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<h3>CHAPTER XXI. Everybody Goes to Them</h3>
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<br/>
<br/>When the Melmottes went from Caversham the house was very
desolate. The task of entertaining these people was indeed
over, and had the return to London been fixed for a certain near day,
there would have been comfort at any rate among the ladies of the
family. But this was so far from being the case that the
Thursday and Friday passed without anything being settled, and
dreadful fears began to fill the minds of Lady Pomona and Sophia
Longestaffe. Georgiana was also impatient, but she asserted
boldly that treachery, such as that which her mother and sister
contemplated, was impossible. Their father, she thought, would
not dare to propose it. On each of these days,—three or four
times daily,—hints were given and questions were asked, but without
avail. Mr Longestaffe would not consent to have a day fixed
till he had received some particular letter, and would not even
listen to the suggestion of a day. "I suppose we can go at any
rate on Tuesday," Georgiana said on the Friday evening. "I
don't know why you should suppose anything of the kind," the father
replied. Poor Lady Pomona was urged by her daughters to compel
him to name a day; but Lady Pomona was less audacious in urging the
request than her younger child, and at the same time less anxious for
its completion. On the Sunday morning before they went to
church there was a great discussion upstairs. The Bishop of
Elmham was going to preach at Caversham church, and the three ladies
were dressed in their best London bonnets. They were in their
mother's room, having just completed the arrangements of their
church-going toilet. It was supposed that the expected letter
had arrived. Mr Longestaffe had certainly received a despatch
from his lawyer, but had not as yet vouchsafed any reference to its
contents. He had been more than ordinarily silent at breakfast,
and,—so Sophia asserted,—more disagreeable than ever. The
question had now arisen especially in reference to their
bonnets. "You might as well wear them," said Lady Pomona, "for
I am sure you will not be in London again this year."
<br/>"You don't mean it, mamma," said Sophia.
<br/>"I do, my dear. He looked like it when he put those papers
back into his pocket. I know what his face means so well."
<br/>"It is not possible," said Sophia. "He promised, and he got
us to have those horrid people because he promised."
<br/>"Well, my dear, if your father says that we can't go back, I
suppose we must take his word for it. It is he must decide of
course. What he meant I suppose was, that he would take us back
if he could."
<br/>"Mamma!" shouted Georgiana. Was there to be treachery not
only on the part of their natural adversary, who, adversary though he
was, had bound himself to terms by a treaty, but treachery also in
their own camp!
<br/>"My dear, what can we do?" said Lady Pomona.
<br/>"Do!" Georgiana was now going to speak out plainly.
"Make him understand that we are not going to be sat upon like
that. I'll do something, if that's going to be the way of
it. If he treats me like that I'll run off with the first man
that will take me, let him be who it may."
<br/>"Don't talk like that, Georgiana, unless you wish to kill me."
<br/>"I'll break his heart for him. He does not care about
us,—not the least,—whether we are happy or miserable; but he cares
very much about the family name. I'll tell him that I'm not
going to be a slave. I'll marry a London tradesman before I'll
stay down here." The younger Miss Longestaffe was lost in
passion at the prospect before her.
<br/>"Oh, Georgey, don't say such horrid things as that," pleaded her
sister.
<br/>"It's all very well for you, Sophy. You've got George
Whitstable."
<br/>"I haven't got George Whitstable."
<br/>"Yes, you have, and your fish is fried. Dolly does just what
he pleases, and spends money as fast as he likes. Of course it
makes no difference to you, mamma, where you are."
<br/>"You are very unjust," said Lady Pomona, wailing, "and you say
horrid things."
<br/>"I ain't unjust at all. It doesn't matter to you. And
Sophy is the same as settled. But I'm to be sacrificed!
How am I to see anybody down here in this horrid hole? Papa
promised and he must keep his word."
<br/>Then there came to them a loud voice calling to them from the
hall. "Are any of you coming to church, or are you going to
keep the carriage waiting all day?" Of course they were all
going to church. They always did go to church when they were at
Caversham; and would more especially do so to-day, because of the
bishop and because of the bonnets. They trooped down into the
hall and into the carriage, Lady Pomona leading the way.
Georgiana stalked along, passing her father at the front door without
condescending to look at him. Not a word was spoken on the way
to church, or on the way home. During the service Mr
Longestaffe stood up in the corner of his pew, and repeated the
responses in a loud voice. In performing this duty he had been
an example to the parish all his life. The three ladies knelt
on their hassocks in the most becoming fashion, and sat during the
sermon without the slightest sign either of weariness or of
attention. They did not collect the meaning of any one
combination of sentences. It was nothing to them whether the
bishop had or had not a meaning. Endurance of that kind was
their strength. Had the bishop preached for forty-five minutes
instead of half an hour they would not have complained. It was
the same kind of endurance which enabled Georgiana to go on from year
to year waiting for a husband of the proper sort. She could put
up with any amount of tedium if only the fair chance of obtaining
ultimate relief were not denied to her. But to be kept at
Caversham all the summer would be as bad as hearing a bishop preach
for ever! After the service they came back to lunch, and that
meal also was eaten in silence. When it was over the head of
the family put himself into the dining-room arm-chair, evidently
meaning to be left alone there. In that case he would have
meditated upon his troubles till he went to sleep, and would have
thus got through the afternoon with comfort. But this was
denied to him. The two daughters remained steadfast while the
things were being removed; and Lady Pomona, though she made one
attempt to leave the room, returned when she found that her daughters
would not follow her. Georgiana had told her sister that she
meant to "have it out" with her father, and Sophia had of course
remained in the room in obedience to her sister's behest. When
the last tray had been taken out, Georgiana began. "Papa, don't
you think you could settle now when we are to go back to town?
Of course we want to know about engagements and all that. There
is Lady Monogram's party on Wednesday. We promised to be there
ever so long ago."
<br/>"You had better write to Lady Monogram and say you can't keep your
engagement."
<br/>"But why not, papa? We could go up on Wednesday morning."
<br/>"You can't do anything of the kind."
<br/>"But, my dear, we should all like to have a day fixed," said Lady
Pomona. Then there was a pause. Even Georgiana, in her
present state of mind, would have accepted some distant, even some
undefined time, as a compromise.
<br/>"Then you can't have a day fixed," said Mr Longestaffe.
<br/>"How long do you suppose that we shall be kept here?" said Sophia,
in a low constrained voice.
<br/>"I do not know what you mean by being kept here. This is
your home, and this is where you may make up your minds to live."
<br/>"But we are to go back?" demanded Sophia. Georgiana stood by
in silence, listening, resolving, and biding her time.
<br/>"You'll not return to London this season," said Mr Longestaffe,
turning himself abruptly to a newspaper which he held in his hands.
<br/>"Do you mean that that is settled?" said Lady Pomona. "I
mean to say that that is settled," said Mr Longestaffe. Was
there ever treachery like this! The indignation in Georgiana's
mind approached almost to virtue as she thought of her father's
falseness. She would not have left town at all but for that
promise. She would not have contaminated herself with the
Melmottes but for that promise. And now she was told that the
promise was to be absolutely broken, when it was no longer possible
that she could get back to London,—even to the house of the hated
Primeros,—without absolutely running away from her father's
residence! "Then, papa," she said, with affected calmness, "you
have simply and with premeditation broken your word to us."
<br/>"How dare you speak to me in that way, you wicked child!"
<br/>"I am not a child, papa, as you know very well. I am my own
mistress,—by law."
<br/>"Then go and be your own mistress. You dare to tell me, your
father, that I have premeditated a falsehood! If you tell me
that again, you shall eat your meals in your own room or not eat them
in this house."
<br/>"Did you not promise that we should go back if we would come down
and entertain these people?"
<br/>"I will not argue with a child, insolent and disobedient as you
are. If I have anything to say about it, I will say it to your
mother. It should be enough for you that I, your father, tell
you that you have to live here. Now go away, and if you choose
to be sullen, go and be sullen where I shan't see you."
Georgiana looked round on her mother and sister and then marched
majestically out of the room. She still meditated revenge, but
she was partly cowed, and did not dare in her father's presence to go
on with her reproaches. She stalked off into the room in which
they generally lived, and there she stood panting with anger,
breathing indignation through her nostrils.
<br/>"And you mean to put up with it, mamma?" she said.
<br/>"What can we do, my dear?"
<br/>"I will do something. I'm not going to be cheated and
swindled and have my life thrown away into the bargain. I have
always behaved well to him. I have never run up bills without
saying anything about them." This was a cut at her elder
sister, who had once got into some little trouble of that kind.
"I have never got myself talked about with anybody. If there is
anything to be done I always do it. I have written his letters
for him till I have been sick, and when you were ill I never asked
him to stay out with us after two or half-past two at the
latest. And now he tells me that I am to eat my meals up in my
bedroom because I remind him that he distinctly promised to take us
back to London! Did he not promise, mamma?"
<br/>"I understood so, my dear."
<br/>"You know he promised, mamma. If I do anything now he must
bear the blame of it. I am not going to keep myself straight
for the sake of the family, and then be treated in that way."
<br/>"You do that for your own sake, I suppose," said her sister.
<br/>"It is more than you've been able to do for anybody's sake," said
Georgiana, alluding to a very old affair,—to an ancient flirtation,
in the course of which the elder daughter had made a foolish and a
futile attempt to run away with an officer of dragoons whose private
fortune was very moderate. Ten years had passed since that, and
the affair was never alluded to except in moments of great
bitterness.
<br/>"I've kept myself as straight as you have," said Sophia.
"It's easy enough to be straight, when a person never cares for
anybody, and nobody cares for a person."
<br/>"My dears, if you quarrel what am I to do?" said their mother.
<br/>"It is I that have to suffer," continued Georgiana. "Does he
expect me to find anybody here that I could take? Poor George
Whitstable is not much; but there is nobody else at all."
<br/>"You may have him if you like," said Sophia, with a chuck of her
head.
<br/>"Thank you, my dear, but I shouldn't like it at all. I
haven't come to that quite yet."
<br/>"You were talking of running away with somebody."
<br/>"I shan't run away with George Whitstable; you may be sure of
that. I'll tell you what I shall do,—I will write papa a
letter. I suppose he'll condescend to read it. If he
won't take me up to town himself, he must send me up to the
Primeros. What makes me most angry in the whole thing is that
we should have condescended to be civil to the Melmottes down in the
country. In London one does those things, but to have them here
was terrible!"
<br/>During that entire afternoon nothing more was said. Not a
word passed between them on any subject beyond those required by the
necessities of life. Georgiana had been as hard to her sister
as to her father, and Sophia in her quiet way resented the
affront. She was now almost reconciled to the sojourn in the
country, because it inflicted a fitting punishment on Georgiana, and
the presence of Mr Whitstable at a distance of not more than ten
miles did of course make a difference to herself. Lady Pomona
complained of a headache, which was always an excuse with her for not
speaking;—and Mr Longestaffe went to sleep. Georgiana during
the whole afternoon remained apart, and on the next morning the head
of the family found the following letter on his dressing-table:—
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
My DEAR PAPA<br/>
<br/>
I don't think you ought to be surprised
because we feel that our going up to town is so very important to
us. If we are not to be in London at this time of the year we
can never see anybody, and of course you know what that must mean for
me. If this goes on about Sophia, it does not signify for her,
and, though mamma likes London, it is not of real importance.
But it is very, very hard upon me. It isn't for pleasure that I
want to go up. There isn't so very much pleasure in it.
But if I'm to be buried down here at Caversham, I might just as well
be dead at once. If you choose to give up both houses for a
year, or for two years, and take us all abroad, I should not grumble
in the least. There are very nice people to be met abroad, and
perhaps things go easier that way than in town. And there would
be nothing for horses, and we could dress very cheap and wear our old
things. I'm sure I don't want to run up bills. But if you
would only think what Caversham must be to me, without any one worth
thinking about within twenty miles, you would hardly ask me to stay
here.<br/>
<br/>
You certainly did say that if we would
come down here with those Melmottes we should be taken back to town,
and you cannot be surprised that we should be disappointed when we
are told that we are to be kept here after that. It makes me
feel that life is so hard that I can't bear it. I see other
girls having such chances when I have none, that sometimes I think I
don't know what will happen to me." </i> [This was the nearest
approach which she dared to make in writing to that threat which she
had uttered to her mother of running away with somebody.] <i>"I
suppose that now it is useless for me to ask you to take us all back
this summer,—though it was promised; but I hope you'll give me money
to go up to the Primeros. It would only be me and my
maid. Julia Primero asked me to stay with them when you first
talked of not going up, and I should not in the least object to
reminding her, only it should be done at once. Their house in
Queen's Gate is very large, and I know they've a room. They all
ride, and I should want a horse; but there would be nothing else, as
they have plenty of carriages, and the groom who rides with Julia
would do for both of us. Pray answer this at once, papa.<br/>
<br/>
Your affectionate daughter,<br/>
<br/>
GEORGIANA LONGESTAFFE.<br/>
</i>
</blockquote>
<br/>
<br/>Mr Longestaffe did condescend to read the letter. He, though
he had rebuked his mutinous daughter with stern severity, was also to
some extent afraid of her. At a sudden burst he could stand
upon his authority, and assume his position with parental dignity;
but not the less did he dread the wearing toil of continued domestic
strife. He thought that upon the whole his daughter liked a row
in the house. If not, there surely would not be so many
rows. He himself thoroughly hated them. He had not any
very lively interest in life. He did not read much; he did not
talk much; he was not specially fond of eating and drinking; he did
not gamble, and he did not care for the farm. To stand about
the door and hall and public rooms of the clubs to which he belonged
and hear other men talk politics or scandal, was what he liked better
than anything else in the world. But he was quite willing to
give this up for the good of his family. He would be contented
to drag through long listless days at Caversham, and endeavour to
nurse his property, if only his daughter would allow it. By
assuming a certain pomp in his living, which had been altogether
unserviceable to himself and family, by besmearing his footmen's
heads, and bewigging his coachmen, by aping, though never achieving,
the grand ways of grander men than himself, he had run himself into
debt. His own ambition had been a peerage, and he had thought
that this was the way to get it. A separate property had come
to his son from his wife's mother,—some £2,000 or £3,000 a year,
magnified by the world into double its amount,—and the knowledge of
this had for a time reconciled him to increasing the burdens on the
family estates. He had been sure that Adolphus, when of age,
would have consented to sell the Sussex property in order that the
Suffolk property might be relieved. But Dolly was now in debt
himself, and though in other respects the most careless of men, was
always on his guard in any dealings with his father. He would
not consent to the sale of the Sussex property unless half of the
proceeds were to be at once handed to himself. The father could
not bring himself to consent to this, but, while refusing it, found
the troubles of the world very hard upon him. Melmotte had done
something for him,—but in doing this Melmotte was very hard and
tyrannical. Melmotte, when at Caversham, had looked into his
affairs, and had told him very plainly that with such an
establishment in the country he was not entitled to keep a house in
town. Mr Longestaffe had then said something about his
daughters,—something especially about Georgiana,—and Mr Melmotte
had made a suggestion.
<br/>Mr Longestaffe, when he read his daughter's appeal, did feel for
her, in spite of his anger. But if there was one man he hated
more than another, it was his neighbour Mr Primero; and if one woman,
it was Mrs Primero. Primero, whom Mr Longestaffe regarded as
quite an upstart, and anything but a gentleman, owed no man
anything. He paid his tradesmen punctually, and never met the
squire of Caversham without seeming to make a parade of his virtue in
that direction. He had spent many thousands for his party in
county elections and borough elections, and was now himself member
for a metropolitan district. He was a radical, of course, or,
according to Mr Longestaffe's view of his political conduct, acted
and voted on the radical side because there was nothing to be got by
voting and acting on the other. And now there had come into
Suffolk a rumour that Mr Primero was to have a peerage. To
others the rumour was incredible, but Mr Longestaffe believed it, and
to Mr Longestaffe that belief was an agony. A Baron Bundlesham
just at his door, and such a Baron Bundlesham, would be more than Mr
Longestaffe could endure. It was quite impossible that his
daughter should be entertained in London by the Primeros.
<br/>But another suggestion had been made. Georgiana's letter had
been laid on her father's table on the Monday morning. On the
following morning, when there could have been no intercourse with
London by letter, Lady Pomona called her younger daughter to her, and
handed her a note to read. "Your papa has this moment given it
me. Of course you must judge for yourself." This was the
note;—
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<blockquote>
<i>
MY DEAR MR LONGESTAFFE,<br/>
<br/>
As you seem determined not to return to London this season, perhaps
one of your young ladies would like to come to us. Mrs Melmotte would
be delighted to have Miss Georgiana for June and July. If so, she need
only give Mrs Melmotte a day's notice.<br/>
<br/>
Yours truly,<br/>
<br/>
AUGUSTUS MELMOTTE<br/>
</i>
</blockquote>
<br/>
<br/>Georgiana, as soon as her eye had glanced down the one side of
note paper on which this invitation was written, looked up for the
date. It was without a date, and had, she felt sure, been left
in her father's hands to be used as he might think fit. She
breathed very hard. Both her father and mother had heard her
speak of these Melmottes, and knew what she thought of them.
There was an insolence in the very suggestion. But at the first
moment she said nothing of that. "Why shouldn't I go to the
Primeros?" she asked.
<br/>"Your father will not hear of it. He dislikes them
especially."
<br/>"And I dislike the Melmottes. I dislike the Primeros of
course, but they are not so bad as the Melmottes. That would be
dreadful."
<br/>"You must judge for yourself; Georgiana."
<br/>"It is that,—or staying here?"
<br/>"I think so, my dear."
<br/>"If papa chooses I don't know why I am to mind. It will be
awfully disagreeable,—absolutely disgusting!"
<br/>"She seemed to be very quiet."
<br/>"Pooh, mamma! Quiet! She was quiet here because she
was afraid of us. She isn't yet used to be with people like
us. She'll get over that if I'm in the house with her.
And then she is, oh! so frightfully vulgar! She must have
been the very sweeping of the gutters. Did you not see it,
mamma? She could not even open her mouth, she was so ashamed of
herself. I shouldn't wonder if they turned out to be something
quite horrid. They make me shudder. Was there ever
anything so dreadful to look at as he is?"
<br/>"Everybody goes to them," said Lady Pomona. "The Duchess of
Stevenage has been there over and over again, and so has Lady Auld
Reekie. Everybody goes to their house."
<br/>"But everybody doesn't go and live with them. Oh, mamma,—to
have to sit down to breakfast every day for ten weeks with that man
and that woman!"
<br/>"Perhaps they'll let you have your breakfast upstairs."
<br/>"But to have to go out with them;—walking into the room after
her! Only think of it!"
<br/>"But you are so anxious to be in London, my dear."
<br/>"Of course I am anxious. What other chance have I,
mamma? And, oh dear, I am so tired of it! Pleasure,
indeed! Papa talks of pleasure. If papa had to work half
as hard as I do, I wonder what he'd think of it. I suppose I
must do it. I know it will make me so ill that I shall almost
die under it. Horrid, horrid people! And papa to propose
it, who has always been so proud of everything,—who used to think so
much of being with the right set"
<br/>"Things are changed, Georgiana," said the anxious mother.
<br/>"Indeed they are when papa wants me to go and stay with people
like that. Why, mamma, the apothecary in Bungay is a fine
gentleman compared with Mr Melmotte, and his wife is a fine lady
compared with Madame Melmotte. But I'll go. If papa
chooses me to be seen with such people it is not my fault.
There will be no disgracing one's self after that. I don't
believe in the least that any decent man would propose to a girl in
such a house, and you and papa must not be surprised if I take some
horrid creature from the Stock Exchange. Papa has altered his
ideas; and so, I suppose, I had better alter mine."
<br/>Georgiana did not speak to her father that night, but Lady Pomona
informed Mr Longestaffe that Mr Melmotte's invitation was to be
accepted. She herself would write a line to Madame Melmotte,
and Georgiana would go up on the Friday following. "I hope
she'll like it," said Mr Longestaffe. The poor man had no
intention of irony. It was not in his nature to be severe after
that fashion. But to poor Lady Pomona the words sounded very
cruel. How could any one like to live in a house with Mr and
Madame Melmotte!
<br/>On the Friday morning there was a little conversation between the
two sisters, just before Georgiana's departure to the railway
station, which was almost touching. She had endeavoured to hold
up her head as usual, but had failed. The thing that she was
going to do cowed her even in the presence of her sister.
"Sophy, I do so envy you staying here."
<br/>"But it was you who were so determined to be in London."
<br/>"Yes; I was determined, and am determined. I've got to get
myself settled somehow, and that can't be done down here. But
you are not going to disgrace yourself."
<br/>"There's no disgrace in it, Georgey."
<br/>"Yes, there is. I believe the man to be a swindler and a
thief; and I believe her to be anything low that you can think
of. As to their pretensions to be gentlefolk, it is
monstrous. The footmen and housemaids would be much better."
<br/>"Then don't go, Georgey."
<br/>"I must go. It's the only chance that is left. If I
were to remain down here everybody would say that I was on the
shelf. You are going to marry Whitstable, and you'll do very
well. It isn't a big place, but there's no debt on it, and
Whitstable himself isn't a bad sort of fellow."
<br/>"Is he, now?"
<br/>"Of course he hasn't much to say for himself; for he's always at
home. But he is a gentleman."
<br/>"That he certainly is."
<br/>"As for me I shall give over caring about gentlemen now. The
first man that comes to me with four or five thousand a year, I'll
take him, though he'd come out of Newgate or Bedlam. And I
shall always say it has been papa's doing."
<br/>And so Georgiana Longestaffe went up to London and stayed with the
Melmottes.
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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