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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIX—CLUB SNOBS </h2>
<p>Why does not some great author write 'The Mysteries of the Club-houses; or
St. James's Street unveiled?' It would be a fine subject for an
imaginative writer. We must all, as boys, remember when we went to the
fair, and had spent all our money—the sort of awe and anxiety with
which we loitered round the outside of the show, speculating upon the
nature of the entertainment going on within.</p>
<p>Man is a Drama—of Wonder and Passion, and Mystery and Meanness, and
Beauty and Truthfulness, and Etcetera. Each Bosom is a Booth in Vanity
Fair. But let us stop this capital style, I should die if I kept it up for
a column (a pretty thing a column all capitals would be, by the way). In a
Club, though there mayn't be a soul of your acquaintance in the room, you
have always the chance of watching strangers, and speculating on what is
going on within those tents and curtains of their souls, their coats and
waistcoats. This is a never-failing sport. Indeed I am told there are some
Clubs in the town where nobody ever speaks to anybody. They sit in the
coffee-room, quite silent, and watching each other.</p>
<p>Yet how little you can tell from a man's outward demeanour! There's a man
at our Club—large, heavy, middle-aged—gorgeously dressed—rather
bald—with lacquered boots—and a boa when he goes out; quiet in
demeanour, always ordering and consuming a RECHERCHE little dinner: whom I
have mistaken for Sir John Pocklington any time these five years, and
respected as a man with five hundred pounds PER DIEM; and I find he is but
a clerk in an office in the City, with not two hundred pounds income, and
his name is Jubber. Sir John Pocklington was, on the contrary, the dirty
little snuffy man who cried out so about the bad quality of the beer, and
grumbled at being overcharged three-halfpence for a herring, seated at the
next table to Jubber on the day when some one pointed the Baronet out to
me.</p>
<p>Take a different sort of mystery. I see, for instance, old Fawney stealing
round the rooms of the Club, with glassy, meaningless eyes, and an endless
greasy simper—he fawns on everybody he meets, and shakes hands with
you, and blesses you, and betrays the most tender and astonishing interest
in your welfare. You know him to be a quack and a rogue, and he knows you
know it. But he wriggles on his way, and leaves a track of slimy flattery
after him wherever he goes. Who can penetrate that man's mystery? What
earthly good can he get from you or me? You don't know what is working
under that leering tranquil mask. You have only the dim instinctive
repulsion that warns you, you are in the presence of a knave—beyond
which fact all Fawney's soul is a secret to you.</p>
<p>I think I like to speculate on the young men best. Their play is opener.
You know the cards in their hand, as it were. Take, for example, Messrs.
Spavin and Cockspur.</p>
<p>A specimen or two of the above sort of young fellows may be found, I
believe, at most Clubs. They know nobody. They bring a fine smell of
cigars into the room with them, and they growl together, in a corner,
about sporting matters. They recollect the history of that short period in
which they have been ornaments of the world by the names of winning
horses. As political men talk about 'the Reform year,' 'the year the Whigs
went out,' and so forth, these young sporting bucks speak of TARNATION'S
year, or OPODELDOC'S year, or the year when CATAWAMPUS ran second for the
Chester Cup. They play at billiards in the morning, they absorb pale ale
for breakfast, and 'top up' with glasses of strong waters. They read
BELL'S LIFE (and a very pleasant paper too, with a great deal of erudition
in the answers to correspondents). They go down to Tattersall's, and
swagger in the Park, with their hands plunged in the pockets of their
paletots.</p>
<p>What strikes me especially in the outward demeanour of sporting youth is
their amazing gravity, their conciseness of speech, and careworn and moody
air. In the smoking-room at the 'Regent,' when Joe Millerson will be
setting the whole room in a roar with laughter, you hear young Messrs.
Spavin and Cockspur grumbling together in a corner. 'I'll take your
five-and-twenty to one about Brother to Bluenose,' whispers Spavin. 'Can't
do it at the price,' Cockspur says, wagging his head ominously. The
betting-book is always present in the minds of those unfortunate
youngsters. I think I hate that work even more than the 'Peerage.' There
is some good in the latter—though, generally speaking, a vain
record: though De Mogyns is not descended from the giant Hogyn Mogyn;
though half the other genealogies are equally false and foolish; yet the
mottoes are good reading—some of them; and the book itself a sort of
gold-laced and livened lackey to History, and in so far serviceable. But
what good ever came out of, or went into, a betting-book? If I could be
Caliph Omar for a week, I would pitch every one of those despicable
manuscripts into the flames; from my Lord's, who is 'in' with Jack
Snaffle's stable, and is over-reaching worse-informed rogues and swindling
greenhorns, down to Sam's, the butcher-boy's, who books eighteenpenny odds
in the tap-room, and 'stands to win five-and-twenty bob.'</p>
<p>In a turf transaction, either Spavin or Cockspur would try to get the
better of his father, and, to gain a point in the odds, victimise his best
friends. One day we shall hear of one or other levanting; an event at
which, not being sporting men, we shall not break our hearts. See—Mr.
Spavin is settling his toilette previous to departure; giving a curl in
the glass to his side-wisps of hair. Look at him! It is only at the hulks,
or among turf-men, that you ever see a face so mean, so knowing, and so
gloomy.</p>
<p>A much more humane being among the youthful Clubbists is the Lady-killing
Snob. I saw Wiggle just now in the dressing-room, talking to Waggle, his
inseparable.</p>
<p>WAGGLE.—'Pon my honour, Wiggle, she did.'</p>
<p>WIGGLE.—'Well, Waggle, as you say—I own I think she DID look
at me rather kindly. We'll see to-night at the French play.'</p>
<p>And having arrayed their little persons, these two harmless young bucks go
upstairs to dinner.</p>
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