<h2><SPAN name="chap37"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVII.<br/> Where Pen appears in Town and Country</h2>
<p>Let us be allowed to pass over a few months of the history of Mr. Arthur
Pendennis’s lifetime, during the which, many events may have occurred
which were more interesting and exciting to himself, than they would be likely
to prove to the reader of his present memoirs. We left him, in his last
chapter, regularly entered upon his business as a professional writer, or
literary hack, as Mr. Warrington chooses to style himself and his friend; and
we know how the life of any hack, legal or literary, in a curacy, or in a
marching regiment, or at a merchant’s desk, is dull of routine, and
tedious of description. One day’s labour resembles another much too
closely. A literary man has often to work for his bread against time, or
against his will, or in spite of his health, or of his indolence, or of his
repugnance to the subject on which he is called to exert himself, just like any
other daily toiler. When you want to make money by Pegasus (as he must,
perhaps, who has no other saleable property), farewell poetry and aerial
flights: Pegasus only rises now like Mr. Green’s balloon, at periods
advertised beforehand, and when the spectator’s money has been paid.
Pegasus trots in harness, over the stony pavement, and pulls a cart or a cab
behind him. Often Pegasus does his work with panting sides and trembling knees,
and not seldom gets a cut of the whip from his driver.</p>
<p>Do not let us, however, be too prodigal of our pity upon Pegasus. There is no
reason why this animal should be exempt from labour, or illness, or decay, any
more than any of the other creatures of God’s world. If he gets the whip,
Pegasus often deserves it, and I for one am quite ready to protest my friend,
George Warrington, against the doctrine which poetical sympathisers are
inclined to put forward, viz., that of letters, and what is called genius, are
to be exempt from prose duties of this daily, bread-wanting, tax-paying life,
and not to be made to work and pay like their neighbours.</p>
<p>Well, then, the Pall Mall Gazette being duly established and Arthur
Pendennis’s merits recognised as a flippant, witty, and amusing critic,
he worked away hard every week, preparing reviews of such works as came into
his department, and writing his reviews with flippancy certainly, but with
honesty, and to the best of his power. It might be that a historian of
threescore, who had spent a quarter of a century in composing a work of which
our young gentleman disposed in the course of a couple of days’ reading
at the British Museum, was not altogether fairly treated by such a facile
critic; or that a poet who had been elaborating sublime sonnets and odes until
he thought them fit for the public and for fame, was annoyed by two or three
dozen pert lines in Mr. Pen’s review, in which the poet’s claims
were settled by the critic, as if the latter were my lord on the bench and the
author a miserable little suitor trembling before him. The actors at the
theatres complained of him wofully, too, and very likely he was too hard upon
them. But there was not much harm done after all. It is different now, as we
know; but there were so few great historians, or great poets, or great actors,
in Pen’s time, that scarce any at all came up for judgment before his
critical desk. Those who got a little whipping, got what in the main was good
for them; not that the judge was any better or wiser than the persons whom he
sentenced, or indeed ever fancied himself so. Pen had a strong sense of humour
and justice, and had not therefore an overweening respect for his own works;
besides, he had his friend Warrington at his elbow—a terrible critic if
the young man was disposed to be conceited, and more savage over Pen than ever
he was to those whom he tried at his literary assize.</p>
<p>By these critical labours, and by occasional contributions to leading articles
of the journal, when, without wounding his paper, this eminent publicist could
conscientiously speak his mind, Mr. Arthur Pendennis gained the sum of four
pounds four shillings weekly, and with no small pains and labour. Likewise he
furnished Magazines and Reviews with articles of his composition, and is
believed to have been (though on this score he never chooses to speak) London
correspondent of the Chatteris Champion, which at that time contained some very
brilliant and eloquent letters from the metropolis. By these labours the
fortunate youth was enabled to earn a sum very nearly equal to four hundred
pounds a year; and on the second Christmas after his arrival in London, he
actually brought a hundred pounds to his mother, as a dividend upon the debt
which he owed to Laura. That Mrs. Pendennis read every word of her son’s
works, and considered him to be the profoundest thinker and most elegant writer
of the day; that she thought his retribution of the hundred pounds an act of
angelic virtue; that she feared he was ruining his health by his labours, and
was delighted when he told her of the society which he met, and of the great
men of letters and fashion whom he saw, will be imagined by all readers who
have seen son-worship amongst mothers, and that charming simplicity of love
with which women in the country watch the career of their darlings in London.
If John has held such and such a brief; if Tom has been invited to such and
such a ball; or George has met this or that great and famous man at dinner;
what a delight there is in the hearts of mothers and sisters at home in
Somersetshire! How young Hopeful’s letters are read and remembered! What
a theme for village talk they give, and friendly congratulation! In the second
winter, Pen came for a very brief space, and cheered the widow’s heart,
and lightened up the lonely house at Fairoaks. Helen had her son all to
herself; Laura was away on a visit to old Lady Rockminster; the folks of
Clavering Park were absent; the very few old friends of the house, Doctor
Portman at their head, called upon Mr. Pen, and treated him with marked
respect; between mother and son, it was all fondness, confidence, and
affection. It was the happiest fortnight of the widow’s whole life;
perhaps in the lives of both of them. The holiday was gone only too quickly;
and Pen was back in the busy world, and the gentle widow alone again. She sent
Arthur’s money to Laura: I don’t know why this young lady took the
opportunity of leaving home when Pen was coming thither, or whether he was the
more piqued or relieved by her absence.</p>
<p>He was by this time, by his own merits and his uncle’s introductions,
pretty well introduced into London, and known both in literary and polite
circles. Amongst the former his fashionable reputation stood him in no little
stead; he was considered to be a gentleman of good present means and better
expectations, who wrote for his pleasure, than which there cannot be a greater
recommendation to a young literary aspirant. Bacon, Bungay and Co. were proud
to accept his articles; Mr. Wenham asked him to dinner; Mr. Wagg looked upon
him with a favourable eye; and they reported how they met him at the houses of
persons of fashion, amongst whom he was pretty welcome, as they did not trouble
themselves about his means, present or future; as his appearance and address
were good; and as he had got a character for being a clever fellow. Finally, he
was asked to one house, because he was seen at another house: and thus no small
varieties of London life were presented to the young man: he was made familiar
with all sorts of people from Paternoster Row to Pimlico, and was as much at
home at Mayfair dining-tables as at those tavern boards where some of his
companions of the pen were accustomed to assemble.</p>
<p>Full of high spirits and curiosity, easily adapting himself to all whom he met,
the young fellow pleased himself in this strange variety and jumble of men, and
made himself welcome, or at ease at least, wherever he went. He would
breakfast, for instance, at Mr. Plover’s of a morning, in company with a
Peer, a Bishop, a parliamentary orator, two blue ladies of fashion, a popular
preacher, the author of the last new novel, and the very latest lion imported
from Egypt or from America: and would quit this distinguished society for the
back room at the newspaper office, where pens and ink and the wet proof-sheets
were awaiting him. Here would be Finucane, the sub-editor, with the last news
from the Row: and Shandon would come in presently, and giving a nod to Pen,
would begin scribbling his leading article at the other end of the table,
flanked by the pint of sherry, which, when the attendant boy beheld him, was
always silently brought for the Captain: or Mr. Bludyer’s roaring voice
would be heard in the front room, where that truculent critic would impound the
books on the counter in spite of the timid remonstrances of Mr. Midge, the
publisher, and after looking through the volumes would sell them at his
accustomed bookstall, and having drunken and dined upon the produce of the sale
in a tavern box, would call for ink and paper, and proceed to
“smash” the author of his dinner and the novel. Towards evening Mr.
Pen would stroll in the direction of his club, and take up Warrington there for
a constitutional walk. This exercise freed the lungs, and gave an appetite for
dinner, after which Pen had the privilege to make his bow at some very pleasant
houses which were opened to him; or the town before him for amusement. There
was the Opera; or the Eagle Tavern; or a ball to go to in Mayfair; or a quiet
night with a cigar and a book and a long talk with Warrington; or a wonderful
new song at the Back Kitchen;—at this time of his life Mr. Pen beheld all
sorts of places and men; and very likely did not know how much he enjoyed
himself until long after, when balls gave him no pleasure, neither did farces
make him laugh; nor did the tavern joke produce the least excitement in him;
nor did the loveliest dancer that ever showed her ankles cause him to stir from
his chair after dinner. At his present mature age all these pleasures are over:
and the times have passed away too. It is but a very very few years
since—but the time is gone, and most of the men. Bludyer will no more
bully authors or cheat landlords of their score. Shandon, the learned and
thriftless, the witty and unwise, sleeps his last sleep. They buried honest
Doolan the other day: never will he cringe or flatter, never pull long-bow or
empty whisky-noggin any more.</p>
<p>The London season was now blooming in its full vigour, and the fashionable
newspapers abounded with information regarding the grand banquets, routs, and
balls which were enlivening the polite world. Our gracious Sovereign was
holding levees and drawing-rooms at St. James’s: the bow-windows of the
clubs were crowded with the heads of respectable red-faced newspaper-reading
gentlemen: along the Serpentine trailed thousands of carriages: squadrons of
dandy horsemen trampled over Rotten Row, everybody was in town, in a word; and
of course Major Arthur Pendennis, who was somebody, was not absent.</p>
<p>With his head tied up in a smart bandana handkerchief and his meagre carcass
enveloped in a brilliant Turkish dressing-gown, the worthy gentleman sate on a
certain morning by his fireside letting his feet gently simmer in a bath,
whilst he took his early cup of tea, and perused his Morning Post. He could not
have faced the day without his two hours’ toilet, without his early cup
of tea, without his Morning Post. I suppose nobody in the world except Morgan,
not even Morgan’s master himself, knew how feeble and ancient the Major
was growing, and what numberless little comforts he required.</p>
<p>If men sneer, as our habit is, at the artifices of an old beauty, at her paint,
perfumes, ringlets; at those innumerable, and to us unknown, stratagems with
which she is said to remedy the ravages of time and reconstruct the charms
whereof years have bereft her; the ladies, it is to be presumed, are not on
their side altogether ignorant that men are vain as well as they, and that the
toilets of old bucks are to the full as elaborate as their own. How is it that
old Blushington keeps that constant little rose-tint on his cheeks; and where
does old Blondel get the preparation which makes his silver hair pass for
golden? Have you ever seen Lord Hotspur get off his horse when he thinks nobody
is looking? Taken out of his stirrups, his shiny boots can hardly totter up the
steps of Hotspur House. He is a dashing young nobleman still as you see the
back of him in Rotten Row; when you behold him on foot, what an old, old
fellow! Did you ever form to yourself any idea of Dick Lacy (Dick has been Dick
these sixty years) in a natural state, and without his stays? All these men are
objects whom the observer of human life and manners may contemplate with as
much profit as the most elderly Belgravian Venus, or inveterate Mayfair
Jezebel. An old reprobate daddy-longlegs, who has never said his prayers
(except perhaps in public) these fifty years: an old buck who still clings to
as many of the habits of youth as his feeble grasp of health can hold by: who
has given up the bottle, but sits with young fellows over it, and tells naughty
stories upon toast-and-water—who has given up beauty, but still talks
about it as wickedly as the youngest roue in company—such an old fellow,
I say, if any parson in Pimlico or St. James’s were to order the beadles
to bring him into the middle aisle, and there set him in an armchair, and make
a text of him, and preach about him to the congregation, could be turned to a
wholesome use for once in his life, and might be surprised to find that some
good thoughts came out of him. But we are wandering from our text, the honest
Major, who sits all this while with his feet cooling in the bath: Morgan takes
them out of that place of purification, and dries them daintily, and proceeds
to set the old gentleman on his legs, with waistband and wig, starched cravat,
and spotless boots and gloves.</p>
<p>It was during these hours of the toilet that Morgan and his employer had their
confidential conversations, for they did not meet much at other times of the
day—the Major abhorring the society of his own chairs and tables in his
lodgings; and Morgan, his master’s toilet over and letters delivered, had
his time very much on his own hands.</p>
<p>This spare time the active and well-mannered gentleman bestowed among the
valets and butlers of the nobility, his acquaintance; and Morgan Pendennis, as
he was styled, for, by such compound names, gentlemen’s gentlemen are
called in their private circles, was a frequent and welcome guest at some of
the very highest tables in this town. He was a member of two influential clubs
in Mayfair and Pimlico; and he was thus enabled to know the whole gossip of the
town, and entertain his master very agreeably during the two hours’
toilet conversation. He knew a hundred tales and legends regarding persons of
the very highest ton, whose valets canvass their august secrets, just, my dear
Madam, as our own parlour-maids and dependants in the kitchen discuss our
characters, our stinginess and generosity, our pecuniary means or
embarrassments, and our little domestic or connubial tiffs and quarrels. If I
leave this manuscript open on my table, I have not the slightest doubt Betty
will read it, and they will talk it over in the lower regions to-night; and
to-morrow she will bring in my breakfast with a face of such entire
imperturbable innocence, that no mortal could suppose her guilty of playing the
spy. If you and the Captain have high words upon any subject, which is just
possible, the circumstances of the quarrel, and the characters of both of you,
will be discussed with impartial eloquence over the kitchen tea-table; and if
Mrs. Smith’s maid should by chance be taking a dish of tea with yours,
her presence will not undoubtedly act as a restraint upon the discussion in
question; her opinion will be given with candour; and the next day her mistress
will probably know that Captain and Mrs. Jones have been a quarrelling as
usual. Nothing is secret. Take it as a rule that John knows everything: and as
in our humble world so in the greatest: a duke is no more a hero to his
valet-de-chambre than you or I; and his Grace’s Man at his club, in
company doubtless with other Men of equal social rank, talks over his
master’s character and affairs with the ingenuous truthfulness which
befits gentlemen who are met together in confidence. Who is a niggard and
screws up his money-boxes: who is in the hands of the money-lenders, and is
putting his noble name on the back of bills of exchange: who is intimate with
whose wife: who wants whom to marry her daughter, and which he won’t, no
not at any price:—all these facts gentlemen’s confidential
gentlemen discuss confidentially, and are known and examined by every person
who has any claim to rank in genteel society. In a word, if old Pendennis
himself was said to know everything, and was at once admirably scandalous and
delightfully discreet; it is but justice to Morgan to say, that a great deal of
his master’s information was supplied to that worthy man by his valet,
who went out and foraged knowledge for him. Indeed, what more effectual plan is
there to get a knowledge of London society, than to begin at the
foundation—that is, at the kitchen floor?</p>
<p>So Mr. Morgan and his employer conversed as the latter’s toilet
proceeded. There had been a drawing-room on the previous day, and the Major
read among the presentations that of Lady Clavering by Lady Rockminster, and of
Miss Amory by her mother Lady Clavering,—and in a further part of the
paper their dresses were described, with a precision and in a jargon which will
puzzle and amuse the antiquary of future generations. The sight of these names
carried Pendennis back to the country. “How long have the Claverings been
in London?” he asked; “pray, Morgan, have you seen any of their
people?”</p>
<p>“Sir Francis have sent away his foring man, sir,” Mr. Morgan
replied; “and have took a friend of mine as own man, sir. Indeed he
applied on my reckmendation. You may recklect Towler, sir,—tall red-aired
man—but dyes his air. Was groom of the chambers in Lord Levant’s
family till his Lordship broke hup. It’s a fall for Towler, sir; but pore
men can’t be particklar,” said the valet, with a pathetic voice.</p>
<p>“Devilish hard on Towler, by gad!” said the Major, amused,
“and not pleasant for Lord Levant—he, he!”</p>
<p>“Always knew it was coming, sir. I spoke to you of it Michaelmas was four
years: when her Ladyship put the diamonds in pawn. It was Towler, sir, took
’em in two cabs to Dobree’s—and a good deal of the plate went
the same way. Don’t you remember seeing of it at Blackwall, with the
Levant arms and coronick, and Lord Levant settn oppsit to it at the Marquis of
Steyne’s dinner? Beg your pardon; did I cut you, sir?”</p>
<p>Morgan was now operating upon the Major’s chin—he continued the
theme while strapping the skilful razor. “They’ve took a house in
Grosvenor Place, and are coming out strong, sir. Her Ladyship’s going to
give three parties, besides a dinner a week, sir. Her fortune won’t stand
it—can’t stand it.”</p>
<p>“Gad, she had a devilish good cook when I was at Fairoaks,” the
Major said, with very little compassion for the widow Amory’s fortune.</p>
<p>“Marobblan was his name, sir; Marobblan’s gone away, sir,”
Morgan said,—and the Major, this time, with hearty sympathy, said,
“he was devilish sorry to lose him.”</p>
<p>“There’s been a tremenjuous row about that Mosseer
Marobblan,” Morgan continued “At a ball at Baymouth, sir, bless his
impadence, he challenged Mr. Harthur to fight a jewel, sir, which Mr. Arthur
was very near knocking him down, and pitchin’ him outawinder, and serve
him right; but Chevalier Strong, sir, came up and stopped the shindy—I
beg pardon, the holtercation, sir—them French cooks has as much pride and
hinsolence as if they was real gentlemen.”</p>
<p>“I heard something of that quarrel,” said the Major; “but
Mirobolant was not turned off for that?”</p>
<p>“No, sir—that affair, sir, which Mr. Harthur forgave it him and
beayved most handsome, was hushed hup: it was about Miss Hamory, sir, that he
ad is dismissial. Those French fellers, they fancy everybody is in love with
’em; and he climbed up the large grape vine to her winder, sir, and was a
trying to get in, when he was caught, sir; and Mr. Strong came out, and they
got the garden-engine and played on him, and there was no end of a row,
sir.”</p>
<p>“Confound his impudence! You don’t mean to say Miss Amory
encouraged him,” cried the Major, amazed at a peculiar expression in Mr.
Morgan’s countenance.</p>
<p>Morgan resumed his imperturbable demeanour. “Know nothing about it, sir.
Servants don’t know them kind of things the least. Most probbly there was
nothing in it—so many lies is told about families—Marobblan went
away, bag and baggage, saucepans, and pianna, and all—the feller ad a
pianna, and wrote potry in French, and he took a lodging at Clavering, and he
hankered about the primises, and it was said that Madam Fribsy, the milliner,
brought letters to Miss Hamory, though I don’t believe a word about it;
nor that he tried to pison hisself with charcoal, which it was all a humbug
betwigst him and Madam Fribsy; and he was nearly shot by the keeper in the
park.”</p>
<p>In the course of that very day, it chanced that the Major had stationed himself
in the great window of Bays’s Club in Saint James’s Street, at the
hour in the afternoon when you see a half-score of respectable old bucks
similarly recreating themselves (Bays’s is rather an old-fashioned place
of resort now, and many of its members more than middle-aged; but in the time
of the Prince Regent, these old fellows occupied the same window, and were some
of the very greatest dandies in this empire)—Major Pendennis was looking
from the great window, and spied his nephew Arthur walking down the street in
company with his friend Mr. Popjoy.</p>
<p>“Look!” said Popjoy to Pen, as they passed, “did you ever
pass Bays’s at four o’clock, without seeing that collection of old
fogies? It’s a regular museum. They ought to be cast in wax, and set up
at Madame Tussaud’s—”</p>
<p>“—In a chamber of old horrors by themselves,” Pen said,
laughing.</p>
<p>“—In the chamber of horrors! Gad, doosid good!” Pop cried.
“They are old rogues, most of ’em, and no mistake. There’s
old Blondel; there’s my Uncle Colchicum, the most confounded old sinner
in Europe; there’s—hullo! there’s somebody rapping the window
and nodding at us.”</p>
<p>“It’s my uncle, the Major,” said Pen. “Is he an old
sinner too?”</p>
<p>“Notorious old rogue,” Pop said, wagging his head.
(“Notowious old wogue,” he pronounced the words, thereby rendering
them much more emphatic.)—“He’s beckoning you in; he wants to
speak to you.”</p>
<p>“Come in too,” Pen said.</p>
<p>“—Can’t,” replied the other. “Cut uncle Col. two
years ago, about Mademoiselle Frangipane—Ta, ta,” and the young
sinner took leave of Pen, and the club of the elder criminals, and sauntered
into Blacquiere’s, an adjacent establishment, frequented by reprobates of
his own age.</p>
<p>Colchicum, Blondel, and the senior bucks had just been conversing about the
Clavering family, whose appearance in London had formed the subject of Major
Pendennis’s morning conversation with his valet. Mr. Blondel’s
house was next to that of Sir Francis Clavering, in Grosvenor Place: giving
very good dinners himself, he had remarked some activity in his
neighbour’s kitchen. Sir Francis, indeed, had a new chef, who had come in
more than once and dressed Mr. Blondel’s dinner for him; that gentleman
having only a remarkably expert female artist permanently engaged in his
establishment, and employing such chiefs of note as happened to be free on the
occasion of his grand banquets. “They go to a devilish expense and see
devilish bad company as yet, I hear,” Mr. Blondel said, “they scour
the streets, by gad, to get people to dine with ’em. Champignon says it
breaks his heart to serve up a dinner to their society. What a shame it is that
those low people should have money at all,” cried Mr. Blondel, whose
grandfather had been a reputable leather-breeches maker, and whose father had
lent money to the Princes.</p>
<p>“I wish I had fallen in with the widow myself” sighed Lord
Colchicum, “and not been laid up with that confounded gout at
Leghorn—I would have married the woman myself.—I’m told she
has six hundred thousand pounds in the Threes.”</p>
<p>“Not quite so much as that,—I knew her family in
India,”—Major Pendennis said, “I knew her family in India;
her father was an enormously rich old indigo-planter,—know all about
her;—Clavering has the next estate to ours in the country.—Ha!
there’s my nephew walking with”—“With mine,—the
infernal young scamp,” said Lord Colchicum glowering at Popjoy out of his
heavy eyebrows; and he turned away from the window as Major Pendennis tapped
upon it.</p>
<p>The Major was in high good-humour. The sun was bright, the air brisk and
invigorating. He had determined upon a visit to Lady Clavering on that day, and
bethought him that Arthur would be a good companion for the walk across the
Green Park to her ladyship’s door. Master Pen was not displeased to
accompany his illustrious relative, who pointed out a dozen great men in that
brief transit through St. James’s Street, and got bows from a Duke at a
crossing, a Bishop (on a cob), and a Cabinet Minister with an umbrella. The
Duke gave the elder Pendennis a finger of a pipe-clayed glove to shake, which
the Major embraced with great veneration; and all Pen’s blood tingled as
he found himself in actual communication, as it were, with this famous man (for
Pen had possession of the Major’s left arm, whilst the gentleman’s
other wing was engaged with his Grace’s right) and he wished all Grey
Friars’ School, all Oxbridge University, all Paternoster Row and the
Temple and Laura and his mother at Fairoaks, could be standing on each side of
the street, to see the meeting between him and his uncle, and the most famous
duke in Christendom.</p>
<p>“How do, Pendennis?—fine day,” were his Grace’s
remarkable words, and with a nod of his august head he passed on—in a
blue frock-coat and spotless white duck trousers, in a white stock, with a
shining buckle behind.</p>
<p>Old Pendennis, whose likeness to his Grace has been remarked, began to imitate
him unconsciously, after they had parted, speaking with curt sentences, after
the manner of the great man. We have all of us, no doubt, met with more than
one military officer who has so imitated the manner of a certain great Captain
of the Age; and has, perhaps, changed his own natural character and
disposition, because Fate had endowed him with an aquiline nose. In like manner
have we not seen many another man pride himself on having a tall forehead and a
supposed likeness to Mr. Canning? many another go through life swelling with
self-gratification on account of an imagined resemblance (we say
“imagined,” because that anybody should be really like that most
beautiful and perfect of men is impossible) to the great and revered George
IV.: many third parties, who wore low necks to their dresses because they
fancied that Lord Byron and themselves were similar in appearance: and has not
the grave closed but lately upon poor Tom Bickerstaff, who having no more
imagination than Mr. Joseph Hume, looked in the glass and fancied himself like
Shakspeare? shaved his forehead so as farther to resemble the immortal bard,
wrote tragedies incessantly, and died perfectly crazy—actually perished
of his forehead? These or similar freaks of vanity most people who have
frequented the world must have seen in their experience. Pen laughed in his
roguish sleeve at the manner in which his uncle began to imitate the great man
from whom they had just parted but Mr. Pen was as vain in his own way, perhaps,
as the elder gentleman, and strutted, with a very consequential air of his own,
by the Major’s side.</p>
<p>“Yes, my dear boy,” said the old bachelor, as they sauntered
through the Green Park, where many poor children were disporting happily, and
errand-boys were playing at toss-halfpenny, and black sheep were grazing in the
sunshine, and an actor was learning his part on a bench, and nursery-maids and
their charges sauntered here and there, and several couples were walking in a
leisurely manner; “yes, depend on it, my boy; for a poor man, there is
nothing like having good acquaintances. Who were those men, with whom you saw
me in the bow-window at Bays’s? Two were Peers of the realm. Hobananob
will be a Peer, as soon as his grand-uncle dies, and he has had his third
seizure; and of the other four, not one has less than his seven thousand a
year. Did you see that dark blue brougham, with that tremendous stepping horse,
waiting at the door of the club? You’ll know it again. It is Sir Hugh
Trumpington’s; he was never known to walk in his life; never appears in
the streets on foot—never: and if he is going two doors off, to see his
mother, the old dowager (to whom I shall certainly introduce you, for she
receives some of the best company in London), gad, sir—he mounts his
horse at No. 23, and dismounts again at No. 25 A. He is now upstairs, at
Bays’s, playing picquet with Count Punter: he is the second-best player
in England—as well he may be; for he plays every day of his life, except
Sundays (for Sir Hugh is an uncommonly religious man) from half-past three till
half-past seven, when he dresses for dinner.</p>
<p>“A very pious manner of spending his time,” Pen said, laughing and
thinking that his uncle was falling into the twaddling state.</p>
<p>“Gad, sir, that is not the question. A man of his estate may employ his
time as he chooses. When you are a baronet, a county member, with ten thousand
acres of the best land in Cheshire, and such a place as Trumpington (though he
never goes there), you may do as you like.”</p>
<p>“And so that was his brougham, sir, was it?” the nephew said with
almost a sneer.</p>
<p>“His brougham—O ay, yes!—and that brings me back to my
point—revenons a nos moutons. Yes, begad! revenons a nous moutons. Well,
that brougham is mine if I choose, between four and seven. Just as much mine as
if I jobbed it from Tilbury’s, begad, for thirty pound a month. Sir Hugh
is the best natured fellow in the world; and if it hadn’t been so fine an
afternoon as it is, you and I would have been in that brougham at this very
minute on our way to Grosvenor Place. That is the benefit of knowing rich
men;—I dine for nothing, sir;—I go into the country, and I’m
mounted for nothing. Other fellows keep hounds and gamekeepers for me. Sic vos,
non vobis, as we used to say at Grey Friars, hey? I’m of the opinion of
my old friend Leech, of the Forty-fourth; and a devilish good shrewd fellow he
was, as most Scotchmen are. Gad, sir, Leech used to say, ‘He was so poor
that he couldn’t afford to know a poor man.’”</p>
<p>“You don’t act up to your principles, uncle,” Pen said
good-naturedly.</p>
<p>“Up to my principles; how, sir?” the Major asked, rather testily.</p>
<p>“You would have cut me in Saint James’s Street, sir,” Pen
said, “were your practice not more benevolent than your theory; you who
live with dukes and magnates of the land, and would take no notice of a poor
devil like me.” By which speech we may see that Mr. Pen was getting on in
the world, and could flatter as well as laugh in his sleeve.</p>
<p>Major Pendennis was appeased instantly, and very much pleased. He tapped
affectionately his nephew’s arm on which he was leaning, and
said,—“you, sir, you are my flesh and blood! Hang it, sir,
I’ve been very proud of you and very fond of you, but for your confounded
follies and extravagances—and wild oats, sir, which I hope you’ve
sown ’em. I hope you’ve sown ’em; begad! My object, Arthur,
is to make a man of you—to see you well placed in the world, as becomes
one of your name and my own, sir. You have got yourself a little reputation by
your literary talents, which I am very far from undervaluing, though in my
time, begad, poetry and genius and that sort of thing were devilish
disreputable. There was poor Byron, for instance, who ruined himself, and
contracted the worst habits by living with poets and newspaper-writers, and
people of that kind: But the times are changed now—there’s a run
upon literature—clever fellows get into the best houses in town, begad!
Tempora mutantur, sir; and by Jove, I suppose whatever is is right, as
Shakspeare says.”</p>
<p>Pen did not think fit to tell his uncle who was the author who had made use of
that remarkable phrase, and here descending from the Green Park, the pair made
their way into Grosvenor Place, and to the door of the mansion occupied there
by Sir Francis and Lady Clavering.</p>
<p>The dining-room shutters of this handsome mansion were freshly gilded; the
knockers shone gorgeous upon the newly painted door; the balcony before the
drawing-room bloomed with a portable garden of the most beautiful plants, and
with flowers, white, and pink, and scarlet; the windows of the upper room (the
sacred chamber and dressing-room of my lady, doubtless), and even a pretty
little casement of the third story, which keen-sighted Mr. Pen presumed to
belong to the virgin bedroom of Miss Blanche Amory, were similarly adorned with
floral ornaments, and the whole exterior face of the house presented the most
brilliant aspect which fresh new paint, shining plate-glass, newly cleaned
bricks, and spotless mortar, could offer to the beholder.</p>
<p>“How Strong must have rejoiced in organising all this splendour,”
thought Pen. He recognised the Chevalier’s genius in the magnificence
before him.</p>
<p>“Lady Clavering is going out for her drive,” the Major said.
“We shall only have to leave our pasteboards, Arthur.” He used the
word ‘pasteboards,’ having heard it from some of the ingenuous
youth of the nobility about town, and as a modern phrase suited to Pen’s
tender years. Indeed, as the two gentlemen reached the door, a landau drove up,
a magnificent yellow carriage, lined with brocade or satin of a faint cream
colour, drawn by wonderful grey horses, with flaming ribbons, and harness
blazing all over with crests: no less than three of these heraldic emblems
surmounted the coats-of-arms on the panels, and these shields contained a
prodigious number of quarterings, betokening the antiquity and splendour of the
house of Clavering and Snell. A coachman in a tight silver wig surmounted the
magnificent hammer-cloth (whereon the same arms were worked in bullion), and
controlled the prancing greys—a young man still, but of a solemn
countenance, with a laced waistcoat and buckles in his shoes—little
buckles, unlike those which John and Jeames, the footmen, wear, and which we
know are large, and spread elegantly over the foot.</p>
<p>One of the leaves of the hall door was opened, and John—one of the
largest of his race—was leaning against the door-pillar with his
ambrosial hair powdered, his legs crossed; beautiful, silk-stockinged; in his
hand his cane, gold-headed, dolichoskion. Jeames was invisible, but near at
hand, waiting in the hall, with the gentleman who does not wear livery, and
ready to fling down the roll of hair-cloth over which her ladyship was to step
to her carriage. These things and men, the which to tell of demands time, are
seen in the glance of a practised eye: and, in fact, the Major and Pen had
scarcely crossed the street, when the second battant of the door flew open; the
horse-hair carpet tumbled down the door-steps to those of the carriage; John
was opening it on one side of the emblazoned door, and Jeames on the other, the
two ladies, attired in the highest style of fashion, and accompanied by a
third, who carried a Blenheim spaniel, yelping in a light blue ribbon, came
forth to ascend the carriage.</p>
<p>Miss Amory was the first to enter, which she did with aerial lightness, and
took the place which she liked best. Lady Clavering next followed, but her
ladyship was more mature of age and heavy of foot, and one of those feet,
attired in a green satin boot, with some part of a stocking, which was very
fine, whatever the ankle might be which it encircled, might be seen swaying on
the carriage-step, as her ladyship leaned for support on the arm of the
unbending Jeames, by the enraptured observer of female beauty who happened to
be passing at the time of this imposing ceremonial.</p>
<p>The Pendennises senior and junior beheld those charms as they came up to the
door—the Major looking grave and courtly, and Pen somewhat abashed at the
carriage and its owners; for he thought of sundry little passages at Clavering,
which made his heart beat rather quick.</p>
<p>At that moment Lady Clavering, looking round the pair,—she was on the
first carriage-step, and would have been in the vehicle in another second, but
she gave a start backwards (which caused some of the powder to fly from the
hair of ambrosial Jeames), and crying out, “Lor, if it isn’t Arthur
Pendennis and the old Major!” jumped back to terra firma directly, and
holding out two fat hands, encased in tight orange-coloured gloves, the
good-natured woman warmly greeted the Major and his nephew.</p>
<p>“Come in both of you.—Why haven’t you been before?—Get
out, Blanche, and come and see your old friends.—O, I’m so glad to
see you. We’ve been waitin and waitin for you ever so long. Come in,
luncheon ain’t gone down,” cried out this hospitable lady,
squeezing Pen’s hand in both hers (she had dropped the Major’s
after a brief wrench of recognition), and Blanche, casting up her eyes towards
the chimneys, descended from the carriage presently, with a timid, blushing,
appealing look, and gave a little hand to Major Pendennis.</p>
<p>The companion with the spaniel looked about irresolute, and doubting whether
she should not take Fido his airing; but she too turned right about face and
entered the house, after Lady Clavering, her daughter, and the two gentlemen.
And the carriage, with the prancing greys, was left unoccupied, save by the
coachman in the silver wig.</p>
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