<h2><SPAN name="chap38"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVIII.<br/> In which the Sylph reappears</h2>
<p>Better folks than Morgan, the valet, were not so well instructed as that
gentleman, regarding the amount of Lady Clavering’s riches; and the
legend in London, upon her Ladyship’s arrival in the polite metropolis,
was, that her fortune was enormous. Indigo factories, opium clippers, banks
overflowing with rupees, diamonds and jewels of native princes, and vast sums
of interest paid by them for loans contracted by themselves or their
predecessors to Lady Clavering’s father, were mentioned as sources of her
wealth. Her account at her London banker’s was positively known, and the
sum embraced so many cyphers as to create as many O’s of admiration in
the wondering hearer. It was a known fact that an envoy from an Indian Prince,
a Colonel Altamont, the Nawaub of Lucknow’s prime favourite, an
extraordinary man, who had, it was said, embraced Mahometanism, and undergone a
thousand wild and perilous adventures was at present in this country, trying to
negotiate with the Begum Clavering, the sale of the Nawaub’s celebrated
nose-ring diamond, ‘the light of the Dewan.’</p>
<p>Under the title of the Begum, Lady Clavering’s fame began to spread in
London before she herself descended upon the Capital, and as it has been the
boast of Delolme, and Blackstone, and all panegyrists of the British
Constitution, that we admit into our aristocracy merit of every kind, and that
the lowliest-born man, if he but deserve it, may wear the robes of a peer, and
sit alongside of a Cavendish or a Stanley: so it ought to be the boast of our
good society, that haughty though it be, naturally jealous of its privileges,
and careful who shall be admitted into its circle, yet, if an individual be but
rich enough, all barriers are instantly removed, and he or she is welcomed, as
from his wealth he merits to be. This fact shows our British independence and
honest feeling—our higher orders are not such mere haughty aristocrats as
the ignorant represent them: on the contrary, if a man have money they will
hold out their hands to him, eat his dinners, dance at his balls, marry his
daughters, or give their own lovely girls to his sons, as affably as your
commonest roturier would do.</p>
<p>As he had superintended the arrangements of the country mansion, our friend,
the Chevalier Strong, gave the benefit of his taste and advice to the
fashionable London upholsterers, who prepared the town house for the reception
of the Clavering family. In the decoration of this elegant abode, honest
Strong’s soul rejoiced as much as if he had been himself its proprietor.
He hung and re-hung the pictures, he studied the positions of sofas, he had
interviews with wine merchants and purveyors who were to supply the new
establishment; and at the same time the Baronet’s factotum and
confidential friend took the opportunity of furnishing his own chambers, and
stocking his snug little cellar: his friends complimented him upon the neatness
of the former; and the select guests who came in to share Strong’s cutlet
now found a bottle of excellent claret to accompany the meal. The Chevalier was
now, as he said, “in clover:” he had a very comfortable set of
rooms in Shepherd’s Inn. He was waited on by a former Spanish Legionary
and comrade of his whom he had left at a breach of a Spanish fort, and found at
a crossing in Tottenham-court Road, and whom he had elevated to the rank of
body-servant to himself and to the chum who, at present, shared his lodgings.
This was no other than the favourite of the Nawaub of Lucknow, the valiant
Colonel Altamont.</p>
<p>No man was less curious, or at any rate, more discreet, than Ned Strong, and he
did not care to inquire into the mysterious connexion which, very soon after
their first meeting at Baymouth was established between Sir Francis Clavering
and the envoy of the Nawaub. The latter knew some secret regarding the former,
which put Clavering into his power, somehow; and Strong, who knew that his
patron’s early life had been rather irregular, and that his career with
his regiment in India had not been brilliant, supposed that the Colonel, who
swore he knew Clavering well at Calcutta, had some hold upon Sir Francis, to
which the latter was forced to yield. In truth, Strong had long understood Sir
Francis Clavering’s character, as that of a man utterly weak in purpose,
in principle, and intellect, a moral and physical trifler and poltroon.</p>
<p>With poor Clavering, his Excellency had had one or two interviews after their
Baymouth meeting, the nature of which conversations the Baronet did not confide
to Strong: although he sent letters to Altamont by that gentleman, who was his
ambassador in all sorts of affairs. On one of these occasions the
Nawaub’s envoy must have been in an exceeding ill humour; for he crushed
Clavering’s letter in his hand, and said with his own particular manner
and emphasis:—</p>
<p>“A hundred, be hanged. I’ll have no more letters nor no more
shilly-shally. Tell Clavering I’ll have a thousand, or by Jove I’ll
split, and burst him all to atoms. Let him give me a thousand and I’ll go
abroad, and I give you my honour as a gentleman, I’ll not ask him for no
more for a year. Give him that message from me, Strong, my boy; and tell him if
the money ain’t here next Friday at twelve o’clock, as sure as my
name’s what it is, I’ll have a paragraph in the newspaper on
Saturday, and next week I’ll blow up the whole concern.”</p>
<p>Strong carried back these words to his principal, on whom their effect was such
that actually on the day and hour appointed, the Chevalier made his appearance
once more at Altamont’s hotel at Baymouth, with the sum of money
required. Altamont was a gentleman, he said, and behaved as such; he paid his
bill at the Inn, and the Baymouth paper announced his departure on a foreign
tour. Strong saw him embark at Dover. “It must be forgery at the very
least,” he thought, “that has put Clavering into this
fellow’s power, and the Colonel has got the bill.”</p>
<p>Before the year was out, however, this happy country saw the Colonel once more
upon its shores. A confounded run on the red had finished him, he said, at
Baden Baden: no gentleman could stand against a colour coming up fourteen
times. He had been obliged to draw upon Sir Francis Clavering for means of
returning home: and Clavering, though pressed for money (for he had election
expenses, had set up his establishment in the country and was engaged in
furnishing his London house), yet found means to accept Colonel
Altamont’s bill, though evidently very much against his will; for in
Strong’s hearing, Sir Francis wished to heaven, with many curses, that
the Colonel could have been locked up in a debtor’s goal in Germany for
life, so that he might never be troubled again.</p>
<p>These sums for the Colonel Sir Francis was obliged to raise without the
knowledge of his wife; for though perfectly liberal, nay, sumptuous in her
expenditure, the good lady had inherited a tolerable aptitude for business
along with the large fortune of her father, Snell, and gave to her husband only
such a handsome allowance as she thought befitted a gentleman of his rank. Now
and again she would give him a present, or pay an outstanding gambling debt;
but she always exacted a pretty accurate account of the moneys so required; and
respecting the subsidies to the Colonel, Clavering fairly told Strong that he
couldn’t speak to his wife.</p>
<p>Part of Mr. Strong’s business in life was to procure this money and other
sums, for his patron. And in the Chevalier’s apartments, in
Shepherd’s Inn, many negotiations took place between gentlemen of the
moneyed world and Sir Francis Clavering, and many valuable bank-notes and
pieces of stamped paper were passed between them. When a man has been in the
habit of getting in debt from his early youth, and of exchanging his promises
to pay at twelve months against present sums of money, it would seem as if no
piece of good fortune ever permanently benefited him: a little while after the
advent of prosperity, the money-lender is pretty certain to be in the house
again, and the bills with the old signature in the market. Clavering found it
more convenient to see these gentry at Strong’s lodgings than at his own;
and such was the Chevalier’s friendship for the Baronet that although he
did not possess a shilling of his own, his name might be seen as the drawer of
almost all the bills of exchange which Sir Francis Clavering accepted. Having
drawn Clavering’s bills, he got them discounted “in the
City.” When they became due he parleyed with the bill-holders, and gave
them instalments of their debt, or got time in exchange for fresh acceptances.
Regularly or irregularly, gentlemen must live somehow: and as we read how, the
other day, at Comorn, the troops forming that garrison were gay and lively,
acted plays, danced at balls, and consumed their rations; though menaced with
an assault from the enemy without the walls, and with a gallows if the
Austrians were successful,—so there are hundreds of gallant spirits in
this town, walking about in good spirits, dining every day in tolerable gaiety
and plenty, and going to sleep comfortably; with a bailiff always more or less
near, and a rope of debt round their necks—the which trifling
inconveniences, Ned Strong, the old soldier, bore very easily.</p>
<p>But we shall have another opportunity of making acquaintance with these and
some other interesting inhabitants of Shepherd’s Inn, and in the
meanwhile are keeping Lady Clavering and her friends too long waiting on the
door-steps of Grosvenor Place.</p>
<p>First they went into the gorgeous dining-room, fitted up, Lady Clavering
couldn’t for goodness gracious tell why, in the middle-aged style,
“unless,” said her good-natured ladyship, laughing, “because
me and Clavering are middle-aged people;”—and here they were
offered the copious remains of the luncheon of which Lady Clavering and Blanche
had just partaken. When nobody was near, our little Sylphide, who scarcely ate
at dinner more than the six grains of rice of Amina, the friend of the Ghouls
in the Arabian Nights, was most active with her knife and fork, and consumed a
very substantial portion of mutton cutlets: in which piece of hypocrisy it is
believed she resembled other young ladies of fashion. Pen and his uncle
declined the refection, but they admired the dining-room with fitting
compliments, and pronounced it “very chaste,” that being the proper
phrase. There were, indeed, high-backed Dutch chairs of the seventeenth
century; there was a sculptured carved buffet of the sixteenth; there was a
sideboard robbed out of the carved work of a church in the Low Countries, and a
large brass cathedral lamp over the round oak table; there were old family
portraits from Wardour Street and tapestry from France, bits of armour,
double-handed swords and battle-axes made of carton-pierre, looking-glasses,
statuettes of saints, and Dresden china—nothing, in a word, could be
chaster. Behind the dining-room was the library, fitted with busts and books
all of a size, and wonderful easy-chairs, and solemn bronzes in the severe
classic style. Here it was that, guarded by double doors, Sir Francis smoked
cigars, and read Bell’s Life in London, and went to sleep after dinner,
when he was not smoking over the billiard-table at his clubs, or punting at the
gambling-houses in Saint James’s.</p>
<p>But what could equal the chaste splendour of the drawing-rooms?—the
carpets were so magnificently fluffy that your foot made no more noise on them
than your shadow: on their white ground bloomed roses and tulips as big as
warming-pans: about the room were high chairs and low chairs, bandy-legged
chairs, chairs so attenuated that it was a wonder any but a sylph could sit
upon them, marquetterie-tables covered with marvellous gimcracks, china
ornaments of all ages and countries, bronzes, gilt daggers, Books of Beauty,
yataghans, Turkish papooshes and boxes of Parisian bonbons. Wherever you sate
down there were Dresden shepherds and shepherdesses convenient at your elbow;
there were, moreover, light blue poodles and ducks and cocks and hens in
porcelain; there were nymphs by Boucher, and shepherdesses by Greuze, very
chaste indeed; there were muslin curtains and brocade curtains, gilt cages with
parroquets and love-birds, two squealing cockatoos, each out-squealing and
out-chattering the other; a clock singing tunes on a console-table, and another
booming the hours like Great Tom, on the mantelpiece—there was, in a
word, everything that comfort could desire, and the most elegant taste devise.
A London drawing-room, fitted up without regard to expense, is surely one of
the noblest and most curious sights of the present day. The Romans of the Lower
Empire, the dear Marchionesses and Countesses of Louis XV., could scarcely have
had a finer taste than our modern folks exhibit; and everybody who saw Lady
Clavering’s reception rooms, was forced to confess that they were most
elegant; and that the prettiest rooms in London—Lady Harley Quin’s,
Lady Hanway Wardour’s, or Mrs. Hodge-Podgson’s own; the great
Railroad Croesus’ wife, were not fitted up with a more consummate
“chastity.”</p>
<p>Poor Lady Clavering, meanwhile, knew little regarding these things, and had a
sad want of respect for the splendours around her. “I only know they cost
a precious deal of money, Major,” she said to her guest, “and that
I don’t advise you to try one of them gossamer gilt chairs: I came down
on one the night we gave our second dinner-party. Why didn’t you come and
see us before? We’d have asked you to it.”</p>
<p>“You would have liked to see Mamma break a chair, wouldn’t you, Mr.
Pendennis?” dear Blanche said with a sneer. She was angry because Pen was
talking and laughing with Mamma, because Mamma had made a number of blunders in
describing the house—for a hundred other good reasons.</p>
<p>“I should like to have been by to give Lady Clavering my arm if she had
need of it,” Pen answered, with a bow and a blush.</p>
<p>“Quel preux Chevalier!” cried the Sylphide, tossing up her little
head.</p>
<p>“I have a fellow-feeling with those who fall, remember,” Pen said.
“I suffered myself very much from doing so once.”</p>
<p>“And you went home to Laura to console you,” said Miss Amory. Pen
winced. He did not like the remembrance of the consolation which Laura had
given to him, nor was he very well pleased to find that his rebuff in that
quarter was known to the world; so as he had nothing to say in reply, he began
to be immensely interested in the furniture round about him, and to praise Lady
Clavering’s taste with all his might.</p>
<p>“No, don’t praise me,” said honest Lady Clavering,
“it’s all the upholsterer’s doings and Captain
Strong’s, they did it all while we was at the
Park—and—and—Lady Rockminster has been here and says the
salongs are very well,” said Lady Clavering, with an air and tone of
great deference.</p>
<p>“My cousin Laura has been staying with her,” Pen said.</p>
<p>“It’s not the dowager: it is the Lady Rockminster.”</p>
<p>“Indeed!” cried Major Pendennis, when he heard this great name of
fashion. “If you have her ladyship’s approval, Lady Clavering, you
cannot be far wrong. No, no, you cannot be far wrong. Lady Rockminster, I
should say, Arthur, is the very centre of the circle of fashion and taste. The
rooms are beautiful indeed!” and the Major’s voice hushed as he
spoke of this great lady, and he looked round and surveyed the apartments
awfully and respectfully, as if he had been at church.</p>
<p>“Yes, Lady Rockminster has took us up,” said Lady Clavering.</p>
<p>“Taken us up, Mamma,” cried Blanche, in a shrill voice.</p>
<p>“Well, taken us up, then,” said my lady; “it’s very
kind of her, and I dare say we shall like it when we git used to it, only at
first one don’t fancy being took—well, taken up, at all. She is
going to give our balls for us; and wants to invite all our dinners. But I
won’t stand that. I will have my old friends and I won’t let her
send all the cards out, and sit mum at the head of my own table. You must come
to me, Arthur and Major—come, let me see, on the 14th.—It
ain’t one of our grand dinners, Blanche,” she said, looking round
at her daughter, who bit her lips and frowned very savagely for a sylphide.</p>
<p>The Major, with a smile and a bow, said he would much rather come to a quiet
meeting than to a grand dinner. He had had enough of those large
entertainments, and preferred the simplicity of the home circle.</p>
<p>“I always think a dinner’s the best the second day,” said
Lady Clavering, thinking to mend her first speech. “On the 14th
we’ll be quite a snug little party;” at which second blunder, Miss
Blanche clasped her hands in despair, and said “O, mamma, vous etes
incorrigible.” Major Pendennis vowed that he liked snug dinners of all
things in the world, and confounded her ladyship’s impudence for daring
to ask such a man as him to a second day’s dinner. But he was a man of an
economical turn of mind, and bethinking himself that he could throw over these
people if anything better should offer, he accepted with the blandest air. As
for Pen, he was not a diner-out of thirty years’ standing as yet, and the
idea of a fine feast in a fine house was still perfectly welcome to him.</p>
<p>“What was that pretty little quarrel which engaged itself between your
worship and Miss Amory?” the Major asked of Pen, as they walked away
together. “I thought you used to au mieux in that quarter.”</p>
<p>“Used to be,” answered Pen, with a dandified air “is a vague
phrase regarding a woman. Was and is are two very different terms, sir, as
regards women’s hearts especially.</p>
<p>“Egad, they change as we do,” cried the elder. “When we took
the Cape of Good Hope, I recollect there was a lady who talked poisoning
herself for your humble servant; and, begad, in three months she ran away from
her husband with somebody else. Don’t get yourself entangled with that
Miss Amory, She is forward, affected, and under-bred; and her character is
somewhat—never mind what. But don’t think of her; ten thousand
pound won’t do for you. What, my good fellow, is ten thousand pound? I
would scarcely pay that girl’s milliner’s bill with the interest of
the money.”</p>
<p>“You seem to be a connoisseur in millinery, Uncle” Pen said.</p>
<p>“I was, sir, I was,” replied the senior; “and the old
war-horse, you know, never hears the sound of a trumpet, but he begins to he,
he!—you understand,”—and he gave a killing and somewhat
superannuated leer and bow to a carriage that passed them and entered the Park.</p>
<p>“Lady Catherine Martingale’s carriage” he said
“mons’ous fine girls the daughters, though, gad, I remember their
mother a thousand times handsomer. No, Arthur, my dear fellow, with your person
and expectations, you ought to make a good coup in marriage some day or other;
and though I wouldn’t have this repeated at Fairoaks, you rogue, ha! ha!
a reputation for a little wickedness, and for being an homme dangereux,
don’t hurt a young fellow with the women. They like it, sir, they hate a
milksop—young men must be young men, you know. But for marriage,”
continued the veteran moralist, “that is a very different matter. Marry a
woman with money. I’ve told you before it is as easy to get a rich wife
as a poor one; and a doosed deal more comfortable to sit down to a well-cooked
dinner, with your little entrees nicely served, than to have nothing but a
damned cold leg of mutton between you and your wife. We shall have a good
dinner on the 14th, when we dine with Sir Francis Clavering: stick to that, my
boy, in your relations with the family. Cultivate ’em, but keep ’em
for dining. No more of your youthful follies and nonsense about love in a
cottage.”</p>
<p>“It must be a cottage with a double coach-house, a cottage of gentility,
sir,” said Pen, quoting the hackneyed ballad of the Devil’s Walk:
but his Uncle did not know that poem (though, perhaps, he might be leading Pen
upon the very promenade in question), and went on with his philosophical
remarks, very much pleased with the aptness of the pupil to whom he addressed
them. Indeed Arthur Pendennis was a clever fellow, who took his colour very
readily from his neighbour, and found the adaptation only too easy.</p>
<p>Warrington, the grumbler, growled out that Pen was becoming such a puppy that
soon there would be no bearing him. But the truth is, the young man’s
success and dashing manners pleased his elder companion. He liked to see Pen
gay and spirited, and brimful of health, and life, and hope; as a man who has
long since left off being amused with clown and harlequin, still gets a
pleasure in watching a child at a pantomime. Mr. Pen’s former sulkiness
disappeared with his better fortune: and he bloomed as the sun began to shine
upon him.</p>
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