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<h2> CHAPTER XXXI—A VISIT TO SOME COUNTRY SNOBS </h2>
<p>'Why, dear Mr. Snob,' said a young lady of rank and fashion (to whom I
present my best compliments), 'if you found everything so SNOBBISH at the
Evergreens, if the pig bored you and the mutton was not to your liking,
and Mrs. Ponto was a humbug, and Miss Wirt a nuisance, with her abominable
piano practice,—why did you stay so long?'</p>
<p>Ah, Miss, what a question! Have you never heard of gallant British
soldiers storming batteries, of doctors passing nights in plague wards of
lazarettos, and other instances of martyrdom? What do you suppose induced
gentlemen to walk two miles up to the batteries of Sabroan, with a hundred
and fifty thundering guns bowling them down by hundreds?—not
pleasure, surely. What causes your respected father to quit his
comfortable home for his chambers, after dinner, and pore over the most
dreary law papers until long past midnight?, Mademoiselle; duty, which
must be done alike by military, or legal, or literary gents. There's a
power of martyrdom in our profession.</p>
<p>You won't believe it? Your rosy lips assume a smile of incredulity—a
most naughty and odious expression in a young lady's face. Well, then, the
fact is, that my chambers, No. 24, Pump Court, Temple, were being painted
by the Honourable Society, and Mrs. Slamkin, my laundress, having occasion
to go into Durham to see her daughter, who is married, and has presented
her with the sweetest little grandson—a few weeks could not be
better spent than in rusticating. But ah, how delightful Pump Court looked
when I revisited its well-known chimney-pots! CARI LUOGHI. Welcome,
welcome, O fog and smut!</p>
<p>But if you think there is no moral in the foregoing account of the Pontine
family, you are, Madam, most painfully mistaken. In this very chapter we
are going to have the moral—why, the whole of the papers are nothing
BUT the moral, setting forth as they do the folly of being a Snob.</p>
<p>You will remark that in the Country Snobography my poor friend Ponto has
been held up almost exclusively for the public gaze—and why? Because
we went to no other house? Because other families did not welcome us to
their mahogany? No, no. Sir John Hawbuck of the Haws, Sir John Hipsley of
Briary Hall, don't shut the gates of hospitality: of General Sago's
mulligatawny I could speak from experience. And the two old ladies at
Guttlebury, were they nothing? Do you suppose that an agreeable young dog,
who shall be nameless, would not be made welcome? Don't you know that
people are too glad to see ANYBODY in the country?</p>
<p>But those dignified personages do not enter into the scheme of the present
work, and are but minor characters of our Snob drama; just as, in the
play, kings and emperors are not half so important as many humble persons.
The DOGE OF VENICE, for instance, gives way to OTHELLO, who is but a
nigger; and the KING OF FRANCE to FALCONBRIDGE, who is a gentleman of
positively no birth at all. So with the exalted characters above
mentioned. I perfectly well recollect that the claret at Hawbuck's was not
by any means so good as that of Hipsley's, while, on the contrary, some
white hermitage at the Haws (by the way, the butler only gave me half a
glass each time) was supernacular. And I remember the conversations. O
Madam, Madam, how stupid they were! The subsoil ploughing; the pheasants
and poaching; the row about the representation of the county; the Earl of
Mangelwurzelshire being at variance with his relative and nominee, the
Honourable Marmaduke Tomnoddy; all these I could put down, had I a mind to
violate the confidence of private life; and a great deal of conversation
about the weather, the Mangelwurzelshire Hunt, new manures, and eating and
drinking, of course.</p>
<p>But CUI BONO? In these perfectly stupid and honourable families there is
not that Snobbishness which it is our purpose to expose. An ox is an ox—a
great hulking, fat-sided, bellowing, munching Beef. He ruminates according
to his nature, and consumes his destined portion of turnips or oilcake,
until the time comes for his disappearance from the pastures, to be
succeeded by other deep-lunged and fat-ribbed animals. Perhaps we do not
respect an ox. We rather acquiesce in him. The Snob, my dear Madam, is the
Frog that tries to swell himself to ox size. Let us pelt the silly brute
out of his folly.</p>
<p>Look, I pray you, at the case of my unfortunate friend Ponto, a
good-natured, kindly English gentleman—not over-wise, but quite
passable—fond of port-wine, of his family, of country sports and
agriculture, hospitably minded, with as pretty a little patrimonial
country-house as heart can desire, and a thousand pounds a year. It is not
much; but, ENTRE NOUS, people can live for less, and not uncomfortably.</p>
<p>For instance, there is the doctor, whom Mrs. P. does not condescend to
visit: that man educates a mirific family, and is loved by the poor for
miles round: and gives them port-wine for physic and medicine, gratis. And
how those people can get on with their pittance, as Mrs. Ponto says, is a
wonder to HER.</p>
<p>Again, there is the clergyman, Doctor Chrysostom,—Mrs. P. says they
quarrelled about Puseyism, but I am given to understand it was because
Mrs. C. had the PAS of her at the Haws—you may see what the value of
his living is any day in the 'Clerical Guide;' but you don't know what he
gives away.</p>
<p>Even Pettipois allows that, in whose eyes the Doctor's surplice is a
scarlet abomination; and so does Pettipois do his duty in his way, and
administer not only his tracts and his talk, but his money and his means
to his people. As a lord's son, by the way, Mrs. Ponto is uncommonly
anxious that he should marry EITHER of the girls whom Lord Gules does not
intend to choose.</p>
<p>Well, although Pon's income would make up almost as much as that of these
three worthies put together—oh, my dear Madam, see in what hopeless
penury the poor fellow lives! What tenant can look to HIS forbearance?
What poor man can hope for HIS charity? 'Master's the best of men,' honest
Stripes says, 'and when we was in the ridgment a more free-handed chap
didn't live. But the way in which Missus DU scryou, I wonder the young
ladies is alive, that I du!'</p>
<p>They live upon a fine governess and fine masters, and have clothes made by
Lady Carabas's own milliner; and their brother rides with earls to cover;
and only the best people in the county visit at the Evergreens, and Mrs.
Ponto thinks herself a paragon of wives and mothers, and a wonder of the
world, for doing all this misery and humbug, and snobbishness, on a
thousand a year.</p>
<p>What an inexpressible comfort it was, my dear Madam, when Stripes put my
portmanteau in the four-wheeled chaise, and (poor P on being touched with
sciatica) drove me over to 'Carabas Arms' at Guttlebury, where we took
leave. There were some bagmen there in the Commercial Room, and one talked
about the house he represented; and another about his dinner, and a third
about the Inns on the road, and so forth—a talk, not very wise, but
honest and to the purpose—about as good as that of the country
gentlemen: and oh, how much pleasanter than listening to Miss Wirt's
show-pieces on the piano, and Mrs. Ponto's genteel cackle about the
fashion and the county families!</p>
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