamed of your origin, and
+there is not a Newcomite old or young, but knows how admirably good you
+have been to your old friend, Mrs.--Mrs. What-d'-you-call'-em."
+
+"Mrs. Mason," from F. B.
+
+"Mrs. Mason. If such a man as you, sir, would consent to put himself in
+nomination at the next election, every true Liberal in this place
+would rush to support you; and crush the oligarchy who rides over the
+liberties of this borough!"
+
+"Something of this sort, gentlemen, I own to you had crossed my mind,"
+Thomas Newcome remarked. "When I saw that disgrace to my name, and the
+name of my father's birthplace, representing the borough in Parliament,
+I thought for the credit of the town and the family, the Member for
+Newcome at least might be an honest man. I am an old soldier; have
+passed all my life in India; and am little conversant with affairs at
+home" (cries of "You are, you are"). "I hoped that my son, Mr. Clive
+Newcome, might have been found qualified to contest this borough against
+his unworthy cousin, and possibly to sit as your representative in
+Parliament. The wealth I have had the good fortune to amass will descend
+to him naturally, and at no very distant period of time, for I am nearly
+seventy years of age, gentlemen."
+
+The gentlemen are astonished at this statement.
+
+"But," resumed the Colonel; "my son Clive, as my friend Bayham knows,
+and to my own regret and mortification, as I don't care to confess to
+you, declares he has no interest or desire in politics, or for public
+distinction--prefers his own pursuits--and even these I fear do not
+absorb him--declines the offer which I made him, to present himself in
+opposition to Sir Barnes Newcome. It becomes men in a certain station,
+as I think, to assert that station; and though a few years back I never
+should have thought of public life at all, and proposed to end my days
+in quiet as a retired dragoon officer, since--since it has pleased
+Heaven to increase very greatly my pecuniary means, to place me, as a
+director and manager of an important banking company, in a station of
+great public responsibility, I and my brother-directors have thought it
+but right that one of us should sit in Parliament, if possible, and I am
+not a man to shirk from that or from any other duty."
+
+"Colonel, will you attend a meeting of electors which we will call,
+and say as much to them and as well?" cries Mr. Potts. "Shall I put
+an announcement in my paper to the effect that you are ready to come
+forward?"
+
+"I am prepared to do so, my good sir."
+
+And presently this solemn palaver ended.
+
+Besides the critical article upon the Baronet's lecture, of which Mr.
+Warrington was the author, there appeared in the leading columns of
+the ensuing number of Mr. Potts' Independent, some remarks of a very
+smashing or hostile nature, against the Member for Newcome. "This
+gentleman has shown such talent in the lecturing business," the
+Independent said, "that it is a great pity he should not withdraw
+himself from politics, and cultivate what all Newcome knows are the arts
+which he understands best; namely, poetry and the domestic affections.
+The performance of our talented representative last night was so
+pathetic as to bring tears into the eyes of several of our fair friends.
+We have heard, but never believed until now, that Sir Barnes Newcome
+possessed such a genius for making women cry. Last week we had the
+talented Miss Noakes, from Slowcome, reading Milton to us; how far
+superior was the eloquence of Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, Bart., even
+to that of the celebrated jestress! Bets were freely offered in the room
+last night that Sir Barnes would beat any woman,--bets which were not
+taken, as we scarcely need say, so well do our citizens appreciate
+the character of our excellent, our admirable representative.--Let
+the Baronet stick to his lectures, and let Newcome relieve him of his
+political occupations. He is not fit for them, he is too sentimental
+a man for us; the men of Newcome want a sound practical person; the
+Liberals of Newcome have a desire to be represented. When we elected Sir
+Barnes, he talked liberally enough, and we thought he would do, but you
+see the honourable Baronet is so poetical! we ought to have known that,
+and not to have believed him. Let us have a straightforward gentleman.
+If not a man of words, at least let us have a practical man. If not a
+man of eloquence, one at any rate whose word we can trust, and we can't
+trust Sir Barnes Newcome's; we have tried him, and we can't really. Last
+night when the ladies were crying, we could not for the souls of us
+help laughing. We hope we know how to conduct ourselves as gentlemen.
+We trust we did not interrupt the harmony of the evening; but Sir Barnes
+Newcome, prating about children and virtue, and affection and poetry,
+this is really too strong.
+
+"The Independent, faithful to its name, and ever actuated by principles
+of honour, has been, as our thousands of readers know, disposed to give
+Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, Bart., a fair trial. When he came forward
+after his father's death, we believed in his pledges and promises, as
+a retrencher and reformer, and we stuck by him. Is there any man in
+Newcome, except, perhaps, our twaddling old contemporary the Sentinel,
+who believes in Sir B. N. any more? We say no, and we now give the
+readers of the Independent, and the electors of this borough, fair
+notice, that when the dissolution of Parliament takes place, a good man,
+a true man, a man of experience, no dangerous Radical, or brawling
+tap orator--Mr. Hicks's friends well understand whom we mean--but a
+gentleman of Liberal principles, well-won wealth, and deserved station
+and honour, will ask the electors of Newcome whether they are, or are
+not discontented with their present unworthy Member. The Independent for
+one, says, we know good men of your family, we know in it men who would
+do honour to any name; but you, Sir Barnes Newcome Newcome, Bart., we
+trust no more."
+
+In the electioneering matter, which had occasioned my unlucky
+interference, and that subsequent little coolness upon the good
+Colonel's part, Clive Newcome had himself shown that the scheme was not
+to his liking; had then submitted as his custom was: and doing so with
+a bad grace, as also was to be expected, had got little thanks for his
+obedience. Thomas Newcome was hurt at his son's faint-heartedness, and
+of course little Rosey was displeased at his hanging back. He set off in
+his father's train, a silent, unwilling partisan. Thomas Newcome had the
+leisure to survey Clive's glum face opposite to him during the whole of
+their journey, and to chew his mustachios, and brood upon his wrath and
+wrongs. His life had been a sacrifice for that boy! What darling schemes
+had he not formed in his behalf, and how superciliously did Clive meet
+his projects! The Colonel could not see the harm of which he had himself
+been the author. Had he not done everything in mortal's power for his
+son's happiness, and how many young men in England were there with such
+advantages as this moody, discontented, spoiled boy? As Clive backed out
+of the contest, of course his father urged it only the more vehemently.
+Clive slunk away from committees and canvassing, and lounged about the
+Newcome manufactories, whilst his father, with anger and bitterness in
+his heart, remained at the post of honour, as he called it, bent upon
+overcoming his enemy and carrying his point against Barnes Newcome. "If
+Paris will not fight, sir," the Colonel said, with a sad look following
+his son, "Priam must." Good old Priam believed his cause to be a
+perfectly just one, and that duty and his honour called upon him to draw
+the sword. So there was difference between Thomas Newcome and Clive his
+son. I protest it is with pain and reluctance I have to write that the
+good old man was in error--that there was a wrong-doer, and that Atticus
+was he.
+
+Atticus, be it remembered, thought himself compelled by the very best
+motives. Thomas Newcome, the Indian banker, was at war with Barnes, the
+English banker. The latter had commenced the hostilities by a sudden
+and cowardly act of treason. There were private wrongs to envenom the
+contest, but it was the mercantile quarrel on which the Colonel chose to
+set his declaration of war. Barnes's first dastardly blow had occasioned
+it, and his uncle was determined to carry it through. This I have said
+was also George Warrington's judgment, who, in the ensuing struggle
+between Sir Barnes and his uncle, acted as a very warm and efficient
+partisan of the latter. "Kinsmanship!" says George, "what has old Tom
+Newcome ever had from his kinsman but cowardice and treachery? If Barnes
+had held up his finger, the young one might have been happy; if he could
+have effected it, the Colonel and his bank would have been ruined. I
+am for war, and for seeing the old boy in Parliament. He knows no more
+about politics than I do about dancing the polka; but there are five
+hundred wiseacres in that assembly who know no more than he does, and an
+honest man taking his seat there, in place of a confounded little rogue,
+at least makes a change for the better."
+
+I dare say Thomas Newcome, Esq. would by no means have concurred in the
+above estimate of his political knowledge, and thought himself as well
+informed as another. He used to speak with the greatest gravity about
+our constitution as the pride and envy of the world, though he surprised
+you as much by the latitudinarian reforms, which he was eager to press
+forward, as by the most singular old Tory opinions which he advocated on
+other occasions. He was for having every man to vote; every poor man
+to labour short time and get high wages; every poor curate to be paid
+double or treble; every bishop to be docked of his salary, and dismissed
+from the House of Lords. But he was a staunch admirer of that assembly,
+and a supporter of the rights of the Crown. He was for sweeping off
+taxes from the poor, and as money must be raised to carry on government,
+he opined that the rich should pay. He uttered all these opinions with
+the greatest gravity and emphasis, before a large assembly of electors,
+and others convened in the Newcome Town Hall, amid the roars of applause
+of the non-electors, and the bewilderment and consternation of Mr.
+Potts, of the Independent, who had represented the Colonel in his paper
+as a safe and steady reformer. Of course the Sentinel showed him up as
+a most dangerous radical, a sepoy republican, and so forth, to the wrath
+and indignation of Colonel Newcome. He a republican! he scorned the
+name! He would die as he had bled many a time for his sovereign. He an
+enemy of our beloved Church! He esteemed and honoured it, as he hated
+and abhorred the superstitions of Rome. (Yells, from the Irish in
+the crowd.) He an enemy of the House of Lords! He held it to be the
+safeguard of the constitution and the legitimate prize of our most
+illustrious, naval, military, and--and--legal heroes (ironical cheers).
+He repelled with scorn the dastard attacks of the journal which
+had assailed him; he asked, laying his hands on his heart, if as a
+gentleman, an officer bearing Her Majesty's commission, he could be
+guilty of a desire to subvert her empire and to insult the dignity of
+her crown?
+
+After this second speech at the Town Hall, it was asserted by a
+considerable party in Newcome, that Old Tom (as the mob familiarly
+called him) was a Tory, while an equal number averred that he was a
+Radical. Mr. Potts tried to reconcile his statements, a work in which
+I should think the talented editor of the Independent had no little
+difficulty. "He knows nothing about it," poor Clive said with a sigh;
+"his politics are all sentiment and kindness; he will have the poor
+man paid double wages, and does not remember that the employer would be
+ruined: you have heard him, Pen, talking in this way at his own table,
+but when he comes out armed cap-a-pied, and careers against windmills
+in public, don't you see that as Don Quixote's son I had rather the dear
+brave old gentleman was at home?"
+
+So this faineant took but little part in the electioneering
+doings, holding moodily aloof from the meetings, and councils, and
+public-houses, where his father's partisans were assembled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVIII. A Letter and a Reconciliation
+
+
+Miss Ethel Newcome to Mrs. Pendennis:
+
+"Dearest Laura,--I have not written to you for many weeks past. There
+have been some things too trivial, and some too sad, to write about;
+some things I know I shall write of if I begin, and yet that I know I
+had best leave; for of what good is looking to the past now? Why vex you
+or myself by reverting to it? Does not every day bring its own duty and
+task, and are these not enough to occupy one? What a fright you must
+have had with my little goddaughter! Thank heaven she is well now, and
+restored to you. You and your husband I know do not think it essential,
+but I do, most essential, and am very grateful that she was taken to
+church before her illness.
+
+"Is Mr. Pendennis proceeding with his canvass? I try and avoid a certain
+subject, but it will come. You know who is canvassing against us here.
+My poor uncle has met with very considerable success amongst the lower
+classes. He makes them rambling speeches at which my brother and his
+friends laugh, but which the people applaud. I saw him only yesterday,
+on the balcony of the King's Arms, speaking to a great mob, who were
+cheering vociferously below. I had met him before. He would not even
+stop and give his Ethel of old days his hand. I would have given him I
+don't know what, for one kiss, for one kind word; but he passed on and
+would not answer me. He thinks me--what the world thinks me, worldly and
+heartless; what I was. But at least, dear Laura, you know that I
+always truly loved him, and do now, although he is our enemy, though he
+believes and utters the most cruel things against Barnes, though he
+says that Barnes Newcome, my father's son, my brother, Laura, is not
+an honest man. Hard, selfish, worldly, I own my poor brother to be, and
+pray Heaven to amend him; but dishonest! and to be so maligned by the
+person one loves best in the world! This is a hard trial. I pray a proud
+heart may be bettered by it.
+
+"And I have seen my cousin; once at a lecture which poor Barnes gave,
+and who seemed very much disturbed on perceiving Clive; once afterwards
+at good old Mrs. Mason's, whom I have always continued to visit for
+uncle's sake. The poor old woman, whose wits are very nearly gone, held
+both our hands, and asked when we were going to be married? and laughed,
+poor old thing! I cried out to her that Mr. Clive had a wife at home,
+a young dear wife, I said. He gave a dreadful sort of laugh, and turned
+away into the window. He looks terribly ill, pale, and oldened.
+
+"I asked him a great deal about his wife, whom I remember a very pretty,
+sweet-looking girl indeed, at my Aunt Hobson's, but with a not agreeable
+mother as I thought then. He answered me by monosyllables, appeared as
+though he would speak, and then became silent. I am pained, and yet glad
+that I saw him, I said, not very distinctly, I dare say, that I hoped
+the difference between Barnes and uncle would not extinguish his regard
+for mamma and me, who have always loved him; when I said loved him, he
+give one of his bitter laughs again; and so he did when I said I hoped
+his wife was well. You never would tell me much about Mrs. Newcome; and
+I fear she does not make my cousin happy. And yet this marriage was of
+my uncle's making: another of the unfortunate marriages in our family.
+I am glad that I paused in time, before the commission of that sin;
+I strive my best, and to amend my temper, my inexperience, my
+shortcomings, and try to be the mother of my poor brother's children.
+But Barnes has never forgiven me my refusal of Lord Farintosh. He is of
+the world still, Laura. Nor must we deal too harshly with people of his
+nature, who cannot perhaps comprehend a world beyond. I remember in old
+days, when we were travelling on the Rhine, in the happiest days of my
+whole life, I used to hear Clive and his friend Mr. Ridley, talk of art
+and of nature in a way that I could not understand at first, but came
+to comprehend better as my cousin taught me; and since then, I see
+pictures, landscapes, and flowers, with quite different eyes, and
+beautiful secrets as it were, of which I had no idea before. The secret
+of all secrets, the secret of the other life, and the better world
+beyond ours, may not this be unrevealed to some? I pray for them all,
+dearest Laura, for those nearest and dearest to me, that the truth may
+lighten their darkness, and Heaven's great mercy defend them in the
+perils and dangers of their night.
+
+"My boy at Sandhurst has done very well indeed; and Egbert, I am happy
+to say, thinks of taking orders; he has been very moderate at College.
+Not so Alfred; but the Guards are a sadly dangerous school for a young
+man; I have promised to pay his debts, and he is to exchange into the
+line. Mamma is coming to us at Christmas with Alice; my sister is very
+pretty indeed, I think, and I am rejoiced she is to marry young Mr.
+Mumford, who has a tolerable living, and who has been attached to her
+ever since he was a boy at Rugby School.
+
+"Little Barnes comes on bravely with his Latin; and Mr. Whitestock, a
+most excellent and valuable person in this place, where there is so much
+Romanism and Dissent, speaks highly of him. Little Clara is so like her
+unhappy mother in a thousand ways and actions, that I am shocked often;
+and see my brother starting back and turning his head away, as if
+suddenly wounded. I have heard the most deplorable accounts of Lord and
+Lady Highgate. Oh, dearest friend and sister!-save you, I think I scarce
+know any one that is happy in the world: I trust you may continue so-you
+who impart your goodness and kindness to all who come near you-you
+in whose sweet serene happiness I am thankful to be allowed to repose
+sometimes. You are the island in the desert, Laura! and the birds sing
+there, and the fountain flows; and we come and repose by you for a
+little while, and to-morrow the march begins again, and the toil, and
+the struggle, and the desert. Good-bye, fountain! Whisper kisses to my
+dearest little ones from their affectionate Aunt Ethel.
+
+"A friend of his, a Mr. Warrington, has spoken against us several times
+with extraordinary ability, as Barnes owns. Do you know Mr. W.? He wrote
+a dreadful article in the Independent, about the last poor lecture,
+which was indeed sad, sentimental, commonplace: and the critique is
+terribly comical. I could not help laughing, remembering some passages
+in it, when Barnes mentioned it: and my brother became so angry! They
+have put up a dreadful caricature of B. in Newcome: and my brother says
+he did it, but I hope not. It is very droll, though: he used to make
+them very funnily. I am glad he has spirits for it. Good-bye again.--E.
+N."
+
+
+"He says he did it!" cries Mr. Pendennis, laying the letter down.
+"Barnes Newcome would scarcely caricature himself, my dear?"
+
+"'He' often means--means Clive--I think," says Mrs. Pendennis, in an
+offhand manner.
+
+"Oh! he means Clive, does he, Laura?"
+
+"Yes--and you mean goose, Mr. Pendennis!" that saucy lady replies.
+
+It must have been about the very time when this letter was written, that
+a critical conversation occurred between Clive and his father, of which
+the lad did not inform me until much later days; as was the case--the
+reader has been more than once begged to believe--with many other
+portions of this biography.
+
+One night the Colonel, having come home from a round of electioneering
+visits, not half satisfied with himself; exceedingly annoyed (much more
+than he cared to own) with the impudence of some rude fellows at the
+public-houses, who had interrupted his fine speeches with odious
+hiccups and familiar jeers, was seated brooding over his cheroot by
+the chimney-fire; friend F. B. (of whose companionship his patron was
+occasionally tired) finding much better amusement with the Jolly Britons
+in the Boscawen Room below. The Colonel, as an electioneering business,
+had made his appearance in the club. But that ancient Roman warrior had
+frightened those simple Britons. His manners were too awful for them: so
+were Clive's, who visited them also under Mr. Pott's introduction; but
+the two gentlemen, each being full of care and personal annoyance at
+the time, acted like wet blankets upon the Britons--whereas F. B. warmed
+them and cheered them, affably partook of their meals with them, and
+graciously shared their cups. So the Colonel was alone, listening to the
+far-off roar of the Britons' choruses by an expiring fire, as he sate by
+a glass of cold negus and the ashes of his cigar.
+
+I dare say he may have been thinking that his fire was well-nigh
+out,--his cup of the dregs, his pipe little more now than dust and
+ashes--when Clive, candle in hand, came into their sitting-room.
+
+As each saw the other's face, it was so very sad and worn and pale, that
+the young man started back; and the elder, with quite the tenderness of
+old days, cried, "God bless me, my boy, how ill you look! Come and warm
+yourself--look, the fire's out. Have something, Clivy!"
+
+For months past they had not had a really kind word. The tender old
+voice smote upon Clive, and he burst into sudden tears. They rained upon
+his father's trembling old brown hand, and stooped down and kissed it.
+
+"You look very ill too, father," says Clive.
+
+"Ill? not I!" cries the father, still keeping the boy's hand under both
+his own on the mantelpiece. "Such a battered old fellow as I am has
+a right to look the worse for wear; but you, boy; why do you look so
+pale?"
+
+"I have seen a ghost, father," Clive answered. Thomas, however, looked
+alarmed and inquisitive as though the boy was wandering in his mind.
+
+"The ghost of my youth, father, the ghost of my happiness, and the best
+days of my life," groaned out the young man. "I saw Ethel to-day. I went
+to see Sarah Mason, and she was there."
+
+"I had seen her, but I did not speak of her," said the father. "I thought
+it was best not to mention her to you, my poor boy. And are--are you
+fond of her still, Clive?"
+
+"Still! once means always in these things, father, doesn't it? Once
+means to-day, and yesterday, and forever and ever."
+
+"Nay, my boy, you mustn't talk to me so, or even to yourself so. You
+have the dearest little wife at home, a dear little wife and child."
+
+"You had a son, and have been kind enough to him, God knows. You had a
+wife: but that doesn't prevent other--other thoughts. Do you know you
+never spoke twice in your life about my mother? You didn't care for
+her."
+
+"I--I did my duty by her; I denied her nothing. I scarcely ever had
+a word with her, and I did my best to make her happy," interposed the
+Colonel.
+
+"I know, but your heart was with the other. So is mine. It's fatal; it
+runs in the family, father."
+
+The boy looked so ineffably wretched that the father's heart melted
+still more. "I did my best, Clive," the Colonel gasped out. "I went to
+that villain Barnes and offered him to settle every shilling I was worth
+on you--I did--you didn't know that--I'd kill myself for your sake,
+Clivy. What's an old fellow worth living for? I can live upon a crust
+and a cigar. I don't care about a carriage, and only go in it to please
+Rosey. I wanted to give up all for you, but he played me false, that
+scoundrel cheated us both; he did, and so did Ethel."
+
+"No, sir; I may have thought so in my rage once, but I know better now.
+She was the victim and not the agent. Did Madame de Florac play you
+false when she married her husband? It was her fate, and she underwent
+it. We all bow to it, we are in the track and the car passes over us.
+You know it does, father." The Colonel was a fatalist: he had often
+advanced this Oriental creed in his simple discourses with his son and
+Clive's friends.
+
+"Besides," Clive went on, "Ethel does not care for me. She received me
+to-day quite coldly, and held her hand out as if we had only parted last
+year. I suppose she likes that marquis who jilted her--God bless her!
+How shall we know what wins the hearts of women? She has mine. There was
+my Fate. Praise be to Allah! It is over."
+
+"But there's that villain who injured you. His isn't over yet," cried
+the Colonel, clenching his trembling hand.
+
+"Ah, father! Let us leave him to Allah too! Suppose Madame de Florac
+had a brother who insulted you. You know you wouldn't have revenged
+yourself. You would have wounded her in striking him."
+
+"You called out Barnes yourself, boy," cried the father.
+
+"That was for another cause, and not for my quarrel. And how do you know
+I intended to fire? By Jove, I was so miserable then that an ounce of
+lead would have done me little harm!"
+
+The father saw the son's mind more clearly than he had ever done
+hitherto. They had scarcely ever talked upon that subject which the
+Colonel found was so deeply fixed in Clive's heart. He thought of his
+own early days, and how he had suffered, and beheld his son before him
+racked with the same cruel pangs of enduring grief. And he began to
+own that he had pressed him too hastily in his marriage; and to make an
+allowance for an unhappiness of which he had in part been the cause.
+
+"Mashallah! Clive, my boy," said the old man, "what is done is done."
+
+"Let us break up our camp before this place, and not go to war with
+Barnes, father," said Clive. "Let us have peace--and forgive him if we
+can."
+
+"And retreat before this scoundrel, Clive?"
+
+"What is a victory over such a fellow? One gives a chimney-sweep the
+wall, father."
+
+"I say again--What is done is done. I have promised to meet him at the
+hustings, and I will. I think it is best: and you are right: and you act
+like a high-minded gentleman--and my dear old boy--not to meddle in the
+quarrel--though I didn't think so--and the difference gave me a great
+deal of pain--and so did what Pendennis said--and I'm wrong--and thank
+God I am wrong--and God bless you, my own boy!" the Colonel cried out
+in a burst of emotion; and the two went to their bedrooms together,
+and were happier as they shook hands at the doors of their adjoining
+chambers than they had been for many a long day and year.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIX. The Election
+
+
+Having thus given his challenge, reconnoitred the enemy, and pledged
+himself to do battle at the ensuing election, our Colonel took leave of
+the town of Newcome, and returned to his banking affairs in London. His
+departure was as that of a great public personage; the gentlemen of the
+Committee followed him obsequiously down to the train. "Quick," bawls
+out Mr. Potts to Mr. Brown, the station-master, "Quick, Mr. Brown, a
+carriage for Colonel Newcome!" Half a dozen hats are taken off as he
+enters into the carriage, F. Bayham and his servant after him, with
+portfolios, umbrellas, shawls, despatch-boxes. Clive was not there to
+act as his father's aide-de-camp. After their conversation together the
+young man had returned to Mrs. Clive and his other duties in life.
+
+It has been said that Mr. Pendennis was in the country, engaged in a
+pursuit exactly similar to that which occupied Colonel Newcome. The
+menaced dissolution of Parliament did not take place so soon as we
+expected. The Ministry still hung together, and by consequence, Sir
+Barnes Newcome kept the seat in the House of Commons, from which his
+elder kinsman was eager to oust him. Away from London, and having but
+few correspondents, save on affairs of business, I heard little of Clive
+and the Colonel, save an occasional puff of one of Colonel Newcome's
+entertainments in the Pall Mall Gazette, to which journal F. Bayham
+still condescended to contribute; and a satisfactory announcement in a
+certain part of that paper, that on such a day, in Hyde Park Gardens,
+Mrs. Clive Newcome had presented her husband with a son. Clive wrote
+to me presently, to inform me of the circumstance, stating at the
+same time, with but moderate gratification on his own part, that the
+Campaigner, Mrs. Newcome's mamma, had upon this second occasion made
+a second lodgment in her daughter's house and bedchamber, and showed
+herself affably disposed to forget the little unpleasantries which had
+clouded over the sunshine of her former visit.
+
+Laura, with a smile of some humour, said she thought now would be the
+time when, if Clive could be spared from his bank, he might pay us that
+visit at Fairoaks which had been due so long, and hinted that change of
+air and a temporary absence from Mrs. Mackenzie might be agreeable to my
+old friend.
+
+It was, on the contrary, Mr. Pendennis's opinion that his wife artfully
+chose that period of time when little Rosey was, perforce, kept at home
+and occupied with her delightful maternal duties, to invite Clive to see
+us. Mrs. Laura frankly owned that she liked our Clive better without his
+wife than with her, and never ceased to regret that pretty Rosey had not
+bestowed her little hand upon Captain Hoby, as she had been very well
+disposed at one time to do. Against all marriages of interest this
+sentimental Laura never failed to utter indignant protests; and Clive's
+had been a marriage of interest, a marriage made up by the old people,
+a marriage which the young man had only yielded out of good-nature and
+obedience. She would apostrophise her unconscious young ones, and inform
+those innocent babies that they should never be made to marry except
+for love, never--an announcement which was received with perfect
+indifference by little Arthur on his rocking-horse, and little Helen
+smiling and crowing in her mother's lap.
+
+So Clive came down to us, careworn in appearance, but very pleased and
+happy, he said, to stay for a while with the friends of his youth. We
+showed him our modest rural lions; we got him such sport and company as
+our quiet neighbourhood afforded, we gave him fishing in the Brawl, and
+Laura in her pony-chaise drove him to Baymouth, and to Clavering Park
+and town, and visit the famous cathedral at Chatteris, where she was
+pleased to recount certain incidents of her husband's youth.
+
+Clive laughed at my wife's stories; he pleased himself in our home; he
+played with our children, with whom he had became a great favourite; he
+was happier, he told me with a sigh, than he had been for many a day.
+His gentle hostess echoed the sigh of the poor young fellow. She was
+sure that his pleasure was only transitory, and was convinced that many
+deep cares weighed upon his mind.
+
+Ere long my old schoolfellow made me sundry confessions, which showed
+that Laura's surmises were correct. About his domestic affairs he did
+not treat much; the little boy was said to be a very fine little boy;
+the ladies had taken entire possession of him. "I can't stand Mrs.
+Mackenzie any longer, I own," says Clive; "but how resist a wife at such
+a moment? Rosa was sure she would die, unless her mother came to her,
+and of course we invited Mrs. Mack. This time she is all smiles and
+politeness with the Colonel: the last quarrel is laid upon me, and in
+so far I am easy, as the old folks get on pretty well together." To me,
+considering these things, it was clear that Mr. Clive Newcome was but a
+very secondary personage indeed in his father's new fine house which
+he inhabited, and in which the poor Colonel had hoped they were to live
+such a happy family.
+
+But it was about Clive Newcome's pecuniary affairs that I felt the most
+disquiet when he came to explain these to me. The Colonel's capital and
+that considerable sum which Mrs. Clive had inherited from her good old
+uncle, were all involved in a common stock, of which Colonel Newcome
+took the management. "The governor understands business so well, you
+see," says Clive; "is a most remarkable head for accounts: he must have
+inherited that from my grandfather, you know, who made his own fortune:
+all the Newcomes are good at accounts, except me, a poor useless devil
+who knows nothing but to paint a picture, and who can't even do
+that." He cuts off the head of a thistle as he speaks, bites his
+tawny mustachios, plunges his hands into his pockets and his soul into
+reverie.
+
+"You don't mean to say," asks Mr. Pendennis, "that your wife's fortune
+has not been settled upon herself?"
+
+"Of course it has been settled upon herself; that is, it is entirely her
+own--you know the Colonel has managed all the business, he understands
+it better than we do."
+
+"Do you say that your wife's money is not vested in the hands of
+trustees, and for her benefit?"
+
+"My father is one of the trustees. I tell you he manages the whole
+thing. What is his property is mine and ever has been; and I might draw
+upon him as much as I liked: and you know it's five times as great as
+my wife's. What is his is ours, and what is ours is his, of course; for
+instance, the India Stock, which poor Uncle James left, that now stands
+in the Colonel's name. He wants to be a Director: he will be at the
+next election--he must have a certain quantity of India Stock, don't you
+see?"
+
+"My dear fellow, is there then no settlement made upon your wife at
+all?"
+
+"You needn't look so frightened," says Clive. "I made a settlement on
+her: with all my worldly goods I did her endow three thousand three
+hundred and thirty-three pounds six and eightpence, which my father sent
+over from India to my uncle, years ago, when I came home."
+
+I might well indeed be aghast at this news, and had yet further
+intelligence from Clive, which by no means contributed to lessen my
+anxiety. This worthy old Colonel, who fancied himself to be so clever a
+man of business, chose to conduct it in utter ignorance and defiance of
+law. If anything happened to the Bundelcund Bank, it was clear that not
+only every shilling of his own property, but every farthing bequeathed
+to Rosa Mackenzie would be lost; only his retiring pension, which was
+luckily considerable, and the hundred pounds a year which Clive had
+settled on his wife, would be saved out of the ruin.
+
+And now Clive confided to me his own serious doubts and misgivings
+regarding the prosperity of the Bank itself. He did not know why, but he
+could not help fancying that things were going wrong. Those partners
+who had come home, having sold out of the Bank, and living in England so
+splendidly, why had they quitted it? The Colonel said it was a proof of
+the prosperity of the company, that so many gentlemen were enriched who
+had taken shares in it. "But when I asked my father," Clive continued,
+"why he did not himself withdraw, the dear old Colonel's countenance
+fell: he told me such things were not to be done every day; and ended,
+as usual, by saying that I do not understand anything about business. No
+more I do: that is the truth. I hate the whole concern, Pen! I hate
+that great tawdry house in which we live; and those fearfully stupid
+parties:--Oh, how I wish we were back in Fitzroy Square! But who can
+recall bygones, Arthur; or wrong steps in life? We must make the best of
+to-day, and to-morrow must take care of itself. 'Poor little child!' I
+could not help thinking, as I took it crying in my arms the other day,
+'what has life in store for you, my poor weeping baby?' My mother-in-law
+cried out that I should drop the baby, and that only the Colonel knew
+how to hold it. My wife called from her bed; the nurse dashed up and
+scolded me; and they drove me out of the room amongst them. By Jove,
+Pen, I laugh when some of my friends congratulate me on my good fortune!
+I am not quite the father of my own child, nor the husband of my own
+wife, nor even the master of my own easel. I am managed for, don't you
+see? boarded, lodged, and done for. And here is the man they call happy.
+Happy! Oh!!! Why had I not your strength of mind; and why did I ever
+leave my art, my mistress?"
+
+And herewith the poor lad fell to chopping thistles again; and quitted
+Fairoaks shortly, leaving his friends there very much disquieted about
+his prospects, actual and future.
+
+The expected dissolution of Parliament came at length. All the country
+papers in England teemed with electioneering addresses; and the country
+was in a flutter with particoloured ribbons. Colonel Thomas Newcome,
+pursuant to his promise, offered himself to the independent electors
+of Newcome in the Liberal journal of the family town, whilst Sir Barnes
+Newcome, Bart., addressed himself to his old and tried friends, and
+called upon the friends of the constitution to rally round him, in
+the Conservative print. The addresses of our friend were sent to us
+at Fairoaks by the Colonel's indefatigable aide-de-camp, Mr. Frederick
+Bayham. During the period which had elapsed since the Colonel's last
+canvassing visit and the issuing of the writs now daily expected for the
+new Parliament, many things of great importance had occurred in Thomas
+Newcome's family--events which were kept secret from his biographer, who
+was, at this period also, pretty entirely occupied with his own affairs.
+These, however, are not the present subject of this history, which has
+Newcome for its business, and the parties engaged in the family quarrel
+there.
+
+There were four candidates in the field for the representation of
+that borough. That old and tried member of Parliament, Mr. Bunce, was
+considered to be secure; and the Baronet's seat was thought to be pretty
+safe on account of his influence in the place. Nevertheless, Thomas
+Newcome's supporters were confident for their champion, and that when
+the parties came to the poll, the extreme Liberals of the borough
+would divide their votes between him and the fourth candidate, the
+uncompromising Radical, Mr. Barker.
+
+In due time the Colonel and his staff arrived at Newcome, and resumed
+the active canvass which they had commenced some months previously.
+Clive was not in his father's suite this time, nor Mr. Warrington,
+whose engagements took him elsewhere. The lawyer, the editor of the
+Independent, and F. B., were the Colonel's chief men. His headquarters
+(which F. B. liked very well) were at the hotel where we last saw him,
+and whence issuing with his aide-de-camp at his heels, the Colonel went
+round to canvass personally, according to his promise, every free and
+independent elector of the borough. Barnes too was canvassing eagerly on
+his side, and was most affable and active; the two parties would often
+meet nose to nose in the same street, and their retainers exchange looks
+of defiance. With Mr. Potts of the Independent, a big man, on his left;
+with Mr. Frederick, a still bigger man, on his right; his own trusty
+bamboo cane in his hand, before which poor Barnes had shrunk abashed ere
+now, Colonel Newcome had commonly the best of these street encounters,
+and frowned his nephew Barnes, and Barnes's staff, off the pavement.
+With the non-electors the Colonel was a decided favourite; the boys
+invariably hurrayed him; whereas they jeered and uttered ironical cries
+after poor Barnes, asking, "Who beat his wife? Who drove his children to
+the workhouse?" and other unkind personal questions. The man upon whom
+the libertine Barnes had inflicted so cruel an injury in his early days,
+was now the Baronet's bitterest enemy. He assailed him with curses and
+threats when they met, and leagued his brother-workmen against him. The
+wretched Sir Barnes owned with contrition that the sins of his youth
+pursued him; his enemy scoffed at the idea of Barnes's repentance;
+he was not moved at the grief, the punishment in his own family, the
+humiliation and remorse which the repentant prodigal piteously pleaded.
+No man was louder in his cries of mea culpa than Barnes: no man
+professed a more edifying repentance. He was hat in hand to every
+black-coat, established or dissenting. Repentance was to his interest,
+to be sure, but yet let us hope it was sincere. There is some hypocrisy,
+of which one does not like even to entertain the thought; especially
+that awful falsehood which trades with divine truth, and takes the name
+of Heaven in vain.
+
+The Roebuck Inn at Newcome stands in the market-place, directly facing
+the King's Arms, where, as we know, Colonel Newcome and uncompromising
+toleration held their headquarters. Immense banners of blue and yellow
+floated from every window of the King's Arms, and decorated the
+balcony from which the Colonel and the assistants were in the habit
+of addressing the multitude. Fiddlers and trumpeters, arrayed in his
+colours, paraded the town and enlivened it with their melodious strains.
+Other trumpeters and fiddlers, bearing the true-blue cockades and
+colours of Sir Barnes Newcome, Bart., would encounter the Colonel's
+musicians, on which occasions of meeting, it is to be feared, small
+harmony was produced. They banged each other with their brazen
+instruments. The warlike drummers thumped each other's heads in lieu of
+the professional sheepskin. The townboys and street-blackguards rejoiced
+in these combats, and exhibited their valour on one side or the other.
+The Colonel had to pay a long bill for broken brass when he settled the
+little accounts of the election.
+
+In after times, F. B. was pleased to describe the circumstances of
+a contest in which he bore a most distinguished part. It was F. B.'s
+opinion that his private eloquence brought over many waverers to the
+Colonel's side, and converted numbers of the benighted followers of
+Sir Barnes Newcome. Bayham's voice was indeed magnificent, and could
+be heard from the King's Arm's balcony above the shout and roar of the
+multitude, the gongs and bugles of the opposition bands. He was untiring
+in his oratory--undaunted in the presence of the crowds below. He was
+immensely popular, F. B. Whether he laid his hand upon his broad chest,
+took off his hat and waved it, or pressed his blue and yellow ribbons to
+his bosom, the crowd shouted, "Hurra: silence! bravo! Bayham for ever!"
+"They would have carried me in triumph," said F. B.; "if I had but the
+necessary qualification I might be member for Newcome this day or any
+other I chose."
+
+I am afraid in this conduct of the Colonel's election Mr. Bayham
+resorted to acts of which his principal certainly would disapprove, and
+engaged auxiliaries whose alliance was scarcely creditable. Whose was
+the hand which flung the potato which struck Sir Barnes Newcome, Bart.,
+on the nose as he was haranguing the people from the Roebuck? How came
+it that whenever Sir Barnes and his friends essayed to speak, such an
+awful yelling and groaning took place in the crowd below, that the
+words of those feeble orators were inaudible? Who smashed all the front
+windows of the Roebuck? Colonel Newcome had not words to express his
+indignation at proceedings so unfair. When Sir Barnes and staff were
+hustled in the market-place and most outrageously shoved, jeered, and
+jolted, the Colonel from the King's Arms organised a rapid sally, which
+he himself headed with his bamboo cane; cut out Sir Barnes and his
+followers from the hands of the mob, and addressed those ruffians in a
+noble speech, of which bamboo-cane--Englishman--shame--fair-play, were
+the most emphatic expressions. The mob cheered Old Tom as they called
+him--they made way for Sir Barnes, who shrunk pale and shuddering back
+into his hotel again--who always persisted in saying that that old
+villain of a dragoon had planned both the assault and the rescue.
+
+"When the dregs of the people--the scum of the rabble, sir, banded
+together by the myrmidons of Sir Barnes Newcome, attacked us at the
+King's Arms, and smashed ninety-six pounds' worth of glass at one
+volley, besides knocking off the gold unicorn head and the tail of the
+British lion; it was fine, sir," F. B. said, "to see how the Colonel
+came forward, and the coolness of the old boy in the midst of the
+action. He stood there in front, sir, with his old hat off, never so
+much as once bobbing his old head, and I think he spoke rather better
+under fire than he did when there was no danger. Between ourselves, he
+ain't much of a speaker, the old Colonel; he hems and haws, and repeats
+himself a good deal. He hasn't the gift of natural eloquence which
+some men have, Pendennis. You should have heard my speech, sir, on the
+Thursday in the Town Hall--that was something like a speech. Potts was
+jealous of it, and always reported me most shamefully."
+
+In spite of his respectful behaviour to the gentlemen in black coats,
+his soup-tickets and his flannel-tickets, his own pathetic lectures and
+his sedulous attendance at other folk's sermons, poor Barnes could
+not keep up his credit with the serious interest at Newcome, and the
+meeting-houses and their respective pastors and frequenters turned their
+backs upon him. The case against him was too flagrant: his enemy,
+the factory-man, worked it with an extraordinary skill, malice, and
+pertinacity. Not a single man, woman, or child in Newcome but was made
+acquainted with Sir Barnes's early peccadillo. Ribald ballads were
+howled through the streets describing his sin, and his deserved
+punishment. For very shame, the reverend dissenting gentlemen were
+obliged to refrain from voting for him; such as ventured, believing in
+the sincerity of his repentance, to give him their voices, were yelled
+away from the polling-places. A very great number who would have been
+his friends, were compelled to bow to decency and public opinion, and
+supported the Colonel.
+
+Hooted away from the hustings, and the public places whence the rival
+candidates addressed the free and independent electors, this wretched
+and persecuted Sir Barnes invited his friends and supporters to meet him
+at the Athenaeum Room--scene of his previous eloquent performances. But,
+though this apartment was defended by tickets, the people burst into
+it; and Nemesis, in the shape of the persevering factory-man, appeared
+before the scared Sir Barnes and his puzzled committee. The man stood
+up and bearded the pale Baronet. He had a good cause, and was in truth
+a far better master of debate than our banking friend, being a great
+speaker amongst his brother-operatives, by whom political questions are
+discussed, and the conduct of political men examined, with a ceaseless
+interest and with an ardour and eloquence which are often unknown in
+what is called superior society. This man and his friends round about
+him fiercely silenced the clamour of "Turn him out," with which his
+first appearance was assailed by Sir Barnes's hangers-on. He said, in
+the name of justice he would speak up; if they were fathers of families
+and loved their wives and daughters he dared them to refuse him a
+hearing. Did they love their wives and their children? it was a shame
+that they should take such a man as that yonder for their representative
+in Parliament. But the greatest sensation he made was when, in the
+middle of his speech, after inveighing against Barnes's cruelty and
+parental ingratitude, he asked, "Where were Barnes's children?" and
+actually thrust forward two, to the amazement of the committee and the
+ghastly astonishment of the guilty Baronet himself.
+
+"Look at them," says the man: "they are almost in rags, they have to
+put up with scanty and hard food; contrast them with his other children,
+whom you see lording in gilt carriages, robed in purple and fine linen,
+and scattering mud from their wheels over us humble people as we walk
+the streets; ignorance and starvation is good enough for these,
+for those others nothing can be too fine or too dear. What can
+a factory-girl expect from such a fine, high-bred, white-handed,
+aristocratic gentleman as Sir Barnes Newcome, Baronet, but to be
+cajoled, and seduced, and deserted, and left to starve! When she has
+served my lord's pleasure, her natural fate is to be turned into the
+street; let her go and rot there and her children beg in the gutter.
+
+"This is the most shameful imposture," gasps out Sir Barnes, "these
+children are not--are not----"
+
+The man interrupted him with a bitter laugh. "No," he says; "they are
+not his; that's true enough, friends. Its Tom Martin's girl and boy, a
+precious pair of lazy little scamps. But, at least he thought they
+were his children. See how much he knows about them! He hasn't seen his
+children for years; he would have left them and their mother to starve,
+and did, but for shame and fear. The old man, his father, pensioned
+them, and he hasn't the heart to stop their wages now. Men of Newcome,
+will you have this man to represent you in Parliament?" And the crowd
+roared "No;" and Barnes and his shamefaced committee slunk out of the
+place, and no wonder the dissenting clerical gentlemen were shy of
+voting for him.
+
+A brilliant and picturesque diversion in Colonel Newcome's favour was
+due to the inventive genius of his faithful aide-de-camp, F. B. On
+the polling-day, as the carriages full of voters came up to the
+market-place, there appeared nigh to the booths an open barouche,
+covered all over with ribbon, and containing Frederick Bayham, Esq.,
+profusely decorated with the Colonel's colours, and a very old woman
+and her female attendant, who were similarly ornamented. It was good old
+Mrs. Mason, who was pleased with the drive and the sunshine, though she
+scarcely understood the meaning of the turmoil, with her maid by her
+side, delighted to wear such ribbons, and sit in such a post of honour.
+Rising up in the carriage, F. B. took off his hat, bade his men of brass
+be silent, who were accustomed to bray "See the Conquering Hero come,"
+whenever the Colonel, or Mr. Bayham, his brilliant aide-de-camp, made
+their appearance;--bidding, we say, the musicians and the universe to be
+silent, F. B. rose, and made the citizens of Newcome a splendid speech.
+Good old unconscious Mrs. Mason was the theme of it, and the Colonel's
+virtues and faithful gratitude in tending her. "She was his father's old
+friend. She was Sir Barnes Newcome's grandfather's old friend. She had
+lived for more than forty years at Sir Barnes Newcome's door, and how
+often had he been to see her? Did he go every week? No. Every month?
+No. Every year? No. Never in the whole course of his life had he set his
+foot into her doors!" (Loud yells, and cries of 'Shame!') "Never had he
+done her one single act of kindness. Whereas for years and years past,
+when he was away in India, heroically fighting the battles of
+his country, when he was distinguishing himself at Assaye,
+and--and--Mulligatawny, and Seringapatam, in the hottest of the fight
+and the fiercest of the danger, in the most terrible moment of the
+conflict, and the crowning glory of the victory, the good, the brave,
+the kind old Colonel,--why should he say Colonel? why should he not say
+Old Tom at once?" (immense roars of applause) "always remembered his
+dear old nurse and friend. Look at that shawl, boys, which she has got
+on! My belief is that Colonel Newcome took that shawl in single combat,
+and on horseback, from the prime minister of Tippoo Sahib." (Immense
+cheers and cries of 'Bravo, Bayham!') "Look at that brooch the dear old
+thing wears!" (he kissed her hand whilst so apostrophising her). "Tom
+Newcome never brags about his military achievements, he is the most
+modest as well as the bravest man in the world. What if I were to tell
+you that he cut that brooch from the throat of an Indian rajah? He's man
+enough to do it." ('He is! he is!' from all parts of the crowd.) "What,
+you want to take the horses out, do you?" (to the crowd, who were
+removing those quadrupeds). "I ain't agoing to prevent you; I expected
+as much of you. Men of Newcome, I expected as much of you, for I know
+you! Sit still, old lady; don't be frightened, ma'am: they are only
+going to pull you to the King's Arms, and show you to the Colonel."
+
+This, indeed, was the direction in which the mob (whether inflamed by
+spontaneous enthusiasm, or excited by cunning agents placed amongst the
+populace by F. B., I cannot say), now took the barouche and its three
+occupants. With a myriad roar and shout the carriage was dragged up
+in front of the King's Arms, from the balconies of which a most
+satisfactory account of the polling was already placarded. The extra
+noise and shouting brought out the Colonel, who looked at first with
+curiosity at the advancing procession, and then, as he caught sight of
+Sarah Mason, with a blush and a bow of his kind old head.
+
+"Look at him, boys!" cried the enraptured F. B., pointing up to the old
+man. "Look at him; the dear old boy! Isn't he an old trump? which will
+you have for your Member, Barnes Newcome or Old Tom?"
+
+And as might be supposed, an immense shout of "Old Tom!" arose from the
+multitude; in the midst of which, blushing and bowing still, the
+Colonel went back to his committee-room: and the bands played "See the
+Conquering Hero" louder than ever; and poor Barnes in the course of his
+duty having to come out upon his balcony at the Roebuck opposite, was
+saluted with a yell as vociferous as the cheer for the Colonel had been;
+and old Mrs. Mason asked what the noise was about; and after making
+several vain efforts, in dumb show, to the crowd, Barnes slunk back into
+his hole again as pale as the turnip which was flung at his head: and
+the horses were brought, and Mrs. Mason driven home; and the day of
+election came to an end.
+
+Reasons of personal gratitude, as we have stated already, prevented
+His Highness the Prince de Moncontour from taking a part in this family
+contest. His brethren of the House of Higg, however, very much to
+Florac's gratification, gave their second votes to Colonel Newcome,
+carrying with them a very great number of electors: we know that in
+the present Parliament, Mr. Higg and Mr. Bunce sit for the borough of
+Newcome. Having had monetary transactions with Sir Barnes Newcome, and
+entered largely into railway speculations with him, the Messrs. Higg had
+found reason to quarrel with the Baronet; accuse him of sharp practices
+to the present day, and have long stories to tell which do not concern
+us about Sir Barnes's stratagems, grasping, and extortion. They their
+following, deserting Sir Barnes, whom they had supported in previous
+elections, voted for the Colonel, although some of the opinions of that
+gentleman were rather too extreme for such sober persons.
+
+Not exactly knowing what his politics were when he commenced the
+canvass, I can't say to what opinions the poor Colonel did not find
+himself committed by the time when the election was over. The worthy
+gentleman felt himself not a little humiliated by what he had to say and
+to unsay, by having to answer questions, and submit to familiarities,
+to shake hands which, to say truth, he did not care for grasping at
+all. His habits were aristocratic; his education had been military; the
+kindest and simplest soul alive, he yet disliked all familiarity, and
+expected from common people the sort of deference which he had received
+from his men in the regiment. The contest saddened and mortified him; he
+felt that he was using wrong means to obtain an end that perhaps was
+not right (for so his secret conscience must have told him); he was
+derogating from his own honour in tampering with political opinions,
+submitting to familiarities, condescending to stand by whilst his agents
+solicited vulgar suffrages or uttered claptraps about retrenchment and
+reform. "I felt I was wrong," he said to me, in after days, "though I
+was too proud to own my error in those times, and you and your good wife
+and my boy were right in protesting against that mad election." Indeed,
+though we little knew what events were speedily to happen, Laura and I
+felt very little satisfaction when the result of the Newcome election
+was made known to us, and we found Sir Barnes Newcome third, and Col.
+Thomas Newcome second upon the poll.
+
+Ethel was absent with her children at Brighton. She was glad, she wrote,
+not to have been at home during the election. Mr. and Mrs. C. were at
+Brighton, too. Ethel had seen Mrs. C. and her child once or twice. It
+was a very fine child. "My brother came down to us," she wrote, "after
+all was over. He is furious against M. de Moncontour, who, he says,
+persuaded the Whigs to vote against him, and turned the election."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXX. Chiltern Hundreds
+
+
+We shall say no more regarding Thomas Newcome's political doings; his
+speeches against Barnes, and the Baronet's replies. The nephew was
+beaten by his stout old uncle.
+
+In due time the Gazette announced that Thomas Newcome, Esq., was
+returned as one of the Members of Parliament for the borough of Newcome;
+and after triumphant dinners, speeches, and rejoicings, the Member came
+back to his family in London, and to his affairs in that city.
+
+The good Colonel appeared to be by no means elated by his victory. He
+would not allow that he was wrong in engaging in that family war, of
+which we have just seen the issue; though it may be that his secret
+remorse on this account in part occasioned his disquiet. But there were
+other reasons, which his family not long afterwards came to understand,
+for the gloom and low spirits which now oppressed the head of their
+home.
+
+It was observed (that is, if simple little Rosey took the trouble to
+observe) that the entertainments at the Colonel's mansion were more
+frequent and splendid even than before; the silver cocoa-nut tree was
+constantly in requisition, and around it were assembled many new guests,
+who had not formerly been used to sit under those branches. Mr. Sherrick
+and his wife appeared at those parties, at which the proprietor of Lady
+Whittlesea's Chapel made himself perfectly familiar. Sherrick cut jokes
+with the master of the house, which the latter received with a very
+grave acquiescence; he ordered the servants about, addressing the butler
+as "Old Corkscrew," and bidding the footman, whom he loved to call by
+his Christian name, to "look alive." He called the Colonel "Newcome"
+sometimes, and facetiously speculated upon the degree of relationship
+subsisting between them now that his daughter was married to Clive's
+uncle, the Colonel's brother-in-law. Though I dare say Clive did not
+much relish receiving news of his aunt, Sherrick was sure to bring such
+intelligence when it reached him; and announced, in due time, the birth
+of a little cousin at Boggley Wollah, whom the fond parents designed to
+name "Thomas Newcome Honeyman."
+
+A dreadful panic and ghastly terror seized poor Clive on occasion which
+he described to me afterwards. Going out from home one day with his
+father, he beheld a wine-merchant's cart, from which hampers were
+carried down the area gate into the lower regions of Colonel Newcome's
+house. "Sherrick and Co., Wine Merchants, Walpole Street," was painted
+upon the vehicle.
+
+"Good heavens! sir, do you get your wine from him?" Clive cried out
+to his father, remembering Honeyman's provisions in early times. The
+Colonel, looking very gloomy and turning red, said, "Yes, he bought
+wine from Sherrick, who had been very good-natured and serviceable;
+and who--and who, you know, is our connexion now." When informed of
+the circumstance by Clive, I too, as I confess, thought the incident
+alarming.
+
+Then Clive, with a laugh, told me of a grand battle which had
+taken place in consequence of Mrs. Mackenzie's behaviour to the
+wine-merchant's wife. The Campaigner had treated this very kind and
+harmless, but vulgar woman, with extreme hauteur--had talked loud during
+her singing--the beauty of which, to say truth, time had considerably
+impaired--had made contemptuous observations regarding her upon more
+than one occasion. At length the Colonel broke out in great wrath
+against Mrs. Mackenzie--bade her to respect that lady as one of his
+guests--and, if she did not like the company which assembled at his
+house, hinted to her that there were many thousand other houses in
+London where she could find a lodging. For the sake of her grandchild,
+and her adored child, the Campaigner took no notice of this hint; and
+declined to remove from the quarter which she had occupied ever since
+she had become a grandmamma.
+
+I myself dined once or twice with my old friends, under the shadow of
+the pickle-bearing cocoa-nut tree; and could not but remark a change of
+personages in the society assembled. The manager of the City branch of
+the B. B. C. was always present--an ominous-looking man, whose whispers
+and compliments seemed to make poor Clive, at his end of the table, very
+melancholy. With the City manager came the City manager's friends, whose
+jokes passed gaily round, and who kept the conversation to themselves.
+Once I had the happiness to meet Mr. Ratray, who had returned, filled
+with rupees from the Indian Bank; who told us many anecdotes of the
+splendour of Rummun Loll at Calcutta, who complimented the Colonel
+on his fine house and grand dinners with sinister good-humour. Those
+compliments did not seem to please our poor friend; that familiarity
+choked him. A brisk little chattering attorney, very intimate with
+Sherrick, with a wife of dubious gentility, was another constant guest.
+He enlivened the table by his jokes, and recounted choice stories about
+the aristocracy, with certain members of whom the little man seemed very
+familiar. He knew to a shilling how much this lord owed--and how much
+the creditors allowed to that marquis. He had been concerned with such
+and such a nobleman, who was now in the Queen's Bench. He spoke of their
+lordships affably and without their titles--calling upon "Louisa, my
+dear," his wife, to testify to the day when Viscount Tagrag dined with
+them, and Earl Bareacres sent them the pheasants. F. B., as sombre and
+downcast as his hosts now seemed to be, informed me demurely that the
+attorney was a member of one of the most eminent firms in the City--that
+he had been engaged in procuring the Colonel's parliamentary title for
+him--and in various important matters appertaining to the B. B. C.; but
+my knowledge of the world and the law was sufficient to make me aware
+that this gentleman belonged to a well-known firm of money-lending
+solicitors, and I trembled to see such a person in the home of our good
+Colonel. Where were the generals and the judges? Where were the fogies
+and their respectable ladies? Stupid they were, and dull their company;
+but better a stalled ox in their society, than Mr. Campion's jokes over
+Mr. Sherrick's wines.
+
+After the little rebuke administered by Colonel Newcome, Mrs. Mackenzie
+abstained from overt hostilities against any guests of her daughter's
+father-in-law; and contented herself by assuming grand and princess-like
+airs in the company of the new ladies. They flattered her and poor
+little Rosa intensely. The latter liked their company, no doubt. To a
+man of the world looking on, who has seen the men and morals of many
+cities, it was curious, almost pathetic, to watch that poor little
+innocent creature fresh and smiling, attired in bright colours and
+a thousand gewgaws, simpering in the midst of these darkling
+people--practising her little arts and coquetries, with such a court
+round about her. An unconscious little maid, with rich and rare gems
+sparkling on all her fingers, and bright gold rings as many as belonged
+to the late Old Woman of Banbury Cross--still she smiled and prattled
+innocently before these banditti--I thought of Zerlina and the Brigands,
+in Fra Diavolo.
+
+Walking away with F. B. from one of these parties of the Colonel's, and
+seriously alarmed at what I had observed there, I demanded of Bayham
+whether my conjectures were not correct, that some misfortune overhung
+our old friend's house? At first Bayham denied stoutly or pretended
+ignorance; but at length, having reached the Haunt together, which I
+had not visited since I was a married man, we entered that place of
+entertainment, and were greeted by its old landlady and waitress, and
+accommodated with a quiet parlour. And here F. B., after groaning and
+sighing--after solacing himself with a prodigious quantity of bitter
+beer--fairly burst out, and, with tears in his eyes, made a full and
+sad confession respecting this unlucky Bundelcund Banking Company. The
+shares had been going lower and lower, so that there was no sale now for
+them at all. To meet the liabilities, the directors must have undergone
+the greatest sacrifices. He did know--he did not like to think what
+the Colonel's personal losses were. The respectable solicitors of the
+Company had retired, long since, after having secured payment of a most
+respectable bill; and had given place to the firm of dubious law-agents
+of whom I had that evening seen a partner. How the retiring partners
+from India had been allowed to withdraw, and to bring fortunes along
+with them, was a mystery to Mr. Frederick Bayham. The great Indian
+millionnaire was in his, F. B.'s eyes, "a confounded mahogany-coloured
+heathen humbug." These fine parties which the Colonel was giving, and
+that fine carriage which was always flaunting about the Park with poor
+Mrs. Clive and the Campaigner, and the nurse and the baby, were, in
+F. B.'s opinion, all decoys and shams. He did not mean to say that the
+meals were not paid, and that the Colonel had to plunder for his horses'
+corn; but he knew that Sherrick, and the attorney, and the manager,
+insisted upon the necessity of giving these parties, and keeping up this
+state and grandeur, and opined that it was at the special instance of
+these advisers that the Colonel had contested the borough for which he
+was now returned. "Do you know how much that contest cost?" asks F. B.
+"The sum, sir, was awful! and we have ever so much of it to pay. I came
+up twice myself from Newcome to Campion and Sherrick about it. I betray
+no secrets--F. B., sir, would die a thousand deaths before he would tell
+the secrets of his benefactor!--But, Pendennis, you understand a thing
+or two. You know what o'clock it is, and so does yours truly, F. B., who
+drinks your health. I know the taste of Sherrick's wine well enough.
+F. B., sir, fears the Greeks and all the gifts they bring. Confound his
+Amontillado! I had rather drink this honest malt and hops all my life
+than ever see a drop of his abominable sherry. Golden? F. B. believes
+it is golden--and a precious deal dearer than gold too"--and herewith,
+ringing the bell, my friend asked for a second pint of the just-named
+and cheaper fluid.
+
+I have of late had to recount portions of my dear old friend's history
+which must needs be told, and over which the writer does not like to
+dwell. If Thomas Newcome's opulence was unpleasant to describe, and to
+contrast with the bright goodness and simplicity I remembered in former
+days, how much more painful is that part of his story to which we are
+now come perforce, and which the acute reader of novels has, no doubt,
+long foreseen? Yes, sir or madam, you are quite right in the opinion
+which you have held all along regarding that Bundelcund Banking Company,
+in which our Colonel has invested every rupee he possesses, Solvuntur
+rupees, etc. I disdain, for the most part, the tricks and surprises of
+the novelist's art. Knowing, from the very beginning of our story, what
+was the issue of this Bundelcund Banking concern, I have scarce had
+patience to keep my counsel about it; and whenever I have had occasion
+to mention the Company, have scarcely been able to refrain from breaking
+out into fierce diatribes against that complicated, enormous, outrageous
+swindle. It was one of many similar cheats which have been successfully
+practised upon the simple folks, civilian and military, who toil and
+struggle--who fight with sun and enemy--who pass years of long exile and
+gallant endurance in the service of our empire in India. Agency houses
+after agency houses have been established, and have flourished in
+splendour and magnificence, and have paid fabulous dividends--and have
+enormously enriched two or three wary speculators--and then have burst
+in bankruptcy, involving widows, orphans, and countless simple people
+who trusted their all to the keeping of these unworthy treasurers.
+
+The failure of the Bundelcund Bank which we now have to record, was one
+only of many similar schemes ending in ruin. About the time when Thomas
+Newcome was chaired as Member of Parliament for the borough of which
+he bore the name, the great Indian merchant who was at the head of
+the Bundelcund Banking Company's affairs at Calcutta, suddenly died of
+cholera at his palace at Barackpore. He had been giving of late a series
+of the most splendid banquets with which Indian prince ever entertained
+a Calcutta society. The greatest and proudest personages of that
+aristocratic city had attended his feasts. The fairest Calcutta beauties
+had danced in his halls. Did not poor F. B. transfer from the columns
+of the Bengal Hurkaru to the Pall Mall Gazette the most astounding
+descriptions of those Asiatic Nights Entertainments, of which the very
+grandest was to come off on the night when cholera seized Rummun Loll
+in its grip? There was to have been a masquerade outvying all European
+masquerades in splendour. The two rival queens of the Calcutta society
+were to have appeared each with her court around her. Young civilians
+at the College, and young ensigns fresh landed, had gone into awful
+expenses and borrowed money at interest from the B. B. C. and other
+banking companies, in order to appear with befitting splendour as
+knights and noblemen of Henrietta Maria's Court (Henrietta Maria, wife
+of Hastings Hicks, Esq., Sudder Dewanee Adawlut), or as princes and
+warriors surrounding the palanquin of Lalla Rookh (the lovely wife of
+Hon. Cornwallis Bobus, Member of Council): all these splendours were
+there. As carriage after carriage drove up from Calcutta, they were met
+at Rummun Loll's gate by ghastly weeping servants, who announced their
+master's demise.
+
+On the next day the Bank at Calcutta was closed, and the day after, when
+heavy bills were presented which must be paid, although by this time
+Rummun Loll was not only dead but buried, and his widows howling over
+his grave, it was announced throughout Calcutta that but 800 rupees were
+left in the treasury of the B. B. C. to meet engagements to the amount
+of four lakhs then immediately due, and sixty days afterwards the
+shutters were closed at No. 175 Lothbury, the London offices of the B.
+B. C. of India, and 35,000 pounds worth of their bills refused by their
+agents, Messrs. Baines, Jolly and Co., of Fog Court.
+
+When the accounts of that ghastly bankruptcy arrived from Calcutta, it
+was found, of course, that the merchant-prince Rummun Loll owed the B.
+B. C. twenty-five lakhs of rupees, the value of which was scarcely even
+represented by his respectable signature. It was found that one of the
+auditors of the bank, the generally esteemed Charley Conder (a capital
+fellow, famous for his good dinners, and for playing low-comedy
+characters at the Chowringhee Theatre), was indebted to the bank in
+90,000 pounds; and also it was discovered that the revered Baptist
+Bellman, Chief Registrar of the Calcutta Tape and Sealing-Wax Office
+(a most valuable and powerful amateur preacher who had converted two
+natives, and whose serious soirees were thronged at Calcutta), had
+helped himself to 73,000 pounds more, for which he settled in the
+Bankruptcy Court before he resumed his duties in his own. In justice
+to Mr. Bellman, it must be said that he could have had no idea of the
+catastrophe impending over the B. B. C. For, only three weeks before
+that great bank closed its doors, Mr. Bellman, as guardian of the
+children of his widowed sister Mrs. Green, had sold the whole of the
+late Colonel's property out of Company's paper and invested it in the
+bank, which gave a high interest, and with bills of which, drawn upon
+their London correspondents, he had accommodated Mrs. Colonel Green when
+she took her departure for Europe with her numerous little family on
+board the Burrumpooter.
+
+And now you have the explanation of the title of this chapter, and know
+wherefore Thomas Newcome never sat in Parliament. Where are our dear old
+friends now? Where are Rosey's chariots and horses? Where her jewels and
+gewgaws? Bills are up in the fine new house. Swarms of Hebrew gentlemen
+with their hats on are walking about the drawing-rooms, peering into
+the bedrooms, weighing and poising the poor old silver cocoa-nut tree,
+eyeing the plate and crystal, thumbing the damask of the curtains,
+and inspecting ottomans, mirrors, and a hundred articles of splendid
+trumpery. There is Rosey's boudoir which her father-in-law loved to
+ornament--there is Clive's studio with a hundred sketches--there is
+the Colonel's bare room at the top of the house, with his little
+iron bedstead and ship's drawers, and a camel trunk or two which have
+accompanied him on many an Indian march, and his old regulation sword,
+and that one which the native officers of his regiment gave him when
+he bade them farewell. I can fancy the brokers' faces as they look
+over this camp wardrobe, and that the uniforms will not fetch much in
+Holywell Street. There is the old one still, and that new one which he
+ordered and wore when poor little Rosey was presented at court. I had
+not the heart to examine their plunder, and go amongst those wreckers.
+F. B. used to attend the sale regularly, and report its proceedings
+to us with eyes full of tears. "A fellow laughed at me," says F. B.,
+"because when I came into the dear old drawing-room I took my hat off.
+I told him that if he dared say another word I would knock him down." I
+think F. B. may be pardoned in this instance for emulating the office of
+auctioneer. Where are you, pretty Rosey and poor little helpless baby?
+Where are you, dear Clive--gallant young friend of my youth? Ah! it is a
+sad story--a melancholy page to pen! Let us pass it over quickly--I love
+not to think of my friend in pain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXI. In which Mrs. Clive Newcome's Carriage is ordered
+
+
+All the friends of the Newcome family, of course, knew the disaster
+which had befallen the good Colonel, and I was aware, for my own part,
+that not only his own, but almost the whole of Rosa Newcome's property
+was involved in the common ruin. Some proposals of temporary relief were
+made to our friends from more quarters than one, but were thankfully
+rejected--and we were led to hope that the Colonel, having still his
+pension secured to him, which the law could not touch, might live
+comfortably enough the retirement to which, of course, he would betake
+himself, when the melancholy proceedings consequent on the bankruptcy
+were brought to an end. It was shown that he had been egregiously duped
+in the transaction--that his credulity had cost him and his family
+a large fortune--that he had given up every penny which belonged
+to him--that there could not be any sort of stain upon his honest
+reputation. The judge before whom he appeared spoke with feeling and
+regard of the unhappy gentleman--the lawyer who examined him respected
+the grief and fall of that simple old man. Thomas Newcome took a little
+room near the court where his affairs and the affairs of the company
+were adjudged--lived with a frugality which never was difficult to
+him--And once when perchance I met him in the City, avoided me, with
+a bow and courtesy that was quite humble, though proud and somehow
+inexpressibly touching to me. Fred Bayham was the only person whom he
+admitted. Fred always faithfully insisted upon attending him in and out
+of court. J. J. came to me immediately after he heard of the disaster,
+eager to place all his savings at the service of his friends. Laura and
+I came to London, and were urgent with similar offers. Our good friend
+declined to see any of us. F. B., again, with tears trickling on his
+rough cheeks, and a break in his voice, told me he feared that affairs
+must be very bad indeed, for the Colonel absolutely denied himself a
+cheroot to smoke. Laura drove to his lodgings and took him a box, which
+was held up to him as he came to open the door to my wife's knock by our
+smiling little boy, He patted the child on his golden head and kissed
+him. My wife wished he would have done as much for her--but he would
+not--though she owned she kissed his hand. He drew it across his eyes
+and thanked her in a very calm and stately manner--but he did not invite
+her within the threshold of his door, saying simply, that such a room
+was not a fit place to receive a lady, "as you ought to know very well,
+Mrs. Smith," he said to the landlady, who had accompanied my wife up the
+stairs. "He will eat scarcely anything," the woman told us, "his meals
+come down untouched; his candles are burning all night, almost, as he
+sits poring over his papers."
+
+"He was bent--he who used to walk so uprightly," Laura said. He seemed
+to have grown many years older, and was, indeed, quite a decrepit old
+man.
+
+"I am glad they have left Clive out of the bankruptcy," the Colonel
+said to Bayham; it was almost the only time when his voice exhibited any
+emotion. "It was very kind of them to leave out Clive, poor boy, and
+I have thanked the lawyers in court." Those gentlemen, and the judge
+himself, were very much moved at this act of gratitude. The judge made a
+very feeling speech to the Colonel when he came up for his certificate.
+He passed very different comments on the conduct of the Manager of the
+Bank, when that person appeared for examination. He wished that the
+law had power to deal with those gentlemen who had come home with large
+fortunes from India, realised but a few years before the bankruptcy.
+Those gentlemen had known how to take care of themselves very well; and
+as for the Manager, is not his wife giving elegant balls at her elegant
+house at Cheltenham at this very day?
+
+What weighed most upon the Colonel's mind, F. B. imagined, was the
+thought that he had been the means of inducing many poor friends to
+embark their money in this luckless speculation. Take J. J.'s money
+after he had persuaded old Ridley to place 200 pounds in Indian shares!
+Good God, he and his family should rather perish than he would touch a
+farthing of it! Many fierce words were uttered to him by Mrs. Mackenzie,
+for instance--by her angry daughter at Musselburgh--Josey's husband, by
+Mr. Smee, R.A., and two or three Indian officers, friends of his own,
+who had entered into the speculation on his recommendation. These
+rebukes Thomas Newcome bore with an affecting meekness, as his faithful
+F. B. described to me, striving with many oaths and much loudness to
+carry off bis own emotion. But what moved the Colonel most of all, was
+a letter which came at this time from Honeyman in India, saying that he
+was doing well--that of course he knew of his benefactor's misfortune,
+and that he sent a remittance which, D. V., should be annual, in payment
+of his debt to the Colonel, and his good sister at Brighton. "On receipt
+of this letter," said F. B., "the old man was fairly beaten--the letter,
+with the bill in it, dropped out of his hands. He clasped them together,
+shaking in every limb, and his head dropped down on his breast as he
+said, 'I thank my God Almighty for this!' and he sent the cheque off to
+Mrs. Honeyman by the post that night, sir, every shilling of it; and he
+passed his old arm under mine--and we went out to Tom's Coffee-House,
+and he ate some dinner the first time for ever so long, and drank a
+couple of glasses of port wine, and F. B. stood it, sir, and would stand
+his heart's blood that dear old boy."
+
+It was on a Monday morning that those melancholy shutters were seen over
+the offices of the Bundelcund Bank in Lothbury, which were not to come
+down until the rooms were handed over to some other, and, let us trust,
+more fortunate speculators. The Indian bills had arrived, and been
+protested in the City on the previous Saturday. The Campaigner and Mrs.
+Rosey had arranged a little party to the theatre that evening, and the
+gallant Captain Goby had agreed to quit the delights of the Flag
+Club, in order to accompany the ladies. Neither of them knew what was
+happening in the City, or could account otherwise than by the common
+domestic causes, for Clive's gloomy despondency and his father's sad
+reserve. Clive had not been in the City on this day. He had spent it,
+as usual, in his studio, boude by his wife, and not disturbed by the
+messroom raillery of the Campaigner. They had dined early, in order to
+be in time for the theatre. Goby entertained them with the latest jokes
+from the smoking-room at the Flag, and was in his turn amused by the
+brilliant plans for the season which Rosey and her mamma sketched out
+the entertainments which Mrs. Clive proposed to give, the ball--she was
+dying for a masked ball just such a one as that was described in the
+Pall Mall Gazette of last week, out of that paper with the droll title,
+the Bengal Hurkaru, which the merchant-prince, the head of the bank, you
+know, in India, had given at Calcutta. "We must have a ball, too," says
+Mrs. Mackenzie; "society demands it of you." "Of course it does,"
+echoes Captain Goby, and he bethought him of a brilliant circle of young
+fellows from the Flag, whom he would bring in splendid uniform to dance
+with the pretty Mrs. Clive Newcome.
+
+After the dinner--they little knew it was to be their last in that fine
+house--the ladies retired to give their parting kiss to baby--a parting
+look to the toilettes, with which they proposed to fascinate the
+inhabitants of the pit and the public boxes at the Olympic. Goby made
+vigorous play with the claret-bottle during the brief interval of
+potation allowed to him; he, too, little deeming that he should never
+drink bumper there again; Clive looking on with the melancholy and
+silent acquiescence which had, of late, been his part in the household.
+The carriage was announced--the ladies came down--pretty capotes on the
+lovely Campaigner, Goby vowed, looking as young and as handsome as
+her daughter, by Jove, and the ball door was opened to admit the two
+gentlemen and ladies to their carriage, when, as they were about to
+step in, a hansom cab drove up rapidly, in which was perceived Thomas
+Newcome's anxious face. He got out of the vehicle--his own carriage
+making way for him--the ladies still on the steps. "Oh, the play! I
+forgot," said the Colonel.
+
+"Of course we are going to the play, papa," cries little Rosey, with a
+gay little tap of her hand.
+
+"I think you had better not," Colonel Newcome said gravely.
+
+"Indeed my darling child has set her heart upon it, and I would not have
+her disappointed for the world in her situation," cries the Campaigner,
+tossing up her head.
+
+The Colonel for reply bade his coachman drive to the stables, and come
+for further orders; and, turning to his daughter's guest, expressed to
+Captain Goby his regret that the proposed party could not take place on
+that evening, as he had matter of very great importance to communicate
+to his family. On hearing these news, and understanding that his further
+company was not desirable, the Captain, a man of great presence of mind,
+arrested the hansom cabman, who was about to take his departure, and who
+blithely, knowing the Club and its inmates full well, carried off the
+jolly Captain to finish his evening at the Flag.
+
+"Has it come, father?" said Clive with a sure prescience, looking in his
+father's face.
+
+The father took and grasped the hand which his son held out. "Let us
+go back into the dining-room," he said. They entered it, and he filled
+himself a glass of wine out of the bottle still standing amidst the
+dessert. He bade the butler retire, who was lingering about the room and
+sideboard, and only wanted to know whether his master would have dinner,
+that was all. And, this gentleman having withdrawn, Colonel Newcome
+finished his glass of sherry and broke a biscuit; the Campaigner
+assuming an attitude of surprise and indignation, whilst Rosey had
+leisure to remark that papa looked very ill, and that something must
+have happened.
+
+The Colonel took both her hands and drew her towards him and kissed her,
+whilst Rosey's mamma, flouncing down on a chair, beat a tattoo upon the
+tablecloth with her fan. "Something has happened, my love," the Colonel
+said very sadly; "you must show all your strength of mind, for a great
+misfortune has befallen us."
+
+"Good heavens, Colonel, what is it? don't frighten my beloved child,"
+cries the Campaigner, rushing towards her darling, and enveloping her
+in her robust arms. "What can have happened, don't agitate this darling
+child, sir," and she looked indignantly towards the poor Colonel.
+
+"We have received the very worst news from Calcutta, a confirmation of
+the news by the last mail, Clivey, my boy."
+
+"It is no news to me. I have always been expecting it, father," says
+Clive, holding down his head.
+
+"Expecting what? What have you been keeping back from us? In what have
+you been deceiving us, Colonel Newcome?" shrieks the Campaigner; and
+Rosa, crying out, "Oh, mamma, mamma!" begins to whimper.
+
+"The chief of the bank in India is dead," the Colonel went on. "He has
+left its affairs in worse than disorder. We are, I fear, ruined, Mrs.
+Mackenzie." And the Colonel went on to tell how the bank could not open
+on Monday morning, and its bills to a great amount had already been
+protested in the City that day.
+
+Rosey did not understand half these news, or comprehend the calamity
+which was to follow; but Mrs. Mackenzie, rustling in great wrath, made a
+speech, of which the anger gathered as he proceeded; in which she vowed
+and protested that her money, which the Colonel, she did not know from
+what motives, had induced her to subscribe, should not be sacrificed,
+and that have it she would, the bank shut or not, the next Monday
+morning--that her daughter had a fortune of her own which her poor
+dear brother James should have divided and would have divided much more
+fairly, had he not been wrongly influenced--she would not say by whom,
+and she commanded Colonel Newcome upon that instant, if he was, as he
+always pretended to be, an honourable man, to give an account of her
+blessed darling's property, and to pay back her own, every sixpence of
+it. She would not lend it for an hour longer, and to see that that dear
+blessed child now sleeping unconsciously upstairs, and his dear brothers
+and sisters who might follow, for Rosey was a young woman, a poor
+innocent creature, too young to be married, and never would have been
+married had she listened to her mamma's advice. She demanded that the
+baby, and all succeeding babies, should have their rights, and should be
+looked to by their grandmother, if their father's father was so unkind,
+and so wicked, and so unnatural, as to give their money to rogues, and
+deprive them of their just bread.
+
+Rosey began to cry more loudly than ever during the utterance of mamma's
+sermon, so loudly that Clive peevishly cried out, "Hold your tongue," on
+which the Campaigner, clutching her daughter to her breast again, turned
+on her son-in-law, and abused him as she had abused his father before
+him, calling out that they were both in a conspiracy to defraud her
+child, and the little darling upstairs of its bread, and she would
+speak, yes, she would, and no power should prevent her, and her money
+she would have on Monday, as sure as her poor dear husband, Captain
+Mackenzie, was dead, and she never would have been cheated so, yes,
+cheated, if he had been alive.
+
+At the word "cheated" Clive broke out with an execration--the poor
+Colonel with a groan of despair--the widow's storm continued, and above
+that howling tempest of words rose Mrs. Clive's piping scream, who went
+off into downright hysterics at last, in which she was encouraged by her
+mother, and in which she gasped out frantic ejaculations regarding baby;
+dear, darling, ruined baby, and so forth.
+
+The sorrow-stricken Colonel had to quell the women's tongues and shrill
+anger, and his son's wrathful replies, who could not bear the weight of
+Mrs. Mackenzie upon him; and it was not until these three were allayed,
+that Thomas Newcome was able to continue his sad story, to explain what
+had happened, and what the actual state of the case was, and to oblige
+the terror-stricken women at length to hear something like reason.
+
+He then had to tell them, to their dismay, that he would inevitably be
+declared a bankrupt in the ensuing week; that the whole of his property
+in that house, as elsewhere, would be seized and sold for the creditors'
+benefit; and that his daughter had best immediately leave a home where
+she would be certainly subject to humiliation and annoyance. "I would
+have Clive, my boy, take you out of the country, and--and return to me
+when I have need of him, and shall send for him," the father said fondly
+in reply to a rebellious look on his son's face. "I would have you quit
+this house as soon as possible. Why not to-night? The law blood-hound
+may be upon us ere an hour is over--at this moment for what I know."
+
+At that moment the door-bell was heard to ring, and the women gave
+a scream apiece, as if the bailiffs were actually coming to take
+possession. Rosey went off in quite a series of screams, peevishly
+repressed by her husband, and always encouraged by mamma, who called
+her son-in-law an unfeeling wretch. It must be confessed that Mrs. Clive
+Newcome did not exhibit much strength of mind, or comfort her husband
+much at a moment when he needed consolation.
+
+From angry rebellion and fierce remonstrance, this pair of women now
+passed to an extreme terror and desire for instantaneous flight. They
+would go that moment--they would wrap the blessed child up in its
+shawls--and nurse should take it anywhere--anywhere, poor neglected
+thing. "My trunks," cries Mrs. Mackenzie, "you know are ready packed--I
+am sure it is not the treatment which I have received--it is nothing but
+my duty and my religion--and the protection which I owe to this
+blessed unprotected--yes, unprotected, and robbed, and cheated, darling
+child--which have made me stay a single day in this house. I never
+thought I should have been robbed in it, or my darlings with their fine
+fortunes flung naked on the world. If my Mac was here, you never
+had dared to have done this, Colonel Newcome--no, never. He had his
+faults--Mackenzie had--but he would never have robbed his own children!
+Come away, Rosey, my blessed love, come let us pack your things, and let
+us go and hide our heads in sorrow somewhere. Ah! didn't I tell you
+to beware of all painters, and that Clarence was a true gentleman, and
+loved you with all his heart, and would never have cheated you out of
+your money, for which I will have justice as sure as there is justice in
+England."
+
+During this outburst the Colonel sat utterly scared and silent,
+supporting his poor head between his hands. When the harem had departed
+he turned sadly to his son. Clive did not believe that his father was
+a cheat and a rogue. No, thank God! The two men embraced with tender
+cordiality and almost happy emotion on the one side and the other. Never
+for one moment could Clive think his dear old father meant wrong--though
+the speculations were unfortunate in which he had engaged--though Clive
+had not liked them; it was a relief to his mind that they were now come
+to an end; they should all be happier now, thank God! those clouds of
+distrust being removed. Clive felt not one moment's doubt but that they
+should be able to meet fortune with a brave face; and that happier, much
+happier days were in store for him than ever they had known since the
+period of this confounded prosperity.
+
+"Here's a good end to it," says Clive, with flashing eyes and a flushed
+face, "and here's a good health till to-morrow, father!" and he filled
+into two glasses the wine still remaining in the flask. "Good-bye to
+our fortune, and bad luck go with her--I puff the prostitute away--Si
+celeres quatit pennas, you remember what we used to say at Grey
+Friars--resign quae dedit, et mea virtute me involve, probamque
+pauperiem sine dote quaero." And he pledged his father, who drank his
+wine, his hand shaking as he raised the glass to his lips, and his kind
+voice trembling as he uttered the well-known old school words, with an
+emotion that was as sacred as a prayer. Once more, and with hearts full
+of love, the two men embraced. Clive's voice would tremble now if he
+told the story, as it did when he spoke it to me in happier times, one
+calm summer evening when we sat together and talked of dear old days.
+
+Thomas Newcome explained to his son the plan, which, to his mind, as he
+came away from the City after the day's misfortunes, he thought it was
+best to pursue. The women and the child were clearly best out of the
+way. "And you too, my boy, must be on duty with them until I send for
+you, which I will do if your presence can be of the least service to me,
+or is called for by--by--our honour," said the old man with a drop in
+his voice. "You must obey me in this, dear Clive, as you have done in
+everything, and been a good and dear, and obedient son to me. God pardon
+me for having trusted to my own simple old brains too much, and not
+to you who know so much better. You will obey me this once more, my
+boy--you will promise me this?" and the old man as he spoke took Clive's
+hand in both his, and fondly caressed it.
+
+Then with a shaking hand he took out of his pocket his old purse with
+the steel rings, which he had worn for many and many a long year. Clive
+remembered it, and his father's face how it would beam with delight,
+when he used to take that very purse out in Clive's boyish days and tip
+him just after he left school. "Here are some notes and some gold," he
+said. "It is Rosey's, honestly, Clive dear, her half-year's dividend,
+for which you will give an order, please, to Sherrick. He has been very
+kind and good, Sherrick. All the servants were providentially paid last
+week--there are only the outstanding week's bills out--we shall manage
+to meet those, I dare say. And you will see that Rosey only takes away
+such clothes for herself and her baby as are actually necessary, won't
+you, dear? the plain things, you know--none of the fineries--they may
+be packed in a petara or two, and you will take them with you--but
+the pomps and vanities, you know, we will leave behind--the pearls
+and bracelets, and the plate, and all that rubbish--and I will make an
+inventory of them to-morrow when you are gone, and give them up, every
+rupee's worth, sir, every anna, by Jove, to the creditors."
+
+The darkness had fallen by this time, and the obsequious butler entered
+to light the dining-room lamps. "You have been a very good and kind
+servant to us, Martin," says the Colonel, making him a low bow. "I
+should like to shake you by the hand. We must part company now, and I
+have no doubt you and your fellow servants will find good places, all of
+you, as you merit, Martin--as you merit. Great losses have fallen upon
+our family--we are ruined, sir--we are ruined! The great Bundelcund
+Banking Company has stopped payment in India, and our branch here must
+stop on Monday. Thank my friends downstairs for their kindness to me
+and my family." Martin bowed in silence with great respect. He and his
+comrades in the servants'-hall had been expecting this catastrophe,
+quite as long as the Colonel himself who thought he had kept his affairs
+so profoundly secret.
+
+Clive went up into his women's apartments, looking with but little
+regret, I dare say, round those cheerless nuptial chambers with all
+their gaudy fittings; the fine looking-glasses, in which poor Rosey's
+little person had been reflected; the silken curtains under which he
+had lain by the poor child's side, wakeful and lonely. Here he found his
+child's nurse, and his wife, and wife's mother, busily engaged with a
+multiplicity of boxes; with flounces, feathers, fal-lals, and finery,
+which they were stowing away in this trunk and that; while the baby lay
+on its little pink pillow breathing softly, a little pearly fist placed
+close to its mouth. The aspect of the tawdry vanities scattered here and
+there chafed and annoyed the young man. He kicked the robes over with
+his foot. When Mrs. Mackenzie interposed with loud ejaculations, he
+sternly bade her to be silent, and not wake the child. His words were
+not to be questioned when he spoke in that manner. "You will take
+nothing with you, Rosey, but what is strictly necessary--only two or
+three of your plainest dresses, and what is required for the boy. What
+is in this trunk?" Mrs. Mackenzie stepped forward and declared, and the
+nurse vowed upon her honour, and the lady's-maid asserted really now
+upon honour too, that there was nothing but what was most strictly
+necessary in that trunk, to which affidavits, when Clive applied to his
+wife, she gave a rather timid assent.
+
+"Where are the keys of that trunk?" Upon Mrs. Mackenzie's exclamation
+of "What nonsense!" Clive, putting his foot upon the flimsy oil-covered
+box, vowed he would kick the lid off unless it was instantly opened.
+Obeying this grim summons, the fluttering women produced the keys, and
+the black box was opened before him.
+
+The box was found to contain a number of objects which Clive pronounced
+to be by no means necessary to his wife's and child's existence.
+Trinket-boxes and favourite little gimcracks, chains, rings and pearl
+necklaces, the tiara poor Rosey had worn at court--the feathers and the
+gorgeous train which had decorated the little person--all these were
+found packed away in this one receptacle; and in another box, I am sorry
+to say, were the silver forks and spoons (the butler wisely judging
+that the rich and splendid electrotype ware might as well be left
+behind)--all the silver forks, spoons, and ladles, and our poor old
+friend the cocoa-nut tree, which these female robbers would have carried
+out of the premises.
+
+Mr. Clive Newcome burst out into fierce laughter when he saw the
+cocoa-nut tree; he laughed so loud that baby woke, and his mother-in-law
+called him a brute, and the nurse ran to give its accustomed quietus
+to the little screaming infant. Rosey's eyes poured forth a torrent of
+little protests, and she would have cried yet more loudly than the other
+baby, had not her husband, again fiercely checking her, sworn with a
+dreadful oath, that unless she told him the whole truth, "By heavens
+she should leave the house with nothing but what covered her." Even the
+Campaigner could not make head against Clive's stern resolution; and the
+incipient insurrection of the maids and the mistresses was quelled by
+his spirit. The lady's-maid, a flighty creature, received her wages and
+took her leave: but the nurse could not find it in her heart to quit her
+little nursling so suddenly, and accompanied Clive's household in the
+journey upon which those poor folks were bound. What stolen goods were
+finally discovered when the family reached foreign parts were found
+in Mrs. Mackenzie's trunks, not in her daughter's: a silver filigree
+basket, a few teaspoons, baby's gold coral, and a costly crimson
+velvet-bound copy of the Hon. Miss Grimstone's Church Service, to which
+articles, having thus appropriated them, Mrs. Mackenzie henceforward
+laid claim as her own.
+
+So when the packing was done a cab was called to receive the modest
+trunks of this fugitive family--the coachman was bidden to put his
+horses to again, and for the last time poor Rosey Newcome sate in her
+own carriage, to which the Colonel conducted her with his courtly old
+bow, kissing the baby as it slept once more unconscious in its nurse's
+embrace, and bestowing a very grave and polite parting salute upon the
+Campaigner.
+
+Then Clive and his father entered a cab on which the trunks were borne,
+and they drove to the Tower Stairs, where the ship lay which was to
+convey them out of England; and, during that journey, no doubt, they
+talked over their altered prospects, and I am sure Clive's father
+blessed his son fondly, and committed him and his family to a good God's
+gracious keeping, and thought of him with sacred love when they had
+parted, and Thomas Newcome had returned to his lonely house to watch and
+to think of his ruined fortunes, and to pray that he might have courage
+under them; that he might bear his own fate honourably; and that a
+gentle one might be dealt to those beloved beings for whom his life had
+been sacrificed in vain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXII. Belisarius
+
+
+When the sale of Colonel Newcome's effects took place, a friend of the
+family bought in for a few shillings those two swords which had hung, as
+we have said, in the good man's chamber, and for which no single broker
+present had the heart to bid. The head of Clive's father, painted by
+himself, which had always kept its place in the young man's studio,
+together with a lot of his oil-sketchings, easels, and painting
+apparatus, were purchased by the faithful J. J., who kept them until his
+friend should return to London and reclaim them, and who showed the most
+generous solicitude in Clive's behalf. J. J. was elected of the Royal
+Academy this year, and Clive, it was evident, was working hard at the
+profession which he had always loved; for he sent over three pictures to
+the Academy, and I never knew man more mortified than the affectionate
+J. J., when two of these unlucky pieces were rejected by the committee
+for the year. One pretty little piece, called "The Stranded Boat," got
+a fair place on the Exhibition walls, and, you may be sure, was loudly
+praised by a certain critic in the Pall Mall Gazette. The picture was
+sold on the first day of the exhibition at the price of twenty-five
+pounds, which the artist demanded; and when the kind J. J. wrote to
+inform his friend of this satisfactory circumstance, and to say that
+he held the money at Clive's disposal, the latter replied with many
+expressions of sincere gratitude, at the same time begging him directly
+to forward the money, with our old friend Thomas Newcome's love, to Mrs.
+Sarah Mason, at Newcome. But J. J. never informed his friend that he
+himself was the purchaser of the picture; nor was Clive made acquainted
+with the fact until some time afterwards, when he found it hanging in
+Ridley's studio.
+
+I have said that we none of us were aware at this time what was the real
+state of Colonel Newcome's finances, and hoped that, after giving up
+every shilling of his property which was confiscated to the creditors
+of the Bank, he had still, from his retiring pension and military
+allowances, at least enough reputably to maintain him. On one occasion,
+having business in the City, I there met Mr. Sherrick. Affairs had been
+going ill with that gentleman--he had been let in terribly, he informed
+me, by Lord Levant's insolvency--having had large money transactions
+with his lordship. "There's none of them so good as old Newcome," Mr.
+Sherrick said with a sigh; "that was a good one--that was an honest man
+if ever I saw one--with no more guile, and no more idea of business
+than a baby. Why didn't he take my advice, poor old cove?--he might be
+comfortable now. Why did he sell away that annuity, Pendennis? I got
+it done for him when nobody else perhaps could have got it done for
+him--for the security ain't worth twopence if Newcome wasn't an honest
+man;--but I know he is, and would rather starve and eat the nails off
+his fingers than not keep his word, the old trump. And when he came to
+me, a good two months before the smash of the Bank, which I knew it,
+sir, and saw that it must come--when he came and raised three thousand
+pounds to meet them d--d electioneering bills, having to pay lawyers,
+commission, premium, life-insurance--you know the whole game, Mr. P.--I
+as good as went down on my knees to him--I did--at the North and South
+American Coffee-house, where he was to meet the party about the money,
+and said, 'Colonel, don't raise it--I tell you, let it stand
+over--let it go in along with the bankruptcy that's a-coming,'--but he
+wouldn't--he went on like an old Bengal tiger, roaring about his honour;
+he paid the bills every shilling--infernal long bills they were, and
+it's my belief that, at this minute, he ain't got fifty pounds a year
+of his own to spend. I would send him back my commission--I would by
+Jove--only times is so bad, and that rascal Levant let me in. It went to
+my heart to take the old cock's money--but it's gone--that and ever
+so much more--and Lady Whittlesea's Chapel too, Mr. P. Hang that young
+Levant."
+
+Squeezing my hand after this speech, Sherrick ran across the street
+after some other capitalist who was entering the Diddlesex Insurance
+Office, and left me very much grieved and dismayed at finding that my
+worst fears in regard to Thomas Newcome were confirmed. Should we confer
+with his wealthy family respecting the Colonel's impoverished condition?
+Was his brother Hobson Newcome aware of it? As for Sir Barnes, the
+quarrel between him and his uncle had been too fierce to admit of hopes
+of relief from that quarter. Barnes had been put to very heavy expenses
+in the first contested election; had come forward again immediately on
+his uncle's resignation, but again had been beaten by a more liberal
+candidate, his quondam former friend, Mr. Higg--who formally declared
+against Sir Barnes, and who drove him finally out of the representation
+of Newcome. From this gentleman it was vain of course for Colonel
+Newcome's friends to expect relief.
+
+How to aid him? He was proud--past work--nearly seventy years old. "Oh,
+why did those cruel Academicians refuse Clive's pictures?" cries Laura.
+"I have no patience with them--had the pictures been exhibited I know
+who might have bought them--but that is vain now. He would suspect at
+once, and send her money away. Oh, Pen! why, why didn't he come when I
+wrote that letter to Brussels?"
+
+From persons so poorly endowed with money as ourselves, any help, but
+of the merest temporary nature, was out of the question. We knew our
+friends too well not to know that they would disdain to receive it. It
+was agreed between me and Laura that at any rate I should go and see
+Clive. Our friends indeed were at a very short distance from us, and,
+having exiled themselves from England, could yet see its coasts
+from their windows upon any clear day. Boulogne was their present
+abiding-place--refuge of how many thousands of other unfortunate
+Britons--and to this friendly port I betook myself speedily, having the
+address of Colonel Newcome. His quarters were in a quiet grass-grown old
+street of the Old Town. None of the family were at home when I called.
+There was indeed no servant to answer the bell, but the good-natured
+French domestic of a neighbouring lodger told me that the young monsieur
+went out every day to make his designs, and that I should probably find
+the elder gentleman upon the rampart, where he was in the custom
+of going every day. I strolled along by those pretty old walks and
+bastions, under the pleasant trees which shadow them, and the grey old
+gabled houses from which you look down upon the gay new city, and the
+busy port, and the piers stretching into the shining sea, dotted with
+a hundred white sails or black smoking steamers, and bounded by the
+friendly lines of the bright English shore. There are few prospects more
+charming than the familiar view from those old French walls--few places
+where young children may play, and ruminating old age repose more
+pleasantly than on those peaceful rampart gardens.
+
+I found our dear old friend seated on one of the benches, a newspaper on
+his knees, and by his side a red-cheeked little French lass, upon whose
+lap Thomas Newcome the younger lay sleeping. The Colonel's face flushed
+up when he saw me. As he advanced a step or two towards me I could see
+that he trembled in his walk. His hair had grown almost quite white. He
+looked now to be more than his age--he whose carriage last year had been
+so erect, whose figure had been so straight and manly. I was very much
+moved at meeting him, and at seeing the sad traces which pain and grief
+had left in the countenance of the dear old man.
+
+"So you are come to see me, my good young friend," cried the Colonel,
+with a trembling voice. "It is very, very kind of you. Is not this a
+pretty drawing-room to receive our friends in? We have not many of them
+now; Boy and I come and sit here for hours every day. Hasn't he grown a
+fine boy? He can say several words now, sir, and can walk surprisingly
+well. Soon he will be able to walk with his grandfather, and then Marie
+will not have the trouble to wait upon either of us." He repeated this
+sentiment in his pretty old French, and turning with a bow to Marie. The
+girl said monsieur knew very well that she did not desire better than
+to come out with baby; that it was better than staying at home, pardieu;
+and, the clock striking at this moment, she rose up with her child,
+crying out that it was time to return or madame would scold.
+
+"Mrs. Mackenzie has rather a short temper," the Colonel said with
+a gentle smile. "Poor thing, she has had a great deal to bear in
+consequence, Pen, of my imprudence. I am glad you never took shares
+in our bank. I should not be so glad to see you as I am now, if I had
+brought losses upon you as I have upon so many of my friends." I, for my
+part, trembled to hear the good old man was under the domination of the
+Campaigner.
+
+"Bayham sends me the paper regularly; he is a very kind faithful
+creature. How glad I am that he has got a snug berth in the City! His
+company really prospers, I am happy to think, unlike some companies you
+know of, Pen. I have read your two speeches, sir, and Clive and I liked
+them very much. The poor boy works all day at his pictures. You know
+he has sold one at the exhibition, which has given us a great deal of
+heart--and he has completed two or three more--and I am sitting to
+him now for--what do you think, sir? for Belisarius. Will you give
+Belisarius and the Obolus kind word?"
+
+"My dear, dear old friend," I said in great emotion, "if you will do
+me the kindness to take my Obolus or to use my services in any way, you
+will give me more pleasure than ever I had from your generous bounties
+in old days. Look, sir, I wear the watch which you gave me when you went
+to India. Did you not tell me then to look over Clive and serve him if
+I could? Can't I serve him now?" and I went on further in this strain,
+asseverating with great warmth and truth that my wife's affection and my
+own were most sincere for both of them, and that our pride would be to
+be able to help such dear friends.
+
+The Colonel said I had a good heart, and my wife had, though--though--he
+did not finish this sentence, but I could interpret it without need of
+its completion. My wife and the two ladies of Colonel Newcome's family
+never could be friends, however much my poor Laura tried to be intimate
+with these women. Her very efforts at intimacy caused a frigidity and
+hauteur which Laura could not overcome. Little Rosey and her mother set
+us down as two aristocratic personages; nor for our parts were we very
+much disturbed at this opinion of the Campaigner and little Rosa.
+
+I talked with the Colonel for half an hour or more about his affairs,
+which indeed were very gloomy, and Clive's prospects, of which he strove
+to present as cheering a view as possible. He was obliged to confirm
+the news which Sherrick had given me, and to own, in fact, that all his
+pension was swallowed up by a payment of interest and life insurance for
+sums which he had been compelled to borrow. How could he do otherwise
+than meet his engagements? Thank God, he had Clive's full approval for
+what he had done--had communicated the circumstance to his son almost
+immediately after it took place, and that was a comfort to him--an
+immense comfort. "For the women are very angry," said the poor Colonel;
+"you see they do not understand the laws of honour, at least as we
+understand them: and perhaps I was wrong in hiding the truth as I
+certainly did from Mrs. Mackenzie, but I acted for the best--I hoped
+against hope that some chance might turn in our favour. God knows, I
+had a hard task enough in wearing a cheerful face for months, and in
+following my little Rosa about to her parties and balls; but poor Mrs.
+Mackenzie has a right to be angry, only I wish my little girl did not
+side with her mother so entirely, for the loss of her affection gives me
+great pain."
+
+So it was as I suspected. The Campaigner ruled over this family, and
+added to all their distresses by her intolerable presence and tyranny.
+"Why, sir," I ventured to ask, "if, as I gather from you--and I
+remember," I added with a laugh, "certain battles-royal which Clive
+described to me in old days--if you and the Campai--Mrs. Mackenzie do
+not agree, why should she continue to live with you, when you would all
+be so much happier apart?"
+
+"She has a right to live in the house," says the Colonel; "It is I
+who have no right in it. I am a poor old pensioner, don't you see,
+subsisting on Rosey's bounty? We live on the hundred a year, secured to
+her at her marriage, and Mrs. Mackenzie has her forty pounds of pension
+which she adds to the common stock. It is I who have made away with
+every shilling of Rosey's 17,000 pounds, God help me, and with 1500
+pounds of her mother's. They put their little means together, and they
+keep us--me and Clive. What can we do for a living? Great God! What can
+we do? Why, I am so useless that even when my poor boy earned 25 pounds
+for his picture, I felt we were bound to send it to Sarah Mason, and you
+may fancy when this came to Mrs. Mackenzie's ears, what a life my boy
+and I led. I have never spoken of these things to any mortal soul--I
+even don't speak of them with Clive--but seeing your kind and honest
+face has made me talk--you must pardon my garrulity--I am growing
+old, Arthur. This poverty and these quarrels have beaten my spirit
+down--there, I shall talk on this subject no more. I wish, sir, I could
+ask you to dine with us, but"--and here he smiled--"we must get the
+leave of the higher powers."
+
+I was determined, in spite of prohibitions and Campaigners, to see my
+old friend Clive, and insisted on walking back with the Colonel to his
+lodgings, at the door of which we met Mrs. Mackenzie and her daughter.
+Rosa blushed up a little--looked at her mamma--and then greeted me with
+a hand and a curtsey. The Campaigner also saluted me in a majestic but
+amicable manner, made no objection even to my entering her apartments
+and seeing the condition to which they were reduced: this phrase was
+uttered with particular emphasis and a significant look towards the
+Colonel, who bowed his meek head and preceded me into the lodgings,
+which were in truth very homely, pretty, and comfortable. The Campaigner
+was an excellent manager--restless, bothering, brushing perpetually.
+Such fugitive gimcracks as they had brought away with them decorated the
+little salon. Mrs. Mackenzie, who took the entire command, even pressed
+me to dine and partake, if so fashionable a gentleman would condescend
+to partake, of a humble exile's fare. No fare was perhaps very pleasant
+to me in company with that woman, but I wanted to see my dear old
+Clive, and gladly accepted his voluble mother-in-law's not disinterested
+hospitality. She beckoned the Colonel aside; whispered to him, putting
+something into his hand; on which he took his hat and went away. Then
+Rosey was dismissed upon some other pretext, and I had the felicity to
+be left alone with Mrs. Captain Mackenzie.
+
+She instantly improved the occasion; and with great eagerness and
+volubility entered into her statement of the present affairs and
+position of this unfortunate family. She described darling Rosey's
+delicate state, poor thing--nursed with tenderness and in the lap of
+luxury--brought up with every delicacy and the fondest mother--never
+knowing in the least how to take care of herself, and likely to fall
+down and perish unless the kind Campaigner were by to prop and protect
+her. She was in delicate health--very delicate--ordered cod-liver oil
+by the doctor. Heaven knows how he could be paid for those expensive
+medicines out of the pittance to which the imprudence--the most culpable
+and designing imprudence, and extravagance, and folly of Colonel Newcome
+had reduced them! Looking out from the window as she spoke I saw--we
+both saw--the dear old gentleman sadly advancing towards the house, a
+parcel in his hand. Seeing his near approach, and that our interview was
+likely to come to an end, Mrs. Mackenzie rapidly whispered to me that
+she knew I had a good heart--that I had been blessed by Providence with
+a fine fortune, which I knew how to keep better than some folks--and
+that if, as no doubt was my intention--for with what other but a
+charitable view could I have come to see them?--and most generous
+and noble was it of you to come, and I always thought it of you, Mr.
+Pendennis, whatever other people said to the contrary. If I proposed
+to give them relief, which was most needful--and for which a mother's
+blessings would follow me--let it be to her, the Campaigner, that my
+loan should be confided--for as for the Colonel, he is not fit to be
+trusted with a shilling, and has already flung away immense sums upon
+some old woman he keeps in the country, leaving his darling Rosey
+without the actual necessaries of life.
+
+The woman's greed and rapacity--the flattery with which she chose to
+belabour me at dinner, so choked and disgusted me, that I could hardly
+swallow the meal, though my poor old friend had been sent out to
+purchase a pate from the pastrycook's for my especial refection.
+Clive was not at the dinner. He seldom returned till late at night on
+sketching days. Neither his wife nor his mother-in-law seemed much to
+miss him; and seeing that the Campaigner engrossed the entire share of
+the conversation, and proposed not to leave me for five minutes alone
+with the Colonel, I took leave rather speedily of my entertainers,
+leaving a message for Clive, and a prayer that he would come and see me
+at my hotel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXIII. In which Belisarius returns from Exile
+
+
+I was sitting in the dusk in my room at Hotel des Bains, when the
+visitor for whom I hoped made his appearance in the person of Clive,
+with his broad shoulders, and broad hat, and a shaggy beard, which he
+had thought fit in his quality of painter to assume. Our greeting it
+need not be said was warm; and our talk, which extended far into the
+night, very friendly and confidential. If I make my readers confidants
+in Mr. Clive's private affairs, I ask my friend's pardon for narrating
+his history in their behoof. The world had gone very ill with my poor
+Clive, and I do not think that the pecuniary losses which had visited
+him and his father afflicted him near so sorely as the state of his
+home. In a pique with the woman he loved, and from that generous
+weakness which formed part of his character, and which led him to
+acquiesce in most wishes of his good father, the young man had gratified
+the darling desire of the Colonel's heart, and taken the wife whom his
+two old friends brought to him. Rosey, who was also, as we have shown,
+of a very obedient and ductile nature, had acquiesced gladly enough in
+her mamma's opinion, that she was in love with the rich and handsome
+young Clive, and accepted him for better or worse. So undoubtedly would
+this good child have accepted Captain Hoby, her previous adorer, have
+smilingly promised fidelity to the Captain at church, and have made a
+very good, happy, and sufficient little wife for that officer,--had not
+mamma commanded her to jilt him. What wonder that these elders should
+wish to see their two dear young ones united? They began with suitable
+age, money, good temper, and parents' blessings. It is not the first
+time that, with all these excellent helps to prosperity and happiness,
+a marriage has turned out unfortunately--a pretty, tight ship gone to
+wreck that set forth on its voyage with cheers from the shore, and every
+prospect of fair wind and fine weather.
+
+We have before quoted poor Clive's simile of the shoes with which his
+good old father provided him--as pretty a little pair of shoes as need
+be--only they did not fit the wearer. If they pinched him at first,
+how they blistered and tortured him now! If Clive was gloomy and
+discontented even when the honeymoon had scarce waned, and he and his
+family sat at home in state and splendour under the boughs of the
+famous silver cocoa-nut tree, what was the young man's condition now in
+poverty, when they had no love along with a scant dinner of herbs;
+when his mother-in-law grudged each morsel which his poor old father
+ate--when a vulgar, coarse-minded woman pursued with brutal sarcasm
+and deadly rancour one of the tenderest and noblest gentlemen in the
+world--when an ailing wife, always under some one's domination, received
+him with helpless hysterical cries and reproaches--when a coarse female
+tyrant, stupid, obstinate, utterly unable to comprehend the son's kindly
+genius, or the father's gentle spirit, bullied over both, using the
+intolerable undeniable advantage which her actual wrongs gave her to
+tyrannise over these two wretched men! He had never heard the last
+of that money which they had sent to Mrs. Mason, Clive said. When the
+knowledge of the fact came to the Campaigner's ears, she raised such a
+storm as almost killed the poor Colonel, and drove his son half mad.
+She seized the howling infant, vowing that its unnatural father and
+grandfather were bent upon starving it--she consoled and sent Rosey into
+hysterics--she took the outlawed parson to whose church they went, and
+the choice society of bankrupt captains, captains' ladies, fugitive
+stockbrokers' wives, and dingy frequenters of billiard-rooms, and
+refugees from the Bench, into her councils; and in her daily visits
+amongst these personages, and her walks on the pier, whither she trudged
+with poor Rosey in her train, Mrs. Mackenzie made known her own wrongs
+and her daughter's--showed how the Colonel, having robbed and cheated
+them previously, was now living upon them; insomuch that Mrs. Bolter,
+the levanting auctioneer's wife, would not make the poor old man a bow
+when she met him--that Mrs. Captain Kitely, whose husband had lain for
+seven years past in Boulogne gaol ordered her son to cut Clive; and
+when, the child being sick, the poor old Colonel went for arrowroot
+to the chemist's, young Snooks, the apothecary's assistant, refused
+to allow him to take the powder away without previously depositing the
+money.
+
+He had no money, Thomas Newcome. He gave up every farthing. After
+having impoverished all around him, he had no right, he said, to touch
+a sixpence of the wretched pittance remaining to them--he had even given
+up his cigar, the poor old man, the companion and comforter of forty
+years. He was "not fit to be trusted with money," Mrs. Mackenzie said,
+and the good man owned as he ate his scanty crust, and bowed his noble
+old head in silence under that cowardly persecution.
+
+And this, at the end of threescore and seven or eight years, was to be
+the close of a life which had been spent in freedom and splendour, and
+kindness and honour; this the reward of the noblest heart that ever
+beat--the tomb and prison of a gallant warrior who had ridden in twenty
+battles--whose course through life had been a bounty wherever it had
+passed--whose name had been followed by blessings, and whose career was
+to end here--here--in a mean room, in a mean alley of a foreign town--a
+low furious woman standing over him and stabbing the kind defenceless
+heart with killing insult and daily outrage!
+
+As we sat together in the dark, Clive told me this wretched story, which
+was wrung from him with a passionate emotion that I could not but keenly
+share. He wondered the old man lived, Clive said. Some of the women's
+taunts and gibes, as he could see, struck his father so that he gasped
+and started back as if some one had lashed him with a whip. "He would
+make away with himself," said poor Clive, "but he deems this is his
+punishment, and that he must bear it as long as it pleases God. He does
+not care for his own losses, as far as they concern himself: but these
+reproaches of Mrs. Mackenzie, and some things which were said to him
+in the Bankruptcy Court, by one or two widows of old friends, who were
+induced through his representations, to take shares in that infernal
+bank, have affected him dreadfully. I hear him lying awake and groaning
+at night, God bless him. Great God! what can I do--what can I do?" burst
+out the young man in a dreadful paroxysm of grief. "I have tried to get
+lessons--I went to London on the deck of a steamer, and took a lot of
+drawings with me--tried picture-dealers--pawnbrokers--Jews--Moss, whom
+you may remember at Gandish's, and who gave me for forty-two drawings,
+eighteen pounds. I brought the money back to Boulogne. It was enough to
+pay the doctor, and bury our last poor little dead baby. Tenez, Pen, you
+must give me some supper: I have had nothing all day but a pain de deux
+sous; I can't stand it at home. My heart's almost broken--you must give
+me some money, Pen, old boy. I know you will. I thought of writing to
+you, but I wanted to support myself, you see. When I went to London with
+the drawings I tried George's chambers, but he was in the country, I saw
+Crackthorpe on the street in Oxford Street, but I could not face him,
+and bolted down Hanway Yard. I tried, and I could not ask him, and I got
+the eighteen pounds from Moss that day, and came home with it."
+
+Give him money? of course I would give him money--my dear old friend!
+And, as an alterative and a wholesome shock to check that burst of
+passion and grief in which the poor fellow indulged, I thought fit
+to break into a very fierce and angry invective on my own part, which
+served to disguise the extreme feeling of pain and pity that I did not
+somehow choose to exhibit. I rated Clive soundly, and taxed him with
+unfriendliness and ingratitude for not having sooner applied to friends
+who would think shame of themselves whilst he was in need. Whatever he
+wanted was his as much as mine. I could not understand how the necessity
+of the family should, in truth, be so extreme as he described it, for
+after all many a poor family lived upon very much less; but I uttered
+none of these objections, checking them with the thought that Clive,
+on his first arrival at Boulogne, entirely ignorant of the practice of
+economy, might have imprudently engaged in expenses which had reduced
+him to this present destitution. (I did not know at the time that Mrs.
+Mackenzie had taken entire superintendence of the family treasury--and
+that this exemplary woman was putting away, as she had done previously,
+sundry little sums to meet rainy days.)
+
+I took the liberty of asking about debts, and of these Clive gave me
+to understand there were none--at least none of his or his father's
+contracting. "If we were too proud to borrow, and I think we were wrong,
+Pen, my dear old boy--I think we were wrong now--at least, we were too
+proud to owe. My colourman takes his bill out in drawings, and I think
+owes me a trifle. He got me some lessons at fifty sous a ticket--a pound
+the ten--from an economical swell who has taken a chateau here, and has
+two flunkeys in livery. He has four daughters, who take advantage of the
+lessons, and screws ten per cent upon the poor colourman's pencils and
+drawing-paper. It's pleasant work to give the lessons to the children;
+and to be patronised by the swell; and not expensive to him, is it, Pen?
+But I don't mind that, if I could but get lessons enough: for, you see,
+besides our expenses here, we must have some more money, and the dear
+old governor would die outright if poor old Sarah Mason did not get her
+fifty pounds a year."
+
+And now there arrived a plentiful supper, and a bottle of good wine,
+of which the giver was not sorry to partake after the meagre dinner at
+three o'clock, to which I had been invited by the Campaigner; and it
+was midnight when I walked back with my friend to his house in the upper
+town; and all the stars of heaven were shining cheerily; and my dear
+Clive's face wore an expression of happiness, such as I remembered in
+old days, as we shook hands and parted with a "God bless you."
+
+To Clive's friend, revolving these things in his mind, as he lay in
+one of those most snug and comfortable beds at the excellent Hotel des
+Bains, it appeared that this town of Boulogne was a very bad market for
+the artist's talents; and that he had to bring them to London, where a
+score of old friends would assuredly be ready to help him. And if the
+Colonel, too, could be got away from the domination of the Campaigner,
+I felt certain that the dear old gentleman could but profit by his leave
+of absence. My wife and I at this time inhabited a spacious old house
+in Queens Square, Westminster, where there was plenty of room for
+father and son. I knew that Laura would be delighted to welcome these
+guests--may the wife of every worthy gentleman who reads these pages be
+as ready to receive her husband's friends. It was the state of Rosa's
+health, and the Campaigner's authority and permission, about which I
+was in doubt, and whether this lady's two slaves would be allowed to go
+away.
+
+These cogitations kept the present biographer long awake, and he did not
+breakfast next day until an hour before noon. I had the coffee-room
+to myself by chance, and my meal was not yet ended when the waiter
+announced a lady to visit Mr. Pendennis, and Mrs. Mackenzie made her
+appearance. No signs of care or poverty were visible in the attire or
+countenance of the buxom widow. A handsome bonnet, decorated within
+with a profusion of poppies, bluebells; and ears of corn; a jewel on
+her forehead, not costly, but splendid in appearance, and glittering
+artfully over that central spot from which her wavy chestnut hair parted
+to cluster in ringlets round her ample cheeks; a handsome India shawl,
+smart gloves, a rich silk dress, a neat parasol of blue with pale yellow
+lining, a multiplicity of glittering rinks, and a very splendid gold
+watch and chain, which I remembered in former days as hanging round poor
+Rosey's white neck;--all these adornments set off the widow's person, so
+that you might have thought her a wealthy capitalist's lady, and never
+could have supposed that she was a poor, cheated, ruined, robbed,
+unfortunate Campaigner.
+
+Nothing could be more gracious than the accueil of this lady. She
+paid me many handsome compliments about my literary work--asked most
+affectionately for dear Mrs. Pendennis and the dear children--and then,
+as I expected, coming to business, contrasted the happiness and genteel
+position of my wife and family with the misery and wrongs of her own
+blessed child and grandson. She never could call that child by the
+odious name which he received at his baptism. I knew what bitter reasons
+she had to dislike the name of Thomas Newcome.
+
+She again rapidly enumerated the wrongs she had received at the hands
+of that gentleman; mentioned the vast sums of money out of which she and
+her soul's darling had been tricked by that poor muddle-headed creature,
+to say no worse of him; and described finally their present pressing
+need. The doctors, the burial, Rosey's delicate condition, the cost of
+sweetbreads, calf's-foot jelly, and cod-liver oil, were again passed in
+a rapid calculation before me; and she ended her speech by expressing
+her gratification that I had attended to her advice of the previous day,
+and not given Clive Newcome a direct loan; that the family wanted it,
+the Campaigner called upon Heaven to witness; that Clive and his absurd
+poor father would fling guineas out of the window was a fact equally
+certain; the rest of the argument was obvious, namely, that Mr.
+Pendennis should administer a donation to herself.
+
+I had brought but a small sum of money in my pocket-book, though Mrs.
+Mackenzie, intimate with bankers, and having, thank Heaven, in spite of
+all her misfortunes, the utmost confidence of all her tradesmen, hinted
+a perfect willingness on her part to accept an order upon her friends,
+Hobson Brothers of London.
+
+This direct thrust I gently and smilingly parried by asking Mrs.
+Mackenzie whether she supposed a gentleman who had just paid an
+electioneering bill, and had, at the best of times, but a very small
+income, might sometimes not be in a condition to draw satisfactorily
+upon Messrs. Hobson or any other bankers? Her countenance fell at this
+remark, nor was her cheerfulness much improved by the tender of one of
+the two bank-notes which then happened to be in my possession. I said
+that I had a use for the remaining note, and that it would not be more
+than sufficient to pay my hotel bill, and the expenses of my party back
+to London.
+
+My party? I had here to divulge, with some little trepidation, the plan
+which I had been making overnight; to explain how I thought that Clive's
+great talents were wasted at Boulogne, and could only find a proper
+market in London; how I was pretty certain, through my connection with
+booksellers, to find some advantageous employment for him, and would
+have done so months ago had I known the state of the case; but I had
+believed, until within a very few days since, that the Colonel, in spite
+of his bankruptcy, was still in the enjoyment of considerable military
+pensions.
+
+This statement, of course, elicited from the widow a number of remarks
+not complimentary to my dear old Colonel. He might have kept
+his pensions had he not been a fool--he was a baby about money
+matters--misled himself and everybody--was a log in the house, etc. etc.
+etc.
+
+I suggested that his annuities might possibly be put into some more
+satisfactory shape--that I had trustworthy lawyers with whom I would put
+him in communication--that he had best come to London to see to these
+matters--and that my wife had a large house where she would most gladly
+entertain the two gentlemen.
+
+This I said with some reasonable dread--fearing, in the first place,
+her refusal; in the second, her acceptance of the invitation, with a
+proposal, as our house was large, to come herself and inhabit it for a
+while. Had I not seen that Campaigner arrive for a month at poor James
+Binnie's house in Fitzroy Square, and stay there for many years? Was
+I not aware that when she once set her foot in a gentleman's
+establishment, terrific battles must ensue before she could be
+dislodged? Had she not once been routed by Clive? and was she not now in
+command and possession? Do I not, finally, know something of the world;
+and have I not a weak, easy temper? I protest it was with terror that I
+awaited the widow's possible answer to my proposal.
+
+To my great relief, she expressed the utmost approval of both my plans.
+I was uncommonly kind, she was sure, to interest myself about the two
+gentlemen, and for her blessed Rosa's sake, a fond mother thanked me.
+It was most advisable that he should earn some money by that horrid
+profession which he had chosen to adopt--a trade, she called it. She
+was clearly anxious get rid both of father and son, and agreed that the
+sooner they went the better.
+
+We walked back arm-in-arm to the Colonel's quarters in the Old Town,
+Mrs. Mackenzie, in the course of our walk, doing me the honour to
+introduce me by name to several dingy acquaintances, whom we met
+sauntering up the street, and imparting to me, as each moved away, the
+pecuniary cause of his temporary residence in Boulogne. Spite of Rosey's
+delicate state of health, Mrs. Mackenzie did not hesitate to break the
+news to her of the gentlemen's probable departure, abruptly and eagerly,
+as if the intelligence was likely to please her:--and it did, rather
+than otherwise. The young woman, being in the habit of letting mamma
+judge for her, continued it in this instance; and whether her husband
+stayed or went, seemed to be equally content or apathetic. "And is it
+not most kind and generous of dear Mr. and Mrs. Pendennis to propose
+to receive Mr. Newcome and the Colonel?" This opportunity for gratitude
+being pointed out to Rosey, she acquiesced in it straightway--it was
+very kind of me, Rosey was sure. "And don't you ask after dear Mrs.
+Pendennis and the dear children--you poor dear suffering darling child?"
+Rosey, who had neglected this inquiry, immediately hoped Mrs. Pendennis
+and the children were well. The overpowering mother had taken utter
+possession of this poor little thing. Rosey's eyes followed the
+Campaigner about, and appealed to her at all moments. She sat
+under Mrs. Mackenzie as a bird before a boa-constrictor,
+doomed--fluttering--fascinated--scared and fawning as a whipt spaniel
+before a keeper.
+
+The Colonel was on his accustomed bench on the rampart at this sunny
+hour. I repaired thither, and found the old gentleman seated by his
+grandson, who lay, as yesterday, on the little bonne's lap, one of his
+little purple hands closed round the grandfather's finger. "Hush!"
+says the good man, lifting up his other finger to his moustache, as
+I approached, "Boy's asleep. Il est bien joli quand il dort--le Boy,
+n'est-ce pas, Marie?" The maid believed monsieur well--the boy was
+a little angel. "This maid is a most trustworthy, valuable person,
+Pendennis," the Colonel said, with much gravity.
+
+The boa-constrictor had fascinated him, too--the lash of that woman at
+home had cowed that helpless, gentle, noble spirit. As I looked at the
+head so upright and manly, now so beautiful and resigned--the year of
+his past life seemed to pass before me somehow in a flash of thought.
+I could fancy the accursed tyranny--the dumb acquiescence--the
+brutal jeer--the helpless remorse--the sleepless nights of pain and
+recollection--the gentle heart lacerated with deadly stabs--and the
+impotent hope. I own I burst into a sob at the sight, and thought of the
+noble suffering creature, and hid my face, and turned away.
+
+He sprang up, releasing his hand from the child's, and placing it, the
+kind shaking hand, on my shoulder. "What is it, Arthur--my dear boy?"
+he said, looking wistfully in my face. "No bad news from home, my dear?
+Laura and the children well?"
+
+The emotion was mastered in a moment, I put his arm under mine, and as
+we slowly sauntered up and down the sunny walk of the old rampart, I
+told him how I had come with special commands from Laura to bring him
+for a while to stay with us, and to settle his business, which I was
+sure had been wofully mismanaged, and to see whether we could not find
+the means of getting some little out of the wreck of the property for
+the boy yonder.
+
+At first Colonel Newcome would not hear of quitting Boulogne, where
+Rosey would miss him--he was sure she would want him--but before the
+ladies of his family, to whom we presently returned, Thomas Newcome's
+resolution was quickly recalled. He agreed to go, and Clive coming in at
+this time was put in possession of our plan and gladly acquiesced in it.
+On that very evening I came with a carriage to conduct my two friends
+to the steamboat. Their little packets were made and ready. There was no
+pretence of grief at parting on the women's side, but Marie, the little
+maid, with Boy in her arms, cried sadly; and Clive heartily embraced the
+child; and the Colonel, going back to give it one more kiss, drew out of
+his neckcloth a little gold brooch which he wore, and which, trembling,
+he put into Marie's hand, bidding her take good care of Boy till his
+return.
+
+"She is a good girl--a most faithful, attached girl, Arthur, do you
+see," the kind old gentleman said; "and I had no money to give her--no,
+not one single rupee."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXIV. In which Clive begins the World
+
+
+We are ending our history, and yet poor Clive is but beginning the
+world. He has to earn the bread which he eats henceforth; and, as I
+saw his labours, his trials, and his disappointments, I could not but
+compare his calling with my own.
+
+The drawbacks and penalties attendant upon our profession are taken into
+full account, as we well know, by literary men, and their friends.
+Our poverty, hardships, and disappointments are set forth with great
+emphasis, and often with too great truth by those who speak of us; but
+there are advantages belonging to our trade which are passed over, I
+think, by some of those who exercise it and describe it, and for
+which, in striking the balance of our accounts, we are not always duly
+thankful. We have no patron, so to speak--we sit in ante-chambers no
+more, waiting the present of a few guineas from my lord, in return for a
+fulsome dedication. We sell our wares to the book-purveyor, between
+whom and us there is no greater obligation than between him and his
+paper-maker or printer. In the great towns in our country immense
+stores of books are provided for us, with librarians to class them, kind
+attendants to wait upon us, and comfortable appliances for study. We
+require scarce any capital wherewith to exercise our trade. What
+other so-called learned profession is equally fortunate? A doctor, for
+example, after carefully and expensively educating himself, must invest
+in house and furniture, horses, carriage, and menservants, before
+the public patient will think of calling him in. I am told that such
+gentlemen have to coax and wheedle dowagers, to humour hypochondriacs,
+to practise a score of little subsidiary arts in order to make that of
+healing profitable. How many many hundreds of pounds has a barrister to
+sink upon his stock-in-trade before his returns are available? There are
+the costly charges of university education--the costly chambers in the
+Inn of Court--the clerk and his maintenance--the inevitable travels on
+circuit--certain expenses all to be defrayed before the possible client
+makes his appearance, and the chance of fame or competency arrives. The
+prizes are great, to be sure, in the law, but what a prodigious sum the
+lottery-ticket costs! If a man of letters cannot win, neither does he
+risk so much. Let us speak of our trade as we find it, and not be too
+eager in calling out for public compassion.
+
+The artists, for the most part, do not cry out their woes as loudly as
+some gentlemen of the literary fraternity, and yet I think the life
+of many of them is harder; their chances even more precarious, and the
+conditions of their profession less independent and agreeable than ours.
+I have watched Smee, Esq., R.A., flattering and fawning, and at the same
+time boasting and swaggering, poor fellow, in order to secure a sitter.
+I have listened to a Manchester magnate talking about fine arts before
+one of J. J.'s pictures, assuming the airs of a painter, and laying down
+the most absurd laws respecting the art. I have seen poor Tomkins bowing
+a rich amateur through a private view, and noted the eager smiles on
+Tomkins' face at the amateur's slightest joke, the sickly twinkle of
+hope in his eyes as Amateur stopped before his own picture. I have been
+ushered by Chipstone's black servant through hall after hall peopled
+with plaster gods and heroes, into Chipstone's own magnificent studio,
+where he sat longing vainly for an order, and justly dreading his
+landlord's call for the rent. And, seeing how severely these gentlemen
+were taxed in their profession, I have been grateful for my own more
+fortunate one, which necessitates cringing to no patron; which calls for
+no keeping up of appearances; and which requires no stock-in-trade save
+the workman's industry, his best ability, and a dozen sheets of paper.
+
+Having to turn with all his might to his new profession, Clive Newcome,
+one of the proudest men alive, chose to revolt and to be restive at
+almost every stage of his training. He had a natural genius for his art,
+and had acquired in his desultory way a very considerable skill. His
+drawing was better than his painting (an opinion which, were my friend
+present, he of course would utterly contradict); his designs and
+sketches were far superior to his finished compositions. His friends,
+presuming to judge of this artist's qualifications, ventured to counsel
+him accordingly, and were thanked for their pains in the usual manner.
+We had in the first place to bully and browbeat Clive most fiercely,
+before he would take fitting lodgings for the execution of those designs
+which we had in view for him. "Why should I take expensive lodgings?"
+says Clive, slapping his fist on the table. "I am a pauper, and can
+scarcely afford to live in a garret. Why should you pay me for drawing
+your portrait and Laura's and the children? What the deuce does
+Warrington want with the effigy of his old mug? You don't want them a
+bit--you only want to give me money.--It would be much more honest of
+me to take the money at once and own that I am a beggar; and I tell you
+what, Pen, the only money which I feel I come honestly by, is that which
+is paid me by a little printseller in Long Acre who buys my drawings,
+one with another, at fourteen shillings apiece, and out of whom I can
+earn pretty nearly two hundred a year. I am doing Coaches for him, sir,
+and Charges of Cavalry; the public like the Mail Coaches best--on a
+dark paper--the horses and miles picked out white--yellow dust--cobalt
+distance, and the guard and coachman of course in vermilion. That's
+what a gentleman can get his bread by--portraits, pooh! it's disguised
+beggary, Crackthorpe, and a half-dozen men of his regiment came, like
+good fellows as they are, and sent me five pounds apiece for their
+heads, but I tell you I am ashamed to take the money." Such used to be
+the tenor of Clive Newcome's conversation as he strode up and down our
+room after dinner, pulling his moustache, and dashing his long yellow
+hair off his gaunt face.
+
+When Clive was inducted into the new lodgings at which his friends
+counselled him to hang up his ensign, the dear old Colonel accompanied
+his son, parting with a sincere regret from our little ones at home, to
+whom he became greatly endeared during his visit to us, and who always
+hailed him when he came to see us with smiles and caresses and sweet
+infantile welcome. On that day when he went away, Laura went up and
+kissed him with tears in her eyes. "You know how long I have been
+wanting to do it," this lady said to her husband. Indeed I cannot
+describe the behaviour of the old man during his stay with us, his
+gentle gratitude, his sweet simplicity and kindness, his thoughtful
+courtesy. There was not a servant in our little household but was eager
+to wait upon him. Laura's maid was as tender-hearted at his departure
+as her mistress. He was ailing for a short time, when our cook performed
+prodigies of puddings and jellies to suit his palate. The youth who held
+the offices of butler and valet in our establishment--a lazy and greedy
+youth whom Martha scolded in vain--would jump up and leave his supper to
+carry a message to our Colonel. My heart is full as I remember the kind
+words which he said to me at parting, and as I think that we were the
+means of giving a little comfort to that stricken and gentle soul.
+
+Whilst the Colonel and his son stayed with us, letters of course passed
+between Clive and his family at Boulogne, but my wife remarked that
+the receipt of those letters appeared to give our friend but little
+pleasure. They were read in a minute, and he would toss them over to his
+father, or thrust them into his pocket with a gloomy face. "Don't you
+see," groans out Clive to me one evening, "that Rosa scarcely writes
+the letters, or if she does, that her mother is standing over her? That
+woman is the Nemesis of our life, Pen. How can I pay her off? Great God!
+how can I pay her off?" And so having spoken, his head fell between his
+hands, and as I watched him I saw a ghastly domestic picture before me
+of helpless pain, humiliating discord, stupid tyranny.
+
+What, I say again, are the so-called great ills of life compared to
+these small ones?
+
+The Colonel accompanied Clive to the lodgings which we had found for the
+young artist, in a quarter not far removed from the old house in Fitzroy
+Square, where some happy years of his youth had been spent. When sitters
+came to Clive--as at first they did in some numbers, many of his
+early friends being anxious to do him a service--the old gentleman was
+extraordinarily cheered and comforted. We could see by his face that
+affairs were going on well at the studio. He showed us the rooms which
+Rosey and the boy were to occupy. He prattled to our children and their
+mother, who was never tired of hearing him, about his grandson. He
+filled up the future nursery with a hundred little knick-knacks of his
+own contriving; and with wonderful cheap bargains, which he bought in
+his walks about Tottenham Court Road. He pasted a most elaborate book of
+prints and sketches for Boy. It was astonishing what notice Boy already
+took of pictures. He would have all the genius of his father. Would he
+had had a better grandfather than the foolish old man who had ruined all
+belonging to him!
+
+However much they like each other, men in the London world see their
+friends but seldom. The place is so vast that even next door is distant;
+the calls of business, society, pleasure, so multifarious that mere
+friendship can get or give but an occasional shake of the hand in the
+hurried moments of passage. Men must live their lives; and are perforce
+selfish, but not unfriendly. At a great need you know where to look for
+your friend, and he that he is secure of you. So I went very little to
+Howland Street, where Clive now lived; very seldom to Lamb Court, where
+my dear old friend Warrington still sate in his old chambers, though our
+meetings were none the less cordial when they occurred, and our trust in
+one another always the same. Some folks say the world is heartless: he
+who says so either prates commonplaces (the most likely and charitable
+suggestion), or is heartless himself, or is most singular and
+unfortunate in having made no friends. Many such a reasonable mortal
+cannot have: our nature, I think, not sufficing for that sort of
+polygamy. How many persons would you have to deplore your death; or
+whose death would you wish to deplore? Could our hearts let in such a
+harem of dear friendships, the mere changes and recurrences of grief and
+mourning would be intolerable, and tax our lives beyond their value. In
+a word, we carry our own burthen in the world; push and struggle along
+on our own affairs; are pinched by our own shoes--though Heaven forbid
+we should not stop and forget ourselves sometimes, when a friend cries
+out in his distress, or we can help a poor stricken wanderer in his way.
+As for good women--these, my worthy reader, are different from us--the
+nature of these is to love, and to do kind offices, and devise untiring
+charities:--so I would have you to know, that, though Mr. Pendennis was
+parcus suorum cultor et infrequens, Mrs. Laura found plenty of time to
+go from Westminster to Bloomsbury; and to pay visits to her Colonel and
+her Clive, both of whom she had got to love with all her heart again,
+now misfortune was on them; and both of whom returned her kindness with
+an affection blessing the bestower and the receiver; and making the
+husband proud and thankful whose wife had earned such a noble regard.
+What is the dearest praise of all to a man? his own--or that you should
+love those whom he loves? I see Laura Pendennis ever constant and tender
+and pure, ever ministering in her sacred office of kindness--bestowing
+love and followed by blessings. Which would I have, think you; that
+priceless crown hymeneal, or the glory of a Tenth Edition?
+
+Clive and his father had found not only a model friend in the lady above
+mentioned, but a perfect prize landlady in their happy lodgings. In
+her house, besides those apartments which Mr. Newcome had originally
+engaged, were rooms just sufficient to accommodate his wife, child, and
+servant, when they should come to him, with a very snug little upper
+chamber for the Colonel, close by Boy's nursery, where he liked best to
+be. "And if there is not room for the Campaigner, as you call her," says
+Mrs. Laura, with a shrug of her shoulders, "why, I am very sorry, but
+Clive must try and bear her absence as well as possible. After all, my
+dear Pen, you know he is married to Rosa and not to her mamma; and so,
+and so I think it will be quite best that they shall have their menage
+as before."
+
+The cheapness of the lodgings which the prize landlady let, the quantity
+of neat new furniture which she put in, the consultations which she had
+with my wife regarding these supplies, were quite singular to me. "Have
+you pawned your diamonds, you reckless little person, in order to supply
+all this upholstery?" "No, sir, I have not pawned my diamonds," Mrs.
+Laura answers; and I was left to think (if I thought on the matter at
+all) that the landlady's own benevolence had provided these good things
+for Clive. For the wife of Laura's husband was perforce poor; and she
+asked me for no more money at this time than at any other.
+
+At first, in spite of his grumbling, Clive's affairs looked so
+prosperous, and so many sitters came to him from amongst his old
+friends, that I was half inclined to believe with the Colonel and my
+wife, that he was a prodigious genius, and that his good fortune would
+go on increasing. Laura was for having Rosey return to her husband.
+Every wife ought to be with her husband. J. J. shook his head about the
+prosperity. "Let us see whether the Academy will have his pictures
+this year, and what a place they will give him," said Ridley. To do him
+justice, Clive thought far more humbly of his compositions than Ridley
+did. Not a little touching was it to us, who had known the young men
+in former days, to see them in their changed positions. It was Ridley,
+whose genius and industry had put him in the rank of a patron--Ridley,
+the good industrious apprentice, who had won the prize of his art--and
+not one of his many admirers saluted his talent and success with such a
+hearty recognition as Clive, whose generous soul knew no envy, and who
+always fired and kindled at the success of his friends.
+
+When Mr. Clive used to go over to Boulogne from time to time to pay his
+dutiful visits to his wife, the Colonel did not accompany his son, but,
+during the latter's absence, would dine with Mrs. Pendennis.
+
+Though the preparations were complete in Howland Street, and Clive
+dutifully went over to Boulogne, Mrs. Pendennis remarked that he seemed
+still to hesitate about bringing his wife to London.
+
+Upon this Mr. Pendennis observed that some gentlemen were not
+particularly anxious about the society of their wives, and that this
+pair were perhaps better apart. Upon which Mrs. Pendennis, drubbing on
+the ground with a little foot, said, "Nonsense, for shame, Arthur! How
+can you speak so flippantly? Did he not swear before Heaven to love and
+cherish her, never to leave her, sir? Is not his duty his duty, sir?"
+(a most emphatic stamp of the foot). "Is she not his for better, or for
+worse?"
+
+"Including the Campaigner, my dear?" says Mr. P.
+
+"Don't laugh, sir! She must come to him. There is no room in Howland
+Street for Mrs. Mackenzie."
+
+"You artful scheming creature! We have some spare rooms. Suppose we ask
+Mrs. Mackenzie to come and live with us, my dear? and we could then have
+the benefit of the garrison anecdotes, and mess jocularities of your
+favourite, Captain Goby."
+
+"I could never bear the horrid man!" cried Mrs. Pendennis. And how can I
+tell why she disliked him?
+
+Everything being now ready for the reception of Clive's little family,
+we counselled our friend to go over to Boulogne, and bring back his wife
+and child, and then to make some final stipulation with the Campaigner.
+He saw, as well as we, that the presence and tyranny of that fatal woman
+destroyed his father's health and spirits--that the old man knew no
+peace or comfort in her neighbourhood, and was actually hastening to his
+grave under that dreadful and unremitting persecution. Mrs. Mackenzie
+made Clive scarcely less wretched than his father--she governed his
+household--took away his weak wife's allegiance and affection from
+him--and caused the wretchedness of every single person round about
+her. They ought to live apart. If she was too poor to subsist upon her
+widow's pension, which, in truth, was but a very small pittance, let
+Clive give up to her, say, the half of his wife's income of one hundred
+pounds a year. His prospects and present means of earning money were
+such that he might afford to do without that portion of his income; at
+any rate, he and his father would be cheaply ransomed at that price from
+their imprisonment to this intolerable person. "Go, Clive," said his
+counsellors, "and bring back your wife and child, and let us all be
+happy together." For, you see, those advisers opined that if we had
+written over to Mrs. Newcome--"Come"--she would have come with the
+Campaigner in her suite.
+
+Vowing that he would behave like a man of courage--and we knew
+that Clive had shown himself to be such in two or three previous
+battles--Clive crossed the water to bring back his little Rosey. Our
+good Colonel agreed to dine at our house during the days of his son's
+absence. I have said how beloved he was by young and old there--and he
+was kind enough to say afterwards, that no woman had made him so happy
+as Laura. We did not tell him--I know not from what reticence--that
+we had advised Clive to offer a bribe of fifty pounds a year to Mrs.
+Mackenzie; until about a fortnight after Clive's absence, and a week
+after his return, when news came that poor old Mrs. Mason was dead at
+Newcome, whereupon we informed the Colonel that he had another pensioner
+now in the Campaigner.
+
+Colonel Newcome was thankful that his dear old friend had gone out of
+the world in comfort and without pain. She had made a will long since,
+leaving all her goods and chattels to Thomas Newcome--but having no
+money to give, the Colonel handed over these to the old lady's faithful
+attendant, Keziah.
+
+Although many of the Colonel's old friends had parted from him or
+quarrelled with him in consequence of the ill success of the B. B. C.,
+there were two old ladies who yet remained faithful to him--Miss Cann,
+namely, and honest little Miss Honeyman of Brighton, who, when she heard
+of the return to London of her nephew and brother-in-law, made a railway
+journey to the metropolis (being the first time she ever engaged in that
+kind of travelling), rustled into Clive's apartments in Howland Street
+in her neatest silks, and looking not a day older than on that when we
+last beheld her; and after briskly scolding the young man for permitting
+his father to enter into money affairs--of which the poor dear Colonel
+was as ignorant as a baby--she gave them both to understand that she had
+a little sum at her banker's at their disposal--and besought the Colonel
+to remember that her house was his, and that she should be proud and
+happy to receive him as soon and as often and for as long a time as
+he would honour her with his company. "Is not my house full of your
+presents"--cried the stout little old lady--"have I not reason to be
+grateful to all the Newcomes--yes, to all the Newcomes;--for Miss
+Ethel and her family have come to me every year for months, and I
+don't quarrel with them, and I won't, although you do, sir? Is not this
+shawl--are not these jewels that I wear," she continued, pointing to
+those well-known ornaments, "my dear Colonel's gift? Did you not relieve
+my brother Charles in this country and procure for him his place in
+India? Yes, my dear friend--and though you have been imprudent in money
+matters, my obligations towards you, and my gratitude, and my affection
+are always the same." Thus Miss Honeyman spoke, with somewhat of a
+quivering voice at the end of her little oration, but with exceeding
+state and dignity--for she believed that her investment of two hundred
+pounds in that unlucky B. B. C., which failed for half a million, was
+a sum of considerable importance, and gave her a right to express her
+opinion to the Managers.
+
+Clive came back from Boulogne in a week, as we have said--but he came
+back without his wife, much to our alarm, and looked so exceedingly
+fierce and glum when we demanded the reason of his return without his
+family, that we saw wars and battles had taken place, and thought that
+in this last continental campaign the Campaigner had been too much for
+her friend.
+
+The Colonel, to whom Clive communicated, though with us the poor lad
+held his tongue, told my wife what had happened:--not all the battles;
+which no doubt raged at breakfast, dinner, supper, during the week of
+Clive's visit to Boulogne,--but the upshot of these engagements. Rosey,
+not unwilling in her first private talk with her husband to come to
+England with him and the boy, showed herself irresolute on the second
+day at breakfast, when the fire was opened on both sides; cried
+at dinner when fierce assaults took place, in which Clive had the
+advantage; slept soundly, but besought him to be very firm, and met
+the enemy at breakfast with a quaking heart; cried all that day during
+which, pretty well without cease, the engagement lasted; and when Clive
+might have conquered and brought her off, but the weather was windy and
+the sea was rough, and he was pronounced a brute to venture on it with a
+wife in Rosey's situation.
+
+Behind that "situation" the widow shielded herself. She clung to her
+adored child, and from that bulwark discharged abuse and satire at Clive
+and his father. He could not rout her out of her position. Having had
+the advantage on the first two or three days, on the four last he
+was beaten, and lost ground in each action. Rosey found that in her
+situation she could not part from her darling mamma. The Campaigner for
+her part averred that she might be reduced to beggary; that she might be
+robbed of her last farthing and swindled and cheated; that she might see
+her daughter's fortune flung away by unprincipled adventurers, and her
+blessed child left without even the comforts of life; but desert her in
+such a situation, she never would--no, never! Was not dear Rosa's health
+already impaired by the various shocks which she had undergone? Did she
+not require every comfort, every attendance? Monster! ask the doctor!
+She would stay with her darling child in spite of insult and rudeness
+and vulgarity. (Rosey's father was a King's officer, not a Company's
+officer, thank God!) She would stay as long at least as Rosey's
+situation continued, at Boulogne, if not in London, but with her child.
+They might refuse to send her money, having robbed her of all her own,
+but she would pawn her gown off her back for her child. Whimpers
+from Rosey--cries of "Mamma, mamma, compose yourself,"--convulsive
+sobs--clenched knuckles--flashing eyes--embraces rapidly
+clutched--laughs--stamps--snorts--from the dishevelled Campaigner;
+grinding teeth--livid fury and repeated breakages of the third
+commandment by Clive--I can fancy the whole scene. He returned to London
+without his wife, and when she came she brought Mrs. Mackenzie with her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXV. Founder's Day at the Grey Friars
+
+
+Rosey came, bringing discord and wretchedness with her to her husband,
+and the sentence of death or exile to his dear old father, all of
+which we foresaw--all of which Clive's friends would have longed to
+prevent--all of which were inevitable under the circumstances. Clive's
+domestic affairs were often talked over by our little set. Warrington
+and F. B. knew of his unhappiness. We three had strongly opined that
+the women being together at Boulogne, should stay there and live there,
+Clive sending them over pecuniary aid as his means permitted. "They must
+hate each other pretty well by this time," growls George Warrington.
+"Why on earth should they not part?" "What a woman that Mrs. Mackenzie
+is!" cries F. B. "What an infernal tartar and catamaran! She who was
+so uncommonly smiling and soft-spoken, and such a fine woman, by
+jingo! What puzzles all women are!" F. B. sighed, and drowned further
+reflection in beer.
+
+On the other side, and most strongly advocating Rosey's return to Clive,
+was Mrs. Laura Pendennis; with certain arguments for which she had
+chapter and verse, and against which we of the separatist party had no
+appeal. "Did he marry her only for the days of her prosperity?" asked
+Laura. "Is it right, is it manly, that he should leave her now she
+is unhappy--poor little creature--no woman had ever more need of
+protection; and who should be her natural guardian save her husband?
+Surely, Arthur, you forget--have you forgotten them yourself, sir?--the
+solemn vows which Clive made at the altar. Is he not bound to his wife
+to keep only unto her so long as they both shall live, to love and
+comfort her, honour her, and keep her in sickness and health?"
+
+"To keep her, yes--but not to keep the Campaigner," cries Mr. Pendennis.
+"It is a moral bigamy, Laura, which you advocate, you wicked, immoral
+young woman!"
+
+But Laura, though she smiled at this notion, would not be put off from
+her first proposition. Turning to Clive, who was with us, talking over
+his doleful family circumstances, she took his hand, and pleaded the
+cause of right and religion with sweet artless fervour. She agreed with
+us that it was a hard lot for Clive to bear. So much the nobler the
+task, and the fulfilment of duty in enduring it. A few months too would
+put an end to his trials. When his child was born Mrs. Mackenzie would
+take her departure. It would even be Clive's duty to separate from her
+then, as it now was to humour his wife in her delicate condition, and
+to soothe the poor soul who had had a great deal of ill-health,
+of misfortune, of domestic calamity to wear and shatter her. Clive
+acquiesced with a groan, but--with a touching and generous resignation
+as we both thought. "She is right, Pen," he said, "I think your wife is
+always right. I will try, Laura, and bear my part, God help me! I will
+do my duty and strive my best to soothe and gratify my poor dear little
+woman. They will be making caps and things, and will not interrupt me in
+my studio. Of nights I can go to Clipstone Street and work at the Life.
+There's nothing like the Life, Pen. So you see I shan't be much at home
+except at meal-times, when by nature I shall have my mouth full, and
+no opportunity of quarrelling with poor Mrs. Mac." So he went home,
+followed and cheered by the love and pity of my dear wife, and
+determined stoutly to bear this heavy yoke which fate had put on him.
+
+To do Mrs. Mackenzie justice, that lady backed up with all her might the
+statement which my wife had put forward, with a view of soothing poor
+Clive, viz., that the residence of his mother-in-law in his house was
+only to be temporary. "Temporary!" cries Mrs. Mac (who was kind enough
+to make a call on Mrs. Pendennis, and treat that lady to a piece of
+her mind). "Do you suppose, madam, that it could be otherwise? Do you
+suppose that worlds would induce me to stay in a house where I have
+received such treatment; where, after I and my daughter had been robbed
+of every shilling of our fortune, where we are daily insulted by Colonel
+Newcome and his son? Do you suppose, ma'am, that I do not know that
+Clive's friends hate me, and give themselves airs and look down upon my
+darling child, and try and make differences between my sweet Rosa and
+me--Rosa who might have been dead, or might have been starving, but that
+her dear mother came to her rescue? No, I would never stay. I loathe
+every day that I remain in the house--I would rather beg my bread--I
+would rather sweep the streets and starve--though, thank God, I have my
+pension as the widow of an officer in Her Majesty's Service, and I can
+live upon that--and of that Colonel Newcome cannot rob me; and when my
+darling love needs a mother's care no longer, I will leave her. I
+will shake the dust off my feet and leave that house. I will--And Mr.
+Newcome's friends may then sneer at me and abuse me, and blacken my
+darling child's heart towards me if they choose. And I thank you, Mrs.
+Pendennis, for all your kindness towards my daughter's family, and for
+the furniture which you have sent into the house, and for the trouble
+you have taken about our family arrangements. It was for this I took
+the liberty of calling upon you, and I wish you a very good morning."
+So speaking, the Campaigner left my wife; and Mrs. Pendennis enacted the
+pleasing scene with great spirit to her husband afterwards, concluding
+the whole with a splendid curtsey and toss of the head, such as Mrs.
+Mackenzie performed as her parting salute.
+
+Our dear Colonel had fled before. He had acquiesced humbly with the
+decree of fate; and, lonely, old and beaten, marched honestly on the
+path of duty. It was a great blessing, he wrote to us, to him to think
+that in happier days and during many years he had been enabled to
+benefit his kind and excellent relative, Miss Honeyman. He could
+thankfully receive her hospitality now, and claim the kindness and
+shelter which this old friend gave him. No one could be more anxious to
+make him comfortable. The air of Brighton did him the greatest good;
+he had found some old friends, some old Bengalees there, with whom
+he enjoyed himself greatly, etc. How much did we, who knew his noble
+spirit, believe of this story? To us Heaven had awarded health,
+happiness, competence, loving children, united hearts, and modest
+prosperity. To yonder good man, whose long life shone with benefactions,
+and whose career was but kindness and honour, fate decreed poverty,
+disappointment, separation, a lonely old age. We bowed our heads,
+humiliated at the contrast of his lot and ours; and prayed Heaven to
+enable us to bear our present good fortune meekly, and our evil days, if
+they should come, with such a resignation as this good Christian showed.
+
+I forgot to say that our attempts to better Thomas Newcome's money
+affairs were quite in vain, the Colonel insisting upon paying over every
+shilling of his military allowances and retiring pension to the parties
+from whom he had borrowed money previous to his bankruptcy. "Ah! what
+a good man that is," says Mr. Sherrick with tears in his eyes, "what a
+noble fellow, sir! He would die rather than not pay every farthing over.
+He'd starve, sir, that he would. The money ain't mine, sir, or if it
+was do you think I'd take it from the poor old boy? No, sir; by Jove! I
+honour and reverence him more now he ain't got a shilling in his pocket,
+than ever I did when we thought he was a-rolling in money."
+
+My wife made one or two efforts at Samaritan visits in Howland Street,
+but was received by Mrs. Clive with such a faint welcome, and by the
+Campaigner with so grim a countenance, so many sneers, innuendoes,
+insults almost, that Laura's charity was beaten back, and she ceased to
+press good offices thus thanklessly received. If Clive came to visit us,
+as he very rarely did, after an official question or two regarding the
+health of his wife and child, no further mention was made of his family
+affairs. His painting, he said, was getting on tolerably well; he had
+work, scantily paid it is true, but work sufficient. He was reserved,
+uncommunicative, unlike the frank Clive of former times, and oppressed
+by his circumstances, as it was easy to see. I did not press the
+confidence which he was unwilling to offer, and thought best to respect
+his silence. I had a thousand affairs of my own; who has not in London?
+If you die to-morrow, your dearest friend will feel for you a hearty
+pang of sorrow, and go to his business as usual. I could divine,
+but would not care to describe, the life which my poor Clive was now
+leading; the vulgar misery, the sordid home, the cheerless toil, and
+lack of friendly companionship which darkened his kind soul. I was glad
+Clive's father was away. The Colonel wrote to us twice or thrice; could
+it be three months ago?--bless me, how time flies! He was happy, he
+wrote, with Miss Honeyman, who took the best care of him.
+
+Mention has been made once or twice in the course of this history of the
+Grey Friars school,--where the Colonel and Clive and I had been brought
+up,--an ancient foundation of the time of James I., still subsisting in
+the heart of London city. The death-day of the founder of the place is
+still kept solemnly by Cistercians. In their chapel, where assemble
+the boys of the school, and the fourscore old men of the Hospital,
+the founder's tomb stands, a huge edifice: emblazoned with heraldic
+decorations and clumsy carved allegories. There is an old Hall, a
+beautiful specimen of the architecture of James's time; an old Hall?
+many old halls; old staircases, passages, old chambers decorated with
+old portraits, walking in the midst of which we walk as it were in the
+early seventeenth century. To others than Cistercians, Grey Friars is a
+dreary place possibly. Nevertheless, the pupils educated there love to
+revisit it; and the oldest of us grow young again for an hour or two as
+we come back into those scenes of childhood.
+
+The custom of the school is, that on the 12th of December, the Founder's
+Day, the head gown-boy shall recite a Latin oration, in praise of
+Fundatoris Nostri, and upon other subjects; and a goodly company of old
+Cistercians is generally brought together to attend this oration: after
+which we go to chapel and hear a sermon; after which we adjourn to a
+great dinner, where old condisciples meet, old toasts are given, and
+speeches are made. Before marching from the oration-hall to chapel,
+the stewards of the day's dinner, according to old-fashioned rite,
+have wands put into their hands, walk to church at the head of the
+procession, and sit there in places of honour. The boys are already in
+their seats, with smug fresh faces, and shining white collars; the old
+black-gowned pensioners are on their benches; the chapel is lighted,
+and Founder's Tomb, with its grotesque carvings, monsters, heraldries,
+darkles and shines with the most wonderful shadows and lights. There
+he lies, Fundator Noster, in his ruff and gown, awaiting the great
+Examination Day. We oldsters, be we ever so old, become boys again as
+we look at that familiar old tomb, and think how the seats are altered
+since we were here, and how the doctor--not the present doctor, the
+doctor of our time--used to sit yonder, and his awful eye used to
+frighten us shuddering boys, on whom it lighted; and how the boy next us
+would kick our shins during service time, and how the monitor would
+cane us afterwards because our shins were kicked. Yonder sit forty
+cherry-cheeked boys, thinking about home and holidays to-morrow. Yonder
+sit some threescore old gentlemen pensioners of the hospital, listening
+to the prayers and the psalms. You hear them coughing feebly in
+the twilight,--the old reverend blackgowns. Is Codd Ajax alive, you
+wonder?--the Cistercian lads called these old gentlemen Codds, I know
+not wherefore--I know not wherefore--but is old Codd Ajax alive, I
+wonder? or Codd Soldier? or kind old Codd Gentleman, or has the grave
+closed over them? A plenty of candles lights up this chapel, and this
+scene of age and youth, and early memories, and pompous death. How
+solemn the well-remembered prayers are, here uttered again in the place
+wherein childhood we used to hear them! How beautiful and decorous the
+rite; how noble the ancient words of the supplications which the priest
+utters, and to which generations of fresh children and troops of bygone
+seniors have cried Amen! under those arches! The service for
+Founder's Day is a special one; one of the psalms selected being the
+thirty-seventh, and we hear--
+
+23. The steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord: and he delighteth
+in his way.
+
+24. Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down: for the Lord
+upholdeth him with his hand.
+
+25. I have been young, and now am old: yet have I not seen the righteous
+forsaken, nor his seed begging their bread.
+
+As we came to this verse, I chanced to look up from my book towards the
+swarm of black-coated pensioners: and amongst them--amongst them--sate
+Thomas Newcome.
+
+His dear old head was bent down over his prayer-book--there was no
+mistaking him. He wore the black gown of the pensioners of the Hospital
+of Grey Friars. His order of the Bath was on his breast. He stood there
+amongst the poor brethren, uttering the responses to the psalm. The
+steps of this good man had been ordered him hither by Heaven's decree:
+to this almshouse! Here it was ordained that a life all love, and
+kindness, and honour, should end! I heard no more of prayers, and
+psalms, and sermon, after that. How dared I to be in a place of mark,
+and he, he yonder among the poor? Oh, pardon, you noble soul! I ask
+forgiveness of you for being of a world that has so treated you--you
+my better, you the honest, and gentle, and good! I thought the service
+would never end, or the organist's voluntaries, or the preacher's
+homily.
+
+The organ played us out of chapel at length, and I waited in the
+ante-chapel until the pensioners took their turn to quit it. My dear,
+dear old friend! I ran to him with a warmth and eagerness of recognition
+which no doubt showed themselves in my face and accents, as my heart was
+moved at the sight of him. His own face flushed up when he saw me, and
+his hand shook in mine. "I have found a home, Arthur," said he. "Don't
+you remember before I went to India, when we came to see the old Grey
+Friars, and visited Captain Scarsdale in his room?--a poor brother like
+me--an old Peninsular man. Scarsdale is gone now, sir, and is where the
+wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest; and I thought
+then, when we saw him,--here would be a place for an old fellow when his
+career was over, to hang his sword up; to humble his soul, and to
+wait thankfully for the end. Arthur. My good friend, Lord H., who is a
+Cistercian like ourselves, and has just been appointed a governor, gave
+me his first nomination. Don't be agitated, Arthur my boy, I am very
+happy. I have good quarters, good food, good light and fire, and good
+friends; blessed be God! my dear kind young friend--my boy's friend; you
+have always been so, sir; and I take it uncommonly kind of you, and I
+thank God for you, sir. Why, sir, I am as happy as the day is long."
+He uttered words to this effect as he walked through the courts of the
+building towards his room, which in truth I found neat and comfortable,
+with a brisk fire crackling on the hearth; a little tea-table laid out,
+a Bible and spectacles by the side of it, and over the mantelpiece a
+drawing of his grandson by Clive.
+
+"You may come and see me here, sir, whenever you like, and so may your
+dear wife and little ones, tell Laura, with my love;--but you must not
+stay now. You must go back to your dinner." In vain I pleaded that I had
+no stomach for it. He gave me a look, which seemed to say he desired to
+be alone, and I had to respect that order and leave him.
+
+Of course I came to him on the very next day; though not with my wife
+and children, who were in truth absent in the country at Rosebury, where
+they were to pass the Christmas holidays; and where, this school-dinner
+over, I was to join them. On my second visit to Grey Friars my good
+friend entered more at length into the reasons why he had assumed the
+Poor Brother's gown; and I cannot say but that I acquiesced in his
+reasons, and admired that noble humility and contentedness of which he
+gave me an example.
+
+"That which had caused him most grief and pain," he said, "in the issue
+of that unfortunate bank, was the thought that poor friends of his had
+been induced by his representations to invest their little capital in
+that speculation. Good Miss Honeyman, for instance, meaning no harm,
+and in all respects a most honest and kindly-disposed old lady, had
+nevertheless alluded more than once to the fact that her money had been
+thrown away; and these allusions, sir, made her hospitality somewhat
+hard to bear," said the Colonel. "At home--at poor Clivey's, I mean--it
+was even worse," he continued; "Mrs. Mackenzie for months past, by
+her complaints, and--and her conduct, has made my son and me so
+miserable--that flight before her, and into any refuge, was the best
+course. She too does not mean ill, Pen. Do not waste any of your oaths
+upon that poor woman," he added, holding up his finger, and smiling
+sadly. "She thinks I deceived her, though Heaven knows it was myself I
+deceived. She has great influence over Rosa. Very few persons can resist
+that violent and headstrong woman, sir. I could not bear her reproaches,
+or my poor sick daughter, whom her mother leads almost entirely now, and
+it was with all this grief on my mind, that, as I was walking one day
+upon Brighton cliff, I met my schoolfellow, my Lord H----, who has
+ever been a good friend of mine--and who told me how he had just been
+appointed a governor of Grey Friars. He asked me to dine with him on
+the next day, and would take no refusal. He knew of my pecuniary
+misfortunes, of course--and showed himself most noble and liberal in his
+offers of help. I was very much touched by his goodness, Pen,--and made
+a clean breast of it to his lordship; who at first would not hear of
+my coming to this place--and offered me out of the purse of an old
+brother-schoolfellow and an old brother soldier as much--as much as
+should last me my time. Wasn't it noble of him, Arthur? God bless him!
+There are good men in the world, sir, there are true friends, as I have
+found in these later days. Do you know, sir"--here the old man's eyes
+twinkled,--"that Fred Bayham fixed up that bookcase yonder--and brought
+me my little boy's picture to hang up? Boy and Clive will come and see
+me soon."
+
+"Do you mean they do not come?" I cried.
+
+"They don't know I am here, sir," said the Colonel, with a sweet, kind
+smile. "They think I am visiting his lordship in Scotland. Ah! they
+are good people! When we had had a talk downstairs over our bottle of
+claret--where my old commander-in-chief would not hear of my plan--we
+went upstairs to her ladyship, who saw that her husband was disturbed,
+and asked the reason. I dare say it was the good claret that made me
+speak, sir; for I told her that I and her husband had had a dispute and
+that I would take her ladyship for umpire. And then I told her the story
+over, that I had paid away every rupee to the creditors, and mortgaged
+my pensions and retiring allowances for the same end, that I was a
+burden upon Clivey, who had enough, poor boy, to keep his own family,
+and his wife's mother, whom my imprudence had impoverished,--that here
+was an honourable asylum which my friend could procure for me, and
+was not that better than to drain his purse? She was very much moved,
+sir--she is a very kind lady, though she passed for being very proud and
+haughty in India--so wrongly are people judged. And Lord H. said, in
+his rough way, 'that, by Jove, if Tom Newcome took a thing into his
+obstinate old head no one could drive it out.' And so," said the
+Colonel, with his sad smile, "I had my own way. Lady H. was good enough
+to come and see me the very next day--and do you know, Pen, she invited
+me to go and live with them for the rest of my life--made me the most
+generous, the most delicate offers. But I knew I was right, and held my
+own. I am too old to work, Arthur: and better here whilst I am to stay,
+than elsewhere. Look! all this furniture came from H. House--and that
+wardrobe is full of linen, which she sent me. She has been twice to see
+me, and every officer in this hospital is as courteous to me as if I had
+my fine house."
+
+I thought of the psalm we had heard on the previous evening, and turned
+to it in the opened Bible, and pointed to the verse, "Though he fall,
+he shall not be utterly cast down: for the Lord upholdeth him."
+Thomas Newcome seeing my occupation, laid a kind, trembling hand on my
+shoulder; and then, putting on his glasses, with a smile bent over
+the volume. And who that saw him then, and knew him and loved him as I
+did--who would not have humbled his own heart, and breathed his inward
+prayer, confessing and adoring the Divine Will, which ordains these
+trials, these triumphs, these humiliations, these blest griefs, this
+crowning Love?
+
+I had the happiness of bringing Clive and his little boy to Thomas
+Newcome that evening; and heard the child's cry of recognition and
+surprise, and the old man calling the boy's name, as I closed the door
+upon that meeting; and by the night's mail I went down to Newcome, to
+the friends with whom my own family was already staying.
+
+Of course, my conscience-keeper at Rosebury was anxious to know about
+the school-dinner, and all the speeches made, and the guests assembled
+there; but she soot ceased to inquire about these when I came to give
+her the news of the discovery of our dear old friend in the habit of a
+Poor Brother of Grey Friars. She was very glad to hear that Clive and
+his little son had been reunited to the Colonel; and appeared to imagine
+at first, that there was some wonderful merit upon my part in bringing
+the three together.
+
+"Well--no great merit, Pen, as you will put it," says the Confessor;
+"but it was kindly thought, sir--and I like my husband when he is
+kind best; and don't wonder at your having made a stupid speech at the
+dinner, as you say you did, when you had this other subject to think of.
+That is a beautiful psalm, Pen, and those verses which you were reading
+when you saw him, especially beautiful."
+
+"But in the presence of eighty old gentlemen, who have all come to
+decay, and have all had to beg their bread in a manner, don't you think
+the clergyman might choose some other psalm?" asks Mr. Pendennis.
+
+"They were not forsaken utterly, Arthur," says Mrs. Laura, gravely:
+but rather declines to argue the point raised by me; namely, that the
+selection of that especial thirty-seventh psalm was not complimentary to
+those decayed old gentlemen.
+
+"All the psalms are good, sir," she says, "and this one, of course, is
+included," and thus the discussion closed.
+
+I then fell to a description of Howland Street, and poor Clive, whom
+I had found there over his work. A dubious maid scanned my appearance
+rather eagerly when I asked to see him. I found a picture-dealer
+chaffering with him over a bundle of sketches, and his little boy,
+already pencil in hand, lying in one corner of the room, the sun playing
+about his yellow hair. The child looked languid and pale, the father
+worn and ill. When the dealer at length took his bargains away, I
+gradually broke my errand to Clive, and told him from whence I had just
+come.
+
+He had thought his father in Scotland with Lord H.: and was immensely
+moved with the news which I brought.
+
+"I haven't written to him for a month. It's not pleasant the letters I
+have to write, Pen, and I can't make them pleasant. Up, Tommykin, and
+put on your cap." Tommykin jumps up. "Put on your cap, and tell them to
+take off your pinafore, tell grandmamma----"
+
+At that name Tommykin begins to cry.
+
+"Look at that!" says Clive, commencing to speak in the French language,
+which the child interrupts by calling out in that tongue. "I speak also
+French, papa."
+
+"Well, my child! You will like to come out with papa, and Betsy can
+dress you." He flings off his own paint-stained shooting-jacket as he
+talks, takes a frock-coat out of a carved wardrobe, and a hat from a
+helmet on the shelf. He is no longer the handsome splendid boy of
+old times. Can that be Clive, with that haggard face and slouched
+handkerchief? "I am not the dandy I was, Pen," he says bitterly.
+
+A little voice is heard crying overhead--and giving a kind of gasp the
+wretched father stops in some indifferent speech he was trying to make.
+"I can't help myself," he groans out; "my wife is so ill, she can't
+attend to the child. Mrs. Mackenzie manages the house for me--and--here!
+Tommy, Tommy! papa is coming!" Tommy has been crying again; and flinging
+open the studio door, Clive calls out, and dashes upstairs.
+
+I hear scuffling, stamping, loud voices, poor Tommy's scared little
+pipe--Clive's fierce objurgations, and the Campaigner's voice barking
+out--"Do, sir, do! with my child suffering in the next room. Behave
+like a brute to me, do. He shall not go! He shall not have the hat"--"He
+shall"--"Ah--ah!" A scream is heard. It is Clive tearing a child's
+hat out of the Campaigner's hands, with which, and a flushed face, he
+presently rushes downstairs, bearing little Tommy on his shoulder.
+
+"You see what I am come to, Pen," he says with a heartbroken voice,
+trying, with hands all of a tremble, to tie the hat on the boy's head.
+He laughs bitterly at the ill success of his endeavours. "Oh, you silly
+papa!" laughs Tommy, too.
+
+The door is flung open, and the red-faced Campaigner appears. Her face
+is mottled with wrath, her bandeaux of hair are disarranged upon her
+forehead, the ornaments of her cap, cheap, and dirty, and numerous, only
+give her a wilder appearance. She is in a large and dingy wrapper, very
+different from the lady who had presented herself a few months back to
+my wife--how different from the smiling Mrs. Mackenzie of old days!
+
+"He shall not go out of a winter day, sir," she breaks out. "I have
+his mother's orders, whom you are killing. Mr. Pendennis!" She starts,
+perceiving me for the first time, and her breast heaves, and she
+prepares for combat, and looks at me over her shoulder.
+
+"You and his father are the best judges upon this point, ma'am," said
+Mr. Pendennis, with a bow.
+
+"The child is delicate, sir," cries Mrs. Mackenzie; "and this
+winter----"
+
+"Enough of this," says Clive with a stamp, and passes through her guard
+with Tommy, and we descend the stairs, and at length are in the free
+street. Was it not best not to describe at full length this portion of
+poor Clive's history?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXVI. Christmas at Rosebury
+
+
+We have known our friend Florac under two aristocratic names, and might
+now salute him by a third, to which he was entitled, although neither he
+nor his wife ever chose to assume it. His father was lately dead, and
+M. Paul de Florac might sign himself Duc d'Ivry if he chose, but he was
+indifferent as to the matter, and his wife's friends indignant at the
+idea that their kinswoman, after having been a Princess, should descend
+to the rank of a mere Duchess. So Prince and Princess these good folks
+remained, being exceptions to that order, inasmuch as their friends
+could certainly put their trust in them.
+
+On his father's death Florac went to Paris, to settle the affairs of the
+paternal succession; and, having been for some time absent in his native
+country, returned to Rosebury for the winter, to resume that sport of
+which he was a distinguished amateur. He hunted in black during the
+ensuing season; and, indeed, henceforth laid aside his splendid attire
+and his allurements as a young man. His waist expanded, or was no longer
+confined by the cestus which had given it a shape. When he laid aside
+his black, his whiskers, too, went into a sort of half-mourning, and
+appeared in grey. "I make myself old, my friend," he said, pathetically;
+"I have no more neither twenty years nor forty." He went to Rosebury
+Church no more; but, with great order and sobriety, drove every
+Sunday to the neighbouring Catholic chapel at C---- Castle. We had an
+ecclesiastic or two to dine with us at Rosebury, one of whom I inclined
+to think was Florac's director.
+
+A reason, perhaps, for Paul's altered demeanour, was the presence of
+his mother at Rosebury. No politeness or respect could be greater than
+Paul's towards the Countess. Had she been a sovereign princess, Madame
+de Florac could not have been treated with more profound courtesy than
+she now received from her son. I think the humble-minded lady could
+have dispensed with some of his attentions; but Paul was a personage who
+demonstrated all his sentiments, and performed his various parts in life
+with the greatest vigour. As a man of pleasure, for instance, what more
+active roue than he? As a jeune homme, who could be younger, and for
+a longer time? As a country gentleman, or an l'homme d'affaires, he
+insisted upon dressing each character with the most rigid accuracy, and
+an exactitude that reminded one somewhat of Bouffe, or Ferville, at the
+play. I wonder whether, when is he quite old, he will think proper to
+wear a pigtail, like his old father? At any rate, that was a good part
+which the kind fellow was now acting, of reverence towards his widowed
+mother, and affectionate respect for her declining days. He not only
+felt these amiable sentiments, but he imparted them to his friends most
+freely, as his wont was. He used to weep freely,--quite unrestrained by
+the presence of the domestics, as English sentiment would be:--and when
+Madame de Florac quitted the room after dinner, would squeeze my hand
+and tell me with streaming eyes, that his mother was an angel. "Her life
+has been but a long trial, my friend," he would say. "Shall not I, who
+have caused her to shed so many tears, endeavour to dry some?" Of course
+the friends who liked him best encouraged him in an intention so pious.
+
+The reader has already been made acquainted with this lady by the
+letters of hers, which came into my possession some time after the
+events which I am at present narrating: my wife, through our kind
+friend, Colonel Newcome, had also had the honour of an introduction to
+Madame de Florac at Paris; and, on coming to Rosebury for the Christmas
+holidays, I found Laura and the children greatly in favour with the
+good Countess. She treated her son's wife with a perfect though distant
+courtesy. She was thankful to Madame de Moncontour for the latter's
+great goodness to her son. Familiar with but very few persons, she
+could scarcely be intimate with her homely daughter-in-law. Madame de
+Moncontour stood in the greatest awe of her; and, to do that good lady
+justice, admired and reverenced Paul's mother with all her simple
+heart. In truth, I think almost every one had a certain awe of Madame de
+Florac, except children, who came to her trustingly, and, as it were, by
+instinct. The habitual melancholy of her eyes vanished as they lighted
+upon young faces and infantile smiles. A sweet love beamed out of her
+countenance: an angelic smile shone over her face, as she bent towards
+them and caressed them. Her demeanour then, nay, her looks and ways at
+other times;--a certain gracious sadness, a sympathy with all grief, and
+pity for all pain; a gentle heart, yearning towards all children; and,
+for her own especially, feeling a love that was almost an anguish: in
+the affairs of the common world only a dignified acquiescence, as if her
+place was not in it, and her thoughts were in her Home elsewhere;--these
+qualities, which we had seen exemplified in another life, Laura and her
+husband watched in Madame de Florac, and we loved her because she was
+like our mother. I see in such women, the good and pure, the patient and
+faithful, the tried and meek, the followers of Him whose earthly life
+was divinely sad and tender.
+
+But, good as she was to us and to all, Ethel Newcome was the French
+lady's greatest favourite. A bond of extreme tenderness and affection
+united these two. The elder friend made constant visits to the younger
+at Newcome; and when Miss Newcome, as she frequently did, came to
+Rosebury, we used to see that they preferred to be alone; divining
+and respecting the sympathy which brought those two faithful hearts
+together. I can imagine now the two tall forms slowly pacing the garden
+walks, or turning, as they lighted on the young ones in their play. What
+was their talk! I never asked it. Perhaps Ethel never said what was in
+her heart, though, be sure, the other knew it. Though the grief of those
+they love is untold, women hear it; as they soothe it with unspoken
+consolations. To see the elder lady embrace her friend as they parted
+was something holy--a sort of saintlike salutation.
+
+Consulting the person from whom I had no secrets, we had thought best at
+first not to mention to our friends the place and position in which we
+had found our dear Colonel; at least to wait for a fitting opportunity
+on which we might break the news to those who held him in such
+affection. I told how Clive was hard at work, and hoped the best for
+him. Good-natured Madame de Moncontour was easily satisfied with my
+replies to her questions concerning our friend. Ethel only asked if he
+and her uncle were well, and once or twice made inquiries respecting
+Rosa and her child. And now it was that my wife told me, what I need no
+longer keep secret, of Ethel's extreme anxiety to serve her distressed
+relatives, and how she, Laura, had already acted as Miss Newcome's
+almoner in furnishing and hiring those apartments, which Ethel believed
+were occupied by Clive and his father, and wife and child. And my wife
+further informed me with what deep grief Ethel had heard of her uncle's
+misfortune, and how, but that she feared to offend his pride, she longed
+to give him assistance. She had even ventured to offer to send him
+pecuniary help; but the Colonel (who never mentioned the circumstance
+to me any other of his friends), in a kind but very cold letter, had
+declined to be beholden to his niece for help.
+
+So I may have remained some days at Rosebury, and the real position of
+the two Newcomes was unknown to our friends there. Christmas Eve was
+come, and, according to a long-standing promise, Ethel Newcome and her
+two children had arrived from the Park, which dreary mansion, since his
+double defeat, Sir Barnes scarcely ever visited. Christmas was come, and
+Rosebury hall was decorated with holly. Florac did his best to welcome
+his friends, and strove to make the meeting gay, though in truth it
+was rather melancholy. The children, however, were happy: and they had
+pleasure enough, in the school festival, in the distribution of cloaks
+and blankets to the poor, and in Madame de Moncontour's gardens,
+delightful and beautiful though the winter was there.
+
+It was only a family meeting, Madame de Florac's widowhood not
+permitting her presence in large companies. Paul sate at his table
+between his mother and Mrs. Pendennis; Mr. Pendennis opposite to him,
+with Ethel and Madame de Moncontour on each side. The four children were
+placed between these personages, on whom Madame de Florac looked with
+her tender glances, and to whose little wants the kindest of hosts
+ministered with uncommon good-nature and affection. He was very
+soft-hearted about children. "Pourquoi n'en avons-nous pas, Jeanne? He!
+quoi n'en avons-nous pas?" he said, addressing his wife by her Christian
+name. The poor little lady looked kindly at her husband, and then gave
+a sigh, and turned and heaped cake upon the plate of the child next
+to her. No mamma or Aunt Ethel could interpose. It was a very light
+wholesome cake. Brown made it on purpose for the children, "the little
+darlings!" cries the Princess.
+
+The children were very happy at being allowed to sit up so late to
+dinner, at all the kindly amusements of the day, at the holly and
+mistletoe clustering round the lamps--the mistletoe, under which the
+gallant Florac, skilled in all British usages, vowed he would have his
+privilege. But the mistletoe was clustered round the lamp, the lamp was
+over the centre of the great round table--the innocent gratification
+which he proposed to himself was denied to M. Paul.
+
+In the greatest excitement and good-humour, our host at the dessert made
+us des speech. He carried a toast to the charming Ethel, another to the
+charming Mistriss Laura, another to his good fren', his brave frren',
+his 'appy fren', Pendennis--'appy as possessor of such a wife, 'appy
+as writer of works destined to the immortality, etc. etc. The little
+children round about clapped their happy little hands, and laughed and
+crowed in chorus. And now the nursery and its guardians were about to
+retreat, when Florac said he had yet a speech, yet a toast--and he bade
+the butler pour wine into every one's glass--yet a toast--and he carried
+it to the health of our dear friends, of Clive and his father,--the
+good, the brave Colonel! "We who are happy," says he, "shall we not
+think of those who are good? We who love each other, shall we not
+remember those whom we all love?" He spoke with very great tenderness
+and feeling. "Ma bonne mere, thou too shalt drink this toast!" he
+said, taking his mother's hand, and kissing it. She returned his caress
+gently, and tasted the wine with her pale lips. Ethel's head bent in
+silence over her glass; and, as for Laura, need I say what happened to
+her! When the ladies went away my heart was opened to my friend Florac,
+and I told him where and how I had left my dear Clive's father.
+
+The Frenchman's emotion on hearing this tale was such that I have loved
+him ever since. Clive in want! Why had he not sent to his friend?
+Grands Dieux! Clive who had helped him in his greatest distress! Clive's
+father, ce preux chevalier, ce parfait gentilhomme! In a hundred rapid
+exclamations Florac exhibited his sympathy, asking of Fate, why such men
+as he and I were sitting surrounded by splendours--before golden vases
+crowned with flowers--with valets to kiss our feet--(those were merely
+figures of speech in which Paul expressed his prosperity)--whilst our
+friend the Colonel, so much better than we, spent his last days in
+poverty, and alone.
+
+I liked Florac none the less, I own, because that one of the conditions
+of the Colonel's present life, which appeared the hardest to most
+people, affected Florac but little. To be a Pensioner of an Ancient
+Institution? Why not? Might not a man retire without shame to the
+Invalides at the close of his campaigns, and, had not Fortune conquered
+our old friend, and age and disaster overcome him? It never once entered
+Thomas Newcome's head; nor Clive's, nor Florac's, nor his mother's,
+that the Colonel demeaned himself at all by accepting that bounty; and I
+recollect Warrington sharing our sentiment and trowling out those noble
+lines of the old poet:--
+
+ "His golden locks time hath to silver turned;
+ O time too swift, O swiftness never ceasing!
+ His youth 'gainst time and age hath ever spurned,
+ But spurned in vain; youth waneth by encreasing.
+ Beauty, strength, youth, are flowers but fading seen.
+ Duty, faith, love, are roots, and ever green.
+
+ His helmet now shall make a hive for bees,
+ And lovers' songs be turned to holy psalms;
+ A man at arms must now serve on his knees,
+ And feed on prayers, which are old age's alms."
+
+
+These, I say, respected our friend, whatever was the coat he wore;
+whereas, among the Colonel's own kinsfolk, dire was the dismay, and
+indignation even, which they expressed when they came to hear of this,
+what they were pleased to call degradation to their family. Clive's dear
+mother-in-law made outcries over the good old man as over a pauper, and
+inquired of Heaven, what she had done that her blessed child should have
+a mendicant for a father? And Mrs. Hobson, in subsequent confidential
+communication with the writer of these memoirs, improved the occasion
+religiously as her wont was; referred the matter to Heaven too, and
+thought fit to assume that the celestial powers had decreed this
+humiliation, this dreadful trial for the Newcome family, as a warning to
+them all that they should not be too much puffed up with prosperity, nor
+set their affections too much upon things of this earth. Had they not
+already received one chastisement in Barnes's punishment, and Lady
+Clara's awful falling away? They had taught her a lesson, which the
+Colonel's lamentable errors had confirmed,--the vanity of trusting in
+all earthly grandeurs! Thus it was this worthy woman plumed herself,
+as it were, on her relative's misfortunes; and was pleased to think
+the latter were designed for the special warning and advantage of her
+private family. But Mrs. Hobson's philosophy is only mentioned by the
+way. Our story, which is drawing to its close, has to busy itself with
+other members of the house of The Newcomes.
+
+My talk with Florac lasted for some time: at its close, when we went to
+join the ladies in the drawing-room, we found Ethel cloaked and shawled,
+and prepared for her departure with her young ones, who were already
+asleep. The little festival was over, and had ended in melancholy--even
+in weeping. Our hostess sate in her accustomed seat by her lamp and her
+worktable; but, neglecting her needle, she was having perpetual recourse
+to her pocket-handkerchief, and uttering ejaculations of pity between
+the intervals of her gushes of tears. Madame de Florac was in her usual
+place, her head cast downwards, and her hands folded. My wife was at
+her side, a grave commiseration showing itself in Laura's countenance,
+whilst I read a yet deeper sadness in Ethel's pale face. Miss Newcome's
+carriage had been announced; the attendants had already carried the
+young ones asleep to the vehicle; and she was in the act of taking
+leave. We looked round at this disturbed party, guessing very likely
+what the subject of their talk had been, to which, however, Miss Ethel
+did not allude: but, announcing that she had intended to depart without
+disturbing the two gentlemen, she bade us farewell and good night. "I
+wish I could say a merry Christmas," she added gravely, "but none of us,
+I fear, can hope for that." It was evident that Laura had told the last
+chapter of the Colonel's story.
+
+Madame de Floras rose up and embraced Miss Newcome, and, that farewell
+over, she sank back on the sofa exhausted, and with such an expression
+of affliction in her countenance, that my wife ran eagerly towards her.
+"It is nothing, my dear," she said, giving a cold hand to the younger
+lady, and sate silent for a few moments, during which we heard Florac's
+voice without crying Adieu! and the wheels of Miss Newcome's carriage
+when it drove away.
+
+Our host entered a moment afterwards; and remarking, as Laura had done,
+his mother's pallor and look of anguish, went up and spoke to her with
+the utmost tenderness and anxiety.
+
+She gave her hand to her son, and a faint blush rose up out of the past
+as it were, and trembled upon her wan cheek. "He was the first friend I
+ever had in the world, Paul," she said "the first and the best. He shall
+not want, shall he, my son?"
+
+No signs of that emotion in which her daughter-in-law had been indulging
+were as yet visible in Madame de Florac's eyes, but, as she spoke,
+holding her son's hand in hers, the tears at length overflowed, and with
+a sob, her head fell forwards. The impetuous Frenchman flung himself on
+his knees before his mother, uttered a hundred words of love and respect
+for her, and with tears and sobs of his own called God to witness that
+their friend should never want. And so this mother and son embraced each
+other, and clung together in a sacred union of love, before which we
+who had been admitted as spectators of that scene, stood hushed and
+respectful.
+
+That night Laura told me, how, when the ladies left us, the talk had
+been entirely about the Colonel and Clive. Madame de Florac had spoken
+especially, and much more freely than was her wont. She had told many
+reminiscences of Thomas Newcome, and his early days; how her father
+taught him mathematics when they were quite poor, and living in their
+dear little cottage at Blackheath; how handsome he was then, with bright
+eyes, and long black hair flowing over his shoulders; how military glory
+was his boyish passion, and he was for ever talking of India, and the
+famous deeds of Clive and Lawrence. His favourite book was a history
+of India--the history of Orme. "He read it, and I read it also, my
+daughter," the French lady said, turning to Ethel; "ah! I may say so
+after so many years."
+
+Ethel remembered the book as belonging to her grandmother, and now in
+the library at Newcome. Doubtless the same sympathy which caused me to
+speak about Thomas Newcome that evening, impelled my wife likewise. She
+told her friends, as I had told Florac, all the Colonel's story; and it
+was while these good women were under the impression of the melancholy
+history, that Florac and his guest found them.
+
+Retired to our rooms, Laura and I talked on the same subject until the
+clock tolled Christmas, and the neighbouring church bells rang out a
+jubilation. And, looking out into the quiet night, where the stars were
+keenly shining, we committed ourselves to rest with humbled hearts;
+praying, for all those we loved, a blessing of peace and goodwill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXVII. The Shortest and Happiest in the Whole History
+
+
+In the ensuing Christmas morning I chanced to rise betimes, and
+entering my dressing-room, opened the windows and looked out on the
+soft landscape, over which mists were still lying; whilst the serene
+sky above, and the lawns and leafless woods in the foreground near, were
+still pink with sunrise. The grey had not even left the west yet, and I
+could see a star or two twinkling there, to vanish with that twilight.
+
+As I looked out, I saw the not very distant lodge-gate open after a
+brief parley, and a lady on horseback, followed by a servant, rode
+rapidly up to the house. This early visitor was no other than Miss Ethel
+Newcome. The young lady espied me immediately. "Come down; come down to
+me this moment, Mr. Pendennis," she cried out. I hastened down to her,
+supposing rightly that news of importance had brought her to Rosebury so
+early.
+
+The news were of importance indeed. "Look here!" she said, "read this;"
+and she took a paper from the pocket of her habit. "When I went home
+last night, after Madame de Florac had been talking to us about Orme's
+India, I took the volumes from the bookcase and found this paper. It is
+in my grandmother's--Mrs. Newcome's--handwriting; I know it quite well,
+it is dated on the very day of her death. She had been writing and
+reading in her study on that very night; I have often heard papa speak
+of the circumstance. Look and read. You are a lawyer, Mr. Pendennis;
+tell me about this paper."
+
+I seized it eagerly, and cast my eyes over it; but having read it, my
+countenance fell.
+
+"My dear Miss Newcome, it is not worth a penny," I was obliged to own.
+
+"Yes, it is, sir, to honest people!" she cried out. "My brother and
+uncle will respect it as Mrs. Newcome's dying wish. They must respect
+it."
+
+The paper in question was a letter in ink that had grown yellow from
+time, and was addressed by the late Mrs. Newcome, to "my dear Mr. Luce."
+
+"That was her solicitor, my solicitor still," interposes Miss Ethel.
+
+
+"THE HERMITAGE, March 14, 182-.
+
+"My Dear Mr. Luce" (the defunct lady wrote)--"My late husband's grandson
+has been staying with me lately, and is a most pleasing, handsome, and
+engaging little boy. He bears a strong likeness to his grandfather, I
+think; and though he has no claims upon me, and I know is sufficiently
+provided for by his father Lieutenant-Colonel Newcome, C.B., of the East
+India Company's Service, I am sure my late dear husband will be pleased
+that I should leave his grandson, Clive Newcome, a token of peace and
+goodwill; and I can do so with the more readiness, as it has pleased
+Heaven greatly to increase my means since my husband was called away
+hence.
+
+"I desire to bequeath a sum equal to that which Mr Newcome willed to
+my eldest son, Brian Newcome, Esq., to Mr. Newcome's grandson, Clive
+Newcome; and furthermore, that a token of my esteem and affection, a
+ring, or a piece of plate, of the value of one hundred pounds, be
+given to Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Newcome, my stepson, whose excellent
+conduct for many years, and whose repeated acts of gallantry in the
+service of his sovereign, have long obliterated the just feelings of
+displeasure with which I could not but view his early disobedience and
+misbehaviour, before he quitted England against my will, and entered the
+military service.
+
+"I beg you to prepare immediately a codicil to my will providing for the
+above bequests; and desire that the amount of these legacies should be
+taken from the property bequeathed to my eldest son. You will be so good
+as to prepare the necessary document, and bring it with you when you
+come on Saturday, to yours very truly,
+
+"Sophia Alethea Newcome.
+
+"Tuesday night."
+
+
+I gave back the paper with a sigh to the finder. "It is but a wish of
+Mrs. Newcome, my dear Miss Ethel," I said. "Pardon me, if I say, I think
+I know your elder brother too well to supposes that he will fulfil it."
+
+"He will fulfil it, sir, I am sure he will," Miss Newcome said, in a
+haughty manner. "He would do as much without being asked, I am certain
+he would, did he know the depth of my dear uncle's misfortune. Barnes is
+in London now, and----"
+
+"And you will write to him? I know what the answer will be."
+
+"I will go to him this very day, Mr. Pendennis! I will go to my dear,
+dear uncle. I cannot bear to think of him in that place," cried the
+young lady, the tears starting into her honest eyes. "It was the will of
+Heaven. Oh, God be thanked for it! Had we found my grandmamma's letter
+earlier, Barnes would have paid the legacy immediately, and the money
+would have gone in that dreadful bankruptcy. I will go to Barnes to-day.
+Will you come with me? Won't you come to your old friends? We may be at
+his--at Clive's house this evening; and oh, praise be to God! there need
+be no more want in his family."
+
+"My dear friend, I will go with you round the world on such an errand,"
+I said, kissing her hand. How beautiful she looked; the generous colour
+rose in her face, her voice thrilled with happiness. The music
+of Christmas church bells leaped up at this moment with joyful
+gratulations; the face of the old house, before which we stood talking,
+shone out in the morning sun.
+
+"You will come I thank you! I must run and tell Madame de Florac," cried
+the happy young lady, and we entered the house together. "How came you
+to be kissing Ethel's hand, sir; and what is the meaning of this early
+visit?" asks Mrs. Laura, as soon as I had returned to my own apartments.
+
+"Martha, get me a carpet-bag! I am going to London in an hour," cries
+Mr. Pendennis. If I had kissed Ethel's hand jus now, delighted at the
+news which she brought to me, was not one a thousand times dearer to me,
+as happy as her friend? I know who prayed with a thankful heart that day
+as we sped, in the almost solitary train, towards London.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXVIII. In which the Author goes on a Pleasant Errand
+
+
+Before I parted with Miss Newcome at the station, she made me promise
+to see her on the morrow at an early hour at her brother's house; and
+having bidden her farewell and repaired to my own solitary residence,
+which presented but a dreary aspect on that festive day, I thought I
+would pay Howland Street a visit; and, if invited, eat my Christmas
+dinner with Clive.
+
+I found my friend at home, and at work still, in spite of the day. He
+had promised a pair of pictures to a dealer for the morrow. "He pays me
+pretty well, and I want all the money he will give me, Pen," the painter
+said, rubbing on at his canvas. "I am pretty easy in my mind since I
+have become acquainted with a virtuous dealer. I sell myself to him,
+body and soul, for some half-dozen pounds a week. I know I can get my
+money, and he is regularly supplied with his pictures. But for Rosey's
+illness we might carry on well enough."
+
+Rosey's illness? I was sorry to hear of that: and poor Clive, entering
+into particulars, told me how he had spent upon doctors rather more than
+a fourth of his year's earnings. "There is a solemn fellow, to whom the
+women have taken a fancy, who lives but a few doors off in Gower Street;
+and who, for his last sixteen visits, has taken sixteen pounds sixteen
+shillings out of my pocket, and as if guineas grew there, with the most
+admirable gravity. He talks the fashions to my mother-in-law. My poor
+wife hangs on every word he says. Look! There is his carriage coming up
+now! and there is his fee, confound him!" says Clive, casting a rueful
+look towards a little packet lying upon the mantelpiece, by the side
+of that skinned figure in plaster of Paris which we have seen in most
+studios.
+
+I looked out of window and saw a certain Fashionable Doctor tripping out
+of his chariot; that Ladies' Delight, who has subsequently migrated from
+Bloomsbury to Belgravia; and who has his polite foot now in a thousand
+nurseries and boudoirs. What Confessors were in old times, Quackenboss
+and his like are in our Protestant country. What secrets they know! into
+what mystic chambers do they not enter! I suppose the Campaigner made
+a special toilette to receive her fashionable friend, for that lady
+attired in considerable splendour, and with the precious jewel on her
+head, which I remembered at Boulogne, came into the studio two minutes
+after the Doctor's visit was announced, and made him a low curtsey. I
+cannot describe the overpowering civilities of that woman.
+
+Clive was very gracious and humble to her. He adopted a lively air in
+addressing her--"Must work, you know, Christmas Day and all--for the
+owner of the pictures will call for them in the morning. Bring me a good
+report about Rosey, Mrs. Mackenzie, please--and if you will have the
+kindness to look by the ecorche there, you will see that little packet
+which I have left for you." Mrs. Mack, advancing, took the money. "I
+thought that plaster of Paris figure was not the only ecorche in the
+room."
+
+"I want you to stay to dinner. You must stay, Pen, please," cried Clive;
+"and be civil to her, will you? My dear old father is coming to dine
+here. They fancy that he has lodgings at the other end of the town, and
+that his brothers do something for him. Not a word about Grey Friars. It
+might agitate Rosa, you know. Ah! isn't he noble, the dear old boy! and
+isn't it fine to see him in that place?" Clive worked on as he talked,
+using up the last remnant of the light of Christmas Day, and was
+cleaning his palette and brushes, when Mrs. Mackenzie returned to us.
+
+Darling Rosey was very delicate, but Doctor Quackenboss was going
+to give her the very same medicine which had done the charming young
+Duchess of Clackmannanshire so much good, and he was not in the least
+disquiet.
+
+On this I cut into the conversation with anecdotes concerning the family
+of the Duchess of Clackmannanshire, remembering early days, when it
+used to be my sport to entertain the Campaigner with anecdotes of the
+aristocracy, about whose proceedings she still maintained a laudable
+curiosity. Indeed, one of few the books escaped out of the wreck of
+Tyburn Gardens was a Peerage, now a well-worn volume, much read by Rosa
+and her mother.
+
+The anecdotes were very politely received--perhaps it was the season
+which made Mrs. Mack and her son-in-law on more than ordinarily good
+terms. When, turning to the Campaigner, Clive said he wished that she
+could persuade me to stay to dinner, she acquiesced graciously and at
+once in that proposal, and vowed that her daughter would be delighted if
+I could condescend to eat their humble fare. "It is not such a dinner
+as you have seen at her house, with six side-dishes, two flanks, that
+splendid epergne, and the silver dishes top and bottom; but such as my
+Rosa has she offers with a willing heart," cries the Campaigner.
+
+"And Tom may sit to dinner, mayn't he, grandmamma?" asks Clive, in a
+humble voice.
+
+"Oh, if you wish it, sir."
+
+"His grandfather will like to sit by him," said Clive. "I will go out
+and meet him; he comes through Guildford Street and Russell Square,"
+says Clive. "Will you walk, Pen?"
+
+"Oh, pray don't let us detain you," says Mrs. Mackenzie, with a toss of
+her head: and when she retreated Clive whispered that she would not want
+me; for she looked to the roasting of the beef and the making of the
+pudding and the mince-pie.
+
+"I thought she might have a finger in it," I said; and we set forth to
+meet the dear old father, who presently came, walking very slowly, along
+the line by which we expected him. His stick trembled as it fell on the
+pavement: so did his voice, as he called out Clive's name: so did his
+hand, as he stretched it to me. His body was bent, and feeble. Twenty
+years had not weakened him so much as the last score of months. I walked
+by the side of my two friends as they went onwards, linked lovingly
+together. How I longed for the morrow, and hoped they might be united
+once more! Thomas Newcome's voice, once so grave, went up to a treble,
+and became almost childish, as he asked after Boy. His white hair hung
+over his collar. I could see it by the gas under which we walked--and
+Clive's great back and arm, as his father leaned on it, and his brave
+face turned towards the old man. Oh, Barnes Newcome, Barnes Newcome! Be
+an honest man for once, and help your kinsfolk! thought I.
+
+The Christmas meal went off in a friendly manner enough. The
+Campaigner's eyes were everywhere: it was evident that the little maid
+who served the dinner, and had cooked a portion of it under their keen
+supervision, cowered under them, as well as other folks. Mrs. Mack
+did not make more than ten allusions to former splendours during the
+entertainment, or half as many apologies to me for sitting down to a
+table very different from that to which I was accustomed. Good, faithful
+F. Bayham was the only other guest. He complimented the mince-pies,
+so that Mrs. Mackenzie owned she had made them. The Colonel was very
+silent, but he tried to feed Boy, and was only once or twice sternly
+corrected by the Campaigner. Boy, in the best little words he could
+muster, asked why grandpapa wore a black cloak? Clive nudged my foot
+under the table. The secret of the Poor Brothership was very nearly
+out. The Colonel blushed, and with great presence of mind said he wore a
+cloak to keep him warm in winter.
+
+Rosey did not say much. She had grown lean and languid: the light of her
+eyes had gone out: all her pretty freshness had faded. She ate scarce
+anything, though her mother pressed her eagerly, and whispered loudly
+that a woman in her situation ought to strengthen herself. Poor Rosey
+was always in a situation.
+
+When the cloth was withdrawn, the Colonel bending his head said, "Thank
+God for what we have received," so reverently, and with an accent so
+touching, that Fred Bayham's big eyes as he turned towards the old man
+filled up with tears. When his mother and grandmother rose to go away,
+poor little Boy cried to stay longer, and the Colonel would have meekly
+interposed, but the domineering Campaigner cried, "Nonsense, let him go
+to bed!" and flounced him out of the room: and nobody appealed against
+that sentence. Then we three remained, and strove to talk as cheerfully
+as we might, speaking now of old times, and presently of new. Without
+the slightest affectation, Thomas Newcome told us that his life was
+comfortable, and that he was happy in it. He wished that many others of
+the old gentlemen, he said, were as contented as himself, but some
+of them grumbled sadly, he owned and quarrelled with their
+bread-and-butter. He, for his part, had everything he could desire: all
+the officers of the Establishment were most kind to him; an excellent
+physician came to him when wanted; a most attentive woman waited on him.
+"And if I wear a black gown," said he, "is not that uniform as good as
+another, and if we have to go to church every day, at which some of the
+Poor Brothers grumble, I think an old fellow can't do better; and I can
+say my prayers with a thankful heart, Clivey my boy, and should be
+quite happy but for my--for my past imprudence, God forgive me. Think of
+Bayham here coming to our chapel to-day!--he often comes--that was very
+right, sir--very right."
+
+Clive, filling a glass of wine, looked at F. B. with eyes that said
+God bless you. F. B. gulped down another bumper. "It is almost a merry
+Christmas," said I; "and oh, I hope it will be a happy New Year!"
+
+Shortly after nine o'clock the Colonel rose to depart, saying he must
+be "in barracks" by ten; and Clive and F. B. went a part of the way with
+him. I would have followed them, but he whispered me to stay and talk to
+Mrs. Mack, for Heaven's sake, and that he would be back ere long. So
+I went and took tea with the two ladies; and as we drank it, Mrs.
+Mackenzie took occasion to tell me she did not know what amount of
+income the Colonel had from his wealthy brother, but that they never
+received any benefit from it; and again she computed to me all the sums,
+principal and interest, which ought at that moment to belong to her
+darling Rosey. Rosey now and again made a feeble remark. She did not
+seem pleased or sorry when her husband came in; and presently, dropping
+me a little curtsey, went to bed under charge of the Campaigner. So
+Bayham and I and Clive retired to the studio, where smoking was allowed,
+and where we brought that Christmas day to an end.
+
+At the appointed time on the next forenoon I called upon Miss Newcome at
+her brother's house. Sir Barnes Newcome was quitting his own door as I
+entered it, and he eyed me with such a severe countenance, as made
+me augur but ill of the business upon which I came. The expression of
+Ethel's face was scarcely more cheering: she was standing at the window,
+sternly looking at Sir Barnes, who yet lingered at his own threshold,
+having some altercation with his cab-boy ere he mounted his vehicle to
+drive into the City.
+
+Miss Newcome was very pale when she advanced and gave me her hand. I
+looked with some alarm into her face, and inquired what news?
+
+"It is as you expected, Mr. Pendennis," she said--"not as I did. My
+brother is averse to making restitution. He just now parted from me in
+some anger. But it does not matter; the restitution must be made, if not
+by Barnes, by one of our family--must it not?"
+
+"God bless you for a noble creature, my dear, dear Miss Newcome!" was
+all I could say.
+
+"For doing what is right? Ought I not to do it? I am the eldest of our
+family after Barnes: I am the richest after him. Our father left all his
+younger children the very sum of money which Mrs. Newcome here devises
+to Clive; and you know, besides, I have all my grandmother's, Lady
+Kew's, property. Why, I don't think I could sleep if this act of justice
+were not done. Will you come with me to my lawyer's? He and my brother
+Barnes are trustees of my property; and I have been thinking, dear Mr.
+Pendennis--and you are very good to be so kind, and to express so kind
+an opinion of me, and you and Laura have always, always been the best
+friends to me"--(she says this, taking one of my hands and placing her
+other hand over it)--"I have been thinking, you know, that this transfer
+had better be made through Mr. Luce, you understand, and as coming from
+the family, and then I need not appear in it at all, you see; and--and
+my dear good uncle's pride need not be wounded." She fairly gave way to
+tears as she spoke--and for me, I longed to kiss the hem of her robe, or
+anything else she would let me embrace, I was so happy, and so touched
+by the simple demeanour and affection of the noble young lady.
+
+"Dear Ethel," I said, "did I not say I would go to the end of the world
+with you--and won't I go to Lincoln's Inn?"
+
+A cab was straightway sent for, and in another half-hour we were in the
+presence of the courtly little old Mr. Luce in his chambers in Lincoln's
+Inn Fields.
+
+He knew the late Mrs. Newcome's handwriting at once. He remembered
+having seen the little boy at the Hermitage, had talked with Mr. Newcome
+regarding his son in India, and had even encouraged Mrs. Newcome in her
+idea of leaving some token of goodwill to the latter. "I was to have
+dined with your grandmamma on the Saturday, with my poor wife. Why,
+bless my soul! I remember the circumstance perfectly well, my dear young
+lady. There can't be a doubt about the letter, but of course the bequest
+is no bequest at all, and Colonel Newcome has behaved so ill to your
+brother that I suppose Sir Barnes will not go out of his way to benefit
+the Colonel."
+
+"What would you do, Mr. Luce?" asks the young lady.
+
+"H'm! And pray why should I tell you what I should do under the
+circumstances?" replied the little lawyer. "Upon my word, Miss Newcome,
+I think I should leave matters as they stand. Sir Barnes and I, you
+are aware, are not the very best of friends--as your father's, your
+grandmother's old friend and adviser, your own too, my dear young lady,
+I and Sir Barnes Newcome remain on civil terms. But neither is over much
+pleased with the other, to say the truth; and, at any rate, I cannot
+be accused--nor can any one else that I know of--of being a very warm
+partisan of your brother's. But candidly, were his case mine--had I a
+relation who had called me unpleasant names, and threatened me I don't
+know with what, with sword and pistol--who had put me to five or six
+thousand pounds' expense in contesting an election which I had lost,--I
+should give him, I think, no more than the law obliged me to give him;
+and that, my dear Miss Newcome, is not one farthing."
+
+"I am very glad you say so," said Miss Newcome, rather to my
+astonishment.
+
+"Of course, my dear young lady; and so you need not be alarmed at
+showing your brother this document. Is not that the point about which
+you came to consult me? You wished that I should prepare him for the
+awful disclosure, did you not? You know, perhaps, that he does not like
+to part with his money, and thought the appearance of this note might
+agitate him? It has been a long time coming to its address, but nothing
+can be done, don't you see? and be sure Sir Barnes Newcome will not be
+the least agitated when I tell him its contents."
+
+"I mean I am very glad you think my brother is not called upon to obey
+Mrs. Newcome's wishes, because I need not think so hardly of him as I
+was disposed to do," Miss Newcome said. "I showed him the paper this
+morning, and he repelled it with scorn; and not kind words passed
+between us, Mr. Luce, and unkind thoughts remained in my mind. But if
+he, you think, is justified, it is I who have been in the wrong for
+saying that he was self--for upbraiding him as I own I did."
+
+"You called him selfish!--You had words with him! Such things have
+happened before, my dear Miss Newcome, in the best-regulated families."
+
+"But if he is not wrong, sir, holding his opinions, surely I should be
+wrong, sir, with mine, not to do as my conscience tells me; and having
+found this paper only yesterday at Newcome, in the library there, in one
+of my grandmother's books, I consulted with this gentleman, the husband
+of my dearest friend, Mrs. Pendennis--the most intimate friend of my
+uncle and cousin Clive; and I wish, and I desire and insist, that my
+share of what my poor father left us girls should be given to my cousin,
+Mr. Clive Newcome, in accordance with my grandmother's dying wishes."
+
+"My dear, you gave away your portion to your brothers and sisters ever
+so long ago!" cried the lawyer.
+
+"I desire, sir, that six thousand pounds may be given to my cousin,"
+Miss Newcome said, blushing deeply. "My dear uncle, the best man in
+the world, whom I love with all my heart, sir, is in the most dreadful
+poverty. Do you know where he is, sir? My dear, kind, generous
+uncle!"--and, kindling as she spoke, and with eyes beaming a bright
+kindness, and flushing cheeks, and a voice that thrilled to the heart of
+those two who heard her, Miss Newcome went on to tell of her uncle's and
+cousin's misfortunes, and of her wish, under God, to relieve them. I see
+before me now the figure of the noble girl as she speaks; the pleased
+little old lawyer, bobbing his white head, looking up at her with his
+twinkling eyes--patting his knees, patting his snuff-box--as he sits
+before his tapes and his deeds, surrounded by a great background of tin
+boxes.
+
+"And I understand you want this money paid as coming from the family,
+and not from Miss Newcome?" says Mr. Luce.
+
+"Coming from the family--exactly," answers Miss Newcome.
+
+Mr. Luce rose up from his old chair--his worn-out old horsehair
+chair--where he had sat for half a century and listened to many a
+speaker, very different from this one. "Mr. Pendennis," he said, "I envy
+you your journey along with this young lady. I envy you the good news
+you are going to carry to your friends--and, Miss Newcome, as I am an
+old--old gentleman who have known your family these sixty years, and
+saw your father in his long-clothes, may I tell you how heartily and
+sincerely I--I love and respect you, my dear? When should you wish Mr.
+Clive Newcome to have his legacy?"
+
+"I think I should like Mr. Pendennis to have it this instant, Mr. Luce,
+please," said the young lady--and her veil dropped over her face as she
+bent her head down, and clasped her hands together for a moment, as if
+she was praying.
+
+Mr. Luce laughed at her impetuosity; but said that if she was bent upon
+having the money, it was at her instant service; and before we left the
+room, Mr. Luce prepared a letter, addressed to Clive Newcome, Esquire,
+in which he stated, that amongst the books of the late Mrs. Newcome a
+paper had only just been found, of which a copy was enclosed, and that
+the family of the late Sir Brian Newcome, desirous to do honour to the
+wishes of the late Mrs. Newcome, had placed the sum of 6000 pounds at
+the bank of Messrs. H. W----, at the disposal of Mr. Clive Newcome, of
+whom Mr. Luce had the honour to sign himself the most obedient servant,
+etc. And, the letter approved and copied, Mr. Luce said Mr. Pendennis
+might be the postman thereof; if Miss Newcome so willed it; and, with
+this document in my pocket, I quitted the lawyer's chambers, with my
+good and beautiful young companion.
+
+Our cab had been waiting several hours in Lincoln's Inn Fields, and I
+asked Miss Ethel whither I now should conduct her?
+
+"Where is Grey Friars?" she said. "Mayn't I go to see my uncle?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXIX. In which Old Friends come together
+
+
+We made the descent of Snowhill, we passed by the miry pens of
+Smithfield; we travel through the street of St. John, and presently
+reach the ancient gateway, in Cistercian Square, where lies the old
+Hospital of Grey Friars. I passed through the gate, my fair young
+companion on my arm, and made my way to the rooms occupied by brother
+Newcome.
+
+As we traversed the court the Poor Brothers were coming from dinner. A
+couple of score, or more, of old gentlemen in black gowns, issued from
+the door of their refectory, and separated over the court, betaking
+themselves to their chambers. Ethel's arm trembled under mine as she
+looked at one and another, expecting to behold her dear uncle's familiar
+features. But he was not among the brethren. We went to his chamber, of
+which the door was open: a female attendant was arranging the room; she
+told us Colonel Newcome was out for the day, and thus our journey had
+been made in vain.
+
+Ethel went round the apartment and surveyed its simple decorations; she
+looked at the pictures of Clive and his boy; the two sabres crossed
+over the mantelpiece, the Bible laid on the table, by the old latticed
+window. She walked slowly up to the humble bed, and sat down on a chair
+near it. No doubt her heart prayed for him who slept there; she turned
+round where his black pensioner's cloak was hanging on the wall, and
+lifted up the homely garment, and kissed it. The servant looked on
+admiring, I should think, her melancholy and her gracious beauty. I
+whispered to the woman that the young lady was the Colonel's niece.
+"He has a son who comes here, and is very handsome, too," said the
+attendant.
+
+The two women spoke together for a while. "Oh, miss!" cried the elder
+and humbler, evidently astonished at some gratuity which Miss Newcome
+bestowed upon her, "I didn't want this to be good to him. Everybody
+here loves him for himself; and I would sit up for him for weeks--that I
+would."
+
+My companion took a pencil from her bag, and wrote "Ethel" on a piece
+of paper, and laid the paper on the Bible. Darkness had again fallen by
+this time, feeble lights were twinkling in the chamber windows of the
+Poor Brethren as we issued into the courts;--feeble lights illumining
+a dim, grey, melancholy old scene. Many a career, once bright, was
+flickering out here in the darkness; many a night was closing in. We
+went away silently from that quiet place; and in another minute were in
+the flare and din and tumult of London.
+
+"The Colonel is most likely gone to Clive's," I said. Would not Miss
+Newcome follow him thither? We consulted whether she should go. She took
+heart and said yes. "Drive, cabman, to Howland Street!" The horse was,
+no doubt, tired, for the journey seemed extraordinarily long; I think
+neither of us spoke a word on the way.
+
+I ran upstairs to prepare our friends for the visit. Clive, his wife,
+his father, and his mother-in-law were seated by a dim light in Mrs.
+Clive's sitting-room. Rosey on the sofa, as usual; the little boy on his
+grandfather's knees.
+
+I hardly made a bow to the ladies, so eager was I to communicate with
+Colonel Newcome. "I have just been to your quarters at Grey Friars,
+sir," said I. "That is----"
+
+"You have been to the Hospital, sir! You need not be ashamed to mention
+it, as Colonel Newcome is not ashamed to go there," cried out the
+Campaigner. "Pray speak in your own language, Clive, unless there is
+something not fit for ladies to hear." Clive was growling out to me in
+German that there had just been a terrible scene, his father having, a
+quarter of an hour previously, let slip the secret about Grey Friars.
+
+"Say at once, Clive!" the Campaigner cried, rising in her might, and
+extending a great strong arm over her helpless child, "that Colonel
+Newcome owns that he has gone to live as a pauper in a hospital! He who
+has squandered his own money. He who has squandered my money. He who has
+squandered the money of that darling helpless child--compose yourself,
+Rosey my love!--has completed the disgrace of the family, by his present
+mean and unworthy--yes, I say, mean and unworthy and degraded conduct.
+Oh, my child, my blessed child! to think that your husband's father
+should have come to a workhouse!" Whilst this maternal agony bursts over
+her, Rosa, on the sofa, bleats and whimpers amongst the faded chintz
+cushions.
+
+I took Clive's hand, which was cast up to his head striking his forehead
+with mad impotent rage, whilst this fiend of a woman lashed his good
+father. The veins of his great fist were swollen, his whole body was
+throbbing and trembling with the helpless pain under which he writhed.
+"Colonel Newcome's friends, ma'am,", I said, "think very differently
+from you; and that he is a better judge than you, or any one else,
+of his own honour. We all, who loved him in his prosperity, love
+and respect him more than ever for the manner in which he bears his
+misfortune. Do you suppose that his noble friend, the Earl of H----,
+would have counselled him to a step unworthy of a gentleman; that the
+Prince de Moncontour would applaud his conduct as he does, if he did
+not think it admirable?" I can hardly say with what scorn I used this
+argument, or what depth of contempt I felt for the woman whom I knew
+it would influence. "And at this minute," I added, "I have come from
+visiting the Gray Friars with one of the Colonel's relatives, whose love
+and respect for him is boundless; who longs to be reconciled to him,
+and who is waiting below, eager to shake his hand, and embrace Clive's
+wife."
+
+"Who is that?" says the Colonel, looking gently up, as he pats Boy's
+head.
+
+"Who is it, Pen?" says Clive. I said in a low voice, "Ethel;" and
+starting up and crying "Ethel! Ethel!" he ran from the room.
+
+Little Mrs. Rosa started up too on her sofa, clutching hold of the
+table-cover with her lean hand, and the two red spots on her cheeks
+burning more fiercely than ever. I could see what passion was beating in
+that poor little heart. "Heaven help us! what a resting-place had friends
+and parents prepared for it! for shame!"
+
+"Miss Newcome, is it? My darling Rosa, get on your shawl!" cried the
+Campaigner, a grim smile lighting her face.
+
+"It is Ethel; Ethel is my niece. I used to love her when she was quite
+a little girl," says the Colonel, patting Boy on the head; "and she is
+a very good, beautiful little child--a very good child." The torture
+had been too much for that kind old heart: there were times when Thomas
+Newcome passed beyond it. What still maddened Clive, excited his father
+no more; the pain yonder woman inflicted, only felled and stupefied him.
+
+As the door opened, the little white-headed child trotted forward
+towards the visitor, and Ethel entered on Clive's arm, who was as
+haggard and pale as death. Little Boy, looking up at the stately lady,
+still followed beside her, as she approached her uncle, who remained
+sitting, his head bent to the ground. His thoughts were elsewhere.
+Indeed he was following the child, and about to caress it again.
+
+"Here is a friend, father!" says Clive, laying a hand on the old man's
+shoulder. "It is I, Ethel, uncle!" the young lady said, taking his hand;
+and kneeling down between his knees, she flung her arms round him, and
+kissed him, and wept on his shoulder.
+
+His consciousness had quite returned ere an instant was over. He
+embraced her with the warmth of his old affection, uttering many brief
+words of love, kindness, and tenderness, such as men speak when strongly
+moved.
+
+The little boy had come wondering up to the chair whilst this embrace
+took place, and Clive's tall figure bent over the three. Rosa's eyes
+were not good to look at, as she stared at the group with a ghastly
+smile. Mrs. Mackenzie surveyed the scene in haughty state, from behind
+the sofa cushions. She tried to take one of Rosa's lean hot hands. The
+poor child tore it away, leaving her rings behind her; lifted her hands
+to her face: and cried, cried as if her little heart would break. Ah
+me! what a story was there! what an outburst of pent-up feeling! what a
+passion of pain! The ring had fallen to the ground; the little boy crept
+towards it, and picked it up, and came towards his mother, fixing on her
+his large wondering eyes. "Mamma crying. Mamma's ring!" he said, holding
+up the circle of gold. With more feeling than I had ever seen her
+exhibit, she clasped the boy in her wasted arms. Great Heaven! what
+passion, jealousy, grief, despair, were tearing and trying all these
+hearts, that but for fate might have been happy?
+
+Clive went round, and with the utmost sweetness and tenderness hanging
+round his child and wife, soothed her with words of consolation, that
+in truth I scarce heard, being ashamed almost of being present at this
+sudden scene. No one, however, took notice of the witnesses; and even
+Mrs. Mackenzie's voice was silent for the moment. I dare say Clive's
+words were incoherent; but women have more presence of mind; and now
+Ethel, with a noble grace which I cannot attempt to describe, going
+up to Rosa, seated herself by her, spoke of her long grief at the
+differences between her dearest uncle and herself; of her early days,
+when he had been as a father to her; of her wish, her hope that Rosa
+should love her as a sister; and of her belief that better days and
+happiness were in store for them all. And she spoke to the mother about
+her boy so beautiful and intelligent, and told her how she had brought
+up her brother's children, and hoped that this one too would call her
+Aunt Ethel. She would not stay now, might she come again? Would Rosa
+come to her with her little boy? Would he kiss her? He did so with a
+very good grace; but when Ethel at parting embraced the child's mother,
+Rosa's face wore a smile ghastly to look at, and the lips that touched
+Ethel's cheeks, were quite white.
+
+"I shall come and see you again to-morrow, uncle, may I not? I saw your
+room to-day, sir, and your housekeeper; such a nice old lady, and your
+black gown. And you shall put it on to-morrow, and walk with me, and
+show me the beautiful old buildings of that old hospital. And I shall
+come and make tea for you, the housekeeper says I may. Will you come
+down with me to my carriage? No, Mr. Pendennis must come;" and she
+quitted the room, beckoning me after her. "You will speak to Clive now,
+won't you?" she said, "and come to me this evening, and tell me all
+before you go to bed?" I went back, anxious in truth to the messenger of
+good tidings to my dear old friends.
+
+Brief as my absence had been, Mrs. Mackenzie had taken advantage of that
+moment again to outrage Clive and his father, and to announce that Rosa
+might go to see this Miss Newcome, whom people respected because she was
+rich, but whom she would never visit; no, never! "An insolent, proud,
+impertinent thing! Does she take me for a housemaid?" Mrs. Mackenzie had
+inquired.
+
+"Am I dust to be trampled beneath her feet? Am I a dog that she can't
+throw me a word?" Her arms were stretched out, and she was making this
+inquiry as to her own canine qualities as I re-entered the room, and
+remembered that Ethel had never once addressed a single word to Mrs.
+Mackenzie in the course of her visit.
+
+I affected not to perceive the incident, and presently said that I
+wanted to speak to Clive in his studio. Knowing that I had brought my
+friend one or two commissions for drawings, Mrs. Mackenzie was civil to
+me, and did not object to our colloquies.
+
+"Will you come too, and smoke a pipe, father?" says Clive.
+
+"Of course your father intends to stay to dinner?" says the Campaigner,
+with a scornful toss of her head. Clive groaned out as we were on the
+stair, "that he could not bear this much longer, by heavens he could
+not."
+
+"Give the Colonel his pipe, Clive," said I. "Now, sir, down with you in
+the sitter's chair, and smoke the sweetest cheroot you ever smoked
+in your life! My dear, dear old Clive! you need not bear with the
+Campaigner any longer; you may go to bed without this nightmare to-night
+if you like; you may have your father back under your roof again."
+
+"My dear Arthur! I must be back at ten, sir, back at ten, military time;
+drum beats; no--bell tolls at ten, and gates close;" and he laughed and
+shook his old head. "Besides, I am to see a young lady, sir; and she is
+coming to make tea for me, and I must speak to Mrs. Jones to have all
+things ready--all things ready;" and again the old man laughed as he
+spoke.
+
+His son looked at him and then at me with eyes full of sad meaning. "How
+do you mean, Arthur," Clive said, "that he can come and stay with me,
+and that that woman can go?"
+
+Then feeling in my pocket for Mr. Luce's letter, I grasped my dear
+Clive by the hand and bade him prepare for good news. I told him how
+providentially, two days since, Ethel, in the library at Newcome,
+looking into Orme's History of India, a book which old Mrs. Newcome had
+been reading on the night of her death, had discovered a paper, of
+which the accompanying letter enclosed a copy, and I gave my friend the
+letter.
+
+He opened it, and read it through. I cannot say that I saw any
+particular expression of wonder in his countenance, for somehow, all the
+while Clive perused this document, I was looking at the Colonel's sweet
+kind face. "It--it is Ethel's doing," said Clive, in a hurried voice.
+"There was no such letter."
+
+"Upon my honour," I answered, "there was. We came up to London with
+it last night, a few hours after she had found it. We showed it to Sir
+Barnes Newcome, who--who could not disown it. We took it to Mr. Luce,
+who recognised it at once, who was old Mrs. Newcome's man of business,
+and continues to be the family lawyer, and the family recognises the
+legacy and has paid it, and you may draw for it to-morrow, as you see.
+What a piece of good luck it is that it did not come before the B. B. C.
+time! That confounded Bundelcund Bank would have swallowed up this like
+all the rest."
+
+"Father! father! do you remember Orme's History of India?" cries Clive.
+
+"Orme's History! of course I do, I could repeat whole pages of it when I
+was a boy," says the old man, and began forthwith. "'The two battalions
+advanced against each other cannonading, until the French, coming to a
+hollow way, imagined that the English would not venture to pass it.
+But Major Lawrence ordered the sepoys and artillery--the sepoys
+and artillery to halt and defend the convoy against the
+Morattoes'--Morattoes Orme calls 'em. Ho! ho! I could repeat whole
+pages, sir."
+
+"It is the best book that ever was written," calls out Clive. The
+Colonel said he had not read it, but he was informed Mr. Mill's was a
+very learned history; he intended to read it. "Eh! there is plenty
+of time now," said the good Colonel. "I have all day long at Grey
+Friars,--after chapel, you know. Do you know, sir, when I was a boy
+I used what they call to tib out and run down to a public-house in
+Cistercian Lane--the Red Cowl sir,--and buy rum there? I was a terrible
+wild boy, Clivy. You weren't so, sir, thank Heaven! A terrible wild boy,
+and my poor father flogged me, though I think it was very hard on me. It
+wasn't the pain, you know: it wasn't the pain, but----" Here tears came
+into his eyes and he dropped his head on his hand, and the cigar from it
+fell on to the floor, burnt almost out, and scattering white ashes.
+
+Clive looked sadly at me. "He was often so at Boulogne, Arthur," he
+whispered; "after a scene with that--that woman yonder, his head would
+go: he never replied to her taunts; he bore her infernal cruelty without
+an unkind word--Oh! I pay her back, thank God I can pay her! But who
+shall pay her," he said, trembling in every limb, "for what she has made
+that good man suffer?"
+
+He turned to his father, who still sate lost in his meditations. "You
+need never go back to Grey Friars, father!" he cried out.
+
+"Not go back, Clivy? Must go back, boy, to say Adsum, when my name is
+called. Newcome! Adsum! Hey! that is what we used to say--we used to
+say!"
+
+"You need not go back, except to pack your things, and return and live
+with me and Boy," Clive continued, and he told Colonel Newcome rapidly
+the story of the legacy. The old man seemed hardly to comprehend it.
+When he did, the news scarcely elated him; when Clive said "they could
+now pay Mrs. Mackenzie," the Colonel replied, "Quite right, quite
+right," and added up the sum, principal and interest, in which they were
+indebted to her--he knew it well enough, the good old man. "Of course we
+shall pay her, Clivy, when we can!" But in spite of what Clive had said
+he did not appear to understand the fact that the debt to Mrs. Mackenzie
+was now actually to be paid.
+
+As we were talking, a knock came to the studio door, and that summons
+was followed by the entrance of the maid, who said to Clive, "If you
+please, sir, Mrs. Mackenzie says, how long are you a-going to keep the
+dinner waiting?"
+
+"Come, father, come to dinner!" cries Clive; "and, Pen, you will come
+too, won't you?" he added; "it may be the last time you dine in such
+pleasant company. Come along," he whispered hurriedly. "I should like
+you to be there, it will keep her tongue quiet." As we proceeded to the
+dining-room, I gave the Colonel my arm; and the good man prattled to
+me something about Mrs. Mackenzie having taken shares in the Bundelcund
+Banking Company, and about her not being a woman of business, and
+fancying we had spent her money. "And I have always felt a wish that
+Clivy should pay her, and he will pay her, I know he will," says the
+Colonel; "and then we shall lead a quiet life, Arthur; for, between
+ourselves, some women are the deuce when they are angry, sir." And again
+he laughed, as he told me this sly news, and he bowed meekly his gentle
+old head as we entered the dining-room.
+
+That apartment was occupied by little Boy already seated in his high
+chair, and by the Campaigner only, who stood at the mantelpiece in a
+majestic attitude. On parting with her, before we adjourned to Clive's
+studio, I had made my bow and taken my leave in form, not supposing that
+I was about to enjoy her hospitality yet once again. My return did not
+seem to please her. "Does Mr. Pendennis favour us with his company to
+dinner again, Clive?" she said, turning to her son-in-law. Clive curtly
+said, Yes, he had asked Mr. Pendennis to stay.
+
+"You might at least have been so kind as to give me notice," says the
+Campaigner, still majestic, but ironical. "You will have but a poor
+meal, Mr. Pendennis; and one such as I'm not accustomed to give my
+guests."
+
+"Cold beef! what the deuce does it matter;" says Clive, beginning to
+carve the joint, which, hot, had served our yesterday's Christmas table.
+
+"It does matter, sir! I am not accustomed to treat my guests in this way
+Maria! who had been cutting that beef? Three pounds of that beef have
+been cut away since one o'clock to-day," and with flashing eyes, and
+a finger twinkling all over with rings, she pointed towards the guilty
+joint.
+
+Whether Maria had been dispensing secret charities, or kept company with
+an occult policeman partial to roast-beef, I do not know; but she
+looked very much alarmed, and said, Indeed, and indeed, mum, she had not
+touched a morsel of it!--not she.
+
+"Confound the beef!" says Clive, carving on.
+
+"She has been cutting it!" cries the Campaigner, bringing her fist down
+with a thump upon the table. "Mr. Pendennis! you saw the beef yesterday;
+eighteen pounds it weighed, and this is what comes up of it! As if there
+was not already ruin enough in the house!"
+
+"D--n the beef!" cries out Clive.
+
+"No! no! Thank God for our good dinner! Benedicti benedicamus, Clivy my
+boy," says the Colonel, in a tremulous voice.
+
+"Swear on, sir! let the child hear your oaths! Let my blessed child,
+who is too ill to sit at table and picks her bite! sweetbread on her
+sofa,--which her poor mother prepares for her, Mr. Pendennis,--which
+I cooked it, and gave it to her with these hands,--let her hear your
+curses and blasphemies, Clive Newcome! They are loud enough."
+
+"Do let us have a quiet life," groans out Clive; and for me, I must
+confess, I kept my eyes steadily down upon my plate, nor dared to lift
+them until my portion of cold beef had vanished.
+
+No further outbreak took place until the appearance of the second
+course, which consisted, as the ingenious reader may suppose, of the
+plum-pudding, now in a grilled state, and the remanent of mince-pies
+from yesterday's meal. Maria, I thought, looked particularly guilty as
+these delicacies were placed on the table: she set them down hastily,
+and was for operating an instant retreat.
+
+But the Campaigner shrieked after her, "Who has eaten that pudding? I
+insist upon knowing who has eaten it. I saw it at two o'clock when
+I went down to the kitchen and fried a bit for my darling child, and
+there's pounds of it gone since then! There were five mince-pies! Mr.
+Pendennis! you saw yourself there were five that went away from table
+yesterday--where's the other two Maria? You leave the house this night,
+you thieving, wicked wretch--and I'll thank you to come back to me
+afterwards for a character. Thirteen servants have we had in nine
+months, Mr. Pendennis, and this girl is the worst of them all, and the
+greatest liar and the greatest thief."
+
+At this charge the outraged Maria stood up in arms, and as the phrase
+is, gave the Campaigner as good as she got. Go! wouldn't she go? Pay
+her her wages, and let her go out of that ell upon hearth, was Maria's
+prayer. "It isn't you, sir," she said, turning to Clive. "You are good
+enough, and works hard enough to git the guineas which you give out to
+pay that doctor; and she don't pay him--and I see five of them in her
+purse wrapped up in paper, myself I did, and she abuses you to him--and
+I heard her, and Jane Black, who was here before, told me she heard her.
+Go! won't I just go, I dispises your puddens and pies!" and with a laugh
+of scorn this rude Maria snapped her black fingers in the immediate
+vicinity of the Campaigner's nose.
+
+"I will pay her her wages, and she shall go this instant!" says Mrs.
+Mackenzie, taking her purse out.
+
+"Pay me with them suvverings that you have got in it, wrapped up in
+paper. See if she haven't, Mr. Newcome," the refractory waiting-woman
+cried out, and again she laughed a strident laugh.
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie briskly shut her portemonnaie, and rose up from table,
+quivering with indignant virtue. "Go!" she exclaimed, "go and pack your
+trunks this instant! you quit the house this night, and a policeman
+shall see to your boxes before you leave it!"
+
+Whilst uttering this sentence against the guilty Maria, the Campaigner
+had intended, no doubt, to replace her purse in her pocket,--a
+handsome filagree gimcrack of poor Ross's, one of the relics of former
+splendours,--but, agitated by Maria's insolence, the trembling hand
+missed the mark, and the purse fell to the ground.
+
+Maria dashed at the purse in a moment, with a scream of laughter shook
+its contents upon the table, and sure enough, five little packets
+wrapped in paper rolled out upon the cloth, besides bank-notes and
+silver and golden coin. "I'm to go, am I? I'm a thief, am I?" screamed
+the girl, clapping her hands. "I sor 'em yesterday when I was a-lacing
+of her; and thought of that pore young man working night and day to get
+the money;--me a thief, indeed!--I despise you, and I give you warning."
+
+"Do you wish to see me any longer insulted by this woman, Clive?
+Mr. Pendennis, I am shocked that you should witness such horrible
+vulgarity," cries the Campaigner, turning to her guest. "Does the
+wretched creature suppose that I, I who have given thousands, I who have
+denied myself everything, I who have spent my all in support of this
+house; and Colonel Newcome knows whether I have given thousands or not,
+and who has spent them, and who has been robbed, I say, and----"
+
+"Here! you! Maria! go about your business," shouted out Clive Newcome,
+starting up; "go and pack your trunks if you like, and pack this woman's
+trunks too. Mrs. Mackenzie, I can bear you no more; go in peace, and if
+you wish to see your daughter she shall come to you; but I will never,
+so help me God! sleep under the same roof with you; or break the same
+crust with you; or bear your infernal cruelty; or sit to hear my father
+insulted; or listen to your wicked pride and folly more. There has not
+been a day since you thrust your cursed foot into our wretched house,
+but you have tortured one and all of us. Look here, at the best
+gentleman, and the kindest heart in all the world, you fiend! and see to
+what a condition you have brought him! Dearest father! she is going, do
+you hear? She leaves us, and you will come back to me, won't you?
+Great God, woman," he gasped out, "do you know what you have made
+me suffer--what you have done to this good man? Pardon, father,
+pardon!"--and he sank down by his father's side, sobbing with passionate
+emotion. The old man even now did not seem to comprehend the scene. When
+he heard that woman's voice in anger, a sort of stupor came over him.
+
+"I am a fiend, am I?" cries the lady. "You hear, Mr. Pendennis, this is
+the language to which I am accustomed; I am a widow, and I trusted my
+child and my all to that old man; he robbed me and my darling of almost
+every farthing we had; and what has been my return for such baseness?
+I have lived in this house and toiled like a slave; I have acted as
+servant to my blessed child; night after night I have sat with her; and
+month after month, when her husband has been away, I have nursed that
+poor innocent; and the father having robbed me, the son turns me out of
+doors!"
+
+A sad thing it was to witness, and a painful proof how frequent were
+these battles, that, as this one raged, the poor little boy sat almost
+careless, whilst his bewildered grandfather stroked his golden head. "It
+is quite clear to me, madam," I said, turning to Mrs. Mackenzie, "that
+you and your son-in-law are better apart; and I came to tell him to-day
+of a most fortunate legacy, which has been left to him, and which will
+enable him to pay you to-morrow morning every shilling, every shilling
+which he does NOT owe you?"
+
+"I will not leave this house until I am paid every shilling of which I
+have been robbed," hissed out Mrs. Mackenzie; and she sat down, folding
+her arms across her chest.
+
+"I am sorry," groaned out Clive, wiping the sweat off his brow, "I used a
+harsh word; I will never sleep under the same roof with you. To-morrow I
+will pay you what you claim; and the best chance I have of forgiving
+you the evil which you have done me, is that we never should meet again.
+Will you give me a bed at your house, Arthur? Father, will you come out
+and walk? Good night, Mrs. Mackenzie; Pendennis will settle with you in
+the morning. You will not be here, if you please, when I return; and so
+God forgive you, and farewell."
+
+Mrs. Mackenzie in a tragic manner dashed aside the hand which poor Clive
+held out to her, and disappeared from the scene of this dismal dinner.
+Boy presently fell a-crying; in spite of all the battle and fury, there
+was sleep in his eyes.
+
+"Maria is too busy, I suppose, to put him to bed," said Clive, with a
+sad smile; "shall we do it, father? Come, Tommy, my son!" and he folded
+his arms round the child, and walked with him to the upper regions.
+The old man's eyes lighted up; his seared thoughts returned to him; he
+followed his two children up the stairs, and saw his grandson in his
+little bed; and, as we walked home with him, he told me how sweetly Boy
+said "Our Father," and prayed God bless all those who loved him, as they
+laid him to rest.
+
+So these three generations had joined in that supplication: the strong
+man, humbled by trial and grief, whose loyal heart was yet full of
+love;--the child, of the sweet age of those little ones whom the Blessed
+Speaker of the prayer first bade to come unto Him;--and the old man,
+whose heart was well-nigh as tender and as innocent; and whose day was
+approaching, when he should be drawn to the bosom of the Eternal Pity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXX. In which the Colonel says "Adsum" when his Name is called
+
+
+The vow which Clive had uttered, never to share bread with his
+mother-in-law, or sleep under the same roof with her, was broken on the
+very next day. A stronger will than the young man's intervened, and he
+had to confess the impotence of his wrath before that superior power.
+In the forenoon of the day following that unlucky dinner, I went with my
+friend to the banking-house whither Mr. Luce's letter directed us, and
+carried away with me the principal sum, in which the Campaigner said
+Colonel Newcome was indebted to her, with the interest accurately
+computed and reimbursed. Clive went off with a pocketful of money to the
+dear old Poor Brother of Grey Friars; and he promised to return with his
+father, and dine with my wife in Queen Square. I had received a letter
+from Laura by the morning's post, announcing her return by the express
+train from Newcome, and desiring that a spare bedroom should be got
+ready for a friend who accompanied her.
+
+On reaching Howland Street, Clive's door was opened, rather to my
+surprise, by the rebellious maid-servant who had received her dismissal
+on the previous night; and the doctor's carriage drove up as she was
+still speaking to me. The polite practitioner sped upstairs to Mrs.
+Newcome's apartment. Mrs. Mackenzie, in a robe-de-chambre and cap very
+different from yesterday's, came out eagerly to meet the physician on
+the landing. Ere they had been a quarter of an hour together, arrived a
+cab, which discharged an elderly person with her bandbox and bundles; I
+had no difficulty in recognising a professional nurse in the new-comer.
+She too disappeared into the sick-room, and left me sitting in the
+neighbouring chamber, the scene of the last night's quarrel.
+
+Hither presently came to me Maria, the maid. She said she had not the
+heart to go away now she was wanted; that they had passed a sad night,
+and that no one had been to bed. Master Tommy was below, and the
+landlady taking care of him: the landlord had gone out for the nurse.
+Mrs. Clive had been taken bad after Mr. Clive went away the night
+before. Mrs. Mackenzie had gone to the poor young thing, and there she
+went on, crying, and screaming, and stamping, as she used to do in her
+tantrums, which was most cruel of her, and made Mrs. Clive so ill. And
+presently the young lady began: my informant told me. She came screaming
+into the sitting-room, her hair over her shoulders, calling out she was
+deserted, deserted, and would like to die. She was like a mad woman for
+some time. She had fit after fit of hysterics: and there was her mother,
+kneeling, and crying, and calling out to her darling child to calm
+herself;--which it was all her own doing, and she had much better have
+held her own tongue, remarked the resolute Maria. I understood only
+too well from the girl's account what had happened, and that Clive, if
+resolved to part with his mother-in-law, should not have left her, even
+for twelve hours, in possession of his house. The wretched woman, whose
+Self was always predominant, and who, though she loved her daughter
+after her own fashion, never forgot her own vanity or passion, had
+improved the occasion of Clive's absence: worked upon her child's
+weakness, jealousy, ill-health, and driven her, no doubt, into the fever
+which yonder physician was called to quell.
+
+The doctor presently enters to write a prescription, followed by
+Clive's mother-in-law, who had cast Rosa's fine Cashmere shawl over her
+shoulders, to hide her disarray. "You here still, Mr. Pendennis!" she
+exclaims. She knew I was there. Had not she changed her dress in order
+to receive me?
+
+"I have to speak to you for two minutes on important business, and then
+I shall go," I replied gravely.
+
+"Oh, sir! to what a scene you have come! To what a state has Clive's
+conduct last night driven my darling child!"
+
+As the odious woman spoke so, the doctor's keen eyes, looking up from
+the prescription, caught mine. "I declare before Heaven, madam," I said
+hotly, "I believe you yourself are the cause of your daughter's present
+illness, as you have been of the misery of my friends."
+
+"Is this, sir," she was breaking out, "is this language to be used
+to----?"
+
+"Madam, will you be silent?" I said. "I am come to bid you farewell on
+the part of those whom your temper has driven into infernal torture. I
+am come to pay you every halfpenny of the sum which my friends do not
+owe you, but which they restore. Here is the account, and here is the
+money to settle it. And I take this gentleman to witness, to whom, no
+doubt, you have imparted what you call your wrongs" (the doctor smiled,
+and shrugged his shoulders) "that now you are paid."
+
+"A widow--a poor, lonely, insulted widow!" cries the Campaigner, with
+trembling hands taking possession of the notes.
+
+"And I wish to know," I continued, "when my friend's house will be free
+to him, and he can return in peace."
+
+Here Rosa's voice was heard from the inner apartment, screaming, "Mamma,
+mamma!"
+
+"I go to my child, sir," she said. "If Captain Mackenzie had been alive,
+you would not have dared to insult me so." And carrying off her money,
+she left us.
+
+"Cannot she be got out of the house?" I said to the doctor. "My friend
+will never return until she leaves it. It is my belief she is the cause
+of her daughter's present illness."
+
+"Not altogether, my dear sir. Mrs. Newcome was in a very, very delicate
+state of health. Her mother is a lady of impetuous temper, who expresses
+herself very strongly--too strongly, I own. In consequence of unpleasant
+family discussions, which no physician can prevent, Mrs. Newcome has
+been wrought up to a state of--of agitation. Her fever is, in fact, at
+present very high. You know her condition. I am apprehensive of ulterior
+consequences. I have recommended an excellent and experienced nurse
+to her. Mr. Smith, the medical man at the corner, is a most able
+practitioner. I shall myself call again in a few hours, and I trust
+that, after the event which I apprehend, everything will go well.
+
+"Cannot Mrs. Mackenzie leave the house, sir?" I asked.
+
+"Her daughter cries out for her at every moment. Mrs. Mackenzie is
+certainly not a judicious nurse, but in Mrs. Newcome's present state I
+cannot take upon myself to separate them. Mr. Newcome may return, and
+I do think and believe that his presence may tend to impose silence and
+restore tranquillity."
+
+I had to go back to Clive with these gloomy tidings. The poor fellow
+must put up a bed in his studio, and there await the issue of his wife's
+illness. I saw Thomas Newcome could not sleep under his son's roof that
+night. That dear meeting, which both so desired, was delayed, who could
+say for how long?
+
+"The Colonel may come to us," I thought; "our old house is big enough."
+I guessed who was the friend coming in my wife's company; and pleased
+myself by thinking that two friends so dear should meet in our home.
+Bent upon these plans, I repaired to Grey Friars, and to Thomas
+Newcome's chamber there.
+
+Bayham opened the door when I knocked, and came towards me with a finger
+on his lip, and a sad, sad countenance. He closed the door gently behind
+him, and led me into the court. "Clive is with him, and Miss Newcome. He
+is very ill. He does not know them," said Bayham with a sob. "He calls
+out for both of them: they are sitting there and he does not know them."
+
+In a brief narrative, broken by more honest tears, Fred Bayham, as we
+paced up and down the court, told me what had happened. The old man
+must have passed a sleepless night, for on going to his chamber in
+the morning, his attendant found him dressed in his chair, and his bed
+undisturbed. He must have sat all through the bitter night without a
+fire: but his hands were burning hot, and he rambled in his talk. He
+spoke of some one coming to drink tea with him, pointed to the fire,
+and asked why it was not made; he would not go to bed, though the nurse
+pressed him. The bell began to ring for morning chapel; he got up and
+went towards his gown, groping towards it as though he could hardly
+see, and put it over his shoulders, and would go out, but he would have
+fallen in the court if the good nurse had not given him her arm; and the
+physician of the hospital, passing fortunately at this moment, who had
+always been a great friend of Colonel Newcome's, insisted upon leading
+him back to his room again, and got him to bed. "When the bell stopped,
+he wanted to rise once more; he fancied he was a boy at school again,"
+said the nurse, "and that he was going in to Dr. Raine, who was
+schoolmaster here ever so many years ago." So it was, that when happier
+days seemed to be dawning for the good man, that reprieve came too late.
+Grief, and years, and humiliation, and care, and cruelty had been too
+strong for him, and Thomas Newcome was stricken down.
+
+Bayham's story told, I entered the room, over which the twilight was
+falling, and saw the figures of Clive and Ethel seated at each end of
+the bed. The poor old man within it was calling incoherent sentences. I
+had to call Clive from the present grief before him, with intelligence
+of further sickness awaiting him at home. Our poor patient did not heed
+what I said to his son. "You must go home to Rosa," Ethel said. "She
+will be sure to ask for her husband, and forgiveness is best, dear
+Clive. I will stay with uncle. I will never leave him. Please God,
+he will be better in the morning when you come back." So Clive's duty
+called him to his own sad home; and, the bearer of dismal tidings, I
+returned to mine. The fires were lit there and the table spread; and
+kind hearts were waiting to welcome the friend who never more was to
+enter my door.
+
+It may be imagined that the intelligence which I brought alarmed and
+afflicted my wife and Madame de Florac, our guest. Laura immediately
+went away to Rosa's house to offer her services if needed. The accounts
+which she brought thence were very bad: Clive came to her for a minute
+or two, but Mr. Mackenzie could not see her. Should she not bring the
+little boy home to her children? Laura asked; and Clive thankfully
+accepted that offer. The little man slept in our nursery that night, and
+was at play with our young ones on the morrow--happy and unconscious of
+the fate impending over his home.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+Yet two more days passed, and I had to take two advertisements to The
+Times newspaper on the part of poor Clive. Among the announcements of
+Births was printed, "On the 28th, in Howland Street, Mrs. Clive Newcome
+of a son, still-born." And a little lower, in the third division of the
+same column, appeared the words, "On the 29th, in Howland Street, aged
+26, Rosa, wife of Clive Newcome, Esq." So, one day, shall the names
+of all of us be written there; to be deplored by how many?--to be
+remembered how long?--to occasion what tears, praises, sympathy,
+censure?--yet for a day or two, while the busy world has time to
+recollect us who have passed beyond it. So this poor little flower had
+bloomed for its little day, and pined, and withered, and perished. There
+was only one friend by Clive's side following the humble procession
+which laid poor Rosa and her child out of sight of a world that had been
+but unkind to her. Not many tears were there to water her lonely little
+grave. A grief that was akin to shame and remorse humbled him as he
+knelt over her. Poor little harmless lady! no more childish triumphs and
+vanities, no more hidden griefs are you to enjoy or suffer; and earth
+closes over your simple pleasures and tears! The snow was falling and
+whitening the coffin as they lowered it into the ground. It was at
+the same cemetery in which Lady Kew was buried. I dare say the same
+clergyman read the same service over the two graves, as he will read it
+for you or any of us to-morrow, and until his own turn comes. Come away
+from the place, poor Clive! Come sit with your orphan little boy; and
+bear him on your knee, and hug him to your heart. He seems yours now,
+and all a father's love may pour out upon him. Until this hour, Fate
+uncontrollable and homely tyranny had separated him from you.
+
+It was touching to see the eagerness and tenderness with which the great
+strong man now assumed the guardianship of the child, and endowed him
+with his entire wealth of affection. The little boy now ran to Clive
+whenever he came in, and sat for hours prattling to him. He would take
+the boy out to walk, and from our windows we could see Clive's black
+figure striding over the snow in St. James's Park, the little man
+trotting beside him, or perched on his father's shoulder. My wife and
+I looked at them one morning as they were making their way towards the
+City.
+
+"He has inherited that loving heart from his father," Laura said; "and
+he is paying over the whole property to his son."
+
+Clive, and the boy sometimes with him, used to go daily to Grey Friars,
+where the Colonel still lay ill. After some days the fever which had
+attacked him left him, but left him so weak and enfeebled that he
+could only go from his bed to the chair by his fireside. The season
+was exceedingly bitter, the chamber which he inhabited was warm and
+spacious; it was considered unadvisable to move him until he had
+attained greater strength, and till warmer weather. The medical men of
+the House hoped he might rally in spring. My friend, Dr. Goodenough,
+came to him; he hoped too: but not with a hopeful face. A chamber,
+luckily vacant, hard by the Colonel's, was assigned to his friends,
+where we sate when we were too many for him. Besides his customary
+attendant, he had two dear and watchful nurses, who were almost always
+with him--Ethel and Madame de Florac, who had passed many a faithful
+year by an old man's bedside; who would have come, as to a work of
+religion, to any sick couch, much more to this one, where he lay for
+whose life she would once gladly have given her own.
+
+But our Colonel, we all were obliged to acknowledge, was no more our
+friend of old days. He knew us again, and was good to every one round
+him, as his wont was; especially when Boy came, his old eyes lighted up
+with simple happiness, and, with eager trembling hands, he would seek
+under his bedclothes, or the pockets of his dressing-gown, for toys or
+cakes, which he had caused to be purchased for his grandson. There was
+a little laughing, red-cheeked, white-headed gown-boy of the school,
+to whom the old man had taken a great fancy. One of the symptoms of his
+returning consciousness and recovery, as we hoped, was his calling for
+this child, who pleased our friend by his archness and merry ways; and
+who, to the old gentleman's unfailing delight, used to call him, "Codd
+Colonel." "Tell little F----, that Codd Colonel wants to see him;" and
+the little gown-boy was brought to him; and the Colonel would listen to
+him for hours; and hear all about his lessons and his play; and prattle
+almost as childishly about Dr. Raine, and his own early school-days. The
+boys of the school, it must be said, had heard the noble old gentleman's
+touching history, and had all got to know and love him. They came every
+day to hear news of him; sent him in books and papers to amuse him; and
+some benevolent young souls,--God's blessing on all honest boys, say
+I,--painted theatrical characters, and sent them in to Codd Colonel's
+grandson. The little fellow was made free of gown-boys, and once came
+thence to his grandfather in a little gown, which delighted the old man
+hugely. Boy said he would like to be a little gown-boy; and I make no
+doubt, when he is old enough, his father will get him that post, and put
+him under the tuition of my friend Dr. Senior.
+
+So, weeks passed away, during which our dear old friend still remained
+with us. His mind was gone at intervals, but would rally feebly; and
+with his consciousness returned his love, his simplicity, his sweetness.
+He would talk French with Madame de Florac, at which time, his memory
+appeared to awaken with surprising vividness, his cheek flushed, and he
+was a youth again,--a youth all love and hope,--a stricken old man, with
+a beard as white as snow covering the noble careworn face. At such times
+he called her by her Christian name of Leonore; he addressed courtly old
+words of regard and kindness to the aged lady; anon he wandered in his
+talk, and spoke to her as if they still were young. Now, as in those
+early days, his heart was pure; no anger remained in it; no guile
+tainted it; only peace and goodwill dwelt in it.
+
+Rosa's death had seemed to shock him for a while when the unconscious
+little boy spoke of it. Before that circumstance, Clive had even forbore
+to wear mourning, lest the news should agitate his father. The Colonel
+remained silent and was very much disturbed all that day, but he never
+appeared to comprehend the fact quite; and, once or twice afterwards,
+asked, why she did not come to see him? She was prevented, he
+supposed--she was prevented, he said, with a look of terror: he never
+once otherwise alluded to that unlucky tyrant of his household, who had
+made his last years so unhappy.
+
+The circumstance of Clive's legacy he never understood: but more than
+once spoke of Barnes to Ethel, and sent his compliments to him, and
+said he should like to shake him by the hand. Barnes Newcome never once
+offered to touch that honoured hand, though his sister bore her uncle's
+message to him. They came often from Bryanstone Square; Mrs. Hobson even
+offered to sit with the Colonel, and read to him, and brought him books
+for his improvement. But her presence disturbed him; he cared not for
+her books; the two nurses whom he loved faithfully watched him; and my
+wife and I were admitted to him sometimes, both of whom he honoured with
+regard and recognition. As for F. B., in order to be near his Colonel,
+did not that good fellow take up his lodging in Cistercian Lane, at the
+Red Cow? He is one whose errors, let us hope, shall be pardoned, quia
+multum amavit. I am sure he felt ten times more joy at hearing of
+Clive's legacy, than if thousands had been bequeathed to himself. May
+good health and good fortune speed him!
+
+The days went on, and our hopes, raised sometimes, began to flicker and
+fail. One evening the Colonel left his chair for his bed in pretty good
+spirits, but passed a disturbed night, and the next morning was too weak
+to rise. Then he remained in his bed, and his friends visited him
+there. One afternoon he asked for his little gown-boy, and the child was
+brought to him, and sate by the bed with a very awestricken face; and
+then gathered courage, and tried to amuse him by telling him how it
+was a half-holiday, and they were having a cricket-match with the St.
+Peter's boys in the green, and Grey Friars was in and winning. The
+Colonel quite understood about it; he would like to see the game; he
+had played many a game on that green when he was a boy. He grew excited;
+Clive dismissed his father's little friend, and put a sovereign into his
+hand; and away he ran to say that Codd Colonel had come into a
+fortune, and to buy tarts, and to see the match out. I, curre, little
+white-haired gown-boy! Heaven speed you, little friend!
+
+After the child had gone, Thomas Newcome began to wander more and more.
+He talked louder; he gave the word of command, spoke Hindustanee as if
+to his men. Then he spoke words in French rapidly, seizing a hand that
+was near him and crying, "Toujours, toujours!" But it was Ethel's hand
+which he took.
+
+Ethel and Clive and the nurse were in the room with him; the latter came
+to us, who were sitting in the adjoining apartment; Madame de Florac was
+there, with my wife and Bayham.
+
+At the look in the woman's countenance Madame de Florac started up. "He
+is very bad, he wanders a great deal," the nurse whispered. The French
+lady fell instantly on her knees, and remained rigid in prayer.
+
+Some time afterwards Ethel came in with a scared face to our pale group.
+"He is calling for you again, dear lady," she said, going up to Madame
+de Florac, who was still kneeling; "and just now he said he wanted
+Pendennis to take care of his boy. He will not know you." She hid her
+tears as she spoke.
+
+She went into the room, where Clive was at the bed's foot; the old man
+within it talked on rapidly for a while: then again he would sigh and be
+still: once more I heard him say hurriedly, "Take care of him while I'm
+in India;" and then with a heart-rending voice he called out, "Leonore,
+Leonore!" She was kneeling by his side now. The patient's voice sank
+into faint murmurs; only a moan now and then announced that he was not
+asleep.
+
+At the usual evening hour the chapel bell began to toll, and Thomas
+Newcome's hands outside the bed feebly beat a time. And just as the last
+bell struck, a peculiar sweet smile shone over his face, and he lifted
+up his head a little, and quickly said, "Adsum!" and fell back. It was
+the word we used at school, when names were called; and lo, he, whose
+heart was as that of a little child, had answered to his name, and stood
+in the presence of The Master.
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+Two years ago, walking with my children in some pleasant fields, near
+to Berne in Switzerland, I strayed from them into a little wood; and,
+coming out of it presently, told them how the story had been revealed
+to me somehow, which for three-and-twenty months the reader has been
+pleased to follow. As I write the last line with a rather sad heart,
+Pendennis and Laura, and Ethel and Clive, fade away into Fable-land. I
+hardly know whether they are not true: whether they do not live near us
+somewhere. They were alive, and I heard their voices, but five minutes
+since was touched by their grief. And have we parted with them here on
+a sudden, and without so much as a shake of the hand? Is yonder line
+(----) which I drew with my own pen, a barrier between me and Hades as
+it were, across which I can see those figures retreating and only dimly
+glimmering? Before taking leave of Mr. Arthur Pendennis, might he
+not have told us whether Miss Ethel married anybody finally? It was
+provoking that he should retire to the shades without answering that
+sentimental question.
+
+But though he has disappeared as irrevocably as Eurydice, these minor
+questions may settle the major one above mentioned. How could Pendennis
+have got all that information about Ethel's goings-on at Baden, and with
+Lord Kew, unless she had told somebody--her husband, for instance, who,
+having made Pendennis an early confidant in his amour, gave him the
+whole story? Clive, Pendennis writes expressly, is travelling abroad
+with his wife. Who is that wife? By a most monstrous blunder, Mr.
+Pendennis killed Lord Farintosh's mother at one page and brought her to
+life again at another; but Rosey, who is so lately consigned to Kensal
+Green, it is not surely with her that Clive is travelling, for then Mrs.
+Mackenzie would probably be with them to a live certainty, and the tour
+would be by no means pleasant. How could Pendennis have got all those
+private letters, etc., but that the Colonel kept them in a teak box,
+which Clive inherited and made over to his friend? My belief then is,
+that in Fable-land somewhere Ethel and Clive are living most comfortably
+together: that she is immensely fond of his little boy, and a great deal
+happier now than they would have been had they married at first, when
+they took a liking to each other as young people. That picture of
+J. J.'s of Mrs. Clive Newcome (in the Crystal Palace Exhibition in
+Fable-land), is certainly not in the least like Rosey, who we read was
+fair; but it represents a tall, handsome, dark lady, who must be Mrs.
+Ethel.
+
+Again, why did Pendennis introduce J. J. with such a flourish, giving
+us, as it were, an overture, and no piece to follow it? J. J.'s history,
+let me confidentially state, has been revealed to me too, and may be
+told some of these fine summer months, or Christmas evenings, when the
+kind reader has leisure to hear.
+
+What about Sir Barnes Newcome ultimately? My impression is that he is
+married again, and it is my fervent hope that his present wife bullies
+him. Mrs. Mackenzie cannot have the face to keep that money which Clive
+paid over to her, beyond her lifetime; and will certainly leave it and
+her savings to little Tommy. I should not be surprised if Madame de
+Moncontour left a smart legacy to the Pendennis children; and Lord
+Kew stood godfather in case--in case Mr. and Mrs. Clive wanted such an
+article. But have they any children? I, for my part, should like her
+best without, and entirely devoted to little Tommy. But for you, dear
+friend, it is as you like. You may settle your Fable-land in your own
+fashion. Anything you like happens in Fable-land. Wicked folks die a
+propos (for instance, that death of Lady Kew was most artful, for if she
+had not died, don't you see that Ethel would have married Lord Farintosh
+the next week?)--annoying folks are got out of the way; the poor are
+rewarded--the upstarts are set down in Fable-land,--the frog bursts with
+wicked rage, the fox is caught in his trap, the lamb is rescued from the
+wolf, and so forth, just in the nick of time. And the poet of Fable-land
+rewards and punishes absolutely. He splendidly deals out bags of
+sovereigns, which won't buy anything; belabours wicked backs with awful
+blows, which do not hurt; endows heroines with preternatural beauty,
+and creates heroes, who, if ugly sometimes, yet possess a thousand good
+qualities, and usually end by being immensely rich; makes the hero
+and heroine happy at last, and happy ever after. Ah, happy, harmless
+Fable-land, where these things are! Friendly reader! may you and the
+author meet there on some future day. He hopes so; as he yet keeps a
+lingering hold of your hand, and bids you farewell with a kind heart.
+
+Paris, 28th June 1855.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Newcomes, by William Makepeace Thackeray
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