<h2><SPAN name="chap46"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLVI.<br/> Miss Amory’s Partners</h2>
<p>The noble Henry Foker, of whom we have lost sight for a few pages, has been in
the meanwhile occupied, as we might suppose a man of his constancy would be, in
the pursuit and indulgence of his all-absorbing passion of love.</p>
<p>I wish that a few of my youthful readers who are inclined to that amusement
would take the trouble to calculate the time which is spent in the pursuit,
when they would find it to be one of the most costly occupations in which a man
can possibly indulge. What don’t you sacrifice to it, indeed, young
gentlemen and young ladies of ill-regulated minds? Many hours of your precious
sleep in the first place, in which you lie tossing and thinking about the
adored object, whence you come down late to breakfast, when noon is advancing
and all the family is long since away to its daily occupations. Then when you
at length get to these occupations you pay no attention to them, and engage in
them with no ardour—all your thoughts and powers of mind being fixed
elsewhere. Then the day’s work being slurred over, you neglect your
friends and relatives, your natural companions and usual associates in life,
that you may go and have a glance at the dear personage, or a look up at her
windows, or a peep at her carriage in the Park. Then at night the artless
blandishments of home bore you; mamma’s conversation palls upon you; the
dishes which that good soul prepares for the dinner of her favourite are sent
away untasted,—the whole meal of life, indeed, except one particular
plat, has no relish. Life, business, family ties, home, all things useful and
dear once, become intolerable, and you are never easy except when you are in
pursuit of your flame.</p>
<p>Such I believe to be not unfrequently the state of mind amongst ill-regulated
young gentlemen, and such indeed was Mr. H. Foker’s condition, who,
having been bred up to indulge in every propensity towards which he was
inclined, abandoned himself to this one with his usual selfish enthusiasm. Nor
because he had given his friend Arthur Pendennis a great deal of good advice on
a former occasion, need men of the world wonder that Mr. Foker became
passion’s slave in his turn. Who among us has not given a plenty of the
very best advice to his friends? Who has not preached, and who has practised?
To be sure, you, madam, are perhaps a perfect being, and never had a wrong
thought in the whole course of your frigid and irreproachable existence: or
sir, you are a great deal too strong-minded to allow any foolish passion to
interfere with your equanimity in chambers or your attendance on ’Change;
you are so strong that you don’t want any sympathy. We don’t give
you any, then; we keep ours for the humble and weak, that struggle and stumble
and get up again, and so march with the rest of mortals. What need have you of
a hand who never fall? Your serene virtue is never shaded by passion, or
ruffled by temptation, or darkened by remorse; compassion would be impertinence
for such an angel: but then with such a one companionship becomes intolerable;
you are, from the elevation of your very virtue and high attributes, of
necessity lonely; we can’t reach up and talk familiarly with such
potentatess good-bye, then; our way lies with humble folks, and not with serene
highnesses like you; and we give notice that there are no perfect characters in
this history, except, perhaps, one little one, and that one is not perfect
either, for she never knows to this day that she is perfect, and with a
deplorable misapprehension and perverseness of humility, believes herself to be
as great a sinner as need be.</p>
<p>This young person does not happen to be in London at the present period of our
story, and it is by no means for the like of her that Mr. Henry Foker’s
mind is agitated. But what matters a few failings? Need we be angels, male or
female, in order to be worshipped as such? Let us admire the diversity of the
tastes of mankind; and the oldest, the ugliest, the stupidest and most pompous,
the silliest and most vapid, the greatest criminal, tyrant booby, Bluebeard,
Catherine Hayes, George Barnwell, amongst us, we need never despair. I have
read of the passion of a transported pickpocket for a female convict (each of
them advanced in age, being repulsive in person, ignorant, quarrelsome, and
given to drink), that was as magnificent as the loves of Cleopatra and Antony,
or Lancelot and Guinever. The passion which Count Borulawski, the Polish dwarf,
inspired in the bosom of the most beautiful Baroness at the Court of Dresden,
is a matter with which we are all of us acquainted: the flame which burned in
the heart of young Cornet Tozer but the other day, and caused him to run off
and espouse Mrs. Battersby, who was old enough to be his mamma,—all these
instances are told in the page of history or the newspaper column. Are we to be
ashamed or pleased to think that our hearts are formed so that the biggest and
highest-placed Ajax among us may some day find himself prostrate before the
pattens of his kitchen-maid; as that there is no poverty or shame or crime,
which will not be supported, hugged even with delight, and cherished more
closely than virtue would be, by the perverse fidelity and admirable constant
folly of a woman?</p>
<p>So then Henry Foker, Esquire, longed after his love, and cursed the fate which
separated him from her. When Lord Gravesend’s family retired to the
country (his lordship leaving his proxy with the venerable Lord Bagwig), Harry
still remained lingering on in London, certainly not much to the sorrow of Lady
Ann, to whom he was affianced, and who did not in the least miss him. Wherever
Miss Clavering went, this infatuated young fellow continued to follow her; and
being aware that his engagement to his cousin was known in the world, he was
forced to make a mystery of his passion, and confine it to his own breast, so
that it was so pent in there and pressed down, that it is a wonder he did not
explode some day with the stormy secret, and perish collapsed after the
outburst.</p>
<p>There had been a grand entertainment at Gaunt House on one beautiful evening in
June, and the next day’s journals contained almost two columns of the
names of the most closely printed nobility and gentry who had been honoured
with invitations to the ball. Among the guests were Sir Francis and Lady
Clavering and Miss Amory, for whom the indefatigable Major Pendennis had
procured an invitation, and our two young friends Arthur and Harry. Each
exerted himself, and danced a great deal with Miss Blanche. As for the worthy
Major, he assumed the charge of Lady Clavering, and took care to introduce her
to that department of the mansion where her ladyship specially distinguished
herself, namely, the refreshment-room, where, amongst pictures of Titian and
Giorgione, and regal portraits of Vandyke and Reynolds, and enormous salvers of
gold and silver, and pyramids of large flowers, and constellations of wax
candles—in a manner perfectly regardless of expense, in a word—a
supper was going on all night. Of how many creams, jellies, salads, peaches,
white soups, grapes, pates, galantines, cups of tea, champagne, and so forth,
Lady Clavering partook, it does not become us to say. How much the Major
suffered as he followed the honest woman about, calling to the solemn male
attendants and lovely servant-maids, and administering to Lady
Clavering’s various wants with admirable patience, nobody knows;—he
never confessed. He never allowed his agony to appear on his countenance in the
least; but with a constant kindness brought plate after plate to the Begum.</p>
<p>Mr. Wagg counted up all the dishes of which Lady Clavering partook as long as
he could count (but as he partook very freely himself of champagne during the
evening, his powers of calculation were not to be trusted at the close of the
entertainment), and he recommended Mr. Honeyman, Lady Steyne’s medical
man, to look carefully after the Begum, and to call and get news of her
ladyship the next day.</p>
<p>Sir Francis Clavering made his appearance, and skulked for a while about the
magnificent rooms; but the company and the splendour which he met there were
not to the Baronet’s taste, and after tossing off a tumbler of wine or
two at the buffet, he quitted Gaunt House for the neighbourhood of Jermyn
Street, where his friends Loder, Punter, little Moss Abramns, and Captain
Skewball were assembled at the familiar green table. In the rattle of the box,
and of their agreeable conversation, Sir Francis’s spirits rose to their
accustomed point of feeble hilarity.</p>
<p>Mr. Pynsent, who had asked Miss Amory to dance, came up on one occasion to
claim her hand, but scowls of recognition having already passed between him and
Mr. Arthur Pendennis in the dancing-room, Arthur suddenly rose up and claimed
Miss Amory as his partner for the present dance, on which Mr. Pynsent, biting
his lips and scowling yet more savagely, withdrew with a profound bow, saying
that he gave up his claim. There are some men who are always falling in
one’s way in life. Pynsent and Pen had this view of each other; and each
regarded other accordingly.</p>
<p>“What a confounded conceited provincial fool that is!” thought the
one. “Because he has written a twopenny novel, his absurd head is turned,
and a kicking would take his conceit out of him.”</p>
<p>“What an impertinent idiot that man is!” remarked the other to his
partner. “His soul is in Downing Street; his neckcloth is foolscap; his
hair is sand; his legs are rulers; his vitals are tape and sealing-wax; he was
a prig in his cradle; and never laughed since he was born, except three times
at the same joke of his chief. I have the same liking for that man, Miss Amory,
I have for that cold boiled veal.” Upon which Blanche of course remarked,
that Mr. Pendennis was wicked, mechant, perfectly abominable, and wondered what
he would say when her back was turned.</p>
<p>“Say!—Say that you have the most beautiful figure, and the slimmest
waist in the world, Blanche—Miss Amory, I mean. I beg your pardon.
Another turn; this music would make an alderman dance.”</p>
<p>“And you have left off tumbling when you waltz now?” Blanche asked,
archly looking up at her partner’s face.</p>
<p>“One falls and one gets up again in life, Blanche; you know I used to
call you so in old times, and it is the prettiest name in the world. Besides, I
have practised since then.”</p>
<p>“And with a great number of partners, I’m afraid,” Blanche
said, with a little sham sigh, and a shrug of the shoulders. And so in truth
Mr. Pen had practised a good deal in this life; and had undoubtedly arrived at
being able to dance better.</p>
<p>If Pendennis was impertinent in his talk, Foker, on the other hand, so bland
and communicative on most occasions, was entirely mum and melancholy when he
danced with Miss Amory. To clasp her slender waist was a rapture, to whirl
round the room with her was a delirium; but to speak to her, what could he say
that was worthy of her? What pearl of conversation could he bring that was fit
for the acceptance of such a Queen of love and wit as Blanche? It was she who
made the talk when she was in the company of this love-stricken partner. It was
she who asked him how that dear little pony was, and looked at him and thanked
him with such a tender kindness and regret, and refused the dear little pony
with such a delicate sigh when he offered it. “I have nobody to ride with
in London,” she said. “Mamma is timid, and her figure is not pretty
on horseback. Sir Francis never goes out with me. He loves me like—like a
stepdaughter. Oh, how delightful it must be to have a father—a father,
Mr. Foker!”</p>
<p>“Oh, uncommon,” said Mr. Harry, who enjoyed that blessing very
calmly, upon which, and forgetting the sentimental air which she had just
before assumed, Blanche’s grey eyes gazed at Foker with such an arch
twinkle that both of them burst out laughing, and Harry enraptured and at his
ease began to entertain her with a variety of innocent prattle—good kind
simple Foker talk, flavoured with many expressions by no means to be discovered
in dictionaries, and relating to the personal history of himself or horses, or
other things dear and important to him, or to persons in the ballroom then
passing before them, and about whose appearance or character Mr. Harry spoke
with artless freedom, and a considerable dash of humour.</p>
<p>And it was Blanche who, when the conversation flagged, and the youth’s
modesty came rushing back and overpowering him, knew how to reanimate her
companion: asked him questions about Logwood, and whether it was a pretty
place? Whether he was a hunting man, and whether he liked women to hunt? (in
which case she was prepared to say that she adored hunting)—but Mr. Foker
expressing his opinion against sporting females, and pointing out Lady
Bullfinch, who happened to pass by, as a horse-godmother, whom he had seen at
cover with a cigar in her face, Blanche too expressed her detestation of the
sports of the field, and said it would make her shudder to think of a dear
sweet little fox being killed, on which Foker laughed and waltzed with renewed
vigour and grace.</p>
<p>And at the end of the waltz,—the last waltz they had on that
night,—Blanche asked him about Drummington, and whether it was a fine
house. His cousins, she had heard, were very accomplished: Lord Erith she had
met, and which of his cousins was his favourite? Was it not Lady Ann? Yes, she
was sure it was she; sure by his looks and his blushes. She was tired of
dancing; it was getting very late; she must go to mamma;—and, without
another word, she sprang away from Harry Foker’s arm, and seized upon
Pen’s, who was swaggering about the dancing-room, and again said,
“Mamma, mamma!—take me to mamma, dear, Mr. Pendennis!”
transfixing Harry with a Parthian shot, as she fled from him.</p>
<p>My Lord Steyne, with garter and ribbon, with a bald head and shining eyes, and
a collar of red whiskers round his face, always looked grand upon an occasion
of state; and made a great effect upon Lady Clavering, when he introduced
himself to her at the request of the obsequious Major Pendennis. With his own
white and royal hand, he handed to her ladyship a glass of wine, said he had
heard of her charming daughter, and begged to be presented to her; and, at this
very juncture, Mr. Arthur Pendennis came up with the young lady on his arm.</p>
<p>The peer made a profound bow, and Blanche the deepest curtesy that ever was
seen. His lordship gave Mr. Arthur Pendennis his hand to shake; said he had
read his book, which was very wicked and clever; asked Miss Blanche if she had
read it,—at which Pen blushed and winced. Why, Blanche was one of the
heroines of the novel. Blanche, in black ringlets and a little altered, was the
Neaera of ‘Walter Lorraine.’</p>
<p>Blanche had read it: the language of the eyes expressed her admiration and
rapture at the performance. This little play being achieved, the Marquis of
Steyne made other two profound bows to Lady Clavering and her daughter, and
passed on to some other of his guests at the splendid entertainment.</p>
<p>Mamma and daughter were loud in their expressions of admiration of the noble
Marquis so soon as his broad back was turned upon them. “He said they
make a very nice couple,” whispered major Pendennis to Lady Clavering.
Did he now, really? Mamma thought they would; Mamma was so flustered with the
honour which had just been shown to her, and with other intoxicating events of
the evening, that her good-humour knew no bounds. She laughed, she winked, and
nodded knowingly at Pen; she tapped him on the arm with her fan; she tapped
Blanche; she tapped the Major;—her contentment was boundless, and her
method of showing her joy equally expansive.</p>
<p>As the party went down the great staircase of Gaunt House, the morning had
risen stark and clear over the black trees of the square; the skies were tinged
with pink; and the cheeks of some of the people at the ball,—ah, how
ghastly they looked! That admirable and devoted Major above all,—who had
been for hours by Lady Clavering’s side, ministering to her and feeding
her body with everything that was nice, and her ear with everything that was
sweet and flattering,—oh! what an object he was! The rings round his eyes
were of the colour of bistre; those orbs themselves were like the
plovers’ eggs whereof Lady Clavering and Blanche had each tasted; the
wrinkles in his old face were furrowed in deep gashes; and a silver stubble,
like an elderly morning dew was glittering on his chin, and alongside the dyed
whiskers now limp and out of curl.</p>
<p>There he stood, with admirable patience, enduring, uncomplainingly, a silent
agony; knowing that people could see the state of his face (for could he not
himself perceive the condition of others, males and females, of his own
age?)—longing to go to rest for hours past; aware that suppers disagreed
with him, and yet having eaten a little so as to keep his friend, Lady
Clavering, in good-humour; with twinges of rheumatism in the back and knees;
with weary feet burning in his varnished boots,—so tired, oh, so tired
and longing for bed! If a man, struggling with hardship and bravely overcoming
it, is an object of admiration for the gods, that Power in whose chapels the
old Major was a faithful worshipper must have looked upwards approvingly upon
the constancy of Pendennis’s martyrdom. There are sufferers in that cause
as in the other: the negroes in the service of Mumbo Jumbo tattoo and drill
themselves with burning skewers with great fortitude; and we read that the
priests in the service of Baal gashed themselves and bled freely. You who can
smash the idols, do so with a good courage; but do not be too fierce with the
idolaters,—they worship the best thing they know.</p>
<p>The Pendennises, the elder and the younger, waited with Lady Clavering and her
daughter until her ladyship’s carriage was announced, when the
elder’s martyrdom may be said to have come to an end, for the
good-natured Begum insisted upon leaving him at his door in Bury Street; so he
took the back seat of the carriage after a feeble bow or two, and speech of
thanks, polite to the last, and resolute in doing his duty. The Begum waved her
dumpy little hand by way of farewell to Arthur and Foker, and Blanche smiled
languidly out upon the young men, thinking whether she looked very wan and
green under her rose-coloured hood, and whether it was the mirrors at Gaunt
House, or the fatigue and fever of her own eyes, which made her fancy herself
so pale.</p>
<p>Arthur, perhaps, saw quite well how yellow Blanche looked, but did not
attribute that peculiarity of her complexion to the effect of the
looking-glasses, or to any error in his sight or her own. Our young man of the
world could use his eyes very keenly, and could see Blanche’s face pretty
much as nature had made it. But for poor Foker it had a radiance which dazzled
and blinded him: he could see no more faults in it than in the sun, which was
now flaring over the house-tops.</p>
<p>Amongst other wicked London habits which Pen had acquired, the moralist will
remark that he had got to keep very bad hours; and often was going to bed at
the time when sober country-people were thinking of leaving it. Men get used to
one hour as to another. Editors of newspapers, Covent Garden market-people,
night cabmen and coffee-sellers, chimney-sweeps, and gentlemen and ladies of
fashion who frequent balls, are often quite lively at three or four
o’clock of a morning, when ordinary mortals are snoring. We have shown in
the last chapter how Pen was in a brisk condition of mind at this period,
inclined to smoke his cigar at ease, and to speak freely.</p>
<p>Foker and Pen walked away from Gaunt House, then, indulging in both the above
amusements: or rather Pen talked, and Foker looked as if he wanted to say
something. Pen was sarcastic and dandified when he had been in the company of
great folks; he could not help imitating some of their airs and tones, and
having a most lively imagination, mistook himself for a person of importance
very easily. He rattled away, and attacked this person and that; sneered at
Lady John Turnbull’s bad French, which her ladyship will introduce into
all conversations in spite of the sneers of everybody; at Mrs. Slack
Roper’s extraordinary costume and sham jewels; at the old dandies and the
young ones;—at whom didn’t he sneer and laugh?</p>
<p>“You fire at everybody, Pen—you’re grown awful, that you
are,” Foker said. “Now you’ve pulled about Blondel’s
yellow wig, and Colchicum’s black one, why don’t you have a shy at
a brown one, hay? you know whose I mean. It got into Lady Clavering’s
carriage.”</p>
<p>“Under my uncle’s hat? My uncle is a martyr, Foker, my boy. My
uncle has been doing excruciating duties all night. He likes to go to bed
rather early. He has a dreadful headache if he sits up and touches supper. He
always has the gout if he walks or stands much at a ball. He has been sitting
up, and standing up, and supping. He has gone home to the gout and the
headache, and for my sake. Shall I make fun of the old boy? no, not for
Venice!”</p>
<p>“How do you mean that he has been doing it for your sake?” Foker
asked, looking rather alarmed.</p>
<p>“Boy! canst thou keep a secret if I impart it to thee?” Pen cried
out, in high spirits. “Art thou of good counsel? Wilt thou swear? Wilt
thou be mum, or wilt thou preach? Wilt thou be silent and hear, or wilt thou
speak and die?” And as he spoke, flinging himself into an absurd
theatrical attitude, the men in the cabstand in Piccadilly wondered and grinned
at the antics of the two young swells.</p>
<p>“What the doose are you driving at?” Foker asked, looking very much
agitated.</p>
<p>Pen, however, did not remark this agitation much, but continued in the same
bantering and excited vein. “Henry, friend of my youth,” he said,
“and witness of my early follies, though dull at thy books, yet thou art
not altogether deprived of sense,—nay, blush not, Henrico, thou hast a
good portion of that, and of courage and kindness too, at the service of thy
friends. Were I in a strait of poverty, I would come to my Foker’s purse.
Were I in grief, I would discharge my grief upon his sympathising
bosom——”</p>
<p>“Gammon, Pen—go on,” Foker said.</p>
<p>“I would, Henrico, upon thy studs, and upon thy cambric worked by the
hands of beauty, to adorn the breast of valour! Know then, friend of my
boyhood’s days, that Arthur Pendennis of the Upper Temple,
student-at-law, feels that he is growing lonely and old Care is furrowing his
temples, and Baldness is busy with his crown. Shall we stop and have a drop of
coffee at this stall, it looks very hot and nice? Look how that cabman is
blowing at his saucer. No, you won’t? Aristocrat! I resume my tale. I am
getting on in life. I have got devilish little money. I want some. I am
thinking of getting some, and settling in life. I’m thinking of settling.
I’m thinking of marrying, old boy. I’m thinking of becoming a moral
man; a steady port and sherry character: with a good reputation in my quartier,
and a moderate establishment of two maids and a man—with an occasional
brougham to drive out Mrs. Pendennis, and a house near the Parks for the
accommodation of the children. Ha! what sayest thou? Answer thy friend, thou
worthy child of beer. Speak, I adjure thee by all thy vats.</p>
<p>“But you ain’t got any money, Pen,” said the other, still
looking alarmed.</p>
<p>“I ain’t? No, but she ave. I tell thee there is gold in store for
me—not what you call money, nursed in the lap of luxury, and cradled on
grains, and drinking in wealth from a thousand mash-tubs. What do you know
about money? What is poverty to you, is splendour to the hardy son of the
humble apothecary. You can’t live without an establishment, and your
houses in town and country. A snug little house somewhere off Belgravia, a
brougham for my wife, a decent cook, and a fair bottle of wine for my friends
at home sometimes; these simple necessaries suffice for me, my Foker.”
And here Pendennis began to look more serious. Without bantering further, Pen
continued, “I’ve rather serious thoughts of settling and marrying.
No man can get on in the world without some money at his back. You must have a
certain stake to begin with, before you can go in and play the great game. Who
knows that I’m not going to try, old fellow? Worse men than I have won at
it. And as I have not got enough capital from my fathers, I must get some by my
wife—that’s all.”</p>
<p>They were walking down Grosvenor Street, as they talked, or rather as Pen
talked, in the selfish fulness of his heart; and Mr. Pen must have been too
much occupied with his own affairs to remark the concern and agitation of his
neighbour, for he continued: “We are no longer children, you know, you
and I, Harry. Bah! the time of our romance has passed away. We don’t
marry for passion, but for prudence and for establishment. What do you take
your cousin for? Because she is a nice girl, and an Earl’s daughter, and
the old folks wish it, and that sort of thing.”</p>
<p>“And you, Pendennis,” asked Foker, “you ain’t very fond
of the girl—you’re going to marry?”</p>
<p>Pen shrugged his shoulders. “Comme ca,” said he; “I like her
well enough. She’s pretty enough; she’s clever enough. I think
she’ll do very well. And she has got money enough—that’s the
great point. Psha! you know who she is, don’t you? I thought you were
sweet on her yourself one night when we dined with her mamma. It’s little
Amory.”</p>
<p>“I—I thought so,” Foker said; “and has she accepted
you!”</p>
<p>“Not quite,” Arthur replied, with a confident smile, which seemed
to say, I have but to ask, and she comes to me that instant.</p>
<p>“Oh, not quite,” said Foker; and he broke out with such a dreadful
laugh, that Pen, for the first time, turned his thoughts from himself towards
his companion, and was struck by the other’s ghastly pale face.</p>
<p>“My dear fellow, Fo! what’s the matter? You’re ill,”
Pen said, in a tone of real concern.</p>
<p>“You think it was the champagne at Gaunt House, don’t you? It
ain’t that. Come in; let me talk to you for a minute. I’ll tell you
what it is. D——it, let me tell somebody,” Foker said.</p>
<p>They were at Mr. Foker’s door by this time, and, opening it, Harry walked
with his friend into his apartments, which were situated in the back part of
the house, and behind the family dining-room where the elder Foker received his
guests, surrounded by pictures of himself, his wife, his infant son on a
donkey, and the late Earl of Gravesend in his robes as a Peer. Foker and Pen
passed by this chamber, now closed with death-like shutters, and entered into
the young man’s own quarters. Dusky streams of sunbeams were playing into
that room, and lighting up poor Harry’s gallery of dancing-girls and
opera nymphs with flickering illuminations.</p>
<p>“Look here! I can’t help telling you, Pen,” he said.
“Ever since the night we dined there, I’m so fond of that girl,
that I think I shall die if I don’t get her. I feel as if I should go mad
sometimes. I can’t stand it, Pen. I couldn’t bear to hear you
talking about her, just now, about marrying her only because she’s money.
Ah, Pen! that ain’t the question in marrying. I’d bet anything it
ain’t. Talking about money and such a girl as that,
it’s—it’s—what-d’ye-call-’em—you know
what I mean—I ain’t good at talking—sacrilege, then. If
she’d have me, I’d take and sweep a crossing, that I would!”</p>
<p>“Poor Fo! I don’t think that would tempt her,” Pen said,
eyeing his friend with a great deal of real good-nature and pity. “She is
not a girl for love and a cottage.”</p>
<p>“She ought to be a duchess, I know that very well, and I know she
wouldn’t take me unless I could make her a great place in the
world—for I ain’t good for anything myself much—I ain’t
clever and that sort of thing,” Foker said sadly. “If I had all the
diamonds that all the duchesses and marchionesses had on to-night,
wouldn’t I put ’em in her lap? But what’s the use of talking?
I’m booked for another race. It’s that kills me, Pen. I can’t
get out of it; though I die, I can’t get out of it. And though my
cousin’s a nice girl, and I like her very well, and that, yet I
hadn’t seen this one when our Governors settled that matter between us.
And when you talked, just now, about her doing very well, and about her having
money enough for both of you, I thought to myself it isn’t money or mere
liking a girl, that ought to be enough to make a fellow marry. He may marry,
and find he likes somebody else better. All the money in the world won’t
make you happy then. Look at me; I’ve plenty of money, or shall have out
of the mash-tubs, as you call ’em. My Governor thought he’d made it
all right for me in settling my marriage with my cousin. I tell you it
won’t do; and when Lady Ann has got her husband, it won’t be happy
for either of us, and she’ll have the most miserable beggar in
town.”</p>
<p>“Poor old fellow!” Pen said, with rather a cheap magnanimity,
“I wish I could help you. I had no idea of this, and that you were so
wild about the girl. Do you think she would have you without your money? No. Do
you think your father would agree to break off your engagement with your
cousin? You know him very well, and that he would cast you off rather than do
so.”</p>
<p>The unhappy Foker only groaned a reply, flinging himself prostrate on a sofa,
face forwards, his head in his hands.</p>
<p>“As for my affair,” Pen went on, “my dear fellow, if I had
thought matters were so critical with you, at least I would not have pained you
by choosing you as my confidant. And my business is not serious, at least not
as yet. I have not spoken a word about it to Miss Amory. Very likely she would
not have me if I asked her. Only I have had a great deal of talk about it with
my uncle, who says that the match might be an eligible one for me. I’m
ambitious and I’m poor. And it appears Lady Clavering will give her a
good deal of money, and Sir Francis might be got to never mind the rest.
Nothing is settled, Harry. They are going out of town directly. I promise you I
won’t ask her before she goes. There’s no hurry: there’s time
for everybody. But, suppose you got her, Foker. Remember what you said about
marriages just now, and the misery of a man who doesn’t care for his
wife; and what sort of a wife would you have who didn’t care for her
husband?”</p>
<p>“But she would care for me,” said Foker, from his
sofa—“that is, I think she would. Last night only, as we were
dancing, she said——”</p>
<p>“What did she say?” Pen cried, starting up in great wrath. But he
saw his own meaning more clearly than Foker, and broke off with a
laugh—“Well, never mind what she said, Harry. Miss Amory is a
clever girl, and says numbers of civil things—to you—to me,
perhaps—and who the deuce knows to whom besides? Nothing’s settled,
old boy. At least, my heart won’t break if I don’t get her. Win her
if you can, and I wish you joy of her. Good-bye! Don’t think about what I
said to you. I was excited, and confoundedly thirsty in those hot rooms, and
didn’t, I suppose, put enough Seltzer-water into the champagne. Good
night! I’ll keep your counsel too. ‘Mum’ is the word between
us; and ‘let there be a fair fight, and let the best man win,’ as
Peter Crawley says.”</p>
<p>So saying, Mr. Arthur Pendennis, giving a very queer and rather dangerous look
at his companion, shook him by the hand, with something of that sort of
cordiality which befitted his just repeated simile of the boxing-match, and
which Mr. Bendigo displays when he shakes hands with Mr. Gaunt before they
fight each other for the champion’s belt and two hundred pounds a side.
Foker returned his friend’s salute with an imploring look, and a piteous
squeeze of the hand, sank back on his cushions again, and Pen, putting on his
hat, strode forth into the air, and almost over the body of the matutinal
housemaid, who was rubbing the steps at the door.</p>
<p>“And so he wants her too, does be?” thought Pen as he marched
along—and noted within himself with a fatal keenness of perception and
almost an infernal mischief, that the very pains and tortures which that honest
heart of Foker’s was suffering gave a zest and an impetus to his own
pursuit of Blanche: if pursuit might be called which had been no pursuit as
yet, but mere sport and idle dallying. “She said something to him, did
she? perhaps she gave him the fellow flower to this;” and he took out of
his coat and twiddled in his thumb and finger a poor little shrivelled crumpled
bud that had faded and blackened with the heat and flare of the
night—“I wonder to how many more she has given her artless tokens
of affection—the little flirt”—and he flung his into the
gutter, where the water may have refreshed it, and where any amateur of
rosebuds may have picked it up. And then bethinking him that the day was quite
bright, and that the passers-by by might be staring at his beard and white
neckcloth, our modest young gentleman took a cab and drove to the Temple.</p>
<p>Ah! is this the boy that prayed at his mother’s knee but a few years
since, and for whom very likely at this hour of morning she is praying? Is this
jaded and selfish worldling the lad who, a short while back, was ready to fling
away his worldly all, his hope, his ambition, his chance of life, for his love?
This is the man you are proud of, old Pendennis. You boast of having formed
him: and of having reasoned him out of his absurd romance and folly—and
groaning in your bed over your pains and rheumatisms, satisfy yourself still by
thinking, that, at last, that lad will do something to better himself in life,
and that the Pendennises will take a good place in the world. And is he the
only one, who in his progress through this dark life goes wilfully or fatally
astray, whilst the natural truth and love which should illumine him grow dim in
the poisoned air, and suffice to light him no more?</p>
<p>When Pen was gone away, poor Harry Foker got up from the sofa, and taking out
from his waistcoat—the splendidly buttoned, but the gorgeously
embroidered, the work of his mamma—a little white rosebud, he drew from
his dressing-case, also the maternal present, a pair of scissors, with which he
nipped carefully the stalk of the flower, and placing it in a glass of water
opposite his bed, he sought refuge there from care and bitter remembrances.</p>
<p>It is to be presumed that Miss Blanche Amory had more than one rose in her
bouquet, and why should not the kind young creature give out of her
superfluity, and make as many partners as possible happy?</p>
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