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<h2> CHAPTER XII—ON CLERICAL SNOBS AND SNOBBISHNESS </h2>
<p>'Dear Mr. Snob,' an amiable young correspondent writes, who signs himself
Snobling, 'ought the clergyman who, at the request of a noble Duke, lately
interrupted a marriage ceremony between two persons perfectly authorised
to marry, to be ranked or not among the Clerical Snobs?'</p>
<p>This, my dear young friend, is not a fair question. One of the illustrated
weekly papers has already seized hold of the clergyman, and blackened him
most unmercifully, by representing him in his cassock performing the
marriage service. Let that be sufficient punishment; and, if you please,
do not press the query.</p>
<p>It is very likely that if Miss Smith had come with a licence to marry
Jones, the parson in question, not seeing old Smith present, would have
sent off the beadle in a cab to let the old gentleman know what was going
on; and would have delayed the service until the arrival of Smith senior.
He very likely thinks it his duty to ask all marriageable young ladies,
who come without their papa, why their parent is absent; and, no doubt,
ALWAYS sends off the beadle for that missing governor.</p>
<p>Or, it is very possible that the Duke of Coeurdelion was Mr.
What-d'ye-call'im's most intimate friend, and has often said to him,
'What-d'ye-call'im, my boy, my daughter must never marry the Capting. If
ever they try at your church, I beseech you, considering the terms of
intimacy on which we are, to send off Rattan in a hack cab to fetch me.'</p>
<p>In either of which cases, you see, dear Snobling, that though the parson
would not have been authorised, yet he might have been excused for
interfering. He has no more right to stop my marriage than to stop my
dinner, to both of which, as a free-born Briton, I am entitled by law, if
I can pay for them. But, consider pastoral solicitude, a deep sense of the
duties of his office, and pardon this inconvenient, but genuine zeal.</p>
<p>But if the clergyman did in the Duke's case what he would NOT do in
Smith's; if he has no more acquaintance with the Coeurdelion family than I
have with the Royal and Serene House of Saxe-Coburg Gotha,—THEN, I
confess, my dear Snobling, your question might elicit a disagreeable
reply, and one which I respectfully decline to give. I wonder what Sir
George Tufto would say, if a sentry left his post because a noble lord
(not the least connected with the service) begged the sentinel not to do
his duty!</p>
<p>Alas! that the beadle who canes little boys and drives them out, cannot
drive worldliness out too; what is worldliness but snobbishness? When, for
instance, I read in the newspapers that the Right Reverend the Lord
Charles James administered the rite of confirmation to a PARTY OF THE
JUVENILE NOBILITY at the Chapel Royal,—as if the Chapel Royal were a
sort of ecclesiastical Almack's, and young people were to get ready for
the next world in little exclusive genteel knots of the aristocracy, who
were not to be disturbed in their journey thither by the company of the
vulgar:—when I read such a paragraph as that (and one or two such
generally appear during the present fashionable season), it seems to me to
be the most odious, mean and disgusting part of that odious, mean, and
disgusting publication, the COURT CIRCULAR; and that snobbishness is
therein carried to quite an awful pitch. What, gentlemen, can't we even in
the Church acknowledge a republic? There, at least, the Heralds' College
itself might allow that we all of us have the same pedigree, and are
direct descendants of Eve and Adam, whose inheritance is divided amongst
us.</p>
<p>I hereby call upon all Dukes, Earls, Baronets, and other potentates, not
to lend themselves to this shameful scandal and error, and beseech all
Bishops who read this publication to take the matter into consideration,
and to protest against the continuance of the practice, and to declare,
'We WON'T confirm or christen Lord Tomnoddy, or Sir Carnaby Jenks, to the
exclusion of any other young Christian;' the which declaration if their
Lordships are induced to make, a great LAPIS OFFENSIONIS will be removed,
and the Snob Papers will not have been written in vain.</p>
<p>A story is current of a celebrated NOUVEAU-RICHE, who having had occasion
to oblige that excellent prelate the Bishop of Bullocksmithy, asked his
Lordship, in return, to confirm his children privately in his Lordship's
own chapel; which ceremony the grateful prelate accordingly performed. Can
satire go farther than this? Is there even in this most amusing of prints,
any more NAIVE absurdity? It is as if a man wouldn't go to heaven unless
he went in a special train, or as if he thought (as some people think
about vaccination) Confirmation more effectual when administered at first
hand. When that eminent person, the Begum Sumroo, died, it is said she
left ten thousand pounds to the Pope, and ten thousand to the Archbishop
of Canterbury,—so that there should be no mistake,—so as to
make sure of having the ecclesiastical authorities on her side. This is
only a little more openly and undisguisedly snobbish than the cases before
alluded to. A well-bred Snob is just as secretly proud of his riches and
honours as a PARVENU Snob who makes the most ludicrous exhibition of them;
and a high-born Marchioness or Duchess just as vain of herself and her
diamonds, as Queen Quashyboo, who sews a pair of epaulets on to her skirt,
and turns out in state in a cocked hat and feathers.</p>
<p>It is not out of disrespect to my 'Peerage,' which I love and honour,
(indeed, have I not said before, that I should be ready to jump out of my
skin if two Dukes would walk down Pall Mall with me?)—it is not out
of disrespect for the individuals, that I wish these titles had never been
invented; but, consider, if there were no tree, there would be no shadow;
and how much more honest society would be, and how much more serviceable
the clergy would be (which is our present consideration), if these
temptations of rank and continual baits of worldliness were not in
existence, and perpetually thrown out to lead them astray.</p>
<p>I have seen many examples of their falling away. When, for instance, Tom
Sniffle first went into the country as Curate for Mr. Fuddleston (Sir
Huddleston Fuddleston's brother), who resided on some other living, there
could not be a more kind, hardworking, and excellent creature than Tom. He
had his aunt to live with him. His conduct to his poor was admirable. He
wrote annually reams of the best-intentioned and vapid sermons. When Lord
Brandyball's family came down into the country, and invited him to dine at
Brandyball Park, Sniffle was so agitated that he almost forgot how to say
grace, and upset a bowl of currant-jelly sauce in Lady Fanny Toffy's lap.</p>
<p>What was the consequence of his intimacy with that noble family? He
quarrelled with his aunt for dining out every night. The wretch forgot his
poor altogether, and killed his old nag by always riding over to
Brandyball; where he revelled in the maddest passion for Lady Fanny. He
ordered the neatest new clothes and ecclesiastical waistcoats from London;
he appeared with corazza-shirts, lackered boots, and perfumery; he bought
a blood-horse from Bob Toffy: was seen at archery meetings, public
breakfasts,—actually at cover; and, I blush to say, that I saw him
in a stall at the Opera; and afterwards riding by Lady Fanny's side in
Rotten Row. He DOUBLE-BARRELLED his name, (as many poor Snobs do,) and
instead of T. Sniffle, as formerly, came out, in a porcelain card, as Rev.
T. D'Arcy Sniffle, Burlington Hotel.</p>
<p>The end of all this may be imagined: when the Earl of Brandyball was made
acquainted with the curate's love for Lady Fanny, he had that fit of the
gout which so nearly carried him off (to the inexpressible grief of his
son, Lord Alicompayne), and uttered that remarkable speech to Sniffle,
which disposed of the claims of the latter:—' If I didn't respect
the Church, Sir,' his Lordship said, 'by Jove, I'd kick you downstairs:'
his Lordship then fell back into the fit aforesaid; and Lady Fanny, as we
all know, married General Podager.</p>
<p>As for poor Tom, he was over head and ears in debt as well as in love: his
creditors came down upon him. Mr. Hemp, of Portugal Street, proclaimed his
name lately as a reverend outlaw; and he has been seen at various foreign
watering-places; sometimes doing duty; sometimes 'coaching' a stray
gentleman's son at Carlsruhe or Kissingen; sometimes—must we say it?—lurking
about the roulette-tables with a tuft to his chin.</p>
<p>If temptation had not come upon this unhappy fellow in the shape of a Lord
Brandyball, he might still have been following his profession, humbly and
worthily. He might have married his cousin with four thousand pounds, the
wine-merchant's daughter (the old gentleman quarrelled with his nephew for
not soliciting wine-orders from Lord B. for him): he might have had seven
children, and taken private pupils, and eked out his income, and lived and
died a country parson.</p>
<p>Could he have done better? You who want to know how great, and good, and
noble such a character may be, read Stanley's 'Life of Doctor Arnold.'</p>
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