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<h2> CHAPTER XL—CLUB SNOBS </h2>
<p>Both sorts of young men, mentioned in my last under the flippant names of
Wiggle and Waggle, may be found in tolerable plenty, I think, in Clubs.
Wiggle and Waggle are both idle. They come of the middle classes. One of
them very likely makes believe to be a barrister, and the other has smart
apartments about Piccadilly. They are a sort of second-chop dandies; they
cannot imitate that superb listlessness of demeanour, and that admirable
vacuous folly which distinguish the noble and high-born chiefs of the
race; but they lead lives almost as bad (were it but for the example), and
are personally quite as useless. I am not going to arm a thunderbolt, and
launch it at the beads of these little Pall Mall butterflies. They don't
commit much public harm, or private extravagance. They don't spend a
thousand pounds for diamond earrings for an Opera-dancer, as Lord Tarquin
can: neither of them ever set up a public-house or broke the bank of a
gambling-club, like the young Earl of Martingale. They have good points,
kind feelings, and deal honourably in money-transactions—only in
their characters of men of second-rate pleasure about town, they and their
like are so utterly mean, self-contented, and absurd, that they must not
be omitted in a work treating on Snobs.</p>
<p>Wiggle has been abroad, where he gives you to understand that his success
among the German countesses and Italian princesses, whom he met at the
TABLES-D'HOTE, was perfectly terrific. His rooms are hung round with
pictures of actresses and ballet-dancers. He passes his mornings in a fine
dressing-gown, burning pastilles, and reading 'Don Juan' and French novels
(by the way, the life of the author of 'Don Juan,' as described by
himself, was the model of the life of a Snob). He has twopenny-halfpenny
French prints of women with languishing eyes, dressed in dominoes,—guitars,
gondolas, and so forth,—and tells you stories about them.</p>
<p>'It's a bad print,' says he, 'I know, but I've a reason for liking it. It
reminds me of somebody—somebody I knew in other climes. You have
heard of the Principessa di Monte Pulciano? I met her at Rimini. Dear,
dear Francesca! That fair-haired, bright-eyed thing in the Bird of
Paradise and the Turkish Simar with the love-bird on her finger, I'm sure
must have been taken from—from somebody perhaps whom you don't know—but
she's known at Munich, Waggle my boy,—everybody knows the Countess
Ottilia de Eulenschreckenstein. Gad, sir, what a beautiful creature she
was when I danced with her on the birthday of Prince Attila of Bavaria, in
'44. Prince Carloman was our vis-a-vis, and Prince Pepin danced the same
CONTREDANSE. She had a Polyanthus in her bouquet. Waggle, I HAVE IT NOW.'
His countenance assumes an agonized and mysterious expression, and he
buries his head in the sofa cushions, as if plunging into a whirlpool of
passionate recollections.</p>
<p>Last year he made a considerable sensation by having on his table a
morocco miniature-case locked by a gold key, which he always wore round
his neck, and on which was stamped a serpent—emblem of eternity—with
the letter M in the circle. Sometimes he laid this upon his little morocco
writing-table, as if it were on an altar—generally he had flowers
upon it; in the middle of a conversation he would start up and kiss it. He
would call out from his bed-room to his valet, 'Hicks, bring me my
casket!'</p>
<p>'I don't know who it is,' Waggle would say. 'Who DOES know that fellow's
intrigues! Desborough Wiggle, sir, is the slave of passion. I suppose you
have heard the story of the Italian princess locked up in the Convent of
Saint Barbara, at Rimini? He hasn't told you? Then I'm not at liberty to
speak. Or the countess, about whom he nearly had the duel with Prince
Witikind of Bavaria? Perhaps you haven't even heard about that beautiful
girl at Pentonville, daughter of a most respectable Dissenting clergyman.
She broke her heart when she found he was engaged (to a most lovely
creature of high family, who afterwards proved false to him), and she's
now in Hanwell.'</p>
<p>Waggle's belief in his friend amounts to frantic adoration. 'What a genius
he is, if he would but apply himself!' he whispers to me. 'He could be
anything, sir, but for his passions. His poems are the most beautiful
things you ever saw. He's written a continuation of "Don Juan," from his
own adventures. Did you ever read his lines to Mary? They're superior to
Byron, sir—superior to Byron.'</p>
<p>I was glad to hear this from so accomplished a critic as Waggle; for the
fact is, I had composed the verses myself for honest Wiggle one day, whom
I found at his chambers plunged in thought over a very dirty old-fashioned
album, in which he had not as yet written a single word.</p>
<p>'I can't,' says he. 'Sometimes I can write whole cantos, and to-day not a
line. Oh, Snob! such an opportunity! Such a divine creature! She's asked
me to write verses for her album, and I can't.'</p>
<p>'Is she rich?' said I. 'I thought you would never marry any but an
heiress.'</p>
<p>'Oh, Snob! she's the most accomplished, highly-connected creature!—and
I can't get out a line.'</p>
<p>'How will you have it?' says I. 'Hot, with sugar?'</p>
<p>'Don't, don't! You trample on the most sacred feelings, Snob. I want
something wild and tender,—like Byron. I want to tell her that
amongst the festive balls, and that sort of thing, you know—I only
think about her, you know—that I scorn the world, and am weary of
it, you know, and—something about a gazelle, and a bulbul, you
know.'</p>
<p>'And a yataghan to finish off with,' the present writer observed, and we
began:—</p>
<p>'TO MARY</p>
<p>'I seem, in the midst of the crowd, The lightest of all; My laughter rings
cheery and loud, In banquet and ball. My lip hath its smiles and its
sneers, For all men to see; But my soul, and my truth, and my tears, Are
for thee, are for thee!'</p>
<p>'Do you call THAT neat, Wiggle?' says I. 'I declare it almost makes me cry
myself.'</p>
<p>'Now suppose,' says Wiggle, 'we say that all the world is at my feet—make
her jealous, you know, and that sort of thing—and that—that
I'm going to TRAVEL, you know? That perhaps may work upon her feelings.'</p>
<p>So WE (as this wretched prig said) began again:—</p>
<p>'Around me they flatter and fawn—The young and the old, The fairest
are ready to pawn Their hearts for my gold. They sue me—I laugh as I
spurn The slaves at my knee, But in faith and in fondness I turn Unto
thee, unto thee!'</p>
<p>'Now for the travelling, Wiggle my boy!' And I began, in a voice choked
with emotion—</p>
<p>'Away! for my heart knows no rest Since you taught it to feel; The secret
must die in my breast I burn to reveal; The passion I may not. . . .'</p>
<p>'I say, Snob!' Wiggle here interrupted the excited bard (just as I was
about to break out into four lines so pathetic that they would drive you
into hysterics). 'I say—ahem—couldn't you say that I was—a—military
man, and that there was some danger of my life?'</p>
<p>'You a military man?—danger of your life? What the deuce do you
mean?'</p>
<p>'Why,' said Wiggle, blushing a great deal, 'I told her I was going out—on—the—Ecuador—expedition.'</p>
<p>'You abominable young impostor,' I exclaimed. 'Finish the poem for
yourself!' And so he did, and entirely out of all metre, and bragged about
the work at the Club as his own performance.</p>
<p>Poor Waggle fully believed in his friend's genius, until one day last week
he came with a grin on his countenance to the Club, and said, 'Oh, Snob,
I've made SUCH a discovery! Going down to the skating to-day, whom should
I see but Wiggle walking with that splendid woman—that lady of
illustrious family and immense fortune, Mary, you know, whom he wrote the
beautiful verses about. She's five-and-forty. She's red hair. She's a nose
like a pump-handle. Her father made his fortune by keeping a ham-and-beef
shop, and Wiggle's going to marry her next week.'</p>
<p>'So much the better, Waggle, my young friend,' I exclaimed. 'Better for
the sake of womankind that this dangerous dog should leave off
lady-killing—this Blue-Beard give up practice. Or, better rather for
his own sake. For as there is not a word of truth in any of those
prodigious love-stories which you used to swallow, nobody has been hurt
except Wiggle himself, whose affections will now centre in the
ham-and-beef shop. There ARE people, Mr. Waggle, who do these things in
earnest, and hold a good rank in the world too. But these are not subjects
for ridicule, and though certainly Snobs, are scoundrels likewise. Their
cases go up to a higher Court.'</p>
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