<h2><SPAN name="chap61"></SPAN>CHAPTER LXI.<br/> Conversations</h2>
<p>Our good-natured Begum was at first so much enraged at this last instance of
her husband’s duplicity and folly, that she refused to give Sir Francis
Clavering any aid in order to meet his debts of honour, and declared that she
would separate from him, and leave him to the consequences of his incorrigible
weakness and waste. After that fatal day’s transactions at the Derby, the
unlucky gambler was in such a condition of mind that he was disposed to avoid
everybody; alike his turf-associates with whom he had made the debts which he
trembled lest he should not have the means of paying, and his wife, his
long-suffering banker, on whom he reasonably doubted whether he should be
allowed any longer to draw. When Lady Clavering asked the next morning whether
Sir Francis was in the house, she received answer that he had not returned that
night, but had sent a messenger to his valet, ordering him to forward clothes
and letters by the bearer. Strong knew that he should have a visit or a message
from him in the course of that or the subsequent day, and accordingly got a
note beseeching him to call upon his distracted friend F. C. at Short Hotel,
Blackfriars, and ask for Mr. Francis there. For the Baronet was a gentleman of
that peculiarity of mind that he would rather tell a lie than not, and always
began a contest with fortune by running away and hiding himself. The Boots of
Mr. Short’s establishment, who carried Clavering’s message to
Grosvenor Place, and brought back his carpet-bag, was instantly aware who was
the owner of the bag, and he imparted his information to the footman who was
laying the breakfast-table, who carried down the news to the
servants’-hall, who took it to Mrs. Bonner, my lady’s housekeeper
and confidential maid, who carried it to my lady. And thus every single person
in the Grosvenor Place establishment knew that Sir Francis was in hiding, under
the name of Francis, at an inn in the Blackfriars Road. And Sir Francis’s
coachman told the news to other gentlemen’s coachmen, who carried it to
their masters, and to the neighbouring Tattersall’s, where very gloomy
anticipations were formed that Sir Francis Clavering was about to make a tour
in the Levant.</p>
<p>In the course of that day the number of letters addressed to Sir Francis
Clavering, Bart., which found their way to his hall-table, was quite
remarkable. The French cook sent in his account to my lady; the tradesmen who
supplied her ladyship’s table, and Messrs. Finer and Gimcrack, the
mercers and ornamental dealers, and Madame Crinoline, the eminent milliner,
also forwarded their little bills to her ladyship, in company with Miss
Amory’s private, and by no means inconsiderable, account at each
establishment.</p>
<p>In the afternoon of the day after the Derby, when Strong (after a colloquy with
his principal at Short’s Hotel, whom he found crying and drinking
Curacoa) called to transact business according to his custom at Grosvenor
Place, he found all these suspicious documents ranged in the Baronet’s
study; and began to open them and examine them with a rueful countenance.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bonner, my lady’s maid and housekeeper, came down upon him whilst
engaged in this occupation. Mrs. Bonner, a part of the family and as necessary
to her mistress as the Chevalier was to Sir Francis, was of course on Lady
Clavering’s side in the dispute between her and her husband, and as by
duty bound even more angry than her ladyship herself.</p>
<p>“She won’t pay, if she takes my advice,” Mrs. Bonner said.
“You’ll please to go back to Sir Francis, Captain—and he
lurking about in a low public-house and don’t dare to face his wife like
a man!—and say that we won’t pay his debts no longer. We made a man
of him, we took him out of gaol (and other folks too perhaps), we’ve paid
his debts over and over again—we set him up in Parliament and gave him a
house in town and country, and where he don’t dare show his face, the
shabby sneak! We’ve given him the horse he rides and the dinner he eats
and the very clothes he has on his back; and we will give him no more. Our
fortune, such as is left of it, is left to ourselves, and we won’t waste
any more of it on this ungrateful man. We’ll give him enough to live upon
and leave him, that’s what we’ll do: and that’s what you may
tell him from Susan Bonner.”</p>
<p>Susan Bonner’s mistress hearing of Strong’s arrival sent for him at
this juncture, and the Chevalier went up to her ladyship not without hopes that
he should find her more tractable than her factotum Mrs. Bonner. Many a time
before had he pleaded his client’s cause with Lady Clavering and caused
her good-nature to relent. He tried again once more. He painted in dismal
colours the situation in which he had found Sir Francis: and would not answer
for any consequences which might ensue if he could not find means of meeting
his engagements.</p>
<p>“Kill hisself,” laughed Mrs. Bonner, “kill hisself, will he?
Dying’s the best thing he could do.” Strong vowed that he had found
him with the razors on the table; but at this, in her turn, Lady Clavering
laughed bitterly. “He’ll do himself no harm, as long as
there’s a shilling left of which he can rob a poor woman. His
life’s quite safe, Captain: you may depend upon that. Ah! it was a bad
day that ever I set eyes on him.”</p>
<p>“He’s worse than the first man,” cried out my lady’s
aide-de-camp. “He was a man, he was—a wild devil, but he had the
courage of a man—whereas this fellow—what’s the use of my
lady paying his bills, and selling her diamonds, and forgiving him? He’ll
be as bad again next year. The very next chance he has he’ll be
a-cheating of her, and robbing of her; and her money will go to keep a pack of
rogues and swindlers—I don’t mean you, Captain—you’ve
been a good friend to us enough, bating we wish we’d never set eyes on
you.”</p>
<p>The Chevalier saw from the words which Mrs. Bonner had let slip regarding the
diamonds, that the kind Begum was disposed to relent once more at least, and
that there were hopes still for his principal.</p>
<p>“Upon my word, ma’am,” he said, with a real feeling of
sympathy for Lady Clavering’s troubles, and admiration for her untiring
good-nature, and with a show of enthusiasm which advanced not a little his
graceless patron’s cause—“anything you say against Clavering,
or Mrs. Bonner here cries out against me, is no better than we deserve, both of
us, and it was an unlucky day for you when you saw either. He has behaved
cruelly to you and if you were not the most generous and forgiving woman in the
world, I know there would be no chance for him. But you can’t let the
father of your son be a disgraced man, and send little Frank into the world
with such a stain upon him. Tie him down; bind him by any promises you like: I
vouch for him that he will subscribe them.”</p>
<p>“And break ’em,” said Mrs. Bonner.</p>
<p>“And keep ’em this time,” cried out Strong. “He must
keep them. If you could have seen how he wept, ma’am! ‘Oh,
Strong,’ he said to me, ‘it’s not for myself I feel now:
it’s for my boy—it’s for the best woman in England, whom I
have treated basely—I know I have.’ He didn’t intend to bet
upon this race, ma’am—indeed he didn’t. He was cheated into
it: all the ring was taken in. He thought he might make the bet quite safely,
without the least risk. And it will be a lesson to him for all his life long.
To see a man cry—oh, it’s dreadful.”</p>
<p>“He don’t think much of making my dear missus cry,” said Mrs.
Bonner—“poor dear soul!—look if he does, Captain.”</p>
<p class="p2">
“If you’ve the soul of a man, Clavering,” Strong said to his
principal, when he recounted this scene to him, “you’ll keep your
promise this time: and, so help me Heaven! if you break word with her,
I’ll turn against you, and tell all.”</p>
<p>“What all?” cried Mr. Francis, to whom his ambassador brought the
news back at Short’s Hotel, where Strong found the Baronet crying and
drinking curacoa.</p>
<p>“Psha! Do you suppose I am a fool?” burst out Strong. “Do you
suppose I could have lived so long in the world, Frank Clavering, without
having my eyes about me? You know I have but to speak and you are a beggar
to-morrow. And I am not the only man who knows your secret.”</p>
<p>“Who else does?” gasped Clavering.</p>
<p>“Old Pendennis does, or I am very much mistaken. He recognised the man
the first night he saw him, when he came drunk into your house.”</p>
<p>“He knows it, does he?” shrieked out Clavering. “Damn
him—kill him.”</p>
<p>“You’d like to kill us all, wouldn’t you, old boy?”
said Strong, with a sneer, puffing his cigar.</p>
<p>The Baronet dashed his weak hand against his forehead; perhaps the other had
interpreted his wish rightly. “Oh, Strong!” he cried, “if I
dared, I’d put an end to myself, for I’m the d——est
miserable dog in all England. It’s that that makes me so wild and
reckless. It’s that which makes me take to drink” (and he drank,
with a trembling hand, a bumper of his fortifier—the curacoa), “and
to live about with these thieves. I know they’re thieves, every one of
’em, d——d thieves. And—and how can I help it?—and
I didn’t know it, you know—and, by Gad, I’m
innocent—and until I saw the d——d scoundrel first, I knew no
more about it than the dead—and I’ll fly, and I’ll go abroad
out of the reach of the confounded hells, and I’ll bury myself in a
forest, by Gad! and hang myself up to a tree—and, oh—I’m the
most miserable beggar in all England!” And so with more tears, shrieks,
and curses, the impotent wretch vented his grief and deplored his unhappy fate;
and, in the midst of groans and despair and blasphemy, vowed his miserable
repentance.</p>
<p>The honoured proverb which declares that to be an ill wind which blows good to
nobody, was verified in the case of Sir Francis Clavering, and another of the
occupants of Mr. Strong’s chambers in Shepherd’s Inn. The man was
“good,” by a lucky hap, with whom Colonel Altamont made his bet;
and on the settling day of the Derby—as Captain Clinker, who was
appointed to settle Sir Francis Clavering’s book for him (for Lady
Clavering by the advice of Major Pendennis, would not allow the Baronet to
liquidate his own money transactions), paid over the notes to the
Baronet’s many creditors—Colonel Altamont had the satisfaction of
receiving the odds of thirty to one in fifties, which he had taken against the
winning horse of the day.</p>
<p>Numbers of the Colonel’s friends were present on the occasion to
congratulate him on his luck—all Altamont’s own set, and the gents
who met in the private parlour of the convivial Wheeler, my host of the
Harlequin’s Head, came to witness their comrade’s good fortune, and
would have liked, with a generous sympathy for success, to share in it.
“Now was the time,” Tom Driver had suggested to the Colonel,
“to have up the specie ship that was sunk in the Gulf of Mexico, with the
three hundred and eighty thousand dollars on board, besides bars and
doubloons.” “The Tredyddlums were very low—to be bought for
an old song—never was such an opportunity for buying shares,” Mr.
Keightley insinuated; and Jack Holt pressed forward his tobacco-smuggling
scheme, the audacity of which pleased the Colonel more than any other of the
speculations proposed to him. Then of the Harlequin’s Head boys: there
was Jack Rackstraw, who knew of a pair of horses which the Colonel must buy;
Tom Fleet, whose satirical paper, The Swell, wanted but two hundred pounds of
capital to be worth a thousand a year to any man—“with such a power
and influence, Colonel, you rogue, and the entree of the green-rooms in
London,” Tom urged; whilst little Moss Abrams entreated the Colonel not
to listen to these absurd fellows with their humbugging speculations, but to
invest his money in some good bills which Moss could get for him, and which
would return him fifty per cent as safe as the Bank of England.</p>
<p>Each and all of these worthies came round the Colonel with their various
blandishments; but he had courage enough to resist them, and to button up his
notes in the pocket of his coat, and go home to Strong, and “sport”
the outer door of the chambers. Honest Strong had given his fellow-lodger good
advice about all his acquaintances; and though, when pressed, he did not mind
frankly taking twenty pounds himself out of the Colonel’s winnings,
Strong was a great deal too upright to let others cheat him.</p>
<p>He was not a bad fellow when in good fortune, this Altamont. He ordered a smart
livery for Grady, and made poor old Costigan shed tears of quickly dried
gratitude by giving him a five-pound note after a snug dinner at the Back
Kitchen, and he bought a green shawl for Mrs. Bolton, and a yellow one for
Fanny: the most brilliant “sacrifices” of a Regent Street
haberdasher’s window. And a short time after this, upon her birthday,
which happened in the month of June, Miss Amory received from “a
friend” a parcel containing an enormous brass inlaid writing-desk, in
which there was a set of amethysts, the most hideous eyes ever looked
upon,—a musical snuff-box, and two Keepsakes of the year before last, and
accompanied with a couple of gown pieces of the most astounding colours, the
receipt of which goods made the Sylphide laugh and wonder immoderately. Now it
is a fact that Colonel Altamont had made a purchase of cigars and French silks
from some duffers in Fleet Street about this period; and he was found by Strong
in the open Auction Room in Cheapside, having invested some money in two desks,
several pairs of richly-plated candlesticks, a dinner epergne, and a
bagatelle-board. The dinner epergne remained at chambers, and figured at the
banquets there, which the Colonel gave pretty freely. It seemed beautiful in
his eyes, until Jack Holt said it looked as if it had been taken “in a
bill.” And Jack Holt certainly knew.</p>
<p>The dinners were pretty frequent at chambers, and Sir Francis Clavering
condescended to partake of them constantly. His own house was shut up: the
successor of Mirobolant, who had sent in his bills so prematurely, was
dismissed by the indignant Lady Clavering: the luxuriance of the establishment
was greatly pruned and reduced. One of the large footmen was cashiered, upon
which the other gave warning, not liking to serve without his mate, or in a
family where on’y one footman was kep’. General and severe
economical reforms were practised by the Begum in her whole household, in
consequence of the extravagance of which her graceless husband had been guilty.
The Major, as her ladyship’s friend; Strong, on the part of poor
Clavering; her ladyship’s lawyer, and the honest Begum herself, executed
these reforms with promptitude and severity. After paying the Baronet’s
debts, the settlement of which occasioned considerable public scandal, and
caused the Baronet to sink even lower in the world’s estimation than he
had been before, Lady Clavering quitted London for Tunbridge Wells in high
dudgeon, refusing to see her reprobate husband, whom nobody pitied. Clavering
remained in London patiently, by no means anxious to meet his wife’s just
indignation, and sneaked in and out of the House of Commons, whence he and
Captain Raff and Mr. Marker would go to have a game at billiards and a cigar or
showed in the sporting public-houses; or might be seen lurking about
Lincoln’s Inn and his lawyers’, where the principals kept him for
hours waiting, and the clerks winked at each other, as he sate in their office.
No wonder that he relished the dinners at Shepherd’s Inn, and was
perfectly resigned there: resigned? he was so happy nowhere else; he was
wretched amongst his equals, who scorned him—but here he was the chief
guest at the table, where they continually addressed him with “Yes, Sir
Francis” and “No, Sir Francis,” where he told his wretched
jokes, and where he quavered his dreary little French song, after Strong had
sung his Jovial chorus, and honest Costigan had piped his Irish ditties. Such a
jolly menage as Strong’s, with Grady’s Irish-stew, and the
Chevalier’s brew of punch after dinner, would have been welcome to many a
better man than Clavering, the solitude of whose great house at home frightened
him, where he was attended only by the old woman who kept the house, and his
valet who sneered at him.</p>
<p>“Yes, dammit,” said he to his friends in Shepherd’s Inn,
“that fellow of mine, I must turn him away, only I owe him two
years’ wages, curse him, and can’t ask my lady. He brings me my tea
cold of a morning, with a dem’d leaden teaspoon, and he says my
lady’s sent all the plate to the banker’s because it ain’t
safe.—Now ain’t it hard that she won’t trust me with a single
teaspoon; ain’t it ungentlemanlike, Altamont? You know my lady’s of
low birth—that is—I beg your pardon—hem—that is,
it’s most cruel of her not to show more confidence in me. And the very
servants begin to laugh—the damn scoundrels! I’ll break every bone
in their great hulking bodies, curse ’em, I will.—They don’t
answer my bell: and—and my man was at Vauxhall last night with one of my
dress-shirts and my velvet waistcoat on, I know it was mine—the
confounded impudent blackguard—and he went on dancing before my eyes
confound him! I’m sure he’ll live to be hanged—he deserves to
be hanged—all those infernal rascals of valets.”</p>
<p>He was very kind to Altamont now: he listened to the Colonel’s loud
stories when Altamont described how—when he was working his way home once
from New Zealand, where he had been on a whaling expedition—he and his
comrades had been obliged to slink on board at night, to escape from their
wives, by Jove—and how the poor devils put out in their canoes when they
saw the ship under sail, and paddled madly after her: how he had been lost in
the bush once for three months in New South Wales, when he was there once on a
trading speculation: how he had seen Boney at Saint Helena, and been presented
to him with the rest of the officers of the Indiaman of which he was a
mate—to all these tales (and over his cups Altamont told many of them;
and, it must be owned, lied and bragged a great deal) Sir Francis now listened
with great attention; making a point of drinking wine with Altamont at dinner
and of treating him with every distinction.</p>
<p>“Leave him alone, I know what he’s a-coming to,” Altamont
said, laughing to Strong, who remonstrated with him, “and leave me alone;
I know what I’m a-telling, very well. I was officer on board an Indiaman,
so I was; I traded to New South Wales, so I did, in a ship of my own, and lost
her. I became officer to the Nawaub, so I did; only me and my royal master have
had a difference, Strong—that’s it. Who’s the better or the
worse for what I tell? or knows anything about me? The other chap is
dead—shot in the bush, and his body reckonised at Sydney. If I thought
anybody would split, do you think I wouldn’t wring his neck? I’ve
done as good before now, Strong—I told you how I did for the overseer
before I took leave—but in fair fight, I mean—in fair fight; or,
rayther, he had the best of it. He had his gun and bay’net, and I had
only an axe. Fifty of ’em saw it—ay, and cheered me when I did
it—and I’d do it again,—him, wouldn’t I? I ain’t
afraid of anybody; and I’d have the life of the man who split upon me.
That’s my maxim, and pass me the liquor.—You wouldn’t turn on
a man. I know you. You’re an honest feller, and will stand by a feller,
and have looked death in the face like a man. But as for that lily-livered
sneak—that poor lyin’ swindlin’ cringin’ cur of a
Clavering—who stands in my shoes—stands in my shoes, hang him!
I’ll make him pull my boots off and clean ’em, I will. Ha,
ha!” Here he burst out into a wild laugh, at which Strong got up and put
away the brandy-bottle. The other still laughed good-humouredly.
“You’re right, old boy,” he said; “you always keep your
head cool, you do—and when I begin to talk too much—I say, when I
begin to pitch, I authorise you, and order you, and command you, to put away
the rum-bottle.”</p>
<p>“Take my counsel, Altamont,” Strong said, gravely, “and mind
how you deal with that man. Don’t make it too much his interest to get
rid of you; or who knows what he may do?”</p>
<p>The event for which, with cynical enjoyment, Altamont had been on the look-out,
came very speedily. One day, Strong being absent upon an errand for his
principal, Sir Francis made his appearance in the chambers, and found the envoy
of the Nawaub alone. He abused the world in general for being heartless and
unkind to him: he abused his wife for being ungenerous to him; he abused Strong
for being ungrateful—hundreds of pounds had he given Ned
Strong—been his friend for life and kept him out of gaol, by
Jove,—and now Ned was taking her ladyship’s side against him and
abetting her in her infernal unkind treatment of him. “They’ve
entered into a conspiracy to keep me penniless, Altamont,” the Baronet
said: “they don’t give me as much pocket money as Frank has at
school.”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you go down to Richmond and borrow of him,
Clavering?” Altamont broke out with a savage laugh. “He
wouldn’t see his poor old beggar of a father without pocket-money, would
he?”</p>
<p>“I tell you, I’ve been obliged to humiliate myself cruelly”
Clavering said. “Look here, sir—look here, at these pawn-tickets!
Fancy a Member of Parliament and an old English Baronet, by Gad! obliged to put
a drawing-room clock and a buhl inkstand up the spout; and a gold
duck’s-head paper-holder, that I dare say cost my wife five pound, for
which they’d only give me fifteen-and-six! Oh, it’s a humiliating
thing, sir, poverty to a man of my habits; and it’s made me shed tears,
sir,—tears; and that d——d valet of mine—curse him, I
wish he was hanged!—he had the confounded impudence to threaten to tell
my lady: as the things in my own house weren’t my own, to sell or to
keep, or fling out of window if I chose—by Gad! the confounded scoundrel.</p>
<p>“Cry a little; don’t mind cryin’ before me—it’ll
relieve you Clavering,” the other said. “Why, I say, old feller,
what a happy feller I once thought you, and what a miserable son of a gun you
really are!”</p>
<p>“It’s a shame that they treat me so, ain’t it?”
Clavering went on,—for, though ordinarily silent and apathetic, about his
own griefs the Baronet could whine for an hour at a time. “And—and,
by Gad, sir, I haven’t got the money to pay the very cab that’s
waiting for me at the door; and the porteress, that Mrs. Bolton, lent me three
shillin’s, and I don’t like to ask her for any more: and I asked
that d——d old Costigan, the confounded old penniless Irish
miscreant, and he hadn’t got a shillin’, the beggar; and
Campion’s out of town, or else he’d do a little bill for me, I know
he would.”</p>
<p>“I thought you swore on your honour to your wife that you wouldn’t
put your name to paper,” said Mr. Altamont, puffing at his cigar.</p>
<p>“Why does she leave me without pocket-money, then? Damme, I must have
money,” cried out the Baronet. “Oh, Am——, oh, Altamont,
I’m the most miserable beggar alive.”</p>
<p>“You’d like a chap to lend you a twenty-pound note, wouldn’t
you now?” the other asked.</p>
<p>“If you would, I’d be grateful to you for ever—for ever, my
dearest friend,” cried Clavering.</p>
<p>“How much would you give? Will you give a fifty-pound bill, at six
months, for half down and half in plate?” asked Altamont.</p>
<p>“Yes, I would, so help me——, and pay it on the day,”
screamed Clavering. “I’ll make it payable at my banker’s:
I’ll do anything you like.”</p>
<p>“Well, I was only chaffing you. I’ll give you twenty pound.”</p>
<p>“You said a pony,” interposed Clavering; “my dear fellow, you
said a pony, and I’ll be eternally obliged to you; and I’ll not
take it as a gift—only as a loan, and pay you back in six months. I take
my oath, I will.”</p>
<p>“Well—well—there’s the money, Sir Francis Clavering. I
ain’t a bad fellow. When I’ve money in my pocket, dammy, I spend it
like a man. Here’s five-and-twenty for you. Don’t be losing it at
the hells now. Don’t be making a fool of yourself. Go down to Clavering
Park, and it’ll keep you ever so long. You needn’t ’ave
butchers’ meat: there’s pigs, I dare say, on the premises: and you
can shoot rabbits for dinner, you know, every day till the game comes in.
Besides, the neighbours will ask you about to dinner, you know, sometimes: for
you are a Baronet, though you have outrun the constable. And you’ve got
this comfort, that I’m off your shoulders for a good bit to
come—p’raps this two years—if I don’t play; and I
don’t intend to touch the confounded black and red: and by that time my
lady, as you call her—Jimmy, I used to say—will have come round
again; and you’ll be ready for me, you know, and come down handsomely to
yours truly.”</p>
<p>At this juncture of their conversation Strong returned, nor did the Baronet
care much about prolonging the talk, having got the money: and he made his way
from Shepherd’s Inn, and went home and bullied his servant in a manner so
unusually brisk and insolent that the man concluded his master must have pawned
some more of the house furniture, or, at any rate, have come into possession of
some ready money.</p>
<p class="p2">
“And yet I’ve looked over the house, Morgan, and I don’t thin
he has took any more of the things,” Sir Francis’s valet said to
Major Pendennis’s man, as they met at their Club soon after. “My
lady locked up a’most all the bejews afore she went away, and he
couldn’t take away the picters and looking-glasses in a cab and he
wouldn’t spout the fenders and fire-irons—he ain’t so bad as
that. But he’s got money somehow. He’s so dam’d imperent when
he have. A few nights ago I sor him at Vauxhall, where I was a-polkin with Lady
Hemly Babewood’s gals—a wery pleasant room that is, and an uncommon
good lot in it, hall except the ’ousekeeper, and she’s
methodisticle—I was a-polkin—you’re too old a cove to polk,
Mr. Morgan—and ’ere’s your ’ealth—and I
’appened to ’ave on some of Clavering’s abberdashery, and he
sor it too: and he didn’t dare so much as speak a word.”</p>
<p>“How about the house in St. John’s Wood?” Mr. Morgan asked.</p>
<p>“Execution in it.—Sold up heverythin: ponies, and pianna, and
brougham, and all. Mrs. Montague were hoff to Boulogne,—non est inwentus,
Mr. Morgan. It’s my belief she put the execution in herself: and was
tired of him.”</p>
<p>“Play much?” asked Morgan.</p>
<p>“Not since the smash. When your Governor, and the lawyers, and my lady
and him had that tremendous scene: he went down on his knees, my lady told Mrs.
Bonner, as told me,—and swear as he never more would touch a card or a
dice, or put his name to a bit of paper; and my lady was a-goin’ to give
him the notes down to pay his liabilities after the race: only your Governor
said (which he wrote it on a piece of paper, and passed it across the table to
the lawyer and my lady) that some one else had better book up for him, for
he’d have kep’ some of the money. He’s a sly old cove, your
Gov’nor.”</p>
<p>The expression of “old cove,” thus flippantly applied by the
younger gentleman to himself and his master, displeased Mr. Morgan exceedingly.
On the first occasion, when Mr. Lightfoot used the obnoxious expression, his
comrade’s anger was only indicated by a silent frown; but on the second
offence, Morgan, who was smoking his cigar elegantly, and holding it on the tip
of his penknife, withdrew the cigar from his lips, and took his young friend to
task.</p>
<p>“Don’t call Major Pendennis an old cove, if you’ll ’ave
the goodness, Lightfoot, and don’t call me an old cove, nether. Such
words ain’t used in society; and we have lived in the fust society, both
at ’ome and foring. We’ve been intimate with the fust statesmen of
Europe. When we go abroad we dine with Prince Metternitch and Louy Philup
reg’lar. We go here to the best houses, the tip-tops, I tell you. We ride
with Lord John and the noble Whycount at the edd of Foring Affairs. We dine
with the Hearl of Burgrave, and are consulted by the Marquis of Steyne in
everythink. We ought to know a thing or two, Mr. Lightfoot. You’re a
young man, I’m an old cove, as you say. We’ve both seen the world,
and we both know that it ain’t money, nor bein’ a Baronet, nor
’avin’ a town and country ’ouse, nor a paltry five or six
thousand a year.”</p>
<p>“It’s ten, Mr. Morgan,” cried Mr. Lightfoot, with great
animation.</p>
<p>“It may have been, sir,” Morgan said, with calm severity; “it
may have been, Mr. Lightfoot, but it ain’t six now, nor five, sir.
It’s been doosedly dipped and cut into, sir, by the confounded
extravygance of your master, with his helbow shakin’, and his bill
discountin’, and his cottage in the Regency Park, and his many
wickednesses. He’s a bad un, Mr. Lightfoot,—a bad lot, sir, and
that you know. And it ain’t money, sir—not such money as that, at
any rate, come from a Calcuttar attorney, and I dussay wrung out of the pore
starving blacks—that will give a pusson position in society, as you know
very well. We’ve no money, but we go everywhere; there’s not a
housekeeper’s room, sir, in this town of any consiquince, where James
Morgan ain’t welcome. And it was me who got you into this Club,
Lightfoot, as you very well know, though I am an old cove, and they would have
blackballed you without me as sure as your name is Frederic.”</p>
<p>“I know they would, Mr. Morgan,” said the other, with much
humility.</p>
<p>“Well, then, don’t call me an old cove, sir. It ain’t
gentlemanlike, Frederic Lightfoot, which I knew you when you was a cab-boy, and
when your father was in trouble, and got you the place you have now when the
Frenchman went away. And if you think, sir, that because you’re making up
to Mrs. Bonner, who may have saved her two thousand pound—and I dare say
she has in five-and-twenty years as she have lived confidential maid to Lady
Clavering—yet, sir, you must remember who put you into that service; and
who knows what you were before, sir, and it don’t become you, Frederic
Lightfoot, to call me an old cove.”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, Mr. Morgan—I can’t do more than make an
apology—will you have a glass, sir, and let me drink your
’ealth?”</p>
<p>“You know I don’t take sperrits. Lightfoot,” replied Morgan,
appeased. “And so you and Mrs. Bonner is going to put up together, are
you?”</p>
<p>“She’s old, but two thousand pound’s a good bit, you see, Mr
Morgan. And we’ll get the ‘Clavering Arms’ for a very little;
and that’ll be no bad thing when the railroad runs through Clavering. And
when we are there, I hope you’ll come and see us, Mr. Morgan.”</p>
<p>“It’s a stoopid place, and no society,” said Mr. Morgan.
“I know it well. In Mrs Pendennis’s time we used to go down,
reg’lar, and the hair refreshed me after the London racket.”</p>
<p>“The railroad will improve Mr. Arthur’s property,” remarked
Lightfoot. “What’s about the figure of it, should you say,
sir?”</p>
<p>“Under fifteen hundred, sir,” answered Morgan; at which the other,
who knew the extent of poor Arthur’s acres, thrust his tongue in his
cheek, but remained wisely silent.</p>
<p>“Is his man any good, Mr. Morgan?” Lightfoot resumed.</p>
<p>“Pidgeon ain’t used to society as yet; but he’s young and has
good talents, and has read a good deal, and I dessay he will do very
well,” replied Morgan. “He wouldn’t quite do for this kind of
thing, Lightfoot, for he ain’t seen the world yet.”</p>
<p>When the pint of sherry for which Mr. Lightfoot called, upon Mr. Morgan’s
announcement that he declined to drink spirits, had been discussed by the two
gentlemen, who held the wine up to the light, and smacked their lips, and
winked their eyes at it, and rallied the landlord as to the vintage, in the
most approved manner of connoisseurs, Morgan’s ruffled equanimity was
quite restored, and he was prepared to treat his young friend with perfect
good-humour.</p>
<p>“What d’you think about Miss Amory, Lightfoot—tell us in
confidence, now—Do you think we should do well—you
understand—if we make Miss A. into Mrs. A. P., comprendy vous?”</p>
<p>“She and her Ma’s always quarrellin’,” said Mr.
Lightfoot. “Bonner is more than a match for the old lady, and treats Sir
Francis like that—like this year spill, which I fling into the grate. But
she daren’t say a word to Miss Amory. No more dare none of us. When a
visitor comes in, she smiles and languishes, you’d think that butter
wouldn’t melt in her mouth: and the minute he is gone, very likely, she
flares up like a little demon, and says things fit to send you wild. If Mr.
Arthur comes, it’s ‘Do let’s sing that there delightful
Song!’ or, ‘Come and write me them pooty verses in this
halbum!’ and very likely she’s been a-rilin’ her mother, or
sticking pins into her maid, a minute before. She do stick pins into her and
pinch her. Mary Hann showed me one of her arms quite black and blue; and I
recklect Mrs. Bonner, who’s as jealous of me as a old cat, boxed her ears
for showing me. And then you should see Miss at luncheon, when there’s
nobody but the family! She makes b’leave she never heats, and my! you
should only jest see her. She has Mary Hann to bring her up plum-cakes and
creams into her bedroom; and the cook’s the only man in the house
she’s civil to. Bonner says, how, the second season in London, Mr.
Soppington was a-goin’ to propose for her, and actially came one day, and
sor her fling a book into the fire, and scold her mother so, that he went down
softly by the back droring-room door, which he came in by; and next thing we
heard of him was, he was married to Miss Rider. Oh, she’s a devil, that
little Blanche, and that’s my candig apinium, Mr. Morgan.”</p>
<p>“Apinion, not apinium, Lightfoot, my good fellow,” Mr. Morgan said,
with parental kindness, and then asked of his own bosom with a sigh, why the
deuce does my Governor want Master Arthur to marry such a girl as this? and the
tete-a-tete of the two gentlemen was broken up by the entry of other gentlemen,
members of the Club—when fashionable town-talk, politics, cribbage, and
other amusements ensued, and the conversation became general.</p>
<p>The Gentleman’s Club was held in the parlour of the Wheel of Fortune
public-house, in a snug little by-lane, leading out of one of the great streets
of Mayfair, and frequented by some of the most select gentlemen about town.
Their masters’ affairs, debts, intrigues, adventures; their ladies’
good and bad qualities and quarrels with their husbands; all the family secrets
were here discussed with perfect freedom and confidence, and here, when about
to enter into a new situation, a gentleman was enabled to get every requisite
information regarding the family of which he proposed to become a member.
Liveries it may be imagined were excluded from this select precinct; and the
powdered heads of the largest metropolitan footmen might bow down in vain
entreating admission into the Gentleman’s Club. These outcast giants in
plush took their beer in an outer apartment of the Wheel of Fortune, and could
no more get an entry into the Clubroom than a Pall Mall tradesman or a
Lincoln’s Inn attorney could get admission into Bays’s or
Spratt’s. And it is because the conversation which we have permitted to
overhear here, in some measure explains the characters and bearings of our
story, that we have ventured to introduce the reader into a society so
exclusive.</p>
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