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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI—ON SOME COUNTRY SNOBS </h2>
<p>Something like a journal of the proceedings at the Evergreens may be
interesting to those foreign readers of PUNCH who want to know the customs
of an English gentleman's family and household. There's plenty of time to
keep the Journal. Piano-strumming begins at six o'clock in the morning; it
lasts till breakfast, with but a minute's intermission, when the
instrument changes hands, and Miss Emily practises in place of her sister
Miss Maria.</p>
<p>In fact, the confounded instrument never stops when the young ladies are
at their lessons, Miss Wirt hammers away at those stunning variations, and
keeps her magnificent finger in exercise.</p>
<p>I asked this great creature in what other branches of education she
instructed her pupils? 'The modern languages,' says she modestly: 'French,
German, Spanish, and Italian, Latin and the rudiments of Greek if desired.
English of course; the practice of Elocution, Geography, and Astronomy,
and the Use of the Globes, Algebra (but only as far as quadratic
equations); for a poor ignorant female, you know, Mr. Snob, cannot be
expected to know everything. Ancient and Modern History no young woman can
be without; and of these I make my beloved pupils PERFECT MISTRESSES.
Botany, Geology, and Mineralogy, I consider as amusements. And with these
I assure you we manage to pass the days at the Evergreens not
unpleasantly.'</p>
<p>Only these, thought I—what an education! But I looked in one of Miss
Ponto's manuscript song-books and found five faults of French in four
words; and in a waggish mood asking Miss Wirt whether Dante Algiery was so
called because he was born at Algiers, received a smiling answer in the
affirmative, which made me rather doubt about the accuracy of Miss Wirt's
knowledge.</p>
<p>When the above little morning occupations are concluded, these unfortunate
young women perform what they call Calisthenic Exercises in the garden. I
saw them to-day, without any crinoline, pulling the garden-roller.</p>
<p>Dear Mrs. Ponto was in the garden too, and as limp as her daughters; in a
faded bandeau of hair, in a battered bonnet, in a holland pinafore, in
pattens, on a broken chair, snipping leaves off a vine. Mrs. Ponto
measures many yards about in an evening. Ye heavens! what a guy she is in
that skeleton morning-costume!</p>
<p>Besides Stripes, they keep a boy called Thomas or Tummus. Tummus works in
the garden or about the pigsty and stable; Thomas wears a page's costume
of eruptive buttons.</p>
<p>When anybody calls, and Stripes is out of the way, Tummus flings himself
like mad into Thomas's clothes, and comes out metamorphosed like Harlequin
in the pantomime. To-day, as Mrs. P. was cutting the grapevine, as the
young ladies were at the roller, down comes Tummus like a roaring
whirlwind, with 'Missus, Missus, there's company coomin'!' Away skurry the
young ladies from the roller, down comes Mrs. P. from the old chair, off
flies Tummus to change his clothes, and in an incredibly short space of
time Sir John Hawbuck, my Lady Hawbuck, and Master Hugh Hawbuck are
introduced into the garden with brazen effrontery by Thomas, who says,
'Please Sir Jan and my Lady to walk this year way: I KNOW Missus is in the
rose-garden.'</p>
<p>And there, sure enough, she was!</p>
<p>In a pretty little garden bonnet, with beautiful curling ringlets, with
the smartest of aprons and the freshest of pearl-coloured gloves, this
amazing woman was in the arms of her dearest Lady Hawbuck. 'Dearest Lady
Hawbuck, how good of you! Always among my flowers! can't live away from
them!'</p>
<p>'Sweets to the sweet! hum—a-ha—haw!' says Sir John Hawbuck,
who piques himself on his gallantry, and says nothing without 'a-hum—a-ha—a-haw!'</p>
<p>'Whereth yaw pinnafaw?' cries Master Hugh. 'WE thaw you in it, over the
wall, didn't we, Pa?'</p>
<p>'Hum—a-ha—a-haw!' burst out Sir John, dreadfully alarmed.
'Where's Ponto? Why wasn't he at Quarter Sessions? How are his birds this
year, Mrs. Ponto—have those Carabas pheasants done any harm to your
wheat? a-hum—a-ha—a-haw!' and all this while he was making the
most ferocious and desperate signals to his youthful heir.</p>
<p>'Well, she WATH in her pinnafaw, wathn't she, Ma?' says Hugh, quite
unabashed; which question Lady Hawbuck turned away with a sudden query
regarding her dear darling daughters, and the ENFANT TERRIBLE was removed
by his father.</p>
<p>'I hope you weren't disturbed by the music?' Ponto says. 'My girls, you
know, practise four hours a day, you know—must do it, you know—absolutely
necessary. As for me, you know I'm an early man, and in my farm every
morning at five—no, no laziness for ME.'</p>
<p>The facts are these. Ponto goes to sleep directly after dinner on entering
the drawing-room, and wakes up when the ladies leave off practice at ten.
From seven till ten, from ten till five, is a very fair allowance of
slumber for a man who says he's NOT a lazy man. It is my private opinion
that when Ponto retires to what is called his 'Study,' he sleeps too. He
locks himself up there daily two hours with the newspaper.</p>
<p>I saw the HAWBUCK scene out of the Study, which commands the garden. It's
a curious object, that Study. Ponto's library mostly consists of boots. He
and Stripes have important interviews here of mornings, when the potatoes
are discussed, or the fate of the calf ordained, or sentence passed on the
pig, &c.. All the Major's bills are docketed on the Study table and
displayed like a lawyer's briefs. Here, too, lie displayed his hooks,
knives, and other gardening irons, his whistles, and strings of spare
buttons. He has a drawer of endless brown paper for parcels, and another
containing a prodigious and never-failing supply of string. What a man can
want with so many gig-whips I can never conceive. These, and fishing-rods,
and landing-nets, and spurs, and boot-trees, and balls for horses, and
surgical implements for the same, and favourite pots of shiny blacking,
with which he paints his own shoes in the most elegant manner, and
buckskin gloves stretched out on their trees, and his gorget, sash, and
sabre of the Horse Marines, with his boot-hooks underneath in atrophy; and
the family medicine-chest, and in a corner the very rod with which he used
to whip his son, Wellesley Ponto, when a boy (Wellesley never entered the
'Study' but for that awful purpose)—all these, with 'Mogg's Road
Book,' the GARDENERS' CHRONICLE, and a backgammon-board, form the Major's
library. Under the trophy there's a picture of Mrs. Ponto, in a light blue
dress and train, and no waist, when she was first married; a fox's brush
lies over the frame, and serves to keep the dust off that work of art.</p>
<p>'My library's small, says Ponto, with the most amazing impudence, 'but
well selected, my boy—well selected. I have been reading the
"History of England" all the morning.'</p>
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