<h2><SPAN name="chap41"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLI.<br/> Carries the Reader both to Richmond and Greenwich</h2>
<p>Poor Foker found the dinner at Richmond to be the most dreary entertainment
upon which ever mortal man wasted his guineas. “I wonder how the deuce I
could ever have liked these people,” he thought in his own mind.
“Why, I can see the crow’s-feet under Rougemont’s eyes, and
the paint on her cheeks is laid on as thick as Clown’s in a pantomime!
The way in which that Calverley talks slang, is quite disgusting. I hate chaff
in a woman. And old Colchicum! that old Col, coming down here in his brougham,
with his coronet on it, and sitting bodkin between Mademoiselle Coralie and her
mother! It’s too bad. An English peer, and a horse-rider of
Franconi’s!—It won’t do; by Jove, it won’t do. I
ain’t proud; but it will not do!”</p>
<p>“Twopence-halfpenny for your thoughts, Fokey!” cried out Miss
Rougemont, taking her cigar from her truly vermilion lips, as she beheld the
young fellow lost in thought, seated at the head of his table, amidst melting
ices, and cut pineapples, and bottles full and empty, and cigar-ashes scattered
on fruit, and the ruins of a dessert which had no pleasure for him.</p>
<p>“Does Foker ever think?” drawled out Mr. Poyntz. “Foker, here
is a considerable sum of money offered by a fair capitalist at this end of the
table for the present emanations of your valuable and acute intellect, old
boy!”</p>
<p>“What the deuce is that Poyntz a talking about?” Miss Calverley
asked of her neighbour. “I hate him. He’s a drawlin’,
sneerin’ beast.”</p>
<p>“What a droll of a little man is that little Fokare, my
lor’,” Mademoiselle Coralie said, in her own language, and with the
rich twang of that sunny Gascony in which her swarthy cheeks and bright black
eyes had got their fire. “What a droll of a man! He does not look to have
twenty years.”</p>
<p>“I wish I were of his age,” said the venerable Colchicum, with a
sigh, as he inclined his purple face towards a large goblet of claret.</p>
<p>“C’te Jeunesse. Peuh! je m’en fiche” said Madame Brack,
Coralie’s mamma, taking a great pinch out of Lord Colchicum’s
delicate gold snuff-box. “Je m’aime que les hommes faits, moi.
Comme milor. Coralie! n’est-ce pas que tu n’aimes que les hommes
faits, ma bichette?”</p>
<p>My lord said, with a grin, “You flatter me, Madame Brack.”</p>
<p>“Taisez-vous, Maman, vous n’etes qu’une bete,” Coralie
cried, with a shrug of her robust shoulders; upon which, my lord said that she
did not flatter at any rate; and pocketed his snuff-box, not desirous that
Madame Brack’s dubious fingers should plunge too frequently into his
Mackabaw.</p>
<p>There is no need to give a prolonged detail of the animated conversation which
ensued during the rest of the banquet; a conversation which would not much
edify the reader. And it is scarcely necessary to say, that all ladies of the
corps de dance are not like Miss Calverley, any more than that all peers
resemble that illustrious member of their order, the late lamented Viscount
Colchicum. But there have been such in our memories who have loved the society
of riotous youth better than the company of men of their own age and rank, and
have given the young ones the precious benefit of their experience and example;
and there have been very respectable men too who have not objected so much to
the kind of entertainment as to the publicity of it. I am sure, for instance,
that our friend Major Pendennis would have made no sort of objection to join a
party of pleasure, provided that it were en petit comite, and that such men as
my Lord Steyne and my Lord Colchicum were of the society. “Give the young
men their pleasures,” this worthy guardian said to Pen more than once.
“I’m not one of your strait-laced moralists, but an old man of the
world, begad; and I know that as long as it lasts young men will be young
men.” And there were some young men to whom this estimable philosopher
accorded about seventy years as the proper period for sowing their wild oats:
but they were men of fashion.</p>
<p>Mr. Foker drove his lovely guests home to Brompton in the drag that night; but
he was quite thoughtful and gloomy during the whole of the little journey from
Richmond; neither listening to the jokes of the friends behind him and on the
box by his side nor enlivening them as was his wont, by his own facetious
sallies. And when the ladies whom he had conveyed alighted at the door of their
house, and asked their accomplished coachman whether he would not step in and
take something to drink, he declined with so melancholy an air, that they
supposed that the Governor and he had had a difference or that some calamity
had befallen him; and he did not tell these people what the cause of his grief
was, but left Mesdames Rougemont and Calverley, unheeding the cries of the
latter, who hung over her balcony like Jezebel, and called out to him to ask
him to give another party soon.</p>
<p>He sent the drag home under the guidance of one of the grooms, and went on foot
himself; his hands in his pockets, plunged in thought. The stars and moon
shining tranquilly overhead, looked down upon Mr. Foker that night, as he in
his turn sentimentally regarded them. And he went and gazed upwards at the
house in Grosvenor Place, and at the windows which he supposed to be those of
the beloved object; and he moaned and he sighed in a way piteous and surprising
to witness, which Policeman X did, who informed Sir Francis Clavering’s
people, as they took the refreshment of beer on the coach-box at the
neighbouring public-house, after bringing home their lady from the French play,
that there had been another chap hanging about the premises that
evening—a little chap, dressed like a swell.</p>
<p>And now with that perspicuity and ingenuity and enterprise which only belongs
to a certain passion, Mr. Foker began to dodge Miss Amory through London, and
to appear wherever he could meet her. If Lady Clavering went to the French
play, where her ladyship had a box, Mr. Foker, whose knowledge of the language,
as we have heard, was not conspicuous, appeared in a stall. He found out where
her engagements were (it is possible that Anatole, his man, was acquainted with
Sir Francis Clavering’s gentleman, and so got a sight of her
ladyship’s engagement-book), and at many of these evening parties Mr.
Foker made his appearance—to the surprise of the world, and of his mother
especially, whom he ordered to apply for cards to these parties, for which
until now he had shown a supreme contempt. He told the pleased and unsuspicious
lady that he went to parties because it was right for him to see the world: he
told her that he went to the French play because he wanted to perfect himself
in the language, and there was no such good lesson as a comedy or
vaudeville,—and when one night the astonished Lady Agnes saw him stand up
and dance, and complimented him upon his elegance and activity, the mendacious
little rogue asserted that he had learned to dance in Paris, whereas Anatole
knew that his young master used to go off privily to an academy in Brewer
Street, and study there for some hours in the morning. The casino of our modern
days was not invented, or was in its infancy as yet; and gentlemen of Mr.
Foker’s time had not the facilities of acquiring the science of dancing
which are enjoyed by our present youth.</p>
<p>Old Pendennis seldom missed going to church. He considered it to be his duty as
a gentleman to patronise the institution of public worship and that it was
quite a correct thing to be seen at church of a Sunday. One day it chanced that
he and Arthur went thither together: the latter, who was now in high favour,
had been to breakfast with his uncle, from whose lodging they walked across the
park to a church not far from Belgrave Square. There was a charity sermon at
Saint James’s, as the Major knew by the bills posted on the pillars of
his parish church, which probably caused him, for he was a thrifty man, to
forsake it for that day: besides he had other views for himself and Pen.
“We will go to church, sir, across the Park; and then, begad, we will go
to the Claverings’ house and ask them for lunch in a friendly way. Lady
Clavering likes to be asked for lunch, and is uncommonly kind, and monstrous
hospitable.”</p>
<p>“I met them at dinner last week, at Lady Agnes Foker’s, sir,”
Pen said, “and the Begum was very kind indeed. So she was in the country:
so she is everywhere. But I share your opinion about Miss Amory; one of your
opinions, that is, uncle, for you were changing the last time we spoke about
her.”</p>
<p>“And what do you think of her now?” the elder said.</p>
<p>“I think her the most confounded little flirt in London,” Pen
answered, laughing “She made a tremendous assault upon Harry Foker, who
sat next to her; and to whom she gave all the talk, though I took her
down.”</p>
<p>“Bah! Henry Foker is engaged to his cousin all the world knows it: not a
bad coup of Lady Rosherville’s, that. I should say, that the young man at
his father’s death, and old Foker’s life’s devilish bad: you
know he had a fit at Arthur’s, last year: I should say, that young Foker
won’t have less than fourteen thousand a year from the brewery, besides
Logwood and Norfolk property. I’ve no pride about me, Pen. I like a man
of birth certainly, but dammy, I like a brewery which brings in a man fourteen
thousand a year; hey, Pen? Ha, ha, that’s the sort of man for me. And I
recommend you now that you are lanced in the world, to stick to fellows of that
sort, to fellows who have a stake in the country, begad.”</p>
<p>“Foker sticks to me, sir,” Arthur answered. “He has been at
our chambers several times lately. He has asked me to dinner. We are almost as
great friends, as we used to be in our youth: and his talk is about Blanche
Amory from morning till night. I’m sure he’s sweet upon her.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure he is engaged to his cousin, and that they will keep the
young man to his bargain,” said the Major. “The marriages in these
families are affairs of state. Lady Agnes was made to marry old Foker by the
late Lord, although she was notoriously partial to her cousin who was killed at
Albuera afterwards, and who saved her life out of the lake at Drummington. I
remember Lady Agnes, sir, an exceedingly fine woman. But what did she
do?—of course she married her father’s man. Why, Mr. Foker sate for
Drummington till the Reform Bill, and paid dev’lish well for his seat,
too. And you may depend upon this, sir, that Foker senior, who is a parvenu,
and loves a great man, as all parvenus do, has ambitious views for his son as
well as himself, and that your friend Harry must do as his father bids him.
Lord bless you! I’ve known a hundred cases of love in young men and
women: hey, Master Arthur, do you take me? They kick, sir, they resist, they
make a deuce of a riot and that sort of thing, but they end by listening to
reason, begad.”</p>
<p>“Blanche is a dangerous girl, sir,” Pen said. “I was smitten
with her myself once, and very far gone, too,” he added; “but that
is years ago.”</p>
<p>“Were you? How far did it go? Did she return it?” asked the Major,
looking hard at Pen.</p>
<p>Pen, with a laugh, said “that at one time he did think he was pretty well
in Miss Amory’s good graces. But my mother did not like her, and the
affair went off.” Pen did not think it fit to tell his uncle all the
particulars of that courtship which had passed between himself and the young
lady.</p>
<p>“A man might go farther and fare worse, Arthur,” the Major said,
still looking queerly at his nephew.</p>
<p>“Her birth, sir; her father was the mate of a ship, they say: and she has
not money enough,” objected Pen, in a dandified manner.
“What’s ten thousand pound and a girl bred up like her?”</p>
<p>“You use my own words, and it is all very well. But, I tell you in
confidence, Pen,—in strict honour, mind,—that it’s my belief
she has a devilish deal more than ten thousand pound: and from what I saw of
her the other day, and—and have heard of her—I should say she was a
devilish accomplished, clever girl: and would make a good wife with a sensible
husband.”</p>
<p>“How do you know about her money?” Pen asked, smiling. “You
seem to have information about everybody, and to know about all the
town.”</p>
<p>“I do know a few things, sir, and I don’t tell all I know. Mark
that,” the uncle replied. “And as for that charming Miss
Amory,—for charming, begad! she is,—if I saw her Mrs. Arthur
Pendennis, I should neither be sorry nor surprised, begad! and if you object to
ten thousand pound, what would you say, sir, to thirty, or forty, or
fifty?” and the Major looked still more knowingly, and still harder at
Pen.</p>
<p>“Well, sir,” he said to his godfather and namesake, “make her
Mrs. Arthur Pendennis. You can do it as well as I.”</p>
<p>“Psha! you are laughing at me, sir,” the other replied rather
peevishly, “and you ought not to laugh so near a church gate. Here we are
at St. Benedict’s. They say Mr. Oriel is a beautiful preacher.”</p>
<p>Indeed, the bells were tolling, the people were trooping into the handsome
church, the carriages of the inhabitants of the lordly quarter poured forth
their pretty loads of devotees, in whose company Pen and his uncle, ending
their edifying conversation, entered the fane. I do not know whether other
people carry their worldly affairs to the church door. Arthur, who, from
habitual reverence and feeling, was always more than respectful in a place of
worship, thought of the incongruity of their talk, perhaps; whilst the old
gentleman at his side was utterly unconscious of any such contrast. His hat was
brushed: his wig was trim: his neckcloth was perfectly tied. He looked at every
soul in the congregation, it is true: the bald heads and the bonnets, the
flowers and the feathers: but so demurely that he hardly lifted up his eyes
from his book—from his book which he could not read without glasses. As
for Pen’s gravity, it was sorely put to the test when, upon looking by
chance towards the seats where the servants were collected, he spied out, by
the side of a demure gentleman in plush, Henry Foker, Esquire, who had
discovered this place of devotion. Following the direction of Harry’s
eye, which strayed a good deal from his book, Pen found that it alighted upon a
yellow bonnet and a pink one: and that these bonnets were on the heads of Lady
Clavering and Blanche Amory. If Pen’s uncle is not the only man who has
talked about his worldly affairs up to the church door, is poor Harry Foker the
only one who has brought his worldly love into the aisle?</p>
<p>When the congregation issued forth at the conclusion of the service, Foker was
out amongst the first, but Pen came up with him presently, as he was hankering
about the entrance, which he was unwilling to leave, until my lady’s
barouche, with the bewigged coachman, had borne away its mistress and her
daughter from their devotions.</p>
<p>When the two ladies came out, they found together the Pendennises, uncle and
nephew, and Harry Foker, Esquire, sucking the crook of his stick, standing
there in the sunshine. To see and to ask to eat were simultaneous with the
good-natured Begum, and she invited the three gentlemen to luncheon
straightway.</p>
<p>Blanche was, too, particularly gracious. “O! do come,” she said to
Arthur, “if you are not too great a man. I want so to talk to you
about—but we mustn’t say what, here, you know. What would Mr. Oriel
say?” And the young devotee jumped into the carriage after her
mamma.—“I’ve read every word of it. It’s
adorable,” she added, still addressing herself to Pen.</p>
<p>“I know who is,” said Mr. Arthur, making rather a pert bow.</p>
<p>“What’s the row about?” asked Mr. Foker, rather puzzled.</p>
<p>“I suppose Miss Clavering means ‘Walter Lorraine,’”
said the Major, looking knowing, and nodding at Pen.</p>
<p>“I suppose so, sir. There was a famous review in the Pall Mall this
morning. It was Warrington’s doing though, and I must not be too
proud.”</p>
<p>“A review in Pall Mall?—Walter Lorraine? What the doose do you
mean?” Foker asked. “Walter Lorraine died of the measles, poor
little beggar, when we were at Grey Friars. I remember his mother coming
up.”</p>
<p>“You are not a literary man, Foker,” Pen said, laughing, and
hooking his arm into his friend’s. “You must know I have been
writing a novel, and some of the papers have spoken very well of it. Perhaps
you don’t read the Sunday Papers?”</p>
<p>“I read Bell’s Life regular, old boy,” Mr Foker answered: at
which Pen laughed again, and the three gentlemen proceeded in great good-humour
to Lady Clavering’s house.</p>
<p>The subject of the novel was resumed after luncheon by Miss Amory, who indeed
loved poets and men of letters if she loved anything, and was sincerely an
artist in feeling. “Some of the passages in the book made me cry,
positively they did,” she said.</p>
<p>Pen said, with some fatuity, “I am happy to think I have a part of vos
larmes, Miss Blanche,”—and the Major (who had not read more than
six pages of Pen’s book) put on his sanctified look, saying, “Yes,
there are some passages quite affecting, mons’ous affecting:”
and,—“Oh, if it makes you cry,”—Lady Amory declared she
would not read it, “that she wouldn’t.”</p>
<p>“Don’t, mamma,” Blanche said, with a French shrug of her
shoulders; and then she fell into a rhapsody about the book, about the snatches
of poetry interspersed in it about the two heroines, Leonora and Neaera; about
the two heroes, Walter Lorraine and his rival the young Duke—“and
what good company you introduce us to,” said the young lady archly
“quel ton! How much of your life have you passed at court, and are you a
prime minister’s son, Mr. Arthur?”</p>
<p>Pen began to laugh—“It is as cheap for a novelist to create a Duke
as to make a Baronet,” he said. “Shall I tell you a secret, Miss
Amory? I promoted all my characters at the request of the publisher. The young
Duke was only a young Baron when the novel was first written; his false friend,
the Viscount, was a simple commoner and so on with all the characters of the
story.”</p>
<p>“What a wicked, satirical, pert young man you have become! Comme vous
voila forme!” said the young lady. “How different from Arthur
Pendennis of the country! Ah! I think I like Arthur Pendennis of the country
best, though!” and she gave him the full benefit of her eyes,—both
of the fond appealing glance into his own, and of the modest look downwards
towards the carpet, which showed off her dark eyelids and long fringed lashes.</p>
<p>Pen of course protested that he had not changed in the least, to which the
young lady replied by a tender sigh; and thinking that she had done quite
enough to make Arthur happy or miserable (as the case might be), she proceeded
to cajole his companion, Mr. Harry Foker, who during the literary conversation
had sate silently imbibing the head of his cane, and wishing that he was a
clever chap like that Pen.</p>
<p>If the Major thought that by telling Miss Amory of Mr. Foker’s engagement
to his cousin, Lady Ann Milton (which information the old gentleman neatly
conveyed to the girl as he sate by her side at luncheon
below-stairs),—if, we say, the Major thought that the knowledge of this
fact would prevent Blanche from paying any further attention to the young heir
of Foker’s Entire, he was entirely mistaken. She became only the more
gracious to Foker: she praised him, and everything belonging to him; she
praised his mamma; she praised the pony which he rode in the Park; she praised
the lovely breloques or gimcracks which the young gentleman wore at his
watch-chain, and that dear little darling of a cane, and those dear little
delicious monkeys’ heads with ruby eyes, which ornamented Harry’s
shirt, and formed the buttons of his waistcoat. And then, having praised and
coaxed the weak youth until he blushed and tingled with pleasure, and until Pen
thought she really had gone quite far enough, she took another theme.</p>
<p>“I am afraid Mr. Foker is a very sad young man,” she said, turning
round to Pen.</p>
<p>“He does not look so,” Pen answered with a sneer.</p>
<p>“I mean we have heard sad stories about him. Haven’t we, mamma?
What was Mr. Poyntz saying here, the other day, about that party at Richmond? O
you naughty creature!” But here, seeing that Harry’s countenance
assumed a great expression of alarm, while Pen’s wore a look of
amusement, she turned to the latter and said, “I believe you are just as
bad: I believe you would have liked to have been there,—wouldn’t
you? I know you would: yes—and so should I.”</p>
<p>“Lor, Blanche!” mamma cried.</p>
<p>“Well, I would. I never saw an actress in my life. I would give anything
to know one; for I adore talent. And I adore Richmond, that I do; and I adore
Greenwich, and I say, I should like to go there.”</p>
<p>“Why should not we three bachelors,” the Major here broke out,
gallantly, and to his nephew’s special surprise, “beg these ladies
to honour us with their company at Greenwich? Is Lady Clavering to go on for
ever being hospitable to us, and may we make no return? Speak for yourselves,
young men,—eh, begad! Here is my nephew, with his pockets full of
money—his pockets full, begad! and Mr. Henry Foker, who, as I have heard
say, is pretty well to do in the world,—how is your lovely cousin, Lady
Ann, Mr. Foker?—here are these two young ones,—and they allow an
old fellow like me to speak. Lady Clavering, will you do me the favour to be my
guest? and Miss Blanche shall be Arthur’s, if she will be so good.”</p>
<p>“Oh, delightful!” cried Blanche.</p>
<p>“I like a bit of fun too,” said Lady Clavering; and we will take
some day when Sir Francis——”</p>
<p>“When Sir Francis dines out,—yes, mamma,” the daughter said,
“it will be charming.”</p>
<p>And a charming day it was. The dinner was ordered at Greenwich, and Foker,
though he did not invite Miss Amory, had some delicious opportunities of
conversation with her during the repast, and afterwards on the balcony of their
room at the hotel, and again during the drive home in her ladyship’s
barouche. Pen came down with his uncle, in Sir Hugh Trumpington’s
brougham, which the Major borrowed for the occasion. “I am an old
soldier, begad,” he said, “and I learned in early life to make
myself comfortable.”</p>
<p>And, being an old soldier, he allowed the two young men to pay for the dinner
between them, and all the way home in the brougham he rallied Pen, about Miss
Amory’s evident partiality for him: praised her good looks, spirits, and
wit: and again told Pen in the strictest confidence, that she would be a
devilish deal richer than people thought.</p>
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