<h2><SPAN name="chap68"></SPAN>CHAPTER LXVIII.<br/> In which the Major is bidden to Stand and Deliver</h2>
<p>Any gentleman who has frequented the Wheel of Fortune public-house, where it
may be remembered that Mr. James Morgan’s Club was held, and where Sir
Francis Clavering had an interview with Major Pendennis, is aware that there
are three rooms for guests upon the ground floor, besides the bar where the
landlady sits. One is a parlour frequented by the public at large; to another
room gentlemen in livery resort; and the third apartment, on the door of which
“Private” is painted, is that hired by the Club of “The
Confidentials,” of which Messrs Morgan and Lightfoot were members.</p>
<p>The noiseless Morgan had listened to the conversation between Strong and Major
Pendennis at the latter’s own lodgings, and had carried away from it
matter for much private speculation; and a desire of knowledge had led him to
follow his master when the Major came to the Wheel of Fortune, and to take his
place quietly in the Confidential room, whilst Pendennis and Clavering had
their discourse in the parlour. There was a particular corner in the
Confidential room from which you could hear almost all that passed in the next
apartment; and as the conversation between the two gentlemen there was rather
angry, and carried on in a high key, Morgan had the benefit of overhearing
almost the whole of it and what he heard, strengthened the conclusions which
his mind had previously formed.</p>
<p>“He knew Altamont at once, did he, when he saw him in Sydney? Clavering
ain’t no more married to my Lady than I am! Altamont’s the man:
Altamont’s a convict; young Harthur comes into Parlyment, and the
Gov’nor promises not to split. By Jove, what a sly old rogue it is, that
old Gov’nor! No wonder he’s anxious to make the match between
Blanche and Harthur: why, she’ll have a hundred thousand if she’s a
penny, and bring her man a seat in Parlyment into the bargain.” Nobody
saw, but a physiognomist would have liked to behold, the expression of Mr.
Morgan’s countenance, when this astounding intelligence was made clear to
him. “But for my hage, and the confounded preudices of society,” he
said, surveying himself in the glass, “dammy, James Morgan, you might
marry her yourself.” But if he could not marry Miss Blanche and her
fortune, Morgan thought he could mend his own by the possession of this
information, and that it might be productive of benefit to him from very many
sources. Of all the persons whom the secret affected, the greater number would
not like to have it known. For instance, Sir Francis Clavering, whose fortune
it involved, would wish to keep it quiet; Colonel Altamont, whose neck it
implicated, would naturally be desirous to hush it: and that young hupstart
beast, Mr. Harthur, who was for gettin’ into Parlyment on the strenth of
it, and was as proud as if he was a duke with half a millium a year (such, we
grieve to say, was Morgan’s opinion of his employer’s nephew),
would pay anythink sooner than let the world know that he was married to a
convick’s daughter, and had got his seat in Parlyment by trafficking with
this secret. As for Lady C., Morgan thought, if she’s tired of Clavering,
and wants to get rid of him, she’ll pay: if she’s frightened about
her son, and fond of the little beggar, she’ll pay all the same: and Miss
Blanche will certainly come down handsome to the man who will put her into her
rights, which she was unjustly defrauded of them, and no mistake.
“Dammy,” concluded the valet, reflecting upon this wonderful hand
which luck had given him to play, “with such cards as these, James
Morgan, you are a made man. It may be a reg’lar enewity to me. Every one
of ’em must susscribe. And with what I’ve made already, I may cut
business, give my old Gov’nor warning, turn gentleman, and have a servant
of my own, begad.” Entertaining himself with calculations such as these,
that were not a little likely to perturb a man’s spirit, Mr. Morgan
showed a very great degree of self-command by appearing and being calm, and by
not allowing his future prospects in any way to interfere with his present
duties.</p>
<p>One of the persons whom the story chiefly concerned, Colonel Altamont, was
absent from London when Morgan was thus made acquainted with his history. The
valet knew of Sir Francis Clavering’s Shepherd’s Inn haunt, and
walked thither an hour or two after the Baronet and Pendennis had had their
conversation together. But that bird was flown; Colonel Altamont had received
his Derby winnings, and was gone to the Continent. The fact of his absence was
exceedingly vexatious to Mr. Morgan. “He’ll drop all that money at
the gambling-shops on the Rhind,” thought Morgan, “and I might have
had a good bit of it. It’s confounded annoying to think he’s gone
and couldn’t have waited a few days longer.” Hope, triumphant or
deferred, ambition or disappointment, victory or patient ambush, Morgan bore
all alike, with similar equable countenance. Until the proper day came, the
Major’s boots were varnished and his hair was curled, his early cup of
tea was brought to his bedside, his oaths, rebukes, and senile satire borne,
with silent, obsequious fidelity. Who would think, to see him waiting upon his
master, packing and shouldering his trunks, and occasionally assisting at
table, at the country-houses where he might be staying, that Morgan was richer
than his employer, and knew his secrets and other people’s? In the
profession Mr. Morgan was greatly respected and admired, and his reputation for
wealth and wisdom got him much renown at most supper-tables: the younger
gentlemen voted him stoopid, a feller of no idears, and a fogey, in a word: but
not one of them would not say amen to the heartfelt prayer which some of the
most serious-minded among the gentlemen uttered, “When I die may I cut up
as well as Morgan Pendennis!”</p>
<p>As became a man of fashion, Major Pendennis spent the autumn passing from house
to house of such country friends as were at home to receive him; and if the
Duke happened to be abroad, the Marquis in Scotland, condescending to sojourn
with Sir John or the plain Squire. To say the truth, the old gentleman’s
reputation was somewhat on the wane: many of the men of his time had died out,
and the occupants of their halls and the present wearers of their titles knew
not Major Pendennis: and little cared for his traditions of “the wild
Prince and Poins,” and of the heroes of fashion passed away. It must have
struck the good man with melancholy as he walked by many a London door, to
think how seldom it was now opened for him, and how often he used to knock at
it—to what banquets and welcome he used to pass through it—a score
of years back. He began to own that he was no longer of the present age, and
dimly to apprehend that the young men laughed at him. Such melancholy musings
must come across many a Pall Mall philosopher. The men, thinks he, are not such
as they used to be in his time: the old grand manner and courtly grace of life
are gone: what is Castlewood House and the present Castlewood, compared to the
magnificence of the old mansion and owner? The late lord came to London with
four postchaises and sixteen horses: all the North Road hurried out to look at
his cavalcade: the people in London streets even stopped as his procession
passed them. The present lord travels with five bagmen in a railway carriage,
and sneaks away from the station, smoking a cigar in a brougham. The late lord
in autumn filled Castlewood with company, who drank claret till midnight: the
present man buries himself in a hut on a Scotch mountain, and passes November
in two or three closets in an entresol at Paris, where his amusements are a
dinner at a cafe and a box at a little theatre. What a contrast there is
between his Lady Lorraine, the Regent’s Lady Lorraine, and her little
ladyship of the present era! He figures to himself the first, beautiful,
gorgeous, magnificent in diamonds and velvets, daring in rouge, the wits of the
world (the old wits, the old polished gentlemen—not the canaille of
to-day with their language of the cabstand, and their coats smelling of smoke)
bowing at her feet; and then thinks of to-day’s Lady Lorraine—a
little woman in a black silk gown, like a governess, who talks astronomy, and
labouring classes, and emigration, and the deuce knows what, and lurks to
church at eight o’clock in the morning. Abbots-Lorraine, that used to be
the noblest house in the county, is turned into a monastery—a regular La
Trappe. They don’t drink two glasses of wine after dinner, and every
other man at table is a country curate, with a white neckcloth, whose talk is
about Polly Higson’s progress at school, or widow Watkins’s
lumbago. “And the other young men, those lounging guardsmen and great
lazy dandies—sprawling over sofas and billiard-tables, and stealing off
to smoke pipes in each other’s bedrooms, caring for nothing, reverencing
nothing, not even an old gentleman who has known their fathers and their
betters, not even a pretty woman—what a difference there is between these
men, who poison the very turnips and stubble-fields with their tobacco, and the
gentlemen of our time!” thinks the Major; “the breed is
gone—there’s no use for ’em; they’re replaced by a
parcel of damned cotton-spinners and utilitarians, and young sprigs of parsons
with their hair combed down their barks. I’m getting old: they’re
getting past me: they laugh at us old boys,” thought old Pendennis. And
he was not far wrong; the times and manners which he admired were pretty nearly
gone—the gay young men “larked” him irreverently, whilst the
serious youth had a grave pity and wonder at him; which would have been even
more painful to bear, had the old gentleman been aware of its extent. But he
was rather simple: his examination of moral questions had never been very deep;
it had never struck him perhaps, until very lately, that he was otherwise than
a most respectable and rather fortunate man. Is there no old age but his
without reverence? Did youthful folly never jeer at other bald pates? For the
past two or three years, he had begun to perceive that his day was well-nigh
over, and that the men of the new time had begun to reign.</p>
<p>After a rather unsuccessful autumn season, then, during which he was faithfully
followed by Mr. Morgan, his nephew Arthur being engaged, as we have seen, at
Clavering, it happened that Major Pendennis came back for a while to London, at
the dismal end of October, when the fogs and the lawyers come to town. Who has
not looked with interest at those loaded cabs, piled boxes, and crowded
children, rattling through the streets on the dun October evenings; stopping at
the dark houses, where they discharge nurse and infant, girls, matron and
father, whose holidays are over? Yesterday it was France and sunshine, or
Broadstairs and liberty; to-day comes work and a yellow fog; and, ye gods! what
a heap of bills there lies in Master’s study! And the clerk has brought
the lawyer’s papers from Chambers; and in half an hour the literary man
knows that the printer’s boy will be in the passage; and Mr. Smith with
that little account (that particular little account) has called presentient of
your arrival, and has left word that he will call to-morrow morning at ten. Who
amongst us has not said Good-bye to his holiday; returned to dun London, and
his fate; surveyed his labours and liabilities laid out before him, and been
aware of that inevitable little account to settle? Smith and his little account
in the morning, symbolise duty, difficulty, struggle, which you will meet, let
us hope, friend, with a manly and honest heart.—And you think of him, as
the children are slumbering once more in their own beds, and the watchful
housewife tenderly pretends to sleep.</p>
<p>Old Pendennis had no special labours or bills to encounter on the morrow, as he
had no affection at home to soothe him. He had always money in his desk
sufficient for his wants; and being by nature and habit tolerably indifferent
to the wants of other people, these latter were not likely to disturb him. But
a gentleman may be out of temper though he does not owe a shilling and though
he may be ever so selfish, he must occasionally feel dispirited and lonely. He
had had two or three twinges of gout in the country-house where he had been
staying: the birds were wild and shy, and the walking over the ploughed fields
had fatigued him deucedly: the young men had laughed at him, and he had been
peevish at table once or twice: he had not been able to get his whist of an
evening: and, in fine, was glad to come away. In all his dealings with Morgan,
his valet, he had been exceedingly sulky and discontented. He had sworn at him
and abused him for many days past. He had scalded his mouth with bad soup at
Swindon. He had left his umbrella in the railroad carriage: at which piece of
forgetfulness, he was in such a rage, that he cursed Morgan more freely than
ever. Both, the chimneys smoked furiously in his lodgings; and when he caused
the windows to be flung open, he swore so acrimoniously, that Morgan was
inclined to fling him out of window too, through that opened casement. The
valet swore after his master, as Pendennis went down the street on his way to
the Club.</p>
<p>Bays’s was not at all pleasant. The house had been new painted, and smelt
of varnish and turpentine, and a large streak of white paint inflicted itself
on the back of the old boy’s fur-collared surtout. The dinner was not
good: and the three most odious men in all London—old Hawkshaw, whose
cough and accompaniments are fit to make any man uncomfortable; old Colonel
Gripley, who seizes on all the newspapers; and that irreclaimable old bore
Jawkins, who would come and dine at the next table to Pendennis, and describe
to him every inn-bill which he had paid in his foreign tour: each and all of
these disagreeable personages and incidents had contributed to make Major
Pendennis miserable; and the Club waiter trod on his toe as he brought him his
coffee. Never alone appear the Immortals. The Furies always hunt in company:
they pursued Pendennis from home to the Club, and from the Club home.</p>
<p>Whilst the Major was absent from his lodgings, Morgan had been seated in the
landlady’s parlour, drinking freely of hot brandy-and-water, and pouring
out on Mrs. Brixham some of the abuse which he had received from his master
upstairs. Mrs. Brixham was Mr. Morgan’s slave. He was his
landlady’s landlord. He had bought the lease of the house which she
rented; he had got her name and her son’s to acceptances, and a bill of
sale which made him master of the luckless widow’s furniture. The young
Brixham was a clerk in an insurance office, and Morgan could put him into what
he called quod any day. Mrs. Brixham was a clergyman’s widow, and Mr.
Morgan, after performing his duties on the first floor, had a pleasure in
making the old lady fetch him his bootjack and his slippers. She was his slave.
The little black profiles of her son and daughter; the very picture of
Tiddlecot Church, where she was married, and her poor dear Brixham lived and
died, was now Morgan’s property, as it hung there over the mantelpiece of
his back-parlour. Morgan sate in the widow’s back-room, in the
ex-curate’s old horse-hair study-chair, making Mrs. Brixham bring supper
for him, and fill his glass again and again.</p>
<p>The liquor was bought with the poor woman’s own coin, and hence Morgan
indulged in it only the more freely; and he had eaten his supper and was
drinking a third tumbler, when old Pendennis returned from the Club, and went
upstairs to his rooms. Mr. Morgan swore very savagely at him and his bell, when
he heard the latter, and finished his tumbler of brandy before he went up to
answer the summons.</p>
<p>He received the abuse consequent on this delay in silence, nor did the Major
condescend to read in the flushed face and glaring eyes of the man, the anger
under which he was labouring. The old gentleman’s foot-bath was at the
fire; his gown and slippers awaiting him there. Morgan knelt down to take his
boots off with due subordination: and as the Major abused him from above, kept
up a growl of maledictions below at his feet. Thus, when Pendennis was crying
“Confound you, sir, mind that strap—curse you, don’t wrench
my foot off,” Morgan sotto voce below was expressing a wish to strangle
him, drown him, and punch his head off.</p>
<p>The boots removed, it became necessary to divest Mr. Pendennis of his coat: and
for this purpose the valet had necessarily to approach very near to his
employer; so near that Pendennis could not but perceive what Mr. Morgan’s
late occupation had been; to which he adverted in that simple and forcible
phraseology which men are sometimes in the habit of using to their domestics;
informing Morgan that he was a drunken beast, and that he smelt of brandy.</p>
<p>At this the man broke out, losing patience, and flinging up all subordination,
“I’m drunk, am I? I’m a beast, am I? I’m
d——d, am I? you infernal old miscreant. Shall I wring your old head
off, and drownd yer in that pail of water? Do you think I’m a-goin’
to bear your confounded old harrogance, you old Wigsby! Chatter your old
hivories at me, do you, you grinning old baboon! Come on, if you are a man, and
can stand to a man. Ha! you coward, knives, knives!”</p>
<p>“If you advance a step, I’ll send it into you,” said the
Major, seizing up a knife that was on the table near him. “Go downstairs,
you drunken brute, and leave the house; send for your book and your wages in
the morning, and never let me see your insolent face again. This
d——d impertinence of yours has been growing for some months past.
You have been growing too rich. You are not fit for service. Get out of it, and
out of the house.”</p>
<p>“And where would you wish me to go, pray, out of the ’ouse?”
asked the man, “and won’t it be equal convenient to-morrow
mornin’?—tootyfay mame shose, sivvaplay, munseer?”</p>
<p>“Silence, you beast, and go!” cried out the Major.</p>
<p>Morgan began to laugh, with rather a sinister laugh. “Look yere,
Pendennis,” he said, seating himself; “since I’ve been in
this room you’ve called me beast, brute, dog: and d——d me,
haven’t you? How do you suppose one man likes that sort of talk from
another? How many years have I waited on you, and how many damns and cusses
have you given me, along with my wages? Do you think a man’s a dog, that
you can talk to him in this way? If I choose to drink a little, why
shouldn’t I? I’ve seen many a gentleman drunk form’ly, and
peraps have the abit from them. I ain’t a-goin’ to leave this
house, old feller, and shall I tell you why? The house is my house, every stick
of furnitur’ in it is mine, excep’ your old traps, and your
shower-bath, and your wigbox. I’ve bought the place, I tell you, with my
own industry and perseverance. I can show a hundred pound, where you can show a
fifty, or your damned supersellious nephew either. I’ve served you
honourable, done everythink for you these dozen years, and I’m a dog, am
I? I’m a beast, am I? That’s the language for gentlemen, not for
our rank. But I’ll bear it no more. I throw up your service; I’m
tired on it; I’ve combed your old wig and buckled your old girths and
waistbands long enough, I tell you. Don’t look savage at me, I’m
sitting in my own chair, in my own room, a-telling the truth to you. I’ll
be your beast, and your brute, and your dog, no more, Major Pendennis Alf
Pay.”</p>
<p>The fury of the old gentleman, met by the servant’s abrupt revolt, had
been shocked and cooled by the concussion, as much as if a sudden shower-bath
or a pail of cold water had been flung upon him. That effect produced, and his
anger calmed, Morgan’s speech had interested him, and he rather respected
his adversary, and his courage in facing him; as of old days, in the
fencing-room, he would have admired the opponent who hit him.</p>
<p>“You are no longer my servant,” the Major said, “and the
house may be yours; but the lodgings are mine, and you will have the goodness
to leave them. To-morrow morning, when we have settled our accounts, I shall
remove into other quarters. In the meantime, I desire to go to bed, and have
not the slightest wish for your further company.”</p>
<p>“We’ll have a settlement, don’t you be afraid,” Morgan
said, getting up from his chair. “I ain’t done with you yet; nor
with your family, nor with the Clavering family, Major Pendennis; and that you
shall know.”</p>
<p>“Have the goodness to leave the room, sir—I’m tired,”
said the Major.</p>
<p>“Hah! you’ll be more tired of me afore you’ve done,”
answered the man, with a sneer, and walked out of the room; leaving the Major
to compose himself as best he might, after the agitation of this extraordinary
scene.</p>
<p>He sate and mused by his fireside over the past events, and the confounded
impudence and ingratitude of servants; and thought how he should get a new man:
how devilish unpleasant it was for a man of his age, and with his habits, to
part with a fellow to whom he had been accustomed: how Morgan had a receipt for
boot-varnish, which was incomparably better and more comfortable to the feet
than any he had ever tried: how very well he made mutton-broth, and tended him
when he was unwell. “Gad, it’s a hard thing to lose a fellow of
that sort: but he must go,” thought the Major. “He has grown rich,
and impudent since he has grown rich. He was horribly tipsy and abusive
to-night. We must part, and I must go out of the lodgings. Dammy, I like the
lodgings; I’m used to ’em. It’s very unpleasant, at my time
of life, to change my quarters.” And so on, mused the old gentleman. The
shower-bath had done him good: the testiness was gone: the loss of the
umbrella, the smell of paint at the Club, were forgotten under the superior
excitement. “Confound the insolent villain!” thought the old
gentleman. “He understood my wants to a nicety: he was the best servant
in England.” He thought about his servant as a man thinks of a horse that
has carried him long and well, and that has come down with him, and is safe no
longer. How the deuce to replace him? Where can he get such another animal?</p>
<p>In these melancholy cogitations the Major, who had donned his own dressing-gown
and replaced his head of hair (a little grey had been introduced into the
coiffure of late by Mr. Truefitt, which had given the Major’s head the
most artless and respectable appearance); in these cogitations, we say, the
Major, who had taken off his wig and put on his night-handkerchief, sate
absorbed by the fireside, when a feeble knock came at his door, which was
presently opened by the landlady of the lodgings.</p>
<p>“God bless my soul, Mrs. Brixham!” cried out the Major, startled
that a lady should behold him in the simple appareil of his night-toilet.
“It—it’s very late, Mrs. Brixham.”</p>
<p>“I wish I might speak to you, sir,” said the landlady, very
piteously.</p>
<p>“About Morgan, I suppose? He has cooled himself at the pump. Can’t
take him back, Mrs. Brixham. Impossible. I’d determined to part with him
before, when I heard of his dealings in the discount business—I suppose
you’ve heard of them, Mrs. Brixham? My servant’s a capitalist,
begad.”</p>
<p>“Oh, sir,” said Mrs. Brixham, “I know it to my cost. I
borrowed from him a little money five years ago; and though I have paid him
many times over, I am entirely in his power. I am ruined by him, sir.
Everything I had is his. He’s a dreadful man.”</p>
<p>“Eh, Mrs. Brixham? tout pis—dev’lish sorry for you, and that
I must quit your house after lodging here so long: there’s no help for
it. I must go.”</p>
<p>“He says we must all go, sir,” sobbed out the luckless widow.
“He came downstairs from you just now—he had been drinking, and it
always makes him very wicked—and he said that you had insulted him, sir,
and treated him like a dog, and spoken to him unkindly; and he swore he would
be revenged, and—and I owe him a hundred and twenty pounds, sir—and
he has a bill of sale of all my furniture—and says he will turn me out of
my house, and send my poor George to prison. He has been the ruin of my family,
that man.”</p>
<p>“Dev’lish sorry, Mrs. Brixham; pray take a chair. What can I
do?”</p>
<p>“Could you not intercede with him for us? George will give half his
allowance; my daughter can send something. If you will but stay on, sir, and
pay a quarter’s rent in advance——”</p>
<p>“My good madam, I would as soon give you a quarter in advance as not, if
I were going to stay in the lodgings. But I can’t; and I can’t
afford to fling away twenty pounds, my good madam. I’m a poor half-pay
officer, and want every shilling I have, begad. As far as a few pounds
goes—say five pounds—I don’t say—and shall be most
happy, and that sort of thing: and I’ll give it you in the morning with
pleasure: but—but it’s getting late, and I have made a railroad
journey.”</p>
<p>“God’s will be done, sir,” said the poor woman, drying her
tears. I must bear my fate.”</p>
<p>“And a dev’lish hard one it is, and most sincerely I pity you, Mrs.
Brixham. I—I’ll say ten pounds, if you will permit me. Good
night.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Morgan, sir, when he came downstairs, and when—when I besought
him to have pity on me, and told him he had been the ruin of my family, said
something which I did not well understand—that he would ruin every family
in the house—that he knew something would bring you down too—and
that you should pay him for your—your insolence to him. I—I must
own to you, that I went down on my knees to him, sir; and he said, with a
dreadful oath against you, that he would have you on your knees.”</p>
<p>“Me?—by Gad, that is too pleasant! Where is the confounded
fellow?”</p>
<p>“He went away, sir. He said he should see you in the morning. Oh, pray
try and pacify him, and save me and my poor boy.” And the widow went away
with this prayer, to pass her night as she might, and look for the dreadful
morrow.</p>
<p>The last words about himself excited Major Pendennis so much, that his
compassion for Mrs. Brixham’s misfortunes was quite forgotten in the
consideration of his own case.</p>
<p>“Me on my knees?” thought he, as he got into bed: “confound
his impudence! Who ever saw me on my knees? What the devil does the fellow
know? Gad, I’ve not had an affair these twenty years. I defy him.”
And the old compaigner turned round and slept pretty sound, being rather
excited and amused by the events of the day—the last day in Bury Street,
he was determined it should be. “For it’s impossible to stay on
with a valet over me, and a bankrupt landlady. What good can I do this poor
devil of a woman? I’ll give her twenty pound—there’s
Warrington’s twenty pound, which he has just paid—but what’s
the use? She’ll want more, and more, and more, and that cormorant Morgan
will swallow all. No, dammy, I can’t afford to know poor people; and
to-morrow I’ll say Good-bye—to Mrs. Brixham and Mr. Morgan.”</p>
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