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<h2> CHAPTER XIX—DINING-OUT SNOBS </h2>
<p>In England Dinner-giving Snobs occupy a very important place in society,
and the task of describing them is tremendous. There was a time in my life
when the consciousness of having eaten a man's salt rendered me dumb
regarding his demerits, and I thought it a wicked act and a breach of
hospitality to speak ill of him.</p>
<p>But why should a saddle-of-mutton blind you, or a turbot and lobster-sauce
shut your mouth for ever? With advancing age, men see their duties more
clearly. I am not to be hoodwinked any longer by a slice of venison, be it
ever so fat; and as for being dumb on account of turbot and lobster-sauce——of
course I am; good manners ordain that I should be so, until I have
swallowed the compound—but not afterwards; directly the victuals are
discussed, and John takes away the plate, my tongue begins to wag. Does
not yours, if you have a pleasant neighbour?—a lovely creature, say,
of some five-and-thirty, whose daughters have not yet quite come out—they
are the best talkers. As for your young misses, they are only put about
the table to look at—like the flowers in the centre-piece. Their
blushing youth and natural modesty preclude them from easy, confidential,
conversational ABANDON which forms the delight of the intercourse with
their dear mothers. It is to these, if he would prosper in his profession,
that the Dining-out Snob should address himself. Suppose you sit next to
one of these, how pleasant it is, in the intervals of the banquet,
actually to abuse the victuals and the giver of the entertainment! It's
twice as PIQUANT to make fun of a man under his very nose.</p>
<p>'What IS a Dinner-giving Snob?' some innocent youth, who is not REPANDU in
the world, may ask—or some simple reader who has not the benefits of
London experience.</p>
<p>My dear sir, I will show you—not all, for that is impossible—but
several kinds of Dinner-giving Snobs. For instance, suppose you, in the
middle rank of life, accustomed to Mutton, roast on Tuesday, cold on
Wednesday, hashed on Thursday, &c., with small means and a small
establishment, choose to waste the former and set the latter topsy-turvy
by giving entertainments unnaturally costly—you come into the
Dinner-giving Snob class at once. Suppose you get in cheap-made dishes
from the pastrycook's, and hire a couple of greengrocers, or
carpet-beaters, to figure as footmen, dismissing honest Molly, who waits
on common days, and bedizening your table (ordinarily ornamented with
willow-pattern crockery) with twopenny-halfpenny Birmingham plate. Suppose
you pretend to be richer and grander than you ought to be—you are a
Dinner-giving Snob. And oh, I tremble to think how many and many a one
will read this!</p>
<p>A man who entertains in this way—and, alas, how few do not!—is
like a fellow who would borrow his neighbour's coat to make a show in, or
a lady who flaunts in the diamonds from next door—a humbug, in a
word, and amongst the Snobs he must be set down.</p>
<p>A man who goes out of his natural sphere of society to ask Lords,
Generals, Aldermen, and other persons of fashion, but is niggardly of his
hospitality towards his own equals, is a Dinner-giving Snob. My dear
friend, Jack Tufthunt, for example, knows ONE Lord whom he met at a
watering-place: old Lord Mumble, who is as toothless as a three-months-old
baby, and as mum as an undertaker, and as dull as—well, we will not
particularise. Tufthunt never has a dinner now but you see this solemn old
toothless patrician at the right-hand of Mrs. Tufthunt—Tufthunt is a
Dinner-giving Snob.</p>
<p>Old Livermore, old Soy, old Chutney, the East Indian Director, old Cutler,
the Surgeon, &c.,—that society of old fogies, in fine, who give
each other dinners round and round, and dine for the mere purpose of
guttling—these, again, are Dinner-giving Snobs.</p>
<p>Again, my friend Lady MacScrew, who has three grenadier flunkeys in lace
round the table, and serves up a scrag-of-mutton on silver, and dribbles
you out bad sherry and port by thimblefuls, is a Dinner-giving Snob of the
other sort; and I confess, for my part, I would rather dine with old
Livermore or old Soy than with her Ladyship.</p>
<p>Stinginess is snobbish. Ostentation is snobbish. Too great profusion is
snobbish. Tuft-hunting is snobbish. But I own there are people more
snobbish than all those whose defects are above mentioned: viz., those
individuals who can, and don't give dinners at all. The man without
hospitality shall never sit SUB IISDEM TRABIBUS with ME. Let the sordid
wretch go mumble his bone alone!</p>
<p>What, again, is true hospitality? Alas, my dear friends and brother Snobs!
how little do we meet of it after all! Are the motives PURE which induce
your friends to ask you to dinner? This has often come across me. Does
your entertainer want something from you? For instance, I am not of a
suspicious turn; but it IS a fact that when Hookey is bringing out a new
work, he asks the critics all round to dinner; that when Walker has got
his picture ready for the Exhibition, he somehow grows exceedingly
hospitable, and has his friends of the press to a quiet cutlet and a glass
of Sillery. Old Hunks, the miser, who died lately (leaving his money to
his housekeeper) lived many years on the fat of the land, by simply taking
down, at all his friends', the names and Christian names OF ALL THE
CHILDREN. But though you may have your own opinion about the hospitality
of your acquaintances; and though men who ask you from sordid motives are
most decidedly Dinner-giving Snobs, it is best not to inquire into their
motives too keenly. Be not too curious about the mouth of a gift-horse.
After all, a man does not intend to insult you by asking you to dinner.</p>
<p>Though, for that matter, I know some characters about town who actually
consider themselves injured and insulted if the dinner or the company is
not to their liking. There is Guttleton, who dines at home off a
shilling's-worth of beef from the cookshop, but if he is asked to dine at
a house where there are not pease at the end of May, or cucumbers in March
along with the turbot, thinks himself insulted by being invited. 'Good
Ged!' says he, 'what the deuce do the Forkers mean by asking ME to a
family dinner? I can get mutton at home;' or 'What infernal impertinence
it is of the Spooners to get ENTREES from the pastrycook's, and fancy that
I am to be deceived with their stories about their French cook!' Then,
again, there is Jack Puddington—I saw that honest fellow t'other day
quite in a rage, because, as chance would have it, Sir John Carver asked
him to meet the very same party he had met at Colonel Cramley's the day
before, and he had not got up a new set of stories to entertain them. Poor
Dinner-giving Snobs! you don't know what small thanks you get for all your
pains and money! How we Dining-out Snobs sneer at your cookery, and
pooh-pooh your old hock, and are incredulous about your four-and-six-penny
champagne, and know that the side-dishes of to-day are RECHAUFFES from the
dinner of yesterday, and mark how certain dishes are whisked off the table
untasted, so that they may figure at the banquet tomorrow. Whenever, for
my part, I see the head man particularly anxious to ESCAMOTER a fricandeau
or a blanc-mange, I always call out, and insist upon massacring it with a
spoon. All this sort of conduct makes one popular with the Dinner-giving
Snob. One friend of mine, I know, has made a prodigious sensation in good
society, by announcing apropos of certain dishes when offered to him, that
he never eats aspic except at Lord Tittup's, and that Lady Jimmy's CHEF is
the only man in London who knows how to dress—FILET EN SERPENTEAU—or
SUPREME DE VOLAILLE AUX TRUFFES.</p>
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