<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> A Pedigree and other Family Matters</h2>
<p>Early in the Regency of George the Magnificent, there lived in a small town in
the west of England, called Clavering, a gentleman whose name was Pendennis.
There were those alive who remembered having seen his name painted on a board,
which was surmounted by a gilt pestle and mortar over the door of a very humble
little shop in the city of Bath, where Mr. Pendennis exercised the profession
of apothecary and surgeon; and where he not only attended gentlemen in their
sick-rooms, and ladies at the most interesting periods of their lives, but
would condescend to sell a brown-paper plaster to a farmer’s wife across
the counter,—or to vend tooth-brushes, hair-powder, and London perfumery.
For these facts a few folks at Clavering could vouch, where people’s
memories were more tenacious, perhaps, than they are in a great bustling
metropolis.</p>
<p>And yet that little apothecary who sold a stray customer a pennyworth of salts,
or a more fragrant cake of Windsor soap, was a gentleman of good education, and
of as old a family as any in the whole county of Somerset. He had a Cornish
pedigree which carried the Pendennises up to the time of the Druids, and who
knows how much farther back? They had intermarried with the Normans at a very
late period of their family existence, and they were related to all the great
families of Wales and Brittany. Pendennis had had a piece of University
education too, and might have pursued that career with great honour, but that
in his second year at Cambridge his father died insolvent, and poor Pen was
obliged to betake himself to the pestle and apron. He always detested the
trade, and it was only necessity, and the offer of his mother’s brother,
a London apothecary of low family, into which Pendennis’s father had
demeaned himself by marrying, that forced John Pendennis into so odious a
calling.</p>
<p>He quickly after his apprenticeship parted from the coarse-minded practitioner
his relative, and set up for himself at Bath with his modest medical ensign. He
had for some time a hard struggle with poverty; and it was all he could do to
keep the shop and its gilt ornaments in decent repair, and his bed-ridden
mother in comfort: but Lady Ribstone happening to be passing to the Rooms with
an intoxicated Irish chairman who bumped her ladyship up against Pen’s
very door-post, and drove his chair-pole through the handsomest pink bottle in
the surgeon’s window, alighted screaming from her vehicle, and was
accommodated with a chair in Mr. Pendennis’s shop, where she was brought
round with cinnamon and sal-volatile.</p>
<p>Mr. Pendennis’s manners were so uncommonly gentlemanlike and soothing,
that her ladyship, the wife of Sir Pepin Ribstone, of Codlingbury, in the
county of Somerset, Bart., appointed her preserver, as she called him,
apothecary to her person and family, which was very large. Master Ribstone
coming home for the Christmas holidays from Eton, over-ate himself and had a
fever, in which Mr. Pendennis treated him with the greatest skill and
tenderness. In a word, he got the good graces of the Codlingbury family, and
from that day began to prosper. The good company of Bath patronised him, and
amongst the ladies especially he was beloved and admired. First his humble
little shop became a smart one: then he discarded the selling of tooth-brushes
and perfumery, as unworthy of a gentleman of an ancient lineage: then he shut
up the shop altogether, and only had a little surgery attended by a genteel
young man: then he had a gig with a man to drive him; and, before her exit from
this world, his poor old mother had the happiness of seeing from her bedroom
window to which her chair was rolled, her beloved John step into a close
carriage of his own, a one-horse carriage it is true, but with the arms of the
family of Pendennis handsomely emblazoned on the panels. “What would
Arthur say now?” she asked, speaking of a younger son of
hers—“who never so much as once came to see my dearest Johnny
through all the time of his poverty and struggles!”</p>
<p>“Captain Pendennis is with his regiment in India, mother,” Mr.
Pendennis remarked, “and, if you please, I wish you would not call me
Johnny before the young man—before Mr. Parkins.”</p>
<p>Presently the day came when she ceased to call her son by the name of Johnny,
or by any other title of endearment or affection; and his house was very lonely
without that kind though querulous voice. He had his night-bell altered and
placed in the room in which the good old lady had grumbled for many a long
year, and he slept in the great large bed there. He was upwards of forty years
old when these events befell; before the war was over; before George the
Magnificent came to the throne; before this history indeed: but what is a
gentleman without his pedigree? Pendennis, by this time, had his handsomely
framed and glazed, and hanging up in his drawing-room between the pictures of
Codlingbury House in Somersetshire, and St. Boniface’s College,
Cambridge, where he had passed the brief and happy days of his early manhood.
As for the pedigree he had taken it out of a trunk, as Sterne’s officer
called for his sword, now that he was a gentleman and could show it.</p>
<p>About the time of Mrs. Pendennis’s demise, another of her son’s
patients likewise died at Bath; that virtuous woman, old Lady Pontypool,
daughter of Reginald twelfth Earl of Bareacres, and by consequence
great-grand-aunt to the present Earl, and widow of John second Lord Pontypool,
and likewise of the Reverend Jonas Wales, of the Armageddon Chapel, Clifton.
For the last five years of her life her ladyship had been attended by Miss
Helen Thistlewood, a very distant relative of the noble house of Bareacres,
before mentioned, and daughter of Lieutenant R. Thistlewood, R.N., killed at
the battle of Copenhagen. Under Lady Pontypool’s roof Miss Thistlewood
found a comfortable shelter, as far as boarding and lodging went, but suffered
under such an infernal tyranny as only women can inflict on, or bear from, one
another: the Doctor, who paid his visits to my Lady Pontypool at least twice a
day, could not but remark the angelical sweetness and kindness with which the
young lady bore her elderly relative’s insults; and it was, as they were
going in the fourth mourning coach to attend her ladyship’s venerated
remains to Bath Abbey, where they now repose, that he looked at her sweet pale
face and resolved upon putting a certain question to her, the very nature of
which made his pulse beat ninety, at least.</p>
<p>He was older than she by more than twenty years, and at no time the most ardent
of men. Perhaps he had had a love affair in early life which he had to
strangle—perhaps all early love affairs ought to be strangled or drowned,
like so many blind kittens: well, at three-and-forty he was a collected quiet
little gentleman in black stockings with a bald head, and a few days after the
ceremony he called to see her, and, as he felt her pulse, he kept hold of her
hand in his, and asked her where she was going to live now that the Pontypool
family had come down upon the property, which was being nailed into boxes, and
packed into hampers, and swaddled up with haybands, and buried in straw, and
locked under three keys in green baize plate-chests, and carted away under the
eyes of poor Miss Helen,—he asked her where she was going to live
finally.</p>
<p>Her eyes filled with tears, and she said she did not know. She had a little
money. The old lady had left her a thousand pounds, indeed; and she would go
into a boarding-house or into a school: in fine, she did not know where.</p>
<p>Then Pendennis, looking into her pale face, and keeping hold of her cold little
hand, asked her if she would come and live with him? He was old compared
to—to so blooming a young lady as Miss Thistlewood (Pendennis was of the
grave old complimentary school of gentlemen and apothecaries), but he was of
good birth, and, he flattered himself, of good principles and temper. His
prospects were good, and daily mending. He was alone in the world, and had need
of a kind and constant companion, whom it would be the study of his life to
make happy; in a word, he recited to her a little speech, which he had composed
that morning in bed, and rehearsed and perfected in his carriage, as he was
coming to wait upon the young lady.</p>
<p>Perhaps if he had had an early love-passage, she too had one day hoped for a
different lot than to be wedded to a little gentleman who rapped his teeth and
smiled artificially, who was laboriously polite to the butler as he slid
upstairs into the drawing-room, and profusely civil to the lady’s-maid,
who waited at the bed-room door; for whom her old patroness used to ring as for
a servant, and who came with even more eagerness; who got up stories, as he
sent in draughts, for his patient’s amusement and his own profit: perhaps
she would have chosen a different man—but she knew, on the other hand,
how worthy Pendennis was, how prudent, how honourable; how good he had been to
his mother, and constant in his care of her; and the upshot of this interview
was, that she, blushing very much, made Pendennis an extremely low curtsey, and
asked leave to—to consider his very kind proposal.</p>
<p>They were married in the dull Bath season, which was the height of the season
in London. And Pendennis having previously, through a professional friend,
M.R.C.S., secured lodgings in Holles Street, Cavendish Square, took his wife
thither in a chaise and pair; conducted her to the theatres, the Parks, and the
Chapel Royal; showed her the folks going to a drawing-room, and, in a word,
gave her all the pleasures of the town. He likewise left cards upon Lord
Pontypool, upon the Right Honourable the Earl of Bareacres, and upon Sir Pepin
and Lady Ribstone, his earliest and kindest patrons. Bareacres took no notice
of the cards. Pontypool called, admired Mrs. Pendennis, and said Lady Pontypool
would come and see her, which her ladyship did, per proxy of John her footman,
who brought her card, and an invitation to a concert five weeks off. Pendennis
was back in his little one-horse carriage, dispensing draughts and pills at
that time: but the Ribstones asked him and Mrs. Pendennis to an entertainment,
of which Mr. Pendennis bragged to the last day of his life.</p>
<p>The secret ambition of Mr. Pendennis had always been to be a gentleman. It
takes much time and careful saving for a provincial doctor, whose gains are not
very large, to lay by enough money wherewith to purchase a house and land: but
besides our friend’s own frugality and prudence, fortune aided him
considerably in his endeavour, and brought him to the point which he so panted
to attain. He laid out some money very advantageously in the purchase of a
house and small estate close upon the village of Clavering before mentioned.
Words cannot describe, nor did he himself ever care to confess to any one, his
pride when he found himself a real landed proprietor, and could walk over acres
of which he was the master. A lucky purchase which he had made of shares in a
copper-mine added very considerably to his wealth, and he realised with great
prudence while this mine was still at its full vogue. Finally, he sold his
business at Bath, to Mr. Parkins, for a handsome sum of ready money, and for an
annuity to be paid to him during a certain number of years after he had for
ever retired from the handling of the mortar and pestle.</p>
<p>Arthur Pendennis, his son, was eight years old at the time of this event, so
that it is no wonder that the latter, who left Bath and the surgery so young,
should forget the existence of such a place almost entirely, and that his
father’s hands had ever been dirtied by the compounding of odious pills,
or the preparation of filthy plasters. The old man never spoke about the shop
himself, never alluded to it; called in the medical practitioner of Clavering
to attend his family when occasion arrived; sunk the black breeches and
stockings altogether; attended market and sessions, and wore a bottle-green
coat and brass buttons with drab gaiters, just as if he had been an English
gentleman all his life. He used to stand at his lodge-gate, and see the coaches
come in, and bow gravely to the guards and coachmen as they touched their hats
and drove by. It was he who founded the Clavering Book Club: and set up the
Samaritan Soup and Blanket Society. It was he who brought the mail, which used
to run through Cacklefield before, away from that village and through
Clavering. At church he was equally active as a vestryman and a worshipper. At
market every Thursday, he went from pen to stall, looked at samples of oats,
and munched corn, felt beasts, punched geese in the breast, and weighed them
with a knowing air, and did business with the farmers at the Clavering Arms, as
well as the oldest frequenter of that house of call. It was now his shame, as
it formerly was his pride, to be called Doctor, and those who wished to please
him always gave him the title of Squire.</p>
<p>Heaven knows where they came from, but a whole range of Pendennis portraits
presently hung round the Doctor’s oak dining-room; Lelys and Vandykes he
vowed all the portraits to be, and when questioned as to the history of the
originals, would vaguely say they were ‘ancestors of his.’ You
could see by his wife’s looks that she disbelieved in these genealogical
legends, for she generally endeavoured to turn the conversation when he
commenced them. But his little boy believed them to their fullest extent, and
Roger Pendennis of Agincourt, Arthur Pendennis of Crecy, General Pendennis of
Blenheim and Oudenarde, were as real and actual beings for this young gentleman
as—whom shall we say?—as Robinson Crusoe, or Peter Wilkins, or the
Seven Champions of Christendom, whose histories were in his library.</p>
<p>Pendennis’s fortune, which, at the best, was not above eight hundred
pounds a year, did not, with the best economy and management, permit of his
living with the great folks of the county; but he had a decent comfortable
society of the second-best sort. If they were not the roses, they lived near
the roses, as it were, and had a good deal of the odour of genteel life. They
had out their plate, and dined each other round in the moonlight nights twice a
year, coming a dozen miles to these festivals; and besides the county, the
Pendennises had the society of the town of Clavering, as much as, nay, more
than they liked: for Mrs. Pybus was always poking about Helen’s
conservatories, and intercepting the operation of her soup-tickets and
coal-clubs. Captain Glanders (H. P., 50th Dragoon Guards) was for ever
swaggering about the Squire’s stables and gardens, and endeavouring to
enlist him in his quarrels with the Vicar, with the Postmaster, with the
Reverend F. Wapshot of Clavering Grammar School, for overflogging his son,
Anglesea Glanders,—with all the village in fine. And Pendennis and his
wife often blessed themselves, that their house of Fairoaks was nearly a mile
out of Clavering, or their premises would never have been free from the prying
eyes and prattle of one or other of the male and female inhabitants there.</p>
<p>Fairoaks lawn comes down to the little river Brawl, and on the other side were
the plantations and woods (as much as were left of them) of Clavering Park, Sir
Francis Clavering, Bart. The park was let out in pasture and fed down by sheep
and cattle, when the Pendennises came first to live at Fairoaks. Shutters were
up in the house; a splendid freestone palace, with great stairs, statues, and
porticos, whereof you may see a picture in the ‘Beauties of England and
Wales.’ Sir Richard Clavering, Sir Francis’s grandfather, had
commenced the ruin of the family by the building of this palace: his successor
had achieved the ruin by living in it. The present Sir Francis was abroad
somewhere; nor could anybody be found rich enough to rent that enormous
mansion, through the deserted rooms, mouldy clanking halls, and dismal
galleries of which, Arthur Pendennis many a time walked trembling when he was a
boy. At sunset, from the lawn of Fairoaks, there was a pretty sight: it and the
opposite park of Clavering were in the habit of putting on a rich golden tinge,
which became them both wonderfully. The upper windows of the great house flamed
so as to make your eyes wink; the little river ran off noisily westward, and
was lost in a sombre wood, behind which the towers of the old abbey church of
Clavering (whereby that town is called Clavering St. Mary’s to the
present day) rose up in purple splendour. Little Arthur’s figure and his
mother’s, cast long blue shadows over the grass; and he would repeat in a
low voice (for a scene of great natural beauty always moved the boy, who
inherited this sensibility from his mother) certain lines beginning,
“These are thy glorious works, Parent of Good; Almighty! thine this
universal frame,” greatly to Mrs. Pendennis’s delight. Such walks
and conversation generally ended in a profusion of filial and maternal
embraces; for to love and to pray were the main occupations of this dear
woman’s life; and I have often heard Pendennis say in his wild way, that
he felt that he was sure of going to heaven, for his mother never could be
happy there without him.</p>
<p>As for John Pendennis, as the father of the family, and that sort of thing,
everybody had the greatest respect for him: and his orders were obeyed like
those of the Medes and Persians. His hat was as well brushed, perhaps, as that
of any man in this empire. His meals were served at the same minute every day,
and woe to those who came late, as little Pen, a disorderly little rascal,
sometimes did. Prayers were recited, his letters were read, his business
dispatched, his stables and garden inspected, his hen-houses and kennel, his
barn and pigstye visited, always at regular hours. After dinner he always had a
nap with the Globe newspaper on his knee, and his yellow bandanna handkerchief
on his face (Major Pendennis sent the yellow handkerchiefs from India, and his
brother had helped in the purchase of his majority, so that they were good
friends now). And so, as his dinner took place at six o’clock to a
minute, and the sunset business alluded to may be supposed to have occurred at
about half-past seven, it is probable that he did not much care for the view in
front of his lawn windows or take any share in the poetry and caresses which
were taking place there.</p>
<p>They seldom occurred in his presence. However frisky they were before, mother
and child were hushed and quiet when Mr. Pendennis walked into the
drawing-room, his newspaper under his arm. And here, while little Pen, buried
in a great chair, read all the books of which he could lay hold, the Squire
perused his own articles in the ‘Gardener’s Gazette,’ or took
a solemn hand at picquet with Mrs. Pendennis, or an occasional friend from the
village.</p>
<p>Pendennis usually took care that at least one of his grand dinners should take
place when his brother, the Major, who, on the return of his regiment from
India and New South Wales, had sold out and gone upon half-pay, came to pay his
biennial visit to Fairoaks. “My brother, Major Pendennis,” was a
constant theme of the retired Doctor’s conversation. All the family
delighted in my brother the Major. He was the link which bound them to the
great world of London, and the fashion. He always brought down the last news of
the nobility, and was in the constant habit of dining with lords and great
folks. He spoke of such with soldierlike respect and decorum. He would say,
“My Lord Bareacres has been good enough to invite me to Bareacres for the
pheasant shooting,” or, “My Lord Steyne is so kind as to wish for
my presence at Stillbrook for the Easter holidays;” and you may be sure
the whereabouts of my brother the Major was carefully made known by worthy Mr.
Pendennis to his friends at the Clavering Reading room, at Justice-meetings, or
at the County-town. Their carriages would come from ten miles round to call
upon Major Pendennis in his visits to Fairoaks; the fame of his fashion as a
man about town was established throughout the county. There was a talk of his
marrying Miss Hunkle, of Lilybank, old Hunkle the Attorney’s daughter,
with at least fifteen hundred a-year to her fortune: but my brother the Major
refused this negotiation, advantageous as it might seem to most persons.
“As a bachelor,” he said, “nobody cares how poor I am. I have
the happiness to live with people who are so highly placed in the world, that a
few hundreds or thousands a year more or less can make no difference in the
estimation in which they are pleased to hold me. Miss Hunkle, though a most
respectable lady, is not in possession of either the birth or the manners,
which would entitle her to be received into the sphere in which I have the
honour to move. I shall live and die an old bachelor, John: and your worthy
friend, Miss Hunkle, I have no doubt, will find some more worthy object of her
affection, than a worn-out old soldier on half-pay.” Time showed the
correctness of the surmise of the old man of the world; Miss Hunkle married a
young French nobleman, and is now at this moment living at Lilybank, under the
title of Baroness de Carambole, having been separated from her wild young
scapegrace of a Baron very shortly after their union.</p>
<p>The Major was a great favourite with almost all the little establishment of
Fairoaks. He was as good-natured as he was well bred, and had a sincere liking
and regard for his sister-in-law, whom he pronounced, and with perfect truth,
to be as fine a lady as any in England, and an honour to the family. Indeed,
Mrs. Pendennis’s tranquil beauty, her natural sweetness and kindness, and
that simplicity and dignity which a perfect purity and innocence are sure to
bestow upon a handsome woman, rendered her quite worthy of her brother’s
praises. I think it is not national prejudice which makes me believe that a
high-bred English lady is the most complete of all Heaven’s subjects in
this world. In whom else do you see so much grace, and so much virtue; so much
faith, and so much tenderness; with such a perfect refinement and chastity? And
by high-bred ladies I don’t mean duchesses and countesses. Be they ever
so high in station, they can be but ladies, and no more. But almost every man
who lives in the world has the happiness, let us hope, of counting a few such
persons amongst his circle of acquaintance—women, in whose angelical
natures, there is something awful, as well as beautiful, to contemplate; at
whose feet the wildest and fiercest of us must fall down and humble
ourselves;—in admiration of that adorable purity which never seems to do
or to think wrong.</p>
<p>Arthur Pendennis had the good fortune to have a mother endowed with these happy
qualities. During his childhood and youth, the boy thought of her as little
less than an angel,—as a supernatural being, all wisdom, love, and
beauty. When her husband drove her into the county town, or to the assize balls
or concerts there, he would step into the assembly with his wife on his arm,
and look the great folks in the face, as much as to say, “Look at that,
my lord; can any of you show me a woman like that?” She enraged some
country ladies with three times her money, by a sort of desperate perfection
which they found in her. Miss Pybus said she was cold and haughty; Miss Pierce,
that she was too proud for her station; Mrs. Wapshot, as a doctor of
divinity’s lady, would have the pas of her, who was only the wife of a
medical practitioner. In the meanwhile, this lady moved through the world quite
regardless of all the comments that were made in her praise or disfavour. She
did not seem to know that she was admired or hated for being so perfect: but
carried on calmly through life, saying her prayers, loving her family, helping
her neighbours, and doing her duty.</p>
<p>That even a woman should be faultless, however, is an arrangement not permitted
by nature, which assigns to us mental defects, as it awards to us headaches,
illnesses, or death; without which the scheme of the world could not be carried
on,—nay, some of the best qualities of mankind could not be brought into
exercise. As pain produces or elicits fortitude and endurance; difficulty,
perseverance; poverty, industry and ingenuity; danger, courage and what not; so
the very virtues, on the other hand, will generate some vices: and, in fine,
Mrs. Pendennis had that vice which Miss Pybus and Miss Pierce discovered in
her, namely, that of pride; which did not vest itself so much in her own
person, as in that of her family. She spoke about Mr. Pendennis (a worthy
little gentleman enough, but there are others as good as he) with an awful
reverence, as if he had been the Pope of Rome on his throne, and she a cardinal
kneeling at his feet, and giving him incense. The Major she held to be a sort
of Bayard among Majors: and as for her son Arthur she worshipped that youth
with an ardour which the young scapegrace accepted almost as coolly as the
statue of the Saint in Saint Peter’s receives the rapturous osculations
which the faithful deliver on his toe.</p>
<p>This unfortunate superstition and idol-worship of this good woman was the cause
of a great deal of the misfortune which befell the young gentleman who is the
hero of this history, and deserves therefore to be mentioned at the outset of
his story.</p>
<p>Arthur Pendennis’s schoolfellows at the Greyfriars School state that, as
a boy, he was in no ways remarkable either as a dunce or as a scholar. He did,
in fact, just as much as was required of him, and no more. If he was
distinguished for anything it was for verse-writing: but was his enthusiasm
ever so great, it stopped when he had composed the number of lines demanded by
the regulations (unlike young Swettenham, for instance, who, with no more of
poetry in his composition than Mr. Wakley, yet would bring up a hundred dreary
hexameters to the master after a half-holiday; or young Fluxmore, who not only
did his own verses, but all the fifth form’s besides). He never read to
improve himself out of school-hours, but, on the contrary, devoured all the
novels, plays, and poetry, on which he could lay his hands. He never was
flogged, but it was a wonder how he escaped the whipping-post. When he had
money he spent it royally in tarts for himself and his friends; he has been
known to disburse nine and sixpence out of ten shillings awarded to him in a
single day. When he had no funds he went on tick. When he could get no credit
he went without, and was almost as happy. He has been known to take a thrashing
for a crony without saying a word; but a blow, ever so slight from a friend,
would make him roar. To fighting he was averse from his earliest youth, as
indeed to physic, the Greek Grammar, or any other exertion, and would engage in
none of them, except at the last extremity. He seldom if ever told lies, and
never bullied little boys. Those masters or seniors who were kind to him, he
loved with boyish ardour. And though the Doctor, when he did not know his
Horace, or could not construe his Greek play, said that that boy Pendennis was
a disgrace to the school, a candidate for ruin in this world, and perdition in
the next; a profligate who would most likely bring his venerable father to ruin
and his mother to a dishonoured grave, and the like—yet as the Doctor
made use of these compliments to most of the boys in the place (which has not
turned out an unusual number of felons and pickpockets), little Pen, at first
uneasy and terrified by these charges, became gradually accustomed to hear
them; and he has not, in fact, either murdered his parents, or committed any
act worthy of transportation or hanging up to the present day.</p>
<p>There were many of the upper boys, among the Cistercians with whom Pendennis
was educated, who assumed all the privileges of men long before they quitted
that seminary. Many of them, for example, smoked cigars—and some had
already begun the practice of inebriation. One had fought a duel with an Ensign
in a marching regiment, in consequence of a row at the theatre—another
actually kept a buggy and horse at a livery stable in Covent Garden, and might
be seen driving any Sunday in Hyde Park with a groom with squared arms and
armorial buttons by his side. Many of the seniors were in love, and showed each
other in confidence poems addressed to, or letters and locks of hair received
from, young ladies—but Pen, a modest and timid youth, rather envied these
than imitated them as yet. He had not got beyond the theory as yet—the
practice of life was all to come. And by the way, ye tender mothers and sober
fathers of Christian families, a prodigious thing that theory of life is as
orally learned at a great public school. Why, if you could hear those boys of
fourteen who blush before mothers and sneak off in silence in the presence of
their daughters, talking among each other—it would be the women’s
turn to blush then. Before he was twelve years old and if while his mother
fancied him an angel of candour, little Pen had heard talk enough to make him
quite awfully wise upon certain points—and so, Madam, has your pretty
little rosy-cheeked son, who is coming home from school for the ensuing
Christmas holidays. I don’t say that the boy is lost, or that the
innocence has left him which he had from ‘Heaven, which is our
home,’ but that the shades of the prison-house are closing very fast over
him, and that we are helping as much as possible to corrupt him.</p>
<p>Well—Pen had just made his public appearance in a coat with a tail, or
cauda virilis, and was looking most anxiously in his little study-glass to see
if his whiskers were growing, like those of more fortunate youths his
companions; and, instead of the treble voice with which he used to speak and
sing (for his singing voice was a very sweet one, and he used when little to be
made to perform ‘Home, sweet Home,’ ‘My pretty Page,’
and a French song or two which his mother had taught him, and other ballads for
the delectation of the senior boys), had suddenly plunged into a deep bass
diversified by a squeak, which when he was called upon to construe in school
set the master and scholars laughing—he was about sixteen years old, in a
word, when he was suddenly called away from his academic studies.</p>
<p>It was at the close of the forenoon school, and Pen had been unnoticed all the
previous part of the morning till now, when the Doctor put him on to construe
in a Greek play. He did not know a word of it, though little Timmins, his
form-fellow, was prompting him with all his might. Pen had made a sad blunder
or two when the awful Chief broke out upon him.</p>
<p>“Pendennis, sir,” he said, “your idleness is incorrigible and
your stupidity beyond example. You are a disgrace to your school, and to your
family, and I have no doubt will prove so in after-life to your country. If
that vice, sir, which is described to us as the root of all evil, be really
what moralists have represented (and I have no doubt of the correctness of
their opinion), for what a prodigious quantity of future crime and wickedness
are you, unhappy boy, laying the seed! Miserable trifler! A boy who construes
δε <i>and</i>, instead of δε <i>but</i>, at sixteen years
of age is guilty not merely of folly, and ignorance, and dulness inconceivable,
but of crime, of deadly crime, of filial ingratitude, which I tremble to
contemplate. A boy, sir, who does not learn his Greek play cheats the parent
who spends money for his education. A boy who cheats his parent is not very far
from robbing or forging upon his neighbour. A man who forges on his neighbour
pays the penalty of his crime at the gallows. And it is not such a one that I
pity (for he will be deservedly cut off), but his maddened and heart-broken
parents, who are driven to a premature grave by his crimes, or, if they live,
drag on a wretched and dishonoured old age. Go on, sir, and I warn you that the
very next mistake that you make shall subject you to the punishment of the rod.
Who’s that laughing? What ill-conditioned boy is there that dares to
laugh?” shouted the Doctor.</p>
<p>Indeed, while the master was making this oration, there was a general titter
behind him in the schoolroom. The orator had his back to the door of this
ancient apartment, which was open, and a gentleman who was quite familiar with
the place, for both Major Arthur and Mr. John Pendennis had been at the school,
was asking the fifth-form boy who sate by the door for Pendennis. The lad
grinning pointed to the culprit against whom the Doctor was pouring out the
thunders of his just wrath—Major Pendennis could not help laughing. He
remembered having stood under that very pillar where Pen the younger now stood,
and having been assaulted by the Doctor’s predecessor years and years
ago. The intelligence was ‘passed round’ that it was
Pendennis’s uncle in an instant, and a hundred young faces wondering and
giggling, between terror and laughter, turned now to the new-comer and then to
the awful Doctor.</p>
<p>The Major asked the fifth-form boy to carry his card up to the Doctor, which
the lad did with an arch look. Major Pendennis had written on the card,
“I must take A. P. home; his father is very ill.”</p>
<p>As the Doctor received the card, and stopped his harangue with rather a scared
look, the laughter of the boys, half constrained until then, burst out in a
general shout. “Silence!” roared out the Doctor stamping with his
foot. Pen looked up and saw who was his deliverer; the Major beckoned to him
gravely with one of his white gloves, and tumbling down his books, Pen went
across.</p>
<p>The Doctor took out his watch. It was two minutes to one. “We will take
the Juvenal at afternoon school,” he said, nodding to the Captain, and
all the boys understanding the signal gathered up their books and poured out of
the hall.</p>
<p>Young Pen saw by his uncle’s face that something had happened at home.
“Is there anything the matter with my mother?” he said. He could
hardly speak, though, for emotion, and the tears which were ready to start.</p>
<p>“No,” said the Major, “but your father’s very ill. Go
and pack your trunk directly; I have got a postchaise at the gate.”</p>
<p>Pen went off quickly to his boarding-house to do as his uncle bade him; and the
Doctor, now left alone in the schoolroom, came out to shake hands with his old
schoolfellow. You would not have thought it was the same man. As Cinderella at
a particular hour became, from a blazing and magnificent Princess, quite an
ordinary little maid in a grey petticoat, so, as the clock struck one, all the
thundering majesty and awful wrath of the schoolmaster disappeared.</p>
<p>“There is nothing serious, I hope,” said the Doctor. “It is a
pity to take the boy away unless there is. He is a very good boy, rather idle
and unenergetic, but he is a very honest gentlemanlike little fellow, though I
can’t get him to construe as I wish. Won’t you come in and have
some luncheon? My wife will be very happy to see you.”</p>
<p>But Major Pendennis declined the luncheon. He said his brother was very ill,
had had a fit the day before, and it was a great question if they should see
him alive.</p>
<p>“There’s no other son, is there?” said the Doctor. The Major
answered “No.”</p>
<p>“And there’s a good eh—a good eh—property I
believe?” asked the other in an off-hand way.</p>
<p>“H’m—so so,” said the Major. Whereupon this colloquy
came to an end. And Arthur Pendennis got into the postchaise with his uncle
never to come back to school any more.</p>
<p>As the chaise drove through Clavering, the hostler standing whistling under the
archway of the Clavering Arms, winked the postilion ominously, as much as to
say all was over. The gardener’s wife came and opened the lodge-gates,
and let the travellers through with a silent shake of the head. All the blinds
were down at Fairoaks—the face of the old footman was as blank when he
let them in. Arthur’s face was white too, with terror more than with
grief. Whatever of warmth and love the deceased man might have had, and he
adored his wife and loved and admired his son with all his heart, he had shut
them up within himself; nor had the boy been ever able to penetrate that frigid
outward barrier. But Arthur had been his father’s pride and glory through
life, and his name the last which John Pendennis had tried to articulate whilst
he lay with his wife’s hand clasping his own cold and clammy palm, as the
flickering spirit went out into the darkness of death, and life and the world
passed away from him.</p>
<p>The little girl, whose face had peered for a moment under the blinds as the
chaise came up, opened the door from the stairs into the hall, and taking
Arthur’s hand silently as he stooped down to kiss her, led him upstairs
to his mother. Old John opened the dining-room door for the Major. The room was
darkened with the blinds down, and surrounded by all the gloomy pictures of the
Pendennises. He drank a glass of wine. The bottle had been opened for the
Squire four days before. His hat was brushed, and laid on the hall table: his
newspapers, and his letter-bag, with John Pendennis, Esquire, Fairoaks,
engraved upon the brass plate, were there in waiting. The doctor and the lawyer
from Clavering, who had seen the chaise pass through, came up in a gig half an
hour after the Major’s arrival, and entered by the back door. The former
gave a detailed account of the seizure and demise of Mr. Pendennis, enlarged on
his virtues and the estimation in which the neighbourhood held him; on what a
loss he would be to the magistrates’ bench, the County Hospital, etc.
Mrs. Pendennis bore up wonderfully, he said, especially since Master
Arthur’s arrival. The lawyer stayed and dined with Major Pendennis, and
they talked business all the evening. The Major was his brother’s
executor, and joint guardian to the boy with Mrs. Pendennis. Everything was
left unreservedly to her, except in case of a second marriage,—an
occasion which might offer itself in the case of so young and handsome a woman,
Mr. Tatham gallantly said, when different provisions were enacted by the
deceased. The Major would of course take entire superintendence of everything
under this most impressive and melancholy occasion. Aware of this authority,
old John the footman, when he brought Major Pendennis the candle to go to bed,
followed afterwards with the plate-basket; and the next morning brought him the
key of the hall clock—the Squire always used to wind it up of a Thursday,
John said. Mrs. Pendennis’s maid brought him messages from her mistress.
She confirmed the doctor’s report, of the comfort which Master
Arthur’s arrival had caused to his mother.</p>
<p>What passed between that lady and the boy is not of import. A veil should be
thrown over those sacred emotions of love and grief. The maternal passion is a
sacred mystery to me. What one sees symbolised in the Roman churches in the
image of the Virgin Mother with a bosom bleeding with love, I think one may
witness (and admire the Almighty bounty for) every day. I saw a Jewish lady,
only yesterday, with a child at her knee, and from whose face towards the child
there shone a sweetness so angelical, that it seemed to form a sort of glory
round both. I protest I could have knelt before her too, and adored in her the
Divine beneficence in endowing us with the maternal storge, which began with
our race and sanctifies the history of mankind.</p>
<p>So it was with this, in a word, that Mrs. Pendennis comforted herself on the
death of her husband, whom, however, she always reverenced as the best, the
most upright, wise, high-minded, accomplished, and awful of men. If the women
did not make idols of us, and if they saw us as we see each other, would life
be bearable, or could society go on? Let a man pray that none of his womankind
should form a just estimation of him. If your wife knew you as you are,
neighbour, she would not grieve much about being your widow, and would let your
grave-lamp go out very soon, or perhaps not even take the trouble to light it.
Whereas Helen Pendennis put up the handsomest of memorials to her husband, and
constantly renewed it with the most precious oil.</p>
<p>As for Arthur Pendennis, after that awful shock which the sight of his dead
father must have produced on him, and the pity and feeling which such an event
no doubt occasioned, I am not sure that in the very moment of the grief, and as
he embraced his mother and tenderly consoled her, and promised to love her for
ever, there was not springing up in his breast a feeling of secret triumph and
exultation. He was the chief now and lord. He was Pendennis; and all round
about him were his servants and handmaids. “You’ll never send me
away,” little Laura said, tripping by him, and holding his hand.
“You won’t send me to school, will you, Arthur?”</p>
<p>Arthur kissed her and patted her head. No, she shouldn’t go to school. As
for going himself, that was quite out of the question. He had determined that
that part of his life should not be renewed. In the midst of the general grief,
and the corpse still lying above, he had leisure to conclude that he would have
it all holidays for the future, that he wouldn’t get up till he liked, or
stand the bullying of the Doctor any more, and had made a hundred of such
day-dreams and resolves for the future. How one’s thoughts will travel!
and how quickly our wishes beget them! When he with Laura in his hand went into
the kitchen on his way to the dog-kennel, the fowl-houses, and other his
favourite haunts, all the servants there assembled in great silence with their
friends, and the labouring men and their wives, and Sally Potter who went with
the post-bag to Clavering, and the baker’s man from Clavering—all
there assembled and drinking beer on the melancholy occasion—rose up on
his entrance and bowed or curtseyed to him. They never used to do so last
holidays, he felt at once and with indescribable pleasure. The cook cried out,
“O Lord,” and whispered, “How Master Arthur do grow!”
Thomas, the groom, in the act of drinking, put down the jug alarmed before his
master. Thomas’s master felt the honour keenly. He went through and
looked at the pointers. As Flora put her nose up to his waistcoat, and Ponto,
yelling with pleasure, hurtled at his chain, Pen patronised the dogs, and said,
“Poo Ponto, poo Flora,” in his most condescending manner. And then
he went and looked at Laura’s hens, and at the pigs, and at the orchard,
and at the dairy; perhaps he blushed to think that it was only last holidays he
had in a manner robbed the great apple-tree, and been scolded by the dairymaid
for taking cream.</p>
<p>They buried John Pendennis, Esquire, “formerly an eminent medical
practitioner at Bath, and subsequently an able magistrate, a benevolent
landlord, and a benefactor to many charities and public institutions in this
neighbourhood and county,” with one of the most handsome funerals that
had been seen since Sir Roger Clavering was buried here, the clerk said, in the
abbey church of Clavering St. Mary’s. A fair marble slab, from which the
above inscription is copied, was erected over the Fairoaks’ pew in the
church. On it you may see the Pendennis coat of arms, and crest, an eagle
looking towards the sun, with the motto ‘nec tenui penna,’ to the
present day. Doctor Portman alluded to the deceased most handsomely and
affectingly, as “our dear departed friend,” in his sermon next
Sunday; and Arthur Pendennis reigned in his stead.</p>
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