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<h2> CHAPTER XXXII—SNOBBIUM GATHERUM </h2>
<p>WHEN I see the great effect which these papers are producing on an
intelligent public, I have a strong hope that before long we shall have a
regular Snob department in the newspapers, just as we have the Police
Courts and the Court News at present. When a flagrant case of
bone-crushing or Poor-law abuse occurs in the world, who so eloquent as
THE TIMES to point it out? When a gross instance of Snobbishness happens,
why should not the indignant journalist call the public attention to that
delinquency too?</p>
<p>How, for instance, could that wonderful case of the Earl of Mangelwurzel
and his brother be examined in the Snobbish point of view? Let alone the
hectoring, the bullying, the vapouring, the bad grammar, the mutual
recriminations, lie-givings, challenges, retractations, which abound in
the fraternal dispute—put out of the question these points as
concerning the individual nobleman and his relative, with whose personal
affairs we have nothing to do—and consider how intimately corrupt,
how habitually grovelling and mean, how entirely Snobbish in a word, a
whole county must be which can find no better chiefs or leaders than these
two gentlemen. 'We don't want,' the great county of Mangelwurzelshire
seems to say, 'that a man should be able to write good grammar; or that he
should keep a Christian tongue in his head; or that he should have the
commonest decency of temper, or even a fair share of good sense, in order
to represent us in Parliament.</p>
<p>All we require is, that a man should be recommended to us by the Earl of
Mangelwurzelshire. And all that we require of the Earl of
Mangelwurzelshire is that he should have fifty thousand a year and hunt
the country.' O you pride of all Snobland! O you crawling, truckling,
self-confessed lackeys and parasites!</p>
<p>But this is growing too savage: don't let us forget our usual amenity, and
that tone of playfulness and sentiment with which the beloved reader and
writer have pursued their mutual reflections hitherto. Well, Snobbishness
pervades the little Social Farce as well as the great State Comedy; and
the self-same moral is tacked to either.</p>
<p>There was, for instance, an account in the papers of a young lady who,
misled by a fortune-teller, actually went part of the way to India (as far
as Bagnigge Wells, I think,) in search of a husband who was promised her
there. Do you suppose this poor deluded little soul would have left her
shop for a man below her in rank, or for anything but a darling of a
Captain in epaulets and a red coat. It was her Snobbish sentiment that
misled her, and made her vanities a prey to the swindling fortune-teller.</p>
<p>Case 2 was that of Mademoiselle de Saugrenue, 'the interesting young
Frenchwoman with a profusion of jetty ringlets,' who lived for nothing at
a boardinghouse at Gosport, was then conveyed to Fareham gratis: and being
there, and lying on the bed of the good old lady her entertainer, the dear
girl took occasion to rip open the mattress, and steal a cash-box, with
which she fled to London. How would you account for the prodigious
benevolence exercised towards the interesting young French lady? Was it
her jetty ringlets or her charming face?—Bah! Do ladies love others
for having faces and black hair?—she said SHE WAS A RELATION OF de
Saugrenue: talked of her ladyship her aunt, and of herself as a De
Saugrenue. The honest boarding-house people were at her feet at once.
Good, honest, simple, lord-loving children of Snobland.</p>
<p>Finally, there was the case of 'the Right Honourable Mr. Vernon,' at York.
The Right Honourable was the son of a nobleman, and practised on an old
lady. He procured from her dinners, money, wearing-apparel, spoons,
implicit credence, and an entire refit of linen. Then he cast his nets
over a family of father, mother, and daughters, one of whom he proposed to
marry. The father lent him money, the mother made jams and pickles for
him, the daughters vied with each other in cooking dinners for the Right
Honourable—and what was the end? One day the traitor fled, with a
teapot and a basketful of cold victuals. It was the 'Right Honourable'
which baited the hook which gorged all these greedy, simple Snobs. Would
they have been taken in by a commoner? What old lady is there, my dear
sir, who would take in you and me, were we ever so ill to do, and comfort
us, and clothe us, and give us her money, and her silver forks? Alas and
alas! what mortal man that speaks the truth can hope for such a landlady?
And yet, all these instances of fond and credulous Snobbishness have
occurred in the same week's paper, with who knows how many score more?</p>
<p>Just as we had concluded the above remarks comes a pretty little note
sealed with a pretty little butterfly—bearing a northern postmark—and
to the following effect:—</p>
<p>'19th November.</p>
<p>'Mr. Punch,—'Taking great interest in your Snob Papers, we are very
anxious to know under what class of that respectable fraternity you would
designate us.</p>
<p>'We are three sisters, from seventeen to twenty-two. Our father is
HONESTLY AND TRULY of a very good family (you will say it is Snobbish to
mention that, but I wish to state the plain fact); our maternal
grandfather was an Earl.' (1)</p>
<p>'We CAN afford to take in a stamped edition of YOU, and all Dickens' works
as fast as they come out, but we do NOT keep such a thing as a PEERAGE or
even a BARONETAGE in the house.</p>
<p>'We live with every comfort, excellent cellar, &c. &c.; but as we
cannot well afford a butler, we have a neat table-maid (though our father
was a military man, has travelled much, been in the best society, &c.)
We HAVE a coachman and helper, but we don't put the latter into buttons,
nor make them wait at table, like Stripes and Tummus.' (2)</p>
<p>'We are just the same to persons with a handle to their name as to those
without it. We wear a moderate modicum of crinoline, (3)and are never limp
(4) in the morning. We have good and abundant dinners on CHINA though we
have plate (5), and just as good when alone as with company.</p>
<p>'Now, my dear MR. PUNCH, will you PLEASE give us a short answer in your
next number, and I will be SO much obliged to you. Nobody knows we are
writing to you, not even our father; nor will we ever tease (6) you again
if you will only give us an answer—just for FUN, now do!</p>
<p>'If you get as far as this, which is doubtful, you will probably fling it
into the fire. If you do, I cannot help it; but I am of a sanguine
disposition, and entertain a lingering hope. At all events, I shall be
impatient for next Sunday, for you reach us on that day, and I am ashamed
to confess, we CANNOT resist opening you in the carriage driving home from
church. (7)</p>
<p>'I remain, &c. &c., for myself and sisters.</p>
<p>Excuse this scrawl, but I always write headlong. (8)</p>
<p>'P. S.—You were rather stupid last week, don't you think? (9) We
keep no gamekeeper, and yet have always abundant game for friends to
shoot, in spite of the poachers. We never write on perfumed paper—in
short, I can't help thinking that if you knew us you would not think us
Snobs.'</p>
<p>To this I reply in the following manner:—'My dear young ladies, I
know your post-town: and shall be at church there the Sunday AFTER next;
when, will you please to wear a tulip or some little trifle in your
bonnets, so that I may know you? You will recognize me and my dress—a
quiet-looking young fellow, in a white top-coat, a crimson satin
neckcloth, light blue trousers, with glossy tipped boots, and an emerald
breast-pin. I shall have a black crape round my white hat; and my usual
bamboo cane with the richly-gilt knob. I am sorry there will be no time to
get up moustaches between now and next week.</p>
<p>'From seventeen to two-and-twenty! Ye gods! what ages! Dear young
creatures, I can see you all three. Seventeen suits me, as nearest my own
time of life; but mind, I don't say two-and-twenty is too old. No, no. And
that pretty, roguish, demure, middle one. Peace, peace, thou silly little
fluttering heart!</p>
<p>'YOU Snobs, dear young ladies! I will pull any man's nose who says so.
There is no harm in being of a good family. You can't help it, poor dears.
What's in a name? What is in a handle to it? I confess openly that I
should not object to being a Duke myself; and between ourselves you might
see a worse leg for a garter.</p>
<p>'YOU Snobs, dear little good-natured things, no that is, I hope not—I
think not—I won't be too confident—none of us should be—that
we are not Snobs. That very confidence savours of arrogance, and to be
arrogant is to be a Snob. In all the social gradations from sneak to
tyrant, nature has placed a most wondrous and various progeny of Snobs.
But are there no kindly natures, no tender hearts, no souls humble,
simple, and truth-loving? Ponder well on this question, sweet young
ladies. And if you can answer it, as no doubt you can—lucky are you—and
lucky the respected Herr Papa, and lucky the three handsome young
gentlemen who are about to become each others' brothers-in-law.'</p>
<p>(1) The introduction of Grandpapa, is I fear, Snobbish.</p>
<p>(2) That is, as you like. I don't object to buttons in moderation.</p>
<p>(3) Quite right.</p>
<p>(4) Bless you!</p>
<p>(5) Snobbish; and I doubt whether you ought to dine as well alone as with
company. You will be getting too good dinners.</p>
<p>(6) We like to be teased; but tell Papa.</p>
<p>(7) O garters and stars! what will Captain Gordon and Exeter Hall say to
this?</p>
<p>(8) Dear little enthusiast!</p>
<p>(9) You were never more mistaken, miss, in your life.</p>
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