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<h2> CHAPTER XXVIII—ON SOME COUNTRY SNOBS </h2>
<p>'Be hanged to your aristocrats!' Ponto said, in some conversation we had
regarding the family at Carabas, between whom and the Evergreens there was
a feud. 'When I first came into the county—it was the year before
Sir John Buff contested in the Blue interest—the Marquis, then Lord
St. Michaels, who, of course, was Orange to the core, paid me and Mrs.
Ponto such attentions, that I fairly confess I was taken in by the old
humbug, and thought that I'd met with a rare neighbour. 'Gad, Sir, we used
to get pines from Carabas, and pheasants from Carabas, and it was—"Ponto,
when will you come over and shoot?"—and—"Ponto, our pheasants
want thinning,"—and my Lady would insist upon her dear Mrs. Ponto
coming over to Carabas to sleep, and put me I don't know to what expense
for turbans and velvet gowns for my wife's toilette. Well, Sir, the
election takes place, and though I was always a Liberal, personal
friendship of course induces me to plump for St. Michaels, who comes in at
the head of the poll. Next year, Mrs. P. insists upon going to town—with
lodgings in Clarges Street at ten pounds a week, with a hired brougham,
and new dresses for herself and the girls, and the deuce and all to pay.
Our first cards were to Carabas House; my Lady's are returned by a great
big flunkey; and I leave you to fancy my poor Betsy's discomfiture as the
lodging-house maid took in the cards, and Lady St. Michaels drives away,
though she actually saw us at the drawing-room window. Would you believe
it, Sir, that though we called four times afterwards, those infernal
aristocrats never returned our visit; that though Lady St. Michaels gave
nine dinner-parties and four DEJEUNERS that season, she never asked us to
one; and that she cut us dead at the Opera, though Betsy was nodding to
her the whole night? We wrote to her for tickets for Almack's; she writes
to say that all hers were promised; and said, in the presence of Wiggins,
her lady's-maid, who told it to Diggs, my wife's woman, that she couldn't
conceive how people in our station of life could so far forget themselves
as to wish to appear in any such place! Go to Castle Carabas! I'd sooner
die than set my foot in the house of that impertinent, insolvent, insolent
jackanapes—and I hold him in scorn!' After this, Ponto gave me some
private information regarding Lord Carabas's pecuniary affairs; how he
owed money all over the county; how Jukes the carpenter was utterly ruined
and couldn't get a shilling of his bill; how Biggs the butcher hanged
himself for the same reason; how the six big footmen never received a
guinea of wages, and Snaffle, the state coachman, actually took off his
blown-glass wig of ceremony and flung it at Lady Carabas's feet on the
terrace before the Castle; all which stories, as they are private, I do
not think proper to divulge. But these details did not stifle my desire to
see the famous mansion of Castle Carabas, nay, possibly excited my
interest to know more about that lordly house and its owners.</p>
<p>At the entrance of the park, there are a pair of great gaunt mildewed
lodges—mouldy Doric temples with black chimney-pots, in the finest
classic taste, and the gates of course are surmounted by the CHATS BOTTES,
the well-known supporters of the Carabas family. 'Give the lodge-keeper a
shilling,' says Ponto, (who drove me near to it in his four-wheeled
cruelty-chaise). 'I warrant it's the first piece of ready money he has
received for some time. I don't know whether there was any foundation for
this sneer, but the gratuity was received with a curtsey, and the gate
opened for me to enter. 'Poor old porteress!' says I, inwardly. 'You
little know that it is the Historian of Snobs whom you let in!' The gates
were passed. A damp green stretch of park spread right and left
immeasurably, confined by a chilly grey wall, and a damp long straight
road between two huge rows of moist, dismal lime-trees, leads up to the
Castle. In the midst of the park is a great black tank or lake, bristling
over with rushes, and here and there covered over with patches of
pea-soup. A shabby temple rises on an island in this delectable lake,
which is approached by a rotten barge that lies at roost in a dilapidated
boat house. Clumps of elms and oaks dot over the huge green flat. Every
one of them would have been down long since, but that the Marquis is not
allowed to cut the timber.</p>
<p>Up that long avenue the Snobographer walked in solitude. At the
seventy-ninth tree on the left-hand side, the insolvent butcher hanged
himself. I scarcely wondered at the dismal deed, so woful and sad were the
impressions connected with the place. So, for a mile and a half I walked—alone
and thinking of death.</p>
<p>I forgot to say the house is in full view all the way—except when
intercepted by the trees on the miserable island in the lake—an
enormous red-brick mansion, square, vast, and dingy. It is flanked by four
stone towers with weathercocks. In the midst of the grand facade is a huge
Ionic portico, approached by a vast, lonely, ghastly staircase. Rows of
black windows, framed in stone, stretch on either side, right and left—three
storeys and eighteen windows of a row. You may see a picture of the palace
and staircase, in the 'Views of England and Wales,' with four carved and
gilt carriages waiting at the gravel walk, and several parties of ladies
and gentlemen in wigs and hoops, dotting the fatiguing lines of stairs.</p>
<p>But these stairs are made in great houses for people NOT to ascend. The
first Lady Carabas (they are but eighty years in the peerage), if she got
out of her gilt coach in a shower, would be wet to the skin before she got
half-way to the carved Ionic portico, where four dreary statues of Peace,
Plenty, Piety and Patriotism, are the only sentinels. You enter these
palaces by back-doors. 'That was the way the Carabases got their peerage,'
the misanthropic Ponto said after dinner.</p>
<p>Well—I rang the bell at a little low side-door; it clanged and
jingled and echoed for a long, long while, till at length a face, as of a
housekeeper, peered through the door, and, as she saw my hand in my
waistcoat pocket, opened it. Unhappy, lonely housekeeper, I thought. Is
Miss Crusoe in her island more solitary? The door clapped to, and I was in
Castle Carabas.</p>
<p>'The side entrance and All,' says the housekeeper. 'The halligator hover
the mantelpiece was brought home by Hadmiral St. Michaels, when a Capting
with Lord Hanson. The harms on the cheers is the harms of the Carabas
family.' The hall was rather comfortable. We went clapping up a clean
stone backstair, and then into a back passage cheerfully decorated with
ragged light-green Kidderminster, and issued upon</p>
<p>'THE GREAT ALL.</p>
<p>'The great all is seventy-two feet in lenth, fifty-six in breath, and
thirty-eight feet 'igh. The carvings of the chimlies, representing the
birth of Venus, and Ercules, and Eyelash, is by Van Chislum, the most
famous sculpture of his hage and country. The ceiling, by Calimanco,
represents Painting, Harchitecture and Music (the naked female figure with
the barrel horgan) introducing George, fust Lord Carabas, to the Temple of
the Muses. The winder ornaments is by Vanderputty. The floor is Patagonian
marble; and the chandelier in the centre was presented to Lionel, second
Marquis, by Lewy the Sixteenth, whose 'ead was cut hoff in the French
Revelation. We now henter</p>
<p>THE SOUTH GALLERY.</p>
<p>'One 'undred and forty-eight in lenth by thirty-two in breath; it is
profusely hornaminted by the choicest works of Hart. Sir Andrew Katz,
founder of the Carabas family and banker of the Prince of Horange,
Kneller. Her present Ladyship, by Lawrence. Lord St. Michaels, by the same—he
is represented sittin' on a rock in velvit pantaloons. Moses in the
bullrushes—the bull very fine, by Paul Potter. The toilet of Venus,
Fantaski. Flemish Bores drinking, Van Ginnums. Jupiter and Europia, de
Horn. The Grandjunction Canal, Venis, by Candleetty; and Italian Bandix,
by Slavata Rosa.'—And so this worthy woman went on, from one room
into another, from the blue room to the green, and the green to the grand
saloon, and the grand saloon to the tapestry closet, cackling her list of
pictures and wonders: and furtively turning up a corner of brown holland
to show the colour of the old, faded, seedy, mouldy, dismal hangings.</p>
<p>At last we came to her Ladyship's bed-room. In the centre of this dreary
apartment there is a bed about the size of one of those whizgig temples in
which the Genius appears in a pantomime. The huge gilt edifice is
approached by steps, and so tall, that it might be let off in floors, for
sleeping-rooms for all the Carabas family. An awful bed! A murder might be
done at one end of that bed, and people sleeping at the other end be
ignorant of it. Gracious powers! fancy little Lord Carabas in a nightcap
ascending those steps after putting out the candle!</p>
<p>The sight of that seedy and solitary splendour was too much for me. I
should go mad were I that lonely housekeeper—in those enormous
galleries—in that lonely library, filled up with ghastly folios that
nobody dares read, with an inkstand on the centre table like the coffin of
a baby, and sad portraits staring at you from the bleak walls with their
solemn Mouldy eyes. No wonder that Carabas does not come down here often.</p>
<p>It would require two thousand footmen to make the place cheerful. No
wonder the coachman resigned his wig, that the masters are insolvent, and
the servants perish in this huge dreary out-at-elbow place.</p>
<p>A single family has no more right to build itself a temple of that sort
than to erect a Tower of Babel. Such a habitation is not decent for a mere
mortal man. But, after all, I suppose poor Carabas had no choice. Fate put
him there as it sent Napoleon to St. Helena. Suppose it had been decreed
by Nature that you and I should be Marquises? We wouldn't refuse, I
suppose, but take Castle Carabas and all, with debts, duns, and mean
makeshifts, and shabby pride, and swindling magnificence.</p>
<p>Next season, when I read of Lady Carabas's splendid entertainments in the
MORNING POST, and see the poor old insolvent cantering through the Park—I
shall have a much tenderer interest in these great people than I have had
heretofore. Poor old shabby Snob! Ride on and fancy the world is still on
its knees before the house of Carabas! Give yourself airs, poor old
bankrupt Magnifico, who are under money-obligations to your flunkeys; and
must stoop so as to swindle poor tradesmen! And for us, O my brother
Snobs, oughtn't we to feel happy if our walk through life is more even,
and that we are out of the reach of that surprising arrogance and that
astounding meanness to which this wretched old victim is obliged to mount
and descend.</p>
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