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<h2> CHAPTER 21. New Faces </h2>
<p>The MAJOR, more blue-faced and staring—more over-ripe, as it were,
than ever—and giving vent, every now and then, to one of the horse's
coughs, not so much of necessity as in a spontaneous explosion of
importance, walked arm-in-arm with Mr Dombey up the sunny side of the way,
with his cheeks swelling over his tight stock, his legs majestically wide
apart, and his great head wagging from side to side, as if he were
remonstrating within himself for being such a captivating object. They had
not walked many yards, before the Major encountered somebody he knew, nor
many yards farther before the Major encountered somebody else he knew, but
he merely shook his fingers at them as he passed, and led Mr Dombey on:
pointing out the localities as they went, and enlivening the walk with any
current scandal suggested by them.</p>
<p>In this manner the Major and Mr Dombey were walking arm-in-arm, much to
their own satisfaction, when they beheld advancing towards them, a wheeled
chair, in which a lady was seated, indolently steering her carriage by a
kind of rudder in front, while it was propelled by some unseen power in
the rear. Although the lady was not young, she was very blooming in the
face—quite rosy—and her dress and attitude were perfectly
juvenile. Walking by the side of the chair, and carrying her gossamer
parasol with a proud and weary air, as if so great an effort must be soon
abandoned and the parasol dropped, sauntered a much younger lady, very
handsome, very haughty, very wilful, who tossed her head and drooped her
eyelids, as though, if there were anything in all the world worth looking
into, save a mirror, it certainly was not the earth or sky.</p>
<p>'Why, what the devil have we here, Sir!' cried the Major, stopping as this
little cavalcade drew near.</p>
<p>'My dearest Edith!' drawled the lady in the chair, 'Major Bagstock!'</p>
<p>The Major no sooner heard the voice, than he relinquished Mr Dombey's arm,
darted forward, took the hand of the lady in the chair and pressed it to
his lips. With no less gallantry, the Major folded both his gloves upon
his heart, and bowed low to the other lady. And now, the chair having
stopped, the motive power became visible in the shape of a flushed page
pushing behind, who seemed to have in part outgrown and in part out-pushed
his strength, for when he stood upright he was tall, and wan, and thin,
and his plight appeared the more forlorn from his having injured the shape
of his hat, by butting at the carriage with his head to urge it forward,
as is sometimes done by elephants in Oriental countries.</p>
<p>'Joe Bagstock,' said the Major to both ladies, 'is a proud and happy man
for the rest of his life.'</p>
<p>'You false creature! said the old lady in the chair, insipidly. 'Where do
you come from? I can't bear you.'</p>
<p>'Then suffer old Joe to present a friend, Ma'am,' said the Major,
promptly, 'as a reason for being tolerated. Mr Dombey, Mrs Skewton.' The
lady in the chair was gracious. 'Mr Dombey, Mrs Granger.' The lady with
the parasol was faintly conscious of Mr Dombey's taking off his hat, and
bowing low. 'I am delighted, Sir,' said the Major, 'to have this
opportunity.'</p>
<p>The Major seemed in earnest, for he looked at all the three, and leered in
his ugliest manner.</p>
<p>'Mrs Skewton, Dombey,' said the Major, 'makes havoc in the heart of old
Josh.'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey signified that he didn't wonder at it.</p>
<p>'You perfidious goblin,' said the lady in the chair, 'have done! How long
have you been here, bad man?'</p>
<p>'One day,' replied the Major.</p>
<p>'And can you be a day, or even a minute,' returned the lady, slightly
settling her false curls and false eyebrows with her fan, and showing her
false teeth, set off by her false complexion, 'in the garden of
what's-its-name.'</p>
<p>'Eden, I suppose, Mama,' interrupted the younger lady, scornfully.</p>
<p>'My dear Edith,' said the other, 'I cannot help it. I never can remember
those frightful names—without having your whole Soul and Being
inspired by the sight of Nature; by the perfume,' said Mrs Skewton,
rustling a handkerchief that was faint and sickly with essences, 'of her
artless breath, you creature!'</p>
<p>The discrepancy between Mrs Skewton's fresh enthusiasm of words, and
forlornly faded manner, was hardly less observable than that between her
age, which was about seventy, and her dress, which would have been
youthful for twenty-seven. Her attitude in the wheeled chair (which she
never varied) was one in which she had been taken in a barouche, some
fifty years before, by a then fashionable artist who had appended to his
published sketch the name of Cleopatra: in consequence of a discovery made
by the critics of the time, that it bore an exact resemblance to that
Princess as she reclined on board her galley. Mrs Skewton was a beauty
then, and bucks threw wine-glasses over their heads by dozens in her
honour. The beauty and the barouche had both passed away, but she still
preserved the attitude, and for this reason expressly, maintained the
wheeled chair and the butting page: there being nothing whatever, except
the attitude, to prevent her from walking.</p>
<p>'Mr Dombey is devoted to Nature, I trust?' said Mrs Skewton, settling her
diamond brooch. And by the way, she chiefly lived upon the reputation of
some diamonds, and her family connexions.</p>
<p>'My friend Dombey, Ma'am,' returned the Major, 'may be devoted to her in
secret, but a man who is paramount in the greatest city in the universe—</p>
<p>'No one can be a stranger,' said Mrs Skewton, 'to Mr Dombey's immense
influence.'</p>
<p>As Mr Dombey acknowledged the compliment with a bend of his head, the
younger lady glancing at him, met his eyes.</p>
<p>'You reside here, Madam?' said Mr Dombey, addressing her.</p>
<p>'No, we have been to a great many places. To Harrogate and Scarborough,
and into Devonshire. We have been visiting, and resting here and there.
Mama likes change.'</p>
<p>'Edith of course does not,' said Mrs Skewton, with a ghastly archness.</p>
<p>'I have not found that there is any change in such places,' was the
answer, delivered with supreme indifference.</p>
<p>'They libel me. There is only one change, Mr Dombey,' observed Mrs
Skewton, with a mincing sigh, 'for which I really care, and that I fear I
shall never be permitted to enjoy. People cannot spare one. But seclusion
and contemplation are my what-his-name—'</p>
<p>'If you mean Paradise, Mama, you had better say so, to render yourself
intelligible,' said the younger lady.</p>
<p>'My dearest Edith,' returned Mrs Skewton, 'you know that I am wholly
dependent upon you for those odious names. I assure you, Mr Dombey, Nature
intended me for an Arcadian. I am thrown away in society. Cows are my
passion. What I have ever sighed for, has been to retreat to a Swiss farm,
and live entirely surrounded by cows—and china.'</p>
<p>This curious association of objects, suggesting a remembrance of the
celebrated bull who got by mistake into a crockery shop, was received with
perfect gravity by Mr Dombey, who intimated his opinion that Nature was,
no doubt, a very respectable institution.</p>
<p>'What I want,' drawled Mrs Skewton, pinching her shrivelled throat, 'is
heart.' It was frightfully true in one sense, if not in that in which she
used the phrase. 'What I want, is frankness, confidence, less
conventionality, and freer play of soul. We are so dreadfully artificial.'</p>
<p>We were, indeed.</p>
<p>'In short,' said Mrs Skewton, 'I want Nature everywhere. It would be so
extremely charming.'</p>
<p>'Nature is inviting us away now, Mama, if you are ready,' said the younger
lady, curling her handsome lip. At this hint, the wan page, who had been
surveying the party over the top of the chair, vanished behind it, as if
the ground had swallowed him up.</p>
<p>'Stop a moment, Withers!' said Mrs Skewton, as the chair began to move;
calling to the page with all the languid dignity with which she had called
in days of yore to a coachman with a wig, cauliflower nosegay, and silk
stockings. 'Where are you staying, abomination?' The Major was staying at
the Royal Hotel, with his friend Dombey.</p>
<p>'You may come and see us any evening when you are good,' lisped Mrs
Skewton. 'If Mr Dombey will honour us, we shall be happy. Withers, go on!'</p>
<p>The Major again pressed to his blue lips the tips of the fingers that were
disposed on the ledge of the wheeled chair with careful carelessness,
after the Cleopatra model: and Mr Dombey bowed. The elder lady honoured
them both with a very gracious smile and a girlish wave of her hand; the
younger lady with the very slightest inclination of her head that common
courtesy allowed.</p>
<p>The last glimpse of the wrinkled face of the mother, with that patched
colour on it which the sun made infinitely more haggard and dismal than
any want of colour could have been, and of the proud beauty of the
daughter with her graceful figure and erect deportment, engendered such an
involuntary disposition on the part of both the Major and Mr Dombey to
look after them, that they both turned at the same moment. The Page,
nearly as much aslant as his own shadow, was toiling after the chair,
uphill, like a slow battering-ram; the top of Cleopatra's bonnet was
fluttering in exactly the same corner to the inch as before; and the
Beauty, loitering by herself a little in advance, expressed in all her
elegant form, from head to foot, the same supreme disregard of everything
and everybody.</p>
<p>'I tell you what, Sir,' said the Major, as they resumed their walk again.
'If Joe Bagstock were a younger man, there's not a woman in the world whom
he'd prefer for Mrs Bagstock to that woman. By George, Sir!' said the
Major, 'she's superb!'</p>
<p>'Do you mean the daughter?' inquired Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Is Joey B. a turnip, Dombey,' said the Major, 'that he should mean the
mother?'</p>
<p>'You were complimentary to the mother,' returned Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'An ancient flame, Sir,' chuckled Major Bagstock. 'Devilish ancient. I
humour her.'</p>
<p>'She impresses me as being perfectly genteel,' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Genteel, Sir,' said the Major, stopping short, and staring in his
companion's face. 'The Honourable Mrs Skewton, Sir, is sister to the late
Lord Feenix, and aunt to the present Lord. The family are not wealthy—they're
poor, indeed—and she lives upon a small jointure; but if you come to
blood, Sir!' The Major gave a flourish with his stick and walked on again,
in despair of being able to say what you came to, if you came to that.</p>
<p>'You addressed the daughter, I observed,' said Mr Dombey, after a short
pause, 'as Mrs Granger.'</p>
<p>'Edith Skewton, Sir,' returned the Major, stopping short again, and
punching a mark in the ground with his cane, to represent her, 'married
(at eighteen) Granger of Ours;' whom the Major indicated by another punch.
'Granger, Sir,' said the Major, tapping the last ideal portrait, and
rolling his head emphatically, 'was Colonel of Ours; a de-vilish handsome
fellow, Sir, of forty-one. He died, Sir, in the second year of his
marriage.' The Major ran the representative of the deceased Granger
through and through the body with his walking-stick, and went on again,
carrying his stick over his shoulder.</p>
<p>'How long is this ago?' asked Mr Dombey, making another halt.</p>
<p>'Edith Granger, Sir,' replied the Major, shutting one eye, putting his
head on one side, passing his cane into his left hand, and smoothing his
shirt- frill with his right, 'is, at this present time, not quite thirty.
And damme, Sir,' said the Major, shouldering his stick once more, and
walking on again, 'she's a peerless woman!'</p>
<p>'Was there any family?' asked Mr Dombey presently.</p>
<p>'Yes, Sir,' said the Major. 'There was a boy.'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey's eyes sought the ground, and a shade came over his face.</p>
<p>'Who was drowned, Sir,' pursued the Major. 'When a child of four or five
years old.'</p>
<p>'Indeed?' said Mr Dombey, raising his head.</p>
<p>'By the upsetting of a boat in which his nurse had no business to have put
him,' said the Major. 'That's his history. Edith Granger is Edith Granger
still; but if tough old Joey B., Sir, were a little younger and a little
richer, the name of that immortal paragon should be Bagstock.'</p>
<p>The Major heaved his shoulders, and his cheeks, and laughed more like an
over-fed Mephistopheles than ever, as he said the words.</p>
<p>'Provided the lady made no objection, I suppose?' said Mr Dombey coldly.</p>
<p>'By Gad, Sir,' said the Major, 'the Bagstock breed are not accustomed to
that sort of obstacle. Though it's true enough that Edith might have
married twenty times, but for being proud, Sir, proud.'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey seemed, by his face, to think no worse of her for that.</p>
<p>'It's a great quality after all,' said the Major. 'By the Lord, it's a
high quality! Dombey! You are proud yourself, and your friend, Old Joe,
respects you for it, Sir.'</p>
<p>With this tribute to the character of his ally, which seemed to be wrung
from him by the force of circumstances and the irresistible tendency of
their conversation, the Major closed the subject, and glided into a
general exposition of the extent to which he had been beloved and doted on
by splendid women and brilliant creatures.</p>
<p>On the next day but one, Mr Dombey and the Major encountered the
Honourable Mrs Skewton and her daughter in the Pump-room; on the day
after, they met them again very near the place where they had met them
first. After meeting them thus, three or four times in all, it became a
point of mere civility to old acquaintances that the Major should go there
one evening. Mr Dombey had not originally intended to pay visits, but on
the Major announcing this intention, he said he would have the pleasure of
accompanying him. So the Major told the Native to go round before dinner,
and say, with his and Mr Dombey's compliments, that they would have the
honour of visiting the ladies that same evening, if the ladies were alone.
In answer to which message, the Native brought back a very small note with
a very large quantity of scent about it, indited by the Honourable Mrs
Skewton to Major Bagstock, and briefly saying, 'You are a shocking bear
and I have a great mind not to forgive you, but if you are very good
indeed,' which was underlined, 'you may come. Compliments (in which Edith
unites) to Mr Dombey.'</p>
<p>The Honourable Mrs Skewton and her daughter, Mrs Granger, resided, while
at Leamington, in lodgings that were fashionable enough and dear enough,
but rather limited in point of space and conveniences; so that the
Honourable Mrs Skewton, being in bed, had her feet in the window and her
head in the fireplace, while the Honourable Mrs Skewton's maid was
quartered in a closet within the drawing-room, so extremely small, that,
to avoid developing the whole of its accommodations, she was obliged to
writhe in and out of the door like a beautiful serpent. Withers, the wan
page, slept out of the house immediately under the tiles at a neighbouring
milk-shop; and the wheeled chair, which was the stone of that young
Sisyphus, passed the night in a shed belonging to the same dairy, where
new-laid eggs were produced by the poultry connected with the
establishment, who roosted on a broken donkey- cart, persuaded, to all
appearance, that it grew there, and was a species of tree.</p>
<p>Mr Dombey and the Major found Mrs Skewton arranged, as Cleopatra, among
the cushions of a sofa: very airily dressed; and certainly not resembling
Shakespeare's Cleopatra, whom age could not wither. On their way upstairs
they had heard the sound of a harp, but it had ceased on their being
announced, and Edith now stood beside it handsomer and haughtier than
ever. It was a remarkable characteristic of this lady's beauty that it
appeared to vaunt and assert itself without her aid, and against her will.
She knew that she was beautiful: it was impossible that it could be
otherwise: but she seemed with her own pride to defy her very self.</p>
<p>Whether she held cheap attractions that could only call forth admiration
that was worthless to her, or whether she designed to render them more
precious to admirers by this usage of them, those to whom they were
precious seldom paused to consider.</p>
<p>'I hope, Mrs Granger,' said Mr Dombey, advancing a step towards her, 'we
are not the cause of your ceasing to play?'</p>
<p>'You! oh no!'</p>
<p>'Why do you not go on then, my dearest Edith?' said Cleopatra.</p>
<p>'I left off as I began—of my own fancy.'</p>
<p>The exquisite indifference of her manner in saying this: an indifference
quite removed from dulness or insensibility, for it was pointed with proud
purpose: was well set off by the carelessness with which she drew her hand
across the strings, and came from that part of the room.</p>
<p>'Do you know, Mr Dombey,' said her languishing mother, playing with a
hand-screen, 'that occasionally my dearest Edith and myself actually
almost differ—'</p>
<p>'Not quite, sometimes, Mama?' said Edith.</p>
<p>'Oh never quite, my darling! Fie, fie, it would break my heart,' returned
her mother, making a faint attempt to pat her with the screen, which Edith
made no movement to meet, '—about these old conventionalities of
manner that are observed in little things? Why are we not more natural?
Dear me! With all those yearnings, and gushings, and impulsive throbbings
that we have implanted in our souls, and which are so very charming, why
are we not more natural?'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey said it was very true, very true.</p>
<p>'We could be more natural I suppose if we tried?' said Mrs Skewton.</p>
<p>Mr Dombey thought it possible.</p>
<p>'Devil a bit, Ma'am,' said the Major. 'We couldn't afford it. Unless the
world was peopled with J.B.'s—tough and blunt old Joes, Ma'am, plain
red herrings with hard roes, Sir—we couldn't afford it. It wouldn't
do.'</p>
<p>'You naughty Infidel,' said Mrs Skewton, 'be mute.'</p>
<p>'Cleopatra commands,' returned the Major, kissing his hand, 'and Antony
Bagstock obeys.'</p>
<p>'The man has no sensitiveness,' said Mrs Skewton, cruelly holding up the
hand-screen so as to shut the Major out. 'No sympathy. And what do we live
for but sympathy! What else is so extremely charming! Without that gleam
of sunshine on our cold cold earth,' said Mrs Skewton, arranging her lace
tucker, and complacently observing the effect of her bare lean arm,
looking upward from the wrist, 'how could we possibly bear it? In short,
obdurate man!' glancing at the Major, round the screen, 'I would have my
world all heart; and Faith is so excessively charming, that I won't allow
you to disturb it, do you hear?'</p>
<p>The Major replied that it was hard in Cleopatra to require the world to be
all heart, and yet to appropriate to herself the hearts of all the world;
which obliged Cleopatra to remind him that flattery was insupportable to
her, and that if he had the boldness to address her in that strain any
more, she would positively send him home.</p>
<p>Withers the Wan, at this period, handing round the tea, Mr Dombey again
addressed himself to Edith.</p>
<p>'There is not much company here, it would seem?' said Mr Dombey, in his
own portentous gentlemanly way.</p>
<p>'I believe not. We see none.'</p>
<p>'Why really,' observed Mrs Skewton from her couch, 'there are no people
here just now with whom we care to associate.'</p>
<p>'They have not enough heart,' said Edith, with a smile. The very twilight
of a smile: so singularly were its light and darkness blended.</p>
<p>'My dearest Edith rallies me, you see!' said her mother, shaking her head:
which shook a little of itself sometimes, as if the palsy Bed now and then
in opposition to the diamonds. 'Wicked one!'</p>
<p>'You have been here before, if I am not mistaken?' said Mr Dombey. Still
to Edith.</p>
<p>'Oh, several times. I think we have been everywhere.'</p>
<p>'A beautiful country!'</p>
<p>'I suppose it is. Everybody says so.'</p>
<p>'Your cousin Feenix raves about it, Edith,' interposed her mother from her
couch.</p>
<p>The daughter slightly turned her graceful head, and raising her eyebrows
by a hair's-breadth, as if her cousin Feenix were of all the mortal world
the least to be regarded, turned her eyes again towards Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'I hope, for the credit of my good taste, that I am tired of the
neighbourhood,' she said.</p>
<p>'You have almost reason to be, Madam,' he replied, glancing at a variety
of landscape drawings, of which he had already recognised several as
representing neighbouring points of view, and which were strewn abundantly
about the room, 'if these beautiful productions are from your hand.'</p>
<p>She gave him no reply, but sat in a disdainful beauty, quite amazing.</p>
<p>'Have they that interest?' said Mr Dombey. 'Are they yours?'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>'And you play, I already know.'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>'And sing?'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>She answered all these questions with a strange reluctance; and with that
remarkable air of opposition to herself, already noticed as belonging to
her beauty. Yet she was not embarrassed, but wholly self-possessed.
Neither did she seem to wish to avoid the conversation, for she addressed
her face, and—so far as she could—her manner also, to him; and
continued to do so, when he was silent.</p>
<p>'You have many resources against weariness at least,' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Whatever their efficiency may be,' she returned, 'you know them all now.
I have no more.</p>
<p>'May I hope to prove them all?' said Mr Dombey, with solemn gallantry,
laying down a drawing he had held, and motioning towards the harp.</p>
<p>'Oh certainly! If you desire it!'</p>
<p>She rose as she spoke, and crossing by her mother's couch, and directing a
stately look towards her, which was instantaneous in its duration, but
inclusive (if anyone had seen it) of a multitude of expressions, among
which that of the twilight smile, without the smile itself, overshadowed
all the rest, went out of the room.</p>
<p>The Major, who was quite forgiven by this time, had wheeled a little table
up to Cleopatra, and was sitting down to play picquet with her. Mr Dombey,
not knowing the game, sat down to watch them for his edification until
Edith should return.</p>
<p>'We are going to have some music, Mr Dombey, I hope?' said Cleopatra.</p>
<p>'Mrs Granger has been kind enough to promise so,' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Ah! That's very nice. Do you propose, Major?'</p>
<p>'No, Ma'am,' said the Major. 'Couldn't do it.'</p>
<p>'You're a barbarous being,' replied the lady, 'and my hand's destroyed.
You are fond of music, Mr Dombey?'</p>
<p>'Eminently so,' was Mr Dombey's answer.</p>
<p>'Yes. It's very nice,' said Cleopatra, looking at her cards. 'So much
heart in it—undeveloped recollections of a previous state of
existence'—and all that—which is so truly charming. Do you
know,' simpered Cleopatra, reversing the knave of clubs, who had come into
her game with his heels uppermost, 'that if anything could tempt me to put
a period to my life, it would be curiosity to find out what it's all
about, and what it means; there are so many provoking mysteries, really,
that are hidden from us. Major, you to play.'</p>
<p>The Major played; and Mr Dombey, looking on for his instruction, would
soon have been in a state of dire confusion, but that he gave no attention
to the game whatever, and sat wondering instead when Edith would come
back.</p>
<p>She came at last, and sat down to her harp, and Mr Dombey rose and stood
beside her, listening. He had little taste for music, and no knowledge of
the strain she played, but he saw her bending over it, and perhaps he
heard among the sounding strings some distant music of his own, that tamed
the monster of the iron road, and made it less inexorable.</p>
<p>Cleopatra had a sharp eye, verily, at picquet. It glistened like a bird's,
and did not fix itself upon the game, but pierced the room from end to
end, and gleamed on harp, performer, listener, everything.</p>
<p>When the haughty beauty had concluded, she arose, and receiving Mr
Dombey's thanks and compliments in exactly the same manner as before, went
with scarcely any pause to the piano, and began there.</p>
<p>Edith Granger, any song but that! Edith Granger, you are very handsome,
and your touch upon the keys is brilliant, and your voice is deep and
rich; but not the air that his neglected daughter sang to his dead son!</p>
<p>Alas, he knows it not; and if he did, what air of hers would stir him,
rigid man! Sleep, lonely Florence, sleep! Peace in thy dreams, although
the night has turned dark, and the clouds are gathering, and threaten to
discharge themselves in hail!</p>
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