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<h2> CHAPTER XXX—ON SOME COUNTRY SNOBS </h2>
<p>At last came that fortunate day at the Evergreens, when I was to be made
acquainted with some of the 'county families' with whom only people of
Ponto's rank condescended to associate. And now, although poor Ponto had
just been so cruelly made to bleed on occasion of his son's new uniform,
and though he was in the direst and most cut-throat spirits with an
overdrawn account at the banker's, and other pressing evils of poverty;
although a tenpenny bottle of Marsala and an awful parsimony presided
generally at his table, yet the poor fellow was obliged to assume the most
frank and jovial air of cordiality; and all the covers being removed from
the hangings, and new dresses being procured for the young ladies, and the
family plate being unlocked and displayed, the house and all within
assumed a benevolent and festive appearance. The kitchen fires began to
blaze, the good wine ascended from the cellar, a professed cook actually
came over from Guttlebury to compile culinary abominations. Stripes was in
a new coat, and so was Ponto, for a wonder, and Tummus's button-suit was
worn EN PERMANENCE.</p>
<p>And all this to show off the little lord, thinks I. All this in honour of
a stupid little cigarrified Cornet of dragoons, who can barely write his
name,—while an eminent and profound moralist like—somebody—is
fobbed off with cold mutton and relays of pig. Well, well: a martyrdom of
cold mutton is just bearable. I pardon Mrs. Ponto, from my heart I do,
especially as I wouldn't turn out of the best bed-room, in spite of all
her hints; but held my ground in the chintz tester, vowing that Lord
Gules, as a young man, was quite small and hardy enough to make himself
comfortable elsewhere.</p>
<p>The great Ponto party was a very august one. The Hawbucks came in their
family coach, with the blood-red band emblazoned all over it: and their
man in yellow livery waited in country fashion at table, only to be
exceeded in splendour by the Hipsleys, the opposition baronet, in light
blue. The old Ladies Fitzague drove over in their little old chariot with
the fat black horses, the fat coachman, the fat footman—(why are
dowagers' horses and footmen always fat?) And soon after these personages
had arrived, with their auburn fronts and red beaks and turbans, came the
Honourable and Reverend Lionel Pettipois, who with General and Mrs. Sago
formed the rest of the party. 'Lord and Lady Frederick Howlet were asked,
but they have friends at Ivybush,' Mrs. Ponto told me; and that very
morning, the Castlehaggards sent an excuse, as her ladyship had a return
of the quinsy. Between ourselves, Lady Castlehaggard's quinsy always comes
on when there is dinner at the Evergreens.</p>
<p>If the keeping of polite company could make a woman happy, surely my kind
hostess Mrs. Ponto was on that day a happy woman. Every person present
(except the unlucky impostor who pretended to a connexion with the
Snobbington Family, and General Sago, who had brought home I don't know
how many lacs of rupees from India,) was related to the Peerage or the
Baronetage. Mrs. P. had her heart's desire. If she had been an Earl's
daughter herself could she have expected better company?—and her
family were in the oil-trade at Bristol, as all her friends very well
know.</p>
<p>What I complained of in my heart was not the dining—which, for this
once, was plentiful and comfortable enough—but the prodigious
dulness of the talking part of the entertainment. O my beloved brother
Snobs of the City, if we love each other no better than our country
brethren, at least we amuse each other more; if we bore ourselves, we are
not called upon to go ten miles to do it!</p>
<p>For instance, the Hipsleys came ten miles from the south, and the Hawbucks
ten miles from the north, of the Evergreens; and were magnates in two
different divisions of the county of Mangelwurzelshire. Hipsley, who is an
old baronet, with a bothered estate, did not care to show his contempt for
Hawbuck, who is a new creation, and rich. Hawbuck, on his part, gives
himself patronizing airs to General Sago, who looks upon the Pontos as
little better than paupers. 'Old Lady Blanche,' says Ponto, 'I hope will
leave something to her god-daughter—my second girl—we've all
of us half-poisoned ourselves with taking her physic.'</p>
<p>Lady Blanche and Lady Rose Fitzague have, the first, a medical, and the
second a literary turn. I am inclined to believe the former had a wet
COMPRESSE around her body, on the occasion when I had the happiness of
meeting her. She doctors everybody in the neighbourhood of which she is
the ornament; and has tried everything on her own person. She went into
Court, and testified publicly her faith in St. John Long: she swore by
Doctor Buchan, she took quantities of Gambouge's Universal Medicine, and
whole boxfuls of Parr's Life Pills. She has cured a multiplicity of
headaches by Squinstone's Eye-snuff; she wears a picture of Hahnemann in
her bracelet and a lock of Priessnitz's hair in a brooch. She talked about
her own complaints and those of her CONFIDANTE for the time being, to
every lady in the room successively, from our hostess down to Miss Wirt,
taking them into corners, and whispering about bronchitis, hepatitis, St.
Vitus, neuralgia, cephalalgia, and so forth. I observed poor fat Lady
Hawbuck in a dreadful alarm after some communication regarding the state
of her daughter Miss Lucy Hawbuck's health, and Mrs. Sago turned quite
yellow, and put down her third glass of Madeira, at a warning glance from
Lady Blanche.</p>
<p>Lady Rose talked literature, and about the book-club at Guttlebury, and is
very strong in voyages and travels. She has a prodigious interest in
Borneo, and displayed a knowledge of the history of the Punjaub and
Kaffirland that does credit to her memory. Old General Sago, who sat
perfectly silent and plethoric, roused up as from a lethargy when the
former country was mentioned, and gave the company his story about a
hog-hunt at Ramjugger. I observed her ladyship treated with something like
contempt her neighbour the Reverend Lionel Pettipois, a young divine whom
you may track through the country by little 'awakening' books at
half-a-crown a hundred, which dribble out of his pockets wherever he goes.
I saw him give Miss Wirt a sheaf of 'The Little Washer-woman on Putney
Common,' and to Miss Hawbuck a couple of dozen of 'Meat in the Tray; or
the Young Butcher-boy Rescued;' and on paying a visit to Guttlebury gaol,
I saw two notorious fellows waiting their trial there (and temporarily
occupied with a game of cribbage), to whom his Reverence offered a tract
as he was walking over Crackshins Common, and who robbed him of his purse,
umbrella, and cambric handkerchief, leaving him the tracts to distribute
elsewhere.</p>
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