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<h2> CHAPTER XXXVIII—CLUB SNOBS </h2>
<p>Such a Sensation has been created in the Clubs by the appearance of the
last paper on Club Snobs, as can't but be complimentary to me who am one
of their number.</p>
<p>I belong to many Clubs. The 'Union Jack,' the 'Sash and Marlin-spike'—Military
Clubs. 'The True Blue,' the 'No Surrender,' the 'Blue and Buff,' the 'Guy
Fawkes,' and the 'Cato Street'—Political Clubs. 'The Brummel' and
the 'Regent'—Dandy Clubs. The 'Acropolis,' the 'Palladium,' the
'Areopagus,' the 'Pnyx' the 'Pentelicus,' the 'Ilissus' and the
'Poluphloisboio Thalasses'—Literary Clubs. I never could make out
how the latter set of Clubs got their names; I don't know Greek for one,
and I wonder how many other members of those institutions do? Ever since
the Club Snobs have been announced, I observe a sensation created on my
entrance into any one of these places. Members get up and hustle together;
they nod, they scowl, as they glance towards the present Snob. 'Infernal
impudent jackanapes! If he shows me up,' says Colonel Bludyer, 'I'll break
every bone in his skin.' 'I told you what would come of admitting literary
men into the Club,' says Ranville Ranville to his colleague, Spooney, of
the Tape and Sealing-Wax Office. 'These people are very well in their
proper places, and as a public man, I make a point of shaking hands with
them, and that sort of thing; but to have one's privacy obtruded upon by
such people is really too much. Come along, Spooney,' and the pair of
prigs retire superciliously.</p>
<p>As I came into the coffee-room at the 'No Surrender,' old Jawkins was
holding out to a knot of men, who were yawning, as usual. There he stood,
waving the STANDARD, and swaggering before the fire. 'What,' says he, 'did
I tell Peel last year? If you touch the Corn Laws, you touch the Sugar
Question; if you touch the Sugar, you touch the Tea. I am no monopolist. I
am a liberal man, but I cannot forget that I stand on the brink of a
precipice; and if were to have Free Trade, give me reciprocity. And what
was Sir Robert Peel's answer to me? "Mr. Jawkins," he said—'</p>
<p>Here Jawkins's eye suddenly turning on your humble servant, he stopped his
sentence, with a guilty look—his stale old stupid sentence, which
every one of us at the Club has heard over and over again.</p>
<p>Jawkins is a most pertinacious Club Snob. Every day he is at that
fireplace, holding that STANDARD, of which he reads up the
leading-article, and pours it out ORE ROTUNDO, with the most astonishing
composure, in the face of his neighbour, who has just read every word of
it in the paper. Jawkins has money, as you may see by the tie of his
neckcloth. He passes the morning swaggering about the City, in bankers'
and brokers parlours, and says:—'I spoke with Peel yesterday, and
his intentions are so and so. Graham and I were talking over the matter,
and I pledge you my word of honour, his opinion coincides with mine; and
that What-d'ye-call-um is the only measure Government will venture on
trying.' By evening-paper time he is at the Club: 'I can tell you the
opinion of the City, my lord,' says he, 'and the way in which Jones Loyd
looks at it is briefly this: Rothschilds told me so themselves. In Mark
Lane, people's minds are QUITE made up.' He is considered rather a
well-informed man.</p>
<p>He lives in Belgravia, of course; in a drab-coloured genteel house, and
has everything about him that is properly grave, dismal, and comfortable.
His dinners are in the MORNING HERALD, among the parties for the week; and
his wife and daughters make a very handsome appearance at the
Drawing-Room, once a year, when he comes down to the Club in his
Deputy-Lieutenant's uniform.</p>
<p>He is fond of beginning a speech to you by saying, 'When I was in the
House, I &c.'—in fact he sat for Skittlebury for three weeks in
the first Reformed Parliament, and was unseated for bribery; since which
he has three times unsuccessfully contested that honourable borough.</p>
<p>Another sort of Political Snob I have seen at most Clubs and that is the
man who does not care so much for home politics, but is great upon foreign
affairs. I think this sort of man is scarcely found anywhere BUT in Clubs.
It is for him the papers provide their foreign articles, at the expense of
some ten thousand a-year each. He is the man who is really seriously
uncomfortable about the designs of Russia, and the atrocious treachery of
Louis Philippe. He it is who expects a French fleet in the Thames, and has
a constant eye upon the American President, every word of whose speech
(goodness help him!) he reads. He knows the names of the contending
leaders in Portugal, and what they are fighting about: and it is he who
says that Lord Aberdeen ought to be impeached, and Lord Palmerston hanged,
or VICE VERSA.</p>
<p>Lord Palmerston's being sold to Russia, the exact number of roubles paid,
by what house in the City, is a favourite theme with this kind of Snob. I
once overheard him—it was Captain Spitfire, R.N., (who had been
refused a ship by the Whigs, by the way)—indulging in the following
conversation with Mr. Minns after dinner.</p>
<p>Why wasn't the Princess Scragamoffsky at Lady Palmerston's party, Minns?
Because SHE CAN'T SHOW—why can't she show? Shall I tell you, Minns,
why she can't show? The Princess Scragainoffsky's back is flayed alive,
Minns—I tell you it's raw, sir! On Tuesday last, at twelve o'clock,
three drummers of the Preobajinski Regiment arrived at Ashburnham House,
and at half-past twelve, in the yellow drawing-room at the Russian
Embassy, before the ambassadress and four ladies'-maids, the Greek Papa,
and the Secretary of Embassy, Madame de Scragamoffsky received thirteen
dozen. She was knouted, sir, knouted in the midst of England—in
Berkeley Square, for having said that the Grand Duchess Olga's hair was
red. And now, sir, will you tell me Lord Palmerston ought to continue
Minister?'</p>
<p>Minns: 'Good Ged!'</p>
<p>Minns follows Spitfire about, and thinks him the greatest and wisest of
human beings.</p>
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