Home
  By Author [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Title [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Language
all Classics books content using ISYS

Download this book: [ ASCII | HTML | PDF ]

Look for this book on Amazon


We have new books nearly every day.
If you would like a news letter once a week or once a month
fill out this form and we will give you a summary of the books for that week or month by email.

Title: Pelham — Complete
Author: Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Pelham — Complete" ***


PELHAM

By Edward Bulwer Lytton



VOLUME I.



CHAPTER I.

Ou peut-on etre mieux qu’au sein de sa famille?--French Song. [Where
can on be better than in the bosom of one’s family?]


I am an only child. My father was the younger son of one of our oldest
earls; my mother the dowerless daughter of a Scotch peer. Mr. Pelham was
a moderate whig, and gave sumptuous dinners; Lady Frances was a woman of
taste, and particularly fond of diamonds and old china.

Vulgar people know nothing of the necessaries required in good society,
and the credit they give is as short as their pedigree. Six years
after my birth, there was an execution in our house. My mother was just
setting off on a visit to the Duchess of D_____; she declared it
was impossible to go without her diamonds. The chief of the bailiffs
declared it was impossible to trust them out of his sight. The matter
was compromised--the bailiff went with my mother to C___, and was
introduced as my tutor. “A man of singular merit,” whispered my mother,
“but so shy!” Fortunately, the bailiff was abashed, and by losing his
impudence he kept the secret. At the end of the week, the diamonds went
to the jeweller’s, and Lady Frances wore paste.

I think it was about a month afterwards that a sixteenth cousin left
my mother twenty thousand pounds. “It will just pay off our most
importunate creditors, and equip me for Melton,” said Mr. Pelham.

“It will just redeem my diamonds, and refurnish the house,” said Lady
Frances.

The latter alternative was chosen. My father went down to run his last
horse at Newmarket, and my mother received nine hundred people in a
Turkish tent. Both were equally fortunate, the Greek and the Turk; my
father’s horse lost, in consequence of which he pocketed five thousand
pounds; and my mother looked so charming as a Sultana, that Seymour
Conway fell desperately in love with her.

Mr. Conway had just caused two divorces; and of course, all the women
in London were dying for him--judge then of the pride which Lady Frances
felt at his addresses. The end of the season was unusually dull, and
my mother, after having looked over her list of engagements, and
ascertained that she had none remaining worth staying for, agreed to
elope with her new lover.

The carriage was at the end of the square. My mother, for the first time
in her life, got up at six o’clock. Her foot was on the step, and her
hand next to Mr. Conway’s heart, when she remembered that her favourite
china monster and her French dog were left behind. She insisted on
returning--re-entered the house, and was coming down stairs with one
under each arm, when she was met by my father and two servants. My
father’s valet had discovered the flight (I forget how), and awakened
his master.

When my father was convinced of his loss, he called for his
dressing-gown--searched the garret and the kitchen--looked in the maid’s
drawers and the cellaret--and finally declared he was distracted. I have
heard that the servants were quite melted by his grief, and I do not
doubt it in the least, for he was always celebrated for his skill in
private theatricals. He was just retiring to vent his grief in his
dressing-room, when he met my mother. It must altogether have been an
awkward rencontre, and, indeed, for my father, a remarkably unfortunate
occurrence; for Seymour Conway was immensely rich, and the damages
would, no doubt, have been proportionably high. Had they met each other
alone, the affair might easily have been settled, and Lady Frances gone
off in tranquillity;--those d--d servants are always in the way!

I have, however, often thought that it was better for me that the affair
ended thus,--as I know, from many instances, that it is frequently
exceedingly inconvenient to have one’s mother divorced.

I have observed that the distinguishing trait of people accustomed to
good society, is a calm, imperturbable quiet, which pervades all their
actions and habits, from the greatest to the least: they eat in quiet,
move in quiet, live in quiet, and lose their wife, or even their money,
in quiet; while low persons cannot take up either a spoon or an
affront without making such an amazing noise about it. To render this
observation good, and to return to the intended elopement, nothing
farther was said upon that event. My father introduced Conway
to Brookes’s, and invited him to dinner twice a week for a whole
twelvemonth.

Not long after this occurrence, by the death of my grandfather, my uncle
succeeded to the title and estates of the family. He was, as people
justly observed, rather an odd man: built schools for peasants, forgave
poachers, and diminished his farmers’ rents; indeed, on account of these
and similar eccentricities, he was thought a fool by some, and a madman
by others. However, he was not quite destitute of natural feeling; for
he paid my father’s debts, and established us in the secure enjoyment of
our former splendour. But this piece of generosity, or justice, was done
in the most unhandsome manner; he obtained a promise from my father to
retire from Brookes’s, and relinquish the turf; and he prevailed upon
my mother to take an aversion to diamonds, and an indifference to china
monsters.



CHAPTER II.

Tell arts they have no soundness, But vary by esteeming; Tell schools
they want profoundness, And stand too much on seeming. If arts and
schools reply, Give arts and schools the lie.--The Soul’s Errand.

At ten years old I went to Eton. I had been educated till that period by
my mother, who, being distantly related to Lord ------, (who had published
“Hints upon the Culinary Art”), imagined she possessed an hereditary
claim to literary distinction. History was her great forte; for she had
read all the historical romances of the day, and history accordingly I
had been carefully taught.

I think at this moment I see my mother before me, reclining on her sofa,
and repeating to me some story about Queen Elizabeth and Lord Essex;
then telling me, in a languid voice, as she sank back with the exertion,
of the blessings of a literary taste, and admonishing me never to read
above half an hour at a time for fear of losing my health.

Well, to Eton I went; and the second day I had been there, I was half
killed for refusing, with all the pride of a Pelham, to wash tea-cups. I
was rescued from the clutches of my tyrant by a boy not much bigger
than myself, but reckoned the best fighter, for his size, in the whole
school. His name was Reginald Glanville: from that period, we became
inseparable, and our friendship lasted all the time he stayed at Eton,
which was within a year of my own departure for Cambridge.

His father was a baronet, of a very ancient and wealthy family; and his
mother was a woman of some talent and more ambition. She made her house
one of the most recherchee in London. Seldom seen at large assemblies,
she was eagerly sought after in the well winnowed soirees of the elect.
Her wealth, great as it was, seemed the least prominent ingredient
of her establishment. There was in it no uncalled for ostentation--no
purse-proud vulgarity--no cringing to great, and no patronizing
condescension to little people; even the Sunday newspapers could not
find fault with her, and the querulous wives of younger brothers could
only sneer and be silent.

“It is an excellent connexion,” said my mother, when I told her of my
friendship with Reginald Glanville, “and will be of more use to you than
many of greater apparent consequence. Remember, my dear, that in all the
friends you make at present, you look to the advantage you can derive
from them hereafter; that is what we call knowledge of the world, and
it is to get the knowledge of the world that you are sent to a public
school.”

I think, however, to my shame, that notwithstanding my mother’s
instructions, very few prudential considerations were mingled with
my friendship for Reginald Glanville. I loved him with a warmth of
attachment, which has since surprised even myself.

He was of a very singular character: he used to wander by the river
in the bright days of summer, when all else were at play, without any
companion but his own thoughts; and these were tinged, even at that
early age, with a deep and impassioned melancholy. He was so reserved in
his manner, that it was looked upon as coldness or pride, and was repaid
as such by a pretty general dislike. Yet to those he loved, no one could
be more open and warm; more watchful to gratify others, more indifferent
to gratification for himself: an utter absence of all selfishness, and
an eager and active benevolence were indeed the distinguishing traits
of his character. I have seen him endure with a careless goodnature the
most provoking affronts from boys much less than himself; but directly
I, or any other of his immediate friends, was injured or aggrieved,
his anger was almost implacable. Although he was of a slight frame, yet
early exercise had brought strength to his muscles, and activity to his
limbs; and his skill in all athletic exercises whenever (which was but
rarely) he deigned to share them, gave alike confidence and success to
whatever enterprise his lion-like courage tempted him to dare.

Such, briefly and imperfectly sketched, was the character of Reginald
Glanville--the one, who of all my early companions differed the most
from myself; yet the one whom I loved the most, and the one whose future
destiny was the most intertwined with my own.

I was in the head class when I left Eton. As I was reckoned an
uncommonly well-educated boy, it may not be ungratifying to the admirers
of the present system of education to pause here for a moment, and recal
what I then knew. I could make twenty Latin verses in half an hour;
I could construe, without an English translation, all the easy Latin
authors, and many of the difficult ones, with it: I could read Greek
fluently, and even translate it though the medium of a Latin version at
the bottom of the page. I was thought exceedingly clever, for I had only
been eight years acquiring all this fund of information, which, as one
can never recal it in the world, you have every right to suppose that
I had entirely forgotten before I was five and twenty. As I was
never taught a syllable of English during this period; as when I once
attempted to read Pope’s poems, out of school hours, I was laughed at,
and called “a sap;” as my mother, when I went to school, renounced
her own instructions; and as, whatever school-masters may think to the
contrary, one learns nothing now-a-days by inspiration: so of everything
which relates to English literature, English laws, and English history
(with the exception of the said story of Queen Elizabeth and Lord
Essex,) you have the same right to suppose that I was, at the age of
eighteen, when I left Eton, in the profoundest ignorance.

At this age, I was transplanted to Cambridge, where I bloomed for two
years in the blue and silver of a fellow commoner of Trinity. At the end
of that time (being of royal descent) I became entitled to an honorary
degree. I suppose the term is in contradistinction to an honourable
degree, which is obtained by pale men in spectacles and cotton
stockings, after thirty-six months of intense application.

I do not exactly remember how I spent my time at Cambridge. I had a
piano-forte in my room, and a private billiard-room at a village two
miles off; and between these resources, I managed to improve my mind
more than could reasonably have been expected. To say truth, the whole
place reeked with vulgarity. The men drank beer by the gallon, and
eat cheese by the hundred weight--wore jockey-cut coats, and talked
slang--rode for wagers, and swore when they lost--smoked in your face,
and expectorated on the floor. Their proudest glory was to drive the
mail--their mightiest exploit to box with the coachman--their most
delicate amour to leer at the barmaid.

It will be believed, that I felt little regret in quitting companions
of this description. I went to take leave of our college tutor. “Mr.
Pelham,” said he, affectionately squeezing me by the hand, “your conduct
has been most exemplary; you have not walked wantonly over the college
grassplats, nor set your dog at the proctor--nor driven tandems by day,
nor broken lamps by night--nor entered the chapel in order to display
your intoxication--nor the lecture-room, in order to caricature the
professors. This is the general behaviour of young men of family and
fortune; but it has not been your’s. Sir, you have been an honour to
your college.”

Thus closed my academical career. He who does not allow that it passed
creditably to my teachers, profitably to myself, and beneficially to the
world, is a narrow-minded and illiterate man, who knows nothing of the
advantages of modern education.



CHAPTER III.

Thus does a false ambition rule us, Thus pomp delude, and folly fool us.
--Shenstone.

An open house, haunted with great resort.--Bishop Hall’s Satires.

I left Cambridge in a very weak state of health; and as nobody had yet
come to London, I accepted the invitation of Sir Lionel Garrett to pay
him a visit at his country seat. Accordingly, one raw winter’s day,
full of the hopes of the reviving influence of air and exercise, I found
myself carefully packed up in three great coats, and on the high road to
Garrett Park.

Sir Lionel Garrett was a character very common in England, and, in
describing him, I describe the whole species. He was of an ancient
family, and his ancestors had for centuries resided on their estates
in Norfolk. Sir Lionel, who came to his majority and his fortune at the
same time, went up to London at the age of twenty-one, a raw, uncouth
sort of young man, in a green coat and lank hair. His friends in town
were of that set whose members are above ton, whenever they do not grasp
at its possession, but who, whenever they do, lose at once their aim and
their equilibrium, and fall immeasurably below it. I mean that set which
I call “the respectable,” consisting of old peers of an old school;
country gentlemen, who still disdain not to love their wine and to hate
the French; generals who have served in the army; elder brothers who
succeed to something besides a mortgage; and younger brothers who do
not mistake their capital for their income. To this set you may add the
whole of the baronetage--for I have remarked that baronets hang together
like bees or Scotchmen; and if I go to a baronet’s house, and speak
to some one whom I have not the happiness to know, I always say “Sir
John--.”

It was no wonder, then, that to this set belonged Sir Lionel Garrett--no
more the youth in a green coat and lank hair, but pinched in, and curled
out--abounding in horses and whiskers--dancing all night--lounging all
day--the favourite of the old ladies, the Philander of the young.

One unfortunate evening Sir Lionel Garrett was introduced to the
celebrated Duchess of D. From that moment his head was turned. Before
then, he had always imagined that he was somebody--that he was Sir
Lionel Garrett, with a good-looking person and eight thousand a-year;
he now knew that he was nobody unless he went to Lady G.’s and unless
he bowed to Lady S. Disdaining all importance derived from himself, it
became absolutely necessary to his happiness, that all his importance
should be derived solely from his acquaintance with others. He cared not
a straw that he was a man of fortune, of family, of consequence; he must
be a man of ton; or he was an atom, a nonentity, a very worm, and no
man. No lawyer at Gray’s Inn, no galley slave at the oar, ever worked so
hard at his task as Sir Lionel Garrett at his. Ton, to a single man,
is a thing attainable enough. Sir Lionel was just gaining the envied
distinction, when he saw, courted, and married Lady Harriett Woodstock.

His new wife was of a modern and not very rich family, and striving like
Sir Lionel for the notoriety of fashion; but of this struggle he
was ignorant. He saw her admitted into good society--he imagined she
commanded it; she was a hanger on--he believed she was a leader. Lady
Harriett was crafty and twenty-four--had no objection to be married, nor
to change the name of Woodstock for Garrett. She kept up the baronet’s
mistake till it was too late to repair it.

Marriage did not bring Sir Lionel wisdom. His wife was of the same
turn of mind as himself: they might have been great people in the
country--they preferred being little people in town. They might have
chosen friends among persons of respectability and rank--they preferred
being chosen as acquaintance by persons of ton. Society was their
being’s end and aim, and the only thing which brought them pleasure
was the pain of attaining it. Did I not say truly that I would describe
individuals of a common species? Is there one who reads this, who does
not recognize that overflowing class of the English population, whose
members would conceive it an insult to be thought of sufficient rank to
be respectable for what they are?--who take it as an honour that they
are made by their acquaintance?--who renounce the ease of living for
themselves, for the trouble of living for persons who care not a pin
for their existence--who are wretched if they are not dictated to by
others--and who toil, groan, travail, through the whole course of life,
in order to forfeit their independence?

I arrived at Garrett Park just time enough to dress for dinner. As I was
descending the stairs after having performed that ceremony, I heard my
own name pronounced by a very soft, lisping voice, “Henry Pelham! dear,
what a pretty name. Is he handsome?”

“Rather distingue than handsome,” was the unsatisfactory reply, couched
in a slow, pompous accent, which I immediately recognized to belong to
Lady Harriett Garrett.

“Can we make something of him?” resumed the first voice.

“Something!” said Lady Harriett, indignantly; “he will be Lord
Glenmorris! and he is son to Lady Frances Pelham.”

“Ah,” said the lisper, carelessly; “but can he write poetry, and play
proverbes?”

“No, Lady Harriett,” said I, advancing; “but permit me, through you, to
assure Lady Nelthorpe that he can admire those who do.”

“So you know me then?” said the lisper: “I see we shall be excellent
friends;” and disengaging herself from Lady Harriett, she took my arm,
and began discussing persons and things, poetry and china, French
plays and music, till I found myself beside her at dinner, and most
assiduously endeavouring to silence her by the superior engrossments of
a bechamelle de poisson.

I took the opportunity of the pause, to survey the little circle of
which Lady Harriett was the centre. In the first place, there was
Mr. Davison, a great political economist, a short, dark, corpulent
gentleman, with a quiet, serene, sleepy countenance, which put me
exceedingly in mind of my grandmother’s arm-chair; beside him was a
quick, sharp little woman, all sparkle and bustle, glancing a small,
grey, prying eye round the table, with a most restless activity: this,
as Lady Nelthorpe afterwards informed me, was a Miss Trafford, an
excellent person for a Christmas in the country, whom every body was
dying to have: she was an admirable mimic, an admirable actress, and
an admirable reciter; made poetry and shoes, and told fortunes by the
cards, which came actually true.

There was also Mr. Wormwood, the noli-me-tangere of literary lions--an
author who sowed his conversation not with flowers but thorns. Nobody
could accuse him of the flattery generally imputed to his species;
through the course of a long and varied life, he had never once
been known to say a civil thing. He was too much disliked not to be
recherche; whatever is once notorious, even for being disagreeable, is
sure to be courted in England. Opposite to him sat the really clever,
and affectedly pedantic Lord Vincent, one of those persons who have been
“promising young men” all their lives; who are found till four o’clock
in the afternoon in a dressing-gown, with a quarto before them; who go
down into the country for six weeks every session, to cram an impromptu
reply; and who always have a work in the press which is never to be
published.

Lady Nelthorpe herself I had frequently seen. She had some reputation
for talent, was exceedingly affected, wrote poetry in albums, ridiculed
her husband, who was a fox hunter, and had a great penchant pour les
beaux arts et les beaux hommes.

There were four or five others of the unknown vulgar, younger brothers,
who were good shots and bad matches; elderly ladies, who lived in
Baker-street, and liked long whist; and young ones, who never took wine,
and said “Sir.”

I must, however, among this number, except the beautiful Lady Roseville,
the most fascinating woman, perhaps, of the day. She was evidently the
great person there, and, indeed, among all people who paid due deference
to ton, was always sure to be so every where. I have never seen but one
person more beautiful. Her eyes were of the deepest blue; her complexion
of the most delicate carnation; her hair of the richest auburn: nor
could even Mr. Wormwood detect the smallest fault in the rounded yet
slender symmetry of her figure.

Although not above twenty-five, she was in that state in which alone a
woman ceases to be a dependant--widowhood. Lord Roseville, who had been
dead about two years, had not survived their marriage many months; that
period was, however, sufficiently long to allow him to appreciate her
excellence, and to testify his sense of it: the whole of his unentailed
property, which was very large, he bequeathed to her.

She was very fond of the society of literati, though without the
pretence of belonging to their order. But her manners constituted her
chief attraction: while they were utterly different from those of every
one else, you could not, in the least minutiae, discover in what the
difference consisted: this is, in my opinion, the real test of perfect
breeding. While you are enchanted with the effect, it should possess
so little prominency and peculiarity, that you should never be able to
guess the cause.

“Pray,” said Lord Vincent to Mr. Wormwood, “have you been to P--this
year?”

“No,” was the answer.

“I have, my lord,” said Miss Trafford, who never lost an opportunity of
slipping in a word.

“Well, and did they make you sleep, as usual, at the Crown, with the
same eternal excuse, after having brought you fifty miles from town,
of small house--no beds--all engaged--inn close by? Ah, never shall I
forget that inn, with its royal name, and its hard beds--

“‘Uneasy sleeps a head beneath the Crown!’”

“Ha, ha! Excellent!” cried Miss Trafford, who was always the first in
at the death of a pun. “Yes, indeed they did: poor old Lord Belton,
with his rheumatism; and that immense General Grant, with his asthma;
together with three ‘single men,’ and myself, were safely conveyed to
that asylum for the destitute.”

“Ah! Grant, Grant!” said Lord Vincent, eagerly, who saw another
opportunity of whipping in a pun. “He slept there also the same night
I did; and when I saw his unwieldy person waddling out of the door the
next morning, I said to Temple, ‘Well, that’s the largest Grant I ever
saw from the Crown.’” [Note: It was from Mr. J. Smith that Lord Vincent
purloined this pun.]

“Very good,” said Wormwood, gravely. “I declare, Vincent, you are
growing quite witty. Do you remember Jekyl? Poor fellow, what a really
good punster he was--not agreeable though--particularly at dinner--no
punsters are. Mr. Davison, what is that dish next to you?”

Mr. Davison was a great gourmand: “Salmi de perdreaux aux truffes,”
 replied the political economist.

“Truffles!” said Wormwood, “have you been eating any?”

“Yes,” said Davison, with unusual energy, “and they are the best I have
tasted for a long time.”

“Very likely,” said Wormwood, with a dejected air. “I am particularly
fond of them, but I dare not touch one--truffles are so very
apoplectic--you, I make no doubt, may eat them in safety.”

Wormwood was a tall, meagre man, with a neck a yard long. Davison was,
as I have said, short and fat, and made without any apparent neck at
all--only head and shoulders, like a cod-fish.

Poor Mr. Davison turned perfectly white; he fidgeted about in his chair;
cast a look of the most deadly fear and aversion at the fatal dish he
had been so attentive to before; and, muttering “apoplectic,” closed his
lips, and did not open them again all dinner-time.

Mr. Wormwood’s object was effected. Two people were silenced and
uncomfortable, and a sort of mist hung over the spirits of the whole
party. The dinner went on and off, like all other dinners; the ladies
retired, and the men drank, and talked indecorums. Mr. Davison left
the room first, in order to look out the word “truffle,” in the
Encyclopaedia; and Lord Vincent and I went next, “lest (as my companion
characteristically observed) that d--d Wormwood should, if we stayed a
moment longer, ‘send us weeping to our beds.’”



CHAPTER IV.

Oh! la belle chose que la Poste!--Lettres de Sevigne.

Ay--but who is it?--As you Like it.

I had mentioned to my mother my intended visit to Garrett Park, and the
second day after my arrival there came the following letter:--

“My dear Henry,

“I was very glad to hear you were rather better than you had been. I
trust you will take great care of yourself. I think flannel waistcoats
might be advisable; and, by-the-by, they are very good for the
complexion. Apropos of the complexion: I did not like that green coat
you wore when I last saw you--you look best in black--which is a great
compliment, for people must be very distingue in appearance, in order to
do so.

“You know, my dear, that those Garretts are in themselves any thing but
unexceptionable; you will, therefore, take care not to be too intimate;
it is, however, a very good house: all you meet there are worth knowing,
for one thing or the other. Remember, Henry, that the acquaintance (not
the friends) of second or third-rate people are always sure to be good:
they are not independent enough to receive whom they like--their whole
rank is in their guests: you may be also sure that the menage will, in
outward appearance at least, be quite comme il faut, and for the same
reason. Gain as much knowledge de l’art culinaire as you can: it is
an accomplishment absolutely necessary. You may also pick up a little
acquaintance with metaphysics, if you have any opportunity; that sort of
thing is a good deal talked about just at present.

“I hear Lady Roseville is at Garrett Park. You must be particularly
attentive to her; you will probably now have an opportunity de faire
votre cour that may never again happen. In London, she is so much
surrounded by all, that she is quite inaccessible to one; besides, there
you will have so many rivals. Without flattery to you, I take it for
granted, that you are the best looking and most agreeable person at
Garrett Park, and it will, therefore, be a most unpardonable fault if
you do not make Lady Roseville of the same opinion. Nothing, my dear
son, is like a liaison (quite innocent of course) with a woman of
celebrity in the world. In marriage a man lowers a woman to his own
rank; in an affaire du coeur he raises himself to her’s. I need not, I
am sure, after what I have said, press this point any further.

“Write to me and inform me of all your proceedings. If you mention
the people who are at Garrett Park, I can tell you the proper line of
conduct to pursue with each.

“I am sure that I need not add that I have nothing but your real good at
heart, and that I am your very affectionate mother,

“Frances Pelham.

“P.S. Never talk much to young men--remember that it is the women who
make a reputation in society.”

“Well,” said I, when I had read this letter, and adjusted my best curl,
“my mother is very right, and so now for Lady Roseville.”

I went down stairs to breakfast. Miss Trafford and Lady Nelthorpe were
in the room talking with great interest, and, on Miss Trafford’s part,
with still greater vehemence.

“So handsome,” said Lady Nelthorpe, as I approached.

“Are you talking of me?” said I.

“Oh, you vanity of vanities!” was the answer. “No, we were speaking of a
very romantic adventure which has happened to Miss Trafford and myself,
and disputing about the hero of it. Miss Trafford declares he is
frightful; I say that he is beautiful. Now, you know, Mr. Pelham, as
to you--” “There can,” interrupted I, “be but one opinion--but the
adventure?”

“Is this!” cried Miss Trafford, in a great fright, lest Lady Nelthorpe
should, by speaking first, have the pleasure of the narration.--“We were
walking, two or three days ago, by the sea-side, picking up shells and
talking about the ‘Corsair,’ when a large fierce--”

“Man!” interrupted I.

“No, dog, (renewed Miss Trafford) flew suddenly out of a cave, under
a rock, and began growling at dear Lady Nelthorpe and me, in the most
savage manner imaginable. He would certainly have torn us to pieces if a
very tall--” “Not so very tall either,” said Lady Nelthorpe.

“Dear, how you interrupt one,” said Miss Trafford, pettishly; “well, a
very short man, then, wrapped up in a cloak--”

“In a great coat,” drawled Lady Nelthorpe. Miss Trafford went on without
noticing the emendation,--“had not with incredible rapidity sprung down
the rock and--”

“Called him off,” said Lady Nelthorpe.

“Yes, called him off,” pursued Miss Trafford, looking round for the
necessary symptoms of our wonder at this very extraordinary incident.

“What is the most remarkable,” said Lady Nelthorpe, “is, that though he
seemed from his dress and appearance to be really a gentleman, he never
stayed to ask if we were alarmed or hurt--scarcely even looked at us--”
 (“I don’t wonder at that!” said Mr. Wormwood, who, with Lord Vincent,
had just entered the room;)--“and vanished among the rocks as suddenly
as he had appeared.”

“Oh, you’ve seen that fellow, have you?” said Lord Vincent: “so have I,
and a devilish queer looking person he is,--

“‘The balls of his broad eyes roll’d in his head, And glar’d betwixt
a yellow and a red; He looked a lion with a gloomy stare, And o’er his
eyebrows hung his matted hair.’

“Well remembered, and better applied--eh, Mr. Pelham!”

“Really,” said I, “I am not able to judge of the application, since I
have not seen the hero.”

“Oh! it’s admirable,” said Miss Trafford, “just the description I should
have given of him in prose. But pray, where, when, and how did you see
him?”

“Your question is religiously mysterious, tria juncta in uno,” replied
Vincent; “but I will answer it with the simplicity of a Quaker. The
other evening I was coming home from one of Sir Lionel’s preserves, and
had sent the keeper on before in order more undisturbedly to--”

“Con witticisms for dinner,” said Wormwood.

“To make out the meaning of Mr. Wormwood’s last work,” continued Lord
Vincent. “My shortest way lay through that churchyard about a mile
hence, which is such a lion in this ugly part of the country, because it
has three thistles and a tree. Just as I got there, I saw a man suddenly
rise from the earth, where he appeared to have been lying; he stood
still for a moment, and then (evidently not perceiving me) raised
his clasped hands to Heaven, and muttered some words I was not able
distinctly to hear. As I approached nearer to him which I did with
no very pleasant sensations, a large black dog, which, till then, had
remained couchant, sprung towards me with a loud growl,

“‘Sonat hic de nare canina Litera,’

as Persius has it. I was too terrified to move--

“‘Obstupui--steteruntque comae--’

and I should most infallibly have been converted into dog’s meat, if our
mutual acquaintance had not started from his reverie, called his dog by
the very appropriate name of Terror, and then slouching his hat over his
face, passed rapidly by me, dog and all. I did not recover the fright
for an hour and a quarter. I walked--ye gods, how I did walk--no wonder,
by the by, that I mended my pace, for as Pliny says truly: ‘Timor est
emendator asperrimus.’”

Mr. Wormwood had been very impatient during this recital, preparing an
attack upon Lord Vincent, when Mr. Davison entering suddenly, diverted
the assault.

“Good God!” said Wormwood, dropping his roll, “how very ill you look
to-day, Mr. Davison; face flushed--veins swelled--oh, those horrid
truffles! Miss Trafford, I’ll trouble you for the salt.”



CHAPTER V.

Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May; If she be not
so to me, What care I how fair she be?--George Withers.

It was a great pity, so it was, That villainous saltpetre should be
digged Out of the bowels of the harmless earth, Which many a good tall
fellow had destroyed.--First Part of King Henry IV.

Several days passed. I had taken particular pains to ingratiate myself
with Lady Roseville, and so far as common acquaintance went, I had
no reason to be dissatisfied with my success. Any thing else, I soon
discovered, notwithstanding my vanity, (which made no inconsiderable
part in the composition of Henry Pelham) was quite out of the question.
Her mind was wholly of a different mould from my own. She was like a
being, not perhaps of a better, but of another world than myself; we
had not one thought or opinion in common; we looked upon things with a
totally different vision; I was soon convinced that she was of a nature
exactly contrary to what was generally believed--she was any thing but
the mere mechanical woman of the world. She possessed great sensibility,
and even romance of temper, strong passions, and still stronger
imagination; but over all these deeper recesses of her character, the
extreme softness and languor of her manners, threw a veil which no
superficial observer could penetrate. There were times when I could
believe that she was inwardly restless and unhappy; but she was too well
versed in the arts of concealment, to suffer such an appearance to be
more than momentary.

I must own that I consoled myself very easily for my want, in this
particular instance, of that usual good fortune which attends me aupres
des dames; the fact was, that I had another object in pursuit. All the
men at Sir Lionel Garrett’s were keen sportsmen. Now, shooting is an
amusement I was never particularly partial to. I was first disgusted
with that species of rational recreation at a battue, where, instead of
bagging anything, I was nearly bagged, having been inserted, like wine
in an ice pail, in a wet ditch for three hours, during which time my hat
had been twice shot at for a pheasant, and my leather gaiters once for a
hare; and to crown all, when these several mistakes were discovered, my
intended exterminators, instead of apologizing for having shot at me,
were quite disappointed at having missed.

Seriously, that same shooting is a most barbarous amusement, only fit
for majors in the army, and royal dukes, and that sort of people; the
mere walking is bad enough, but embarrassing one’s arms moreover, with
a gun, and one’s legs with turnip tops, exposing oneself to the mercy of
bad shots and the atrocity of good, seems to me only a state of painful
fatigue, enlivened by the probability of being killed.

This digression is meant to signify, that I never joined the single
men and double Mantons that went in and off among Sir Lionel Garrett’s
preserves. I used, instead, to take long walks by myself, and found,
like virtue, my own reward, in the additional health and strength these
diurnal exertions produced me.

One morning, chance threw into my way une bonne fortune, which I took
care to improve. From that time the family of a farmer Sinclair, (one
of Sir Lionel’s tenants) was alarmed by strange and supernatural noises:
one apartment in especial, occupied by a female member of the household,
was allowed, even by the clerk of the parish, a very bold man, and a bit
of a sceptic, to be haunted; the windows of that chamber were wont to
open and shut, thin airy voices confabulate therein, and dark shapes
hover thereout, long after the fair occupant had, with the rest of the
family, retired to repose. But the most unaccountable thing was the
fatality which attended me, and seemed to mark me out, nolens volens,
for an untimely death. I, who had so carefully kept out of the way of
gunpowder as a sportsman, very narrowly escaped being twice shot as a
ghost. This was but a poor reward for a walk more than a mile long, in
nights by no means of cloudless climes and starry skies; accordingly I
resolved to “give up the ghost” in earnest rather than in metaphor, and
to pay my last visit and adieus to the mansion of Farmer Sinclair. The
night on which I executed this resolve was rather memorable in my future
history.

The rain had fallen so heavily during the day, as to render the road to
the house almost impassable, and when it was time to leave, I inquired
with very considerable emotion, whether there was not an easier way
to return. The answer was satisfactory, and my last nocturnal visit at
Farmer Sinclair’s concluded.



CHAPTER VI.

Why sleeps he not, when others are at rest?--Byron.

According to the explanation I had received, the road I was now to
pursue was somewhat longer, but much better, than that which I generally
took. It was to lead me home through the churchyard of--, the same, by
the by, which Lord Vincent had particularized in his anecdote of the
mysterious stranger. The night was clear, but windy: there were a few
light clouds passing rapidly over the moon, which was at her full,
and shone through the frosty air, with all that cold and transparent
brightness so peculiar to our northern winters. I walked briskly on till
I came to the churchyard; I could not then help pausing (notwithstanding
my total deficiency in all romance) to look for a few moments at the
exceeding beauty of the scene around me. The church itself was extremely
old, and stood alone and grey, in the rude simplicity of the earliest
form of gothic architecture: two large dark yew-trees drooped on each
side over tombs, which from their size and decorations, appeared to be
the last possession of some quondam lords of the soil. To the left, the
ground was skirted by a thick and luxuriant copse of evergreens, in the
front of which stood one tall, naked oak, stern and leafless, a very
token of desolation and decay; there were but few grave stones scattered
about, and these were, for the most part, hidden by the long wild grass
which wreathed and climbed round them. Over all, the blue skies and
still moon shed that solemn light, the effect of which, either on the
scene or the feelings, it is so impossible to describe.

I was just about to renew my walk, when a tall, dark figure, wrapped up,
like myself, in a large French cloak, passed slowly along from the other
side of the church, and paused by the copse I have before mentioned. I
was shrouded at that moment from his sight by one of the yew trees;
he stood still only for a few moments; he then flung himself upon the
earth, and sobbed, audibly even at the spot where I was standing. I was
in doubt whether to wait longer or to proceed; my way lay just by him,
and it might be dangerous to interrupt so substantial an apparition.
However, my curiosity was excited, and my feet were half frozen, two
cogent reasons for proceeding; and, to say truth, I was never very much
frightened by any thing dead or alive.

Accordingly I left my obscurity, and walked slowly onwards. I had
not got above three paces before the figure rose, and stood erect and
motionless before me. His hat had fallen off, and the moon shone full
upon his countenance; it was not the wild expression of intense anguish
which dwelt on those hueless and sunken features; nor their quick change
to ferocity and defiance, as his eyes fell upon me, which made me start
back and feel my heart stand still! Notwithstanding the fearful ravages
graven in that countenance, then so brilliant with the graces of
boyhood, I recognized, at one glance, those still noble and chiselled
features. It was Reginald Glanville who stood before me! I recovered
myself instantly; I threw myself towards him, and called him by his
name. He turned hastily; but I would not suffer him to escape; I put my
hand upon his arm, and drew him towards me. “Glanville!” I exclaimed,
“it is I! it is your old--old friend, Henry Pelham. Good God! have I met
you at last, and in such a scene?”

Glanville shook me from him in an instant, covered his face with his
hands, and sunk down with one wild cry, which went fearfully through
that still place, upon the spot from which he had but just risen. I
knelt beside him; I took his hand; I spoke to him in every endearing
term that I could think of; and roused and excited as my feelings
were, by so strange and sudden a meeting, I felt my tears involuntarily
falling over the hand which I held in my own. Glanville turned; he
looked at me for one moment, as if fully to recognize me: and then
throwing himself in my arms, wept like a child.

It was but for a few minutes that this weakness lasted; he rose
suddenly--the whole expression of his countenance was changed--the
tears still rolled in large drops down his cheeks, but the proud, stern
character which the features had assumed, seemed to deny the feelings
which that feminine weakness had betrayed.

“Pelham,” he said, “you have seen me thus; I had hoped that no living
eye would--this is the last time in which I shall indulge this folly.
God bless you--we shall meet again--and this night shall then seem to
you like a dream.”

I would have answered, but he turned swiftly, passed in one moment
through the copse, and in the next had utterly disappeared.



CHAPTER VII.

You reach a chilling chamber, where you dread Damps.--Crabbe’s Borough.

I could not sleep the whole of that night, and the next morning, I set
off early, with the resolution of discovering where Glanville had taken
up his abode; it was evident from his having been so frequently seen,
that it must be in the immediate neighbourhood.

I went first to Farmer Sinclair’s; they had often remarked him, but
could give me no other information. I then proceeded towards the coast;
there was a small public house belonging to Sir Lionel close by the sea
shore; never had I seen a more bleak and dreary prospect than that which
stretched for miles around this miserable cabaret. How an innkeeper
could live there is a mystery to me at this day--I should have imagined
it a spot upon which anything but a sea-gull or a Scotchman would have
starved.

“Just the sort of place, however,” thought I, “to hear something of
Glanville.” I went into the house; I inquired, and heard that a strange
gentleman had been lodging for the last two or three weeks at a cottage
about a mile further up the coast. Thither I bent my steps; and after
having met two crows, and one officer on the preventive service, I
arrived safely at my new destination.

It was a house very little better, in outward appearance, than the
wretched hut I had just left, for I observe in all situations, and in
all houses, that “the public” is not too well served. The situation was
equally lonely and desolate; the house, which belonged to an individual,
half fisherman and half smuggler, stood in a sort of bay, between two
tall, rugged, black cliffs. Before the door hung various nets, to dry
beneath the genial warmth of a winter’s sun; and a broken boat, with
its keel uppermost, furnished an admirable habitation for a hen
and her family, who appeared to receive en pension, an old
clerico-bachelor-looking raven. I cast a suspicious glance at the
last-mentioned personage, which hopped towards me with a very hostile
appearance, and entered the threshold with a more rapid step, in
consequence of sundry apprehensions of a premeditated assault.

“I understand,” said I, to an old, dried, brown female, who looked like
a resuscitated red-herring, “that a gentleman is lodging here.”

“No, Sir,” was the answer: “he left us this morning.”

The reply came upon me like a shower bath; I was both chilled and
stunned by so unexpected a shock. The old woman, on my renewing my
inquiries, took me up stairs, to a small, wretched room, to which the
damps literally clung. In one corner was a flock-bed, still unmade, and
opposite to it, a three-legged stool, a chair, and an antique carved oak
table, a donation perhaps from some squire in the neighbourhood; on this
last were scattered fragments of writing paper, a cracked cup half
full of ink, a pen, and a broken ramrod. As I mechanically took up the
latter, the woman said, in a charming patois, which I shall translate,
since I cannot do justice to the original: “The gentleman, Sir, said he
came here for a few weeks to shoot; he brought a gun, a large dog, and a
small portmanteau. He used to spend all the mornings in the fens, though
he must have been but a poor shot, for he seldom brought home anything;
and we fear, Sir, that he was rather out of his mind, for he used to
go out alone at night, and stay sometimes till morning. However, he was
quite quiet, and behaved to us like a gentleman; so it was no business
of ours, only my husband does think--”

“Pray,” interrupted I, “why did he leave you so suddenly?”

“Lord, Sir, I don’t know! but he told us for several days past that he
should not stay over the week, and so we were not surprised when he left
us this morning at seven o’clock. Poor gentleman, my heart bled for him
when I saw him look so pale and ill.”

And here I did see the good woman’s eyes fill with tears: but she wiped
them away, and took advantage of the additional persuasion they gave to
her natural whine to say, “If, Sir, you know of any young gentleman who
likes fen-shooting, and wants a nice, pretty, quiet apartment--”

“I will certainly recommend this,” said I.

“You see it at present,” rejoined the landlady, “quite in a litter like:
but it is really a sweet place in summer.”

“Charming,” said I, with a cold shiver, hurrying down the stairs, with a
pain in my ear, and the rheumatism in my shoulder.

“And this,” thought I, “was Glanville’s residence for nearly a month! I
wonder he did not exhale into a vapour, or moisten into a green damp.”

I went home by the churchyard. I paused on the spot where I had last
seen him. A small gravestone rose over the mound of earth on which he
had thrown himself; it was perfectly simple. The date of the year and
month (which showed that many weeks had not elapsed since the death of
the deceased) and the initials G. D. were all that was engraved upon the
stone. Beside this tomb was one of a more pompous description, to the
memory of a Mrs. Douglas, which had with the simple tumulus nothing in
common, unless the initial letter of the surname corresponding with
the latter initial on the neighbouring gravestone, might authorize
any connection between them, not supported by that similitude of style
usually found in the cenotaphs of the same family: the one, indeed,
might have covered the grave of a humble villager--the other, the
resting-place of the lady of the manor.

I found, therefore, no clue for the labyrinth of surmise: and I went
home, more vexed and disappointed with my day’s expedition than I liked
to acknowledge to myself.

Lord Vincent met me in the hall. “Delighted to see you,” said he, “I
have just been to--, (the nearest town) in order to discover what sort
of savages abide there. Great preparations for a ball--all the tallow
candles in the town are bespoken--and I heard a most uncivilized fiddle,

“‘Twang short and sharp, like the shrill swallow’s cry.’”

The one milliner’s shop was full of fat squiresses, buying muslin
ammunition, to make the ball go off; and the attics, even at four
o’clock, were thronged with rubicund damsels, who were already, as
Shakspeare says of waves in a storm,

“‘Curling their monstrous heads.’”



CHAPTER VIII.

Jusqu’au revoir le ciel vous tienne tous en joie.--Moliere.

I was now pretty well tried of Garrett Park. Lady Roseville was going
to H--t--d, where I also had an invitation. Lord Vincent meditated an
excursion to Paris. Mr. Davison had already departed. Miss Trafford had
been gone, God knows how long, and I was not at all disposed to be left,
like “the last rose of summer,” in single blessedness at Garrett Park.
Vincent, Wormwood, and myself, all agreed to leave on the same day.

The morning of our departure arrived. We sat down to breakfast as usual.
Lord Vincent’s carriage was at the door; his groom was walking about his
favourite saddle horse.

“A beautiful mare that is of your’s,” said I, carelessly looking at it,
and reaching across the table to help myself to the pate de foie gras.

“Mare!” exclaimed the incorrigible punster, delighted with my mistake:
“I thought that you would have been better acquainted with your propria
quoe maribus.”

“Humph!” said Wormwood, “when I look at you I am always at least
reminded of the as in praoesenti!”

Lord Vincent drew up and looked unutterable anger. Wormwood went on with
his dry toast, and Lady Roseville, who that morning had, for a wonder,
come down to breakfast, good naturedly took off the bear. Whether or not
his ascetic nature was somewhat mollified by the soft smiles and
softer voice of the beautiful countess, I cannot pretend to say; but he
certainly entered into a conversation with her, not much rougher
than that of a less gifted individual might have been. They talked of
literature, Lord Byron, converzaziones, and Lydia White. [Note: Written
before the death of that lady.]

“Miss White,” said Lady Roseville, “has not only the best command
of language herself, but she gives language to other people. Dinner
parties, usually so stupid, are, at her house, quite delightful. I have
actually seen English people look happy, and one or two even almost
natural.”

“Ah!” said Wormwood, “that is indeed rare. With us every thing is
assumption. We are still exactly like the English suitor to Portia, in
the Merchant of Venice. We take our doublet from one country, our hose
from another, and our behaviour every where. Fashion with us is like
the man in one of Le Sage’s novels, who was constantly changing his
servants, and yet had but one suit of livery, which every new comer,
whether he was tall or short, fat or thin, was obliged to wear. We adopt
manners, however incongruous and ill suited to our nature, and thus
we always seem awkward and constrained. But Lydia White’s soirees are
indeed agreeable. I remember the last time I dined there we were six in
number, and though we were not blessed with the company of Lord Vincent,
the conversation was without ‘let or flaw.’ Every one, even S----, said
good things.”

“Indeed!” cried Lord Vincent; “and pray, Mr. Wormwood, what did you
say!”

“Why,” answered the poet, glancing with a significant sneer over
Vincent’s somewhat inelegant person, “I thought of your lordship’s
figure, and said--grace!”

“Hem--hem!--‘Gratia malorum tam infida est quam ipsi,’ as Pliny says,”
 muttered Lord Vincent, getting up hastily, and buttoning his coat.

I took the opportunity of the ensuing pause to approach Lady Roseville,
and whisper my adieus. She was kind and even warm to me in returning
them; and pressed me, with something marvellously like sincerity, to
be sure to come and see her directly she returned to London. I soon
discharged the duties of my remaining farewells, and in less than
half an hour, was more than a mile distant from Garrett Park and its
inhabitants. I can’t say that for one, who, like me, is fond of being
made a great deal of, that there is any thing very delightful in those
visits into the country. It may be all well enough for married people,
who, from the mere fact of being married, are always entitled to certain
consideration, put--par exemple--into a bed-room, a little larger than a
dog kennel, and accommodated with a looking-glass, that does not distort
one’s features like a paralytic stroke. But we single men suffer a
plurality of evils and hard-ships, in entrusting ourselves to the
casualties of rural hospitality. We are thrust up into any attic
repository--exposed to the mercy of rats, and the incursions of
swallows. Our lavations are performed in a cracked basin, and we are so
far removed from human assistance, that our very bells sink into silence
before they reach half way down the stairs. But two days before I left
Garrett Park, I myself saw an enormous mouse run away with my almond
paste, without any possible means of resisting the aggression. Oh! the
hardships of a single man are beyond conception; and what is worse, the
very misfortune of being single deprives one of all sympathy. “A single
man can do this, and a single man ought to do that, and a single man may
be put here, and a single man may be sent there,” are maxims that I have
been in the habit of hearing constantly inculcated and never disputed
during my whole life; and so, from our fare and treatment being coarse
in all matters, they have at last grown to be all matters in course.



CHAPTER IX.

Therefore to France.--Henry IV.

I was rejoiced to find myself again in London. I went to my father’s
house in Grosvenor-square. All the family, viz. he and my mother, were
down at H--t--d; and, malgre my aversion to the country, I thought I
might venture as far as Lady S--‘s for a couple of days. Accordingly,
to H--t--d I went. That is really a noble house--such a hall--such a
gallery. I found my mother in the drawing-room, admiring the picture of
his late Majesty. She was leaning on the arm of a tall, fair young man.
“Henry,” said she, (introducing me to him) “do you remember your old
schoolfellow, Lord George Clinton?”

“Perfectly,” said I, (though I remembered nothing about him) and we
shook hands in the most cordial manner imaginable. By the way, there is
no greater bore than being called upon to recollect men, with whom one
had been at school some ten years back. In the first place, if they were
not in one’s own set, one most likely scarcely knew them to speak to;
and, in the second place, if they were in one’s own set, they are sure
to be entirely opposite to the nature we have since acquired: for I
scarcely ever knew an instance of the companions of one’s boyhood being
agreeable to the tastes of one’s manhood: a strong proof of the folly
of common people, who send their sons to Eton and Harrow to form
connections.

Clinton was on the eve of setting out upon his travels. His intention
was to stay a year at Paris, and he was full of the blissful
expectations the idea of that city had conjured up. We remained together
all the evening, and took a prodigious fancy to one another. Long before
I went to bed, he had perfectly inoculated me with his own ardour for
continental adventures; and, indeed, I had half promised to accompany
him. My mother, when I first told her of my travelling intentions, was
in despair, but by degrees she grew reconciled to the idea.

“Your health will improve by a purer air,” said she, “and your
pronunciation of French is, at present, any thing but correct. Take care
of yourself, therefore, my dear son, and pray lose no time in engaging
Coulon as your maitre de danse.”

My father gave me his blessing, and a check on his banker. Within three
days I had arranged every thing with Clinton, and on the fourth,
I returned with him to London. From thence we set off to
Dover--embarked--dined, for the first time in our lives, on French
ground--were astonished to find so little difference between the two
countries, and still more so at hearing even the little children talk
French so well [Note: See Addison’s Travels for this idea.]--proceeded
to Abbeville--there poor Clinton fell ill: for several days we were
delayed in that abominable town, and then Clinton, by the advice of the
doctors, returned to England. I went back with him as far as Dover, and
then, impatient at my loss of time, took no rest, night or day, till I
found myself at Paris.

Young, well-born, tolerably good-looking, and never utterly destitute of
money, nor grudging whatever enjoyment it could produce, I entered Paris
with the ability and the resolution to make the best of those beaux
jours which so rapidly glide from our possession.



CHAPTER X.

Seest thou how gayly my young maister goes?--Bishop Hall’s Satires.

Qui vit sans folie, n’est pas si sage qu’il croit.--La Rochefoucault.

I lost no time in presenting my letters of introduction, and they were
as quickly acknowledged by invitations to balls and dinners. Paris was
full to excess, and of a better description of English than those who
usually overflow that reservoir of the world. My first engagement was to
dine with Lord and Lady Bennington, who were among the very few English
intimate in the best French houses.

On entering Paris I had resolved to set up “a character;” for I was
always of an ambitious nature, and desirous of being distinguished from
the ordinary herd. After various cogitations as to the particular one I
should assume, I thought nothing appeared more likely to be remarkable
among men, and therefore pleasing to women, than an egregious coxcomb:
accordingly I arranged my hair into ringlets, dressed myself with
singular plainness and simplicity (a low person, by the by, would have
done just the contrary), and putting on an air of exceeding languor,
made my maiden appearance at Lord Bennington’s. The party was small,
and equally divided between French and English: the former had been all
emigrants, and the conversation was chiefly in our own tongue.

I was placed, at dinner, next to Miss Paulding, an elderly young lady,
of some notoriety at Paris, very clever, very talkative, and very
conceited. A young, pale, ill-natured looking man, sat on her left hand;
this was Mr. Aberton, one of the attaches.

“Dear me!” said Miss Paulding, “what a pretty chain that is of your’s,
Mr. Aberton.”

“Yes,” said the attache, “I know it must be pretty, for I got it at
Brequet’s, with the watch.” (How common people always buy their opinions
with their goods, and regulate the height of the former by the mere
price or fashion of the latter.)

“Pray, Mr. Pelham,” said Miss Paulding, turning to me, “have you got one
of Brequet’s watches yet?”

“Watch!” said I: “do you think I could ever wear a watch? I know nothing
so plebeian. What can any one, but a man of business, who has nine hours
for his counting-house and one for his dinner, ever possibly want to
know the time for? An assignation, you will say: true, but (here I
played with my best ringlet) if a man is worth having, he is surely
worth waiting for!”

Miss Paulding opened her eyes, and Mr. Aberton his mouth. A pretty
lively French woman opposite (Madame D’Anville) laughed, and immediately
joined in our conversation, which, on my part, was, during the whole
dinner, kept up exactly in the same strain.

“What do you think of our streets?” said the old, yet still animated
Madame de G--s. “You will not find them, I fear, so agreeable for
walking as the trottoirs in London.”

“Really,” I answered, “I have only been once out in your streets, at
least a pied, since my arrival, and then I was nearly perishing for want
of help.”

“What do you mean?” said Madame D’Anville.

“Why, I fell into that intersecting stream which you call a kennel, and
I a river. Pray, Mr. Aberton, what do you think I did in that dangerous
dilemma?”

“Why, got out again as fast as you could,” said the literal attache.

“No such thing, I was too frightened: I stood still and screamed for
assistance.”

Madame D’Anville was delighted, and Miss Paulding astonished. Mr.
Aberton muttered to a fat, foolish Lord Luscombe, “What a damnation
puppy,”--and every one, even to the old Madame de G--s, looked at me six
times as attentively as they had done before.

As for me, I was perfectly satisfied with the effect I had produced,
and I went away the first, in order to give the men an opportunity of
abusing me; for whenever the men abuse, the women, to support alike
their coquetry and the conversation, think themselves called upon to
defend.

The next day I rode into the Champs Elysees. I always valued myself
particularly upon my riding, and my horse was both the most fiery
and the most beautiful in Paris. The first person I saw was Madame
D’Anville. At that moment I was reining in my horse, and conscious,
as the wind waved my long curls, that I was looking to the very best
advantage, I made my horse bound towards her carriage, which she
immediately stopped, and speaking in my natural tone of voice, and
without the smallest affectation, I made at once my salutations and my
court.

“I am going,” said she, “to the Duchesse D--g’s this evening--it is her
night--do come.”

“I don’t know her,” said I.

“Tell me your hotel, and I’ll send you an invitation before dinner,”
 rejoined Madame D’Anville.

“I lodge,” said I, “at the Hotel de--, Rue de Rivoli, au second at
present; next year, I suppose, according to the usual gradations in the
life of a garcon, I shall be au troisieme: for here the purse and the
person seem to be playing at see-saw--the latter rises as the former
descends.”

We went on conversing for about a quarter of an hour, in which I
endeavoured to make the pretty Frenchwoman believe that all the good
opinion I possessed of myself the day before, I had that morning
entirely transferred to her account.

As I rode home I met Mr. Aberton, with three or four other men; with
that glaring good-breeding, so peculiar to the English, he instantly
directed their eyes towards me in one mingled and concentrated stare.
“N’importe,” thought I, “they must be devilish clever fellows if they
can find a single fault either in my horse or myself.”



CHAPTER XI.

Lud! what a group the motley scene discloses, False wits, false wives,
false virgins, and false spouses.--Goldsmith’s Epilogue to the Comedy
of the Sisters.

Madame D’Anville kept her promise--the invitation was duly sent, and
accordingly at half past ten to the Rue D’Anjou I drove.

The rooms were already full. Lord Bennington was standing by the door,
and close by him, looking exceedingly distrait, was my old friend Lord
Vincent. They both came towards me at the same moment. “Strive not,”
 thought I, looking at the stately demeanour of the one, and the
humourous expression of countenance in the other--“strive not, Tragedy
nor Comedy, to engross a Garrick.” I spoke first to Lord Bennington, for
I knew he would be the sooner dispatched, and then for the next quarter
of an hour found myself overflowed with all the witticisms poor Lord
Vincent had for days been obliged to retain. I made an engagement to
dine with him at Very’s the next day, and then glided off towards Madame
D’Anville.

She was surrounded with men, and talking to each with that vivacity
which, in a Frenchwoman, is so graceful, and in an Englishwoman would
be so vulgar. Though her eyes were not directed towards me, she saw me
approach by that instinctive perception which all coquets possess, and
suddenly altering her seat, made way for me beside her. I did not lose
so favourable an opportunity of gaining her good graces, and losing
those of all the male animals around her. I sunk down on the vacant
chair, and contrived, with the most unabashed effrontery, and yet with
the most consummate dexterity, to make every thing that I said pleasing
to her, revolting to some one of her attendants. Wormwood himself could
not have succeeded better. One by one they dropped off, and we were left
alone among the crowd. Then, indeed, I changed the whole tone of my
conversation. Sentiment succeeded to satire, and the pretence of feeling
to that of affectation. In short, I was so resolved to please that I
could scarcely fail to succeed.

In this main object of the evening I was not however solely employed.
I should have been very undeserving of that character for observation
which I flatter myself I peculiarly deserve, if I had not during
the three hours I stayed at Madame D--g’s, conned over every person
remarkable for any thing, from rank to a ribbon. The duchesse herself
was a fair, pretty, clever woman, with manners rather English than
French. She was leaning, at the time I paid my respects to her, on the
arm of an Italian count, tolerably well known at Paris. Poor O--i! I
hear he is just married. He did not deserve so heavy a calamity!

Sir Henry Millington was close by her, carefully packed up in his coat
and waistcoat. Certainly that man is the best padder in Europe.

“Come and sit by me, Millington,” cried old Lady Oldtown; “I have a good
story to tell you of the Duc de G--e.”

Sir Henry, with difficulty, turned round his magnificent head, and
muttered out some unintelligible excuse. The fact was, that poor Sir
Henry was not that evening made to sit down--he had only his standing
up coat on. Lady Oldtown--heaven knows--is easily consoled. She supplied
the place of the dilapidated baronet with a most superbly mustachioed
German.

“Who,” said I, to Madame D’Anville, “are those pretty girls in white,
talking with such eagerness to Mr. Aberton and Lord Luscombe?”

“What!” said the Frenchwoman, “have you been ten days at Paris and
not been introduced to the Miss Carltons? Let me tell you that your
reputation among your countrymen at Paris depends solely upon their
verdict.”

“And upon your favour,” added I.

“Ah!” said she, “you must have had your origin in France; you have
something about you presque Parisien.”

“Pray,” said I, (after having duly acknowledged this compliment, the
very highest that a Frenchwoman can bestow) “what did you really and
candidly think of our countrymen during your residence in England?”

“I will tell you,” answered Madame D’Anville; “they are brave, honest,
generous, mais ils sont demi-barbares.”



CHAPTER XII.

Pia mater, Plus quam se sapere, et virtutibus esse priorem Vult, et ait
prope vera.--Horace.

Vere mihi festus atras Eximet curas.--Horace.

The next morning I received a letter from my mother.

“My dear Henry,” began my affectionate and incomparable parent--

“My dear Henry,

“You have now fairly entered the world, and though at your age my advice
may be but little followed, my experience cannot altogether be useless.
I shall, therefore, make no apology for a few precepts, which I hope may
tend to make you a wiser and better man.

“I hope, in the first place, that you have left your letter at the
ambassador’s, and that you will not fail to go there as often as
possible. Pay your court in particular to Lady--. She is a charming
person, universally popular, and one of the very few English people to
whom one may safely be civil. Apropos, of English civility, you have, I
hope, by this time discovered, that you have to assume a very different
manner with French people than with our own countrymen: with us, the
least appearance of feeling or enthusiasm is certain to be ridiculed
every where; but in France, you may venture to seem not quite devoid of
all natural sentiments: indeed, if you affect enthusiasm, they will
give you credit for genius, and they will place all the qualities of the
heart to the account of the head. You know that in England, if you
seem desirous of a person’s acquaintance you are sure to lose it; they
imagine you have some design upon their wives or their dinners; but in
France you can never lose by politeness: nobody will call your civility
forwardness and pushing. If the Princess De T--, and the Duchesse de
D--, ask you to their houses (which indeed they will, directly you have
left your letters), go there two or three times a week, if only for a
few minutes in the evening. It is very hard to be acquainted with great
French people, but when you are, it is your own fault if you are not
intimate with them.

“Most English people have a kind of diffidence and scruple at calling in
the evening--this is perfectly misplaced: the French are never ashamed
of themselves, like us, whose persons, families, and houses are never
fit to be seen, unless they are dressed out for a party.

“Don’t imagine that the ease of French manners is at all like what we
call ease: you must not lounge on your chair--nor put your feet upon a
stool--nor forget yourself for one single moment when you are talking
with women.

“You have heard a great deal about the gallantries of the French ladies;
but remember that they demand infinitely greater attention than English
women do; and that after a month’s incessant devotion, you may lose
every thing by a moment’s impolitesse.

“You will not, my dear son, misinterpret these hints. I suppose, of
course, that all your liaisons are platonic.

“Your father is laid up with the gout, and dreadfully ill-tempered and
peevish; however, I keep out of the way as much as possible. I dined
yesterday at Lady Roseville’s: she praised you very much, said your
manners were particularly good, and that you had already quite the usage
du monde. Lord Vincent is, I understand, at Paris: though very tiresome
with his learning and Latin, he is exceedingly clever and repandu; be
sure to cultivate his acquaintance.

“If you are ever at a loss as to the individual character of a person
you wish to gain, the general knowledge of human nature will teach you
one infallible specific,--flattery! The quantity and quality may vary
according to the exact niceties of art; but, in any quantity and in any
quality, it is more or less acceptable, and therefore certain to please.
Only never (or at least very rarely) flatter when other people, besides
the one to be flattered, are by; in that case you offend the rest, and
you make even your intended dupe ashamed to be pleased.

“In general, weak minds think only of others, and yet seem only occupied
with themselves; you, on the contrary, must appear wholly engrossed
with those about you, and yet never have a single idea which does not
terminate in yourself: a fool, my dear Henry, flatters himself--a wise
man flatters the fool.

“God bless you, my dear child, take care of your health--don’t forget
Coulon; and believe me your most affectionate mother,

“F. P.”


By the time I had read this letter and dressed myself for the evening,
Vincent’s carriage was at the porte cocher. I hate the affection
of keeping people waiting, and went down so quickly, that I met his
facetious lordship upon the stairs. “Devilish windy,” said I, as we were
getting into the carriage.

“Yes,” said Vincent; “but the moral Horace reminds us of our remedies as
well as our misfortune--

“‘Jam galeam Pallas, et aegida, Currusque parat,’--

that is, ‘Providence that prepares the gale, gives us also a great coat
and a carriage.’”

We were not long driving to the Palais Royal. Very’s was crowded to
excess--“A very low set!” said Lord Vincent, (who, being half a liberal,
is of course a thorough aristocrat) looking round at the various English
who occupied the apartment.

There was, indeed, a motley congregation; country esquires; extracts
from the Universities; half-pay officers; city clerks in frogged coats
and mustachios; two or three of a better looking description, but in
reality half swindlers, half gentlemen. All, in short, fit specimens of
that wandering tribe, which spread over the continent the renown and the
ridicule of good old England. I know not why it is that we should look
and act so very disgracefully abroad; but I never meet in any spot
out of this happy island, a single Englishman, without instinctively
blushing for my native country.

“Garcon, garcon,” cried a stout gentleman, who made one of three at the
table next to us. “Donnez-nous une sole frite pour un, et des pommes de
terre pour trois!”

“Humph!” said Lord Vincent; “fine ideas of English taste these garcons
must entertain; men who prefer fried soles and potatoes to the various
delicacies they can command here, might, by the same perversion of
taste, prefer Bloomfield’s poems to Byron’s. Delicate taste depends
solely upon the physical construction; and a man who has it not in
cookery, must want it in literature. Fried sole and potatoes!! If I had
written a volume, whose merit was in elegance, I would not show it
to such a man!--but he might be an admirable critic upon ‘Cobbett’s
Register,’ or ‘Every Man his own Brewer.’”

“Excessively true,” said I; “what shall we order?”

“D’abord des huitres d’Ostende,” said Vincent; “as to the rest,” taking
hold of the carte, “deliberare utilia mora utilissima est.”

We were soon engaged in all the pleasures and pains of a dinner.

“Petimus,” said Lord Vincent, helping himself to some poulet a
l’Austerlitz, “petimus bene vivere--quod petis, hic est?”

We were not, however, assured of that fact at the termination of dinner.
If half the dishes were well conceived and better executed, the other
half were proportionably bad. Very is, indeed, no longer the prince of
Restaurateurs. The low English who have flocked there, have entirely
ruined the place. What waiter--what cook can possibly respect men who
take no soup, and begin with a roti; who know neither what is good nor
what is bad; who eat rognons at dinner instead of at breakfast, and fall
into raptures over sauce Robert and pieds de cochon; who cannot tell,
at the first taste, whether the beaune is premiere qualite, or the
fricassee made of yesterday’s chicken; who suffer in the stomach after
champignon, and die with indigestion of a truffle? O! English people,
English people! why can you not stay and perish of apoplexy and
Yorkshire pudding at home?

By the time we had drank our coffee it was considerably past nine
o’clock, and Vincent had business at the ambassador’s before ten; we
therefore parted for the night.

“What do you think of Very’s?” said I, as we were at the door.

“Why,” replied Vincent, “when I recal the astonishing heat of the place,
which has almost sent me to sleep; the exceeding number of times in
which that becasse had been re-roasted, and the extortionate length
of our bills, I say of Very’s, what Hamlet said of the world, ‘Weary,
stale, and unprofitable!’”



CHAPTER XIII.

I would fight with broad swords, and sink point on the first blood drawn
like a gentleman’s.--The Chronicles of the Canongate.

I strolled idly along the Palais Royal (which English people, in some
silly proverb, call the capital of Paris, whereas no French man of
any rank, nor French woman of any respectability, are ever seen in its
promenades) till, being somewhat curious to enter some of the smaller
cafes, I went into one of the meanest of them; took up a Journal des
Spectacles, and called for some lemonade. At the next table to me sat
two or three Frenchmen, evidently of inferior rank, and talking very
loudly over L’Angleterre et les Anglois. Their attention was soon fixed
upon me.

Have you ever observed that if people are disposed to think ill of you,
nothing so soon determines them to do so as any act of yours, which,
however innocent and inoffensive, differs from their ordinary habits and
customs? No sooner had my lemonade made its appearance, than I perceived
an increased sensation among my neighbours of the next table. In the
first place, lemonade is not much drank, as you may suppose, among the
French in winter; and, in the second, my beverage had an appearance of
ostentation, from being one of the dearest articles I could have called
for. Unhappily, I dropped my newspaper--it fell under the Frenchmen’s
table; instead of calling the garcon, I was foolish enough to stoop
for it myself. It was exactly under the feet of one of the Frenchmen; I
asked him with the greatest civility, to move: he made no reply. I could
not, for the life of me, refrain from giving him a slight, very slight
push; the next moment he moved in good earnest; the whole party sprung
up as he set the example. The offended leg gave three terrific stamps
upon the ground, and I was immediately assailed by a whole volley of
unintelligible abuse. At that time I was very little accustomed to
French vehemence, and perfectly unable to reply to the vituperations I
received.

Instead of answering them, I therefore deliberated what was best to
be done. If, thought I, I walk away, they will think me a coward, and
insult me in the streets; if I challenge them, I shall have to fight
with men probably no better than shopkeepers; if I strike this most
noisy amongst them, he may be silenced, or he may demand satisfaction:
if the former, well and good; if the latter, why I shall have a better
excuse for fighting him than I should have now.

My resolution was therefore taken. I was never more free from passion in
my life, and it was, therefore, with the utmost calmness and composure
that, in the midst of my antagonist’s harangue, I raised my hand
and--quietly knocked him down.

He rose in a moment. “Sortons,” said he, in a low tone, “a Frenchman
never forgives a blow!”

At that moment, an Englishman, who had been sitting unnoticed in an
obscure corner of the cafe, came up and took me aside.

“Sir,” said he, “don’t think of fighting the man; he is a tradesman in
the Rue St. Honore. I myself have seen him behind the counter; remember
that ‘a ram may kill a butcher.’”

“Sir,” I replied, “I thank you a thousand times for your information.
Fight, however, I must, and I’ll give you, like the Irishman, my reasons
afterwards: perhaps you will be my second.”

“With pleasure,” said the Englishman, (a Frenchman would have said,
“with pain!”)

We left the cafe together. My countryman asked them if he should go the
gunsmith’s for the pistols.

“Pistols!” said the Frenchman’s second: “we will only fight with
swords.”

“No, no,” said my new friend. “‘On ne prend le lievre au tabourin.’ We
are the challenged, and therefore have the choice of weapons.”

Luckily I overheard this dispute, and called to my second--“Swords or
pistols,” said I; “it is quite the same to me. I am not bad at either,
only do make haste.”

Swords, then, were chosen and soon procured. Frenchmen never grow cool
upon their quarrels: and as it was a fine, clear, starlight night, we
went forthwith to the Bois de Boulogne. We fixed our ground on a spot
tolerably retired, and, I should think, pretty often frequented for the
same purpose. I was exceedingly confident, for I knew myself to have few
equals in the art of fencing; and I had all the advantage of coolness,
which my hero was a great deal too much in earnest to possess. We joined
swords, and in a very few moments I discovered that my opponent’s life
was at my disposal.

“C’est bien,” thought I; “for once I’ll behave handsomely.”

The Frenchman made a desperate lunge. I struck his sword from his hand,
caught it instantly, and, presenting it to him again, said,

“I think myself peculiarly fortunate that I may now apologize for the
affront I have put upon you. Will you permit my sincerest apologies to
suffice? A man who can so well resent an injury, can forgive one.”

Was there ever a Frenchman not taken by a fine phrase? My hero received
the sword with a low bow--the tears came into his eyes.

“Sir,” said he, “you have twice conquered.”

We left the spot with the greatest amity and affection, and re-entered,
with a profusion of bows, our several fiacres.

“Let me,” I said, when I found myself alone with my second, “let me
thank you most cordially for your assistance; and allow me to cultivate
an acquaintance so singularly begun. I lodge at the Hotel de--, Rue de
Rivoli; my name is Pelham. Your’s is--”

“Thornton,” replied my countryman. “I will lose no time in profiting by
an offer of acquaintance which does me so much honour.”

With these and various other fine speeches, we employed the time till I
was set down at my hotel; and my companion, drawing his cloak round him,
departed on foot, to fulfil (he said, with a mysterious air) a certain
assignation in the Faubourg St. Germain.

I said to Mr. Thornton, that I would give him many reasons for fighting
after I had fought. As I do not remember that I ever did, and as I am
very unwilling that they should be lost, I am now going to bestow them
on the reader. It is true that I fought a tradesman. His rank in life
made such an action perfectly gratuitous on my part, and to many people
perhaps perfectly unpardonable. The following was, however, my view of
the question: In striking him I had placed myself on his level; if I did
so in order to insult him, I had a right also to do it in order to give
him the only atonement in my power: had the insult come solely from
him, I might then, with some justice, have intrenched myself in my
superiority of rank--contempt would have been as optional as revenge:
but I had left myself no alternative in being the aggressor, for if
my birth was to preserve me from redressing an injury, it was also to
preserve me from committing one. I confess, that the thing would have
been wholly different had it been an English, instead of a French, man;
and this, because of the different view of the nature and importance of
the affront, which the Englishman would take. No English tradesman has
an idea of les lois d’armes--a blow can be returned, or it can be paid
for.

But in France, neither a set-to, nor an action for assault, would repay
the generality of any class removed from the poverty of the bas peuple,
for so great and inexcusable an affront. In all countries it is the
feelings of the generality of people, that courtesy, which is the
essence of honour, obliges one to consult. As in England I should,
therefore, have paid, so in France I fought.

If it be said that a French gentleman would not have been equally
condescending to a French tradesman, I answer that the former would
never have perpetrated the only insult for which the latter might think
there could be only one atonement. Besides, even if this objection
held good, there is a difference between the duties of a native and a
stranger. In receiving the advantages of a foreign country, one ought
to be doubly careful not to give offence, and it is therefore doubly
incumbent upon us to redress it when given. To the feelings of the
person I had offended, there was but one redress. Who can blame me if I
granted it?



CHAPTER XIV.

Erat homo ingeniosus, acutus, acer, et qui plurimum et salis haberet et
fellis, nec candoris minus.--Pliny.

I do not know a more difficult character to describe than Lord
Vincent’s. Did I imitate certain writers, who think that the whole art
of pourtraying individual character is to seize hold of some prominent
peculiarity, and to introduce this distinguishing trait, in all times
and in all scenes, the difficulty would be removed. I should only have
to present to the reader a man, whose conversation was nothing but
alternate jest and quotation--a due union of Yorick and Partridge. This
would, however, be rendering great injustice to the character I wish
to delineate. There were times when Vincent was earnestly engrossed
in discussion in which a jest rarely escaped him, and quotation
was introduced only as a serious illustration, not as a humorous
peculiarity. He possessed great miscellaneous erudition, and a memory
perfectly surprising for its fidelity and extent. He was a severe
critic, and had a peculiar art of quoting from each author he reviewed,
some part that particularly told against him. Like most men, in the
theory of philosophy he was tolerably rigid; in its practice, more than
tolerably loose. By his tenets you would have considered him a very
Cato for stubbornness and sternness: yet was he a very child in his
concession to the whim of the moment. Fond of meditation and research,
he was still fonder of mirth and amusement; and while he was among the
most instructive, he was also the boonest of companions. When alone
with me, or with men whom he imagined like me, his pedantry (for more or
less, he always was pedantic) took only a jocular tone; with the savan
or the bel esprit, it became grave, searching, and sarcastic. He was
rather a contradicter than a favourer of ordinary opinions: and this,
perhaps, led him not unoften into paradox: yet was there much soundness,
even in his most vehement notions, and the strength of mind which
made him think only for himself, was visible in all the productions
it created. I have hitherto only given his conversation in one of its
moods; henceforth I shall be just enough occasionally to be dull, and to
present it sometimes to the reader in a graver tone.

Buried deep beneath the surface of his character, was a hidden, yet a
restless ambition: but this was perhaps, at present, a secret even
to himself. We know not our own characters till time teaches us
self-knowledge: if we are wise, we may thank ourselves; if we are great,
we must thank fortune.

It was this insight into Vincent’s nature which drew us closer
together. I recognized in the man, who as yet was only playing a part,
a resemblance to myself, while he, perhaps, saw at times that I was
somewhat better than the voluptuary, and somewhat wiser than the
coxcomb, which were all that at present it suited me to appear.

In person, Vincent was short, and though not ill--yet ungracefully
made--but his countenance was singularly fine. His eyes were dark,
bright and penetrating, and his forehead (high and thoughtful) corrected
the playful smile of his mouth, which might otherwise have given to his
features too great an expression of levity. He was not positively
ill dressed, yet he paid no attention to any external art, except
cleanliness. His usual garb was a brown coat, much too large for him,
a coloured neckcloth, a spotted waistcoat, grey trowsers, and short
gaiters: add to these gloves of most unsullied doeskin, and a curiously
thick cane, and the portrait is complete.

In manners, he was civil, or rude, familiar, or distant, just as the
whim seized him; never was there any address less common, and less
artificial. What a rare gift, by the by, is that of manners! how
difficult to define--how much more difficult to impart! Better for a
man to possess them, than wealth, beauty, or talent; they will more than
supply all. No attention is too minute, no labour too exaggerated, which
tends to perfect them. He who enjoys their advantages in the highest
degree, viz., he who can please, penetrate, persuade, as the object
may require, possesses the subtlest secret of the diplomatist and the
statesman, and wants nothing but opportunity to become “great.”



CHAPTER XV.

Le plaisir de la societe entre les amis se cultive par une ressemblance
de gout sur ce qui regarde les moeurs, et par quelque difference
d’opinions sur les sciences; par la ou l’on s’affermit dans ses
sentiments, ou l’on s’exerce et l’on s’instruit par la dispute.--La
Bruyere.

There was a party at Monsieur de V--e’s, to which Vincent and myself
were the only Englishmen invited: accordingly as the Hotel de V. was in
the same street as my hotel, we dined together at my rooms, and walked
from thence to the minister’s house.

The party was as stiff and formal as such assemblies invariably are,
and we were both delighted when we espied Monsieur d’A--, a man of much
conversational talent, and some celebrity as an ultra writer, forming a
little group in one corner of the room.

We took advantage of our acquaintance with the urbane Frenchman to join
his party; the conversation turned almost entirely on literary subjects.
Allusion being made to Schlegel’s History of Literature, and the
severity with which he speaks of Helvetius, and the philosophers of his
school, we began to discuss what harm the free-thinkers in philosophy
had effected.

“For my part,” said Vincent, “I am not able to divine why we are
supposed, in works where there is much truth, and little falsehood, much
good, and a little evil, to see only the evil and the falsehood, to
the utter exclusion of the truth and the good. All men whose minds are
sufficiently laborious or acute to love the reading of metaphysical
inquiries, will by the same labour and acuteness separate the chaff
from the corn--the false from the true. It is the young, the light, the
superficial, who are easily misled by error, and incapable of
discerning its fallacy; but tell me, if it is the light, the young, the
superficial, who are in the habit of reading the abstruse and subtle
speculations of the philosopher. No, no! believe me that it is the very
studies Monsieur Schlegel recommends, which do harm to morality and
virtue; it is the study of literature itself, the play, the poem, the
novel, which all minds, however frivolous, can enjoy and understand,
that constitute the real foes to religion and moral improvement.”

“Ma foi,” cried Monsieur de G., (who was a little writer, and a great
reader of romances) “why, you would not deprive us of the politer
literature, you would not bid us shut up our novels, and burn our
theatres.”

“Certainly not!” replied Vincent; “and it is in this particular that I
differ from certain modern philosophers of our own country, for whom,
for the most part, I entertain the highest veneration. I would not
deprive life of a single grace, or a single enjoyment, but I would
counteract whatever is pernicious in whatever is elegant; if among my
flowers there is a snake, I would not root up my flowers, I would kill
the snake. Thus, who are they that derive from fiction and literature
a prejudicial effect? We have seen already--the light and
superficial;--but who are they that derive profit from them?--they who
enjoy well regulated and discerning minds. Who pleasure?--all mankind!
Would it not therefore be better, instead of depriving some of profit,
and all of pleasure, by banishing poetry and fiction from our Utopia,
to correct the minds which find evil, where, if they were properly
instructed, they would find good? Whether we agree with Helvetius, that
all men are born with an equal capacity of improvement, or merely go
the length with all other metaphysicians, that education can improve the
human mind to an extent yet incalculable, it must be quite clear, that
we can give sound views instead of fallacies, and make common truths as
easy to discern and adopt as common errors. But if we effect this,
which we all allow is so easy, with our children; if we strengthen their
minds, instead of weakening them, and clear their vision, rather than
confuse it, from that moment, we remove the prejudicial effects of
fiction, and just as we have taught them to use a knife, without cutting
their fingers, we teach them to make use of fiction without perverting
it to their prejudice. What philosopher was ever hurt by reading the
novels of Crebillon, or seeing the comedies of Moliere? You understand
me, then, Monsieur de G., I do, it is true, think that polite literature
(as it is termed,) is prejudicial to the superficial, but for that
reason, I would not do away with the literature, I would do away with
the superficial.”

“I deny,” said M. D’A--, “that this is so easy a task--you cannot make
all men wise.”

“No,” replied Vincent; “but you can all children, at least to a certain
extent. Since you cannot deny the prodigious effects of education, you
must allow that they will, at least, give common sense; for it they
cannot do this, they can do nothing. Now common sense is all that is
necessary to distinguish what is good and evil, whether it be in life
or in books: but then your education must not be that of public teaching
and private fooling; you must not counteract the effects of common sense
by instilling prejudice, or encouraging weakness; your education may
not be carried to the utmost goal: but as far as it does go you must see
that the road is clear. Now, for instance, with regard to fiction, you
must not first, as is done in all modern education, admit the disease,
and then dose with warm water to expel it; you must not put fiction into
your child’s hands, and not give him a single principle to guide his
judgment respecting it, till his mind has got wedded to the poison, and
too weak, by its long use, to digest the antidote. No; first fortify his
intellect by reason, and you may then please his fancy by fiction. Do
not excite his imagination with love and glory, till you can instruct
his judgment as to what love and glory are. Teach him, in short, to
reflect, before you permit him full indulgence to imagine.”

Here there was a pause. Monsieur D’A--looked very ill-pleased, and poor
Monsieur de G--thought that somehow or other his romance writing was
called into question. In order to soothe them, I introduced some subject
which permitted a little national flattery; the conversation then turned
insensibly on the character of the French people.

“Never,” said Vincent, “has there been a character more often
described--never one less understood. You have been termed superficial.
I think, of all people, that you least deserve the accusation. With
regard to the few, your philosophers, your mathematicians, your men
of science, are consulted by those of other nations, as some of their
profoundest authorities. With regard to the many, the charge is still
more unfounded. Compare your mob, whether of gentlemen or plebeians,
to those of Germany, Italy--even England--and I own, in spite of my
national prepossessions, that the comparison is infinitely in your
favour. The country gentlemen, the lawyer, the petit maitre of England,
are proverbially inane and ill-informed. With you, the classes of
society that answer to those respective grades, have much information
in literature, and often not a little in science. In like manner, your
tradesmen, your mechanics, your servants, are, beyond all measure, of
larger, better cultivated, and less prejudiced minds than those ranks in
England. The fact is, that all with you pretend to be savans, and this
is the chief reason why you have been censured as shallow. We see your
fine gentleman, or your petit bourgeois, give himself the airs of a
critic or a philosopher; and because he is neither a Scaliger nor a
Newton, we forget that he is only the bourgeois or the pelit maitre,
and set down all your philosophers and critics with the censure of
superficiality, which this shallow individual of a shallow order
may justly have deserved. We, the English, it is true, do not expose
ourselves thus: our dandies, our tradesmen, do not vent second rate
philosophy on the human mind, nor on les beaux arts: but why is this?
Not because they are better informed than their correspondent ciphers
in France, but because they are much worse; not because they can say
a great deal more on the subject, but because they can say nothing at
all.”

“You do us more than justice,” said Monsieur D’A--, “in this instance:
are you disposed to do us justice also in another? It is a favourite
propensity of your countrymen to accuse us of heartlessness and want of
feeling. Think you that this accusation is deserved?”

“By no means,” replied Vincent. “The same cause that brought on the
erroneous censure we have before mentioned, appears to me also to have
created this; viz. a sort of Palais Royal vanity, common to all your
nation, which induces you to make as much display at the shop window as
possible. You show great cordiality, and even enthusiasm, to strangers;
you turn your back on them--you forget them. ‘How heartless!’ cry we.
Not at all! The English show no cordiality, no enthusiasm to strangers,
it is true: but they equally turn their backs on them, and equally
forget them! The only respect, therefore, in which they differ from
you, is the previous kindness: now if we are to receive strangers, I can
really see no reason why we are not to be as civil to them as possible;
and so far from imputing the desire to please them to a bad heart, I
think it a thousand times more amiable and benevolent than telling them,
a l’Anglaise, by your morosity and reserve, that you do not care a pin
what becomes of them. If I am only to walk a mile with a man, why should
I not make that mile as pleasant to him as I can; or why, above all, if
I choose to be sulky, and tell him to go and be d--d, am I to swell out
my chest, colour with conscious virtue, and cry, see what a good heart I
have?

“Ah, Monsieur D’A----, since benevolence is inseparable from all
morality, it must be clear that there is a benevolence in little
things as well as in great; and that he who strives to make his fellow
creatures happy, though only for an instant, is a much better man than
he who is indifferent to, or, (what is worse) despises, it. Nor do I, to
say truth, see that kindness to an acquaintance is at all destructive
to sincerity to a friend: on the contrary, I have yet to learn, that
you are (according to the customs of your country) worse friends, worse
husbands, or worse fathers than we are!”

“What!” cried I, “you forget yourself, Vincent. How can the private
virtues be cultivated without a coal fire? Is not domestic affection
a synonymous term with domestic hearth? and where do you find either,
except in honest old England?”

“True,” replied Vincent; “and it is certainly impossible for a father
and his family to be as fond of each other on a bright day in the
Tuilleries, or at Versailles, with music and dancing, and fresh air, as
they would be in a back parlour, by a smoky hearth, occupied entirely by
le bon pere, et la bonne mere; while the poor little children sit at the
other end of the table, whispering and shivering, debarred the vent of
all natural spirits, for fear of making a noise; and strangely uniting
the idea of the domestic hearth with that of a hobgoblin, and the
association of dear papa with that of a birch rod.”

We all laughed at this reply, and Monsieur D’A----, rising to depart,
said, “Well, well, milord, your countrymen are great generalizers in
philosophy; they reduce human actions to two grand touchstones. All
hilarity, they consider the sign of a shallow mind; and all kindness,
the token of a false heart.”



CHAPTER XVI.

Quis sapiens bono Confidat fragili.--Seneca.

Grammatici certant et adhuc sub judice lis est.--Horace.

When I first went to Paris, I took a French master, to perfect me in the
Parisian pronunciation. This “Haberdasher of Pronouns” was a person of
the name of Margot. He was a tall, solemn man, with a face of the most
imperturbable gravity. He would have been inestimable as an undertaker.
His hair was of a pale yellow; you would have thought it had caught a
bilious complaint from his complexion; the latter was, indeed, of so
sombre a saffron, that it looked as if ten livers had been forced into
a jaundice, in order to supply its colour. His forehead was high, bald,
and very narrow. His cheekbones were extremely prominent, and his cheeks
so thin, that they seemed happier than Pyramus and Thisbe, and kissed
each other inside without any separation or division. His face was as
sharp and almost as long as an inverted pyramid, and was garnished on
either side by a miserable half starved whisker, which seemed scarcely
able to maintain itself, amid the general symptoms of atrophy and
decay. This charming countenance was supported by a figure so long, so
straight, so shadowy, that you might have taken it for the monument in a
consumption.

But the chief characteristic of the man was the utter and wonderful
gravity I have before spoken of. You could no more have coaxed a
smile out of his countenance, than you could out of the poker, and yet
Monsieur Margot was by no means a melancholy man. He loved his joke,
and his wine, and his dinner, just as much as if he had been of a fatter
frame; and it was a fine specimen of the practical antithesis, to hear
a good story, or a jovial expression, leap friskily out of that long,
curved mouth; it was at once a paradox and a bathos--it was the mouse
coming out of its hole in Ely Cathedral.

I said that this gravity was M. Margot’s most especial characteristic.
I forgot:--he had two others equally remarkable; the one was an ardent
admiration for the chivalrous, the other an ardent admiration for
himself. Both of these are traits common enough in a Frenchman, but in
Mons. Margot their excesses rendered them uncommon. He was a most ultra
specimen of le chevalier amoureux--a mixture of Don Quixote and the Duc
de Lauzun. Whenever he spoke of the present tense, even en professeur,
he always gave a sigh to the preterite, and an anecdote of Bayard;
whenever he conjugated a verb, he paused to tell me that the favourite
one of his female pupils was je t’aime.

In short, he had tales of his own good fortune, and of other people’s
brave exploits, which, without much exaggeration, were almost as long,
and had perhaps as little substance as himself; but the former was his
favourite topic: to hear him, one would have imagined that his face,
in borrowing the sharpness of the needle, had borrowed also its
attraction;--and then the prettiness of Mons. Margot’s modesty!

“It is very extraordinary,” said he, “very extraordinary, for I have no
time to give myself up to those affairs; it is not, Monsieur, as if I
had your leisure to employ all the little preliminary arts of creating
la belle passion. Non, Monsieur, I go to church, to the play, to the
Tuilleries, for a brief relaxation--and me voila partout accable with
my good fortune. I am not handsome, Monsieur, at least, not very; it
is true, that I have expression, a certain air noble, (my first cousin,
Monsieur, is the Chevalier de Margot) and above all, de l’a me in my
physiognomy; the women love soul, Monsieur--something intellectual and
spiritual always attracts them; yet my success certainly is singular.”

“Bah! Monsieur,” replied I: “with dignity, expression, and soul! how
could the heart of any French woman resist you? No, you do yourself
injustice. It was said of Caesar, that he was great without an effort;
much more, then, may Monsieur Margot be happy without an exertion.”

“Ah, Monsieur!” rejoined the Frenchman, still looking

“As weak, as earnest, and as gravely out As sober Lanesbro’ dancing with
the gout.”

“Ah, Monsieur, there is a depth and truth in your remarks, worthy of
Montaigne. As it is impossible to account for the caprices of women, so
it is impossible for ourselves to analyze the merit they discover in us;
but, Monsieur, hear me--at the house where I lodge, there is an English
lady en pension. Eh bien, Monsieur, you guess the rest: she has taken a
caprice for me, and this very night she will admit me to her apartment.
She is very handsome,--Ah qu’elle est belle, une jolie petite bouche,
une denture eblouissante, un nez tout afait grec, in fine, quite a
bouton de rose.”

I expressed my envy at Monsieur Margot’s good fortune, and when he had
sufficiently dilated upon it, he withdrew. Shortly afterwards Vincent
entered--“I have a dinner invitation for both of us to-day,” said he;
“you will come?”

“Most certainly,” replied I; “but who is the person we are to honour?”

“A Madame Laurent,” replied Vincent; “one of those ladies only found
at Paris, who live upon anything rather than their income. She keeps
a tolerable table, haunted with Poles, Russians, Austrians, and idle
Frenchmen, peregrinae gentis amaenum hospitium. As yet, she has not the
happiness to be acquainted with any Englishmen, (though she boards one
of our countrywomen) and (as she is desirous of making her fortune as
soon as possible) she is very anxious of having that honour. She has
heard vast reports of our wealth and wisdom, and flatters herself that
we are so many ambulatory Indies: in good truth, a Frenchwoman thinks
she is never in want of a fortune as long as there is a rich fool in the
world.

“‘Stultitiam patiuntur, opes,’

is her hope; and

“‘Ut tu fortunam, sic nos te, Celse, feremus,’

is her motto.”

“Madame Laurent!” repeated I, “why, surely that is the name of Mons.
Margot’s landlady.”

“I hope not,” cried Vincent, “for the sake of our dinner; he reflects no
credit on her good cheer--

“‘Who eats fat dinners, should himself be fat.’”

“At all events,” said I, “we can try the good lady for once. I am very
anxious to see a countrywoman of ours, probably the very one you
speak of, whom Mons. Margot eulogizes in glowing colours, and who has,
moreover, taken a violent fancy for my solemn preceptor. What think you
of that, Vincent?”

“Nothing extraordinary,” replied Vincent; “the lady only exclaims with
the moralist--

“‘Love, virtue, valour, yea, all human charms, Are shrunk and centred in
that heap of bones. Oh! there are wondrous beauties in the grave!’”

I made some punning rejoinder, and we sallied out to earn an appetite in
the Tuilleries for Madame Laurent’s dinner.

At the hour of half-past five we repaired to our engagement. Madame
Laurent received us with the most evident satisfaction, and introduced
us forthwith to our countrywoman. She was a pretty, fair, shrewd looking
person, with an eye and lip which, unless it greatly belied her, showed
her much more inclined, as an amante, to be merry and wise, than honest
and true.

Presently Monsieur Margot made his appearance. Though very much
surprised at seeing me, he did not appear the least jealous of my
attentions to his inamorata. Indeed, the good gentleman was far too much
pleased with himself to be susceptible of the suspicions common to less
fortunate lovers. At dinner I sat next to the pretty Englishwoman, whose
name was Green.

“Monsieur Margot,” said I, “has often spoken to me of you before I had
the happiness of being personally convinced how true and unexaggerated
were his sentiments.”

“Oh!” cried Mrs. Green, with an arch laugh, “you are acquainted with
Monsieur Margot, then?”

“I have that honour,” said I. “I receive from him every morning lessons
both in love and languages. He is perfect master of both.”

Mrs. Green burst out into one of those peals so peculiarly British.

“Ah, le pauvre Professeur!” cried she. “He is too absurd!”

“He tells me,” said I, gravely, “that he is quite accable with his
bonnes fortunes--possibly he flatters himself that even you are not
perfectly inaccessible to his addresses.”

“Tell me, Mr. Pelham,” said the fair Mrs. Green, “can you pass by this
street about half past twelve to-night?”

“I will make a point of doing so,” replied I, not a little surprised by
the remark.

“Do,” said she, “and now let us talk of old England.”

When we went away I told Vincent of my appointment. “What!” said he,
“eclipse Monsieur Margot! Impossible!”

“You are right,” replied I, “nor is it my hope; there is some trick
afloat of which we may as well be spectators.”

“De tout mon coeur!” answered Vincent; “let us go till then to the
Duchesse de G----.”

I assented, and we drove to the Rue de--.

The Duchesse de G--was a fine relict of the ancien regime--tall and
stately, with her own grey hair crepe, and surmounted by a high cap of
the most dazzling blonde. She had been one of the earliest emigrants,
and had stayed for many months with my mother, whom she professed to
rank amongst her dearest friends. The duchesse possessed to perfection
that singular melange of ostentation and ignorance which was so peculiar
to the ante-revolutionists. She would talk of the last tragedy with the
emphatic tone of a connoisseur, in the same breath that she would ask,
with Marie Antoinette, why the poor people were so clamorous for bread
when they might buy such nice cakes for two-pence a-piece? “To give
you an idea of the Irish,” said she one day to an inquisitive marquess,
“know that they prefer potatoes to mutton!”

Her soirees were among the most agreeable at Paris--she united all the
rank and talent to be found in the ultra party, for she professed to
be quite a female Maecenas; and whether it was a mathematician or a
romance-writer, a naturalist or a poet, she held open house for all, and
conversed with each with equal fluency and self-satisfaction.

A new play had just been acted, and the conversation, after a few
preliminary hoverings, settled upon it.

“You see,” said the duchesse, “that we have actors, you authors; of what
avail is it that you boast of a Shakspeare, since your Liseton, great as
he is, cannot be compared with our Talma?”

“And yet,” said I, preserving my gravity with a pertinacity, which
nearly made Vincent and the rest of our compatriots assembled lose
their’s “Madame must allow, that there is a striking resemblance in
their persons, and the sublimity of their acting?”

“Pour ca, j’en conviens,” replied this ‘critique de l’Ecole des Femmes.’
“Mais cependant Liseton n’a pas la Nature! l’ame! la grandeur de Talma!”

“And will you then allow us no actors of merit?” asked Vincent.

“Mais oui!--dans le genre comique, par exemple, votre buffo Kean met dix
fois plus d’esprit et de drollerie dans ses roles que La Porte.”

“The impartial and profound judgment of Madame admits of no further
discussion on this point,” said I. “What does she think of the present
state of our dramatic literature?”

“Why,” replied Madame, “you have many great poets, but when they write
for the stage they lose themselves entirely; your Valter Scote’s play of
Robe Roi is very inferior to his novel of the same name.”

“It is a great pity,” said I, “that Byron did not turn his Childe Harold
into a tragedy--it has so much energy--action--variety!”

“Very true,” said Madame, with a sigh; “but the tragedy is, after all,
only suited to our nation--we alone carry it to perfection.”

“Yet,” said I, “Goldoni wrote a few fine tragedies.”

“Eh bien!” said Madame, “one rose does not constitute a garden!”

And satisfied with this remark, la femme savante turned to a celebrated
traveller to discuss with him the chance of discovering the North Pole.

There were one or two clever Englishmen present; Vincent and I joined
them.

“Have you met the Persian prince yet?” said Sir George Lynton to me; “he
is a man of much talent, and great desire of knowledge. He intends
to publish his observations on Paris, and I suppose we shall have an
admirable supplement to Montesquieu’s Lettres Persannes!”

“I wish we had,” said Vincent: “there are few better satires on a
civilized country than the observations of visitors less polished; while
on the contrary the civilized traveller, in describing the manners of
the American barbarian, instead of conveying ridicule upon the visited,
points the sarcasm on the visitor; and Tacitus could not have thought of
a finer or nobler satire on the Roman luxuries than that insinuated by
his treatise on the German simplicity.”

“What,” said Monsieur D’E--(an intelligent ci-devant emigre), “what
political writer is generally esteemed as your best?”

“It is difficult to say,” replied Vincent, “since with so many parties
we have many idols; but I think I might venture to name Bolingbroke as
among the most popular. Perhaps, indeed, it would be difficult to
select a name more frequently quoted and discussed than his; and yet his
political works are the least valuable part of his remains; and though
they contain many lofty sentiments, and many beautiful yet scattered
truths, they were written when legislation, most debated, was least
understood, and ought to be admired rather as excellent for the day than
estimable in themselves. The life of Bolingbroke would convey a juster
moral than all his writings: and the author who gives us a full and
impartial memoir of that extraordinary man, will have afforded both
to the philosophical and political literature of England one of its
greatest desideratums.”

“It seems to me,” said Monsieur D’E--, “that your national literature is
peculiarly deficient in biography--am I right in my opinion?”

“Indubitably!” said Vincent; “we have not a single work that can be
considered a model in biography, (excepting, perhaps, Middleton’s Life
of Cicero.) This brings on a remark I have often made in distinguishing
your philosophy from ours. It seems to me that you who excel so
admirably in biography, memoirs, comedy, satirical observation on
peculiar classes, and pointed aphorisms, are fonder of considering man
in his relation to society and the active commerce of the world, than
in the more abstracted and metaphysical operations of the mind.
Our writers, on the contrary, love to indulge rather in abstruse
speculations on their species--to regard man in an abstract and isolated
point of view, and to see him think alone in his chamber, while you
prefer beholding him act with the multitude in the world.”

“It must be allowed,” said Monsieur D’E----t, “that if this be true, our
philosophy is the most useful, though yours may be the most profound.”

Vincent did not reply.

“Yet,” said Sir George Lynton, “there will be a disadvantage attending
your writings of this description, which, by diminishing their general
applicability, diminish their general utility. Works which treat upon
man in his relation to society, can only be strictly applicable so long
as that relation to society treated upon continues. For instance, the
play which satirizes a particular class, however deep its reflections
and accurate its knowledge upon the subject satirized, must necessarily
be obsolete when the class itself has become so. The political pamphlet,
admirable for one state, may be absurd in another; the novel which
exactly delineates the present age may seem strange and unfamiliar to
the next; and thus works which treat of men relatively, and not man in
se, must often confine their popularity to the age and even the country
in which they were written. While on the other hand, the work which
treats of man himself, which seizes, discovers, analyzes the human
mind, as it is, whether in the ancient or the modern, the savage or the
European, must evidently be applicable, and consequently useful, to all
times and all nations. He who discovers the circulation of the blood,
or the origin of ideas, must be a philosopher to every people who have
veins or ideas; but he who even most successfully delineates the
manners of one country, or the actions of one individual, is only the
philosopher of a single country, or a single age. If, Monsieur D’E--t,
you will condescend to consider this, you will see perhaps that the
philosophy which treats of man in his relations is not so useful,
because neither so permanent nor so invariable, as that which treats of
man in himself.” [Note: Yet Hume holds the contrary opinion to this, and
considers a good comedy more durable than a system of philosophy. Hume
is right, if by a system of philosophy is understood--a pile of guesses,
false but plausible, set up by one age to be destroyed by the next.
Ingenuity cannot rescue error from oblivion; but the moment Wisdom has
discovered Truth, she has obtained immortality.]

I was now somewhat weary of this conversation, and though it was not yet
twelve, I seized upon my appointment as an excuse to depart--accordingly
I rose for that purpose. “I suppose,” said I to Vincent, “that you will
not leave your discussion.”

“Pardon me,” said he, “amusement is quite as profitable to a man of
sense as metaphysics. Allons.”



CHAPTER XVII.

I was in this terrible situation when the basket stopt.--Oriental
Tales--History of the Basket.

We took our way to the street in which Madame Laurent resided. Meanwhile
suffer me to get rid of myself, and to introduce you, dear Reader, to my
friend, Monsieur Margot, the whole of whose adventures were subsequently
detailed to me by the garrulous Mrs. Green.

At the hour appointed he knocked at the door of my fair countrywoman,
and was carefully admitted. He was attired in a dressing-gown of
sea-green silk, in which his long, lean, hungry body, looked more like a
river pike than any thing human.

“Madame,” said he, with a solemn air, “I return you my best thanks for
the honour you have done me--behold me at your feet!” and so saying the
lean lover gravely knelt down on one knee.

“Rise, Sir,” said Mrs. Green, “I confess that you have won my heart; but
that is not all--you have yet to show that you are worthy of the opinion
I have formed of you. It is not, Monsieur Margot, your person that has
won me--no! it is your chivalrous and noble sentiments--prove that these
are genuine, and you may command all from my admiration.”

“In what manner shall I prove it, Madame,” said Monsieur Margot, rising,
and gracefully drawing his sea-green gown more closely round him.

“By your courage, your devotion, and your gallantry! I ask but one
proof--you can give it me on the spot. You remember, Monsieur, that in
the days of romance, a lady threw her glove upon the stage on which a
lion was exhibited, and told her lover to pick it up. Monsieur Margot,
the trial to which I shall put you is less severe. Look, (and Mrs.
Green threw open the window)--look, I throw my glove out into the
street--descend for it.”

“Your commands are my law,” said the romantic Margot. “I will go
forthwith,” and so saying, he went to the door.

“Hold, Sir!” said the lady, “it is not by that simple manner that
you are to descend--you must go the same way as my glove, out of the
window.”

“Out of the window, Madame!” said Monsieur Margot, with astonished
solemnity; “that is impossible, because this apartment is three stories
high, and consequently I shall be dashed to pieces.”

“By no means,” answered the dame; “in that corner of the room there is a
basket, to which (already foreseeing your determination) I have affixed
a rope; by that basket you shall descend. See, Monsieur, what expedients
a provident love can suggest.”

“H--e--m!” said, very slowly, Monsieur Margot, by no means liking the
airy voyage imposed upon him; “but the rope may break, or your hand may
suffer it to slip.”

“Feel the rope,” cried the lady, “to satisfy you as to your first doubt;
and, as to the second, can you--can you imagine that my affections
would not make me twice as careful of your person as of my own. Fie!
ungrateful Monsieur Margot! fie!”

The melancholy chevalier cast a rueful look at the basket. “Madame,”
 said he, “I own that I am very averse to the plan you propose: suffer
me to go down stairs in the ordinary way; your glove can be as easily
picked up whether your adorer goes out of the door or the window. It is
only, Madame, when ordinary means fail that we should have recourse to
the extraordinary.”

“Begone, Sir!” exclaimed Mrs. Green; “begone! I now perceive that your
chivalry was only a pretence. Fool that I was to love you as I have
done--fool that I was to imagine a hero where I now find a--”

“Pause, Madame, I will obey you--my heart is firm--see that the rope
is--”

“Gallant Monsieur Margot!” cried the lady: and going to her
dressing-room, she called her woman to her assistance. The rope was
of the most unquestionable thickness, the basket of the most capacious
dimensions. The former was fastened to a strong hook--and the latter
lowered.

“I go, Madame,” said Monsieur Margot, feeling the rope; “but it really
is a most dangerous exploit.”

“Go, Monsieur! and the God of St. Louis befriend you!”

“Stop!” said Monsieur Margot, “let me fetch my coat: the night is cold,
and my dressing-gown thin.”

“Nay, nay, my Chevalier,” returned the dame, “I love you in that gown:
it gives you an air of grace and dignity, quite enchanting.”

“It will give me my death of cold, Madame,” said Monsieur Margot,
earnestly.

“Bah!” said the Englishwoman: “what knight ever feared cold? Besides,
you mistake; the night is warm, and you look so handsome in your gown.”

“Do I!” said the vain Monsieur Margot, with an iron expression of
satisfaction; “if that is the case, I will mind it less; but may I
return by the door?”

“Yes,” replied the lady; “you see that I do not require too much from
your devotion--enter.”

“Behold me!” said the French master, inserting his body into the basket,
which immediately began to descend.

The hour and the police of course made the street empty; the lady’s
handkerchief waved in token of encouragement and triumph. When the
basket was within five yards of the ground, Mrs. Green cried to her
lover, who had hitherto been elevating his serious countenance towards
her, in sober, yet gallant sadness--“Look, look, Monsieur--straight
before you.”

The lover turned round, as rapidly as his habits would allow him, and at
that instant the window was shut, the light extinguished, and the basket
arrested. There stood Monsieur Margot, upright in the basket, and there
stopped the basket, motionless in the air.

What were the exact reflections of Monsieur Margot, in that position, I
cannot pretend to determine, because he never favoured me with them;
but about an hour afterwards, Vincent and I (who had been delayed on the
road), strolling up the street, according to our appointment, perceived,
by the dim lamps, some opaque body leaning against the wall of Madame
Laurent’s house, at about the distance of fifteen feet from the ground.

We hastened our steps towards it; a measured and serious voice, which
I well knew, accosted us--“For God’s sake, gentlemen, procure me
assistance; I am the victim of a perfidious woman, and expect every
moment to be precipitated to the earth.”

“Good Heavens!” said I, “surely it is Monsieur Margot, whom I hear. What
are you doing there?”

“Shivering with cold,” answered Monsieur Margot, in a tone tremulously
slow.

“But what are you in? for I can see nothing but a dark substance.”

“I am in a basket,” replied Monsieur Margot, “and I should be very much
obliged to you to let me out of it.”

“Well--indeed,” said Vincent, (for I was too much engaged in laughing
to give a ready reply,) “your Chateau-Margot has but a cool cellar. But
there are some things in the world easier said than done. How are we to
remove you to a more desirable place?”

“Ah,” returned Monsieur Margot, “how indeed! There is to be sure a
ladder in the porter’s lodge long enough to deliver me; but then, think
of the gibes and jeers of the porter--it will get wind--I shall be
ridiculed, gentlemen--I shall be ridiculed--and what is worse, I shall
lose my pupils.”

“My good friend,” said I, “you had better lose your pupils than your
life; and the day-light will soon come, and then, instead of being
ridiculed by the porter, you will be ridiculed by the whole street!”

Monsieur Margot groaned. “Go, then, my friend,” said he, “procure the
ladder! Oh, those she devils!--what could make me such a fool!”

Whilst Monsieur Margot was venting his spleen in a scarcely articulate
mutter, we repaired to the lodge, knocked up the porter, communicated
the accident, and procured the ladder. However, an observant eye had
been kept upon our proceedings, and the window above was re-opened,
though so silently that I only perceived the action. The porter,
a jolly, bluff, hearty-looking fellow, stood grinning below with a
lantern, while we set the ladder (which only just reached the basket)
against the wall.

The chevalier looked wistfully forth, and then, by the light of
the lantern, we had a fair view of his ridiculous figure--his teeth
chattered woefully, and the united cold without and anxiety within,
threw a double sadness and solemnity upon his withered countenance;
the night was very windy, and every instant a rapid current seized the
unhappy sea-green vesture, whirled it in the air, and threw it, as if
in scorn, over the very face of the miserable professor. The constant
recurrence of this sportive irreverence of the gales--the high sides of
the basket, and the trembling agitation of the inmate, never too agile,
rendered it a work of some time for Monsieur Margot to transfer himself
from the basket to the ladder; at length, he had fairly got out one
thin, shivering leg.

“Thank God!” said the pious professor--when at that instant the
thanksgiving was checked, and, to Monsieur Margot’s inexpressible
astonishment and dismay, the basket rose five feet from the ladder,
leaving its tenant with one leg dangling out, like a flag from a
balloon.

The ascent was too rapid to allow Monsieur Margot even time for an
exclamation, and it was not till he had had sufficient leisure in his
present elevation to perceive all its consequences, that he found words
to say, with the most earnest tone of thoughtful lamentation, “One could
not have foreseen this!--it is really extremely distressing--would to
God that I could get my leg in, or my body out!”

While we were yet too convulsed with laughter to make any comment upon
the unlooked-for ascent of the luminous Monsieur Margot, the basket
descended with such force as to dash the lantern out of the hand of the
porter, and to bring the professor so precipitously to the ground, that
all the bones in his skin rattled audibly!

“My God!” said he, “I am done for!--be witness how inhumanly I have been
murdered.”

We pulled him out of the basket, and carried him between us into the
porter’s lodge; but the woes of Monsieur Margot were not yet at their
termination. The room was crowded. There was Madame Laurent,--there was
the German count, whom the professor was teaching French;--there was
the French viscount, whom he was teaching German;--there were all
his fellow-lodgers--the ladies whom he had boasted of--the men he had
boasted to--Don Juan, in the infernal regions, could not have met with
a more unwelcome set of old acquaintance than Monsieur Margot had the
happiness of opening his bewildered eyes upon in the porter’s lodge.

“What!” cried they all, “Monsieur Margot, is that you who have been
frightening us so? We thought the house was attacked; the Russian
general is at this very moment loading his pistols; lucky for you that
you did not choose to stay longer in that situation. Pray, Monsieur,
what could induce you to exhibit yourself so, in your dressing-gown too,
and the night so cold? Ar’n’t you ashamed of yourself?”

All this, and infinitely more, was levelled against the miserable
professor, who stood shivering with cold and fright; and turning his
eyes first upon one, and then on another, as the exclamations circulated
round the room,

“I do assure you,” at length he began.

“No, no,” cried one, “it is of no use explaining now!”

“Mais, Messieurs,” querulously recommenced the unhappy Margot.

“Hold your tongue,” exclaimed Madame Laurent, “you have been disgracing
my house.”

“Mais, Madame, ecoutez-moi--”

“No, no,” cried the German, “we saw you--we saw you.”

“Mais, Monsieur Le Comte--” “Fie, fie!” cried the Frenchman.

“Mais, Monsisur Le Vicomte--” At this every mouth was opened, and the
patience of Monsieur Margot being by this time exhausted, he flew into
a violent rage; his tormentors pretended an equal indignation, and at
length he fought his way out of the room, as fast as his shattered bones
would allow him, followed by the whole body, screaming, and shouting,
and scolding, and laughing after him.

The next morning passed without my usual lesson from Monsieur Margot;
that was natural enough: but when the next day, and the next, rolled on,
and brought neither Monsieur Margot nor his excuse, I began to be uneasy
for the poor man. Accordingly I sent to Madame Laurent’s to inquire
after him: judge of my surprise at hearing that he had, early the day
after his adventure, left his lodgings with his small possession of
books and clothes, leaving only a note to Madame Laurent, enclosing the
amount of his debt to her, and that none had since seen or heard of him.

From that day to this I have never once beheld him. The poor professor
lost even the little money due to him for his lessons--so true is
it, that in a man of Monsieur Margot’s temper, even interest is a
subordinate passion to vanity.



CHAPTER XVIII.

It is good to be merry and wise, It’s good to be honest and true; It is
good to be off with the old love Before you be on with the new.--Song.

One morning, when I was riding to the Bois de Boulogne (the celebrated
place of assignation), in order to meet Madame d’Anville, I saw a lady
on horseback, in the most imminent danger of being thrown. Her horse
had taken fright at an English tandem, or its driver, and was plunging
violently; the lady was evidently much frightened, and lost her presence
of mind more and more every moment. A man who was with her, and
who could scarcely manage his own horse, appeared to be exceedingly
desirous, but perfectly unable, to assist her; and a great number
of people were looking on, doing nothing, and saying “Good God, how
dangerous!”

I have always had a great horror of being a hero in scenes, and a still
greater antipathy to “females in distress.” However, so great is the
effect of sympathy upon the most hardened of us, that I stopped for
a few moments, first to look on, and secondly to assist. Just when a
moment’s delay might have been dangerous, I threw myself off my horse,
seized her’s with one hand, by the rein which she no longer had the
strength to hold, and assisted her with the other to dismount. When all
the peril was over, Monsieur, her companion, managed also to find his
legs; and I did not, I confess, wonder at his previous delay, when
I discovered that the lady in danger had been his wife. He gave me a
profusion of thanks, and she made them more than complimentary by the
glance which accompanied them. Their carriage was in attendance at a
short distance behind. The husband went for it--I remained with the
lady.

“Mr. Pelham,” she said, “I have heard much of you from my friend Madame
D’Anville, and have long been anxious for your acquaintance. I did not
think I should commence it with so great an obligation.”

Flattered by being already known by name, and a subject of previous
interest, you may be sure that I tried every method to improve the
opportunity I had gained; and when I handed my new acquaintance into
her carriage, my pressure of her hand was somewhat more than slightly
returned.

“Shall you be at the English ambassador’s to-night?” said the lady, as
they were about to shut the door of the carriage.

“Certainly, if you are to be there,” was my answer.

“We shall meet then,” said Madame, and her look said more.

I rode into the Bois; and giving my horse to my servant, as I came near
Passy, where I was to meet Madame D’Anville, I proceeded thither on
foot. I was just in sight of the spot, and indeed of my inamorata, when
two men passed, talking very earnestly; they did not remark me, but
what individual could ever escape my notice? The one was Thornton;
the other--who could he be? Where had I seen that pale, but more than
beautiful countenance before? I looked again. I was satisfied that I
was mistaken in my first thought; the hair was of a completely different
colour. “No, no,” said I, “it is not he: yet how like.”

I was distrait and absent during the whole time I was with Madame
D’Anville. The face of Thornton’s companion haunted me like a dream;
and, to say the truth, there were also moments when the recollection of
my new engagement for the evening made me tired with that which I was
enjoying the troublesome honour of keeping.

Madame D’Anville was not slow in perceiving the coldness of my
behaviour. Though a Frenchwoman, she was rather grieved than resentful.

“You are growing tired of me, my friend,” she said: “and when I consider
your youth and temptations, I cannot be surprised at it--yet, I
own, that this thought gives me much greater pain than I could have
supposed.”

“Bah! ma belle amie,” cried I, “you deceive yourself--I adore you--I
shall always adore you; but it’s getting very late.”

Madame D’Anville sighed, and we parted. “She is not half so pretty or
agreeable as she was,” thought I, as I mounted my horse, and remembered
my appointment at the ambassador’s.

I took unusual pains with my appearance that evening, and drove to the
ambassador’s hotel in the Rue Faubourg St. Honore, full half an hour
earlier than I had ever done before. I had been some time in the rooms
without discovering my heroine of the morning. The Duchess of H--n
passed by.

“What a wonderfully beautiful woman,” said Mr. Howard de Howard (the
spectral secretary of the embassy) to Mr. Aberton.

“Ay,” answered Aberton, “but to my taste, the Duchesse de Perpignan is
quite equal to her--do you know her?”

“No--yes!” said Mr. Howard de Howard; “that is, not exactly--not well;”
 an Englishman never owns that he does not know a duchess.

“Hem!” said Mr. Aberton, thrusting his large hand through his lank light
hair. “Hem--could one do anything, do you think, in that quarter?”

“I should think one might, with a tolerable person!” answered the
spectral secretary, looking down at a pair of most shadowy supporters.

“Pray,” said Aberton, “what do you think of Miss--? they say she is an
heiress.”

“Think of her!” said the secretary, who was as poor as he was thin,
“why, I have thought of her!”

“They say, that fool Pelham makes up to her.” (Little did Mr. Aberton
imagine, when he made this remark, that I was close behind him.)

“I should not imagine that was true,” said the secretary; “he is so
occupied with Madame D’Anville.”

“Pooh!” said Aberton, dictatorially, “she never had any thing to say to
him.”

“Why are you so sure?” said Mr. Howard de Howard.

“Why? because he never showed any notes from her, or ever even said he
had a liaison with her himself!”

“Ah! that is quite enough!” said the secretary. “But, is not that the
Duchesse de Perpignan?”

Mr. Aberton turned, and so did I--our eyes met--his fell--well they
might, after his courteous epithet to my name; however, I had far too
good an opinion of myself to care one straw about his; besides, at that
moment, I was wholly lost in my surprise and pleasure, in finding that
this Duchesse de Perpignan was no other than my acquaintance of the
morning. She caught my gaze and smiled as she bowed. “Now,” thought I,
as I approached her, “let us see if we cannot eclipse Mr. Aberton.”

All love-making is just the same, and, therefore, I shall spare the
reader my conversation that evening. When he recollects that it was
Henry Pelham who was the gallant, I am persuaded that he will be pretty
certain as to the success.



VOLUME II.



CHAPTER XIX.

Alea sequa vorax species certissima furti Non contenta bonis, animum
quoque perfida mergit;--Furca, furax--infamis, iners, furiosa, ruina.
Petrarch: Dial.

I dined the next day at the Freres Provencaux; an excellent
restaurateur’s, by-the-by, where one gets irreproachable gibier, and
meets no English. After dinner, I strolled into the various gambling
houses, with which the Palais Royal abounds.

In one of these, the crowd and heat were so great, that I should
immediately have retired if I had not been struck with the extreme
and intense expression of interest in the countenance of one of the
spectators at the rouge et noir table. He was a man about forty years
of age; his complexion was dark and sallow; the features prominent, and
what are generally called handsome; but there was a certain sinister
expression in his eyes and mouth, which rendered the effect of his
physiognomy rather disagreeable than prepossessing. At a small distance
from him, and playing, with an air which, in its carelessness and
nonchalance, formed a remarkable contrast to the painful anxiety of the
man I have just described, sate Mr. Thornton.

At first sight, these two appeared to be the only Englishmen present
besides myself; I was more struck by seeing the former in that scene,
than I was at meeting Thornton there; for there was something distingue
in the mien of the stranger, which suited far worse with the appearance
of the place, than the bourgeois air and dress of my ci-devant second.

“What! another Englishman?” thought I, as I turned round and perceived
a thick, rough great coat, which could possibly belong to no continental
shoulders. The wearer was standing directly opposite the seat of the
swarthy stranger; his hat was slouched over his face; I moved in order
to get a clearer view of his countenance. It was the same person I had
seen with Thornton that morning. Never to this moment have I forgotten
the stern and ferocious expression with which he was gazing upon the
keen and agitated features of the gambler opposite. In the eye and
lip there was neither pleasure, hatred, nor scorn, in their simple and
unalloyed elements; but each seemed blent and mingled into one deadly
concentration of evil passions.

This man neither played, nor spoke, nor moved. He appeared utterly
insensible of every feeling in common with those around. There he stood,
wrapt in his own dark and inscrutable thoughts, never, for one instant,
taking his looks from the varying countenance which did not observe
their gaze, nor altering the withering character of their almost
demoniacal expression. I could not tear myself from the spot. I felt
chained by some mysterious and undefinable interest; my attention was
first diverted into a new channel, by a loud exclamation from the
dark visaged gambler at the table; it was the first he had uttered,
notwithstanding his anxiety; and, from the deep, thrilling tone in
which it was expressed, it conveyed a keen sympathy with the overcharged
feelings which it burst from.

With a trembling hand, he took from an old purse the few Napoleons that
were still left there. He set them all at one hazard, on the rouge. He
hung over the table with a dropping lip; his hands were tightly clasped
in each other; his nerves seemed strained into the last agony of
excitation. I ventured to raise my eyes upon the gaze, which I felt must
still be upon the gambler--there it was fixed, and stern as before; but
it now conveyed a deeper expression of joy than of the other passions
which were there met. Yet a joy so malignant and fiendish, that no look
of mere anger or hatred could have so chilled my heart. I dropped my
eyes. I redoubled my attention to the cards--the last two were to be
turned up. A moment more!--the fortune was to the noir. The stranger had
lost! He did not utter a single word. He looked with a vacant eye on the
long mace, with which the marker had swept away his last hopes, with his
last coin, and then, rising, left the room, and disappeared.

The other Englishman was not long in following him. He uttered a short,
low, laugh, unobserved, perhaps, by any one but myself; and, pushing
through the atmosphere of sacres and mille tonnerres, which filled that
pandaemonium, strode quickly to the door. I felt as if a load had been
taken from my bosom, when he was gone.



CHAPTER XX.

Reddere person ae scit convenientia cuique.--Horace: Ars Poetica.

I was loitering over my breakfast the next morning, and thinking of the
last night’s scene, when Lord Vincent was announced.

“How fares the gallant Pelham?” said he, as he entered the room.

“Why, to say the truth,” I replied, “I am rather under the influence
of blue devils this morning, and your visit is like a sun-beam in
November.”

“A bright thought,” said Vincent, “and I shall make you a very pretty
little poet soon; publish you in a neat octavo, and dedicate you to Lady
D--e. Pray, by the by, have you ever read her plays? You know they were
only privately printed?”

“No,” said I, (for in good truth, had his lordship interrogated me
touching any other literary production, I should have esteemed it a part
of my present character to return the same answer.)

“No!” repeated Vincent; “permit me to tell you, that you must never seem
ignorant of any work not published. To be recherche, one must always
know what other people don’t--and then one has full liberty to sneer
at the value of what other people do know. Renounce the threshold
of knowledge. There every new proselyte can meet you. Boast of your
acquaintance with the sanctum, and not one in ten thousand can dispute
it with you. Have you read Monsieur de C--‘s pamphlet?”

“Really,” said I, “I have been so busy.”

“Ah, mon ami!” cried Vincent, “the greatest sign of an idle man is to
complain of being busy. But you have had a loss: the pamphlet is good.
C--, by the way, has an extraordinary, though not an expanded mind; it
is like a citizen’s garden near London: a pretty parterre here, and a
Chinese pagoda there; an oak tree in one corner, and a mushroom bed
in the other. You may traverse the whole in a stride; it is the four
quarters of the globe in a mole-hill. Yet every thing is good in its
kind; and is neither without elegance nor design in its arrangement.”

“What do you think,” said I, “of the Baron de--, the minister of--?”

“Of him!” replied Vincent--

“‘His soul Still sits at squat, and peeps not from its hole.’”

“It is dark and bewildered--full of dim visions of the ancient
regime;--it is a bat hovering about the chambers of an old ruin. Poor,
antique little soul! but I will say nothing more about it,--

“‘For who would be satirical Upon a thing so very small’ as the soul of
the Baron de ------?”

Finding Lord Vincent so disposed to the biting mood, I immediately
directed his rabies towards Mr. Aberton, for whom I had a most
inexpressible contempt.

“Aberton,” said Vincent, in answer to my question, if he knew that
aimable attache--“Yes! a sort of man who, speaking of the English
embassy, says we--who sticks his best cards on his chimney-piece, and
writes himself billets-doux from duchesses. A duodecimo of ‘precious
conceits,’ bound in calf-skin--I know the man well; does he not dress
decently, Pelham?”

“His clothes are well made,” said I; “but no man can dress well with
those hands and feet!”

“Ah!” said Vincent, “I should think he went to the best tailor, and
said, ‘give me a collar like Lord So and So’s’; one who would not dare
to have a new waistcoat till it had been authoritatively patronized, and
who took his fashions, like his follies, from the best proficients. Such
fellows are always too ashamed of themselves not to be proud of their
clothes--like the Chinese mariners, they burn incense before the
needle!”

“And Mr. Howard de Howard,” said I, laughing, “what do you think of
him?”

“What! the thin secretary?” cried Vincent.

“He is the mathematical definition of a straight line--length without
breadth. His inseparable friend, Mr. Aberton, was running up the Rue St.
Honore yesterday in order to catch him.”

“Running!” cried I, “just like common people--when were you or I ever
seen running?”

“True,” continued Vincent; “but when I saw him chasing that meagre
apparition, I said to Bennington, ‘I have found out the real Peter
Schlemil!’ ‘Who?’ (asked his grave lordship, with serious naivete) ‘Mr.
Aberton,’ said I; ‘don’t you see him running after his shadow?’ But the
pride of the lean thing is so amusing! He is fifteenth cousin to the
duke, and so his favourite exordium is, ‘Whenever I succeed to the
titles of my ancestors.’It was but the other day, that he heard two or
three silly young men discussing church and state, and they began by
talking irreligion--(Mr. Howard de Howard is too unsubstantial not to be
spiritually inclined)--however he only fidgeted in his chair. They then
proceeded to be exceedingly disloyal. Mr. Howard de Howard fidgeted
again;--they then passed to vituperations on the aristocracy--this the
attenuated pomposity (magni nominis umbra) could brook no longer. He
rose up, cast a severe look on the abashed youths, and thus addressed
them--‘Gentlemen, I have sate by in silence, and heard my King derided,
and my God blasphemed; but now in attacking the aristocracy, I can no
longer refrain from noticing so obviously intentional an insult. You
have become personal.’ But did you know, Pelham, that he is going to be
married?”

“No,” said I. “I can’t say that I thought such an event likely. Who is
the intended?”

“A Miss--, a girl with some fortune. ‘I can bring her none,’ said he to
the father, ‘but I can make her Mrs. Howard de Howard.’”

“Alas, poor girl!” said I, “I fear that her happiness will hang upon a
slender thread. But suppose we change the conversation: first, because
the subject is so meagre, that we might easily wear it out, and
secondly, because such jests may come home. I am not very corpulent
myself.”

“Bah!” said Vincent, “but at least you have bones and muscles. If you
were to pound the poor secretary in a mortar, you might take him all up
in a pinch of snuff.”

“Pray, Vincent,” said I, after a short pause, “did you ever meet with a
Mr. Thornton, at Paris?”

“Thornton, Thornton,” said Vincent, musingly; “what, Tom Thornton?”

“I should think, very likely,” I replied; “just the sort of man who
would be Tom Thornton--has a broad face, with a colour, and wears a
spotted neckcloth; Tom--what could his name be but Tom?”

“Is he about five-and-thirty?” asked Vincent, “rather short, and with
reddish coloured hair and whiskers?”

“Precisely,” said I; “are not all Toms alike?”

“Ah,” said Vincent, “I know him well: he is a clever, shrewd fellow, but
a most unmitigated rascal. He is the son of a steward in Lancashire, and
received an attorney’s education; but being a humorous, noisy fellow, he
became a great favourite with his father’s employer, who was a sort of
Mecaenas to cudgel players, boxers, and horse jockies. At his house,
Thornton met many persons of rank, but of a taste similar to their
host’s: and they, mistaking his vulgar coarseness for honesty, and his
quaint proverbs for wit, admitted him into their society. It was with
one of them that I have seen him. I believe of late, that his character
has been of a very indifferent odour: and whatever has brought him among
the English at Paris--those white-washed abominations--those ‘innocent
blacknesses,’ as Charles Lamb calls chimney sweepers, it does not argue
well for his professional occupations. I should think, however, that he
manages to live here; for wherever there are English fools, there are
fine pickings for an English rogue.”

“Ay,” said I, “but are there enough fools here, to feed the rogues?”

“Yes, because rogues are like spiders, and eat each other, when there is
nothing else to catch; and Tom Thornton is safe, as long as the ordinary
law of nature lasts, that the greater knave preys on the lesser, for
there cannot possibly be a greater knave than he is. If you have made
his acquaintance, my dear Pelham, I advise you most soberly to look to
yourself, for if he doth not steal, beg, or borrow of you, Mr. Howard de
Howard will grow fat, and even Mr. Aberton cease to be a fool. And
now, most noble Pelham, farewell. Il est plus aise d’etre sage pour les
autres que de l’etre pour soi-meme.”



CHAPTER XXI.

This is a notable couple--and have met But for some secret knavery.
--The Tanner of Tyburn.

I had now been several weeks in Paris, and I was not altogether
dissatisfied with the manner in which they had been spent. I had enjoyed
myself to the utmost, while I had, as much as possible, combined profit
with pleasure; viz. if I went to the Opera in the evening, I learned
to dance in the morning; if I drove to a soiree at the Duchesse de
Perpignan’s, it was not till I had fenced an hour at the Salon des
Assauts d’Armes; and if I made love to the duchess herself it was sure
to be in a position I had been a whole week in acquiring from my master
of the graces; in short, I took the greatest pains to complete my
education. I wish all young men who frequented the Continent for that
purpose, could say the same.

One day (about a week after the conversation with Vincent, recorded
in my last CHAPTER) I was walking slowly along one of the paths in the
Jardin des Plantes, meditating upon the various excellencies of the
Rocher de Cancale and the Duchesse de Perpignan, when I perceived a tall
man, with a thick, rough coat, of a dark colour (which I recognized long
before I did the face of the wearer) emerging from an intersecting path.
He stopped for a few moments, and looked round as if expecting some one.
Presently a woman, apparently about thirty, and meanly dressed, appeared
in an opposite direction. She approached him; they exchanged a few
words, and then, the woman taking his arm, they struck into another
path, and were soon out of sight. I suppose that the reader has already
discovered that this man was Thornton’s companion in the Bois de
Boulogne, and the hero of the Salon de Jeu, in the Palais Royal. I could
not have supposed that so noble a countenance, even in its frowns, could
ever have wasted its smiles upon a mistress of that low station to which
the woman who had met him evidently belonged. However, we all have our
little foibles, as the Frenchman said, when he boiled his grandmother’s
head in a pipkin.

I myself was, at that time, the sort of person that is always taken by
a pretty face, however coarse may be the garments which set it off; and
although I cannot say that I ever stooped so far as to become amorous of
a chambermaid, yet I could be tolerably lenient to any man under thirty
who did. As a proof of this gentleness of disposition, ten minutes after
I had witnessed so unsuitable a rencontre, I found myself following a
pretty little bourgeoise into a small sort of cabaret, which was, at
the time I speak of (and most probably still is), in the midst of the
gardens. I sat down, and called for my favourite drink of lemonade; the
little grisette, who was with an old woman, possibly her mother, and un
beau gros garcon, probably her lover, sat opposite, and began, with all
the ineffable coquetries of her country, to divide her attention between
the said garcon and myself. Poor fellow, he seemed to be very little
pleased by the significant glances exchanged over his right shoulder,
and, at last, under pretence of screening her from the draught of the
open window, placed himself exactly between us. This, however ingenious,
did not at all answer his expectations; for he had not sufficiently
taken into consideration, that I also was endowed with the power
of locomotion; accordingly I shifted my chair about three feet, and
entirely defeated the countermarch of the enemy.

But this flirtation did not last long; the youth and the old woman
appeared very much of the same opinion as to its impropriety; and
accordingly, like experienced generals, resolved to conquer by a
retreat; they drank up their orgeat--paid for it--placed the wavering
regiment in the middle, and left me master of the field. I was not,
however, of a disposition to break my heart at such an occurrence, and
I remained by the window, drinking my lemonade, and muttering to myself,
“After all, women are a great bore.”

On the outside of the cabaret, and just under my window, was a bench,
which for a certain number of sous, one might appropriate to the entire
and unparticipated use of one’s self and party. An old woman (so at
least I suppose by her voice, for I did not give myself the trouble of
looking, though, indeed as to that matter, it might have been the
shrill treble of Mr. Howard de Howard) had been hitherto engrossing this
settlement with some gallant or other. In Paris, no women are too old to
get an amant, either by love or money. In a moment of tenderness, this
couple paired off, and were immediately succeeded by another. The first
tones of the man’s voice, low as they were, made me start from my seat.
I cast one quick glance before I resumed it. The new pair were the
Englishman I had before noted in the garden, and the female companion
who had joined him.

“Two hundred pounds, you say?” muttered the man; “we must have it all.”

“But,” said the woman, in the same whispered voice, “he says, that he
will never touch another card.”

The man laughed. “Fool,” said he, “the passions are not so easily
quelled--how many days is it since he had this remittance from England?”

“About three,” replied the woman.

“And it is absolutely the very last remnant of his property?”

“The last.”

“I am then to understand, that when this is spent there is nothing
between him and beggary?”

“Nothing,” said the woman, with a half sigh.

The man laughed again, and then rejoined in an altered tone, “Then, then
will this parching thirst be quenched at last. I tell you, woman, that
it is many months since I have known a day--night--hour, in which my
life has been as the life of other men. My whole soul has been melted
down into one burning, burning thought. Feel this hand--ay, you may well
start--but what is the fever of the frame to that within?”

Here the voice sunk so low as to be inaudible. The woman seemed as if
endeavouring to sooth him; at length she said--“But poor Tyrrell--you
will not, surely, suffer him to die of actual starvation?”

The man paused for a few moments, and then replied--“Night and day, I
pray to God, upon my bended knees, only one unvarying, unceasing prayer,
and that is--‘When the last agonies shall be upon that man--when, sick
with weariness, pain, disease, hunger, he lies down to die--when the
death-gurgle is in the throat, and the eye swims beneath the last dull
film--when remembrance peoples the chamber with Hell, and his cowardice
would falter forth its dastard recantation to Heaven--then--may I be
there?”

There was a long pause, only broken by the woman’s sobs, which she
appeared endeavouring to stifle. At last the man rose, and in a tone
so soft that it seemed literally like music, addressed her in the most
endearing terms. She soon yielded to their persuasion, and replied to
them with interest. “Spite of the stings of my remorse,” she said,
“as long as I lose not you, I will lose life, honour, hope, even soul
itself!”

They both quitted the spot as she said this.

O, that woman’s love! how strong is it in its weakness! how beautiful in
its guilt!



CHAPTER XXII.

At length the treacherous snare was laid, Poor pug was caught--to town
convey’d; There sold. How envied was his doom, Made captive in a lady’s
room!--Gay’s Fables.

I was sitting alone a morning or two after this adventure, when Bedos
entering, announced une dame. This dame was a fine tall thing, dressed
out like a print in the Magasin des Modes. She sate herself down,
threw up her veil, and, after a momentary pause, asked me if I liked my
apartment?

“Very much,” said I, somewhat surprised at the nature of the
interrogatory.

“Perhaps you would wish it altered in some way?” rejoined the lady.

“Non--mille remercimens!” said I--“you are very good to be so interested
in my accommodation.”

“Those curtains might be better arranged--that sofa replaced with a more
elegant one,” continued my new superintendant.

“Really,” said I, “I am too, too much flattered. Perhaps you would like
to have my rooms altogether; if so, make at least no scruple of saying
it.”

“Oh, no,” replied the lady, “I have no objection to your staying here.”

“You are too kind,” said I, with a low bow.

There was a pause of some moments--I took advantage of it.

“I think, Madame, I have the honour of speaking to--to--to--”

“The mistress of the hotel,” said the lady, quietly. “I merely called to
ask you how you did, and hope you were well accommodated.”

“Rather late, considering I have been six weeks in the house,” thought
I, revolving in my mind various reports I had heard of my present
visitor’s disposition to gallantry. However, seeing it was all over with
me, I resigned myself, with the patience of a martyr, to the fate that I
foresaw. I rose, approached her chair, took her hand (very hard and thin
it was too), and thanked her with a most affectionate squeeze.

“I have seen much English!” said the lady, for the first time speaking
in our language.

“Ah!” said I, giving another squeeze.

“You are handsome, garcon,” renewed the lady.

“I am so,” I replied.

At that moment Bedos entered, and whispered that Madame D’Anville was in
the anti-room.

“Good heavens!” said I, knowing her jealousy of disposition, “what is
to be done? Oblige me, Madame,” seizing the unfortunate mistress of the
hotel, and opening the door to the back entrance--“There,” said I, “you
can easily escape. Bon jour.”

Hardly had I closed the door, and put the key in my pocket, before
Madame D’Anville entered.

“Do you generally order your servants to keep me waiting in your
anti-room?” said she haughtily.

“Not generally,” I replied, endeavouring to make my peace; but all
my complaisance was in vain--she was jealous of my intimacy with the
Duchesse de Perpignan, and glad of any excuse to vent her pique. I am
just the sort of man to bear, but never to forgive a woman’s ill temper,
viz.--it makes no impression on me at the time, but leaves a sore
recollection of something disagreeable, which I internally resolve never
again to experience. Madame D’Anville was going to the Luxembourg; and
my only chance of soothing her anger was to accompany her.

Down stairs, therefore, we went, and drove to the Luxembourg; I gave
Bedos, before my departure, various little commissions, and told him he
need not be at home till the evening. Long before the expiration of an
hour, Madame D’Anville’s ill humour had given me an excuse for affecting
it myself. Tired to death of her, and panting for release, I took a
high tone--complained of her ill temper, and her want of love--spoke
rapidly--waited for no reply, and leaving her at the Luxembourg,
proceeded forthwith to Galignani’s, like a man just delivered from a
strait waistcoat.

Leave me now, for a few minutes, in the reading-room at Galignani’s,
and return to the mistress of the hotel, whom I had so unceremoniously
thrust out of my salon. The passage into which she had been put
communicated by one door with my rooms, and by another with the
staircase. Now, it had so happened, that Bedos was in the habit of
locking the latter door, and keeping the key; the other egress, it will
be remembered, I myself had secured; so that the unfortunate mistress of
the hotel was no sooner turned into this passage than she found herself
in a sort of dungeon, ten feet by five, and surrounded, like Eve in
Paradise, by a whole creation--not of birds, beasts, and fishes, but of
brooms, brushes, unclean linen, and a wood-basket. What she was to do in
this dilemma was utterly inconceivable; scream, indeed, she might,
but then the shame and ridicule of being discovered in so equivocal a
situation, were somewhat more than our discreet landlady could endure.
Besides, such an expose might be attended with a loss the good woman
valued more than reputation, viz. lodgers; for the possessors of the two
best floors were both Englishwomen of a certain rank; and my landlady
had heard such accounts of our national virtue, that she feared an
instantaneous emigration of such inveterate prudes, if her screams and
situation reached their ears.

Quietly then, and soberly, did the good lady sit, eyeing the brooms and
brushes as they grew darker and darker with the approach of the
evening, and consoling herself with the certainty that her release must
eventually take place.

Meanwhile, to return to myself--from which dear little person, I
very seldom, even in imagination, digress--I found Lord Vincent at
Galignani’s, carefully looking over “Choice Extracts from the best
English Authors.”

“Ah, my good fellow!” said he, “I am delighted to see you; I made such
a capital quotation just now: the young Benningtons were drowning a poor
devil of a puppy; the youngest (to whom the mother belonged) looked on
with a grave earnest face, till the last kick was over, and then burst
into tears. ‘Why do you cry so?’ said I. ‘Because it was so cruel in us
to drown the poor puppy!’ replied the juvenile Philocunos. ‘Pooh,” said
I, “‘Quid juvat errores mersa jam puppe fateri.’” Was it not good?--you
remember it in Claudian, eh, Pelham? Think of its being thrown away on
those Latinless young lubbers! Have you seen any thing of Mr. Thornton
lately?”

“No,” said I, “I’ve not, but I am determined to have that pleasure
soon.”

“You will do as you please,” said Vincent, “but you will be like the
child playing with edged tools.”

“I am not a child,” said I, “so the simile is not good. He must be the
devil himself, or a Scotchman at least, to take me in.”

Vincent shook his head. “Come and dine with me at the Rocher,” said he;
“we are a party of six--choice spirits all.”

“Volontiers; but we can stroll in the Tuileries first, if you have no
other engagement.”

“None,” said Vincent, putting his arm in mine.

As we passed up the Rue de la Paix, we met Sir Henry Millington, mounted
on a bay horse, as stiff as himself, and cantering down the street as if
he and his steed had been cut out of pasteboard together.

“I wish,” said Vincent, (to borrow Luttrel’s quotation,) “that that
master of arts would ‘cleanse his bosom of that perilous stuff.’ I
should like to know in what recess of that immense mass now cantering
round the corner is the real body of Sir Henry Millington. I could fancy
the poor snug little thing shrinking within, like a guilty conscience.
Ah, well says Juvenal,

“‘Mors sola fatetur Quantula sint hominum corpuscula.’”

“He has a superb head, though,” I replied. “I like to allow that other
people are handsome now and then--it looks generous.”

“Yes,” said Vincent, “for a barber’s block: but here comes Mrs. C--me,
and her beautiful daughter--those are people you ought to know, if you
wish to see human nature a little relieved from the frivolities which
make it in society so like a man milliner. Mrs. C--has considerable
genius, combined with great common sense.”

“A rare union,” said I.

“By no means,” replied Vincent. “It is a cant antithesis in opinion to
oppose them to one another; but, so far as mere theoretical common
sense is concerned, I would much sooner apply to a great poet or a great
orator for advice on matter of business, than any dull plodder who
has passed his whole life in a counting-house. Common sense is only a
modification of talent--genius is an exaltation of it: the difference
is, therefore, in the degree, not nature. But to return to Mrs. C--; she
writes beautiful poetry--almost impromptu; draws excellent caricatures;
possesses a laugh for whatever is ridiculous, but never loses a smile
for whatever is good. Placed in very peculiar situations, she has passed
through each with a grace and credit which make her best eulogium. If
she possesses one quality higher than intellect, it is her kindness of
heart: no wonder indeed, that she is so really clever--those trees which
are the soundest at the core produce the finest fruits, and the most
beautiful blossoms.”

“Lord Vincent grows poetical,” thought I--“how very different he really
is to that which he affects to be in the world; but so it is with
every one--we are all like the ancient actors: let our faces be ever so
beautiful, we must still wear a mask.”

After an hour’s walk, Vincent suddenly recollected that he had a
commission of a very important nature in the Rue J. J. Rousseau. This
was--to buy a monkey. “It is for Wormwood,” said he, “who has written me
a long letter, describing its’ qualities and qualifications. I suppose
he wants it for some practical joke--some embodied bitterness--God
forbid I should thwart him in so charitable a design!”

“Amen,” said I; and we proceeded together to the monkey-fancier. After
much deliberation we at last decided upon the most hideous animal I ever
beheld--it was of a--no, I will not attempt to describe it--it would
be quite impossible! Vincent was so delighted with our choice that he
insisted upon carrying it away immediately.

“Is it quite quiet?” I asked.

“Comme un oiseau,” said the man.

We called a fiacre--paid for monsieur Jocko, and drove to Vincent’s
apartments; there we found, however, that his valet had gone out and
taken the key.

“Hang it,” said Vincent, “it does not signify! We’ll carry le petit
monsieur with us to the Rocher.”

Accordingly we all three once more entered the fiacre, and drove to
the celebrated restaurateur’s of the Rue Mont Orgueil. O, blissful
recollections of that dinner! how at this moment you crowd upon my
delighted remembrance! Lonely and sorrowful as I now sit, digesting
with many a throe the iron thews of a British beef-steak--more
anglico--immeasurably tough--I see the grateful apparitions of
Escallopes de Saumon and Laitances de Carps rise in a gentle vapour
before my eyes! breathing a sweet and pleasant odour, and contrasting
the dream-like delicacies of their hue and aspect, with the dire and
dure realities which now weigh so heavily on the region below my heart!
And thou, most beautiful of all--thou evening star of entremets--thou
that delightest in truffles, and gloriest in a dark cloud of
sauces--exquisite foie-gras!--Have I forgotten thee? Do I not, on the
contrary, see thee--smell thee--taste thee--and almost die with rapture
of thy possession? What, though the goose, of which thou art a part,
has, indeed, been roasted alive by a slow fire, in order to increase
thy divine proportions--yet has not our Almanach--the Almanach
des Gourmands--truly declared that the goose rejoiced amid all her
tortures--because of the glory that awaited her? Did she not, in
prophetic vision, behold her enlarged and ennobled foie dilate into
pates and steam into sautees--the companion of truffles--the glory
of dishes--the delight--the treasure--the transport of gourmands! O,
exalted among birds--apotheosised goose, did not thy heart exult even
when thy liver parched and swelled within thee, from that most agonizing
death; and didst thou not, like the Indian at the stake, triumph in the
very torments which alone could render thee illustrious?

After dinner we grew exceedingly merry. Vincent punned and quoted; we
laughed and applauded; and our Burgundy went round with an alacrity, to
which every new joke gave an additional impetus. Monsieur Jocko was
by no means the dullest in the party; he cracked his nuts with as much
grace as we did our jests, and grinned and chatted as facetiously as the
best of us. After coffee we were all so pleased with one another, that
we resolved not to separate, and accordingly we adjourned to my rooms,
Jocko and all, to find new revelries and grow brilliant over Curacoa
punch.

We entered my salon with a roar, and set Bedos to work at the punch
forthwith. Bedos, that Ganymede of a valet, had himself but just
arrived, and was unlocking the door as we entered. We soon blew up a
glorious fire, and our spirits brightened in proportion. Monsieur Jocko
sate on Vincent’s knee--Ne monstrum, as he classically termed it. One of
our compotatores was playing with it. Jocko grew suddenly in earnest--a
grin--a scratch and a bite, were the work of a moment.

“Ne quid nimis--now,” said Vincent, gravely, instead of endeavouring to
soothe the afflicted party, who grew into a towering passion. Nothing
but Jocko’s absolute disgrace could indeed have saved his life from the
vengeance of the sufferer.

“Where shall we banish him?” said Vincent.

“Oh,” I replied, “put him out in that back passage; the outer door
is shut; he’ll be quite safe;” and to the passage he was therefore
immediately consigned.

It was in this place, the reader will remember, that the hapless Dame du
Chateau was at that very instant in “durance vile.” Bedos, who took the
condemned monkey, opened the door, thrust Jocko in, and closed it again.
Meanwhile we resumed our merriment.

“Nunc est bibendum,” said Vincent, as Bedos placed the punch on the
table. “Give us a toast, Dartmore.”

Lord Dartmore was a young man, with tremendous spirits, which made up
for wit. He was just about to reply, when a loud shriek was heard from
Jocko’s place of banishment: a sort of scramble ensued, and the next
moment the door was thrown violently open, and in rushed the terrified
landlady, screaming like a sea-gull, and bearing Jocko aloft upon her
shoulders, from which “bad eminence” he was grinning and chattering with
the fury of fifty devils. She ran twice round the room, and then sunk on
the floor in hysterics. We lost no time in hastening to her assistance;
but the warlike Jocko, still sitting upon her, refused to permit one
of us to approach. There he sat, turning from side to side, showing his
sharp, white teeth, and uttering from time to time the most menacing and
diabolical sounds.

“What the deuce shall we do?” cried Dartmore.

“Do?” said Vincent, who was convulsed with laughter, and yet
endeavouring to speak gravely; “why, watch like L. Opimius, ‘ne quid
respublica detrimenti caperet.’”

“By Jove, Pelham, he will scratch out the lady’s beaux yeux,” cried the
good-natured Dartmore, endeavouring to seize the monkey by the tail, for
which he very narrowly escaped with an unmutilated visage. But the man
who had before suffered by Jocko’s ferocity, and whose breast was still
swelling with revenge, was glad of so favourable an opportunity and
excuse for wreaking it. He seized the poker, made three strides to
Jocko, who set up an ineffable cry of defiance, and with a single
blow split the skull of the unhappy monkey in twain. It fell with one
convulsion on the ground, and gave up the ghost.

We then raised the unfortunate landlady, placed her on the sofa, and
Dartmore administered a plentiful potation of the Curacoa punch. By slow
degrees she revived, gave three most doleful suspirations, and then,
starting up, gazed wildly around her. Half of us were still laughing--my
unfortunate self among the number; this the enraged landlady no sooner
perceived than she imagined herself the victim of some preconcerted
villainy. Her lips trembled with passion--she uttered the most dreadful
imprecations; and had I not retired into a corner, and armed myself
with the dead body of Jocko, which I wielded with exceeding valour, she
might, with the simple weapons with which nature had provided her hands,
have for ever demolished the loves and graces that abide in the face of
Henry Pelham.

When at last she saw that nothing hostile was at present to be effected,
she drew herself up, and giving Bedos a tremendous box on the ear, as he
stood grinning beside her, marched out of the room.

We then again rallied around the table, more than ever disposed to be
brilliant, and kept up till day break a continued fire of jests upon
the heroine of the passage. “Cum qua (as Vincent observed) clauditur
adversis innoxia simia fatis!”



CHAPTER XXIII.

Show me not thy painted beauties, These impostures I defy.--George
Withers.

The cave of Falri smelt not more delicately--on every side appeared
the marks of drunkenness and gluttony. At the upper end of the cave the
sorcerer lay extended, etc.--Mirglip the Persian, in the “Tales of the
Genii.”

I woke the next morning with an aching head and feverish frame. Ah,
those midnight carousals, how glorious they would be if there was no
next morning! I took my sauterne and sodawater in my dressing-room; and,
as indisposition always makes me meditative, I thought over all I had
done since my arrival at Paris. I had become (that, God knows, I soon
manage to do) rather a talked of and noted character. It is true that I
was every where abused--one found fault with my neckcloth--another with
my mind--the lank Mr. Aberton declared that I put my hair in papers, and
the stuffed Sir Henry Millington said I was a thread-paper myself. One
blamed my riding--a second my dancing--a third wondered how any woman
could like me, and a fourth said that no woman ever could.

On one point, however, all--friends and foes--were alike agreed; viz.
that I was a consummate puppy, and excessively well satisfied with
myself. A la verite, they were not much mistaken there. Why is it,
by the by, that to be pleased with one’s-self is the surest way of
offending every body else? If any one, male or female, an evident
admirer of his or her own perfections, enter a room, how perturbed,
restless, and unhappy every individual of the offender’s sex instantly
becomes: for them not only enjoyment but tranquillity is over, and if
they could annihilate the unconscious victim of their spleen, I fully
believe no Christian toleration would come in the way of that last
extreme of animosity. For a coxcomb there is no mercy--for a coquet no
pardon. They are, as it were, the dissenters of society--no crime is
too bad to be imputed to them; they do not believe the religion of
others--they set up a deity of their own vanity--all the orthodox
vanities of others are offended. Then comes the bigotry--the stake--the
auto-da-fe of scandal. What, alas! is so implacable as the rage of
vanity? What so restless as its persecution? Take from a man his
fortune, his house, his reputation, but flatter his vanity in each, and
he will forgive you. Heap upon him benefits, fill him with blessings:
but irritate his self-love, and you have made the very best man an
ingrat. He will sting you if he can: you cannot blame him; you yourself
have instilled the venom. This is one reason why you must not always
reckon upon gratitude in conferring an obligation. It is a very high
mind to which gratitude is not a painful sensation. If you wish to
please, you will find it wiser to receive--solicit even--favours, than
accord them; for the vanity of the obliger is always flattered--that of
the obligee rarely.

Well, this is an unforeseen digression: let me return! I had mixed,
of late, very little with the English. My mother’s introductions
had procured me the entree of the best French houses; and to them,
therefore, my evenings were usually devoted. Alas! that was a happy
time, when my carriage used to await me at the door of the Rocher de
Cancale, and then whirl me to a succession of visits, varying in their
degree and nature as the whim prompted: now to the brilliant soirees of
Madame De--, or to the appartemens au troisieme of some less celebrated
daughter of dissipation and ecarte;--now to the literary conversaziones
of the Duchesse de D--s, or the Vicomte d’A--, and then to the feverish
excitement of the gambling house. Passing from each with the appetite
for amusement kept alive by variety; finding in none a disappointment,
and in every one a welcome; full of the health which supports, and
the youth which colours all excess or excitation, I drained, with an
unsparing lip, whatever that enchanting metropolis could afford.

I have hitherto said but little of the Duchesse de Perpignan; I think
it necessary now to give some account of that personage. Ever since
the evening I had met her at the ambassador’s, I had paid her the most
unceasing attentions. I soon discovered that she had a curious sort of
liaison with one of the attaches--a short, ill-made gentleman, with high
shoulders, and a pale face, who wore a blue coat and buff waistcoat,
wrote bad verses, and thought himself handsome. All Paris said she was
excessively enamoured of this youth. As for me, I had not known her four
days before I discovered that she could not be excessively enamoured of
any thing but an oyster pete and Lord Byron’s Corsair. Her mind was the
most marvellous melange of sentiment and its opposite. In her amours she
was Lucretia herself; in her epicurism, Apicius would have yielded to
her. She was pleased with sighs, but she adored suppers. She would
leave every thing for her lover, except her dinner. The attache soon
quarrelled with her, and I was installed into the platonic honours of
his office.

At first, I own that I was flattered by her choice, and though she
was terribly exigeante of my petits soins, I managed to keep up her
affection, and, what is still more wonderful, my own, for the better
part of a month. What then cooled me was the following occurrence:

I was in her boudoir one evening, when her femme de chambre came to tell
us that the duc was in the passage. Notwithstanding the innocence of our
attachment, the duchesse was in a violent fright; a small door was at
the left of the ottoman, on which we were sitting. “Oh, no, no, not
there,” cried the lady; but I, who saw no other refuge, entered it
forthwith, and before she could ferret me out, the duc was in the room.

In the meanwhile, I amused myself by examining the wonders of the new
world into which I had so abruptly immerged: on a small table before
me, was deposited a remarkably constructed night-cap; I examined it as
a curiosity: on each side was placed une petite cotelette de veau
cru, sewed on with green-coloured silk (I remember even the smallest
minutiae), a beautiful golden wig (the duchesse never liked me to play
with her hair) was on a block close by, and on another table was a set
of teeth, d’une blancheur eblouissante. In this manufactory of a beauty
I remained for a quarter of an hour; at the end of that time, the
abigail (the duchesse had the grace to disappear) released me, and I
flew down stairs like a spirit from purgatory.

From that moment the duchesse honoured me with her most deadly
abhorrence. Equally silly and wicked, her schemes of revenge were as
ludicrous in their execution as remorseless in their design: at one
time I narrowly escaped poison in a cup of coffee--at another, she
endeavoured to stab me to the heart with a paper cutter.

Notwithstanding my preservation from these attacks, this new Messalina
had resolved on my destruction, and another means of attempting it still
remained, which the reader will yet have the pleasure of learning.

Mr. Thornton had called upon me twice, and twice I had returned
the visit, but neither of us had been at home to benefit by these
reciprocities of politesse. His acquaintance with my mysterious hero of
the gambling house and the Jardin des Plantes, and the keen interest
I took, in spite of myself, in that unaccountable person, whom I was
persuaded I had seen before in some very different scene, and under very
different circumstances, made me desirous to increase a connoissance,
which, from Vincent’s detail, I should otherwise have been anxious to
avoid. I therefore resolved to make another attempt to find him at home;
and my headache being somewhat better, I took my way to his apartments
in the Faubourg St. Germain.

I love that quartier--if ever I went to Paris again I should reside
there. It is quite a different world from the streets usually known to,
and tenanted by the English--there, indeed, you are among the French,
the fossilized remains of the old regime--the very houses have an air of
desolate, yet venerable grandeur--you never pass by the white and modern
mansion of a nouveau riche; all, even to the ruggedness of the pave,
breathes a haughty disdain of innovation--you cross one of the
numerous bridges, and you enter into another time--you are inhaling
the atmosphere of a past century; no flaunting boutique, French in its
trumpery, English in its prices, stares you in the face; no stiff coats
and unnatural gaits are seen anglicising up the melancholy streets. Vast
hotels, with their gloomy frontals, and magnificent contempt of comfort;
shops, such as shops might have been in the aristocratic days of Louis
Quatorze, ere British vulgarities made them insolent and dear;
public edifices, still redolent of the superb charities of le grand
monarque--carriages with their huge bodies and ample decorations;
horses, with their Norman dimensions and undocked honours; men, on whose
more high though not less courteous demeanour, the revolution seems to
have wrought no democratic plebeianism--all strike on the mind with a
vague and nameless impression of antiquity; a something solemn even in
gaiety, and faded in pomp, appear to linger over all you behold; there
are the Great French people unadulterated by change, unsullied with the
commerce of the vagrant and various tribes that throng their mighty mart
of enjoyments.

The strangers who fill the quartiers on this side the Seine pass not
there; between them and the Faubourg there is a gulf; the very skies
seem different--your own feelings, thoughts--nature itself--alter,
when you have passed that Styx which divides the wanderers from the
habitants; your spirits are not so much damped, as tinged, refined,
ennobled by a certain inexpressible awe--you are girt with the
stateliness of Eld, and you tread the gloomy streets with the dignity of
a man, who is recalling the splendours of an ancient court where he once
did homage.

I arrived at Thornton’s chambers in the Rue St. Dominique. “Monsieur,
est-il chez lui?” said I to the ancient porteress, who was reading one
of Crebillon’s novels.

“Oui, Monsieur, au quatrieme,” was the answer. I turned to the dark and
unclean staircase, and, after incredible exertion and fatigue, arrived,
at last, at the elevated abode of Mr. Thornton.

“Entrez,” cried a voice, in answer to my rap. I obeyed the signal, and
found myself in a room of tolerable dimensions and multiplied utilities.
A decayed silk curtain of a dingy blue, drawn across a recess, separated
the chambre a coucher from the salon. It was at present only half drawn,
and did not, therefore, conceal the mysteries of the den within; the bed
was still unmade, and apparently of no very inviting cleanliness; a red
handkerchief, that served as a nightcap, hung pendant from the foot of
the bed; at a little distance from it, more towards the pillow, were a
shawl, a parasol, and an old slipper. On a table, which stood between
the two dull, filmy windows, were placed a cracked bowl, still reeking
with the less of gin-punch, two bottles half full, a mouldy cheese, and
a salad dish; on the ground beneath it lay two huge books, and a woman’s
bonnet.

Thornton himself sat by a small consumptive fire, in an easy chair;
another table, still spread with the appliances of breakfast, viz. a
coffee-pot, a milk-jug, two cups, a broken loaf, and an empty dish,
mingled with a pack of cards, one dice, and an open book de mauvais
gout, stood immediately before him.

Every thing around bore some testimony of the spirit of low debauchery;
and the man himself, with his flushed and sensual countenance, his
unwashed hands, and the slovenly rakishness of his whole appearance,
made no unfitting representation of the Genius Loci.

All that I have described, together with a flitting shadow of feminine
appearance, escaping through another door, my quick eye discovered in
the same instant that I made my salutation.

Thornton rose, with an air half careless and half abashed, and
expressed, in more appropriate terms than his appearance warranted,
his pleasurable surprise at seeing me at last. There was, however, a
singularity in his conversation, which gave it an air both of shrewdness
and vulgarity. This was, as may before have been noted, a profuse
intermixture of proverbs, some stale, some new, some sensible enough,
and all savouring of a vocabulary carefully eschewed by every man of
ordinary refinement in conversation.

“I have but a small tenement,” said he, smiling; “but, thank Heaven, at
Paris a man is not made by his lodgings. Small house, small care. Few
garcons have indeed a more sumptuous apartment than myself.”

“True,” said I; “and if I may judge by the bottles on the opposite
table, and the bonnet beneath it, you find that no abode is too humble
or too exalted for the solace of the senses.”

“‘Fore Gad, you are in the right, Mr. Pelham,” replied Thornton, with
a loud, coarse, chuckling laugh, which, more than a year’s conversation
could have done, let me into the secrets of his character. “I care not
a rush for the decorations of the table, so that the cheer be good; nor
for the gew-gaws of the head-dress, as long as the face is pretty--‘the
taste of the kitchen is better than the smell.’ Do you go much to Madame
B--‘s ion the Rue Gretry--eh, Mr. Pelham?--ah, I’ll be bound you do.”

“No,” said I, with a loud laugh, but internal shiver; “but you know
where to find le bon vin et les jolies filles. As for me, I am still a
stranger in Paris, and amuse myself but very indifferently.”

Thornton’s face brightened. “I tell you what my good fell--I beg
pardon--I mean Mr. Pelham--I can shew you the best sport in the world,
if you can only spare me a little of your time--this very evening,
perhaps?”

“I fear,” said I, “I am engaged all the present week; but I long for
nothing more than to cultivate an acquaintance, seemingly so exactly to
my own taste.”

Thornton’s grey eyes twinkled. “Will you breakfast with me on Sunday?”
 said he.

“I shall be too happy,” I replied

There was now a short pause. I took advantage of it. “I think,” said
I, “I have seen you once or twice with a tall, handsome man, in a loose
great coat of very singular colour. Pray, if not impertinent, who is he?
I am sure I have seen him before in England.”

I looked full upon Thornton as I said this; he changed colour, and
answered my gaze with a quick glance from his small, glittering eye,
before he replied. “I scarcely know who you mean, my acquaintance is so
large and miscellaneous at Paris. It might have been Johnson, or Smith,
or Howard, or any body, in short.”

“It is a man nearly six feet high,” said I, “thin, and remarkably well
made, of a pale complexion, light eyes, and very black hair, mustachios
and whiskers. I saw him with you once in the Bois de Boulogne, and once
in a hell in the Palais Royal. Surely, now you will recollect who he
is?”

Thornton was evidently disconcerted. “Oh!” said he, after a short pause,
and another of his peculiarly quick, sly glances--“Oh, that man; I have
known him a very short time. What is his name? let me see!” and
Mr. Thornton affected to look down in a complete reverie of dim
remembrances.

I saw, however, that, from time to time, his eye glanced up to me, with
a restless, inquisitive expression, and as instantly retired.

“Ah,” said I, carelessly, “I think I know who he is!”

“Who!” cried Thornton, eagerly, and utterly off his guard.

“And yet,” I pursued, without noticing the interruption, “it scarcely
can be--the colour of the hair is so very different.”

Thornton again appeared to relapse into his recollections.
“War--Warbur--ah, I have it now!” cried he, “Warburton--that’s
it--that’s the name--is it the one you supposed, Mr. Pelham?”

“No,” said I, apparently perfectly satisfied. “I was quite mistaken.
Good morning, I did not think it was so late. On Sunday, then, Mr.
Thornton--au plaisir!”

“A d--d cunning dog!” said I to myself, as I left the apartments.
“However, on peut-etre trop fin. I shall have him yet.”

The surest way to make a dupe is to let you victim suppose you are his



CHAPTER XXIV.

Voila de l’erudition.--Les Femmes Savantes.

I found, on my return, covered with blood, and foaming with passion, my
inestimable valet--Bedos!

“What’s the matter?” said I.

“Matter!” repeated Bedos, in a tone almost inarticulate with rage; and
then, rejoicing at the opportunity of unbosoming his wrath, he poured
out a vast volley of ivrognes and carognes, against our Dame du Chateau,
of monkey reminiscence. With great difficulty, I gathered, at last, from
his vituperations, that the enraged landlady, determined to wreak her
vengeance on some one, had sent for him into her appartment, accosted
him with a smile, bade him sit down, regaled him with cold vol-au-vent,
and a glass of Curacoa, and, while he was felicitating himself on his
good fortune, slipped out of the room: presently, three tall fellows
entered with sticks.

“We’ll teach you,” said the biggest of them--“we’ll teach you to lock up
ladies, for the indulgence of your vulgar amusement;” and, without one
other word, they fell upon Bedos, with incredible zeal and vigour. The
valiant valet defended himself, tooth and nail, for some time, for which
he only got the more soundly belaboured. In the meanwhile the landlady
entered, and, with the same gentle smile as before, begged him to make
no ceremony, to proceed with his present amusement, and when he was
tired with the exercise, hoped he would refresh himself with another
glass of Curacoa.

“It was this,” said Bedos, with a whimper, “which hurt me the most, to
think she should serve me so cruelly, after I had eaten so plentifully
of the vol-au-vent; envy and injustice I can bear, but treachery stabs
me to the heart.”

When these threshers of men were tired, the lady satisfied, and Bedos
half dead, they suffered the unhappy valet to withdraw; the mistress
of the hotel giving him a note, which she desired, with great civility,
that he would transmit to me on my return. This, I found, inclosed my
bill, and informed me that my month being out on the morrow, she was
unwilling to continue me any longer, and begged I would, therefore, have
the bonte to choose another apartment.

“Carry my luggage forthwith,” said I, “to the Hotel de Mirabeau:” and
that very evening I changed my abode.

I am happy in the opportunity this incident affords me of especially
recommending the Hotel de Mirabeau, Rue de la Paix, to any of
my countrymen who are really gentlemen, and will not disgrace my
recommendation. It is certainly the best caravansera in the English
quartier.

I was engaged that day to a literary dinner at the Marquis D’Al--; and
as I knew I should meet Vincent, I felt some pleasure in repairing to my
entertainer’s hotel. They were just going to dinner as I entered. A good
many English were of the party. The good natured (in all senses of the
word) Lady--, who always affected to pet me, cried aloud, “Pelham, mon
joli petit mignon, I have not seen you for an age--do give me your arm.”

Madame D’Anville was just before me, and, as I looked at her, I saw that
her eyes were full of tears; my heart smote me for my late inattention,
and going up to her, I only nodded to Lady--, and said, in reply to her
invitation, “Non, perfide, it is my turn to be cruel now. Remember your
flirtation with Mr. Howard de Howard.”

“Pooh!” said Lady--, taking Lord Vincent’s arm, “your jealousy does
indeed rest upon ‘a trifle light as air.’”

“Do you forgive me?” whispered I to Madame D’Anville, as I handed her to
the salle a manger. “Does not love forgive every thing?” was her answer.

“At least,” thought I, “it never talks in those pretty phrases.”

The conversation soon turned upon books. As for me, I never at that time
took a share in those discussions; indeed, I have long laid it down as
a rule, that a man never gains by talking to more than one person at a
time. If you don’t shine, you are a fool--if you do, you are a bore.
You must become either ridiculous or unpopular--either hurt your own
self-love by stupidity, or that of others by wit. I therefore sat in
silence, looking exceedingly edified, and now and then muttering “good!”
 “true!” Thank heaven, however, the suspension of one faculty only
increases the vivacity of the others; my eyes and ears always watch like
sentinels over the repose of my lips. Careless and indifferent as I seem
to all things, nothing ever escapes me: the minutest erreur in a dish or
a domestic, the most trifling peculiarity in a criticism or a coat, my
glance detects in an instant, and transmits for ever to my recollection.

“You have seen Jouy’s ‘Hermite de la Chaussee D’Antin?’” said our host
to Lord Vincent.

“I have, and think meanly of it. There is a perpetual aim at something
pointed, which as perpetually merges into something dull. He is like a
bad swimmer, strikes out with great force, makes a confounded splash,
and never gets a yard the further for it. It is a great effort not to
sink. Indeed, Monsieur D’A--, your literature is at a very reduced ebb;
bombastic in the drama--shallow in philosophy--mawkish in poetry, your
writers of the present day seem to think, with Boileau--

“‘Souvent de tous nos maux la raison est le pire.’”

“Surely,” cried Madame D’Anville, “you will allow De la Martine’s poetry
to be beautiful?”

“I allow it,” said he, “to be among the best you have; and I know
very few lines in your language equal to the two first stanzas in his
‘Meditation on Napoleon,’ or to those exquisite verses called ‘Le
Lac;’ but you will allow also that he wants originality and nerve. His
thoughts are pathetic, but not deep; he whines, but sheds no tears. He
has, in his imitation of Lord Byron, reversed the great miracle; instead
of turning water into wine, he has turned wine into water. Besides,
he is so unpardonably obscure. He thinks, with Bacchus--(you remember,
D’A--, the line in Euripides, which I will not quote), that ‘there
is something august in the shades;’ but he has applied this thought
wrongly--in his obscurity there is nothing sublime--it is the back
ground of a Dutch picture. It is only a red herring, or an old hat,
which he has invested with such pomposity of shadow and darkness.”

“But his verses are so smooth,” said Lady--.

“Ah!” answered Vincent.

“‘Quand la rime enfin se trouve au bout des vers, Qu’importe que le
reste y soit mis des travers.’”

“Helas” said the Viscount D’A--t, an author of no small celebrity
himself; “I agree with you--we shall never again see a Voltaire or a
Rousseau.”

“There is but little justice in those complaints, often as they are
made,” replied Vincent. “You may not, it is true, see a Voltaire or a
Rousseau, but you will see their equals. Genius can never be exhausted
by one individual. In our country, the poets after Chaucer in the
fifteenth century complained of the decay of their art--they did
not anticipate Shakspeare. In Hayley’s time, who ever dreamt of the
ascension of Byron? Yet Shakspeare and Byron came like the bridegroom
‘in the dead of night;’ and you have the same probability of
producing--not, indeed, another Rousseau, but a writer to do equal
honour to your literature.”

“I think,” said Lady--, “that Rousseau’s ‘Julie’ is over-rated. I had
heard so much of ‘La Nouvelle Heloise’ when I was a girl, and been so
often told that it was destruction to read it, that I bought the book
the very day after I was married. I own to you that I could not get
through it.”

“I am not surprised at it,” answered Vincent; “but Rousseau is not the
less a genius for all that: there is no story to bear out the style,
and he himself is right when he says ‘ce livre convient a tres peu de
lecteurs.’ One letter would delight every one--four volumes of them
are a surfeit--it is the toujours perdrix. But the chief beauty of that
wonderful conception of an empassioned and meditative mind is to be
found in the inimitable manner in which the thoughts are embodied, and
in the tenderness, the truth, the profundity of the thoughts themselves:
when Lord Edouard says, ‘c’est le chemin des passions qui m’a conduit
a la philosophie,’ he inculcates, in one simple phrase, a profound and
unanswerable truth. It is in these remarks that nature is chiefly found
in the writings of Rousseau: too much engrossed in himself to be deeply
skilled in the characters of others, that very self-study had yet given
him a knowledge of the more hidden recesses of the heart. He could
perceive at once the motive and the cause of actions, but he wanted the
patience to trace the elaborate and winding progress of their effects.
He saw the passions in their home, but he could not follow them abroad.
He knew mankind in the general, but not men in the detail. Thus, when he
makes an aphorism or reflection, it comes home at once to you as true;
but when he would analyze that reflection, when he argues, reasons, and
attempts to prove, you reject him as unnatural, or you refute him
as false. It is then that he partakes of that manie commune which he
imputes to other philosophers, ‘de nier ce qui est, et d’expliquer ce
qui n’est pas.’”

There was a short pause. “I think,” said Madame D’Anville, “that it is
in those pensees which you admire so much in Rousseau, that our authors
in general excel.”

“You are right,” said Vincent, “and for this reason--with you les gens
de letters are always les gens du monde. Hence their quick perceptions
are devoted to men as well as to books. They make observations acutely,
and embody them with grace; but it is worth remarking, that the same
cause which produced the aphorism, frequently prevents its being
profound. These literary gens du monde have the tact to observe, but not
the patience, perhaps not the time, to investigate. They make the maxim,
but they never explain to you the train of reasoning which led to it.
Hence they are more brilliant than true. An English writer would not
dare to make a maxim, involving, perhaps, in two lines, one of the most
important of moral truths, without bringing pages to support his dictum.
A French essayist leaves it wholly to itself. He tells you neither how
he came by his reasons, nor their conclusion, ‘le plus fou souvent est
le plus satisfait.’ Consequently, if less tedious than the English,
your reasoners are more dangerous, and ought rather to be considered
as models of terseness than of reflection. A man might learn to think
sooner from your writers, but he will learn to think justly sooner from
ours. Many observations of La Bruyere and Rochefoucault--the latter
especially--have obtained credit for truth solely from their point.
They possess exactly the same merit as the very sensible--permit me to
add--very French line in Corneille:--

“‘Ma plus douce esperance est de perdre l’espoir.’”

The Maquis took advantage of the silence which followed Vincent’s
criticism to rise from table. We all (except Vincent, who took leave)
adjourned to the salon. “Qui est cet homme la?” said one, “comme il est
epris de lui-meme.” “How silly he is,” cried another--“how ugly,” said a
third. What a taste in literature--such a talker--such shallowness,
and such assurance--not worth the answering--could not slip in a
word--disagreeable, revolting, awkward, slovenly, were the most
complimentary opinions bestowed upon the unfortunate Vincent. The
women called him un horreur, and the men un bete. The old railed at his
mauvais gout, and the young at his mauvais coeur, for the former always
attribute whatever does not correspond with their sentiments, to a
perversion of taste, and the latter whatever does not come up to their
enthusiasm, to a depravity of heart.

As for me, I went home, enriched with two new observations; first, that
one may not speak of any thing relative to a foreign country, as one
would if one was a native. National censures become particular affronts.

Secondly, that those who know mankind in theory, seldom know it in
practice; the very wisdom that conceives a rule, is accompanied with
the abstraction, or the vanity, which destroys it. I mean that the
philosopher of the cabinet is often too diffident to put into action
his observations, or too eager for display to conceal their design. Lord
Vincent values himself upon his science du monde. He has read much
upon men, he has reflected more; he lays down aphorisms to govern or to
please them. He goes into society; he is cheated by the one half, and
the other half he offends. The sage in the cabinet is but a fool in
the salon; and the most consummate men of the world are those who have
considered the least on it.



CHAPTER XXV.

Falstaff. What money is in my purse? Page. Seven groats and two-pence.
--Second Part of Henry IV.

En iterum Crispinus.

The next day a note was brought me, which had been sent to my former
lodgings in the Hotel de Paris: it was from Thornton.

“My dear Sir,” (it began)

“I am very sorry that particular business will prevent me the pleasure
of seeing you at my rooms on Sunday. I hope to be more fortunate some
other day. I should like much to introduce you, the first opportunity,
to my friends in the Rue Gretry, for I like obliging my countrymen. I
am sure, if you were to go there, you would cut and come again--one
shoulder of mutton drives down another.

“I beg you to accept my repeated excuses, and remain,

“Dear Sir,

“Your very obedient servant,

“Thomas Thornton.

“Rue St. Dominique,

“Friday Morning.”


This letter produced in me many and manifold cogitations. What could
possibly have induced Mr. Tom Thornton, rogue as he was, to postpone
thus of his own accord, the plucking of a pigeon, which he had such good
reason to believe he had entrapped? There was evidently no longer the
same avidity to cultivate my acquaintance as before; in putting off
our appointment with so little ceremony, he did not even fix a day
for another. What had altered his original designs towards me? for if
Vincent’s account was true, it was natural to suppose that he wished to
profit by any acquaintance he might form with me, and therefore such an
acquaintance his own interests would induce him to continue and confirm.

Either, then, he no longer had the same necessity for a dupe, or he no
longer imagined I should become one. Yet neither of these suppositions
was probable. It was not likely that he should grow suddenly honest,
or suddenly rich: nor had I, on the other hand, given him any reason to
suppose I was a jot more wary than any other individual he might have
imposed upon. On the contrary, I had appeared to seek his acquaintance
with an eagerness which said but little for my knowledge of the world.
The more I reflected, the more I should have been puzzled, had I not
connected his present backwardness with his acquaintance with the
stranger, whom he termed Warburton. It is true, that I had no reason to
suppose so: it was a conjecture wholly unsupported, and, indeed, against
my better sense; yet, from some unanalysed associations, I could not
divest myself of the supposition.

“I will soon see,” thought I; and wrapping myself in my cloak, for the
day was bitterly cold, I bent my way to Thornton’s lodgings. I could
not explain to myself the deep interest I took in whatever was connected
with (the so-called) Warburton, or whatever promised to discover more
clearly any particulars respecting him. His behaviour in the gambling
house; his conversation with the woman in the Jardin des Plantes;
and the singular circumstance, that a man of so very aristocratic an
appearance, should be connected with Thornton, and only seen in such
low scenes, and with such low society, would not have been sufficient
so strongly to occupy my mind, had it not been for certain dim
recollections, and undefinable associations, that his appearance when
present, and my thoughts of him when absent, perpetually recalled.

As, engrossed with meditations of this nature, I was passing over the
Pont Neuf, I perceived the man Warburton had so earnestly watched in the
gambling house, and whom I identified with the “Tyrrell,” who had formed
the subject of conversation in the Jardin des Plantes, pass slowly
before me. There was an appearance of great exhaustion in his swarthy
and strongly marked countenance. He walked carelessly on, neither
looking to the right nor the left, with that air of thought and
abstraction which I have remarked as common to all men in the habit of
indulging any engrossing and exciting passion.

We were just on the other side of the Seine, when I perceived the woman
of the Jardin des Plantes approach. Tyrrell (for that, I afterwards
discovered, was really his name) started as she came near, and asked
her, in a tone of some asperity, where she had been? As I was but a few
paces behind, I had a clear, full view of the woman’s countenance.
She was about twenty-eight or thirty years of age. Her features were
decidedly handsome, though somewhat too sharp and aquiline for my
individual taste. Her eyes were light and rather sunken; and her
complexion bespoke somewhat of the paleness and languor of ill-health.
On the whole, the expression of her face, though decided, was not
unpleasing, and when she returned Tyrrell’s rather rude salutation, it
was with a smile, which made her, for the moment, absolutely beautiful.

“Where have I been to?” she said, in answer to his interrogatory. “Why,
I went to look at the New Church, which they told me was so superbe.”

“Methinks,” replied the man, “that ours are not precisely the
circumstances in which such spectacles are amusing.”

“Nay, Tyrrell,” said the woman, as taking his arm they walked on
together a few paces before me, “nay, we are quite rich now to what we
have been; and, if you do play again, our two hundred pounds may swell
into a fortune. Your losses have brought you skill, and you may now turn
them into actual advantages.”

Tyrrell did not reply exactly to these remarks, but appeared as if
debating with himself. “Two hundred pounds--twenty already gone!--in a
few months all will have melted away. What is it then now but a respite
from starvation?--but with luck it may become a competence.”

“And why not have luck? many a fortune has been made with a worse
beginning,” said the woman.

“True, Margaret,” pursued the gambler, “and even without luck, our fate
can only commence a month or two sooner--better a short doom than a
lingering torture.”

“What think you of trying some new game where you have more experience,
or where the chances are greater than in that of rouge et noir?” asked
the woman. “Could you not make something out of that tall, handsome man,
who Thornton says is so rich?”

“Ah, if one could!” sighed Tyrrell, wistfully. “Thornton tells me,
that he has won thousands from him, and that they are mere drops in his
income. Thornton is a good, easy, careless fellow, and might let me into
a share of the booty: but then, in what games can I engage him?”

Here I passed this well-suited pair, and lost the remainder of their
conversation. “Well,” thought I, “if this precious personage does starve
at last, he will most richly deserve it, partly for his designs on the
stranger, principally for his opinion of Thornton. If he was a knave
only, one might pity him; but a knave and fool both, are a
combination of evil, for which there is no intermediate purgatory of
opinion--nothing short of utter damnation.”

I soon arrived at Mr. Thornton’s abode. The same old woman, poring
over the same novel of Crebillon, made me the same reply as before; and
accordingly again I ascended the obscure and rugged stairs, which seemed
to indicate, that the road to vice is not so easy as one generally
supposes. I knocked at the door, and receiving no answering
acknowledgment, opened it at once. The first thing I saw was the dark,
rough coat of Warburton--that person’s back was turned to me, and he
was talking with some energy to Thornton (who lounged idly in his chair,
with one ungartered leg thrown over the elbow.)

“Ah, Mr. Pelham,” exclaimed the latter, starting from his not very
graceful position, “it gives me great pleasure to see you--Mr.
Warburton, Mr. Pelham--Mr. Pelham, Mr. Warburton.” My new-made and
mysterious acquaintance drew himself up to his full height, and bowed
very slightly to my own acknowledgment of the introduction. A low person
would have thought him rude. I only supposed him ignorant of the
world. No real gentleman is uncivil. He turned round after this stiff
condescension de sa part, and sunk down on the sofa, with his back
towards me.

“I was mistaken,” thought I, “when I believed him to be above such
associates as Thornton--they are well matched.”

“My dear Sir,” said Thornton, “I am very sorry I could not see you to
breakfast--a particular engagement prevented me--verbum sap. Mr. Pelham,
you take me, I suppose--black eyes white skin, and such an ancle;” and
the fellow rubbed his great hands and chuckled.

“Well,” said I, “I cannot blame you, whatever may be my loss--a dark eye
and a straight ancle are powerful excuses. What says Mr. Warburton to
them?” and I turned to the object of my interrogatory.

“Really,” he answered drily, and without moving from his uncourteous
position, “Mr. Thornton only can judge of the niceties of his peculiar
tastes, or the justice of his general excuses.”

Mr. Warburton said this in a sarcastic, bitter tone. Thornton bit his
lip, more, I should think, at the manner than the words, and his small
grey eyes sparkled with a malignant and stern expression, which suited
the character of his face far better than the careless levity and
enjouement which his glances usually denoted.

“They are no such great friends after all,” thought I; “and now let me
change my attack. Pray,” I asked, “among all your numerous acquaintances
at Paris, did you ever meet with a Mr. Tyrrell?”

Warburton started from his chair, and as instantly re-seated himself.
Thornton eyed me with one of those peculiar looks which so strongly
reminded me of a dog, in deliberation whether to bite or run away.

“I do know a Mr. Tyrrell!” he said, after a short pause.

“What sort of a person is he?” I asked with an indifferent air--“a great
gamester, is he not?”

“He does slap it down on the colours now and then,” replied Thornton. “I
hope you don’t know him, Mr. Pelham!”

“Why?” said I, evading the question. “His character is not affected by
a propensity so common, unless, indeed, you suppose him to be more a
gambler than a gamester, viz. more acute than unlucky.”

“God forbid that I should say any such thing,” replied Thornton; “you
won’t catch an old lawyer in such imprudence.”

“The greater the truth, the greater the libel,” said Warburton, with a
sneer.

“No,” resumed Thornton, “I know nothing against Mr. Tyrrell--nothing!
He may be a very good man, and I believe he is; but as a friend, Mr.
Pelham, (and Mr. Thornton grew quite affectionate), I advise you to have
as little as possible to do with that sort of people.”

“Truly,” said I, “you have now excited my curiosity. Nothing, you know,
is half so inviting as mystery.”

Thornton looked as if he had expected a very different reply; and
Warburton said, in an abrupt tone--“Whoever enters an unknown road in a
fog may easily lose himself.”

“True,” said I; “but that very chance is more agreeable than a road
where one knows every tree! Danger and novelty are more to my taste
than safety and sameness. Besides, as I never gamble myself, I can lose
nothing by an acquaintance with those who do.”

Another pause ensued--and, finding I had got all from Mr. Thornton and
his uncourteous guest that I was likely to do, I took my hat and my
departure.

“I do not know,” thought I, “whether I have profited much by this visit.
Let me consider. In the first place, I have not ascertained why I
was put off by Mr. Thornton--for as to his excuse, it could only have
availed one day, and had he been anxious for my acquaintance, he would
have named another. I have, however, discovered, first, that he does not
wish me to form any connection with Tyrrell; secondly, from Warburton’s
sarcasm, and his glance of reply, that there is but little friendship
between those two, whatever be the intimacy; and, thirdly, that
Warburton, from his dorsal positions, so studiously preserved, either
wished to be uncivil or unnoticed.” The latter, after all, was the most
probable; and, upon the whole, I felt more than ever convinced that he
was the person I suspected him to be.



CHAPTER XXVI.

Tell how the fates my giddy course did guide, The inconstant turns of
every changing hour.--Pierce Gaveston, by M. Drayton.

Je me retire donc.--Adieu, Paris, adieu!--Boileau.

When I returned home, I found on my table the following letter from my
mother:

“My dear Henry,

“I am rejoiced to hear you are so well entertained at Paris--that you
have been so often to the D--s and C--s; that Coulon says you are his
best pupil--that your favourite horse is so much admired--and that you
have only exceeded your allowance by a L1,000; with some difficulty I
have persuaded your uncle to transmit you an order for L1,500, which
will, I trust, make up all your deficiencies.

“You must not, my dear child, be so extravagant for the future, and
for a very good reason, namely, I do not see how you can. Your uncle, I
fear, will not again be so generous, and your father cannot assist you.
You will therefore see more clearly than ever the necessity of marrying
an heiress: there are only two in England (the daughters of gentlemen)
worthy of you--the most deserving of these has L10,000 a year, the other
has L150,000. The former is old, ugly, and very ill tempered; the latter
tolerably pretty, and agreeable, and just of age; but you will perceive
the impropriety of even thinking of her till we have tried the other.
I am going to ask both to my Sunday soirees, where I never admit any
single men, so that there, at least, you will have no rivals.

“And now, my dear son, before I enter into a subject of great importance
to you, I wish to recal to your mind that pleasure is never an end, but
a means--viz. that in your horses and amusements at Paris--your visits
and your liaisons--you have always, I trust, remembered that these were
only so far desirable as the methods of shining in society. I have now
a new scene on which you are to enter, with very different objects in
view, and where any pleasures you may find have nothing the least in
common with those you at present enjoy.

“I know that this preface will not frighten you as it might many silly
young men. Your education has been too carefully attended to, for you to
imagine that any step can be rough or unpleasant which raises you in the
world.

“To come at once to the point. One of the seats in your uncle’s borough
of Buyemall is every day expected to be vacated; the present member, Mr.
Toolington, cannot possibly live a week, and your uncle is very desirous
that you should fill the vacancy which Mr. Toolington’s death will
create. Though I called it Lord Glenmorris’s borough, yet it is not
entirely at his disposal, which I think very strange, since my father,
who was not half so rich as your uncle, could send two members
to Parliament without the least trouble in the world--but I don’t
understand these matters. Possibly your uncle (poor man) does not manage
them well. However, he says no time is to be lost. You are to return
immediately to England, and come down to his house in--shire. It is
supposed you will have some contest, but be certain eventually to come
in.

“You will also, in this visit to Lord Glenmorris, have an excellent
opportunity of securing his affection; you know it is some time since he
saw you, and the greater part of his property is unentailed. If you come
into the House you must devote yourself wholly to it, and I have no fear
of your succeeding; for I remember, when you were quite a child, how
well you spoke, ‘My name is Norval,’ and ‘Romans, countrymen, and
lovers,’ I heard Mr. Canning speak the other day, and I think his voice
is quite like yours; in short, I make no doubt of seeing you in the
ministry in a very few years.

“You see, my dear son, that it is absolutely necessary you should set
out immediately. You will call on Lady--, and you will endeavour to make
firm friends of the most desirable among your present acquaintance; so
that you may be on the same footing you are now, should you return
to Paris. This a little civility will easily do: nobody (as I before
observed), except in England, ever loses by politeness; by the by, that
last word is one you must never use, it is too Gloucester-place like.

“You will also be careful, in returning to England, to make very little
use of French phrases; no vulgarity is more unpleasing. I could not
help being exceedingly amused by a book written the other day, which
professes to give an accurate description of good society. Not knowing
what to make us say in English, the author has made us talk nothing but
French. I have often wondered what common people think of us, since
in their novels they always affect to pourtray us so different from
themselves. I am very much afraid we are in all things exactly like
them, except in being more simple and unaffected. The higher the rank,
indeed, the less pretence, because there is less to pretend to. This is
the chief reason why our manners are better than low persons: ours are
more natural, because they imitate no one else; theirs are affected,
because they think to imitate ours; and whatever is evidently
borrowed becomes vulgar. Original affection is sometimes ton--imitated
affectation, always bad.

“Well, my dear Henry, I must now conclude this letter, already too long
to be interesting. I hope to see you about ten days after you receive
this; and if you could bring me a Cachemire shawl, it would give me
great pleasure to see your taste in its choice. God bless you, my dear
son.

“Your very affectionate

“Frances Pelham.”

“P.S. I hope you go to church sometimes: I am sorry to see the young men
of the present day so irreligious. Perhaps you could get my old friend,
Madame De--, to choose the Cachemire--take care of your health.”

This letter, which I read carefully twice over, threw me into a most
serious meditation. My first feeling was regret at leaving Paris; my
second, was a certain exultation at the new prospects so unexpectedly
opened to me. The great aim of a philosopher is, to reconcile every
disadvantage by some counterbalance of good--where he cannot create
this, he should imagine it. I began, therefore, to consider less what
I should lose than what I should gain, by quitting Paris. In the first
place, I was tolerably tired of its amusements: no business is half so
fatiguing as pleasure. I longed for a change: behold, a change was at
hand! Then, to say truth, I was heartily glad of a pretence of escaping
from a numerous cohort of folles amours, with Madame D’Anville at the
head; and the very circumstance which men who play the German flute and
fall in love, would have considered the most vexatious, I regarded as
the most consolatory.

There was yet another reason which reconciled me more than any other to
my departure. I had, in my residence at Paris, among half wits and
whole roues, contracted a certain--not exactly grossierete--but want of
refinement--a certain coarseness of expression and idea which, though
slight, and easily thrown off, took in some degree from my approach to
that character which I wished to become. I know nothing which would
so polish the manners as continental intercourse, were it not for the
English debauches with which that intercourse connects one. English
profligacy is always coarse, and in profligacy nothing is more
contagious than its tone. One never keeps a restraint on the manner when
one unbridles the passions, and one takes from the associates with whom
the latter are indulged, the air and the method of the indulgence.

I was, the reader well knows, too solicitous for improvement, not to be
anxious to escape from such chances of deterioration, and I therefore
consoled myself with considerable facility for the pleasures and the
associates I was about to forego. My mind being thus relieved from
all regret at my departure, I now suffered it to look forward to the
advantages of my return to England. My love of excitement and variety
made an election, in which I was to have both the importance of the
contest and the certainty of the success, a very agreeable object of
anticipation.

I was also by this time wearied with my attendance upon women, and
eager to exchange it for the ordinary objects of ambition to men; and my
vanity whispered that my success in the one was no unfavourable omen of
my prosperity in the other. On my return to England, with a new scene
and a new motive for conduct, I resolved that I would commence a
different character to that I had hitherto assumed. How far I kept this
resolution the various events hereafter to be shown, will testify. For
myself, I felt that I was now about to enter a more crowded scene upon
a more elevated ascent; and my previous experience of human nature
was sufficient to convince me that my safety required a more continual
circumspection, and my success a more dignified bearing.



CHAPTER XXVII.

Je noterai cela, Madame, dans mon livre.--Moliere.

I am not one of those persons who are many days in deciding what may be
effected in one. “On the third day from this,” said I to Bedos, “at half
past nine in the morning, I shall leave Paris for England.”

“Oh, my poor wife!” said the valet, “she will break her heart if I leave
her.”

“Then stay,” said I. Bedos shrugged his shoulders.

“I prefer being with Monsieur to all things.”

“What, even to your wife?” The courteous rascal placed his hand to his
heart and bowed. “You shall not suffer by your fidelity--you shall take
your wife with you.”

The conjugal valet’s countenance fell. “No,” he said, “no; he could not
take advantage of Monsieur’s generosity.”

“I insist upon it--not another word.”

“I beg a thousand pardons of Monsieur; but--but my wife is very ill, and
unable to travel.”

“Then, in that case, so excellent a husband cannot think of leaving a
sick and destitute wife.”

“Poverty has no law; if I consulted my heart and stayed, I should
starve, et il faut vivre.”

“Je n’en vois pas la necessite,” replied I, as I got into my carriage.
That repartee, by the way, I cannot claim as my own; it is the very
unanswerable answer of a judge to an expostulating thief.

I made the round of reciprocal regrets, according to the orthodox
formula. The Duchesse de Perpignan was the last--(Madame D’Anville I
reserved for another day)--that virtuous and wise personage was in the
boudoir of reception. I glanced at the fatal door as I entered. I have
a great aversion, after any thing has once happened and fairly subsided,
to make any allusion to its former existence. I never, therefore, talked
to the Duchess about our ancient egaremens. I spoke, this morning,
of the marriage of one person, the death of another, and lastly, the
departure of my individual self.

“When do you go?” she said, eagerly.

“In two days: my departure will be softened, if I can execute any
commissions in England for Madame.”

“None,” said she; and then in a low tone (that none of the idlers, who
were always found at her morning levees, should hear), she added, “you
will receive a note from me this evening.”

I bowed, changed the conversation, and withdrew. I dined in my own
rooms, and spent the evening in looking over the various billets-doux,
received during my sejour at Paris.

“Where shall I put all these locks of hair?” asked Bedos, opening a
drawer full.

“Into my scrap-book.”

“And all these letters?”

“Into the fire.”

I was just getting into bed when the Duchesse de Perpignan’s note
arrived--it was as follows:--

“My dear Friend,

“For that word, so doubtful in our language, I may at least call you in
your own. I am unwilling that you should leave this country with those
sentiments you now entertain of me, unaltered, yet I cannot imagine any
form of words of sufficient magic to change them. Oh! if you knew how
much I am to be pitied; if you could look for one moment into this
lonely and blighted heart; if you could trace, step by step, the
progress I have made in folly and sin, you would see how much of what
you now condemn and despise, I have owed to circumstances, rather than
to the vice of my disposition. I was born a beauty, educated a beauty,
owed fame, rank, power to beauty; and it is to the advantages I have
derived from person that I owe the ruin of my mind. You have seen how
much I now derive from art I loathe myself as I write that sentence; but
no matter: from that moment you loathed me too. You did not take into
consideration, that I had been living on excitement all my youth, and
that in my maturer years I could not relinquish it. I had reigned by my
attractions, and I thought every art preferable to resigning my empire:
but in feeding my vanity, I had not been able to stifle the dictates of
my heart. Love is so natural to a woman, that she is scarcely a woman
who resists it: but in me it has been a sentiment, not a passion.

“Sentiment, then, and vanity, have been my seducers. I said, that I
owed my errors to circumstances, not to nature. You will say, that
in confessing love and vanity to be my seducers, I contradict this
assertion--you are mistaken. I mean, that though vanity and sentiment
were in me, yet the scenes in which I have been placed, and the events
which I have witnessed, gave to those latent currents of action a wrong
and a dangerous direction. I was formed to love; for one whom I did love
I could have made every sacrifice. I married a man I hated, and I only
learnt the depths of my heart when it was too late.

“Enough of this; you will leave this country; we shall never meet
again--never! You may return to Paris, but I shall then be no more;
n’importe--I shall be unchanged to the last. Je mourrai en reine.

“As a latest pledge of what I have felt for you, I send you the enclosed
chain and ring; as a latest favour, I request you to wear them for six
months, and, above all, for two hours in the Tuileries tomorrow. You
will laugh at this request: it seems idle and romantic--perhaps it
is so. Love has many exaggerations in sentiment, which reason would
despise. What wonder, then, that mine, above that of all others, should
conceive them? You will not, I know, deny this request. Farewell!--in
this world we shall never meet again, and I believe not in the existence
of another. Farewell!

“E. P.”


“A most sensible effusion,” said I to myself, when I had read this
billet; “and yet, after all, it shows more feeling and more character
than I could have supposed she possessed.” I took up the chain: it
was of Maltese workmanship; not very handsome, nor, indeed, in any way
remarkable, except for a plain hair ring which was attached to it, and
which I found myself unable to take off, without breaking. “It is a very
singular request,” thought I, “but then it comes from a very singular
person; and as it rather partakes of adventure and intrigue, I shall at
all events appear in the Tuileries, tomorrow, chained and ringed.”



CHAPTER XXVIII.

Thy incivility shall not make me fail to do what becomes me; and since
thou hast more valour than courtesy, I for thee will hazard that life
which thou wouldst take from me.--Cassandra, “elegantly done into
English by Sir Charles Cotterell.”

About the usual hour for the promenade in the Tuileries, I conveyed
myself thither. I set the chain and ring in full display, rendered still
more conspicuous by the dark coloured dress which I always wore. I
had not been in the gardens ten minutes, before I perceived a young
Frenchman, scarcely twenty years of age, look with a very peculiar air
at my new decorations. He passed and repassed me, much oftener than the
alternations of the walk warranted; and at last, taking off his hat,
said in a low tone, that he wished much for the honour of exchanging a
few words with me in private. I saw, at the first glance, that he was
a gentleman, and accordingly withdrew with him among the trees, in the
more retired part of the garden.

“Permit me,” said he, “to inquire how that ring and chain came into your
possession?”

“Monsieur,” I replied, “you will understand me, when I say, that
the honour of another person is implicated in my concealment of that
secret.”

“Sir,” said the Frenchman, colouring violently, “I have seen them
before--in a word, they belong to me!”

I smiled--my young hero fired at this. “Oui, Monsieur,” said he,
speaking very loud, and very quick, “they belong to me, and I insist
upon your immediately restoring them, or vindicating your claim to them
by arms.”

“You leave me but one answer, Monsieur,” said I; “I will find a friend
to wait upon you immediately. Allow me to inquire your address?” The
Frenchman, who was greatly agitated, produced a card. We bowed and
separated.

I was glancing over the address I held in my hand, which was--C.
D’Azimart, Rue de Bourbon Numero--, when my ears were saluted with--

“‘Now do you know me?--thou shouldst be Alonzo.’”

I did not require the faculty of sight to recognize Lord Vincent. “My
dear fellow,” said I, “I am rejoiced to see you!” and thereupon I poured
into his ear the particulars of my morning adventure. Lord Vincent
listened to me with much apparent interest, and spoke very unaffectedly
of his readiness to serve me, and his regret at the occasion.

“Pooh.” said I, “a duel in France, is not like one in England; the
former is a matter of course; a trifle of common occurrence; one makes
an engagement to fight, in the same breath as an engagement to dine;
but the latter is a thing of state and solemnity--long faces--early
rising--and willmaking. But do get this business over as soon as you
can, that we may dine at the Rocher afterwards.”

“Well, my dear Pelham,” said Vincent, “I cannot refuse you my services;
and as I suppose Monsieur D’Azimart will choose swords, I venture to
augur everything from your skill in that species of weapon. It is the
first time I have ever interfered in affairs of this nature, but I hope
to get well through the present,

“‘Nobilis ornatur lauro collega secundo,’

as Juvenal says: au revoir,” and away went Lord Vincent, half forgetting
all his late anxiety for my life, in his paternal pleasure for the
delivery of his quotation.

Vincent is the only punster I ever knew with a good heart. No action to
that race in general is so serious an occupation as the play upon words;
and the remorseless habit of murdering a phrase, renders them perfectly
obdurate to the simple death of a friend. I walked through every variety
the straight paths of the Tuileries could afford, and was beginning to
get exceedingly tired, when Lord Vincent returned. He looked very grave,
and I saw at once that he was come to particularize the circumstances of
the last extreme. “The Bois de Boulogne--pistols--in one hour,” were the
three leading features of his detail.

“Pistols!” said I; “well, be it so. I would rather have had swords, for
the young man’s sake as much as my own: but thirteen paces and a steady
aim will settle the business as soon. We will try a bottle of the
chambertin to-day, Vincent.” The punster smiled faintly, and for once in
his life made no reply. We walked gravely and soberly to my lodgings
for the pistols, and then proceeded to the engagement as silently as
Christians should do.

The Frenchman and his second were on the ground first. I saw that the
former was pale and agitated, not, I think, from fear, but passion. When
we took our ground, Vincent came to me, and said, in a low tone, “For
God’s sake, suffer me to accommodate this, if possible?”

“It is not in our power,” said I, receiving the pistol. I looked
steadily at D’Azimart, and took my aim. His pistol, owing, I suppose,
to the trembling of his hand, went off a moment sooner than he had
anticipated--the ball grazed my hat. My aim was more successful--I
struck him in the shoulder--the exact place I had intended. He staggered
a few paces, but did not fall.

We hastened towards him--his cheek assumed a still more livid hue as I
approached; he muttered some half-formed curses between his teeth, and
turned from me to his second.

“You will inquire whether Monsieur D’Azimart is satisfied,” said I to
Vincent, and retired to a short distance.

“His second,” said Vincent, (after a brief conference with that person,)
“replies to my question, that Monsieur D’Azimart’s wound has left him,
for the present, no alternative.” Upon this answer I took Vincent’s arm,
and we returned forthwith to my carriage.

“I congratulate you most sincerely on the event of this duel,” said
Vincent. “Monsieur de M--(D’Azimart’s second) informed me, when I waited
on him, that your antagonist was one of the most celebrated pistol shots
in Paris, and that a lady with whom he had been long in love, made the
death of the chain-bearer the price of her favours. Devilish lucky for
you, my good fellow, that his hand trembled so; but I did not know you
were so good a shot.”

“Why,” I answered, “I am not what is vulgarly termed ‘a crack shot’--I
cannot split a bullet on a penknife; but I am sure of a target somewhat
smaller than a man: and my hand is as certain in the field as it is in
the practice-yard.”

“Le sentiment de nos forces les augmente,” replied Vincent. “Shall I
tell the coachman to drive to the Rocher?”



CHAPTER XXIX.

Here’s a kind host, that makes the invitation, To your own cost to his
fort bon collation.--Wycherly’s Gent. Dancing Master.

Vous pouvez bien juger que je n’aurai pas grande peine a me consoler
d’une chose donc je me suis deja console tant de fois.--Lettres de
Boileau.

As I was walking home with Vincent from the Rue Mont-orgueil, I saw, on
entering the Rue St. Honore, two figures before us; the tall and noble
stature of the one I could not for a moment mistake. They stopped at the
door of an hotel, which opened in that noiseless manner so peculiar
to the Conciergerie of France. I was at the porte the moment they
disappeared, but not before I had caught a glance of the dark locks and
pale countenance of Warburton--my eye fell upon the number of the hotel.

“Surely,” said I, “I have been in that house before.”

“Likely enough,” growled Vincent, who was gloriously drunk. “It is
a house of two-fold utility--you may play with cards, or coquet with
women, selon votre gout.”

At these words I remembered the hotel and its inmates immediately. It
belonged to an old nobleman, who, though on the brink of the grave, was
still grasping at the good things on the margin. He lived with a pretty
and clever woman, who bore the name and honours of his wife. They kept
up two salons, one pour le petit souper, and the other pour le petit
jeu. You saw much ecarte and more love-making, and lost your heart and
your money with equal facility. In a word, the marquis and his jolie
petite femme were a wise and prosperous couple, who made the best of
their lives, and lived decently and honourably upon other people.

“Allons, Pelham,” cried Vincent, as I was still standing at the door
in deliberation; “how much longer will you keep me to congeal in this
‘eager and nipping air’--‘Quamdiu nostram patientiam abutere Catilina.’”

“Let us enter,” said I. “I have the run of the house, and we may find--”
 “‘Some young vices--some fair iniquities’” interrupted Vincent, with a
hiccup--

“‘Leade on good fellowe,’ quoth Robin Hood, Lead on, I do bid thee.’”

And with these words, the door opened in obedience to my rap, and we
mounted to the marquis’s tenement au premiere.

The room was pretty full--the soi-disante marquise was flitting from
table to table--betting at each, and coquetting with all; and the
marquis himself, with a moist eye and a shaking hand, was affecting the
Don Juan with the various Elviras and Annas with which his salon was
crowded. Vincent was trying to follow me through the crowd, but his
confused vision and unsteady footing led him from one entanglement
to another, till he was quite unable to proceed. A tall, corpulent
Frenchman, six foot by five, was leaning, (a great and weighty
objection,) just before him, utterly occupied in the vicissitudes of an
ecarte table, and unconscious of Vincent’s repeated efforts, first on
one side, and then on the other, to pass him.

At last, the perplexed wit, getting more irascible as he grew more
bewildered, suddenly seized the vast incumbrance by the arm, and said
to him in a sharp, querulous tone, “Pray, Monsieur, why are you like the
lote tree in Mahomet’s Seventh Heaven?”

“Sir!” cried the astonished Frenchman.

“Because,” (continued Vincent, answering his own enigma)--“because,
beyond you there is no passing!”

The Frenchman (one of that race who always forgive any thing for a bon
mot) smiled, bowed, and drew himself aside. Vincent steered by, and,
joining me, hiccuped out, “In rebus adversis opponite pectora fortia.”

Meanwhile I had looked round the room for the objects of my pursuit: to
my great surprise I could not perceive them; they may be in the other
room, thought I, and to the other room I went; the supper was laid out,
and an old bonne was quietly helping herself to some sweetmeat. All
other human beings (if, indeed, an old woman can be called a human
being) were, however, invisible, and I remained perfectly bewildered
as to the non-appearance of Warburton and his companion. I entered the
Salle a Jouer once more--I looked round in every corner--I examined
every face--but in vain; and with a feeling of disappointment very
disproportioned to my loss, I took Vincent’s arm, and we withdrew.

The next morning I spent with Madame D’Anville. A Frenchwoman easily
consoles herself for the loss of a lover--she converts him into a
friend, and thinks herself (nor is she much deceived) benefited by the
exchange. We talked of our grief in maxims, and bade each other adieu
in antitheses. Ah! it is a pleasant thing to drink with Alcidonis (in
Marmontel’s Tale) of the rose-coloured phial--to sport with the fancy,
not to brood over the passion of youth. There is a time when the heart,
from very tenderness, runs over, and (so much do our virtues as well
as vices flow from our passions) there is, perhaps, rather hope than
anxiety for the future in that excess. Then, if Pleasure errs, it errs
through heedlessness, not design; and Love, wandering over flowers,
“proffers honey, but bears not a sting.” Ah! happy time! in the lines of
one who can so well translate feeling into words--

“Fate has not darkened thee; Hope has not made The blossoms expand it
but opens to fade; Nothing is known of those wearing fears Which will
shadow the light of our after years.”--The Improvisatrice.

Pardon this digression--not much, it must be confessed, in my ordinary
strain--but let me, dear reader, very seriously advise thee not to
judge of me yet. When thou hast got to the end of my book, if thou dost
condemn it or its hero--why “I will let thee alone (as honest Dogberry
advises) till thou art sober; and, if thou make me not, then, the better
answer, thou art not the man I took thee for.”



VOLUME III.



CHAPTER XXX.

It must be confessed, that flattery comes mighty easily to one’s mouth
in the presence of royalty.--Letters of Stephen Montague.

‘Tis he.--How came he thence--what doth he here?--Lara.

I had received for that evening (my last at Paris) an invitation from
the Duchesse de B----. I knew that the party was to be small, and that
very few besides the royal family would compose it. I had owed the
honour of this invitation to my intimacy with the----s, the great
friends of the duchesse, and I promised myself some pleasure in the
engagement.

There were but eight or nine persons present when I entered the royal
chamber. The most distingue of these I recognized immediately as the--.
He came forward with much grace as I approached, and expressed his
pleasure at seeing me.

“You were presented, I think, about a month ago,” added the--, with a
smile of singular fascination; “I remember it well.”

I bowed low to this compliment.

“Do you propose staying long at Paris?” continued the--.

“I protracted,” I replied, “my departure solely for the honour this
evening affords me. In so doing, please your--, I have followed the wise
maxim of keeping the greatest pleasure to the last.”

The royal chevalier bowed to my answer with a smile still sweeter
than before, and began a conversation with me which lasted for several
minutes. I was much struck with the--‘s air and bearing. They possess
great dignity, without any affectation of its assumption. He speaks
peculiarly good English, and the compliment of addressing me in that
language was therefore as judicious as delicate. His observations owed
little to his rank; they would have struck you as appropriate, and the
air which accompanied them pleased you as graceful, even in a simple
individual. Judge, then, if they charmed me in the--. The upper part
of his countenance is prominent and handsome, and his eyes have much
softness of expression. His figure is slight and particularly well
knit; perhaps he is altogether more adapted to strike in private than
in public effect. Upon the whole, he is one of those very few persons
of great rank whom you would have had pride in knowing as an equal, and
have pleasure in acknowledging as a superior.

As the--paused, and turned with great courtesy to the Duc de--, I bowed
my way to the Duchesse de B--. That personage, whose liveliness and
piquancy of manner always make one wish for one’s own sake that her rank
was less exalted, was speaking with great volubility to a tall, stupid
looking man, one of the ministers, and smiled most graciously upon me as
I drew near. She spoke to me of our national amusements. “You are not,”
 said she, “so fond of dancing as we are.”

“We have not the same exalted example to be at once our motive and our
model,” said I, in allusion to the duchesse’s well known attachment to
that accomplishment. The Duchesse D’A--came up as I said this, and
the conversation flowed on evenly enough till the--‘s whist party was
formed. His partner was Madame de la R--, the heroine of La Vendee. She
was a tall and very stout woman, singularly lively and entertaining, and
appeared to possess both the moral and the physical energy to accomplish
feats still more noble than those she performed.

I soon saw that it would not do for me to stay very long. I had already
made a favourable impression, and, in such cases, it is my constant
rule immediately to retire. Stay, if it be whole hours, until you have
pleased, but leave the moment after your success. A great genius should
not linger too long either in the salon or the world. He must quit each
with eclat. In obedience to this rule, I no sooner found that my court
had been effectually made than I rose to withdraw.

“You will return soon to Paris,” said the Duchesse de B--.

“I cannot resist it,” I replied. “Mon corps reviendra pour chercher mon
coeur.”

“We shall not forget you,” said the duchesse.

“Your Highness has now given me my only inducement not to return,” I
answered, as I bowed out of the room.

It was much too early to go home; at that time I was too young and
restless to sleep till long after midnight; and while I was deliberating
in what manner to pass the hours, I suddenly recollected the hotel in
the Rue St. Honore, to which Vincent and I had paid so unceremonious
a visit the night before. Impressed with the hope that I might be more
successful in meeting Warburton than I had then been, I ordered the
coachman to drive to the abode of the old Marquis--The salon was as
crowded as usual. I lost a few Napoleons at ecarte in order to pay my
entree, and then commenced a desultory flirtation with one of the fair
decoys. In this occupation my eye and my mind frequently wandered. I
could not divest myself of the hope of once more seeing Warburton
before my departure from Paris, and every reflection which confirmed my
suspicions of his identity redoubled my interest in his connection with
Tyrrell and the vulgar debauche of the Rue St. Dominique. I was making
some languid reply to my Cynthia of the minute, when my ear was suddenly
greeted by an English voice. I looked round, and saw Thornton in close
conversation with a man whose back was turned to me, but whom I rightly
conjectured to be Tyrrell.

“Oh! he’ll be here soon,” said the former, “and we’ll bleed him
regularly to-night. It is very singular that you who play so much better
should not have floored him yesterday evening.”

Tyrrell replied in a tone so low as to be inaudible, and a minute
afterwards the door opened, and Warburton entered. He came up instantly
to Thornton and his companion; and after a few words of ordinary
salutation, Warburton said, in one of those modulated tones so peculiar
to himself, “I am sure, Tyrrell, that you must be eager for your
revenge. To lose to such a mere Tyro as myself, is quite enough to
double the pain of defeat, and the desire of retaliation.”

I did not hear Tyrrell’s reply, but the trio presently moved towards
the door, which till then I had not noticed, and which was probably the
entrance to our hostess’s boudoir. The soi-disant marquise opened it
herself, for which kind office Thornton gave her a leer and a wink,
characteristic of his claims to gallantry. When the door was
again closed upon them, I went up to the marquise, and after a few
compliments, asked whether the room Messieurs les Anglois had entered,
was equally open to all guests?

“Why,” said she, with a slight hesitation, “those gentlemen play for
higher stakes than we usually do here, and one of them is apt to get
irritated by the advice and expostulations of the lookers on; and so
after they had played a short time in the salon last night, Monsieur
Thornton, a very old friend of mine,” (here the lady looked down) “asked
me permission to occupy the inner room; and as I knew him so well, I
could have no scruple in obliging him.”

“Then, I suppose,” said I, “that, as a stranger, I have not permission
to intrude upon them?”

“Shall I inquire?” answered the marquise.

“No!” said I, “it is not worth while;” and accordingly I re-seated
myself, and appeared once more occupied in saying des belles choses
to my kind-hearted neighbour. I could not, however, with all my
dissimulation, sustain a conversation from which my present feelings
were so estranged, for more than a few minutes; and I was never more
glad than when my companion, displeased with my inattention, rose, and
left me to my own reflections.

What could Warburton (if he were the person I suspected) gain by the
disguise he had assumed? He was too rich to profit by any sums he could
win from Tyrrell, and too much removed from Thornton’s station in
life, to derive any pleasure or benefit from his acquaintance with that
person. His dark threats of vengeance in the Jardin des Plantes, and his
reference to the two hundred pounds Tyrrell possessed, gave me, indeed,
some clue as to his real object; but then--why this disguise! Had he
known Tyrrell before, in his proper semblance, and had anything passed
between them, which rendered this concealment now expedient?--this,
indeed, seemed probable enough; but, was Thornton entrusted with the
secret?--and, if revenge was the object, was that low man a partaker
in its execution?--or was he not, more probably, playing the traitor
to both? As for Tyrrell himself, his own designs upon Warburton were
sufficient to prevent pity for any fall into the pit he had dug for
others.

Meanwhile, time passed on, the hour grew late, and the greater part of
the guests were gone; still I could not tear myself away; I looked from
time to time at the door, with an indescribable feeling of anxiety. I
longed, yet dreaded, for it to open; I felt as if my own fate were in
some degree implicated in what was then agitating within, and I could
not resolve to depart, until I had formed some conclusions on the
result.

At length the door opened; Tyrrell came forth--his countenance was
perfectly hueless, his cheek was sunk and hollow, the excitement of two
hours had been sufficient to render it so. I observed that his teeth
were set, and his hand clenched, as they are when we idly seek, by the
strained and extreme tension of the nerves, to sustain the fever and the
agony of the mind. Warburton and Thornton followed him; the latter with
his usual air of reckless indifference--his quick rolling eye glanced
from the marquis to myself, and though his colour changed slightly,
his nod of recognition was made with its wonted impudence and ease; but
Warburton passed on, like Tyrrell, without noticing or heeding any thing
around. He fixed his large bright eye upon the figure which preceded
him, without once altering its direction, and the extreme beauty of his
features, which, not all the dishevelled length of his hair and whiskers
could disguise, was lighted up with a joyous but savage expression,
which made me turn away, almost with a sensation of fear.

Just as Tyrrell was leaving the room, Warburton put his hand upon his
shoulder--“Stay,” said he, “I am going your way, and will accompany
you.” He turned round to Thornton (who was already talking with the
marquis) as he said this, and waved his hand, as if to prevent his
following; the next moment, Tyrrell and himself had left the room.

I could not now remain longer. I felt a feverish restlessness, which
impelled me onwards. I quitted the salon, and was on the escalier before
the gamesters had descended. Warburton was, indeed, but a few steps
before me; the stairs were but very dimly lighted by one expiring lamp;
he did not turn round to see me, and was probably too much engrossed to
hear me.

“You may yet have a favourable reverse,” said he to Tyrrell.

“Impossible!” replied the latter, in a tone of such deep anguish, that
it thrilled me to the very heart. “I am an utter beggar--I have nothing
in the world--I have no expectation but to starve!”

While he was saying this, I perceived by the faint and uncertain light,
that Warburton’s hand was raised to his own countenance.

“Have you no hope--no spot wherein to look for comfort--is beggary your
absolute and only possible resource from famine?” he replied, in a low
and suppressed tone.

At that moment we were just descending into the court-yard. Warburton
was but one step behind Tyrrell: the latter made no answer; but as he
passed from the dark staircase into the clear moonlight of the court, I
caught a glimpse of the big tears which rolled heavily and silently down
his cheeks. Warburton laid his hand upon him.

“Turn,” he cried, suddenly, “your cup is not yet full--look upon me--and
remember!”

I pressed forward--the light shone full upon the countenance of the
speaker--the dark hair was gone--my suspicions were true--I discovered
at one glance the bright locks and lofty brow of Reginald Glanville.
Slowly Tyrrell gazed, as if he were endeavouring to repel some terrible
remembrance, which gathered, with every instant, more fearfully upon
him; until, as the stern countenance of Glanville grew darker and darker
in its mingled scorn and defiance, he uttered one low cry, and sank
senseless upon the earth.



CHAPTER XXXI.

Well, he is gone, and with him go these thoughts.--Shakspeare.

What ho! for England!--Shakspeare.

I have always had an insuperable horror of being placed in what the
vulgar call a predicament. In a predicament I was most certainly placed
at the present moment. A man at my feet in a fit--the cause of it having
very wisely disappeared, devolving upon me the charge of watching,
recovering, and conducting home the afflicted person--made a
concatenation of disagreeable circumstances, as much unsuited to
the temper of Henry Pelham, as his evil fortune could possibly have
contrived.

After a short pause of deliberation, I knocked up the porter, procured
some cold water, and bathed Tyrrell’s temples for several moments before
he recovered. He opened his eyes slowly, and looked carefully round with
a fearful and suspicious glance: “Gone--gone--(he muttered)--ay--what
did he here at such a moment?--vengeance--for what?--I could not
tell--it would have killed her--let him thank his own folly. I do not
fear; I defy his malice.” And with these words, Tyrrell sprung to his
feet.

“Can I assist you to your home?” said I; “you are still unwell--pray
suffer me to have that pleasure.”

I spoke with some degree of warmth and sincerity; the unfortunate man
stared wildly at me for a moment, before he replied. “Who,” said he,
at last, “who speaks to me--the lost--the guilty--the ruined, in the
accents of interest and kindness?”

I placed his arm in mine, and drew him out of the yard into the open
street. He looked at me with an eager and wistful survey, and then, by
degrees, appearing to recover his full consciousness of the present, and
recollection of the past, he pressed my hand warmly, and after a short
silence, during which we moved on slowly towards the Tuileries, he
said,--“Pardon me, Sir, if I have not sufficiently thanked you for your
kindness and attention. I am now quite restored; the close room in which
I have been sitting for so many hours, and the feverish excitement of
play, acting upon a frame very debilitated by ill health, occasioned my
momentary indisposition. I am now, I repeat, quite recovered, and will
no longer trespass upon your good nature.”

“Really,” said I, “you had better not discard my services yet. Do suffer
me to accompany you home?”

“Home!” muttered Tyrrell, with a deep sigh; “no--no!” and then, as if
recollecting himself, he said, “I thank you, Sir, but--but--” I saw his
embarrassment, and interrupted him.

“Well, if I cannot assist you any further, I will take your dismissal. I
trust we shall meet again under auspices better calculated for improving
acquaintance.”

Tyrrell bowed, once more pressed my hand, and we parted. I hurried on up
the long street towards my hotel.

When I had got several paces beyond Tyrrell, I turned back to look at
him. He was standing in the same place in which I had left him. I saw
by the moonlight that this face and hands were raised towards Heaven. It
was but for a moment: his attitude changed while I was yet looking, and
he slowly and calmly continued his way in the same direction as myself.
When I reached my chambers, I hastened immediately to bed, but not to
sleep: the extraordinary scene I had witnessed; the dark and ferocious
expression of Glanville’s countenance, so strongly impressed with every
withering and deadly passion; the fearful and unaccountable remembrance
that had seemed to gather over the livid and varying face of the
gamester; the mystery of Glanville’s disguise; the intensity of a
revenge so terribly expressed, together with the restless and burning
anxiety I felt--not from idle curiosity, but, from my early and intimate
friendship for Glanville, to fathom its cause--all crowded upon my mind
with a feverish confusion, that effectually banished repose.

It was with that singular sensation of pleasure which none but those
who have passed frequent nights in restless and painful agitation, can
recognize, that I saw the bright sun penetrate through my shutters, and
heard Bedos move across my room.

“What hour will Monsieur have the post horses?” said that praiseworthy
valet.

“At eleven,” answered I, springing out of bed with joy at the change of
scene which the very mention of my journey brought before my mind.

I was a luxurious personage in those days. I had had a bath made from
my own design; across it were constructed two small frames--one for the
journal of the day, and another to hold my breakfast apparatus; in this
manner I was accustomed to lie for about an hour, engaging the triple
happiness of reading, feeding, and bathing. Owing to some unaccountable
delay, Galignani’s Messenger did not arrive at the usual hour, on
the morning of my departure; to finish breakfast, or bathing, without
Galignani’s Messenger, was perfectly impossible, so I remained, till I
was half boiled, in a state of the most indolent imbecility.

At last it came: the first paragraph that struck my eyes was the
following:--“It is rumoured among the circles of the Faubourg, that a
duel was fought on--, between a young Englishman and Monsieur D--;
the cause of it is said to be the pretensions of both to the beautiful
Duchesse de P--, who, if report be true, cares for neither of the
gallants, but lavishes her favours upon a certain attache to the English
embassy.”

“Such,” thought I, “are the materials for all human histories. Every one
who reads, will eagerly swallow this account as true: if an author were
writing the memoirs of the court, he would compile his facts and scandal
from this very collection of records; and yet, though so near the truth,
how totally false it is! Thank Heaven, however, that, at least, I am not
suspected of the degradation of the duchesse’s love:--to fight for
her may make me seem a fool--to be loved by her would constitute me a
villain.”

The next passage in that collection of scandal which struck me was--“We
understand that E. W. Howard de Howard, Esq., Secretary, is shortly to
lead to the hymeneal altar the daughter of Timothy Tomkins, Esq., late
Consul of--.” I quite started out of my bath with delight. I scarcely
suffered myself to be dried and perfumed, before I sat down to write the
following congratulatory epistle to the thin man:--

“My dear Mr. Howard de Howard,

“Permit me, before I leave Paris, to compliment you upon that happiness
which I have just learnt is in store for you. Marriage to a man like
you, who has survived the vanities of the world--who has attained that
prudent age when the passions are calmed into reason, and the purer
refinements of friendship succeed to the turbulent delirium of the
senses--marriage, my dear Mr. Howard, to a man like you, must, indeed,
be a most delicious Utopia. After all the mortifications you may meet
elsewhere, whether from malicious females, or a misjudging world, what
happiness to turn to one being to whom your praise is an honour, and
your indignation of consequence!

“But if marriage itself be so desirable, what words shall I use
sufficiently expressive of my congratulation at the particular match you
have chosen, so suitable in birth and station? I can fancy you, my dear
Sir, in your dignified retirement, expatiating to your admiring bride
upon all the honours of your illustrious line, and receiving from her,
in return, a full detail of all the civic glories that have ever graced
the lineage of the Tomkins’s. As the young lady is, I suppose, an
heiress, I conclude you will take her name, instead of changing it. Mr.
Howard de Howard de Tomkins, will sound peculiarly majestic; and when
you come to the titles and possessions of your ancestors, I am persuaded
that you will continue to consider your alliance with the honest
citizens of London among your proudest distinctions.

“Should you have any commands in England, a letter directed to me in
Grosvenor-square will be sure to find me; and you may rely upon my
immediately spreading among our mutual acquaintance in London, the happy
measure you are about to adopt, and my opinions on its propriety.

“Adieu, my dear Sir,

“With the greatest respect and truth,

“Yours,

“H. Pelham.”


“There,” said I, as I sealed my letter, “I have discharged some part of
that debt I owe to Mr. Howard de Howard, for an enmity towards me, which
he has never affected to conceal. He prides himself on his youth--my
allusions to his age will delight him! On the importance of his good
or evil opinion--I have flattered him to a wonder! Of a surety, Henry
Pelham, I could not have supposed you were such an adept in the art of
panegyric.”

“The horses, Sir!” said Bedos; and “the bill, Sir?” said the garcon.
Alas! that those and that should be so coupled together; and that we can
never take our departure without such awful witnesses of our sojourn.
Well--to be brief--the bill for once was discharged--the horses
snorted--the carriage door was opened--I entered--Bedos mounted
behind--crack went the whips--off went the steeds, and so terminated my
adventures at dear Paris.



CHAPTER XXXII.

O, cousin, you know him--the fine gentleman they talk of so much in
town.--Wycherly’s Dancing Master.

By the bright days of my youth, there is something truly delightful in
the quick motion of four post-horses. In France, where one’s steeds are
none of the swiftest, the pleasures of travelling are not quite so
great as in England; still, however, to a man who is tired of one
scene--panting for another--in love with excitement, and not yet wearied
of its pursuit--the turnpike road is more grateful than the easiest
chair ever invented, and the little prison we entitle a carriage, more
cheerful than the state-rooms of Devonshire House.

We reached Calais in safety, and in good time, the next day.

“Will Monsieur dine in his rooms, or at the table d’hote?”

“In his rooms, of course,” said Bedos, indignantly deciding the
question. A French valet’s dignity is always involved in his master’s.

“You are too good, Bedos,” said I, “I shall dine at the table
d’hote--who have you there in general?”

“Really,” said the garcon, “we have such a swift succession of guests,
that we seldom see the same faces two days running. We have as many
changes as an English administration.”

“You are facetious,” said I.

“No,” returned the garcon, who was a philosopher as well as a wit; “no,
my digestive organs are very weak, and par consequence, I am naturally
melancholy--Ah, ma fois tres triste!” and with these words the
sentimental plate-changer placed his hand--I can scarcely say, whether
on his heart, or his stomach, and sighed bitterly!

“How long,” said I, “does it want to dinner?” My question restored the
garcon to himself.

“Two, hours, Monsieur, two hours,” and twirling his serviette with an
air of exceeding importance, off went my melancholy acquaintance to
compliment new customers, and complain of his digestion.

After I had arranged myself and my whiskers--two very distinct
affairs--yawned three times, and drank two bottles of soda water, I
strolled into the town. As I was sauntering along leisurely enough, I
heard my name pronounced behind me. I turned, and saw Sir Willoughby
Townshend, an old baronet of an antediluvian age--a fossil witness of
the wonders of England, before the deluge of French manners swept away
ancient customs, and created, out of the wrecks of what had been, a new
order of things, and a new race of mankind.

“Ah! my dear Mr. Pelham, how are you? and the worthy Lady Frances, your
mother, and your excellent father, all well?--I’m delighted to hear
it. Russelton,” continued Sir Willoughby, turning to a middle-aged man,
whose arm he held, “you remember Pelham--true Whig--great friend of
Sheridan’s?--let me introduce his son to you. Mr. Russelton, Mr. Pelham;
Mr. Pelham, Mr. Russelton.”

At the name of the person thus introduced to me, a thousand
recollections crowded upon my mind; the contemporary and rival of
Napoleon--the autocrat of the great world of fashion and cravats--the
mighty genius before whom aristocracy had been humbled and ton
abashed--at whose nod the haughtiest noblesse of Europe had quailed--who
had introduced, by a single example, starch into neckcloths, and had
fed the pampered appetite of his boot-tops on champagne--whose coat and
whose friend were cut with an equal grace--and whose name was connected
with every triumph that the world’s great virtue of audacity could
achieve--the illustrious, the immortal Russelton, stood before me. I
recognised in him a congenial, though a superior spirit, and I bowed
with a profundity of veneration, with which no other human being has
ever inspired me.

Mr. Russelton seemed pleased with my evident respect, and returned my
salutation with a mock dignity which enchanted me. He offered me his
disengaged arm; I took it with transport, and we all three proceeded up
the street.

“So,” said Sir Willoughby--“so, Russelton, you like your quarters here;
plenty of sport among the English, I should think: you have not forgot
the art of quizzing; eh, old fellow?”

“Even if I had,” said Mr. Russelton, speaking very slowly, “the sight of
Sir Willoughby Townshend would be quite sufficient to refresh my memory.
Yes,” continued the venerable wreck, after a short pause,--“yes, I like
my residence pretty well; I enjoy a calm conscience, and a clean shirt:
what more can man desire? I have made acquaintance with a tame parrot,
and I have taught it to say, whenever an English fool with a stiff neck
and a loose swagger passes him--‘True Briton--true Briton.’ I take care
of my health, and reflect upon old age. I have read Gil Blas, and the
Whole Duty of Man; and, in short, what with instructing my parrot, and
improving myself, I think I pass my time as creditably and decorously
as the Bishop of Winchester, or my Lord of A--v--ly himself. So you have
just come from Paris, I presume, Mr. Pelham?”

“I left it yesterday!”

“Full of those horrid English, I suppose; thrusting their broad hats
and narrow minds into every shop in the Palais Royal--winking their dull
eyes at the damsels of the counter, and manufacturing their notions
of French into a higgle for sous. Oh! the monsters!--they bring on
a bilious attack whenever I think of them: the other day one of them
accosted me, and talked me into a nervous fever about patriotism and
roast pigs: luckily I was near my own house, and reached it before the
thing became fatal; but only think, had I wandered too far when he met
me! at my time of life, the shock would have been too great; I should
certainly have perished in a fit. I hope, at least, they would have
put the cause of my death in my epitaph--‘Died, of an Englishman, John
Russelton, Esq., aged,’ Pah! You are not engaged, Mr. Pelham; dine with
me to-day; Willoughby and his umbrella are coming.”

“Volontiers,” said I, “though I was going to make observations on men
and manners at the table d’hote of my hotel.”

“I am most truly grieved,” replied Mr. Russelton, “at depriving you of
so much amusement. With me you will only find some tolerable Lafitte,
and an anomalous dish my cuisiniere calls a mutton chop. It will be
curious to see what variation in the monotony of mutton she will
adopt to-day. The first time I ordered ‘a chop,’ I thought I had amply
explained every necessary particular; a certain portion of flesh, and a
gridiron: at seven o’clock, up came a cotelette panee, faute de mieux.
I swallowed the composition, drowned as it was, in a most pernicious
sauce. I had one hour’s sleep, and the nightmare, in consequence.
The next day, I imagined no mistake could be made: sauce was strictly
prohibited; all extra ingredients laid under a most special veto, and
a natural gravy gently recommended: the cover was removed, and lo! a
breast of mutton, all bone and gristle, like the dying gladiator! This
time my heart was too full for wrath; I sat down and wept! To-day will
be the third time I shall make the experiment, if French cooks will
consent to let one starve upon nature. For my part, I have no stomach
left now for art: I wore out my digestion in youth, swallowing Jack St.
Leger’s suppers, and Sheridan’s promises to pay. Pray, Mr. Pelham, did
you try Staub when you were at Paris?”

“Yes; and thought him one degree better than Stultz, whom, indeed, I
have long condemned, as fit only for minors at Oxford, and majors in the
infantry.”

“True,” said Russelton, with a very faint smile at a pun, somewhat in
his own way, and levelled at a tradesman, of whom he was, perhaps, a
little jealous--“True; Stultz aims at making gentlemen, not coats; there
is a degree of aristocratic pretension in his stitches, which is vulgar
to an appalling degree. You can tell a Stultz coat any where, which is
quite enough to damn it: the moment a man’s known by an invariable cut,
and that not original, it ought to be all over with him. Give me the man
who makes the tailor, not the tailor who makes the man.”

“Right, by G--!” cried Sir Willoughby, who was as badly dressed as one
of Sir E--‘s dinners. “Right; just my opinion. I have always told my
Schneiders to make my clothes neither in the fashion nor out of it; to
copy no other man’s coat, and to cut their cloth according to my natural
body, not according to an isosceles triangle. Look at this coat, for
instance,” and Sir Willoughby Townshend made a dead halt, that we might
admire his garment the more accurately.

“Coat!” said Russelton, with an appearance of the most naive surprise,
and taking hold of the collar, suspiciously, by the finger and thumb;
“coat, Sir Willoughby! do you call this thing a coat?”



CHAPTER XXXIII.

J’ai toujours cru que le bon n’etait que le beau mis en action.
--Rousseau.

Shortly after Russelton’s answer to Sir Willoughby’s eulogistic
observations on his own attire, I left those two worthies till I was
to join them at dinner; it wanted three hours yet to that time, and I
repaired to my quarters to bathe and write letters. I scribbled one
to Madame D’Anville, full of antitheses and maxims, sure to charm her;
another to my mother, to prepare her for my arrival; and a third to Lord
Vincent, giving him certain commissions at Paris, which I had forgotten
personally to execute.

My pen is not that of a ready writer; and what with yawning, stretching,
admiring my rings, and putting pen to paper, in the intervals of these
more natural occupations, it was time to bathe and dress before my
letters were completed. I set off to Russelton’s abode in high spirits,
and fully resolved to make the most of a character so original.

It was a very small room in which I found him; he was stretched in an
easy chair before the fire-place, gazing complacently at his feet,
and apparently occupied in any thing but listening to Sir Willoughby
Townsend, who was talking with great vehemence about politics and the
corn laws. Notwithstanding the heat of the weather, there was a small
fire on the hearth, which, aided by the earnestness of his efforts
to convince his host, put poor Sir Willoughby into a most intense
perspiration. Russelton, however, seemed enviably cool, and hung over
the burning wood like a cucumber on a hotbed. Sir Willoughby came to a
full stop by the window, and (gasping for breath) attempted to throw it
open.

“What are you doing? for Heaven’s sake, what are you doing?” cried
Russelton, starting up; “do you mean to kill me?”

“Kill you!” said Sir Willoughby, quite aghast.

“Yes; kill me! is it not quite cold enough already in this d--d
seafaring place, without making my only retreat, humble as it is, a
theatre for thorough draughts? Have I not had the rheumatism in my left
shoulder, and the ague in my little finger, these last six months? and
must you now terminate my miserable existence at one blow, by opening
that abominable lattice? Do you think, because your great frame, fresh
from the Yorkshire wolds, and compacted of such materials, that one
would think, in eating your beeves, you had digested their hides into
skin--do you think, because your limbs might be cut up into planks for
a seventy-eight, and warranted water-proof without pitch, because of the
density of their pores--do you think, because you are as impervious as
an araphorostic shoe, that I, John Russelton, am equally impenetrable,
and that you are to let easterly winds play about my room like children,
begetting rheums and asthmas and all manner of catarrhs? I do beg, Sir
Willoughby Townshend, that you will suffer me to die a more natural and
civilized death;” and so saying, Russelton sank down into his chair,
apparently in the last state of exhaustion.

Sir Willoughby, who remembered the humourist in all his departed glory,
and still venerated him as a temple where the deity yet breathed, though
the altar was overthrown, made to this extraordinary remonstrance no
other reply than a long whiff, and a “Well, Russelton, dash my wig (a
favourite oath of Sir W.’s) but you’re a queer fellow.”

Russelton now turned to me, and invited me, with a tone of the most
lady-like languor, to sit down near the fire. As I am naturally of a
chilly disposition, and fond, too, of beating people in their own line,
I drew a chair close to the hearth, declared the weather was very cold,
and rung the bell for some more wood. Russelton started for a moment,
and then, with a politeness he had not deigned to exert before,
approached his chair to mine, and began a conversation, which, in spite
of his bad witticisms, and peculiarity of manner, I found singularly
entertaining.

Dinner was announced, and we adjourned to another room--poor Sir
Willoughby, with his waistcoat unbuttoned, and breathing like a pug in
a phthisis--groaned bitterly, when he discovered that this apartment was
smaller and hotter than the one before. Russelton immediately helped
him to some scalding soup--and said, as he told the servant to hand Sir
Willoughby the cayenne--“you will find this, my dear Townshend, a very
sensible potage for this severe season.”

Dinner went off tamely enough, with the exception of “our stout
friend’s” agony, which Russelton enjoyed most luxuriously. The
threatened mutton-chops did not make their appearance, and the dinner,
though rather too small, was excellently cooked, and better arranged.
With the dessert, the poor baronet rose, and pleading sudden
indisposition, tottered out of the door.

When he was gone, Russelton threw himself back in his chair, and laughed
for several minutes with a loud chuckling sound, till the tears ran down
his cheek. “A nice heart you must have!” thought I--(my conclusions of
character are always drawn from small propensities).

After a few jests at Sir Willoughby, our conversation turned upon other
individuals. I soon saw that Russelton was a soured and disappointed
man; his remarks on people were all sarcasms--his mind was overflowed
with a suffusion of ill-nature--he bit as well as growled. No man of the
world ever, I am convinced, becomes a real philosopher in retirement.
People who have been employed for years upon trifles have not the
greatness of mind, which could alone make them indifferent to what they
have coveted all their lives, as most enviable and important.

“Have you read ------‘s memoirs?” said Mr. Russelton. “No! Well, I
imagined every one had at least dipped into them. I have often had
serious thoughts of dignifying my own retirement, by the literary
employment of detailing my adventures in the world. I think I could
throw a new light upon things and persons, which my contemporaries will
shrink back like owls at perceiving.

“Your life,” said I, “must indeed furnish matter of equal instruction
and amusement.”

“Ay,” answered Russelton; “amusement to the fools, but instruction to
the knaves. I am, indeed, a lamentable example of the fall of ambition.
I brought starch into all the neckcloths in England, and I end by tying
my own at a three-inch looking-glass at Calais. You are a young man, Mr.
Pelham, about to commence life, probably with the same views as (though
greater advantages than) myself; perhaps in indulging my egotism, I
shall not weary without recompensing you.

“I came into the world with an inordinate love of glory, and a great
admiration of the original; these propensities might have made me a
Shakspeare--they did more, they made me a Russelton! When I was six
years old, I cut my jacket into a coat, and turned my aunt’s best
petticoat into a waistcoat. I disdained at eight the language of the
vulgar, and when my father asked me to fetch his slippers, I replied,
that my soul swelled beyond the limits of a lackey’s. At nine, I was
self-inoculated with propriety of ideas. I rejected malt with the air
of His Majesty, and formed a violent affection for maraschino; though
starving at school, I never took twice of pudding, and paid sixpence
a week out of my shilling to have my shoes blacked. As I grew up, my
notions expanded. I gave myself, without restraint, to the ambition
that burnt within me--I cut my old friends, who were rather envious
than emulous of my genius, and I employed three tradesmen to make my
gloves--one for the hand, a second for the fingers, and a third for
the thumb! These two qualities made me courted and admired by a new
race--for the great secrets of being courted are to shun others, and
seem delighted with yourself. The latter is obvious enough; who the
deuce should be pleased with you, if you yourself are not?

“Before I left college I fell in love. Other fellows, at my age, in such
a predicament, would have whined--shaved only twice a week, and written
verses. I did none of the three--the last indeed I tried, but, to my
infinite surprise, I found my genius was not universal. I began with

“‘Sweet nymph, for whom I wake my muse.’

“For this, after considerable hammering, I could only think of the rhyme
‘shoes’--so I began again,--

“‘Thy praise demands much softer lutes.’

“And the fellow of this verse terminated like myself in ‘boots.’--Other
efforts were equally successful--‘bloom’ suggested to my imagination
no rhyme but ‘perfume!’--‘despair’ only reminded me of my ‘hair,’--and
‘hope’ was met at the end of the second verse, by the inharmonious
antithesis of ‘soap.’ Finding, therefore, that my forte was not in
the Pierian line, I redoubled my attention to my dress; I coated, and
cravated, and essenced, and oiled, with all the attention the very
inspiration of my rhymes seemed to advise;--in short, I thought the best
pledge I could give my Dulcinea of my passion for her person, would be
to show her what affectionate veneration I could pay to my own.

“My mistress could not withhold from me her admiration, but she denied
me her love. She confessed Mr. Russelton was the best dressed man at the
University, and had the whitest hands; and two days after this avowal,
she ran away with a great rosy-cheeked extract from Leicestershire.

“I did not blame her: I pitied her too much--but I made a vow never to
be in love again. In spite of all advantages I kept my oath, and avenged
myself on the species for the insult of the individual.

“Before I commenced a part which was to continue through life, I
considered deeply on the humours of the spectators. I saw that
the character of the English was servile to rank, and yielding to
pretension--they admire you for your acquaintance, and cringe to you for
your conceit. The first thing, therefore, was to know great people--the
second to controul them. I dressed well, and had good horses--that
was sufficient to make me sought by the young of my own sex. I talked
scandal, and was never abashed--that was more than enough to make me
recherche among the matrons of the other. It is single men, and married
women, to whom are given the St. Peter’s keys of Society. I was soon
admitted into its heaven--I was more--I was one of its saints. I became
imitated as well as initiated. I was the rage--the lion. Why?--was I
better--was I richer--was I handsomer--was I cleverer, than my kind?
No, no;--(and here Russelton ground his teeth with a strong and
wrathful expression of scorn);--and had I been all--had I been a very
concentration and monopoly of all human perfections, they would not have
valued me at half the price they did set on me. It was--I will tell you
the simple secret, Mr. Pelham--it was because I trampled on them, that,
like crushed herbs, they sent up a grateful incense in return.

“Oh! it was balm to my bitter and loathing temper, to see those who
would have spurned me from them, if they dared, writhe beneath my lash,
as I withheld or inflicted it at will. I was the magician who held the
great spirits that longed to tear me to pieces, by one simple spell
which a superior hardihood had won me--and, by Heaven, I did not spare
to exert it.

“Well, well, this is but an idle recollection now; all human power, says
the proverb of every language, is but of short duration. Alexander did
not conquer kingdoms for ever; and Russelton’s good fortune deserted him
at last. Napoleon died in exile, and so shall I; but we have both had
our day, and mine was the brightest of the two, for it had no change
till the evening. I am more happy than people would think for--Je ne
suis pas souvent ou mon corps est--I live in a world of recollections, I
trample again upon coronets and ermine, the glories of the small great!
I give once more laws which no libertine is so hardy not to feel exalted
in adopting; I hold my court, and issue my fiats; I am like the madman,
and out of the very straws of my cell, I make my subjects and my realm;
and when I wake from these bright visions, and see myself an old,
deserted man, forgotten, and decaying inch by inch in a foreign village,
I can at least summon sufficient of my ancient regality of spirit not
to sink beneath the reverse. If I am inclined to be melancholy, why, I
extinguish my fire, and imagine I have demolished a duchess. I steal up
to my solitary chamber, to renew again, in my sleep, the phantoms of my
youth; to carouse with princes; to legislate for nobles; and to wake in
the morning (here Russelton’s countenance and manner suddenly changed to
an affectation of methodistical gravity,) and thank Heaven that I have
still a coat to my stomach, as well as to my back, and that I am
safely delivered of such villainous company; ‘to forswear sack and live
cleanly,’ during the rest of my sublunary existence.”

After this long detail of Mr. Russelton’s, the conversation was but dull
and broken. I could not avoid indulging a reverie upon what I had
heard, and my host was evidently still revolving the recollections
his narration had conjured up; we sat opposite each other for several
minutes as abstracted and distracted as if we had been a couple two
months married; till at last I rose, and tendered my adieus. Russelton
received them with his usual coldness, but more than his usual civility,
for he followed me to the door.

Just as they were about to shut it, he called me back. “Mr. Pelham,”
 said he, “Mr. Pelham, when you come back this way, do look in upon me,
and--and as you will be going a good deal into society, just find out
what people say of my manner of life!” [It will be perceived by those
readers who are kind or patient enough to reach the conclusion of this
work, that Russelton is specified as one of my few dramatis personae of
which only the first outline is taken from real life: all the rest--all,
indeed, which forms and marks the character thus briefly delineated, is
drawn solely from imagination.]



CHAPTER XXXIV.

An old worshipful gentleman, that had a great estate, And kept a brave
old house at a hospitable rate.--Old Song.

I think I may, without much loss to the reader, pass in silence over
my voyage, the next day, to Dover. (Horrible reminiscence!) I may also
spare him an exact detail of all the inns and impositions between that
sea-port and London; nor will it be absolutely necessary to the plot of
this history, to linger over every mile-stone between the metropolis
and Glenmorris Castle, where my uncle and my mother were impatiently
awaiting the arrival of the candidate to be.

It was a fine bright evening when my carriage entered the park. I had
not seen the place for years; and I felt my heart swell with something
like family pride, as I gazed on the magnificent extent of hill and
plain that opened upon me, as I passed the ancient and ivy-covered
lodge. Large groups of trees, scattered on either side, seemed, in their
own antiquity, the witness of that of the family which had given them
existence. The sun set on the waters which lay gathered in a lake at
the foot of the hill, breaking the waves into unnumbered sapphires, and
tinging the dark firs that overspread the margin, with a rich and golden
light, that put me excessively in mind of the Duke of--‘s livery.

When I descended at the gate, the servants, who stood arranged in an
order so long that it almost startled me, received me with a visible
gladness and animation, which shewed me, at one glance, the old
fashioned tastes of their master. Who, in these days, ever inspires his
servants with a single sentiment of regard or interest for himself or
his whole race? That tribe one never, indeed, considers as possessing
a life separate from their services to us: beyond that purpose of
existence, we know not even if they exist. As Providence made the stars
for the benefit of earth, so it made servants for the use of gentlemen;
and, as neither stars nor servants appear except when we want them, so
I suppose they are in a sort of suspense from being, except at those
important and happy moments.

To return--for if I have any fault, it is too great a love for abstruse
speculation and reflection--I was formally ushered through a great hall,
hung round with huge antlers and rusty armour, through a lesser one,
supported by large stone columns, and without any other adornment
than the arms of the family; then through an anti-room, covered with
tapestry, representing the gallantries of King Solomon to the Queen of
Sheba; and lastly, into the apartment honoured by the august presence
of Lord Glenmorris. That personage was dividing the sofa with three
spaniels and a setter; he rose hastily when I was announced, and then
checking the first impulse which hurried him, perhaps, into an unseemly
warmth of salutation, held out his hand with a pompous air of kindly
protection, and while he pressed mine, surveyed me from head to foot to
see how far my appearance justified his condescension.

Having, at last, satisfied himself, he proceeded to inquire after the
state of my appetite. He smiled benignantly when I confessed that I was
excessively well prepared to testify its capacities (the first idea of
all kind-hearted, old-fashioned people, is to stuff you), and, silently
motioning to the grey-headed servant who stood in attendance, till
receiving the expected sign, he withdrew, Lord Glenmorris informed me
that dinner was over for every one but myself, that for me it would be
prepared in an instant, that Mr. Toolington had expired four days since,
that my mother was, at that moment, canvassing for me, and that my
own electioneering qualities were to open their exhibition with the
following day.

After this communication there was a short pause. “What a beautiful
place this is!” said I, with great enthusiasm. Lord Glenmorris was
pleased with the compliment, simple as it was.

“Yes,” said he, “it is, and I have made it still more so than you have
yet been able to perceive.”

“You have been planting, probably, on the other side of the park?”

“No,” said my uncle, smiling; “Nature had done every thing for this spot
when I came to it, but one, and the addition of that one ornament is the
only real triumph which art ever can achieve.”

“What is it?” asked I; “oh, I know--water.”

“You are mistaken,” answered Lord Glenmorris; “it is the ornament
of--happy faces.”

I looked up to my uncle’s countenance in sudden surprise. I cannot
explain how I was struck with the expression which it wore: so calmly
bright and open!--it was as if the very daylight had settled there.

“You don’t understand this at present, Henry,” said he, after a moment’s
silence; “but you will find it, of all rules for the improvement of
property, the easiest to learn. Enough of this now. Were you not au
desespoir at leaving Paris?”

“I should have been, some months ago; but when I received my mother’s
summons, I found the temptations of the continent very light in
comparison with those held out to me here.”

“What, have you already arrived at that great epoch, when vanity casts
off its first skin, and ambition succeeds to pleasure? Why--but thank
Heaven that you have lost my moral--your dinner is announced.”

Most devoutly did I thank Heaven, and most earnestly did I betake myself
to do honour to my uncle’s hospitality.

I had just finished my repast, when my mother entered. She was, as you
might well expect from her maternal affection, quite overpowered with
joy, first, at finding my hair grown so much darker, and, secondly, at
my looking so well. We spent the whole evening in discussing the great
business for which I had been summoned. Lord Glenmorris promised me
money, and my mother advice; and I, in my turn, enchanted them, by
promising to make the best use of both.



CHAPTER XXXV.

Cor. Your good voice, Sir--what say you? 2nd Cit. You shall have it,
worthy Sir.--Coriolanus.

The borough of Buyemall had long been in undisputed possession of the
lords of Glenmorris, till a rich banker, of the name of Lufton, had
bought a large estate in the immediate neighbourhood of Glenmorris
Castle. This event, which was the precursor of a mighty revolution in
the borough of Buyemall, took place in the first year of my uncle’s
accession to his property. A few months afterwards, a vacancy in the
borough occurring, my uncle procured the nomination of one of his own
political party. To the great astonishment of Lord Glenmorris, and the
great gratification of the burghers of Buyemall, Mr. Lufton offered
himself in opposition to the Glenmorris candidate. In this age
of enlightenment, innovation has no respect for the most sacred
institutions of antiquity. The burghers, for the only time since their
creation as a body, were cast first into doubt, and secondly into
rebellion. The Lufton faction, horresco referens, were triumphant, and
the rival candidate was returned. From that hour the Borough of Buyemall
was open to all the world.

My uncle, who was a good easy man, and had some strange notions of free
representation, and liberty of election, professed to care very little
for this event. He contented himself henceforward, with exerting his
interest for one of the members, and left the other seat entirely at
the disposal of the line of Lufton, which, from the time of the first
competition, continued peaceably to monopolize it.

During the last two years, my uncle’s candidate, the late Mr.
Toolington, had been gradually dying of a dropsy, and the Luftons had
been so particularly attentive to the honest burghers, that it was
shrewdly suspected a bold push was to be made for the other seat. During
the last month these doubts were changed into certainty. Mr. Augustus
Leopold Lufton, eldest son to Benjamin Lufton, Esq., had publicly
declared his intention of starting at the decease of Mr. Toolington;
against this personage, behold myself armed and arrayed.

Such is, in brief, the history of the borough, up to the time in which I
was to take a prominent share in its interests and events.

On the second day after my arrival at the castle, the following
advertisement appeared at Buyemall:--

“To the Independent Electors of the Borough of Buyemall.

“Gentlemen,

“In presenting myself to your notice, I advance a claim not altogether
new and unfounded. My family have for centuries been residing amongst
you, and exercising that interest which reciprocal confidence, and good
offices may fairly create. Should it be my good fortune to be chosen
your representative, you may rely upon my utmost endeavours to deserve
that honour. One word upon the principles I espouse: they are those
which have found their advocates among the wisest and the best; they are
those which, hostile alike to the encroachments of the crown, and the
licentiousness of the people, would support the real interest of both.
Upon these grounds, gentlemen, I have the honour to solicit your votes;
and it is with the sincerest respect for your ancient and honourable
body, that I subscribe myself your very obedient servant,

“Henry Pelham.”

“Glenmorris Castle,”

Such was the first public signification of my intentions; it was drawn
up by Mr. Sharpon, our lawyer, and considered by our friends as a
masterpiece: for, as my mother sagely observed, it did not commit me
in a single instance--espoused no principle, and yet professed what all
parties would allow was the best.

At the first house where I called, the proprietor was a clergyman of
good family, who had married a lady from Baker-street: of course the
Reverend Combermere St. Quintin and his wife valued themselves upon
being “genteel.” I arrived at an unlucky moment; on entering the hall, a
dirty footboy was carrying a yellow-ware dish of potatoes into the back
room. Another Ganymede (a sort of footboy major), who opened the door,
and who was still settling himself into his coat, which he had slipped
on at my tintinnabulary summons, ushered me with a mouth full of bread
and cheese into this said back room. I gave up every thing as lost, when
I entered, and saw the lady helping her youngest child to some ineffable
trash, which I have since heard is called “blackberry pudding.” Another
of the tribe was bawling out, with a loud, hungry tone--“A tatoe, pa!”
 The father himself was carving for the little group, with a napkin
stuffed into the top button-hole of his waistcoat, and the mother,
with a long bib, plentifully bespattered with congealing gravy, and the
nectarean liquor of the “blackberry pudding,” was sitting, with a sort
of presiding complacency, on a high stool, like Jupiter on Olympus,
enjoying rather than stilling the confused hubbub of the little domestic
deities, who eat, clattered, spattered, and squabbled around her.

Amidst all this din and confusion, the candidate for the borough of
Buyemall was ushered into the household privacy of the genteel Mr.
and Mrs. St. Quintin. Up started the lady at the sound of my name. The
Reverend Combermere St. Quintin seemed frozen into stone. The plate
between the youngest child and the blackberry-pudding, stood as still as
the sun in Ajalon. The morsel between the mouth of the elder boy and his
fork had a respite from mastication. The Seven Sleepers could not have
been spell-bound more suddenly and completely.

“Ah!” cried I, advancing eagerly, with an air of serious and yet abrupt
gladness; “how deuced lucky that I should find you all at luncheon. I
was up and had finished breakfast so early this morning, that I am half
famished. Only think how fortunate, Hardy (turning round to one of the
members of my committee, who accompanied me); I was just saying what
would I not give to find Mr. St. Quintin at luncheon. Will you allow me,
Madam, to make one of your party?”

Mrs. St. Quintin coloured, and faltered, and muttered out something
which I was fully resolved not to hear. I took a chair, looked round the
table, not too attentively, and said--“Cold veal; ah! ah! nothing I
like so much. May I trouble you, Mr. St. Quintin?--Hollo, my little man,
let’s see if you can’t give me a potatoe. There’s a brave fellow. How
old are you, my young hero?--to look at your mother, I should say two;
to look at you, six.”

“He is four next May,” said his mother, colouring, and this time not
painfully.

“Indeed!” said I, surveying him earnestly; and then, in a graver tone,
I turned to the Reverend Combermere with--“I think you have a branch of
your family still settled in France. I met Monsieur St. Quintin, the Due
de Poictiers, abroad.”

“Yes,” said Mr. Combermere, “yes, the name is still in Normandy, but I
was not aware of the title.”

“No!” said I, with surprise; “and yet (with another look at the boy), it
is astonishing how long family likenesses last. I was a great favourite
with all the Duc’s children. Do you know, I must trouble you for some
more veal, it is so very good, and I am so very hungry.”

“How long have you been abroad?” said Mrs. St. Quintin, who had slipped
off her bib, and smoothed her ringlets; for which purposes I had been
most adroitly looking in an opposite direction the last three minutes.

“About seven or eight months. The fact is, that the continent only does
for us English people to see--not to inhabit; and yet, there are some
advantages there, Mr. St. Quintin!--Among others, that of the due
respect ancient birth is held in. Here, you know, ‘money makes the man,’
as the vulgar proverb has it.”

“Yes,” said Mr. St. Quintin, with a sigh, “it is really dreadful to
see those upstarts rising around us, and throwing every thing that is
respectable and ancient into the back ground. Dangerous times these,
Mr. Pelham--dangerous times; nothing but innovation upon the most
sacred institutions. I am sure, Mr. Pelham, that your principles must be
decidedly against these new-fashioned doctrines, which lead to nothing
but anarchy and confusion--absolutely nothing.”

“I’m delighted to find you so much of my opinion!” said I. “I cannot
endure any thing that leads to anarchy and confusion.”

Here Mr. Combermere glanced at his wife--who rose, called to the
children, and, accompanied by them, gracefully withdrew.

“Now then,” said Mr. Combermere, drawing his chair nearer to
me,--“now, Mr. Pelham, we can discuss these matters. Women are no
politicians,”--and at this sage aphorism, the Rev. Combermere laughed a
low solemn laugh, which could have come from no other lips. After I had
joined in this grave merriment for a second or two--I hemmed thrice, and
with a countenance suited to the subject and the hosts, plunged at once
in medias res.

“Mr. St. Quintin,” said I, “you are already aware, I think, of my
intention of offering myself as a candidate for the borough of Buyemall.
I could not think of such a measure, without calling upon you, the very
first person, to solicit the honour of your vote.” Mr. Combermere looked
pleased, and prepared to reply. “You are the very first person I called
upon,” repeated I.

Mr. Combermere smiled. “Well, Mr. Pelham,” said he, “our families have
long been on the most intimate footing.”

“Ever since” cried I, “ever since Henry the Seventh’s time have the
houses of St. Quintin and Glenmorris been allied. Your ancestors, you
know, were settled in the county before our’s, and my mother assures me
that she has read in some old book or another, a long account of your
forefather’s kind reception of mine at the castle of St. Quintin. I
do trust, Sir, that we have done nothing to forfeit a support so long
afforded us.”

Mr. St. Quintin bowed in speechless gratification; at length he found
voice. “But your principles, Mr. Pelham?”

“Quite your’s, my dear Sir: quite against anarchy and confusion.”

“But the catholic question, Mr. Pelham?”

“Oh! the catholic question,” repeated I, “is a question of great
importance; it won’t be carried--no, Mr. St. Quintin, no, it won’t be
carried; how did you think, my dear Sir, that I could, in so great a
question, act against my conscience?”

I said this with warmth, and Mr. St. Quintin was either too convinced or
too timid to pursue so dangerous a topic any further. I blessed my stars
when he paused, and not giving him time to think of another piece of
debateable ground, continued, “Yes, Mr. St. Quintin, I called upon you
the very first person. Your rank in the county, your ancient birth, to
be sure, demanded it; but I only considered the long, long time the St.
Quintins and Pelhams had been connected.”

“Well,” said the Rev. Combermere, “well, Mr. Pelham, you shall have
my support; and I wish, from my very heart, all success to a young
gentleman of such excellent principles.”



CHAPTER XXXVI.

More voices!

Sic. How now, my masters, have you chosen him? Cit. He has our voices,
Sir!--Coriolanus.

From Mr. Combermere St. Quintin’s, we went to a bluff, hearty, radical
wine-merchant, whom I had very little probability of gaining; but my
success with the clerical Armado had inspirited me, and I did not suffer
myself to fear, though I could scarcely persuade myself to hope. How
exceedingly impossible it is, in governing men, to lay down positive
rules, even where we know the temper of the individual to be gained.
“You must be very stiff and formal with the St. Quintins,” said my
mother. She was right in the general admonition, and had I found them
all seated in the best drawing-room, Mrs. St. Quintin in her best
attire, and the children on their best behaviour, I should have been as
stately as Don Quixote in a brocade dressing-gown; but finding them in
such dishabille, I could not affect too great a plainness and almost
coarseness of bearing, as if I had never been accustomed to any thing
more refined than I found there; nor might I, by any appearance of pride
in myself, put them in mind of the wound their own pride had received.
The difficulty was to blend with this familiarity a certain respect,
just the same as a French ambassador might have testified towards the
august person of George the Third, had he found his Majesty at dinner at
one o’clock, over mutton and turnips.

In overcoming this difficulty, I congratulated myself with as much
zeal and fervour as if I had performed the most important victory; for,
whether it be innocent or sanguinary, in war or at an election, there
is no triumph so gratifying to the viciousness of human nature, as the
conquest of our fellow beings.

But I must return to my wine-merchant, Mr. Briggs. His house was at the
entrance of the town of Buyemall; it stood inclosed in a small garden,
flaming with crocuses and sunflowers, and exhibiting an arbour to the
right, where, in the summer evenings, the respectable owner might be
seen, with his waistcoat unbuttoned, in order to give that just and
rational liberty to the subordinate parts of the human commonwealth
which the increase of their consequence after the hour of dinner,
naturally demands. Nor, in those moments of dignified ease, was
the worthy burgher without the divine inspirations of complacent
contemplation which the weed of Virginia bestoweth. There as he smoked
and puffed, and looked out upon the bright crocuses, and meditated over
the dim recollections of the hesternal journal, did Mr. Briggs revolve
in his mind the vast importance of the borough of Buyemall to the
British empire, and the vast importance of John Briggs to the borough of
Buyemall.

When I knocked at the door a prettyish maidservant opened it with a
smile, and a glance which the vender of wine might probably have
taught her himself after too large potations of his own spirituous
manufactories. I was ushered into a small parlour--where sat, sipping
brandy and water, a short, stout, monosyllabic sort of figure,
corresponding in outward shape to the name of Briggs--even unto a very
nicety.

“Mr. Pelham,” said this gentleman, who was dressed in a brown coat,
white waistcoat, buff-coloured inexpressibles, with long strings, and
gaiters of the same hue and substance as the breeches--“Mr. Pelham,
pray be seated--excuse my rising, I’m like the bishop in the story, Mr.
Pelham, too old to rise;” and Mr. Briggs grunted out a short, quick,
querulous, “he--he--he,” to which, of course, I replied to the best of
my cachinnatory powers.

No sooner, however, did I begin to laugh, than Mr. Briggs stopped
short--eyed me with a sharp, suspicious glance--shook his head, and
pushed back his chair at least four feet from the spot it had hitherto
occupied. Ominous signs, thought I--I must sound this gentleman a little
further, before I venture to treat him as the rest of his species.

“You have a nice situation here, Mr. Briggs,” said I.

“Ah, Mr. Pelham, and a nice vote too, which is somewhat more to your
purpose, I believe.”

‘Oh!’ thought I, ‘I see through you now, Mr. Briggs!’--you must not be
too civil to one who suspects you are going to be civil, in order to
take him in.

“Why,” said I, “Mr. Briggs, to be frank with you, I do call upon you
for the purpose of requesting your vote; give it me, or not, just as
you please. You may be sure I shall not make use of the vulgar
electioneering arts to coax gentlemen out of their votes. I ask you
for your’s as one freeman solicits another: if you think my opponent
a fitter person to represent your borough, give your support to him in
God’s name: if not, and you place confidence in me, I will, at least,
endeavour not to betray it.”

“Well done, Mr. Pelham,” exclaimed Mr. Briggs: “I love candour--you
speak just after my own heart; but you must be aware that one does
not like to be bamboozled out of one’s right of election, by a
smooth-tongued fellow, who sends one to the devil the moment the
election is over--or still worse, to be frightened out of it by some
stiff-necked proud coxcomb, with his pedigree in his hand, and his acres
in his face, thinking he does you a marvellous honour to ask you at
all. Sad times these for this free country, Mr. Pelham, when a parcel of
conceited paupers, like Parson Quinny (as I call that reverend fool, Mr.
Combermere St. Quintin), imagine they have a right to dictate to warm,
honest men, who can buy their whole family out and out. I tell you what,
Mr. Pelham, we shall never do anything for this country till we get
rid of those landed aristocrats, with their ancestry and humbug. I hope
you’re of my mind, Mr. Pelham.”

“Why,” answered I, “there is certainly nothing so respectable in Great
Britain as our commercial interest. A man who makes himself is worth a
thousand men made by their forefathers.”

“Very true, Mr. Pelham,” said the wine-merchant, advancing his chair to
me, and then laying a short, thickset finger upon my arm--he looked
up in my face with an investigating air, and said:--“Parliamentary
Reform--what do you say to that? you’re not an advocate for ancient
abuses, and modern corruption, I hope, Mr. Pelham?”

“By no means,” cried I, with an honest air of indignation--“I have a
conscience, Mr. Briggs, I have a conscience as a public man, no less
than as a private one!”

“Admirable!” cried my host.

“No,” I continued, glowing as I proceeded, “no, Mr. Briggs; I disdain to
talk too much about my principles before they are tried; the proper time
to proclaim them is when they have effected some good by being put into
action. I won’t supplicate your vote, Mr. Briggs, as my opponent may do;
there must be a mutual confidence between my supporters and myself. When
I appear before you a second time, you will have a right to see how
far I have wronged that trust reposed in me as your representative. Mr.
Briggs, I dare say it may seem rude and impolitic to address you in this
manner; but I am a plain, blunt man, and I disdain the vulgar arts of
electioneering, Mr. Briggs.”

“Give us your fist, old boy,” cried the wine merchant, in a transport;
“give us your fist; I promise you my support, and I am delighted to vote
for a young gentleman of such excellent principles.”

So much, dear reader, for Mr. Briggs, who became from that interview
my staunchest supporter. I will not linger longer upon this part of my
career; the above conversations may serve as a sufficient sample of my
electioneering qualifications: and so I shall merely add, that after the
due quantum of dining, drinking, spouting, lying, equivocating, bribing,
rioting, head-breaking, promise-breaking, and--thank the god Mercury,
who presides over elections--chairing of successful candidateship, I
found myself fairly chosen member for the borough of Buyemall.



CHAPTER XXXVII.

Political education is like the keystone to the arch--the strength of
the whole depends upon it.--Encycl. Britt. Sup. Art. “Education.”

I was sitting in the library of Glenmorris Castle, about a week after
all the bustle of contest and the eclat of victory had began to subside,
and quietly dallying with the dry toast, which constituted then, and
does to this day, my ordinary breakfast, when I was accosted by the
following speech from my uncle.

“Henry, your success has opened to you a new career: I trust you intend
to pursue it?”

“Certainly,” was my answer.

“But you know, my dear Henry, that though you have great talents, which,
I confess, I was surprised in the course of the election to discover,
yet they want that careful cultivation, which, in order to shine in the
House of Commons, they must receive. Entre nous, Henry; a litle reading
would do you no harm.”

“Very well,” said I, “suppose I begin with Walter Scott’s novels; I am
told they are extremely entertaining.”

“True,” answered my uncle, “but they don’t contain the most accurate
notions of history, or the soundest principles of political philosophy
in the world. What did you think of doing to-day, Henry?”

“Nothing!” said I very innocently.

“I should conceive that to be an usual answer of yours, Henry, to any
similar question.”

“I think it is,” replied I, with great naivete.

“Well, then, let us have the breakfast things taken away, and do
something this morning.”

“Willingly,” said I, ringing the bell.

The table was cleared, and my uncle began his examination. Little,
poor man, had he thought, from my usual bearing and the character of my
education, that in general literature there were few subjects on which
I was not to the full as well read as himself. I enjoyed his surprise,
when little by little he began to discover the extent of my information,
but I was mortified to find it was only surprise, not delight.

“You have,” said he, “a considerable store of learning; far more than
I could possibly have imagined you possessed; but it is knowledge not
learning, in which I wish you to be skilled. I would rather, in order
to gift you with the former, that you were more destitute of the latter.
The object of education, is to instil principles which are hereafter
to guide and instruct us; facts are only desirable, so far as they
illustrate those principles; principles ought therefore to precede
facts! What then can we think of a system which reverses this evident
order, overloads the memory with facts, and those of the most doubtful
description, while it leaves us entirely in the dark with regard to
the principles which could alone render this heterogeneous mass of
any advantage or avail? Learning without knowledge, is but a bundle of
prejudices; a lumber of inert matter set before the threshold of the
understanding to the exclusion of common sense. Pause for a moment,
and recal those of your contemporaries, who are generally considered
well-informed; tell me if their information has made them a whit the
wiser; if not, it is only sanctified ignorance. Tell me if names with
them are not a sanction for opinion; quotations, the representatives of
axioms? All they have learned only serves as an excuse for all they are
ignorant of. In one month, I will engage that you shall have a juster
and deeper insight into wisdom, than they have been all their lives
acquiring; the great error of education is to fill the mind first with
antiquated authors, and then to try the principles of the present day by
the authorities and maxims of the past. We will pursue for our plan, the
exact reverse of the ordinary method. We will learn the doctrines of the
day, as the first and most necessary step, and we will then glance over
those which have passed away, as researches rather curious than useful.

“You see this very small pamphlet; it is a paper by Mr. Mills, upon
Government. We will know this thoroughly, and when we have done so, we
may rest assured that we have a far more accurate information upon the
head and front of all political knowledge, than two-thirds of the young
men whose cultivation of mind you have usually heard panegyrized.”

So saying, my uncle opened the pamphlet. He pointed out to me its close
and mathematical reasoning, in which no flaw could be detected, nor
deduction controverted: and he filled up, as we proceeded, from the
science of his own clear and enlarged mind, the various parts which the
political logician had left for reflection to complete. My uncle had
this great virtue of an expositor, that he never over-explained; he
never made a parade of his lecture, nor confused what was simple by
unnecessary comment.

When we broke off our first day’s employment, I was quite astonished at
the new light which had gleamed upon me. I felt like Sinbad, the sailor,
when, in wandering through the cavern in which he had been buried alive,
he caught the first glimpse of the bright day. Naturally eager in every
thing I undertook, fond of application, and addicted to reflect over the
various bearings of any object that once engrossed my attention, I made
great advance in my new pursuit. After my uncle had brought me to be
thoroughly conversant with certain and definite principles, we proceeded
to illustrate them from fact. For instance, when we had finished the
“Essay upon Government,” we examined into the several constitutions of
England, British America, and France; the three countries which pretend
the most to excellence in their government: and we were enabled to
perceive and judge the defects and merits of each, because we had,
previous to our examination, established certain rules, by which they
were to be investigated and tried. Here my sceptical indifference to
facts was my chief reason for readily admitting knowledge. I had no
prejudices to contend with; no obscure notions gleaned from the past; no
popular maxims cherished as truths. Every thing was placed before me as
before a wholly impartial inquirer--freed from all the decorations and
delusions of sects and parties, every argument was stated with logical
precision--every opinion referred to a logical test. Hence, in a very
short time, I owned the justice of my uncle’s assurance, as to the
comparative concentration of knowledge. We went over the whole of
Mills’s admirable articles in the encyclopaedia, over the more popular
works of Bentham, and thence we plunged into the recesses of political
economy. I know not why this study has been termed uninteresting. No
sooner had I entered upon its consideration, than I could scarcely tear
myself from it. Never from that moment to this have I ceased to pay it
the most constant attention, not so much as a study as an amusement; but
at that time my uncle’s object was not to make me a profound political
economist. “I wish,” said he, “merely to give you an acquaintance with
the principles of the science; not that you may be entitled to boast of
knowledge, but that you may be enabled to avoid ignorance; not that
you may discover truth, but that you may detect error. Of all sciences,
political economy is contained in the fewest books, and yet is the most
difficult to master; because all its higher branches require earnestness
of reflection, proportioned to the scantiness of reading. Mrs. Marsett’s
elementary work, together with some conversational enlargement on the
several topics she treats of, will be enough for our present purpose. I
wish, then, to show you, how inseparably allied is the great science
of public policy with that of private morality. And this, Henry, is the
grandest object of all. Now to our present study.”

Well, gentle Reader, (I love, by the by, as you already perceive, that
old-fashioned courtesy of addressing you)--well, to finish this part of
my life which, as it treats rather of my attempts at reformation than my
success in error, must begin to weary you exceedingly, I acquired,
more from my uncle’s conversation than the books we read, a sufficient
acquaintance with the elements of knowledge, to satisfy myself, and to
please my instructor. And I must say, in justification of my studies and
my tutor, that I derived one benefit from them which has continued with
me to this hour--viz. I obtained a clear knowledge of moral principle.
Before that time, the little ability I possessed only led me into acts,
which, I fear, most benevolent Reader, thou hast already sufficiently
condemned: my good feelings--for I was not naturally bad--never availed
me the least when present temptation came into my way. I had no guide
but passion; no rule but the impulse of the moment. What else could have
been the result of my education? If I was immoral, it was because I was
never taught morality. Nothing, perhaps, is less innate than virtue. I
own that the lessons of my uncle did not work miracles--that, living in
the world, I have not separated myself from its errors and its follies:
the vortex was too strong--the atmosphere too contagious; but I have
at least avoided the crimes into which my temper would most likely have
driven me. I ceased to look upon the world as a game one was to play
fairly, if possible--but where a little cheating was readily allowed;
I no longer divorced the interests of other men from my own: if I
endeavoured to blind them, it was neither by unlawful means, nor for
a purely selfish end:--if--but come, Henry Pelham, thou hast praised
thyself enough for the present; and, after all, thy future adventures
will best tell if thou art really amended.



CHAPTER XXXVIII.

Mihi jam non regia Roma, Sed vacuum Tibur placet.--Horace.

“My dear child,” said my mother to me, affectionately, “you must be very
much bored here, pour dire vrai, I am so myself. Your uncle is a very
good man, but he does not make his house pleasant; and I have, lately,
been very much afraid that he should convert you into a mere bookworm;
after all, my dear Henry, you are quite clever enough to trust to your
own ability. Your great geniuses never read.”

“True, my dear mother,” said I, with a most unequivocal yawn, and
depositing on the table Mr. Bentham upon Popular Fallacies; “true, and
I am quite of your opinion. Did you see in the Post of this morning, how
full Cheltenham was?”

“Yes, Henry; and now you mention it, I don’t think you could do better
than to go there for a month or two. As for me, I must return to your
father, whom I left at Lord H--‘s: a place, entre nous, very little more
amusing than this--but then one does get one’s ecarte table, and that
dear Lady Roseville, your old acquaintance, is staying there.”

“Well,” said I, musingly, “suppose we take our departure the beginning
of next week?--our way will be the same as far as London, and the plea
of attending you will be a good excuse to my uncle, for proceeding no
farther in these confounded books.”

“C’est une affaire finie,” replied my mother, “and I will speak to your
uncle myself.”

Accordingly the necessary disclosure of our intentions was made. Lord
Glenmorris received it with proper indifference, so far as my mother was
concerned; but expressed much pain at my leaving him so soon. However,
when he found I was not so much gratified as honoured by his wishes for
my longer sejour, he gave up the point with a delicacy that enchanted
me.

The morning of our departure arrived. Carriage at the door--bandboxes in
the passage--breakfast on the table--myself in my great coat--my uncle
in his great chair. “My dear boy,” said he, “I trust we shall meet again
soon: you have abilities that may make you capable of effecting much
good to your fellow-creatures; but you are fond of the world, and,
though not averse to application, devoted to pleasure, and likely to
pervert the gifts you possess. At all events, you have now learned, both
as a public character and a private individual, the difference between
good and evil. Make but this distinction, that whereas, in political
science, though the rules you have learned be fixed and unerring, yet
the application of them must vary with time and circumstance. We must
bend, temporize, and frequently withdraw, doctrines, which, invariable
in their truth, the prejudices of the time will not invariably allow,
and even relinquish a faint hope of obtaining a great good, for the
certainty of obtaining a lesser; yet in the science of private morals,
which relate for the main part to ourselves individually, we have no
right to deviate one single iota from the rule of our conduct. Neither
time nor circumstance must cause us to modify or to change. Integrity
knows no variation; honesty no shadow of turning. We must pursue the
same course--stern and uncompromising--in the full persuasion that the
path of right is like the bridge from earth to heaven, in the Mahometan
creed--if we swerve but a single hair’s breadth, we are irrevocably
lost.”

At this moment my mother joined us, with a “Well, my dear Henry, every
thing is ready--we have no time to lose.”

My uncle rose, pressed my hand, and left in it a pocket-book, which I
afterwards discovered to be most satisfactorily furnished. We took an
edifying and affectionate farewell of each other, passed through the
two rows of servants, drawn up in martial array, along the great hall,
entered the carriage, and went off with the rapidity of a novel upon
“fashionable life.”



CHAPTER XXXIX.

Dic--si grave non est--Quae prima iratum ventrem placaverit esca.
--Horace.

I did not remain above a day or two in town. I had never seen much of
the humours of a watering-place, and my love of observing character
made me exceedingly impatient for that pleasure. Accordingly, the first
bright morning I set off for Cheltenham. I was greatly struck with the
entrance to that town: it is to these watering-places that a foreigner
should be taken, in order to give him an adequate idea of the
magnificent opulence, and universal luxury, of England. Our country has,
in every province, what France only has in Paris--a capital, consecrated
to gaiety, idleness, and enjoyment. London is both too busy in one class
of society, and too pompous in another, to please a foreigner, who
has not excellent recommendations to private circles. But at Brighton,
Cheltenham, Hastings, Bath, he may, as at Paris, find all the gaieties
of society without knowing a single individual.

My carriage stopped at the--Hotel. A corpulent and stately waiter, with
gold buckles to a pair of very tight pantaloons, showed me up stairs. I
found myself in a tolerable room facing the street, and garnished
with two pictures of rocks and rivers, with a comely flight of crows,
hovering in the horizon of both, as natural as possible, only they were
a little larger than the trees. Over the chimney-piece, where I had
fondly hoped to find a looking-glass, was a grave print of General
Washington, with one hand stuck out like the spout of a tea-pot. Between
the two windows (unfavourable position!) was an oblong mirror, to which
I immediately hastened, and had the pleasure of seeing my complexion
catch the colour of the curtains that overhung the glass on each side,
and exhibit the pleasing rurality of a pale green.

I shrunk back aghast, turned, and beheld the waiter. Had I seen myself
in a glass delicately shaded by rose-hued curtains, I should gently and
smilingly have said, “Have the goodness to bring me the bill of fare.”
 As it was, I growled out, “Bring me the bill, and be d--d to you.”

The stiff waiter bowed solemnly, and withdrew slowly. I looked round the
room once more, and discovered the additional adornments of a tea-urn,
and a book. “Thank Heaven,” thought I, as I took up the latter, “it
can’t be one of Jeremy Bentham’s.” No! it was the Cheltenham Guide. I
turned to the head of amusements--“Dress ball at the rooms every--” some
day or other--which of the seven I utterly forget; but it was the same
as that which witnessed my first arrival in the small drawing-room of
the--Hotel.

“Thank Heaven!” said I to myself, as Bedos entered with my things, and
was ordered immediately to have all in preparation for “the dressball
at the rooms,” at the hour of half-past ten. The waiter entered with the
bill. “Soups, chops, cutlets, steaks, roast joints, birds.”

“Get some soup,” said I, “a slice or two of lion, and half a dozen
birds.”

“Sir,” said the solemn waiter, “you can’t have less than a whole lion,
and we have only two birds in the house.”

“Pray,” asked I, “are you in the habit of supplying your larder from
Exeter ‘Change, or do you breed lions here like poultry?”

“Sir,” answered the grim waiter, never relaxing into a smile, “we have
lions brought us from the country every day.”

“What do you pay for them?” said I.

“About three and sixpence a-piece, Sir.”

“Humph!--market in Africa overstocked,” thought I.

“Pray, how do you dress an animal of that description?”

“Roast and stuff him, Sir, and serve him up with currant jelly.”

“What! like a hare?”

“It is a hare, Sir.”

“What!”

“Yes, Sir, it is a hare! [Note: I have since learned, that this custom
of calling a hare a lion is not peculiar to Cheltenham. At that time
I was utterly unacquainted with the regulations of the London
coffee-houses.]--but we call it a lion, because of the Game Laws.”

‘Bright discovery,’ thought I; ‘they have a new language in Cheltenham:
nothing’s like travelling to enlarge the mind.’ “And the birds,” said I,
aloud, “are neither humming birds, nor ostriches, I suppose?”

“No, Sir; they are partridges.”

“Well, then, give me some soup; a cotelette de mouton, and a ‘bird,’ as
you term it, and be quick about it.”

“It shall be done with dispatch,” answered the pompous attendant, and
withdrew.

Is there, in the whole course of this pleasant and varying life, which
young gentlemen and ladies write verses to prove same and sorrowful,--is
there, in the whole course of it, one half-hour really and genuinely
disagreeable?--if so, it is the half-hour before dinner at a strange
inn. Nevertheless, by the help of philosophy and the window, I managed
to endure it with great patience: and though I was famishing with
hunger, I pretended the indifference of a sage, even when the dinner was
at length announced. I coquetted a whole minute with my napkin, before I
attempted the soup, and I helped myself to the potatory food with a slow
dignity that must have perfectly won the heart of the solemn waiter. The
soup was a little better than hot water, and the sharp sauced cotelette
than leather and vinegar; howbeit, I attacked them with the vigour of
an Irishman, and washed them down with a bottle of the worst liquor ever
dignified with the venerabile nomen of claret. The bird was tough enough
to have passed for an ostrich in miniature; and I felt its ghost hopping
about the stomachic sepulchre to which I consigned it, the whole of that
evening and a great portion of the next day, when a glass of curacoa
laid it at rest.

After this splendid repast, I flung myself back on my chair with the
complacency of a man who has dined well, and dozed away the time till
the hour of dressing.

“Now,” thought I, as I placed myself before my glass, “shall I gently
please, or sublimely astonish the ‘fashionables’ of Cheltenham? Ah, bah!
the latter school is vulgar, Byron spoilt it. Don’t put out that chain,
Bedos--I wear--the black coat, waistcoat, and trowsers. Brush my hair as
much out of curl as you can, and give an air of graceful negligence to
my tout ensemble.”

“Oui, Monsieur, je comprends,” answered Bedos.

I was soon dressed, for it is the design, not the execution, of all
great undertakings which requires deliberation and delay. Action cannot
be too prompt. A chair was called, and Henry Pelham was conveyed to the
rooms.



CHAPTER XL.

Now see, prepared to lead the sprightly dance, The lovely nymphs, and
well dressed youths advance: The spacious room receives its jovial
guest, And the floor shakes with pleasing weight oppressed.--Art of
Dancing.

Page. His name, my lord, is Tyrrell.--Richard III.

Upon entering, I saw several heads rising and sinking, to the tune
of “Cherry ripe.” A whole row of stiff necks, in cravats of the most
unexceptionable length and breadth, were just before me. A tall thin
young man, with dark wiry hair brushed on one side, was drawing on a
pair of white Woodstock gloves, and affecting to look round the room
with the supreme indifference of bon ton.

“Ah, Ritson,” said another young Cheltenhamian to him of the Woodstock
gauntlets, “hav’n’t you been dancing yet?”

“No, Smith, ‘pon honour!” answered Mr. Ritson; “it is so overpoweringly
hot; no fashionable man dances now;--it isn’t the thing.”

“Why,” replied Mr. Smith, who was a good-natured looking person, with
a blue coat and brass buttons, a gold pin in his neckcloth, and
kneebreeches, “why, they dance at Almack’s, don’t they?”

“No, ‘pon honour,” murmured Mr. Ritson; “no, they just walk a quadrille
or spin a waltz, as my friend, Lord Bobadob, calls it, nothing more--no,
hang dancing, ‘tis so vulgar.”

A stout, red-faced man, about thirty, with wet auburn hair, a
marvellously fine waistcoat, and a badly-washed frill, now joined
Messrs. Ritson and Smith.

“Ah, Sir Ralph,” cried Smith, “how d’ye do? been hunting all day, I
suppose?”

“Yes, old cock,” replied Sir Ralph; “been after the brush till I am
quite done up; such a glorious run. By G--, you should have seen my grey
mare, Smith; by G--, she’s a glorious fencer.”

“You don’t hunt, do you, Ritson?” interrogated Mr. Smith.

“Yes, I do,” replied Mr. Ritson, affectedly playing with his Woodstock
glove; “yes, but I only hunt in Leicestershire with my friend, Lord
Bobadob; ‘tis not the thing to hunt any where else, ‘tis so vulgar.”

Sir Ralph stared at the speaker with mute contempt: while Mr. Smith,
like the ass between the hay, stood balancing betwixt the opposing
merits of the baronet and the beau. Meanwhile, a smiling, nodding,
affected female thing, in ringlets and flowers, flirted up to the trio.

“Now, reelly, Mr. Smith, you should deence; a feeshionable young man,
like you--I don’t know what the young leedies will say to you.” And the
fair seducer laughed bewitchingly.

“You are very good, Mrs. Dollimore,” replied Mr. Smith, with a blush and
a low bow; “but Mr. Ritson tells me it is not the thing to dance.”

“Oh,” cried Mrs. Dollimore, “but then he’s seech a naughty, conceited
creature--don’t follow his example, Meester Smith;” and again the good
lady laughed immoderately.

“Nay, Mrs. Dollimore,” said Mr. Ritson, passing his hand through his
abominable hair, “you are too severe; but tell me, Mrs. Dollimore, is
the Countess St. A--coming here?”

“Now, reelly, Mr. Ritson, you, who are the pink of feeshion, ought to
know better than I can; but I hear so.”

“Do you know the countess?” said Mr. Smith, in respectful surprise, to
Ritson.

“Oh, very well,” replied the Coryphaeus of Cheltenham, swinging his
Woodstock glove to and fro; “I have often danced with her at Almack’s.”

“Is she a good deencer?” asked Mrs. Dollimore.

“O, capital,” responded Mr. Ritson; “she’s such a nice genteel little
figure.”

Sir Ralph, apparently tired of this “feeshionable” conversation,
swaggered away.

“Pray,” said Mrs. Dollimore, “who is that geentleman?”

“Sir Ralph Rumford,” replied Smith, eagerly, “a particular friend of
mine at Cambridge.”

“I wonder if he’s going to make a long steey?” said Mrs. Dollimore.

“Yes, I believe so,” replied Mr. Smith, “if we make it agreeable to
him.”

“You must positively introduce him to me,” said Mrs. Dollimore.

“I will, with great pleasure,” said the good-natured Mr. Smith.

“Is Sir Ralph a man of fashion?” inquired Mr. Ritson.

“He’s a baronet!” emphatically pronounced Mr. Smith.

“Ah!” replied Ritson, “but he may be a man of rank, without being a man
of fashion.”

“True,” lisped Mrs. Dollimore.

“I don’t know,” replied Smith, with an air of puzzled wonderment, “but
he has L7,000. a-year.”

“Has he, indeed?” cried Mrs. Dollimore, surprised into her natural tone
of voice; and, at that moment, a young lady, ringletted and flowered
like herself, joined her, and accosted her by the endearing appellation
of “Mamma.”

“Have you been dancing, my love?” inquired Mrs. Dollimore.

“Yes, ma; with Captain Johnson.”

“Oh,” said the mother, with a toss of her head; and giving her daughter
a significant push, she walked away with her to another end of the room,
to talk about Sir Ralph Rumford, and his seven thousand pounds a-year.

“Well!” thought I, “odd people these; let us enter a little farther into
this savage country.” In accordance with this reflection, I proceeded
towards the middle of the room.

“Who’s that?” said Mr. Smith, in a loud whisper, as I passed him.

“‘Pon honour,” answered Ritson, “I don’t know! but he’s a deuced neat
looking fellow, quite genteel.”

“Thank you, Mr. Ritson,” said my vanity; “you are not so offensive after
all.”

I paused to look at the dancers; a middle-aged, respectable looking
gentleman was beside me. Common people, after they have passed forty,
grow social. My neighbour hemmed twice, and made preparation for
speaking. “I may as well encourage him,” was my reflection; accordingly
I turned round, with a most good-natured expression of countenance.

“A fine room this, Sir,” said the man immediately.

“Very,” said I, with a smile, “and extremely well filled.”

“Ah, Sir,” answered my neighbour, “Cheltenham is not as it used to be
some fifteen years ago. I have seen as many as one thousand two hundred
and fifty persons within these walls;” (certain people are always so
d--d particularizing,) “ay, Sir,” pursued my laudator temporis acti,
“and half the peerage here into the bargain.”

“Indeed!” quoth I, with an air of surprise suited to the information I
received, “but the society is very good still, is it not?”

“Oh, very genteel,” replied the man; “but not so dashing as it used to
be.” (Oh! those two horrid words! low enough to suit even the author
of”--.”)

“Pray,” asked I, glancing at Messrs. Ritson and Smith, “do you know who
those gentlemen are?”

“Extremely well!” replied my neighbour: “the tall young man is Mr.
Ritson; his mother has a house in Baker-street, and gives quite elegant
parties. He’s a most genteel young man; but such an insufferable
coxcomb.”

“And the other?” said I.

“Oh! he’s a Mr. Smith; his father was an eminent merchant, and is lately
dead, leaving each of his sons thirty thousand pounds; the young Smith
is a knowing hand, and wants to spend his money with spirit. He has a
great passion for ‘high life,’ and therefore attaches himself much to
Mr. Ritson, who is quite that way inclined.”

“He could not have selected a better model,” said I.

“True,” rejoined my Cheltenham Asmodeus, with naive simplicity; “but I
hope he won’t adopt his conceit as well as his elegance.”

“I shall die,” said I to myself, “if I talk with this fellow any
longer,” and I was just going to glide away, when a tall, stately
dowager, with two lean, scraggy daughters, entered the room; I could not
resist pausing to inquire who they were.

My friend looked at me with a very altered and disrespectful air at this
interrogation. “Who?” said he, “why, the Countess of Babbleton, and her
two daughters, the Honourable Lady Jane Babel, and the Honourable Lady
Mary Babel. They are the great people of Cheltenham,” pursued he, “and
it’s a fine thing to get into their set.”

Meanwhile Lady Babbleton and her two daughters swept up the room, bowing
and nodding to the riven ranks on each side, who made their salutations
with the most profound respect. My experienced eye detected in a moment
that Lady Babbleton, in spite of her title and her stateliness, was
exceedingly the reverse of good ton, and the daughters (who did not
resemble the scrag of mutton, but its ghost) had an appearance of sour
affability, which was as different from the manners of proper society,
as it possibly could be.

I wondered greatly who and what they were. In the eyes of the
Cheltenhamians, they were the countess and her daughters; and any
further explanation would have been deemed quite superfluous; further
explanation I was, however, determined to procure, and was walking
across the room in profound meditation as to the method in which the
discovery should be made, when I was startled by the voice of Sir Lionel
Garrett: I turned round, and to my inexpressible joy, beheld that worthy
baronet.

“God bless me, Pelham,” said he, “how delighted I am to see you. Lady
Harriett, here’ your old favourite, Mr. Pelham.”

Lady Harriet was all smiles and pleasure. “Give me your arm,” said she;
“I must go and speak to Lady Babbleton--odious woman!”

“Do, my dear Lady Harriett,” said I, “explain to me what Lady Babbleton
was?”

“Why--she was a milliner, and took in the late lord, who was an
idiot.--Voila tout!”

“Perfectly satisfactory,” replied I.

“Or, short and sweet, as Lady Babbleton would say,” replied Lady
Harriett, laughing.

“In antithesis to her daughters, who are long and sour.”

“Oh, you satirist!” said the affected Lady Harriett (who was only three
removes better than the Cheltenham countess); “but tell me, how long
have you been at Cheltenham?”

“About four hours and a half!”

“Then you don’t know any of the lions here?”

“None.”

“Well, let me dispatch Lady Babbleton, and I’ll then devote myself to
being your nomenclator.”

We walked up to Lady Babbleton, who had already disposed of her
daughters, and was sitting in solitary dignity at the end of the room.

“My dear Lady Babbleton,” cried Lady Harriett, taking both the hands of
the dowager, “I am so glad to see you, and how well you are looking; and
your charming daughters, how are they?--sweet girls!--and how long have
you been here?”

“We have only just come,” replied the cidevant milliner, half rising
and rustling her plumes in stately agitation, like a nervous parrot; “we
must conform to modern ours, Lady Arriett, though for my part, I like
the old-fashioned plan of dining early, and finishing one’s gaieties
before midnight; but I set the fashion of good ours as well as I can. I
think it’s a duty we owe to society, Lady Arriett, to encourage morality
by our own example. What else do we have rank for?” And, so saying,
the counter countess drew herself up with a most edifying air of moral
dignity.

Lady Harriett looked at me, and perceiving that my eye said “go on,” as
plain as eye could possibly speak, she continued--“Which of the wells do
you attend, Lady Babbleton?”

“All,” replied the patronizing dowager. “I like to encourage the poor
people here; I’ve no notion of being proud because one has a title, Lady
Arriett.”

“No,” rejoined the worthy helpmate of Sir Lionel Garrett; “every body
talks of your condescension, Lady Babbleton; but are you not afraid of
letting yourself down by going every where?”

“Oh,” answered the countess, “I admit very few into my set, at home,
but I go out promiscuously;” and then, looking at me, she said, in a
whisper, to Lady Harriett, “Who is that nice young gentleman?”

“Mr. Pelham,” replied Lady Harriett; and, turning to me, formally
introduced us to each other.

“Are you any relation (asked the dowager) to Lady Frances Pelham?”

“Only her son,” said I.

“Dear me,” replied Lady Babbleton, “how odd; what a nice elegant woman
she is! She does not go much out, does she? I don’t often meet her.”

“I should not think it likely that your ladyship did meet her much. She
does not visit promiscuously.”

“Every rank has its duty,” said Lady Harriett, gravely; “your mother,
Mr. Pelham, may confine her circle as much as she pleases; but the high
rank of Lady Babbleton requires greater condescension; just as the Dukes
of Sussex and Gloucester go to many places where you and I would not.”

“Very true!” said the innocent dowager; “and that’s a very sensible
remark! Were you at Bath last winter, Mr. Pelham?” continued the
countess, whose thoughts wandered from subject to subject in the most
rudderless manner.

“No, Lady Babbleton, I was unfortunately at a less distinguished place.”

“What was that?”

“Paris!”

“Oh, indeed! I’ve never been abroad; I don’t think persons of a certain
rank should leave England; they should stay at home and encourage their
own manufactories.”

“Ah!” cried I, taking hold of Lady Babbleton’s shawl, “what a pretty
Manchester pattern this is.”

“Manchester pattern!” exclaimed the petrified peeress; “why it is real
cachemere: you don’t think I wear any thing English, Mr. Pelham?”

“I beg your ladyship ten thousand pardons. I am no judge of dress; but
to return--I am quite of your opinion, that we ought to encourage our
own manufactories, and not go abroad: but one cannot stay long on the
Continent, even if one is decoyed there. One soon longs for home again.”

“Very sensibly remarked,” rejoined Lady Babbleton: “that’s what I call
true patriotism and morality. I wish all the young men of the present
day were like you. Oh, dear!--here’s a great favourite of mine coming
this way--Mr. Ritson!--do you know him; shall I introduce you?”

“God forbid!” exclaimed I--frightened out of my wits, and my manners.
“Come, Lady Harriett, let us rejoin Sir Lionel;” and, “swift at the
word,” Lady Harriett retook my arm, nodded her adieu to Lady Babbleton,
and withdrew with me to an obscurer part of the room.

Here we gave way to our laughter for some time, till, at last, getting
weary of the Cheltenham Cleopatra, I reminded Lady Harriett of her
promise to name to me the various personages of the assemblage.

“Eh bien,” began Lady Harriett; “d’abord, you observe that very short
person, somewhat more than inclined to enbonpoint?”

“What, that thing like a Chinese tumbler--that peg of old clothes--that
one foot square of mortality, with an aquatic-volucrine face, like a
spoonbill?”

“The very same,” said Lady Harriett, laughing; “she is a Lady Gander.
She professes to be a patroness of literature, and holds weekly soirees
in London, for all the newspaper poets. She also falls in love every
year, and then she employs her minstrels to write sonnets: her son has
a most filial tenderness for a jointure of L10,000. a-year, which she
casts away on these feasts and follies; and, in order to obtain it,
declares the good lady to be insane. Half of her friends he has bribed,
or persuaded, to be of his opinion: the other half stoutly maintain her
rationality; and, in fact, she herself is divided in her own opinion as
to the case; for she is in the habit of drinking to a most unsentimental
excess, and when the fit of intoxication is upon her, she confesses to
the charge brought against her--supplicates for mercy and brandy, and
totters to bed with the air of a Magdalene; but when she recovers the
next morning, the whole scene is changed; she is an injured woman, a
persecuted saint, a female Sophocles--declared to be mad only because
she is a miracle. Poor Harry Darlington called upon her in town, the
other day; he found her sitting in a large chair, and surrounded by a
whole host of hangers-on, who were disputing by no means sotto voce,
whether Lady Gander was mad or not? Henry was immediately appealed
to:--‘Now, is not this a proof of insanity?’ said one.--‘Is not this
a mark of compos mentis?’ cried another. ‘I appeal to you, Mr.
Darlington,’ exclaimed all. Meanwhile the object of the conversation
sate in a state of maudlin insensibility, turning her head, first on one
side, and then on the other; and nodding to all the disputants, as if
agreeing with each. But enough of her. Do you observe that lady in--”

“Good heavens!” exclaimed I, starting up, “is that--can that be
Tyrrell?”

“What’s the matter with the man?” cried Lady Harriett.

I quickly recovered my presence of mind, and reseated myself: “Pray
forgive me, Lady Harriett,” said I; “but I think, nay, I am sure, I see
a person I once met under very particular circumstances. Do you observe
that dark man in deep mourning, who has just entered the room, and is
now speaking to Sir Ralph Rumford?”

“I do, it is Sir John Tyrrell!” replied Lady Harriett: “he only came to
Cheltenham yesterday. His is a very singular history.”

“What is it?” said I, eagerly.

“Why! he was the only son of a younger branch of the Tyrrells; a very
old family, as the name denotes. He was a great deal in a certain roue
set, for some years, and was celebrated for his affaires du coeur. His
fortune was, however, perfectly unable to satisfy his expenses; he took
to gambling, and lost the remains of his property. He went abroad,
and used to be seen at the low gaming houses at Paris, earning a very
degraded and precarious subsistence; till, about three months ago, two
persons, who stood between him and the title and estates of the family,
died, and most unexpectedly he succeeded to both. They say that he was
found in the most utter penury and distress, in a small cellar at Paris;
however that may be, he is now Sir John Tyrrell, with a very large
income, and in spite of a certain coarseness of manner, probably
acquired by the low company he latterly kept, he is very much liked, and
even admired by the few good people in the society of Cheltenham.”

At this instant Tyrrell passed us; he caught my eye, stopped short, and
coloured violently. I bowed; he seemed undecided for a moment as to
the course he should adopt; it was but for a moment. He returned my
salutation with great appearance of cordiality; shook me warmly by
the hand; expressed himself delighted to meet me; inquired where I was
staying, and said he should certainly call upon me. With this promise he
glided on, and was soon lost among the crowd.

“Where did you meet him?” said Lady Harriett.

“At Paris.”

“What! was he in decent society there?”

“I don’t know,” said I. “Good night, Lady Harriett;” and, with an air of
extreme lassitude, I took my hat, and vanished from that motley mixture
of the fashionably low and the vulgarly genteel!



CHAPTER XLI.

Full many a lady I have eyed with best regard, and many a time The
harmony of their tongues hath unto bondage Drawn my too diligent eyes.
But you, oh! you, So perfect and so peerless, are created Of every
creature’s best.--Shakspeare.

Thou wilt easily conceive, my dear reader, who hast been in my
confidence throughout the whole of this history, and whom, though as yet
thou hast cause to esteem me but lightly, I already love as my familiar
and my friend--thou wilt easily conceive my surprise at meeting so
unexpectedly with my old hero of the gambling house. I felt indeed
perfectly stunned at the shock of so singular a change in his
circumstances since I had last met him. My thoughts reverted immediately
to that scene, and to the mysterious connection between Tyrrell and
Glanville. How would the latter receive the intelligence of his enemy’s
good fortune? was his vengeance yet satisfied, or through what means
could it now find vent?

A thousand thoughts similar to these occupied and distracted my
attention till morning, when I summoned Bedos into the room to read me
to sleep. He opened a play of Monsieur Delavigne’s, and at the beginning
of the second scene I was in the land of dreams.

I woke about two o’clock; dressed, sipped my chocolate, and was on the
point of arranging my hat to the best advantage, when I received the
following note:

“My Dear Pelham,

“Me tibi commendo. I heard this morning, at your hotel, that you were
here; my heart was a house of joy at the intelligence. I called upon you
two hours ago; but, like Antony, ‘you revel long o’ nights.’ Ah, that
I could add with Shakspeare, that you were ‘notwithstanding up.’ I have
just come from Paris, that umbilicus terrae, and my adventures since I
saw you, for your private satisfaction, ‘because I love you, I will let
you know;’ but you must satisfy me with a meeting. Till you do, ‘the
mighty gods defend you!’

“Vincent.”

The hotel from which Vincent dated this epistle, was in the same street
as my own caravansera, and to this hotel I immediately set off. I found
my friend sitting before a huge folio, which he in vain endeavoured to
persuade me that he seriously intended to read. We greeted each other
with the greatest cordiality.

“But how,” said Vincent, after the first warmth of welcome had subsided,
“how shall I congratulate you upon your new honours? I was not prepared
to find you grown from a roue into a senator.

“‘In gathering votes you were not slack, Now stand as tightly by your
tack, Ne’er show your lug an’ fidge your back, An’ hum an’ haw; But
raise your arm, an’ tell your crack Before them a’.’

“So saith Burns; advice which, being interpreted, meaneth, that you must
astonish the rats of St. Stephen’s.”

“Alas!” said I, “all one’s clap-traps in that house must be baited.”

“Nay, but a rat bites at any cheese, from Gloucester to Parmasan, and
you can easily scrape up a bit of some sort. Talking of the House,
do you see, by the paper, that the civic senator, Alderman W--, is at
Cheltenham?”

“I was not aware of it. I suppose he’s cramming speeches and turtle for
the next season.”

“How wonderfully,” said Vincent, “your city dignities unloose the
tongue: directly a man has been a mayor, he thinks himself qualified for
a Tully at least. Faith, Venables asked me one day, what was the
Latin for spouting? and I told him, ‘hippomanes, or a raging humour in
mayors.’”

After I had paid, through the medium of my risible muscles, due homage
to this witticism of Vincent’s, he shut up his folio, called for his
hat, and we sauntered down into the street. As we passed by one of the
libraries, a whole mob of the dandies of the last night were lounging
about the benches placed before the shop windows.

“Pray, Vincent,” said I, “remark those worthies, and especially that
tall meagre youth in the blue frock-coat, and the buff waistcoat; he is
Mr. Ritson, the De Rous (viz. the finished gentleman) of the place.”

“I see him,” answered Vincent: “he seems a most happy mixture of native
coarseness and artificial decoration. He puts me in mind of the picture
of the great ox set in a gilt frame.”

“Or a made dish in Bloomsbury-square, garnished with cut carrots, by way
of adornment,” said I.

“Or a flannel petticoat, with a fine crape over it,” added Vincent.
“Well, well, these imitators are, after all, not worse than the
originals. When do you go up to town?”

“Not till my senatorial duties require me.”

“Do you stay here till then?”

“As it pleases the gods. But, good Heavens! Vincent, what a beautiful
girl!”

Vincent turned. “O Dea certe,” murmured he, and stopped.

The object of our exclamations was standing by a corner shop, apparently
waiting for some one within. Her face, at the moment I first saw her,
was turned full towards me. Never had I seen any countenance half so
lovely. She was apparently about twenty; her hair was of the richest
chesnut, and a golden light played through its darkness, as if a sunbeam
had been caught in those luxuriant tresses, and was striving in vain
to escape. Her eyes were of a light hazel, large, deep, and shaded into
softness (to use a modern expression) by long and very dark lashes. Her
complexion alone would have rendered her beautiful, it was so clear--so
pure; the blood blushed beneath it, like roses under a clear stream; if,
in order to justify my simile, roses would have the complacency to grow
in such a situation. Her nose was of that fine and accurate mould that
one so seldom sees, except in the Grecian statues, which unites the
clearest and most decided outline with the most feminine delicacy and
softness; and the short curved arch which descended from thence to her
mouth, was so fine--so airily and exquisitely formed, that it seemed as
if Love himself had modelled the bridge which led to his most beautiful
and fragrant island. On the right side of the mouth was one dimple,
which corresponded so exactly with every smile and movement of those
rosy lips, that you might have sworn the shadow of each passed there; it
was like the rapid changes of an April heaven reflected upon a valley.
She was somewhat, but not much, taller that the ordinary height; and her
figure, which united all the first freshness and youth of the girl with
the more luxuriant graces of the woman, was rounded and finished so
justly, so minutely, that the eye could glance over the whole, without
discovering the least harshness or unevenness, or atom, to be added or
subtracted. But over all these was a light, a glow, a pervading spirit,
of which it is impossible to convey the faintest idea. You should have
seen her by the side of a shaded fountain on a summer’s day. You should
have watched her amidst music and flowers, and she might have seemed
to you like the fairy that presided over both. So much for poetical
description.

“What think you of her, Vincent?” said I.

“I say, with Theocritus, in his epithalamium of Helen--”

“Say no such thing,” said I: “I will not have her presence profaned by
any helps from your memory.”

At that moment the girl turned round abruptly, and re-entered the shop,
at the door of which she had been standing. It was a small perfumer’s
shop. “Thank Heaven,” said I, “that she does use perfumes. What scents
can she now be hesitating between?--the gentle bouquet du roi, the
cooling esprit de Portugal, the mingled treasures des mellifleurs, the
less distinct but agreeably adulterated miel, the sweet May-recalling
esprit des violets, or the--”

“Omnis copia narium,” said Vincent: “let us enter; I want some eau de
Cologne.”

I desired no second invitation: we marched into the shop. My Armida was
leaning on the arm of an old lady. She blushed deeply when she saw
us enter; and, as ill-luck would have it, the old lady concluded her
purchases the moment after, and they withdrew.

“‘Who had thought this clime had held A deity so unparallel’d!’”

justly observed my companion.

I made no reply. All the remainder of that day I was absent and
reserved; and Vincent, perceiving that I no longer laughed at his jokes,
nor smiled at his quotations, told me I was sadly changed for the worse,
and pretended an engagement, to rid himself of an auditor so obtuse.



CHAPTER XLII.

Tout notre mal vient de ne pouvoir etre seuls; de la le jeu, le luxe,
la dissipation, le vin, les femmes, l’ignorance, la medisance, l’envie,
l’oubli de soi-meme et de Dieu.--La Bruyere.

The next day I resolved to call upon Tyrrell, seeing that he had not yet
kept his promise of anticipating me, and being very desirous not to lose
any opportunity of improving my acquaintance with him; accordingly, I
sent my valet to make inquiries as to his abode. I found that he lodged
in the same hotel as myself; and having previously ascertained that he
was at home, I made up my features into their most winning expression,
and was ushered by the head waiter into the gamester’s apartment.

He was sitting by the fire in a listless, yet thoughtful attitude. His
muscular and rather handsome person, was indued in a dressing-gown of
rich brocade, thrown on with a slovenly nonchalance. His stockings
were about his heels, his hair was dishevelled, and the light streaming
through the half-drawn window-curtains, rested upon the grey flakes with
which its darker luxuriance was interspersed, and the cross light in
which he had the imprudence or misfortune to sit (odious cross light,
which even I already begin carefully to avoid), fully developed the
deep wrinkles which years and dissipation had planted round his eyes
and mouth. I was quite startled at the oldness and haggardness of his
appearance.

He rose gracefully enough when I was announced; and no sooner had the
waiter retired, than he came up to me, shook me warmly by the hand, and
said, “Let me thank you now for the attention you formerly shewed me,
when I was less able to express my acknowledgments. I shall be proud to
cultivate your intimacy.”

I answered him in the same strain, and in the course of conversation,
made myself so entertaining, that he agreed to spend the remainder
of the day with me. We ordered our horses at three, and our dinner at
seven, and I left him till the former were ready, in order to allow him
time for his toilet.

During our ride we talked principally on general subjects, on the
various differences of France and England, on horses, on wines, on
women, on politics, on all things, except that which had created our
acquaintance. His remarks were those of a strong, ill-regulated mind,
which had made experience supply the place of the reasoning faculties;
there was a looseness in his sentiments, and a licentiousness in his
opinions, which startled even me (used as I had been to rakes of all
schools); his philosophy was of that species which thinks that the best
maxim of wisdom is--to despise. Of men he spoke with the bitterness of
hatred; of women, with the levity of contempt. France had taught him its
debaucheries, but not the elegance which refines them: if his sentiments
were low, the language in which they were clothed was meaner still:
and that which makes the morality of the upper classes, and which no
criminal is supposed to be hardy enough to reject; that religion which
has no scoffers, that code which has no impugners, that honour among
gentlemen, which constitutes the moving principle of the society in
which they live, he seemed to imagine, even in its most fundamental
laws, was an authority to which nothing but the inexperience of the
young, and the credulity of the romantic, could accede.

Upon the whole, he seemed to me a “bold, bad man,” with just enough of
intellect to teach him to be a villain, without that higher degree which
shews him that it is the worst course for his interest; and just enough
of daring to make him indifferent to the dangers of guilt, though it was
not sufficient to make him conquer and control them. For the rest,
he loved trotting better than cantering--piqued himself upon being
manly--wore doe-skin gloves--drank port wine, par preference, and
considered beef-steaks and oysters as the most delicate dish in the
whole carte. I think, now, reader, you have a tolerably good view of his
character.

After dinner, when we were discussing the second bottle, I thought it
would not be a bad opportunity to question him upon his acquaintance
with Glanville. His countenance fell directly I mentioned that name.
However, he rallied himself. “Oh,” said he, “you mean the soi-disant
Warburton. I knew him some years back--he was a poor silly youth, half
mad, I believe, and particularly hostile to me, owing to some foolish
disagreement when he was quite a boy.”

“What was the cause?” said I.

“Nothing--nothing of any consequence,” answered Tyrrell; and then added,
with an air of coxcombry, “I believe I was more fortunate than he, in
an affaire du coeur. Poor Granville is a little romantic, you know. But
enough of this now: shall we go to the rooms?”

“With pleasure,” said I; and to the rooms we went.



CHAPTER XLIII.

Veteres revocavit artes.--Horace.

Since I came hither I have heard strange news.--King Lear.

Two days after my long conversation with Tyrrell, I called again
upon that worthy. To my great surprise he had left Cheltenham. I then
strolled to Vincent: I found him lolling on his sofa, surrounded, as
usual, with books and papers.

“Come in, Pelham,” said he, as I hesitated at the threshold--“come in. I
have been delighting myself with Plato all the morning; I scarcely know
what it is that enchants us so much with the ancients. I rather believe,
with Schlegel, that it is that air of perfect repose--the stillness of
a deep soul, which rests over their writings. Whatever would appear
common-place amongst us, has with them I know not what of sublimity and
pathos. Triteness seems the profundity of truth--wildness the daring of
a luxuriant imagination. The fact is, that in spite of every fault, you
see through all the traces of original thought; there is a contemplative
grandeur in their sentiments, which seems to have nothing borrowed
in its meaning or its dress. Take, for instance, this fragment of
Mimnermus, on the shortness of life,--what subject can seem more
tame?--what less striking than the feelings he expresses?--and yet,
throughout every line, there is a melancholy depth and tenderness, which
it is impossible to define. Of all English writers who partake the
most of this spirit of conveying interest and strength to sentiments,
subjects, and language, neither novel in themselves, nor adorned in
their arrangement, I know none that equal Byron; it is indeed the chief
beauty of that extraordinary poet. Examine Childe Harold accurately,
and you will be surprised to discover how very little of real depth or
novelty there often is in the reflections which seem most deep and new.
You are enchained by the vague but powerful beauty of the style; the
strong impress of originality which breathes throughout. Like the oracle
of Dodona, he makes the forest his tablets, and writes his inspirations
upon the leaves of the trees: but the source of that inspiration you
cannot tell; it is neither the truth nor the beauty of his sayings
which you admire, though you fancy that it is: it is the mystery which
accompanies them.”

“Pray,” said I, stretching myself listlessly on the opposite sofa to
Vincent, “do you not imagine that one great cause of this spirit of
which you speak, and which seems to be nothing more than a thoughtful
method of expressing all things, even to trifles, was the great
loneliness to which the ancient poets and philosophers were attached? I
think (though I have not your talent for quoting) that Cicero calls
the consideratio naturae, the pabulum animi; and the mind which, in
solitude, is confined necessarily to a few objects, meditates more
closely upon those it embraces: the habit of this meditation enters
and pervades the system, and whatever afterwards emanates from it
is tinctured with the thoughtful and contemplative colours it has
received.”

“Heus Domine!” cried Vincent: “how long have you learnt to read Cicero,
and talk about the mind?”

“Ah,” said I, “I am perhaps less ignorant than I affect to be: it is now
my object to be a dandy; hereafter I may aspire to be an orator--a wit,
a scholar, or a Vincent. You will see then that there have been many
odd quarters of an hour in my life less unprofitably wasted than you
imagine.”

Vincent rose in a sort of nervous excitement, and then reseating
himself, fixed his dark bright eyes steadfastly upon me for some
moments; his countenance all the while assuming a higher and graver
expression than I had ever before seen it wear.

“Pelham,” said he, at last, “it is for the sake of moments like these,
when your better nature flashes out, that I have sought your society and
your friendship. I, too, am not wholly what I appear: the world may
yet see that Halifax was not the only statesman whom the pursuits of
literature had only formed the better for the labours of business.
Meanwhile, let me pass for the pedant, and the bookworm: like a sturdier
adventurer than myself, ‘I bide my time.’--Pelham--this will be a busy
session! shall you prepare for it?”

“Nay,” answered I, relapsing into my usual tone of languid affectation;
“I shall have too much to do in attending to Stultz, and Nugee, and
Tattersall and Baxter, and a hundred other occupiers of spare time.
Remember, this is my first season in London since my majority.”

Vincent took up the newspaper with evident chagrin; however, he was
too theoretically the man of the world, long to shew his displeasure.
“Parr--Parr--again,” said he; “how they stuff the journals with that
name. God knows, I venerate learning as much as any man; but I respect
it for its uses, and not for itself. However, I will not quarrel with
his reputation--it is but for a day. Literary men, who leave nothing but
their name to posterity, have but a short twilight of posthumous renown.
Apropos, do you know my pun upon Parr and the Major?”

“Not I,” said I, “Majora canamus!”

“Why, Parr and I, and two or three more were dining once at poor
T. M--‘s, the author of ‘The Indian Antiquities.’Major--, a great
traveller, entered into a dispute with Parr about Babylon; the Doctor
got into a violent passion, and poured out such a heap of quotations on
his unfortunate antagonist, that the latter, stunned by the clamour, and
terrified by the Greek, was obliged to succumb. Parr turned triumphantly
to me: ‘What is your opinion, my lord,’ said he; ‘who is in the right?’

“Adversis major--par secundis,” answered I.

“Vincent,” I said, after I had expressed sufficient admiration at his
pun--“Vincent, I begin to be weary of this life; I shall accordingly
pack up my books and myself, and go to Malvern Wells, to live quietly
till I think it time for London. After to-day, you will, therefore, see
me no more.”

“I cannot,” answered Vincent, “contravene so laudable a purpose, however
I may be the loser.” And after a short and desultory conversation, I
left him once more to the tranquil enjoyment of his Plato. That evening
I went to Malvern, and there I remained in a monotonous state of
existence, dividing my time equally between my mind and my body, and
forming myself into that state of contemplative reflection, which was
the object of Vincent’s admiration in the writings of the ancients.

Just when I was on the point of leaving my retreat, I received an
intelligence which most materially affected my future prospects. My
uncle, who had arrived to the sober age of fifty, without any apparent
designs of matrimony, fell suddenly in love with a lady in his immediate
neighbourhood, and married her, after a courtship of three weeks.

“I should not,” said my poor mother, very generously, in a subsequent
letter, “so much have minded his marriage, if the lady had not thought
proper to become in the family way; a thing which I do and always shall
consider a most unwarrantable encroachment on your rights.”

I will confess that, on first hearing this news, I experienced a bitter
pang; but I reasoned it away. I was already under great obligations to
my uncle, and I felt it a very unjust and ungracious assumption on
my part, to affect anger at conduct I had no right to question, or
mortification at the loss of pretensions I had so equivocal a privilege
to form. A man of fifty has, perhaps, a right to consult his own
happiness, almost as much as a man of thirty; and if he attracts by his
choice the ridicule of those whom he has never obliged, it is at least
from those persons he has obliged, that he is to look for countenance
and defence.

Fraught with these ideas, I wrote to my uncle a sincere and warm letter
of congratulation. His answer was, like himself, kind, affectionate, and
generous: it informed me that he had already made over to me the annual
sum of one thousand pounds; and that in case of his having a lineal
heir, he had, moreover, settled upon me, after his death, two thousand
a-year. He ended by assuring me, that his only regret at marrying a lady
who, in all respects, was above all women, calculated to make him happy,
was his unfeigned reluctance to deprive me of a station, which (he was
pleased to say), I not only deserved, but should adorn.

Upon receiving this letter, I was sensibly affected with my uncle’s
kindness; and so far from repining at his choice, I most heartily wished
him every blessing it could afford him, even though an heir to the
titles of Glenmorris were one of them.

I protracted my stay at Malvern some weeks longer than I had intended;
the circumstance which had wrought so great a change in my fortune,
wrought no less powerfully on my character. I became more thoughtfully
and solidly ambitious. Instead of wasting my time in idle regrets at the
station I had lost, I rather resolved to carve out for myself one still
loftier and more universally acknowledged. I determined to exercise, to
their utmost, the little ability and knowledge I possessed; and while
the increase of income, derived from my uncle’s generosity, furnished me
with what was necessary for my luxury, I was resolved that it should not
encourage me in the indulgence of my indolence.

In this mood, and with these intentions, I repaired to the metropolis.



VOLUME IV.



CHAPTER XLIV.

Cum pulchris tunicis sumet nova consilia et spes.--Horace.

And look always that they be shape, What garment that thou shalt make Of
him that can best do With all that pertaineth thereto.--Romaunt of the
Rose

How well I can remember the feelings with which I entered London, and
took possession of the apartments prepared for me at Mivart’s. A year
had made a vast alteration in my mind; I had ceased to regard pleasure
for its own sake, I rather coveted its enjoyments, as the great sources
of worldly distinction. I was not the less a coxcomb than heretofore,
nor the less a voluptuary, nor the less choice in my perfumes, nor the
less fastidious in my horses and my dress; but I viewed these matters
in a light wholly different from that in which I had hitherto regarded
them. Beneath all the carelessness of my exterior, my mind was close,
keen, and inquiring; and under the affectations of foppery, and the
levity of a manner almost unique, for the effeminacy of its tone, I
veiled an ambition the most extensive in its object, and a resolution
the most daring in the accomplishment of its means.

I was still lounging over my breakfast, on the second morning of my
arrival, when Mr. N--, the tailor, was announced.

“Good morning, Mr. Pelham; happy to see you returned. Do I disturb you
too early? shall I wait on you again?”

“No, Mr. N--, I am ready to receive you; you may renew my measure.”

“We are a very good figure, Mr. Pelham; very good figure,” replied the
Schneider, surveying me from head to foot, while he was preparing his
measure; “we want a little assistance though; we must be padded well
here; we must have our chest thrown out, and have an additional inch
across the shoulders; we must live for effect in this world, Mr. Pelham;
a leetle tighter round the waist, eh?”

“Mr. N--,” said I, “you will take, first, my exact measure, and,
secondly, my exact instructions. Have you done the first?”

“We are done now, Mr. Pelham,” replied my man-maker, in a slow, solemn
tone.

“You will have the goodness then to put no stuffing of any description
in my coat; you will not pinch me an iota tighter across the waist
than is natural to that part of my body, and you will please, in your
infinite mercy, to leave me as much after the fashion in which God made
me, as you possibly can.”

“But, Sir, we must be padded; we are much too thin; all the gentlemen in
the Life Guards are padded, Sir.”

“Mr. N--,” answered I, “you will please to speak of us, with a separate,
and not a collective pronoun; and you will let me for once have my
clothes such as a gentleman, who, I beg of you to understand, is not a
Life Guardsman, can wear without being mistaken for a Guy Fawkes on a
fifth of November.”

Mr. N--looked very discomfited: “We shall not be liked, Sir, when we are
made--we sha’n’t, I assure you. I will call on Saturday at 11 o’clock.
Good morning, Mr. Pelham; we shall never be done justice to, if we do
not live for effect; good morning, Mr. Pelham.”

Scarcely had Mr. N--retired, before Mr.--, his rival, appeared. The
silence and austerity of this importation from Austria, were very
refreshing after the orations of Mr. N--.

“Two frock-coats, Mr.--,” said I, “one of them brown, velvet collar same
colour; the other, dark grey, no stuffing, and finished by Wednesday.
Good morning, Mr.--.”

“Monsieur B--, un autre tailleur,” said Bedos, opening the door after
Mr. S.’s departure.

“Admit him,” said I. “Now for the most difficult article of dress--the
waistcoat.”

And here, as I am weary of tailors, let me reflect a little upon that
divine art of which they are the professors. Alas, for the instability
of all human sciences! A few short months ago, in the first edition of
this memorable Work, I laid down rules for costume, the value of which,
Fashion begins already to destroy. The thoughts which I shall now
embody, shall be out of the reach of that great innovator, and
applicable not to one age, but to all. To the sagacious reader, who has
already discovered what portions of this work are writ in irony--what
in earnest--I fearlessly commit these maxims; beseeching him to believe,
with Sterne, that “every thing is big with jest, and has wit in it, and
instruction too, if we can but find it out!”


MAXIMS.

1. Do not require your dress so much to fit, as to adorn you. Nature is
not to be copied, but to be exalted by art. Apelles blamed Protogenes
for being too natural.

2. Never in your dress altogether desert that taste which is general.
The world considers eccentricity in great things, genius; in small
things, folly.

3. Always remember that you dress to fascinate others, not yourself.

4. Keep your mind free from all violent affections at the hour of the
toilet. A philosophical serenity is perfectly necessary to success.
Helvetius says justly, that our errors arise from our passions.

5. Remember that none but those whose courage is unquestionable,
can venture to be effeminate. It was only in the field that the
Lacedemonians were accustomed to use perfumes and curl their hair.

6. Never let the finery of chains and rings seem your own choice; that
which naturally belongs to women should appear only worn for their sake.
We dignify foppery, when we invest it with a sentiment.

7. To win the affection of your mistress, appear negligent in your
costume--to preserve it, assiduous: the first is a sign of the passion
of love; the second, of its respect.

8. A man must be a profound calculator to be a consummate dresser. One
must not dress the same, whether one goes to a minister or a mistress;
an avaricious uncle, or an ostentatious cousin: there is no diplomacy
more subtle than that of dress.

9. Is the great man whom you would conciliate a coxcomb?--go to him in
a waistcoat like his own. “Imitation,” says the author of Lacon, “is the
sincerest flattery.”

10. The handsome may be shewy in dress, the plain should study to
be unexceptionable; just as in great men we look for something to
admire--in ordinary men we ask for nothing to forgive.

11. There is a study of dress for the aged, as well as for the young.
Inattention is no less indecorous in one than in the other; we may
distinguish the taste appropriate to each, by the reflection that youth
is made to be loved--age, to be respected.

12. A fool may dress gaudily, but a fool cannot dress well--for to
dress well requires judgment; and Rochefaucault says with truth, “On
est quelquefois un sot avec de l’esprit, mais on ne lest jamais avec du
jugement.”

13. There may be more pathos in the fall of a collar, or the curl of a
lock, than the shallow think for. Should we be so apt as we are now to
compassionate the misfortunes, and to forgive the insincerity of Charles
I., if his pictures had pourtrayed him in a bob wig and a pigtail?
Vandyke was a greater sophist than Hume.

14. The most graceful principle of dress is neatness--the most vulgar is
preciseness.

15. Dress contains the two codes of morality--private and public.
Attention is the duty we owe to others--cleanliness that which we owe to
ourselves.

16. Dress so that it may never be said of you “What a well dressed
man!”--but, “What a gentlemanlike man!”

17. Avoid many colours; and seek, by some one prevalent and quiet tint,
to sober down the others. Apelles used only four colours, and always
subdued those which were more florid, by a darkening varnish.

18. Nothing is superficial to a deep observer! It is in trifles that the
mind betrays itself. “In what part of that letter,” said a king to the
wisest of living diplomatists, “did you discover irresolution?”--“In its
ns and gs!” was the answer.

19. A very benevolent man will never shock the feelings of others, by an
excess either of inattention or display; you may doubt, therefore, the
philanthropy both of a sloven and a fop.

20. There is an indifference to please in a stocking down at heel--but
there may be a malevolence in a diamond ring.

21. Inventions in dressing should resemble Addison’s definition of fine
writing, and consists of “refinements which are natural, without being
obvious.”

22. He who esteems trifles for themselves, is a trifler--he who esteems
them for the conclusions to be drawn from them, or the advantage to
which they can be put, is a philosopher.



CHAPTER XLV.

Tantot, Monseigneur le Marquis a cheval--Tantot, Monsieur du Mazin de
bout!--L’Art de se Promener a Cheval.

My cabriolet was at the door, and I was preparing to enter, when I saw
a groom managing, with difficulty, a remarkably fine and spirited horse.
As, at that time, I was chiefly occupied with the desire of making as
perfect an equine collection as my fortune would allow, I sent my cab
boy (vulgo Tiger) to inquire of the groom, whether the horse was to be
sold, and to whom it belonged.

“It was not to be disposed of,” was the answer, “and it belonged to Sir
Reginald Glanville.”

The name thrilled through me: I drove after the groom, and inquired Sir
Reginald Glanville’s address. His house, the groom (whose dark coloured
livery was the very perfection of a right judgment) informed me, was at
No.--Pall Mall. I resolved to call that morning, but first I drove
to Lady Roseville’s to talk about Almack’s and the beau monde, and be
initiated into the newest scandal and satire of the day.

Lady Roseville was at home; I found the room half full of women: the
beautiful countess was one of the few persons extant who admit people of
a morning. She received me with marked kindness. Seeing that--, who was
esteemed, among his friends, the handsomest man of the day, had risen
from his seat, next to Lady Roseville, in order to make room for me,
I negligently and quietly dropped into it, and answered his grave
and angry stare at my presumption, with my very sweetest and most
condescending smile. Heaven be praised, the handsomest man of the day is
never the chief object in the room, when Henry Pelham and his guardian
angel, termed by his enemies, his self-esteem, once enter it.

“Charming collection you have here, dear Lady Roseville,” said I,
looking round the room; “quite a museum! But who is that very polite,
gentlemanlike young man, who has so kindly relinquished his seat to
me,--though it quite grieves me to take it from him?” added I: at the
same time leaning back, with a comfortable projection of the feet, and
establishing myself more securely in my usurped chair. “Pour l’amour de
Dieu, tell me the on dits of the day. Good Heavens! what an unbecoming
glass that is! placed just opposite to me, too! Could it not be removed
while I stay here? Oh! by the by, Lady Roseville, do you patronize the
Bohemian glasses? For my part, I have one which I only look at when I am
out of humour; it throws such a lovely flush upon the complexion, that
it revives my spirits for the rest of the day. Alas! Lady Roseville, I
am looking much paler than when I saw you at Garrett Park; but you--you
are like one of those beautiful flowers which bloom the brightest in the
winter.”

“Thank Heaven, Mr. Pelham,” said Lady Roseville, laughing, “that you
allow me at last to say one word. You have learned, at least, the art of
making the frais of the conversation since your visit to Paris.”

“I understand you,” answered I; “you mean that I talk too much; it is
true--I own the offence--nothing is so unpopular! Even I, the civilest,
best natured, most unaffected person in all Europe, am almost disliked,
positively disliked, for that sole and simple crime. Ah! the
most beloved man in society is that deaf and dumb person, comment
s’appelle-t-il?”

“Yes,” said Lady Roseville, “Popularity is a goddess best worshipped
by negatives; and the fewer claims one has to be admired, the more
pretensions one has to be beloved.”

“Perfectly true, in general,” said I--“for instance, I make the rule,
and you the exception. I, a perfect paragon, am hated because I am one;
you, a perfect paragon, are idolized in spite of it. But tell me what
literary news is there. I am tired of the trouble of idleness, and
in order to enjoy a little dignified leisure, intend to set up as a
savant.”

“Oh, Lady C--B--is going to write a Commentary on Ude; and Madame
de Genlis a Proof of the Apocrypha. The Duke of N--e is publishing a
Treatise on ‘Toleration;’ and Lord L--y an Essay on ‘Self-knowledge.’ As
for news more remote, I hear that the Dey of Algiers is finishing an
‘Ode to Liberty’ and the College of Caffraria preparing a volume of
voyages to the North Pole!”

“Now,” said I, “if I retail this information with a serious air, I will
lay a wager that I find plenty of believers; for falsehood, uttered
solemnly, is much more like probability than truth uttered doubtingly:
else how do the priests of Brama and Mahomet live?”

“Ah! now you grow too profound, Mr. Pelham!”

“C’est vrai--but--”

“Tell me,” interrupted Lady Roseville, “how it happens that you, who
talk eruditely enough upon matters of erudition, should talk so lightly
upon matters of levity?”

“Why,” said I, rising to depart, “very great minds are apt to think that
all which they set any value upon, is of equal importance. Thus
Hesiod, who, you know, was a capital poet, though rather an imitator of
Shenstone, tells us that God bestowed valour on some men, and on others
a genius for dancing. It was reserved for me, Lady Roseville, to unite
the two perfections. Adieu!”

“Thus,” said I, when I was once more alone--“thus do we ‘play the fools
with the time,’ until Fate brings that which is better than folly; and,
standing idly upon the sea-shore, till we can catch the favouring wind
which is to waft the vessel of our destiny to enterprise and fortune,
amuse ourselves with the weeds and the pebbles which are within our
reach!”



CHAPTER XLVI.

There was a youth who, as with toil and travel, Had grown quite weak and
grey before his time; Nor any could the restless grief unravel, Which
burned within him, withering up his prime, And goading him, like fiends,
from land to land.--P. B. Shelley.

From Lady Roseville’s I went to Glanville’s house. He was at home. I
was ushered into a beautiful apartment, hung with rich damask, and
interspersed with a profusion of mirrors, which enchanted me to the
heart. Beyond, to the right of this room, was a small boudoir, fitted up
with books, and having, instead of carpets, soft cushions of dark green
velvet, so as to supersede the necessity of chairs. This room, evidently
a favourite retreat, was adorned at close intervals with girandoles of
silver and mother-of-pearl; and the interstices of the book-cases were
filled with mirrors, set in silver: the handles of the doors were of the
same metal.

Beyond this library (if such it might be called), and only divided
from it by half-drawn curtains of the same colour and material as
the cushion, was a bath room. The decorations of this room were of
a delicate rose colour: the bath, which was of the most elaborate
workmanship, represented, in the whitest marble, a shell, supported
by two Tritons. There was, as Glanville afterwards explained to me, a
machine in this room which kept up a faint but perpetual breeze, and the
light curtains, waving to and fro, scattered about perfumes of the most
exquisite odour.

Through this luxurious chamber I was led, by the obsequious and bowing
valet, into a fourth room, in which, opposite to a toilet of massive
gold, and negligently robed in his dressing-gown, sate Reginald
Glanville:--“Good Heavens,” thought I, as I approached him, “can this be
the man who made his residence par choix, in a miserable hovel, exposed
to all the damps, winds, and vapours, that the prolific generosity of an
English Heaven ever begot?”

Our meeting was cordial in the extreme. Glanville, though still pale and
thin, appeared in much better health than I had yet seen him since our
boyhood. He was, or affected to be, in the most joyous spirits; and when
his dark blue eye lighted up, in answer to the merriment of his lips,
and his noble and glorious cast of countenance shone out, as if it had
never been clouded by grief or passion, I thought, as I looked at him,
that I had never seen so perfect a specimen of masculine beauty, at once
physical and intellectual.

“My dear Pelham,” said Glanville, “let us see a great deal of each
other: I live very much alone: I have an excellent cook, sent me over
from France, by the celebrated gourmand Marechal de--. I dine every day
exactly at eight, and never accept an invitation to dine elsewhere.
My table is always laid for three, and you will, therefore, be sure
of finding a dinner here every day you have no better engagement. What
think you of my taste in furnishing?”

“I have only to say,” answered I, “that since I am so often to dine with
you, I hope your taste in wines will be one half as good.”

“We are all,” said Glanville, with a faint smile, “we are all, in the
words of the true old proverb, ‘children of a larger growth.’Our first
toy is love--our second, display, according as our ambition prompts us
to exert it. Some place it in horses--some in honours, some in feasts,
and some--voici un exemple--in furniture. So true it is, Pelham, that
our earliest longings are the purest: in love, we covet goods for
the sake of the one beloved; in display, for our own: thus, our first
stratum of mind produces fruit for others; our second becomes niggardly,
and bears only sufficient for ourselves. But enough of my morals--will
you drive me out, if I dress quicker than you ever saw man dress
before?”

“No,” said I; “for I make it a rule never to drive out a badly dressed
friend; take time, and I will let you accompany me.”

“So be it then. Do you ever read? If so, my books are made to be opened,
and you may toss them over while I am at my toilet.”

“You are very good,” said I, “but I never do read.”

“Look--here,” said Glanville, “are two works, one of poetry--one on the
Catholic Question--both dedicated to me. Seymour--my waistcoat. See what
it is to furnish a house differently from other people; one becomes a
bel esprit, and a Mecaenas, immediately. Believe me, if you are
rich enough to afford it, that there is no passport to fame like
eccentricity. Seymour--my coat. I am at your service, Pelham. Believe
hereafter that one may dress well in a short time?”

“One may do it, but not two--allons!”

I observed that Glanville was dressed in the deepest mourning, and
imagined, from that circumstance, and his accession to the title I heard
applied to him for the first time, that his father was only just dead.
In this opinion I was soon undeceived. He had been dead for some years.
Glanville spoke to me of his family;--“To my mother,” said he, “I am
particularly anxious to introduce you--of my sister, I say nothing; I
expect you to be surprised with her. I love her more than any thing on
earth now,” and as Glanville said this, a paler shade passed over his
face.

We were in the Park--Lady Roseville passed us--we both bowed to her; as
she returned our greeting, I was struck with the deep and sudden blush
which overspread her countenance. “Can that be for me?” thought I. I
looked towards Glanville: his countenance had recovered its serenity,
and was settled into its usual proud, but not displeasing, calmness of
expression.

“Do you know Lady Roseville well?” said I. “Very,” answered Glanville,
laconically, and changed the conversation. As we were leaving the Park,
through Cumberland Gate, we were stopped by a blockade of carriages; a
voice, loud, harsh, and vulgarly accented, called out to Glanville by
his name. I turned, and saw Thornton.

“For God’s sake, Pelham, drive on,” cried Glanville; “let me, for once,
escape that atrocious plebeian.”

Thornton was crossing the road towards us; I waved my hand to him
civilly enough (for I never cut any body), and drove rapidly through the
other gate, without appearing to notice his design of speaking to us.

“Thank Heaven!” said Glanville, and sunk back in a reverie, from which I
could not awaken him, till he was set down at his own door.

When I returned to Mivart’s, I found a card from Lord Dawton, and a
letter from my mother.

“My Dear Henry, (began the letter,)

“Lord Dawton having kindly promised to call upon you, personally, with
this note, I cannot resist the opportunity that promise affords me, of
saying how desirous I am that you should cultivate his acquaintance. He
is, you know, among the most prominent leaders of the Opposition; and
should the Whigs, by any possible chance, ever come into power, he would
have a great chance of becoming prime minister. I trust, however, that
you will not adopt that side of the question. The Whigs are a horrid
set of people (politically speaking), vote for the Roman Catholics, and
never get into place; they give very good dinners, however, and till you
have decided upon your politics, you may as well make the most of them.
I hope, by the by, that you see a great deal of Lord Vincent: every one
speaks highly of his talents; and only two weeks ago, he said, publicly,
that he thought you the most promising young man, and the most naturally
clever person, he had ever met. I hope that you will be attentive
to your parliamentary duties; and, oh, Henry, be sure that you see
Cartwright, the dentist, as soon as possible.

“I intend hastening to London three weeks earlier than I had intended,
in order to be useful to you. I have written already to dear Lady
Roseville, begging her to introduce you at Lady C.’s, and Lady--; the
only places worth going to at present. They tell me there is a horrid,
vulgar, ignorant book come out, about--. As you ought to be well versed
in modern literature, I hope you will read it, and give me your opinion.
Adieu, my dear Henry, ever your affectionate mother,

“Frances Pelham.”

I was still at my solitary dinner, when the following note was brought
me from Lady Roseville:--

“Dear Mr. Pelham,

“Lady Frances wishes Lady C--to be made acquainted with you; this is her
night, and I therefore enclose you a card. As I dine at--House, I shall
have an opportunity of making your eloge before your arrival. Your’s
sincerely,

“C. Roseville.”

I wonder, thought I, as I made my toilet, whether or not Lady Roseville
is enamoured with her new correspondent? I went very early, and before I
retired, my vanity was undeceived. Lady Roseville was playing at ecarte,
when I entered. She beckoned to me to approach. I did. Her antagonist
was Mr. Bedford, a natural son of the Duke of Shrewsbury, and one of the
best natured and best looking dandies about town: there was, of course,
a great crowd round the table. Lady Roseville played incomparably; bets
were high in her favour. Suddenly her countenance changed--her hand
trembled--her presence of mind forsook her. She lost the game. I looked
up and saw just opposite to her, but apparently quite careless and
unmoved, Reginald Glanville. We had only time to exchange nods, for Lady
Roseville rose from the table, took my arm, and walked to the other end
of the room, in order to introduce me to my hostess.

I spoke to her a few words, but she was absent and inattentive; my
penetration required no farther proof to convince me that she was not
wholly insensible to the attentions of Glanville. Lady--was as civil and
silly as the generality of Lady Blanks are: and feeling very much bored,
I soon retired to an obscurer corner of the room. Here Glanville joined
me.

“It is but seldom,” said he, “that I come to these places; to-night my
sister persuaded me to venture forth.”

“Is she here?” said I.

“She is,” answered he; “she has just gone into the refreshment room with
my mother, and when she returns, I will introduce you.”

While Glanville was yet speaking, three middle-aged ladies, who had
been talking together with great vehemence for the last ten minutes,
approached us.

“Which is he?--which is he?” said two of them, in no inaudible accents.

“This,” replied the third; and coming up to Glanville, she addressed
him, to my great astonishment, in terms of the most hyperbolical
panegyric.

“Your work is wonderful! wonderful!” said she.

“Oh! quite--quite!” echoed the other two.

“I can’t say,” recommenced the Coryphoea, “that I like the moral--at
least not quite; no, not quite.”

“Not quite,” repeated her coadjutrices.

Glanville drew himself up with his most stately air, and after three
profound bows, accompanied by a smile of the most unequivocal contempt,
he turned on his heel, and sauntered away.

“Did your grace ever see such a bear?” said one of the echoes.

“Never,” said the duchess, with a mortified air; “but I will have him
yet. How handsome he is for an author!”

I was descending the stairs in the last state of ennui, when Glanville
laid his hand on my shoulder.

“Shall I take you home?” said he: “my carriage has just drawn up.”

I was too glad to answer in the affirmative.

“How long have you been an author?” said I, when we were seated in
Glanville’s carriage.

“Not many days,” he replied. “I have tried one resource after
another--all--all in vain. Oh, God! that for me there could exist such a
blessing as fiction! Must I be ever the martyr of one burning, lasting,
indelible truth!”

Glanville uttered these words with a peculiar wildness and energy of
tone: he then paused abruptly for a minute, and continued, with an
altered voice--“Never, my dear Pelham, be tempted by any inducement into
the pleasing errors of print; from that moment you are public property;
and the last monster at Exeter ‘Change has more liberty than you; but
here we are at Mivart’s. Addio--I will call on you to-morrow, if my
wretched state of health will allow me.”

And with these words we parted.



CHAPTER XLVII.

Ambition is a lottery, where, however uneven the chances, there are
some prizes; but in dissipation, every one draws a blank.--Letters of
Stephen Montague.

The season was not far advanced before I grew heartily tired of what are
nicknamed its gaieties; I shrunk, by rapid degrees, into a very small
orbit, from which I rarely moved. I had already established a certain
reputation for eccentricity, coxcombry, and, to my great astonishment,
also for talent; and my pride was satisfied with finding myself
universally recherche, whilst I indulged my inclinations by rendering
myself universally scarce. I saw much of Vincent, whose varied
acquirements and great talents became more and more perceptible, both as
my own acquaintance with him increased, and as the political events with
which that year was pregnant, called forth their exertion and display. I
went occasionally to Lady Roseville’s, and was always treated rather as
a long-known friend, than an ordinary acquaintance; nor did I undervalue
this distinction, for it was part of her pride to render her house not
only as splendid, but as agreeable, as her command over society enabled
her to effect.

At the House of Commons my visits would have been duly paid, but for one
trifling occurrence, upon which, as it is a very sore subject, I shall
dwell as briefly as possible. I had scarcely taken my seat, before I was
forced to relinquish it. My unsuccessful opponent, Mr. Lufton, preferred
a petition against me, for what he called undue means. God knows what he
meant; I am sure the House did not, for they turned me out, and declared
Mr. Lufton duly elected.

Never was there such a commotion in the Glenmorris family before.
My uncle was seized with the gout in his stomach, and my mother shut
herself up with Tremaine, and one China monster, for a whole week. As
for me, though I writhed at heart, I bore the calamity philosophically
enough in external appearance, nor did I the less busy myself in
political matters: with what address and success, good or bad, I
endeavoured to supply the loss of my parliamentary influence, the reader
will see, when it suits the plot of this history to touch upon such
topics.

Glanville I saw continually. When in tolerable spirits, he was an
entertaining, though never a frank nor a communicative companion. His
conversation then was lively, yet without wit, and sarcastic, though
without bitterness. It abounded also in philosophical reflections
and terse maxims, which always brought improvement, or, at the
worst, allowed discussion. He was a man of even vast powers--of
deep thought--of luxuriant, though dark imagination, and of great
miscellaneous, though, perhaps, ill arranged erudition. He was fond of
paradoxes in reasoning, and supported them with a subtlety and strength
of mind, which Vincent, who admired him greatly, told me he had never
seen surpassed. He was subject, at times, to a gloom and despondency,
which seemed almost like aberration of intellect. At those hours he
would remain perfectly silent, and apparently forgetful of my presence,
and of every object around him.

It was only then, when the play of his countenance was vanished, and his
features were still and set, that you saw in their full extent, the dark
and deep traces of premature decay. His cheek was hollow and hueless;
his eye dim, and of that visionary and glassy aspect, which is never
seen but in great mental or bodily disease, and which, according to
the superstitions of some nations, implies a mysterious and unearthly
communion of the soul with the beings of another world. From these
trances he would sometimes start abruptly, and renew any conversation
broken off before, as if wholly unconscious of the length of his
reverie. At others, he would rise slowly from his seat, and retire into
his own apartment, from which he never emerged during the rest of the
day.

But the reader must bear in mind that there was nothing artificial or
affected in his musings, of whatever complexion they might be.
Nothing like the dramatic brown studies, and quick starts, which young
gentlemen, in love with Lara and Lord Byron, are apt to practise.
There never, indeed, was a character that possessed less cant of any
description. His work, which was a singular, wild tale--of mingled
passion and reflection--was, perhaps, of too original, certainly of too
abstract a nature, to suit the ordinary novel readers of the day. It did
not acquire popularity for itself, but it gained great reputation for
the author. It also inspired every one who read it, with a vague and
indescribable interest to see and know the person who had composed so
singular a work.

This interest he was the first to laugh at, and to disappoint. He shrunk
from all admiration, and from all sympathy. At the moment when a crowd
assembled round him, and every ear was bent to catch the words, which
came alike from so beautiful a lip, and so strange and imaginative a
mind, it was his pleasure to utter some sentiment totally different from
his written opinion, and utterly destructive of the sensation he had
excited. But it was very rarely that he exposed himself to these
“trials of an author.” He went out little to any other house but Lady
Roseville’s, and it was seldom more than once a week that he was seen
even there. Lonely, and singular in mind and habits, he lived in the
world like a person occupied by a separate object, and possessed of a
separate existence, from that of his fellow-beings. He was luxurious
and splendid, beyond all men, in his habits, rather than his tastes. His
table groaned beneath a weight of gold, too costly for the daily service
even of a prince; but he had no pleasure in surveying it. His wines and
viands were of the most exquisite description; but he scarcely tasted
them. Yet, what may seem inconsistent, he was averse to all ostentation
and show in the eyes of others. He admitted very few into his
society--no one so intimately as myself. I never once saw more than
three persons at his table. He seemed, in his taste for furniture, in
his love of literature, and his pursuit after fame, to be, as he himself
said, eternally endeavouring to forget and eternally brought back to
remembrance.

“I pity that man even more than I admire him,” said Vincent to me, one
night when we were walking home from Glanville’s house. “His is, indeed,
the disease nulla medicabilis herba. Whether it is the past or the
present that afflicts him--whether it is the memory of past evil, or
the satiety of present good, he has taken to his heart the bitterest
philosophy of life. He does not reject its blessings--he gathers them
around him, but as a stone gathers moss--cold, hard, unsoftened by the
freshness and the greenness which surround it. As a circle can only
touch a circle in one place, every thing that life presents to
him, wherever it comes from--to whatever portion of his soul it is
applied--can find but one point of contact; and that is the soreness of
affliction: whether it is the oblivio or the otium that he requires,
he finds equally that he is for ever in want of one treasure:--‘neque
gemmis neque purpura venale nec auro.’”



CHAPTER XLVIII.

Mons. Jourdain. Etes-vous fou de l’aller quereller’ lui qui entend la
tierce et la quarte, et qui sait tuer un homme par raison demonstrative?

Le Maitre a Danser. Je me moque de sa raison demonstrative, et de sa
tierce et de sa quarte.--Moliere.

“Hollo, my good friend; how are you?--d--d glad to see you in England,”
 vociferated a loud, clear, good-humoured voice, one cold morning, as I
was shivering down Brook-street, into Bond-street. I turned, and beheld
Lord Dartmore, of Rocher de Cancale memory. I returned his greeting with
the same cordiality with which it was given: and I was forthwith saddled
with Dartmore’s arm, and dragged up Bond-street, into that borough of
all noisy, riotous, unrefined, good fellows--yclept--‘s Hotel.

Here we were soon plunged into a small, low apartment, which Dartmore
informed me was his room. It was crowded with a score of masculine
looking youths, at whose very appearance my gentler frame shuddered from
head to foot. However, I put as good a face on the matter as I possibly
could, and affected a freedom and frankness of manner, correspondent
with the unsophisticated tempers with which I was so unexpectedly
brought into contact.

Dartmore was still gloriously redolent of Oxford: his companions were
all extracts from Christchurch; and his favourite occupations were
boxing and hunting--scenes at the Fives’ Court--nights in the Cider
Cellar--and mornings at Bowstreet. Figure to yourself a fitter companion
for the hero and writer of these adventures! The table was covered with
boxing gloves, single sticks, two ponderous pair of dumb bells, a large
pewter pot of porter, and four foils; one snapped in the middle.

“Well,” cried Dartmore, to two strapping youths, with their coats off,
“which was the conqueror?”

“Oh, it is not yet decided,” was the answer; and forthwith the bigger
one hit the lesser a blow, with his boxing glove, heavy enough to have
felled Ulysses, who, if I recollect aright, was rather ‘a game blood’ in
such encounters.

This slight salute was forthwith the prelude to an encounter, which the
whole train crowded round to witness. I, among the rest, pretending an
equal ardour, and an equal interest, and hiding, like many persons in
a similar predicament, a most trembling spirit beneath a most valorous
exterior.

When the match (which terminated in favour of the lesser champion) was
over, “Come, Pelham,” said Dartmore, “let me take up the gloves with
you?”

“You are too good!” said I, for the first time using my drawing-room
drawl. A wink and a grin went round the room.

“Well, then, will you fence with Staunton, or play at single sticks with
me?” said the short, thick, bullying, impudent, vulgar Earl of Calton.

“Why,” answered I, “I am a poor hand at the foils, and a still worse
at the sticks; but I have no objection to exchange a cut or two at the
latter with Lord Calton.”

“No, no!” said the good-natured Dartmore;--“no, Calton is the best
stick-player I ever knew;” and then, whispering me, he added, “and the
hardest hitter--and he never spares, either.”

“Really,” said I aloud, in my most affected tone, “it is a great pity,
for I am excessively delicate; but as I said I would engage him, I don’t
like to retract. Pray let me look at the hilt: I hope the basket is
strong: I would not have my knuckles rapped for the world--now for it.
I’m in a deuced fright, Dartmore;” and so saying, and inwardly chuckling
at the universal pleasure depicted in the countenances of Calton and
the by-standers, who were all rejoiced at the idea of the “dandy being
drubbed,” I took the stick, and pretended great awkwardness, and lack of
grace in the position I chose.

Calton placed himself in the most scientific attitude, assuming at the
same time an air of hauteur and nonchalance, which seemed to call for
the admiration it met.

“Do we make hard hitting?” said I.

“Oh! by all means,” answered Calton, eagerly.

“Well,” said I, settling on my own chapeau, “had not you better put on
your hat?”

“Oh, no,” answered Calton, imperiously; “I can take pretty good care of
my head;” and with these words we commenced.

I remained at first nearly upright, not availing myself in the least
of my superiority in height, and only acting on the defensive. Calton
played well enough for a gentleman; but he was no match for one who had,
at the age of thirteen, beat the Life Guardsmen at Angelo’s. Suddenly,
when I had excited a general laugh at the clumsy success with which I
warded off a most rapid attack of Calton’s, I changed my position, and
keeping Calton at arm’s length till I had driven him towards a corner,
I took advantage of a haughty imprudence on his part, and by a common
enough move in the game, drew back from a stroke aimed at my limbs, and
suffered the whole weight of my weapon to fall so heavily upon his head,
that I felled him to the ground in an instant.

I was sorry for the severity of the stroke, the moment after it was
inflicted; but never was punishment more deserved. We picked up the
discomfited hero, and placed him on a chair to recover his senses;
meanwhile I received the congratulations of the conclave with a frank
alteration of manner which delighted them; and I found it impossible to
get away, till I had promised to dine with Dartmore, and spend the rest
of the evening in the society of his friends.



CHAPTER XLIX.

Heroes mischievously gay, Lords of the street and terrors of the way,
Flush’d as they are with folly, youth, and wine.--Johnson’s London.

Hol. Novi hominem tanquam te--his humour is lofty, his discourse
peremptory, his tongue filed, his eye ambitious, his gait majestical,
and his general behaviour vain, ridiculous, and thrasonical.
--Shakspeare.

I went a little after seven o’clock to keep my dinner engagement
at---‘s; for very young men are seldom unpunctual at dinner. We
sat down, six in number, to a repast at once incredibly bad, and
ridiculously extravagant; turtle without fat--venison without
flavour--champagne with the taste of a gooseberry, and hock with the
properties of a pomegranate. [Note: Pomum valde purgatorium.] Such
is the constant habit of young men: they think any thing expensive is
necessarily good, and they purchase poison at a dearer rate than the
most medicine-loving hypochondriac in England.

Of course, all the knot declared the dinner was superb; called in the
master to eulogize him in person, and made him, to his infinite dismay,
swallow a bumper of his own hock. Poor man, they mistook his reluctance
for his diffidence, and forced him to wash it away in another potation.
With many a wry face of grateful humility, he left the room, and we then
proceeded to pass the bottle with the suicidal determination of defeated
Romans. You may imagine that we were not long in arriving at the
devoutly wished for consummation of comfortable inebriety; and with our
eyes reeling, our cheeks burning, and our brave spirits full ripe for
a quarrel, we sallied out at eleven o’clock, vowing death, dread, and
destruction to all the sober portion of his majesty’s subjects.

We came to a dead halt in Arlington-street, which, as it was the
quietest spot in the neighbourhood, we deemed a fitting place for the
arrangement of our forces. Dartmore, Staunton, (a tall, thin, well
formed, silly youth,) and myself, marched first, and the remaining
three followed. We gave each other the most judicious admonitions as
to propriety of conduct, and then, with a shout that alarmed the whole
street, we renewed our way. We passed on safely enough till we got to
Charing-Cross, having only been thrice upbraided by the watchmen, and
once threatened by two carmen of prodigious size, to whose wives or
sweethearts we had, to our infinite peril, made some gentle overtures.
When, however, we had just passed the Opera Colonnade, we were accosted
by a bevy of buxom Cyprians, as merry and as drunk as ourselves. We
halted for a few minutes in the midst of the kennel, to confabulate
with our new friends, and a very amicable and intellectual conversation
ensued. Dartmore was an adept in the art of slang, and he found himself
fairly matched, by more than one of the fair and gentle creatures by
whom we were surrounded. Just, however, as we were all in high glee,
Staunton made a trifling discovery, which turned the merriment of the
whole scene into strife, war, and confusion. A bouncing lass, whose
hands were as ready as her charms, had quietly helped herself to a watch
which Staunton wore, a la mode, in his waistcoat pocket. Drunken as the
youth was at that time, and dull as he was at all others, he was not
without the instinctive penetration with which all human bipeds watch
over their individual goods and chattels. He sprung aside from the
endearments of the syren, grasped her arm, and in a voice of querulous
indignation, accused her of the theft.

“Then rose the cry of women--shrill As shriek of gosshawk on the hill.”

Never were my ears so stunned. The angry authors in the adventures of
Gil Blas, were nothing to the disputants in the kennel at Charing Cross;
we rowed, swore, slanged with a Christian meekness and forbearance,
which would have rejoiced Mr. Wilberforce to the heart, and we were
already preparing ourselves for a more striking engagement, when we were
most unwelcomely interrupted by the presence of three watchmen.

“Take away this--this--d--d woman,” hiccuped out Staunton, “She has
sto--len--(hiccup)--my watch”--(hiccup.)

“No such thing, watchman,” hallooed out the accused, “the
b--counter-skipper never had any watch! he only filched a
twopenny-halfpenny gilt chain out of his master, Levi, the pawnbroker’s
window, and stuck it in his eel-skin to make a show: ye did, ye pitiful,
lanky-chopped son of a dog-fish, ye did.”

“Come, come,” said the watchman, “move on, move on.”

“You be d--d, for a Charley!” said one of our gang.

“Ho! ho! master jackanapes, I shall give you a cooling in the
watch-house, if you tips us any of your jaw. I dare say the young oman
here, is quite right about ye, and ye never had any watch at all, at
all.”

“You are a d--d liar,” cried Staunton; “and you are all in with each
other, like a pack of rogues as you are.”

“I’ll tell ye what, young gemman,” said another watchman, who was a more
potent, grave, and reverend senior than his comrades, “if you do not
move on instantly, and let those decent young omen alone, I’ll take you
all up before Sir Richard.”

“Charley, my boy,” said Dartmore, “did you ever get thrashed for
impertinence?”

The last mentioned watchman took upon himself the reply to this
interrogatory by a very summary proceeding: he collared Dartmore, and
his companions did the same kind office to us. This action was not
committed with impunity: in an instant two of the moon’s minions,
staffs, lanterns, and all, were measuring their length at the foot of
their namesake of royal memory; the remaining Dogberry was, however,
a tougher assailant; he held Staunton so firmly in his gripe, that
the poor youth could scarcely breathe out a faint and feeble d--ye of
defiance, and with his disengaged hand he made such an admirable use of
his rattle, that we were surrounded in a trice.

As when an ant-hill is invaded, from every quarter and crevice of the
mound arise and pour out an angry host, of whose previous existence
the unwary assailant had not dreamt; so from every lane, and alley, and
street, and crossing, came fast and far the champions of the night.

“Gentlemen,” said Dartmore, “we must fly--sauve qui peut.” We wanted no
stronger admonition, and, accordingly, all of us who were able, set off
with the utmost velocity with which God had gifted us. I have some faint
recollection that I myself headed the flight. I remember well that I
dashed up the Strand, and dashed down a singular little shed, from
which emanated the steam of tea, and a sharp, querulous scream of
“All hot--all hot! a penny a pint.” I see, now, by the dim light of
retrospection, a vision of an old woman in the kennel, and a pewter pot
of mysterious ingredients precipitated into a greengrocer’s shop, “te
virides inter lauros,” as Vincent would have said. On we went, faster
and faster, as the rattle rung in our ears, and the tramp of the enemy
echoed after us in hot pursuit.

“The devil take the hindmost,” said Dartmore, breathlessly (as he kept
up with me).

“The watchman has saved his majesty the trouble,” answered I, looking
back and seeing one of our friends in the clutch of the pursuers.

“On, on!” was Dartmore’s only reply.

At last, after innumerable perils, and various immersements into back
passages, and courts, and alleys, which, like the chicaneries of law,
preserved and befriended us, in spite of all the efforts of justice, we
fairly found ourselves in safety in the midst of a great square.

Here we paused, and after ascertaining our individual safeties, we
looked round to ascertain the sum total of the general loss. Alas! we
were wofully fully shorn of our beams--we were reduced onehalf: only
three out of the six survived the conflict and the flight.

“Half,” (said the companion of Dartmore and myself, whose name was
Tringle, and who was a dabbler in science, of which he was not a little
vain) “half is less worthy than the whole; but the half is more worthy
than nonentity.”

“An axiom,” said I, “not to be disputed; but now that we are safe, and
have time to think about it, are you not slightly of opinion that we
behaved somewhat scurvily to our better half, in leaving it so quietly
in the hands of the Philistines?”

“By no means,” answered Dartmore. “In a party, whose members make no
pretensions to sobriety, it would be too hard to expect that persons who
are scarcely capable of taking care of themselves, should take care of
other people. No; we have, in all these exploits, only the one maxim of
self-preservation.”

“Allow me,” said Tringle, seizing me by the coat, “to explain it to
you on scientific principles. You will find, in hydrostatics, that the
attraction of cohesion is far less powerful in fluids than in solids;
viz. that persons who have been converting their ‘solid flesh’ into wine
skins, cannot stick so close to one another as when they are sober.”

“Bravo, Tringle!” cried Dartmore; “and now, Pelham, I hope your delicate
scruples are, after so luminous an eclaircissement, set at rest for
ever.”

“You have convinced me,” said I; “let us leave the unfortunates to their
fate, and Sir Richard. What is now to be done?”

“Why, in the first place,” answered Dartmore, “let us reconnoitre. Does
any one know this spot?”

“Not I,” said both of us. We inquired of an old fellow, who was
tottering home under the same Bacchanalian auspices as ourselves, and
found we were in Lincoln’s Inn Fields.

“Which shall we do?” asked I, “stroll home; or parade the streets, visit
the Cider-Cellar, and the Finish, and kiss the first lass we meet in the
morning bringing her charms and carrots to Covent Garden Market?”

“The latter,” cried Dartmore and Tringle, “without doubt.”

“Come, then,” said I, “let us investigate Holborn, and dip into St.
Giles’s, and then find our way into some more known corner of the
globe.”

“Amen!” said Dartmore, and accordingly we renewed our march. We wound
along a narrow lane, tolerably well known, I imagine, to the gentlemen
of the quill, and entered Holborn. There was a beautiful still moon
above us, which cast its light over a drowsy stand of hackney coaches,
and shed a ‘silver sadness’ over the thin visages and sombre vestments
of two guardians of the night, who regarded us, we thought, with a very
ominous aspect of suspicion.

We strolled along, leisurely enough, till we were interrupted by a
miserable-looking crowd, assembled round a dull, dingy, melancholy shop,
from which gleamed a solitary candle, whose long, spinster-like wick was
flirting away with an east wind, at a most unconscionable rate. Upon
the haggard and worn countenances of the by-standers, was depicted one
general and sympathizing expression of eager, envious, wistful anxiety,
which predominated so far over the various characters of each, as to
communicate something of a likeness to all. It was an impress of such
a seal as you might imagine, not the arch-fiend, but one of his
subordinate shepherds, would have set upon each of his flock.

Amid this crowd, I recognized more than one face which I had often seen
in my equestrian lounges through town, peering from the shoulders of
some intrusive, ragamuffin, wagesless lackey, and squealing out of its
wretched, unpampered mouth, the everlasting query of “Want your oss
held, Sir?” The rest were made up of unfortunate women of the vilest
and most ragged description, aged itinerants, with features seared with
famine, bleared eyes, dropping jaws, shivering limbs, and all the mortal
signs of hopeless and aidless, and, worst of all, breadless infirmity.
Here and there an Irish accent broke out in the oaths of national
impatience, and was answered by the shrill, broken voice of some
decrepit but indefatigable votaress of pleasure--(Pleasure! good God!)
but the chief character of the meeting was silence;--silence, eager,
heavy, engrossing; and, above them all, shone out the quiet moon, so
calm, so holy, so breathing of still happiness and unpolluted glory,
as if it never looked upon the traces of human passion, and misery, and
sin. We stood for some moments contemplating the group before us, and
then, following the steps of an old, withered crone, who, with a cracked
cup in her hand, was pushing her way through the throng, we found
ourselves in that dreary pandaemonium, at once the origin and the refuge
of humble vices--a Gin-shop.

“Poor devils,” said Dartmore, to two or three of the nearest and
eagerest among the crowd, “come in, and I will treat you.”

The invitation was received with a promptness which must have been the
most gratifying compliment to the inviter; and thus Want, which is the
mother of Invention, does not object, now and then, to a bantling by
Politeness.

We stood by the counter while our proteges were served, in silent
observation. In low vice, to me, there is always something too gloomy,
almost too fearful for light mirth; the contortions of the madman are
stranger than those of the fool, but one does not laugh at them; the
sympathy is for the cause--not the effect.

Leaning against the counter at one corner, and fixing his eyes
deliberately and unmovingly upon us, was a man about the age of fifty,
dressed in a costume of singular fashion, apparently pretending to an
antiquity of taste, correspondent with that of the material. This person
wore a large cocked-hat, set rather jauntily on one side,--a black coat,
which seemed an omnium gatherum of all abominations that had come in its
way for the last ten years, and which appeared to advance equal claims
(from the manner it was made and worn), to the several dignities of the
art military and civil, the arma and the toga:--from the neck of the
wearer hung a blue ribbon of amazing breadth, and of a very surprising
assumption of newness and splendour, by no means in harmony with the
other parts of the tout ensemble; this was the guardian of an eye-glass
of block tin, and of dimensions correspondent with the size of the
ribbon. Stuck under the right arm, and shaped fearfully like a sword,
peeped out the hilt of a very large and sturdy looking stick, “in war a
weapon, in peace a support.”

The features of the man were in keeping with his garb; they betokened
an equal mixture of the traces of poverty, and the assumption of the
dignities reminiscent of a better day. Two small, light-blue eyes were
shaded by bushy, and rather imperious brows, which lowered from under
the hat, like Cerberus out of his den. These, at present, wore the
dull, fixed stare of habitual intoxication, though we were not long
in discovering that they had not yet forgotten to sparkle with all
the quickness, and more than the roguery of youth. His nose was large,
prominent, and aristocratic; nor would it have been ill formed, had not
some unknown cause pushed it a little nearer towards the left ear, than
would have been thought, by an equitable judge of beauty, fair to the
pretensions of the right. The lines in the countenance were marked as if
in iron, and had the face been perfectly composed, must have given to
it a remarkably stern and sinister appearance; but at that moment, there
was an arch leer about the mouth, which softened, or at least altered,
the expression the features habitually wore.

“Sir,” said he, (after a few minutes of silence,) “Sir,” said he,
approaching me, “will you do me the honour to take a pinch of snuff?”
 and so saying, he tapped a curious copper box, with a picture of his
late majesty upon it.

“With great pleasure,” answered I, bowing low, “since the act is a
prelude to the pleasure of your acquaintance.”

My gentleman of the gin-shop opened his box with an air, as he
replied--“It is but seldom that I meet, in places of this description,
gentlemen of the exterior of yourself and your friends. I am not a
person very easily deceived by the outward man. Horace, Sir, could not
have included me, when he said, specie decipimur. I perceive that you
are surprised at hearing me quote Latin. Alas! Sir, in my wandering and
various manner of life, I may say, with Cicero and Pliny, that the study
of letters has proved my greatest consolation. ‘Gaudium mihi,’ says the
latter author, ‘et solatium in literis: nihil tam laete quod his non
laetius, nihil tam triste quid non per hos sit minus triste.’ God d--n
ye, you scoundrel, give me my gin! ar’n’t you ashamed of keeping a
gentleman of my fashion so long waiting?” This was said to the sleepy
dispenser of the spirituous potations, who looked up for a moment with a
dull stare, and then replied, “Your money first, Mr. Gordon--you owe us
seven-pence halfpenny already.”

“Blood and confusion! speakest thou to me of halfpence! Know that thou
art a mercenary varlet; yes, knave, mark that, a mercenary varlet.” The
sleepy Ganymede replied not, and the wrath of Mr. Gordon subsided into a
low, interrupted, internal muttering of strange oaths, which rolled and
grumbled, and rattled in his throat, like distant thunder.

At length he cheered up a little--“Sir,” said he, addressing Dartmore,
“it is a sad thing to be dependant on these low persons; the wise among
the ancients were never so wrong as when they panegyrized poverty: it
is the wicked man’s tempter, the good man’s perdition, the proud man’s
curse, the melancholy man’s halter.”

“You are a strange old cock,” said the unsophisticated Dartmore, eyeing
him from head to foot; “there’s half a sovereign for you.”

The blunt blue eyes of Mr. Gordon sharpened up in an instant; he seized
the treasure with an avidity, of which the minute after, he seemed
somewhat ashamed; for he said, playing with the coin, in an idle,
indifferent manner--“Sir, you show a consideration, and, let me add,
Sir, a delicacy of feeling, unusual at your years. Sir, I shall repay
you at my earliest leisure, and in the meanwhile allow me to say, that I
shall be proud of the honour of your acquaintance.”

“Thank-ye, old boy,” said Dartmore, putting on his glove before he
accepted the offered hand of his new friend, which, though it was
tendered with great grace and dignity, was of a marvellously dingy and
soapless aspect.

“Harkye! you d--d son of a gun!” cried Mr. Gordon, abruptly turning
from Dartmore, after a hearty shake of the hand, to the man at the
counter--“Harkye! give me change for this half sovereign, and be d--d
to you--and then tip us a double gill of your best; you whey-faced,
liverdrenched, pence-griping, belly-griping, paupercheating,
sleepy-souled Arismanes of bad spirits. Come, gentlemen, if you have
nothing better to do, I’ll take you to my club; we are a rare knot of
us, there--all choice spirits; some of them are a little uncouth, it is
true, but we are not all born Chesterfields. Sir, allow me to ask the
favour of your name?”

“Dartmore.”

“Mr. Dartmore, you are a gentleman. Hollo! you Liquorpond-street of a
scoundrel--having nothing of liquor but the name, you narrow, nasty,
pitiful alley of a fellow, with a kennel for a body, and a sink for a
soul; give me my change and my gin, you scoundrel! Humph, is that all
right, you Procrustes of the counter, chopping our lawful appetites down
to your rascally standard of seven-pence half-penny? Why don’t you take
a motto, you Paynim dog? Here’s one for you--‘Measure for measure, and
the devil to pay!’ Humph, you pitiful toadstool of a trader, you have
no more spirit than an empty water-bottle; and when you go to h--ll,
they’ll use you to cool the bellows. I say, you rascal, why are you
worse off than the devil in a hip bath of brimstone?--because, you
knave, the devil then would only be half d--d, and you are d--d all
over! Come, gentlemen, I am at your service.”



CHAPTER L.

The history of a philosophical vagabond, pursuing novelty, and losing
content.--Vicar of Wakefield.

We followed our strange friend through the crowd at the door, which he
elbowed on either side with the most aristocratic disdain, perfectly
regardless of their jokes at his dress and manner; he no sooner got
through the throng, than he stopped short (though in the midst of the
kennel) and offered us his arm. This was an honour of which we were by
no means desirous; for, to say nothing of the shabbiness of Mr. Gordon’s
exterior, there was a certain odour in his garments which was possibly
less displeasing to the wearer than to his acquaintance. Accordingly,
we pretended not to notice this invitation, and merely said, we would
follow his guidance.

He turned up a narrow street, and after passing some of the most ill
favoured alleys I ever had the happiness of beholding, he stopped at
a low door; here he knocked twice, and was at last admitted by a
slip-shod, yawning wench, with red arms, and a profusion of sandy hair.
This Hebe, Mr. Gordon greeted with a loving kiss, which the kissee
resented in a very unequivocal strain of disgustful reproach.

“Hush! my Queen of Clubs; my Sultana Sootina!” said Mr. Gordon; “hush!
or these gentlemen will think you in earnest. I have brought three new
customers to the club.”

This speech somewhat softened the incensed Houri of Mr. Gordon’s
Paradise, and she very civilly asked us to enter.

“Stop!” said Mr. Gordon with an air of importance, “I must just step in
and ask the gentlemen to admit you;--merely a form--for a word from me
will be quite sufficient.” And so saying, he vanished for about five
minutes.

On his return, he said, with a cheerful countenance, that we were free
of the house, but that we must pay a shilling each as the customary
fee. This sum was soon collected, and quietly inserted in the waistcoat
pocket of our chaperon, who then conducted us up the passage into a
small back room, where were sitting about seven or eight men, enveloped
in smoke, and moistening the fever of the Virginian plant with various
preparations of malt. On entering, I observed Mr. Gordon deposit, at a
sort of bar, the sum of three-pence, by which I shrewdly surmised he
had gained the sum of two and nine-pence by our admission. With a very
arrogant air, he proceeded to the head of the table, sat himself down
with a swagger, and called out, like a lusty royster of the true kidney,
for a pint of purl and a pipe. Not to be out of fashion, we ordered the
same articles of luxury.

After we had all commenced a couple of puffs at our pipes, I looked
round at our fellow guests; they seemed in a very poor state of body,
as might naturally be supposed; and, in order to ascertain how far the
condition of the mind was suited to that of the frame, I turned round to
Mr. Gordon, and asked him in a whisper to give us a few hints as to the
genus and characteristics of the individual components of his club.
Mr. Gordon declared himself delighted with the proposal, and we all
adjourned to a separate table at the corner of the room, where Mr.
Gordon, after a deep draught at the purl, thus began:--“You observe
yon thin, meagre, cadaverous animal, with rather an intelligent and
melancholy expression of countenance--his name is Chitterling Crabtree:
his father was an eminent coal-merchant, and left him L10,000. Crabtree
turned politician. When fate wishes to ruin a man of moderate abilities
and moderate fortune, she makes him an orator. Mr. Chitterling Crabtree
attended all the meetings at the Crown and Anchor--subscribed to the
aid of the suffering friends of freedom--harangued, argued, sweated,
wrote--was fined and imprisoned--regained his liberty, and married--his
wife loved a community of goods no less than her spouse, and ran off
with one citizen, while he was running on to the others. Chitterling
dried his tears; and contented himself with the reflection, that, in ‘a
proper state of things,’ such an event could not have occurred.

“Mr. Crabtree’s money and life were now half gone. One does not
subscribe to the friends of freedom and spout at their dinners for
nothing. But the worst drop was yet in the cup. An undertaking, of the
most spirited and promising nature, was conceived by the chief of the
friends, and the dearest familiar of Mr. Chitterling Crabtree.
Our worthy embarked his fortune in a speculation so certain of
success;--crash went the speculation, and off went the friend--Mr.
Crabtree was ruined. He was not, however, a man to despair at trifles.
What were bread, meat, and beer, to the champion of equality! He went to
the meeting that very night: he said he gloried in his losses--they were
for the cause: the whole conclave rang with shouts of applause, and Mr.
Chitterling Crabtree went to bed happier than ever. I need not pursue
his history farther; you see him here--verbum sat. He spouts at the
‘Ciceronian,’ for half a crown a night, and to this day subscribes
sixpence a week to the cause of ‘liberty and enlightenment all over the
world.’”

“By Heaven!” cried Dartmore, “he is a fine fellow, and my father shall
do something for him.”

Gordon pricked up his ears, and continued,--“Now, for the second
person, gentlemen, whom I am about to describe to you. You see that
middle-sized, stout man, with a slight squint, and a restless, lowering,
cunning expression?”

“What! him in the kerseymere breeches and green jacket?” said I.

“The same,” answered Gordon. “His real name, when he does not travel
with an alias, is Job Jonson. He is one of the most remarkable rogues in
Christendom; he is so noted a cheat, that there is not a pick-pocket in
England who would keep company with him if he had anything to lose.
He was the favourite of his father, who intended to leave him all his
fortune, which was tolerably large. He robbed him one day on the high
road; his father discovered it, and disinherited him. He was placed at
a merchant’s office, and rose, step by step, to be head clerk, and
intended son-in-law. Three nights before his marriage, he broke open the
till, and was turned out of doors the next morning. If you were going to
do him the greatest favour in the world, he could not keep his hands out
of your pocket till you had done it. In short, he has rogued himself out
of a dozen fortunes, and a hundred friends, and managed, with incredible
dexterity and success, to cheat himself into beggary and a pot of beer.”

“I beg your pardon,” said I, “but I think a sketch of your own life must
be more amusing than that of any one else: am I impertinent in asking
for it?”

“Not at all,” replied Mr. Gordon; “you shall have it in as few words as
possible.”

“I was born a gentleman, and educated with some pains; they told me I
was a genius, and it was not very hard to persuade me of the truth of
the assertion. I wrote verses to a wonder--robbed orchards according
to military tactics--never played at marbles, without explaining to
my competitors the theory of attraction--and was the best informed,
mischievous, little rascal in the whole school. My family were in great
doubt what to do with so prodigious a wonder; one said the law, another
the church, a third talked of diplomacy, and a fourth assured my mother,
that if I could but be introduced at court, I should be lord chamberlain
in a twelvemonth. While my friends were deliberating, I took the
liberty of deciding; I enlisted, in a fit of loyal valour, in a marching
regiment; my friends made the best of a bad job, and bought me an
ensigncy.

“I recollect I read Plato the night before I went to battle; the next
morning they told me I ran away. I am sure it was a malicious invention,
for if I had, I should have recollected it; whereas I was in such a
confusion that I cannot remember a single thing that happened in the
whole course of that day. About six months afterwards, I found myself
out of the army, and in gaol; and no sooner had my relations released me
from the latter predicament, than I set off on my travels. At Dublin, I
lost my heart to a rich widow (as I thought); I married her, and found
her as poor as myself. God knows what would have become of me, if I had
not taken to drinking; my wife scorned to be outdone by me in any thing;
she followed my example, and at the end of a year I followed her to
the grave. Since then I have taken warning, and been scrupulously
sober.--Betty, my love, another pint of purl.

“I was now once more a freeman in the prime of my life; handsome, as you
see, gentlemen, and with the strength and spirit of a young Hercules.
Accordingly I dried my tears, turned marker by night, at a gambling
house, and buck by day, in Bond-street (for I had returned to London).
I remember well one morning, that his present Majesty was pleased, en
passant, to admire my buckskins--tempora mutantur. Well, gentlemen, one
night at a brawl in our salon, my nose met with a rude hint to move
to the right. I went, in a great panic to the surgeon, who mended the
matter, by moving it to the left. There, thank God! it has rested in
quiet ever since. It is needless to tell you the nature of the quarrel
in which this accident occurred; however, my friends thought it
necessary to remove me from the situation I then held. I went once more
to Ireland, and was introduced to ‘a friend of freedom.’ I was poor;
that circumstance is quite enough to make a patriot. They sent me to
Paris on a secret mission, and when I returned, my friends were in
prison. Being always of a free disposition, I did not envy them their
situation: accordingly I returned to England. Halting at Liverpool, with
a most debilitated purse, I went into a silversmith’s shop to brace it,
and about six months afterwards, I found myself on a marine excursion
to Botany Bay. On my return from that country, I resolved to turn my
literary talents to account. I went to Cambridge, wrote declamations,
and translated Virgil at so much a sheet. My relations (thanks to my
letters, neither few nor far between) soon found me out; they allowed
me (they do so still) half a guinea a week; and upon this and my
declamations, I manage to exist. Ever since, my chief residence has
been at Cambridge. I am an universal favourite with both graduates and
under-graduates. I have reformed my life and my manners, and have become
the quiet, orderly person you behold me. Age tames the fiercest of us--

“‘Non sum qualis eram.’

“Betsy, bring me my purl, and be d--d to you.

“It is now vacation time, and I have come to town with the idea of
holding lectures on the state of education. Mr. Dartmore, your health.
Gentlemen, yours. My story is done, and I hope you will pay for the
purl.”



CHAPTER LI.

I hate a drunken rogue.--Twelfth Night.

We took an affectionate leave of Mr. Gordon, and found ourselves once
more in the open air; the smoke and the purl had contributed greatly to
the continuance of our inebriety, and we were as much averse to bed
as ever. We conveyed ourselves, laughing and rioting all the way, to a
stand of hackney-coaches. We entered the head of the flock, and drove to
Piccadilly. It set us down at the corner of the Haymarket.

“Past two!” cried the watchman, as we sauntered by him.

“You lie, you rascal,” said I, “you have passed three now.”

We were all merry enough to laugh at this sally; and seeing a light
gleam from the entrance of the Royal Saloon, we knocked at the door, and
it was opened unto us. We sat down at the only spare table in the place,
and looked round at the smug and varment citizens with whom the room was
filled.

“Hollo, waiter!” cried Tringle, “some red wine negus--I know not why it
is, but the devil himself could never cure me of thirst. Wine and I
have a most chemical attraction for each other. You know that we always
estimate the force of attraction between bodies by the force required to
separate them!”

While we were all three as noisy and nonsensical as our best friends
could have wished us, a new stranger entered, approached, looked round
the room for a seat, and seeing none, walked leisurely up to our table,
and accosted me with a--“Ha! Mr. Pelham, how d’ye do? Well met; by your
leave I will sip my grog at your table. No offence, I hope--more the
merrier, eh?--Waiter, a glass of hot brandy and water--not too weak.
D’ye hear?”

Need I say that this pithy and pretty address proceeded from the mouth
of Mr. Tom Thornton. He was somewhat more than half drunk, and his light
prying eyes twinkled dizzily in his head. Dartmore, who was, and is,
the best natured fellow alive, hailed the signs of his intoxication as
a sort of freemasonry, and made way for him beside himself. I could
not help remarking, that Thornton seemed singularly less sleek than
heretofore: his coat was out at the elbows, his linen was torn and
soiled; there was not a vestige of the vulgar spruceness about him which
was formerly one of his most prominent characteristics. He had also
lost a great deal of the florid health formerly visible in his face;
his cheeks seemed sunk and haggard, his eyes hollow, and his complexion
sallow and squalid, in spite of the flush which intemperance spread over
it at the moment. However, he was in high spirits, and soon made himself
so entertaining that Dartmore and Tringle grew charmed with him.

As for me, the antipathy I had to the man sobered and silenced me for
the rest of the night; and finding that Dartmore and his friend were
eager for an introduction to some female friends of Thornton’s, whom he
mentioned in terms of high praise, I tore myself from them, and made the
best of my way home.



CHAPTER LII.

Illi mors gravis incubat Qui notus nimis omnibus Ignotus moritus sibi.
--Seneca.

Nous serons par nos lois les juges des ouvrages.--Les Femmes Savantes.

Vincent called on me the next day. “I have news for you,” said he,
“though somewhat of a lugubrious nature. Lugete Veneres Cupidinesque.
You remember the Duchesse de Perpignan!”

“I should think so,” was my answer.

“Well then,” pursued Vincent, “she is no more. Her death was worthy
of her life. She was to give a brilliant entertainment to all the
foreigners at Paris: the day before it took place a dreadful eruption
broke over her complexion. She sent for the doctors in despair. ‘Cure me
against to-morrow,’ she said, ‘and name your own reward.’ ‘Madame, it is
impossible to do so with safety to your health.’ ‘Au diable! with your
health,’ said the duchesse, ‘what is health to an eruption?’ The doctors
took the hint; an external application was used--the duchesse woke in
the morning as beautiful as ever--the entertainment took place--she
was the Armida of the scene. Supper was announced. She took the arm
of the--ambassador, and moved through the crowd amidst the audible
admiration of all. She stopped for a moment at the door; all eyes were
upon her. A fearful and ghastly convulsion passed over her countenance,
her lips trembled, she fell on the ground with the most terrible
contortions of face and frame. They carried her to bed. She remained for
some days insensible; when she recovered, she asked for a looking-glass.
Her whole face was drawn on one side, not a wreck of beauty was
left;--that night she poisoned herself!”

I cannot express how shocked I was at this information. Much as I had
cause to be disgusted with the conduct of that unhappy woman, I could
find in my mind no feeling but commiseration and horror at her death;
and it was with great difficulty that Vincent persuaded me to accept an
invitation to Lady Roseville’s for the evening, to meet Glanville and
himself.

However, I cheered up as the night came on; and though my mind was still
haunted with the tale of the morning, it was neither in a musing nor a
melancholy mood that I entered the drawing-room at Lady Roseville’s--“So
runs the world away.”

Glanville was there in his “customary mourning,” and looking remarkably
handsome.

“Pelham,” he said, when he joined me, “do you remember at Lady--‘s one
night, I said I would introduce you to my sister? I had no opportunity
then, for we left the house before she returned from the refreshment
room. May I do so now?”

I need not say what was my answer. I followed Glanville into the next
room; and to my inexpressible astonishment and delight, discovered in
his sister the beautiful, the never-forgotten stranger I had seen at
Cheltenham.

For once in my life I was embarrassed--my bow would have shamed a major
in the line, and my stuttered and irrelevant address, an alderman in the
presence of His Majesty. However, a few moments sufficed to recover me,
and I strained every nerve to be as agreeable and seduisant as possible.

After I had conversed with Miss Glanville for some time, Lady Roseville
joined us. Stately and Juno-like as was that charming personage in
general, she relaxed into a softness of manner to Miss Glanville, that
quite won my heart. She drew her to a part of the room, where a
very animated and chiefly literary conversation was going on--and I,
resolving to make the best of my time, followed them, and once more
found myself seated beside Miss Glanville. Lady Roseville was on the
other side of my beautiful companion; and I observed that, whenever she
took her eyes from Miss Glanville, they always rested upon her brother,
who, in the midst of the disputation and the disputants, sat silent,
gloomy, and absorbed.

The conversation turned upon Scott’s novels; thence on novels in
general; and finally on the particular one of Anastasius.

“It is a thousand pities” said Vincent, “that the scene of that novel is
so far removed from us. Could the humour, the persons, the knowledge
of character, and of the world, come home to us, in a national, not
an exotic garb, it would be a more popular, as it is certainly a more
gifted work, than even the exquisite novel of Gil Blas. But it is a
great misfortune for Hope that--

“‘To learning he narrowed his mind, And gave up to the East what was
meant for mankind.’

“One often loses, in admiration at the knowledge of peculiar costume,
the deference one would have paid to the masterly grasp of universal
character.”

“It must require,” said Lady Roseville, “an extraordinary combination of
mental powers to produce a perfect novel.”

“One so extraordinary,” answered Vincent, “that, though we have one
perfect epic poem, and several which pretend to perfection, we have not
one perfect novel in the world. Gil Blas approaches more to perfection
than any other (owing to the defect I have just mentioned in
Anastasius); but it must be confessed that there is a want of dignity,
of moral rectitude, and of what I may term moral beauty, throughout the
whole book. If an author could combine the various excellencies of Scott
and Le Sage, with a greater and more metaphysical knowledge of morals
than either, we might expect from him the perfection we have not yet
discovered since the days of Apuleius.”

“Speaking of morals,” said Lady Roseville, “do you not think every
novel should have its distinct but, and inculcate, throughout, some one
peculiar moral, such as many of Marmontel’s and Miss Edgeworth’s?”

“No!” answered Vincent, “every good novel has one great end--the same in
all--viz. the increasing our knowledge of the heart. It is thus that a
novel writer must be a philosopher. Whoever succeeds in shewing us more
accurately the nature of ourselves and species, has done science, and,
consequently, virtue, the most important benefit; for every truth is
a moral. This great and universal end, I am led to imagine, is rather
crippled than extended by the rigorous attention to the one isolated
moral you mention.

“Thus Dryden, in his Essay on the Progress of Satire, very rightly
prefers Horace to Juvenal, so far as instruction is concerned; because
the miscellaneous satires of the former are directed against every
vice--the more confined ones of the latter (for the most part) only
against one. All mankind is the field the novelist should cultivate--all
truth, the moral he should strive to bring home. It is in occasional
dialogue, in desultory maxims, in deductions from events, in analysis of
character, that he should benefit and instruct. It is not enough--and I
wish a certain novelist who has lately arisen would remember this--it
is not enough for a writer to have a good heart, amiable sympathies,
and what are termed high feelings, in order to shape out a moral, either
true in itself, or beneficial in its inculcation. Before he touches his
tale, he should be thoroughly acquainted with the intricate science of
morals, and the metaphysical, as well as the more open, operations of
the mind. If his knowledge is not deep and clear, his love of the good
may only lead him into error; and he may pass off the prejudices of a
susceptible heart for the precepts of virtue. Would to God that people
would think it necessary to be instructed before they attempt to
instruct. ‘Dire simplement que la vertu est vertu parce qu’elle est
bonne en son fonds, et le vice tout au contraire, ce n’est pas les faire
connoitre.’ For me, if I was to write a novel, I would first make myself
an acute, active, and vigilant observer of men and manners. Secondly, I
would, after having thus noted effects by action in the world, trace the
causes by books, and meditation in my closet. It is then, and not till
then, that I would study the lighter graces of style and decoration; nor
would I give the rein to invention, till I was convinced that it would
create neither monsters of men nor falsities of truth. For my vehicles
of instruction or amusement, I would have people as they are--neither
worse nor better--and the moral they should convey, should be rather
through jest or irony, than gravity and seriousness. There never was
an imperfection corrected by portraying perfection; and if levity or
ridicule be said so easily to allure to sin, I do not see why they
should not be used in defence of virtue. Of this we may be sure, that as
laughter is a distinct indication of the human race, so there never was
a brute mind or a savage heart that loved to indulge in it.” [Note: The
Philosopher of Malmesbury express a very different opinion of the origin
of laughter, and, for my part, I think his doctrine, in great measure,
though not altogether--true.--See Hobbes on Human Nature, and the answer
to him in Campbell’s Rhetoric.]

Vincent ceased.

“Thank you, my lord,” said Lady Roseville, as she took Miss Glanville’s
arm and moved from the table. “For once you have condescended to give
us your own sense, and not other people’s; you have scarce made a single
quotation.”

“Accept,” answered Vincent, rising--

“‘Accept a miracle instead of wit.’”



CHAPTER LIII.

Oh! I love!--Methinks This word of love is fit for all the world, And
that for gentle hearts, another name Should speak of gentler thoughts
than the world owns.--P. B. Shelley.

For me, I ask no more than honour gives, To think me yours, and rank me
with your friends,--Shakspeare

Callous and worldly as I may seem, from the tone of these memoirs, I can
say, safely, that one of the most delicious evenings I ever spent, was
the first of my introduction to Miss Glanville. I went home intoxicated
with a subtle spirit of enjoyment that gave a new zest and freshness
to life. Two little hours seemed to have changed the whole course of my
thoughts and feelings.

There was nothing about Miss Glanville like a heroine--I hate your
heroines. She had none of that “modest ease,” and “quiet dignity,” and
“English grace” (Lord help us!) of which certain writers speak with
such applause. Thank Heaven, she was alive. She had great sense, but
the playfulness of a child; extreme rectitude of mind, but with the
tenderness of a gazelle: if she laughed, all her countenance, lips,
eyes, forehead, cheeks laughed too: “Paradise seemed opened in her
face:” if she looked grave, it was such a lofty and upward, yet sweet
and gentle gravity, that you might (had you been gifted with the least
imagination,) have supposed, from the model of her countenance, a new
order of angels between the cherubim and the seraphim, the angels of
Love and Wisdom. She was not, perhaps, quite so silent in society as
my individual taste would desire; but when she spoke, it was with a
propriety of thought and diction which made me lament when her voice
had ceased. It was as if something beautiful in creation had stopped
suddenly.

Enough of this now. I was lazily turning (the morning after Lady
Roseville’s) over some old books, when Vincent entered. I observed that
his face was flushed, and his eyes sparkled with more than their usual
brilliancy. He looked carefully round the room, and then approaching his
chair towards mine, said, in a low tone--“Pelham, I have something
of importance on my mind which I wish to discuss with you; but let
me entreat you to lay aside your usual levity, and pardon me if I say
affectation; meet me with the candour and plainness which are the real
distinctions of your character.”

“My Lord Vincent,” I replied, “there is, in your words, a depth and
solemnity which pierce me, through one of N--‘s best stuffed coats, even
to the very heart. Let me ring for my poodle and some eau de Cologne,
and I will hear you as you desire, from the alpha to the omega of your
discourse.”

Vincent bit his lip, but I rung, had my orders executed, and then
settling myself and my poodle on the sofa, I declared my readiness to
attend to him.

“My dear friend,” said he, “I have often seen that, in spite of all your
love of pleasure, you have your mind continually turned towards higher
and graver objects; and I have thought the better of your talents, and
of your future success, for the little parade you make of the one, and
the little care you appear to pay to the other: for

“‘‘tis a common proof, That lowliness is young Ambition’s ladder.’

“I have also observed that you have, of late, been much to Lord
Dawton’s; I have even heard that you have been twice closeted with
him. It is well known that that person entertains hopes of leading
the Opposition to the grata arva of the Treasury benches; and
notwithstanding the years in which the Whigs have been out of office,
there are some persons who pretend to foresee the chance of a coalition
between them and Mr. Gaskell, to whose principles it is also added that
they have been gradually assimilating.”

Here Vincent paused a moment, and looked full at me. I met his eye with
a glance as searching as his own. His look changed, and he continued.

“Now, listen to me, Pelham: such a coalition never can take place. You
smile; I repeat it. It is my object to form a third party; perhaps while
the two great sects ‘anticipate the cabinet designs of fate,’ there may
suddenly come by a third, ‘to whom the whole shall be referred.’ Say
that you think it not impossible that you may join us, and I will tell
you more.”

I paused for three minutes before I answered Vincent. I then said--“I
thank you very sincerely for your proposal: tell me the names of two of
your designed party, and I will answer you.”

“Lord Lincoln and Lord Lesborough.”

“What!” said I--“the Whig, who says in the Upper House, that whatever
may be the distresses of the people, they shall not be gratified at the
cost of one of the despotic privileges of the aristocracy. Go to!--I
will have none of him. As to Lesborough, he is a fool and a boaster--who
is always puffing his own vanity with the windiest pair of oratorical
bellows that ever were made by air and brass, for the purpose of
sound and smoke, ‘signifying nothing.’ Go to!--I will have none of him
either.”

“You are right in your judgment of my confreres,” answered Vincent; “but
we must make use of bad tools for good purposes.”

“No--no!” said I; “the commonest carpenter will tell you the reverse.”

Vincent eyed me suspiciously. “Look you!” said he: “I know well that
no man loves better than you place, power, and reputation. Do you grant
this?”

“I do!” was my reply.

“Join with us; I will place you in the House of Commons immediately: if
we succeed, you shall have the first and the best post I can give you.
Now--‘under which king, Bezonian, speak or die!’”

“I answer you in the words of the same worthy you quote,” said I--“‘A
foutra for thine office.’--Do you know, Vincent, that I have, strange as
it may seem to you, such a thing as a conscience? It is true I forget it
now and then; but in a public capacity, the recollection of others
would put me very soon in mind of it. I know your party well. I cannot
imagine--forgive me--one more injurious to the country, nor one more
revolting to myself; and I do positively affirm, that I would sooner
feed my poodle on paunch and liver, instead of cream and fricassee, than
be an instrument in the hands of men like Lincoln and Lesborough; who
talk much, who perform nothing--who join ignorance of every principle
of legislation to indifference for every benefit to the people:--who are
full of ‘wise saws,’ but empty of ‘modern instances’--who level upwards,
and trample downwards--and would only value the ability you are pleased
to impute to me, in the exact proportion that a sportsman values the
ferret, that burrows for his pleasure, and destroys for his interest.
Your party sha’n’t stand!”

Vincent turned pale--“And how long,” said he, “have you learnt ‘the
principles of legislation,’ and this mighty affection for the ‘benefit
of the people?’”

“Ever since,” said I, coldly, “I learnt any thing! The first piece of
real knowledge I ever gained was, that my interest was incorporated with
that of the beings with whom I had the chance of being cast: if I injure
them, I injure myself: if I can do them any good, I receive the benefit
in common with the rest. Now, as I have a great love for that personage
who has now the honour of addressing you, I resolved to be honest for
his sake. So much for my affection for the benefit of the people. As to
the little knowledge of the principles of legislation, on which you are
kind enough to compliment me, look over the books on this table, or the
writings in this desk, and know, that ever since I had the misfortune of
parting from you at Cheltenham, there has not been a day in which I have
spent less than six hours reading and writing on that sole subject. But
enough of this--will you ride to-day?”

Vincent rose slowly--

“‘Gli arditi (said he) tuoi voti Gia noti mi sono; Ma inveno a quel
trono, Tu aspiri con me Trema per te!’”

“‘Io trema’ (I replied out of the same opera)--‘Io trema--di te!’”

“Well,” answered Vincent, and his fine high nature overcame his
momentary resentment and chagrin at my reception of his offer--“Well,
I honour your for your sentiments, though they are opposed to my own. I
may depend on your secrecy?”

“You may,” said I.

“I forgive you, Pelham,” rejoined Vincent: “we part friends.”

“Wait one moment,” said I, “and pardon me, if I venture to speak in the
language of caution to one in every way so superior to myself. No one,
(I say this with a safe conscience, for I never flattered my friend in
my life, though I have often adulated my enemy)--no one has a greater
admiration for your talents than myself; I desire eagerly to see you in
the station most fit for their display; pause one moment before you link
yourself, not only to a party, but to principles that cannot stand. You
have only to exert yourself, and you may either lead the opposition,
or be among the foremost in the administration. Take something certain,
rather than what is doubtful; or at least stand alone:--such is my
belief in your powers, if fairly tried, that if you were not united to
those men, I would promise you faithfully to stand or fall by you alone,
even if we had not through all England another soldier to our standard;
but--”

“I thank you, Pelham,” said Vincent, interrupting me; “till we meet
in public as enemies, we are friends in private--I desire no
more.--Farewell.”



CHAPTER LIV.

Il vaut mieux employer notre esprit a supporter les infortunes qui nous
arrivent, qu’a prevoir celle qui nous peuvent arriver.--Rochefoucault.

No sooner had Vincent departed, than I buttoned my coat, and sallied out
through a cold easterly wind to Lord Dawton’s. It was truly said by the
political quoter, that I had been often to that nobleman’s, although
I have not thought it advisable to speak of my political adventures
hitherto. I have before said that I was ambitious; and the sagacious
have probably already discovered, that I was somewhat less ignorant than
it was my usual pride and pleasure to appear. Heaven knows why! but I
had established among my uncle’s friends, a reputation for talent, which
I by no means deserved; and no sooner had I been personally introduced
to Lord Dawton, than I found myself courted by that personage in
a manner equally gratifying and uncommon. When I lost my seat in
Parliament, Dawton assured me that before the session was over, I should
be returned for one of his boroughs; and though my mind revolted at
the idea of becoming dependant on any party, I made little scruple of
promising conditionally to ally myself to his. So far had affairs gone,
when I was honoured with Vincent’s proposal. I found Lord Dawton in his
library, with the Marquess of Clandonald, (Lord Dartmore’s father, and,
from his rank and property, classed among the highest, as, from his
vanity and restlessness, he was among the most active members of the
Opposition.) Clandonald left the room when I entered. Few men in office
are wise enough to trust the young; as if the greater zeal and sincerity
of youth did not more than compensate for its appetite for the gay, or
its thoughtlessness of the serious.

When we were alone, Dawton said to me, “We are in great despair at the
motion upon the--, to be made in the Lower House. We have not a single
person whom we can depend upon, for the sweeping and convincing answer
we ought to make; and though we should at least muster our full force in
voting, our whipper-in, poor--, is so ill, that I fear we shall make but
a very pitiful figure.”

“Give me,” said I, “full permission to go forth into the high-ways and
by-ways, and I will engage to bring a whole legion of dandies to the
House door. I can go no farther; your other agents must do the rest.”

“Thank you, my dear young friend,” said Lord Dawton, eagerly; “thank
you a thousand times: we must really get you in the House as soon as
possible; you will serve us more than I can express.”

I bowed, with a sneer I could not repress. Dawton pretended not to
observe it. “Come,” said I, “my lord, we have no time to lose. I shall
meet you, perhaps, at Brookes’s, to morrow evening, and report to you
respecting my success.”

Lord Dawton pressed my hand warmly, and followed me to the door.

“He is the best premier we could have,” thought I; “but he deceives
himself, if he thinks Henry Pelham will play the jackall to his lion.
He will soon see that I shall keep for myself what he thinks I hunt for
him.” I passed through Pall Mall, and thought of Glanville. I knocked at
his door: he was at home. I found him leaning his cheek upon his hand,
in a thoughtful position; an open letter was before him.

“Read that,” he said, pointing to it.

I did so. It was from the agent to the Duke of--, and contained his
appointment to an opposition borough.

“A new toy, Pelham,” said he, faintly smiling; “but a little longer, and
they will all be broken--the rattle will be the last.”

“My dear, dear Glanville,” said I, much affected, “do not talk thus; you
have every thing before you.”

“Yes,” interrupted Glanville, “you are right, for every thing left
for me is in the grave. Do you imagine that I can taste one of the
possessions which fortune has heaped upon me, that I have one healthful
faculty, one sense of enjoyment, among the hundred which other men are
‘heirs to?’ When did you ever see me for a moment happy? I live, as it
were, on a rock, barren, and herbless, and sapless, and cut off from
all human fellowship and intercourse. I had only a single object left to
live for, when you saw me at Paris; I have gratified that, and the end
and purpose of my existence is fulfilled. Heaven is merciful; but a
little while, and this feverish and unquiet spirit shall be at rest.”

I took his hand and pressed it.

“Feel,” said he, “this dry, burning skin; count my pulse through the
variations of a single minute, and you will cease either to pity me,
or to speak to me of life. For months I have had, night and day, a
wasting--wasting fever, of brain, and heart, and frame; the fire works
well, and the fuel is nearly consumed.”

He paused, and we were both silent. In fact, I was shocked at the fever
of his pulse, no less than affected at the despondency of his words. At
last I spoke to him of medical advice.

“‘Canst thou,’” he said, with a deep solemnity of voice and manner,
“‘administer to a mind diseased--pluck from the memory’--Ah! away with
the quotation and the reflection.” And he sprung from the sofa, and
going to the window, opened it, and leaned out for a few moments in
silence. When he turned again towards me, his manner had regained its
usual quiet. He spoke about the important motion approaching on the--,
and promised to attend; and then, by degrees, I led him to talk of his
sister.

He mentioned her with enthusiasm. “Beautiful as Ellen is,” he said, “her
face is the very faintest reflection of her mind. Her habits of thought
are so pure, that every impulse is a virtue. Never was there a person
to whom goodness was so easy. Vice seems something so opposite to her
nature, that I cannot imagine it possible for her to sin.”

“Will you not call with me at your mother’s?” said I. “I am going there
to-day.”

Glanville replied in the affirmative, and we went at once to Lady
Glanville’s, in Berkeley-square. We were admitted into his mother’s
boudoir. She was alone with Miss Glanville. Our conversation soon
turned from common-place topics to those of a graver nature; the deep
melancholy of Glanville’s mind imbued all his thoughts when he once
suffered himself to express them.

“Why,” said Lady Glanville, who seemed painfully fond of her son, “why
do you not go more into the world? You suffer your mind to prey upon
itself, till it destroys you. My dear, dear son, how very ill you seem.”

Ellen, whose eyes swam in tears, as they gazed upon her brother, laid
her beautiful hand upon his, and said, “For my mother’s sake, Reginald,
do take more care of yourself: you want air, and exercise, and
amusement.”

“No,” answered Glanville, “I want nothing but occupation, and thanks to
the Duke of--, I have now got it. I am chosen member for--.”

“I am too happy,” said the proud mother; “you will now be all I have
ever predicted for you;” and, in her joy at the moment, she forgot the
hectic of his cheek, and the hollowness of his eye.

“Do you remember,” said Reginald, turning to his sister, “those
beautiful lines in my favourite Ford--

‘“Glories Of human greatness are but pleasing dreams, And shadows soon
decaying. On the stage Of my mortality, my youth has acted Some scenes
of vanity, drawn out at length By varied pleasures--sweetened in the
mixture, But tragical in issue. Beauty, pomp, With every sensuality our
giddiness Doth frame an idol--are inconstant friends When any troubled
passion makes us halt On the unguarded castle of the mind.’”

“Your verses,” said I, “are beautiful, even to me, who have no soul
for poetry, and never wrote a line in my life. But I love not their
philosophy. In all sentiments that are impregnated with melancholy, and
instil sadness as a moral, I question the wisdom, and dispute the truth.
There is no situation in life which we cannot sweeten, or embitter, at
will. If the past is gloomy, I do not see the necessity of dwelling upon
it. If the mind can make one vigorous exertion, it can another: the same
energy you put forth in acquiring knowledge, would also enable you
to baffle misfortune. Determine not to think upon what is painful;
resolutely turn away from every thing that recals it; bend all your
attention to some new and engrossing object; do this, and you defeat the
past. You smile, as if this were impossible; yet it is not an iota more
so, than to tear one’s self from a favourite pursuit, and addict
one’s self to an object unwelcome to one at first. This the mind does
continually through life: so can it also do the other, if you will but
make an equal exertion. Nor does it seem to me natural to the human
heart to look much to the past; all its plans, its projects, its
aspirations, are for the future; it is for the future, and in the
future, that we live. Our very passions, when most agitated, are most
anticipative. Revenge, avarice, ambition, love, the desire of good and
evil, are all fixed and pointed to some distant goal; to look backwards,
is like walking backwards--against our proper formation; the mind does
not readily adopt the habit, and when once adopted, it will readily
return to its natural bias. Oblivion is, therefore, an easier obtained
boon than we imagine. Forgetfulness of the past is purchased by
increasing our anxiety for the future.”

I paused for a moment, but Glanville did not answer me; and, encouraged
by a look from Ellen, I continued--“You remember that, according to an
old creed, if we were given memory as a curse, we were also given hope
as a blessing. Counteract the one by the other. In my own life, I have
committed many weak, many wicked actions; I have chased away their
remembrance, though I have transplanted their warning to the future. As
the body involuntarily avoids what is hurtful to it, without tracing the
association to its first experience, so the mind insensibly shuns
what has formerly afflicted it, even without palpably recalling the
remembrance of the affliction. The Roman philosopher placed the secret
of human happiness in the one maxim--‘not to admire.’ I never could
exactly comprehend the sense of the moral: my maxim for the same object
would be--‘never to regret.’”

“Alas! my dear friend,” said Glanville--“we are great philosophers to
each other, but not to ourselves; the moment we begin to feel sorrow, we
cease to reflect on its wisdom. Time is the only comforter; your maxims
are very true, but they confirm me in my opinion--that it is in vain for
us to lay down fixed precepts for the regulation of the mind, so long
as it is dependent upon the body. Happiness and its reverse are
constitutional in many persons, and it is then only that they are
independent of circumstances. Make the health, the frames of all men
alike--make their nerves of the same susceptibility--their memories of
the same bluntness, or acuteness--and I will then allow, that you can
give rules adapted to all men; till then, your maxim, ‘never to regret,’
is as idle as Horace’s ‘never to admire.’ It may be wise to you--it is
impossible to me!”

With these last words, Glanville’s voice faltered, and I felt averse to
push the argument further. Ellen’s eye caught mine, and gave me a look
so kind, and almost grateful, that I forgot every thing else in the
world. A few moments afterwards a friend of Lady Glanville’s was
announced, and I left the room.



CHAPTER LV.

Intus et in jecore aegro, Nascuntur domini.--Persius.

The next two or three days I spent in visiting all my male friends in
the Lower House, and engaging them to dine with me, preparatory to the
great act of voting on--‘s motion. I led them myself to the House
of Commons, and not feeling sufficiently interested in the debate to
remain, as a stranger, where I ought, in my own opinion, to have acted
as a performer, I went to Brookes’s to wait the result. Lord Gravelton,
a stout, bluff, six-foot nobleman, with a voice like a Stentor, was
“blowing up” the waiters in the coffee-room. Mr.--, the author of
T--, was conning the Courier in a corner; and Lord Armadilleros, the
haughtiest and most honourable peer in the calendar, was monopolizing
the drawing-room, with his right foot on one hob and his left on the
other. I sat myself down in silence, and looked over the “crack article”
 in the Edinburgh. By and by, the room got fuller; every one spoke of the
motion before the House, and anticipated the merits of the speeches, and
the numbers of the voters.

At last a principal member entered--a crowd gathered round him. “I have
heard,” he said, “the most extraordinary speech, for the combination of
knowledge and imagination, that I ever recollect to have listened to.”

“From Gaskell, I suppose?” was the universal cry.

“No,” said Mr.--, “Gaskell has not yet spoken. It was from a young
man who has only just taken his seat. It was received with the most
unanimous cheers, and was, indeed, a remarkable display.”

“What is his name?” I asked, already half foreboding the answer.

“I only just learnt it as I left the House,” replied Mr.--: “the speaker
was Sir Reginald Glanville.”

Then every one whom I had often before heard censure Glanville for his
rudeness, or laugh at him for his eccentricity, opened their mouths in
congratulations to their own wisdom, for having long admired his talents
and predicted his success.

I left the “turba Remi sequens fortunam;” I felt agitated and feverish;
those who have unexpectedly heard of the success of a man for whom
great affection is blended with greater interest, can understand the
restlessness of mind with which I wandered into the streets. The air was
cold and nipping. I was buttoning my coat round my chest, when I heard a
voice say, “You have dropped your glove, Mr. Pelham.”

The speaker was Thornton. I thanked him coldly for his civility, and
was going on, when he said, “If your way is up Pall Mall, I have no
objection to join you for a few minutes.”

I bowed with some hauteur; and as I seldom refuse any opportunity of
knowing more perfectly individual character, I said I should be happy of
his company so long as our way lay together.

“It is a cold night, Mr. Pelham,” said Thornton, after a pause. “I have
been dining at Hatchett’s, with an old Paris acquaintance: I am sorry we
did not meet more often in France, but I was so taken up with my friend
Mr. Warburton.”

As Thornton uttered that name, he looked hard at me, and then added, “By
the by, I saw you with Sir Reginald Glanville the other day; you know
him well, I presume?”

“Tolerably well,” said I, with indifference.

“What a strange character he is,” rejoined Thornton; “I also have
known him for some years,” and again Thornton looked pryingly into my
countenance. Poor fool, it was not for a penetration like his to read
the cor inscrutabile of a man born and bred like me, in the consummate
dissimulation of bon ton.

“He is very rich, is he not?” said Thornton, after a brief silence.

“I believe so,” said I.

“Humph!” answered Thornton. “Things have grown better with him, in
proportion as they grew worse with me, who have had ‘as good luck as
the cow that stuck herself with her own horn.’ I suppose he is not too
anxious to recollect me--‘poverty parts fellowship.’ Well, hang pride,
say I; give me an honest heart all the year round, in summer or winter,
drought or plenty. Would to God, some kind friend would lend me twenty
pounds.”

To this wish I made no reply. Thornton sighed.

“Mr. Pelham,” renewed he, “it is true I have known you but a short
time--excuse the liberty I take--but if you could lend me a trifle, it
would really assist me very much.”

“Mr. Thornton,” said I, “if I knew you better, and could serve you more,
you might apply to me for a more real assistance than any bagatelle I
could afford you would be. If twenty pounds would really be of service
to you, I will lend it you, upon this condition, that you never ask me
for another farthing.”

Thornton’s face brightened. “A thousand, thousand--” he began.

“No,” interrupted I, “no thanks, only your promise.”

“Upon my honour,” said Thornton, “I will never ask you for another
farthing.”

“There is honour among thieves,” thought I, and so I took out the sum
mentioned, and gave it to him. In good earnest, though I disliked
the man, his threadbare garments and altered appearance moved me to
compassion. While he was pocketing the money, which he did with the most
unequivocal delight, a tall figure passed us rapidly. We both turned at
the same instant, and recognised Glanville. He had not gone seven yards
beyond us, before we observed his steps, which were very irregular,
pause suddenly; a moment afterwards he fell against the iron rails of
an area; we hastened towards him, he was apparently fainting. His
countenance was perfectly livid, and marked with the traces of extreme
exhaustion. I sent Thornton to the nearest public-house for some water;
before he returned, Glanville had recovered.

“All--all--in vain,” he said, slowly and unconsciously, “death is the
only Lethe.”

He started when he saw me. I made him lean on my arm, and we walked on
slowly.

“I have already heard of your speech,” said I. Glanville smiled with the
usual faint and sicklied expression, which made his smile painful even
in its exceeding sweetness.

“You have also already seen its effects; the excitement was too much for
me.”

“It must have been a proud moment when you sat down,” said I.

“It was one of the bitterest I ever felt--it was fraught with the memory
of the dead. What are all honours to me now?--O God! O God! have mercy
upon me!”

And Glanville stopped suddenly, and put his hand to his temples.

By this time Thornton had joined us. When Glanville’s eyes rested upon
him, a deep hectic rose slowly and gradually over his cheeks. Thornton’s
lip curled with a malicious expression. Glanville marked it, and his
brow grew on the moment as black as night.

“Begone!” he said, in a loud voice, and with a flashing eye, “begone
instantly; I loathe the very sight of so base a thing.”

Thornton’s quick, restless eye, grew like a living coal, and he bit his
lip so violently that the blood gushed out. He made, however, no other
answer than--“You seem agitated to-night, Sir Reginald; I wish your
speedy restoration to better health. Mr. Pelham, your servant.”

Glanville walked on in silence till we came to his door: we parted
there; and for want of any thing better to do, I sauntered towards the
M--Hell. There were only about ten or twelve persons in the rooms, and
all were gathered round the hazard table--I looked on silently, seeing
the knaves devour the fools, and younger brothers make up in wit for the
deficiencies of fortune.

The Honourable Mr. Blagrave came up to me; “Do you never play?” said he.

“Sometimes,” was my brief reply.

“Lend me a hundred pounds!” rejoined my kind acquaintance.

“I was just going to make you the same request,” said I.

Blagrave laughed heartily. “Well,” said he, “be my security to a Jew,
and I’ll be yours. My fellow lends me money at only forty per cent. My
governor is a d--d stingy old fellow, for I am the most moderate son
in the universe. I neither hunt, nor race, nor have I any one favourite
expense, except gambling, and he won’t satisfy me in that--now I call
such conduct shameful!”

“Unheard-of barbarity,” said I; “and you do well to ruin your property
by Jews, before you have it; you could not avenge yourself better on
‘the governor.’”

“No, d--me,” said Blagrave, “leave me alone for that! Well, I have got
five pounds left, I shall go and slap it down.”

No sooner had he left me than I was accosted by Mr. Goren, a handsome
little adventurer, who lived the devil knew how, for the devil seemed to
take excellent care of him.

“Poor Blagrave!” said he, eyeing the countenance of that ingenious
youth. “He is a strange fellow--he asked me the other day, if I ever
read the History of England, and told me there was a great deal in
it about his ancestor, a Roman General, in the time of William the
Conqueror, called Caractacus. He told me at the last New-market, that
he had made up a capital book, and it turned out that he had hedged with
such dexterity, that he must lose one thousand pounds, and he might
lose two. Well, well,” continued Goren, with a sanctified expression; “I
would sooner see those real fools here, than the confounded scoundrels,
who pillage one under a false appearance. Never, Mr. Pelham, trust to a
man at a gaming-house; the honestest look hides the worst sharper! Shall
you try your luck to-night?”

“No,” said I, “I shall only look on.”

Goren sauntered to the table, and sat down next to a rich young man,
of the best temper and the worst luck in the world. After a few throws,
Goren said to him, “Lord--, do put your money aside--you have so much
on the table, that in interferes with mine--and that is really so
unpleasant. Suppose you put some of it in your pocket.”

Lord--took a handful of notes, and stuffed them carelessly in his coat
pocket. Five minutes afterwards I saw Goren insert his hand, empty,
in his neighbour’s pocket, and bring it out full--and half an hour
afterwards he handed over a fifty pound note to the marker, saying,
“There, Sir, is my debt to you. God bless me, Lord--, how you have
won; I wish you would not leave all your money about--do put it in your
pocket with the rest.”

Lord--(who had perceived the trick, though he was too indolent to resent
it), laughed. “No, no, Goren,” said he, “you must let me keep some!”

Goren coloured, and soon after rose. “D--n my luck!” said he, as he
passed me. “I wonder I continue to play--but there are such sharpers in
the room. Avoid a gaming house, Mr. Pelham, if you wish to live.”

“And let live,” thought I.

I was just going away, when I heard a loud laugh on the stairs, and
immediately afterwards Thornton entered, joking with one of the markers.
He did not see me; but approaching the table, drew out the identical
twenty pound note I had given him, and asked for change with the air
of a millionaire. I did not wait to witness his fortune, good or ill; I
cared too little about it. I descended the stairs, and the servant, on
opening the door for me, admitted Sir John Tyrrell. “What,” I thought,
“is the habit still so strong?” We stopped each other, and after a few
words of greeting, I went, once more, up stairs with him.

Thornton was playing as eagerly with his small quota as Lord C--with his
ten thousands. He nodded with an affected air of familiarity to Tyrrell,
who returned his salutation with the most supercilious hauteur; and very
soon afterwards the baronet was utterly engrossed by the chances of the
game. I had, however, satisfied my curiosity, in ascertaining that there
was no longer any intimacy between him and Thornton, and accordingly
once more I took my departure.



CHAPTER LVI.

The times have been That when the brains were out, the man would die,
And there an end--but now they rise again.--Macbeth.

It was a strange thing to see a man like Glanville, with costly tastes,
luxurious habits, great talents, peculiarly calculated for display,
courted by the highest members of the state, admired for his beauty
and genius by half the women in London, yet living in the most ascetic
seclusion from his kind, and indulging in the darkest and most morbid
despondency. No female was ever seen to win even his momentary glance
of admiration. All the senses seemed to have lost, for his palate, their
customary allurements. He lived among his books, and seemed to make his
favourite companions amidst the past. At nearly all hours of the night
he was awake and occupied, and at day-break his horse was always brought
to his door. He rode alone for several hours, and then, on his return,
he was employed till the hour he went to the House, in the affairs and
politics of the day. Ever since his debut, he had entered with
much constancy into the more leading debates, and his speeches were
invariably of the same commanding order which had characterised his
first.

It was singular that, in his parliamentary display, as in his ordinary
conversation, there were none of the wild and speculative opinions, or
the burning enthusiasm of romance, in which the natural inclination of
his mind seemed so essentially to delight. His arguments were always
remarkable for the soundness of the principles on which they were based,
and the logical clearness with which they were expressed. The feverish
fervour of his temperament was, it is true, occasionally shown in a
remarkable energy of delivery, or a sudden and unexpected burst of the
more impetuous powers of oratory; but these were so evidently natural
and spontaneous, and so happily adapted to be impressive of the subject,
rather than irrelevant from its bearings, that they never displeased
even the oldest and coldest cynics and calculators of the House.

It is no uncommon contradiction in human nature (and in Glanville it
seemed peculiarly prominent) to find men of imagination and genius
gifted with the strongest common sense, for the admonition or benefit of
others, even while constantly neglecting to exert it for themselves.
He was soon marked out as the most promising and important of all the
junior members of the House; and the coldness with which he kept aloof
from social intercourse with the party he adopted, only served to
increase their respect, though it prevented their affection.

Lady Roseville’s attachment to him was scarcely a secret; the celebrity
of her name in the world of ton made her least look or action the
constant subject of present remark and after conversation; and there
were too many moments, even in the watchful publicity of society, when
that charming but imprudent person forgot every thing but the romance of
her attachment. Glanville seemed not only perfectly untouched by it,
but even wholly unconscious of its existence, and preserved invariably,
whenever he was forced into the crowd, the same stern, cold,
unsympathizing reserve, which made him, at once, an object of universal
conversation and dislike.

Three weeks after Glanville’s first speech in the House, I called upon
him, with a proposal from Lord Dawton. After we had discussed it, we
spoke on more familiar topics, and, at last, he mentioned Thornton. It
will be observed that we had never conversed respecting that person; nor
had Glanville once alluded to our former meetings, or to his disguised
appearance and false appellation at Paris. Whatever might be the
mystery, it was evidently of a painful nature, and it was not,
therefore, for me to allude to it. This day he spoke of Thornton with a
tone of indifference.

“The man,” he said, “I have known for some time; he was useful to me
abroad, and, notwithstanding his character, I rewarded him well for his
services. He has since applied to me several times for money, which is
spent at the gambling-house as soon as it is obtained. I believe him to
be leagued with a gang of sharpers of the lowest description; and I
am really unwilling any farther to supply the vicious necessities of
himself and his comrades. He is a mean, mercenary rascal, who would
scruple at no enormity, provided he was paid for it!”

Glanville paused for a few moments, and then added, while his cheek
blushed, and his voice seemed somewhat hesitating and embarrassed--“You
remember Mr. Tyrrell, at Paris?”

“Yes,” said I--“he is, at present, in London, and--” Glanville started
as if he had been shot.

“No, no,” he exclaimed, wildly--“he died at Paris, from want--from
starvation.”

“You are mistaken,” said I; “he is now Sir John Tyrrell, and possessed
of considerable property. I saw him myself, three weeks ago.”

Glanville, laying his hand upon my arm, looked in my face with a long,
stern, prying gaze, and his cheek grew more ghastly and livid with every
moment. At last he turned, and muttered something between his teeth; and
at that moment the door opened, and Thornton was announced. Glanville
sprung towards him and seized him by the throat!

“Dog!” he cried, “you have deceived me--Tyrrell lives!”

“Hands off!” cried the gamester, with a savage grin of defiance--“hands
off! or, by the Lord that made me, you shall have gripe for gripe!”

“Ho, wretch!” said Glanville, shaking him violently, while his worn
and slender, yet still powerful frame, trembled with the excess of his
passion; “dost thou dare to threaten me!” and with these words he flung
Thornton against the opposite wall with such force, that the blood
gushed out of his mouth and nostrils. The gambler rose slowly, and
wiping the blood from his face, fixed his malignant and fiery eye upon
his aggressor, with an expression of collected hate and vengeance, that
made my very blood creep.

“It is not my day now,” he said, with a calm, quiet, cold voice, and
then, suddenly changing his manner, he approached me with a sort of bow,
and made some remark on the weather.

Meanwhile, Glanville had sunk on the sofa, exhausted, less by his late
effort than the convulsive passion which had produced it. He rose in
a few moments, and said to Thornton, “Pardon my violence; let this pay
your bruises;” and he placed a long and apparently well filled purse in
Thornton’s hand. That veritable philosophe took it with the same air as
a dog receives the first caress from the hand which has just chastised
him; and feeling the purse between his short, hard fingers, as if to
ascertain the soundness of its condition, quietly slid it into his
breeches pocket, which he then buttoned with care, and pulling his
waistcoat down, as if for further protection to the deposit, he
turned towards Glanville, and said, in his usual quaint style of
vulgarity--“Least said, Sir Reginald, the soonest mended. Gold is a good
plaister for bad bruises. Now, then, your will:--ask and I will answer,
unless you think Mr. Pelham un de trop.”

I was already at the door, with the intention of leaving the room,
when Glanville cried, “Stay, Pelham, I have but one question to ask Mr.
Thornton. Is John Tyrrell still living?”

“He is!” answered Thornton, with a sardonic smile.

“And beyond all want!” resumed Glanville.

“He is!” was the tautological reply.

“Mr. Thornton,” said Glanville, with a calm voice, “I have now done with
you--you may leave the room!”

Thornton bowed with an air of ironical respect, and obeyed the command.

I turned to look at Glanville. His countenance, always better adapted to
a stern, than a soft expression, was perfectly fearful; every line in
it seemed dug into a furrow; the brows were bent over his large and
flashing eyes with a painful intensity of anger and resolve; his teeth
were clenched firmly as if by a vice, and the thin upper lip, which was
drawn from them with a bitter curl of scorn, was as white as death. His
right hand had closed upon the back of the massy chair, over which his
tall nervous frame leant, and was grasping it with an iron force, which
it could not support: it snapped beneath his hand like a hazel stick.
This accident, slight as it was, recalled him to himself. He apologized
with apparent self-possession for his disorder; and, after a few words
of fervent and affectionate farewell on my part, I left him to the
solitude which I knew he desired.



CHAPTER LVII.

While I seemed only intent upon pleasure, I locked in my heart the
consciousness and vanity of power; in the levity of the lip, I disguised
the knowledge and the workings of the brain; and I looked, as with a
gifted eye, upon the mysteries of the hidden depths, while I seemed
to float an idler with the herd only upon the surface of the stream.
--Falkland.

As I walked home, revolving the scene I had witnessed, the words of
Tyrrell came into my recollection--viz. that the cause of Glanville’s
dislike to him had arisen in Tyrrell’s greater success in some youthful
liaison. In this account I could not see much probability. In the first
place, the cause was not sufficient to produce such an effect; and,
in the second, there was little likelihood that the young and rich
Glanville, possessed of the most various accomplishments, and the most
remarkable personal beauty, should be supplanted by a needy spendthrift
(as Tyrrell at that time was), of coarse manners, and unpolished mind;
with a person not, indeed, unprepossessing, but somewhat touched by
time, and never more comparable to Glanville’s than that of the Satyr to
Hyperion.

While I was meditating over a mystery which excited my curiosity more
powerfully than anything, not relating to himself, ought ever to occupy
the attention of a wise man, I was accosted by Vincent: the difference
in our politics had of late much dissevered us, and when he took my
arm, and drew me up Bond-street, I was somewhat surprised at his
condescension.

“Listen to me, Pelham,” he said; “once more I offer you a settlement
in our colony. There will be great changes soon: trust me, so radical
a party as that you have adopted can never come in: our’s, on the
contrary, is no less moderate than liberal. This is the last time of
asking; for I know you will soon have exposed your opinions in public
more openly than you have yet done, and then it will be too late. At
present I hold, with Hudibras, and the ancients, that it is--

“‘More honourable far, servare Civem than slay an adversary.’”

“Alas, Vincent,” said I, “I am marked out for slaughter, for you cannot
convince me by words, and so, I suppose, you must conquer me by blows.
Adieu, this is my way to Lord Dawton’s: where are you going?”

“To mount my horse, and join the parca juventus,” said Vincent, with a
laugh at his own witticism, as we shook hands, and parted.

I grieve much, my beloved reader, that I cannot unfold to thee all the
particulars of my political intrigue. I am, by the very share which fell
to my lot, bound over to the strictest secrecy, as to its nature, and
the characters of the chief agents in its execution. Suffice it to say,
that the greater part of my time was, though furtively, employed in a
sort of home diplomacy, gratifying alike to the activity of my tastes,
and the vanity of my mind; and there were moments when I ventured to
grasp in my imagination the highest honours of the state, and the most
lucrative offices of power. I had filled Dawton, and his coadjutors,
with an exaggerated opinion of my abilities; but I knew well how to
sustain it. I rose by candle-light, and consumed, in the intensest
application, the hours which every other individual of our party wasted
in enervating slumbers, from the hesternal dissipation or debauch. Was
there a question in political economy debated, mine was the readiest
and the clearest reply. Did a period in our constitution become
investigated, it was I to whom the duty of expositor was referred.
From Madame D’Anville, with whom (though lost as a lover) I constantly
corresponded as a friend, I obtained the earliest and most accurate
detail of the prospects and manoeuvres of the court in which her life
was spent, and in whose more secret offices her husband was employed.
I spared no means of extending my knowledge of every the minutest point
which could add to the reputation I enjoyed. I made myself acquainted
with the individual interests and exact circumstances of all whom it was
our object to intimidate or to gain. It was I who brought to the House
the younger and idler members, whom no more nominally powerful agent
could allure from the ball-room or the gaming-house.

In short, while, by the dignity of my birth, and the independent hauteur
of my bearing, I preserved the rank of an equal amongst the highest of
the set, I did not scruple to take upon myself the labour and activity
of the most subordinate. Dawton declared me his right hand; and, though
I knew myself rather his head than his hand, I pretended to feel proud
of the appellation. In truth, I only waited for my entree into the
House, to fix my eye and grasp upon the very situation that nobleman
coveted for himself.

Meanwhile, it was my pleasure to wear in society the coxcombical and
eccentric costume of character I had first adopted, and to cultivate the
arts which won from women the smile which cheered and encouraged me in
my graver contest with men. It was only to Ellen Glanville, that I laid
aside an affectation, which I knew was little likely to attract a taste
so refined and unadulterated as her’s. I discovered in her a mind which,
while it charmed me by its tenderness and freshness, elevated me by
its loftiness of thought. She was, at heart, perhaps, as ambitious as
myself; but while my aspirations were concealed by affectation, her’s
were softened by her timidity, and purified by her religion. There were
moments when I opened myself to her, and caught a new spirit from her
look of sympathy and enthusiasm.

“Yes,” thought I, “I do long for honours, but it is that I may ask her
to share and ennoble them.” In fine, I loved as other men loved--and I
fancied a perfection in her, and vowed an emulation in myself, which it
was reserved for Time to ratify or deride.

Where did I leave myself? as the Irishman said--on my road to Lord
Dawton’s. I was lucky enough to find that personage at home; he was
writing at a table covered with pamphlets and books of reference.

“Hush! Pelham,” said his lordship, who is a quiet, grave, meditative
little man, always ruminating on a very small cud--“hush! or do oblige
me by looking over this history, to find out the date of the Council of
Pisa.”

“That will do, my young friend,” said his lordship, after I had
furnished him with the information he required--“I wish to Heaven, I
could finish this pamphlet by to-morrow: it is intended as an answer
to--. But I am so perplexed with business, that--”

“Perhaps,” said I, “if you will pardon my interrupting you, I can throw
your observations together--make your Sibylline leaves into a book. Your
lordship will find the matter, and I will not spare the trouble.”

Lord Dawton was profuse in his thanks; he explained the subject, and
left the arrangement wholly to me. He could not presume to dictate. I
promised him, if he lent me the necessary books, to finish the pamphlet
against the following evening.

“And now,” said Lord Dawton--“that we have settled this affair--what
news from France?”--

“I wish,” sighed Lord Dawton, as we were calculating our forces, “that
we could gain over Lord Guloseton.”

“What, the facetious epicure?” said I.

“The same,” answered Dawton: “we want him as a dinner-giver; and,
besides, he has four votes in the Lower House.”

“Well,” said I, “he is indolent and independent--it is not impossible.”

“Do you know him?” answered Dawton.

“No:” said I.

Dawton sighed.--“And young A--?” said the statesman, after a pause.

“Has an expensive mistress, and races. Your lordship might be sure of
him, were you in power, and sure not to have him while you are out of
it.”

“And B.?” rejoined Dawton.



VOLUME V.



CHAPTER LVIII.

Mangez-vous bien, Monsieur? Oui, et bois encore mieux.--Mons. de
Porceaugnac.

My pamphlet took prodigiously. The authorship was attributed to the most
talented member of the Opposition; and though there were many errors in
style, and (I now think) many sophisms in the reasoning, yet it carried
the end proposed by all ambition of whatever species--and imposed upon
the taste of the public.

Sometime afterwards, I was going down the stairs at Almack’s, when I
heard an altercation, high and grave, at the door of reception. To my
surprise, I found Lord Guloseton and a very young man in great wrath;
the latter had never been to Almack’s before, and had forgotten his
ticket. Guloseton, who belonged to a very different set to that of
the Almackians, insisted that his word was enough to bear his juvenile
companion through. The ticket inspector was irate and obdurate, and
having seldom or ever seen Lord Guloseton himself, paid very little
respect to his authority.

As I was wrapping myself in my cloak, Guloseton turned to me, for
passion makes men open their hearts: too eager for an opportunity
of acquiring the epicure’s acquaintance, I offered to get his friend
admittance in an instant; the offer was delightedly accepted, and I soon
procured a small piece of pencilled paper from Lady--, which effectually
silenced the Charon, and opened the Stygian via to the Elysium beyond.

Guloseton overwhelmed me with his thanks. I remounted the stairs
with him--took every opportunity of ingratiating myself--received an
invitation to dinner on the following day, and left Willis’s transported
at the goodness of my fortune.

At the hour of eight on the ensuing evening, I had just made my entrance
into Lord Guloseton’s drawing-room. It was a small apartment furnished
with great luxury and some taste. A Venus of Titian’s was placed over
the chimney-piece, in all the gorgeous voluptuousness of her unveiled
beauty--the pouting lip, not silent though shut--the eloquent lid
drooping over the eye, whose reveille you could so easily imagine--the
arms--the limbs--the attitude, so composed, yet so redolent of life--all
seemed to indicate that sleep was not forgetfulness, and that the dreams
of the goddess were not wholly inharmonious with the waking realities
in which it was her gentle prerogative to indulge. On either side, was
a picture of the delicate and golden hues of Claude; these were the only
landscapes in the room; the remaining pictures were more suitable to
the Venus of the luxurious Italian. Here was one of the beauties of Sir
Peter Lely; there was an admirable copy of the Hero and Leander. On
the table lay the Basia of Johannes Secundus, and a few French works on
Gastronomy.

As for the genius loci--you must imagine a middle-sized, middle-aged
man, with an air rather of delicate than florid health. But little of
the effects of his good cheer were apparent in the external man. His
cheeks were neither swollen nor inflated--his person, though not thin,
was of no unwieldy obesity--the tip of his nasal organ was, it is true,
of a more ruby tinge than the rest, and one carbuncle, of tender age
and gentle dyes, diffused its mellow and moonlight influence over the
physiognomical scenery--his forehead was high and bald, and the few
locks which still rose above it, were carefully and gracefully curled a
l’antique: Beneath a pair of grey shaggy brows, (which their noble owner
had a strange habit of raising and depressing, according to the nature
of his remarks,) rolled two very small, piercing, arch, restless orbs,
of a tender green; and the mouth, which was wide and thick-lipped, was
expressive of great sensuality, and curved upwards in a perpetual smile.

Such was Lord Guloseton. To my surprise no other guest but myself
appeared.

“A new friend,” said he, as we descended into the dining-room, “is like
a new dish--one must have him all to oneself, thoroughly to enjoy and
rightly to understand him.”

“A noble precept,” said I, with enthusiasm. “Of all vices,
indiscriminate hospitality is the most pernicious. It allows us neither
conversation nor dinner, and realizing the mythological fable of
Tantalus, gives us starvation in the midst of plenty.”

“You are right,” said Guloseton, solemnly; “I never ask above six
persons to dinner, and I never dine out; for a bad dinner, Mr. Pelham, a
bad dinner is a most serious--I may add, the most serious calamity.”

“Yes,” I replied, “for it carries with it no consolation: a buried
friend may be replaced--a lost mistress renewed--a slandered character
be recovered--even a broken constitution restored; but a dinner, once
lost, is irremediable; that day is for ever departed; an appetite once
thrown away can never, till the cruel prolixity of the gastric agents
is over, be regained. ‘Il y a tant de maitresses, (says the admirable
Corneille), ‘il n’y a qu’un diner.’”

“You speak like an oracle--like the Cook’s Oracle, Mr. Pelham: may I
send you some soup, it is a la Carmelite? But what are you about to do
with that case?”

“It contains” (said I) “my spoon, my knife, and my fork. Nature
afflicted me with a propensity, which through these machines I have
endeavoured to remedy by art. I eat with too great a rapidity. It is
a most unhappy failing, for one often hurries over in one minute, what
ought to have afforded the fullest delight for the period of five. It
is, indeed, a vice which deadens enjoyment, as well as abbreviates it;
it is a shameful waste of the gifts, and a melancholy perversion of the
bounty of Providence: my conscience tormented me; but the habit,
fatally indulged in early childhood, was not easy to overcome. At last
I resolved to construct a spoon of peculiarly shallow dimensions, a fork
so small, that it could only raise a certain portion to my mouth, and a
knife rendered blunt and jagged, so that it required a proper and just
time to carve the goods ‘the gods provide me.’ My lord, ‘the lovely
Thais sits beside me’ in the form of a bottle of Madeira. Suffer me to
take wine with you?”

“With pleasure, my good friend; let us drink to the memory of the
Carmelites, to whom we are indebted for this inimitable soup.”

“Yes!” I cried. “Let us for once shake off the prejudices of sectarian
faith, and do justice to one order of those incomparable men, who,
retiring from the cares of an idle and sinful world, gave themselves
with undivided zeal and attention to the theory and practice of the
profound science of gastronomy. It is reserved for us, my lord, to pay
a grateful tribute of memory to those exalted recluses, who, through
a long period of barbarism and darkness, preserved, in the solitude of
their cloisters, whatever of Roman luxury and classic dainties have come
down to this later age. We will drink to the Carmelites at a sect, but
we will drink also to the monks as a body. Had we lived in those days,
we had been monks ourselves.”

“It is singular,” answered Lord Guloseton--“(by the by, what think you
of this turbot?)--to trace the history of the kitchen; it affords the
greatest scope to the philosopher and the moralist. The ancients seemed
to have been more mental, more imaginative, than we are in their
dishes; they fed their bodies as well as their minds upon delusion: for
instance, they esteemed beyond all price the tongues of nightingales,
because they tasted the very music of the birds in the organs of their
utterance. That is what I call the poetry of gastronomy!”

“Yes,” said I, with a sigh, “they certainly had, in some respects, the
advantage over us. Who can pore over the suppers of Apicius without
the fondest regret? The venerable Ude [Note: Q.--The venerable
Bede--Printer’s Devil.] implies, that the study has not progressed.
‘Cookery (he says, in the first part of his work) possesses but few
innovators.’”

“It is with the greatest diffidence,” said Guloseton, (his mouth full
of truth and turbot,) “that we may dare to differ from so great an
authority. Indeed, so high is my veneration for that wise man, that if
all the evidence of my sense and reason were on one side, and the dictum
of the great Ude upon the other, I should be inclined--I think, I should
be determined--to relinquish the former, and adopt the latter.” [Note:
See the speech of Mr. Brougham in honour of Mr. Fox.]

“Bravo, my lord,” cried I, warmly. “‘Qu’un Cuisinier est un mortel
divin!’ Why should we not be proud of our knowledge in cookery? It is
the soul of festivity at all times, and to all ages. How many marriages
have been the consequence of meeting at dinner? How much good fortune
has been the result of a good supper? At what moment of our existence
are we happier than at table? There hatred and animosity are lulled
to sleep, and pleasure alone reigns. Here the cook, by his skill and
attention, anticipates our wishes in the happiest selection of the best
dishes and decorations. Here our wants are satisfied, our minds and
bodies invigorated, and ourselves qualified for the high delights of
love, music, poetry, dancing, and other pleasures; and is he, whose
talents have produced these happy effects, to rank no higher in the
scale of man than a common servant? [Note: Ude, verbatim.]

“‘Yes,’ cries the venerable professor himself, in a virtuous and
prophetic paroxysm of indignant merit--‘yes, my disciples, if you adopt,
and attend to the rules I have laid down, the self-love of mankind will
consent at last, that cookery shall rank in the class of the sciences,
and its professors deserve the name of artists!’” [Note: Ibid.]

“My dear, dear Sir,” exclaimed Guloseton, with a kindred glow, “I
discover in you a spirit similar to my own. Let us drink long life to
the venerable Ude!”

“I pledge you, with all my soul,” said I, filling my glass to the brim.

“What a pity,” rejoined Guloseton, “that Ude, whose practical science
was so perfect, should ever have written, or suffered others to write,
the work published under his name; true it is that the opening part
which you have so feelingly recited, is composed with a grace, a charm
beyond the reach of art; but the instructions are vapid, and frequently
so erroneous, as to make me suspect their authenticity; but, after
all, cooking is not capable of becoming a written science--it is the
philosophy of practice!”

“Ah! by Lucullus,” exclaimed I, interrupting my host, “what a visionary
bechamelle! Oh, the inimitable sauce; these chickens are indeed worthy
of the honour of being dressed. Never, my lord, as long as you live, eat
a chicken in the country; excuse a pun, you will have foul fare.”

“‘J’ai toujours redoute la volaille perfide, Qui brave les efforts
d’une dent intrepide; Souvent par un ami, dans ses champs entraine.
J’ai reconnu le soir le coq infortune Qui m’avait le matin a l’aurore
naissante Reveille brusquement de sa voix glapissante; Je l’avais admire
dans le sein de la cour, Avec des yeux jaloux, j’avais vu son amour.
Helas! la malheureux, abjurant sa tendresse, Exercait a souper sa fureur
vengeresse.’

“Pardon the prolixity of my quotation for the sake of its value.”

“I do, I do,” answered Guloseton, laughing at the humour of the lines:
till, suddenly checking himself, he said, “we must be grave, Mr. Pelham,
it will never do to laugh. What would become of our digestions?”

“True,” said I, relapsing into seriousness; “and if you will allow me
one more quotation, you will see what my author adds with regard to any
abrupt interruption.

“‘Defendez que personne au milieu d’un banquet, Ne vous vienne donner
un avis indiscret, Ecartez ce facheux qui vers vous s’achemine, Rien ne
doit deranger l’honnete homme qui dine.”

“Admirable advice,” said Guloseton, toying with a filet mignon de
poulet. “Do you remember an example in the Bailly of Suffren, who, being
in India, was waited upon by a deputation of natives while he was at
dinner. ‘Tell them,’ said he, ‘that the Christian religion peremptorily
forbids every Christian, while at table, to occupy himself with any
earthly subject, except the function of eating.’ The deputation retired
in the profoundest respect at the exceeding devotion of the French
general.”

“Well,” said I, after we had chuckled gravely and quietly, with the care
of our digestion before us, for a few minutes--“well, however good the
invention was, the idea is not entirely new, for the Greeks esteemed
eating and drinking plentifully, a sort of offering to the gods; and
Aristotle explains the very word, THoinai, or feasts, by an etymological
exposition, ‘that it was thought a duty to the gods to be drunk;’ no
bad idea of our classical patterns of antiquity. Polypheme, too, in
the Cyclops of Euripides, no doubt a very sound theologian, says, his
stomach is his only deity; and Xenophon tells us, that as the Athenians
exceeded all other people in the number of their gods, so they exceeded
them also in the number of their feasts. May I send your lordship an
ortolan?”

“Pelham, my boy,” said Guloseton, whose eyes began to roll and twinkle
with a brilliancy suited to the various liquids which ministered to
their rejoicing orbs; “I love you for your classics. Polypheme was a
wise fellow, a very wise fellow, and it was a terrible shame in Ulysses
to put out his eye. No wonder that the ingenious savage made a deity
of his stomach; to what known and visible source, on this earth, was he
indebted for a keener enjoyment--a more rapturous and a more constant
delight? No wonder he honoured it with his gratitude, and supplied it
with his peace-offerings;--let us imitate so great an example:--let us
make our digestive receptacles a temple, to which we will consecrate the
choicest goods we possess;--let us conceive no pecuniary sacrifice too
great, which procures for our altar an acceptable gift;--let us deem it
an impiety to hesitate, if a sauce seems extravagant, or an ortolan
too dear; and let our last act in this sublunary existence, be a solemn
festival in honour of our unceasing benefactor.”

“Amen to your creed,” said I: “edibilatory Epicurism holds the key to
all morality: for do we not see now how sinful it is to yield to an
obscene and exaggerated intemperance?--would it not be to the last
degree ungrateful to the great source of our enjoyment, to overload it
with a weight which would oppress it with languor, or harass it with
pain; and finally to drench away the effects of our impiety with some
nauseous potation which revolts it, tortures it, convulses, irritates,
enfeebles it, through every particle of its system? How wrong in us to
give way to anger, jealousy, revenge, or any evil passion; for does not
all that affects the mind operate also upon the stomach; and how can we
be so vicious, so obdurate, as to forget, for a momentary indulgence,
our debt to what you have so justly designated our perpetual
benefactor?”

“Right,” said Lord Guloseton, “a bumper to the morality of the stomach.”

The desert was now on the table. “I have dined well,” said Guloseton,
stretching his legs with an air of supreme satisfaction; “but--” and
here my philosopher sighed deeply--“we cannot dine again till to-morrow!
Happy, happy, happy common people, who can eat supper! Would to Heaven,
that I might have one boon--perpetual appetite--a digestive Houri,
which renewed its virginity every time it was touched. Alas! for the
instability of human enjoyment. But now that we have no immediate hope
to anticipate, let us cultivate the pleasures of memory. What thought
you of the veau a la Dauphine?”

“Pardon me if I hesitate at giving my opinion, till I have corrected my
judgment by yours.”

“Why, then, I own I was somewhat displeased--disappointed as it
were--with that dish; the fact is, veal ought to be killed in its very
first infancy; they suffer it to grow to too great an age. It becomes a
sort of hobbydehoy, and possesses nothing of veal, but its insipidity,
or of beef, but its toughness.”

“Yes,” said I, “it is only in their veal, that the French surpass us;
their other meats want the ruby juices and elastic freshness of ours.
Monsieur L--allowed this truth, with a candour worthy of his vast mind.
Mon Dieu! what claret!--what a body! and, let me add, what a soul,
beneath it! Who would drink wine like this? it is only made to taste. It
is like first love--too pure for the eagerness of enjoyment; the rapture
it inspires is in a touch, a kiss. It is a pity, my lord, that we do
not serve perfumes at dessert: it is their appropriate place. In
confectionary (delicate invention of the Sylphs,) we imitate the forms
of the rose and the jessamine; why not their odours too? What is nature
without its scents?--and as long as they are absent from our desserts,
it is in vain that the Bard exclaims, that--

“‘L’observateur de la belle Nature, S’extasie en voyant des fleurs en
confiture.’”

“It is an exquisite idea of yours,” said Guloseton--“and the next time
you dine here, we will have perfumes. Dinner ought to be a reunion of
all the senses--

“‘Gladness to the ear, nerve, heart, and sense.’”

There was a momentary pause. “My lord,” said I, “what a lusty
lusciousness in this pear! it is like the style of the old English
poets. What think you of the seeming good understanding between Mr.
Gaskell and the Whigs?”

“I trouble myself little about it,” replied Guloseton, helping himself
to some preserves--“politics disturb the digestion.”

“Well,” thought I, “I must ascertain some point in this man’s character
easier to handle than his epicurism: all men are vain: let us find out
the peculiar vanity of mine host.”

“The Tories,” said I, “seem to think themselves exceedingly secure; they
attach no importance to the neutral members; it was but the other day,
Lord--told me that he did not care a straw for Mr.--, notwithstanding he
possessed four votes. Heard you ever such arrogance?”

“No, indeed,” said Golouston, with a lazy air of indifference--“are you
a favourer of the olive?”

“No,” said I, “I love it not; it hath an under taste of sourness, and
an upper of oil, which do not make harmony to my palate. But, as I was
saying, the Whigs, on the contrary, pay the utmost deference to their
partizans; and a man of fortune, rank, and parliamentary influence,
might have all the power without the trouble of a leader.”

“Very likely,” said Guloseton, drowsily.

“I must change my battery,” thought I; but while I was meditating a new
attack, the following note was brought me:--

“For God’s sake, Pelham, come out to me: I am waiting in the street to
see you; come directly, or it will be too late to render me the service
I would ask of you.

“R. Glanville.”

I rose instantly. “You must excuse me, Lord Guloseton, I am called
suddenly away.”

“Ha! ha!” laughed the gourmand; “some tempting viand--post prandia
Callirhoe.”

“My good lord,” said I, not heeding his insinuation--“I leave you with
the greatest regret.”

“And I part from you with the same; it is a real pleasure to see such a
person at dinner.”

“Adieu! my host--‘Je vais vivre et manger en sage.’”



CHAPTER LIX.

I do defy him, and I spit at him, Call him a slanderous coward and a
villain--Which to maintain I will allow him odds.--Shakspeare.

I found Glanville walking before the door with a rapid and uneven step.

“Thank Heaven!” he said, when he saw me--“I have been twice to Mivart’s
to find you. The second time, I saw your servant, who told me where you
were gone. I knew you well enough to be sure of your kindness.”

Glanville broke off aburptly: and after a short pause, said, with a
quick, low, hurried tone--“The office I wish you to take upon yourself
is this:--go immediately to Sir John Tyrrell, with a challenge from
me. Ever since I last saw you, I have been hunting out that man, and
in vain. He had then left town. He returned this evening, and quits it
to-morrow: you have no time to lose.”

“My dear Glanville,” said I, “I have no wish to learn any secret
you would conceal from me; but forgive me if I ask for some further
instructions than those you have afforded me. Upon what plea am I to
call out Sir John Tyrrell? and what answer am I to give to any excuses
he may create?”

“I have anticipated your reply,” said Glanville, with ill-subdued
impatience; “you have only to give this paper: it will prevent all
discussion. Read it if you will; I have left it unsealed for that
purpose.”

I cast my eyes over the lines Glanville thrust into my hand; they ran
thus:--

“The time has at length come for me to demand the atonement so long
delayed. The bearer of this, who is, probably, known to you, will
arrange with any person you may appoint, the hour and place of our
meeting. He is unacquainted with the grounds of my complaint against
you, but he is satisfied of my honour: your second will, I presume,
be the same with respect to yours. It is for me only to question the
latter, and to declare you solemnly to be void alike of principle and
courage, a villain, and a poltroon.

“Reginald Glanville.”

“You are my earliest friend,” said I, when I had read this soothing
epistle; “and I will not flinch from the place you assign me: but I tell
you fairly and frankly, that I would sooner cut off my right hand than
suffer it to give this note to Sir John Tyrrell.”

Glanville made no answer; we walked on till he stopped suddenly,
and said, “My carriage is at the corner of the street; you must go
instantly; Tyrrell lodges at the Clarendon; you will find me at home on
your return.”

I pressed his hand, and hurried on my mission. It was, I own, one
peculiarly unwelcome and displeasing. In the first place, I did not
love to be made a party in a business of the nature of which I was so
profoundly ignorant. Besides, Glanville was more dear to me than
any one, judging only of my external character, would suppose; and
constitutionally indifferent as I am to danger for myself, I trembled
like a woman at the peril I was instrumental in bringing upon him. But
what weighed upon me far more than either of these reflections, was the
recollection of Ellen. Should her brother fall in an engagement in which
I was his supposed adviser, with what success could I hope for those
feelings from her, which, at present, constituted the tenderest and
the brightest of my hopes? In the midst of these disagreeable ideas the
carriage stopped at the door of Tyrrel’s Hotel.

The waiter said Sir John was in the coffee-room; thither I immediately
marched. Seated in the box nearest the fire sat Tyrrell, and two men, of
that old-fashioned roue set, whose members indulged in debauchery, as if
it were an attribute of manliness, and esteemed it, as long as it were
hearty and English, rather a virtue to boast of, than a vice to disown.
Tyrrel nodded to me familiarly as I approached him; and I saw, by
the half-emptied bottles before him, and the flush of his sallow
countenance, that he had not been sparing of his libations. I whispered
that I wished to speak to him on a subject of great importance; he rose
with much reluctance, and, after swallowing a large tumbler-full of port
wine to fortify him for the task, he led the way to a small room, where
he seated himself, and asked me, with his usual mixture of bluntness
and good-breeding, the nature of my business. I made him no reply: I
contented myself with placing Glanville’s billet doux in his hand.
The room was dimly lighted with a single candle, and the small and
capricious fire, near which the gambler was seated, threw its upward
light, by starts and intervals, over the strong features and deep lines
of his countenance. It would have been a study worthy of Rembrandt.

I drew my chair near him, and half shading my eyes with my hand, sat
down in silence to mark the effect the letter would produce. Tyrrel (I
imagine) was a man originally of hardy nerves, and had been thrown much
in the various situations of life where the disguise of all outward
emotion is easily and insensibly taught; but whether his frame had been
shattered by his excesses, or that the insulting language of the note
touched him to the quick, he seemed perfectly unable to govern his
feelings; the lines were written hastily, and the light, as I said
before, was faint and imperfect, and he was forced to pause over each
word as he proceeded, so that “the iron had full time to enter into his
soul.”

Passion, however, developed itself differently in him than in Glanville:
in the latter, it was a rapid transition of powerful feelings, one angry
wave dashing over another; it was the passion of a strong and keenly
susceptible mind, to which every sting was a dagger, and which used the
force of a giant to dash away the insect which attacked it. In Tyrrell,
it was passion acting on a callous mind but a broken frame--his hand
trembled violently--his voice faltered--he could scarcely command the
muscles which enabled him to speak; but there was no fiery start--no
indignant burst--no flashing forth of the soul; in him, it was the
body overcoming and paralyzing the mind. In Glanville it was the mind
governing and convulsing the body.

“Mr. Pelham,” he said at last, after a few preliminary efforts to clear
his voice, “this note requires some consideration. I know not at present
whom to appoint as my second--will you call upon me early to-morrow?”

“I am sorry,” said I, “that my sole instructions were to get an
immediate answer from you. Surely either of the gentlemen I saw with you
would officiate as your second?”

Tyrrell made no reply for some moments. He was endeavouring to compose
himself, and in some measure he succeeded. He raised his head with a
haughty air of defiance, and tearing the paper deliberately, though
still with uncertain and trembling fingers, he stamped his foot upon the
atoms.

“Tell your principal,” said he, “that I retort upon him the foul
and false words he has uttered against me; that I trample upon his
assertions with the same scorn I feel towards himself; and that before
this hour to-morrow, I will confront him to death as through life. For
the rest, Mr. Pelham, I cannot name my second till the morning; leave me
your address, and you shall hear from me before you are stirring. Have
you any thing farther with me?”

“Nothing,” said I, laying my card on the table, “I have fulfilled the
most ungrateful charge ever entrusted to me. I wish you good night.”

I re-entered the carriage, and drove to Glanville’s. I broke into the
room rather abruptly; Glanville was leaning on the table, and gazing
intently on a small miniature. A pistol-case lay beside him: one of the
pistols in order for use, and the other still unarranged; the room was,
as usual, covered with books and papers, and on the costly cushions of
the ottoman, lay the large, black dog, which I remembered well as his
companion of yore, and which he kept with him constantly, as the only
thing in the world whose society he could at all times bear: the animal
lay curled up, with its quick, black eye fixed watchfully upon its
master, and directly I entered, it uttered, though without moving, a
low, warning growl.

Glanville looked up, and in some confusion thrust the picture into a
drawer of the table, and asked me my news. I told him word for word what
had passed. Glanville set his teeth, and clenched his hand firmly; and
then, as if his anger was at once appeased, he suddenly changed the
subject and tone of our conversation. He spoke with great cheerfulness
and humour, on the various topics of the day; touched upon politics;
laughed at Lord Guloseton, and seemed as indifferent and unconscious of
the event of the morrow as my peculiar constitution would have rendered
myself.

When I rose to depart, for I had too great an interest in him to feel
much for the subjects he conversed on, he said, “I shall write one line
to my mother, and another to my poor sister; you will deliver them if I
fall, for I have sworn that one of us shall not quit the ground alive. I
shall be all impatience to know the hour you will arrange with Tyrrell’s
second. God bless you, and farewell for the present.”



CHAPTER LX.

Charge, Chester, charge!--Marmion.

Though this was one of the first mercantile transactions of my life,
I had no doubt about acquitting myself with reputation.--Vicar of
Wakefield.

The next morning I was at breakfast, when a packet was brought me from
Tyrrell; it contained a sealed letter to Glanville, and a brief note to
myself. The latter I transcribe:--

“My Dear Sir,

“The enclosed letter to Sir Reginald Glanville will explain my reasons
for not keeping my pledge: suffice it to state to you, that they are
such as wholly to exonerate me, and fairly to satisfy Sir Reginald. It
will be useless to call upon me; I leave town before you will receive
this. Respect for myself obliges me to add that, although there are
circumstances to forbid my meeting Sir Reginald Glanville, there are
none to prevent my demanding satisfaction of any one, whoever he may be,
who shall deem himself authorized to call my motives into question,

“I have the honour,

“John Tyrrell.”


It was not till I had thrice read this letter that I could credit its
contents. From all I had seen of Tyrrell’s character, I had no reason
to suspect him to be less courageous than the generality of worldly men;
and the conclusion of his letter, evidently pointed at myself, should
I venture to impugn his conduct, seemed by no means favourable to any
suspicion of his cowardice. And yet, when I considered the violent
language of Glanville’s letter, and Tyrrell’s apparent resolution
the night before, I scarcely knew to what more honourable motive to
attribute his conduct. However, I lost no time in despatching the whole
packet to Glanville, with a few lines from myself, saying I should call
in an hour.

When I fulfilled this promise, Glanville’s servant told me his master
had gone out immediately on reading the letters I had sent, and had
merely left word that he should not return home the whole day. That
night he was to have brought an important motion before the House. A
message from him, pleading sudden and alarming illness, devolved this
duty upon another member of our party. Lord Dawton was in despair; the
motion was lost by a great majority; the papers, the whole of that week,
were filled with the most triumphant abuse and ridicule of the Whigs.
Never was that unhappy and persecuted party reduced to so low an ebb:
never did there seem a fainter probability of their coming into power.
They appeared almost annihilated--a mere nominis umbra.

On the eighth day from Glanville’s disappearance, a sudden event in the
cabinet threw the whole country into confusion; the Tories trembled to
the very soles of their easy slippers of sinecure and office; the eyes
of the public were turned to the Whigs; and chance seemed to effect in
an instant that change in their favour, which all their toil, trouble,
eloquence, and art, had been unable for so many years to render even a
remote probability.

But there was a strong though secret party in the state, which reminded
me of the independents in the reign of Charles the First, that,
concealed under a general name, worked only for a private end, and made
a progress in number and respectability, not the less sure for being
but little suspected. Foremost among the leaders of this party was Lord
Vincent. Dawton, who knew of their existence, and regarded them with
fear and jealousy, considered the struggle rather between them and
himself, than any longer between himself and the Tories; and strove,
while it was yet time, to reinforce himself by a body of allies, which,
should the contest really take place, might be certain of giving him the
superiority. The Marquis of Chester was among the most powerful of the
neutral noblemen: it was of the greatest importance to gain him to the
cause. He was a sturdy, sporting, independent man, who lived chiefly
in the country, and turned his ambition rather towards promoting
the excellence of quadrupeds, than the bad passions of men. To this
personage Lord Dawton implored me to be the bearer of a letter, and to
aid, with all the dexterity in my power, the purpose it was intended to
effect. It was the most consequential mission yet entrusted to me, and
I felt eager to turn my diplomatic energies to so good an account.
Accordingly, one bright morning I wrapped myself carefully in my cloak,
placed my invaluable person safely in my carriage, and set off to
Chester Park, in the county of Suffolk.



CHAPTER LXI.

Hinc Canibus blandis rabies venit--Virgil Georgics.

I should have mentioned, that the day after I sent Glanville Tyrrell’s
communication, I received a short and hurried note from the former,
saying, that he had left London in pursuit of Tyrrell, and that he would
not rest till he had brought him to account. In the hurry of the public
events in which I had been of late so actively engaged, my mind had not
had leisure to dwell much upon Glanville; but when I was alone in my
carriage, that singular being, and the mystery which attended him,
forced themselves upon my reflection, in spite of all the importance of
my mission.

I was leaning back in my carriage, at (I think) Ware, while they were
changing horses, when a voice, strongly associated with my meditations,
struck upon my ear. I looked out, and saw Thornton standing in the yard,
attired with all his original smartness of boot and breeches: he was
employed in smoking a cigar, sipping brandy and water, and exercising
his conversational talents in a mixture of slang and jokeyism,
addressed to two or three men of his own rank of life, and seemingly his
companions. His brisk eye soon discovered me, and he swaggered to the
carriage door with that ineffable assurance of manner which was so
peculiarly his own.

“Ah, ah, Mr. Pelham,” said he, “going to Newmarket, I suppose? bound
there myself--like to be found among my betters. Ha, ha--excuse a pun:
what odds on the favourite? What! you won’t bet, Mr. Pelham? close and
sly at present; well, the silent sow sups up all the broth--eh!--”

“I’m not going to Newmarket,” I replied: “I never attend races.”

“Indeed!” answered Thornton. “Well, if I was as rich as you, I would
soon make or spend a fortune on the course. Seen Sir John Tyrrell? No!
He is to be there. Nothing can cure him of gambling--what’s bred in
the bone, Good day, Mr. Pelham--won’t keep you any longer--sharp shower
coming on. ‘The devil will soon be basting his wife with a leg of
mutton,’ as the proverb says--au plaisir, Mr. Pelham.”

And at these words my post-boy started, and released me from my bete
noire. I spare my reader an account of my miscellaneous reflections on
Thornton, Dawton, Vincent, politics, Glanville, and Ellen, and will land
him, without further delay, at Chester Park.

I was ushered through a large oak hall of the reign of James the First,
into a room strongly resembling the principal apartment of a club; two
or three round tables were covered with newspapers, journals, racing
calendars, An enormous fire-place was crowded with men of all ages, I
had almost said, of all ranks; but, however various they might appear
in their mien and attire, they were wholly of the patrician order. One
thing, however, in this room, belied its similitude to the apartment of
a club, viz., a number of dogs, that lay in scattered groups upon the
floor. Before the windows were several horses, in body-cloths, led
or rode to exercise upon a plain in the park, levelled as smooth as a
bowling-green at Putney; and stationed at an oriel window, in earnest
attention to the scene without, were two men; the tallest of these was
Lord Chester. There was a stiffness and inelegance in his address which
prepossessed me strongly against him. “Les manieres que l’on neglige
comme de petites choses, sont souvent ce qui fait que les hommes
decident de vous en bien ou en mal.”

[The manners which one neglects as trifles, are often precisely that by
which men decide on you favourably or the reverse.]

I had long since, when I was at the University, been introduced to
Lord Chester; but I had quite forgotten his person, and he the very
circumstance. I said, in a low tone, that I was the bearer of a letter
of some importance from our mutual friend, Lord Dawton, and that I
should request the honour of a private interview at Lord Chester’s first
convenience.

His lordship bowed, with an odd mixture of the civility of a jockey
and the hauteur of a head groom of the stud, and led the way to a small
apartment, which I afterwards discovered he called his own. (I never
could make out, by the way, why, in England, the very worst room in the
house is always appropriated to the master of it, and dignified by the
appellation of “the gentleman’s own.”) I gave the Newmarket grandee the
letter intended for him, and quietly seating myself, awaited the result.

He read it through slowly and silently, and then taking out a huge
pocket-book, full of racing bets, horses’ ages, jockey opinions,
and such like memoranda, he placed it with much solemnity among this
dignified company, and then said, with a cold, but would-be courteous
air, “My friend, Lord Dawton, says you are entirely in his confidence
Mr. Pelham. I hope you will honour me with your company at Chester Park
for two or three days, during which time I shall have leisure to reply
to Lord Dawton’s letter. Will you take some refreshment?”

I answered the first sentence in the affirmative, and the latter in the
negative; and Lord Chester thinking it perfectly unnecessary to trouble
himself with any further questions or remarks, which the whole jockey
club might not hear, took me back into the room we had quitted, and left
me to find, or make whatever acquaintance I could. Pampered and spoiled
as I was in the most difficult circles of London, I was beyond measure
indignant at the cavalier demeanour of this rustic Thane, whom I
considered a being as immeasurably beneath me in every thing else, as he
really was in antiquity of birth, and, I venture to hope, in cultivation
of intellect. I looked round the room, and did not recognize a being of
my acquaintance: I seemed literally thrown into a new world: the very
language in which the conversation was held, sounded strange to my ear.
I had always transgressed my general rule of knowing all men in all
grades, in the single respect of sporting characters: they were a
species of bipeds, that I would never recognize as belonging to the
human race. Alas! I now found the bitter effects of not following my
usual maxims. It is a dangerous thing to encourage too great a disdain
of one’s inferiors: pride must have a fall.

After I had been a whole quarter of an hour in this strange place,
my better genius came to my aid. Since I found no society among the
two-legged brutes, I turned to the quadrupeds. At one corner of the room
lay a black terrier of the true English breed; at another was a short,
sturdy, wirey one, of the Scotch. I soon formed a friendship with each
of these canine Pelei, (little bodies with great souls), and then by
degrees alluring them from their retreat to the centre of the room,
I fairly endeavoured to set them by the ears. Thanks to the national
antipathy, I succeeded to my heart’s content. The contest soon aroused
the other individuals of the genus--up they started from their repose,
like Roderic Dhu’s merry men, and incontinently flocked to the scene of
battle.

“To it,” said I; and I took one by the leg and another by the
throat, and dashing them against each other, turned all their peevish
irascibility at the affront into mutual aggression. In a very few
moments, the whole room was a scene of uproarious confusion; the beasts
yelled, and bit, and struggled with the most delectable ferocity. To
add to the effect, the various owners of the dogs crowded round--some
to stimulate, others to appease the fury of the combatants. As for me, I
flung myself into an arm chair, and gave way to an excess of merriment,
which only enraged the spectators more: many were the glances of anger,
many the murmurs of reproach directed against me. Lord Chester himself
eyed me with an air of astonished indignation, that redoubled my
hilarity: at length, the conflict was assuaged--by dint of blows, and
kicks, and remonstrances from their dignified proprietors, the dogs
slowly withdrew, one with the loss of half an ear, another with a
shoulder put out, a third with a mouth increased by one-half of its
natural dimensions.

In short, every one engaged in the conflict bore some token of its
severity. I did not wait for the thunder-storm I foresaw: I rose with
a nonchalant yaw n of ennui--marched out of the apartment, called a
servant--demanded my own room--repaired to it, and immersed the internal
faculties of my head in Mignet’s History of the Revolution, while Bedos
busied himself in its outward embellishment.



CHAPTER LXII.

Noster ludos, spectaverat una, Luserat in campo, Fortunae filius omnes.
--Horace.

I did not leave my room till the first dinner-bell had ceased a
sufficient time to allow me the pleasing hope that I should have but a
few moments to wait in the drawing-room, previous to the grand epoch
and ceremony of an European day. The manner most natural to me, is
one rather open and easy; but I pique myself peculiarly upon a certain
(though occasional) air, which keeps impertinence aloof; in fine, I am
by no means a person with whom others would lightly take a liberty,
or to whom they would readily offer or resent an affront. This day I
assumed a double quantum of dignity, in entering a room which I well
knew must be filled with my enemies; there were a few women round Lady
Chester, and as I always feel reassured by a sight of the dear sex, I
walked towards them.

Judge of my delight, when I discovered amongst the group, Lady Harriett
Garrett. It is true that I had no particular predilection for that lady,
but the sight of a negress I had seen before, I should have hailed
with rapture in so desolate and inhospitable a place. If my pleasure at
seeing Lady Harriett was great, her’s seemed equally so at receiving
my salutation. She asked me if I knew Lady Chester--and on my negative
reply, immediately introduced me to that personage. I now found myself
quite at home; my spirits rose, and I exerted every nerve to be as
charming as possible. In youth, to endeavour is to succeed.

I gave a most animated account of the canine battle, interspersed with
various sarcasms on the owners of the combatants, which were by no means
ill-received either by the marchioness or her companions; and, in fact,
when the dinner was announced, they all rose in a mirth, sufficiently
unrestrained to be any thing but patrician: for my part, I offered my
arm to Lady Harriett, and paid her as many compliments on crossing the
suite that led to the dining-room, as would have turned a much wiser
head than her ladyship’s.

The dinner went off agreeably enough, as long as the women stayed, but
the moment they quitted the room, I experienced exactly the same feeling
known unto a mother’s darling, left for the first time at that strange,
cold, comfortless place--ycleped a school.

I was not, however, in a mood to suffer my flowers of oratory to blush
unseen. Besides, it was absolutely necessary that I should make a better
impression upon my host. I leant, therefore, across the table, and
listened eagerly to the various conversations afloat: at last I
perceived, on the opposite side, Sir Lionel Garrett, a personage whom
I had not before even inquired after, or thought of. He was busily and
noisily employed in discussing the game-laws. Thank Heaven, thought I, I
shall be on firm ground there. The general interest of the subject,
and the loudness with which it was debated, soon drew all the scattered
conversation into one focus.

“What!” said Sir Lionel, in a high voice, to a modest, shrinking youth,
probably from Cambridge, who had supported the liberal side of the
question--“what! are our interests to be never consulted? Are we to
have our only amusement taken away from us? What do you imagine brings
country gentlemen to their seats? Do you not know, Sir, the vast
importance our residence at our country houses is to the nation? Destroy
the game laws, and you destroy our very existence as a people.”

‘Now,’ thought I, ‘it is my time.’ “Sir Lionel,” said I, speaking almost
from one end of the table to the other, “I perfectly agree with your
sentiments; I am entirely of opinion, first, that it is absolutely
necessary for the safety of the nation that game should be preserved;
secondly, that if you take away game you take away country gentlemen:
no two propositions can be clearer than these; but I do differ from you
with respect to the intended alterations. Let us put wholly out of the
question, the interests of the poor people, or of society at large:
those are minor matters, not worthy of a moment’s consideration; let us
only see how far our interests as sportsmen will be affected. I think
by a very few words I can clearly prove to you, that the proposed
alterations will make us much better off than we are at present.”

I then entered shortly, yet fully enough, into the nature of the laws as
they now stood, and as they were intended to be changed. I first
spoke of the two great disadvantages of the present system to
country gentlemen; viz. in the number of poachers, and the expense of
preserving. Observing that I was generally and attentively listened
to, I dwelt upon these two points with much pathetic energy; and having
paused till I had got Sir Lionel and one or two of his supporters to
confess that it would be highly desirable that these defects should, if
possible, be remedied, I proceeded to show how, and in what manner it
was possible. I argued, that to effect this possibility, was the exact
object of the alterations suggested; I anticipated the objections; I
answered them in the form of propositions, as clearly and concisely
stated as possible; and as I spoke with great civility and conciliation,
and put aside every appearance of care for any human being in the world
who was not possessed of a qualification, I perceived at the conclusion
of my harangue, that I had made a very favourable impression. That
evening completed my triumph: for Lady Chester and Lady Harriett made so
good a story of my adventure with the dogs, that the matter passed
off as a famous joke, and I was soon considered by the whole knot as
a devilish amusing, good-natured, sensible fellow. So true is it
that there is no situation which a little tact cannot turn to our own
account: manage yourself well, and you may manage all the world.

As for Lord Chester, I soon won his heart by a few feats of
horsemanship, and a few extempore inventions respecting the sagacity of
dogs. Three days after my arrival we became inseparable; and I made such
good use of my time, that in two more, he spoke to me of his friendship
for Dawton, and his wish for a dukedom. These motives it was easy enough
to unite, and at last he promised me that his answer to my principal
should be as acquiescent as I could desire; the morning after this
promise commenced the great day at Newmarket.

Our whole party were of course bound to the race-ground, and with
great reluctance I was pressed into the service. We were not many miles
distant from the course, and Lord Chester mounted me on one of his
horses. Our shortest way lay through rather an intricate series of cross
roads: and as I was very little interested in the conversation of my
companions, I paid more attention to the scenery we passed, than is my
customary wont: for I study nature rather in men than fields, and find
no landscape afford such variety to the eye, and such subject to the
contemplation, as the inequalities of the human heart.

But there were to be fearful circumstances hereafter to stamp forcibly
upon my remembrance some traces of the scenery which now courted and
arrested my view. The chief characteristics of the country were broad,
dreary plains, diversified at times by dark plantations of fir and
larch; the road was rough and stony, and here and there a melancholy
rivulet, swelled by the first rains of spring, crossed our path, and
lost itself in the rank weeds of some inhospitable marsh.

About six miles from Chester Park, to the left of the road, stood an old
house with a new face; the brown, time-honoured bricks which composed
the fabric, were strongly contrasted by large Venetian windows newly
inserted in frames of the most ostentatious white. A smart, green
veranda, scarcely finished, ran along the low portico, and formed the
termination to two thin rows of meagre and dwarfish sycamores, which did
duty for an avenue, and were bounded, on the roadside, by a spruce white
gate, and a sprucer lodge, so moderate in its dimensions, that it would
scarcely have boiled a turnip: if a rat had got into it, he might have
run away with it. The ground was dug in various places, as if for the
purpose of further improvements, and here and there a sickly little tree
was carefully hurdled round, and seemed pining its puny heart out at the
confinement.

In spite of all these well-judged and well-thriving graces of art, there
was such a comfortless and desolate appearance about the place, that it
quite froze one to look at it; to be sure, a damp marsh on one side, and
the skeleton rafters and beams of an old stable on the other, backed by
a few dull and sulky-looking fir trees, might, in some measure, create,
or at least considerably add to, the indescribable cheerlessness of the
tout ensemble. While I was curiously surveying the various parts of this
northern “Delices,” and marvelling at the choice of two crows who
were slowly walking over the unwholesome ground, instead of making all
possible use of the black wings with which Providence had gifted them,
I perceived two men on horseback wind round from the back part of
the building and proceed in a brisk trot down the avenue. We had not
advanced many paces before they overtook us; the foremost of them turned
round as he passed me, and pulling up his horse abruptly, discovered to
my dismayed view, the features of Mr. Thornton. Nothing abashed by the
slightness of my bow, or the grave stares of my lordly companions, who
never forgot the dignity of their birth, in spite of the vulgarity of
their tastes, Thornton instantly and familiarly accosted me.

“Told you so, Mr. Pelham--silent sow, Sure I should have the pleasure of
seeing you, though you kept it so snug. Well, will you bet now? No!--Ah,
you’re a sly one. Staying here at that nice-looking house--belongs to
Dawson, an old friend of mine--shall be happy to introduce you!”

“Sir,” said I, abruptly, “you are too good. Permit me to request that
you will rejoin your friend Mr. Dawson.”

“Oh,” said the imperturbable Thornton, “it does not signify; he won’t be
affronted at my lagging a little. However,” (and here he caught my
eye, which was assuming a sternness that perhaps little pleased him,)
“however, as it gets late, and my mare is none of the best, I’ll wish
you good morning.” With these words Thornton put spurs to his horse and
trotted off.

“Who the devil have you got there, Pelham?” said Lord Chester.

“A person,” said I, “who picked me up at Paris, and insists on the right
of treasure trove to claim me in England. But will you let me ask, in my
turn, whom that cheerful mansion we have just left, belongs to?”

“To a Mr. Dawson, whose father was a gentleman farmer who bred horses,
a very respectable person, for I made one or two excellent bargains with
him. The son was always on the turf, and contracted the worst of its
habits. He bears but a very indifferent character, and will probably
become a complete blackleg. He married, a short time since, a woman of
some fortune, and I suppose it is her taste which has so altered and
modernized his house. Come, gentlemen, we are on even ground, shall we
trot?”

We proceeded but a few yards before we were again stopped by a
precipitous ascent, and as Lord Chester was then earnestly engaged in
praising his horse to one of the cavalcade, I had time to remark the
spot. At the foot of the hill we were about slowly to ascend, was a
broad, uninclosed patch of waste land; a heron, flapping its enormous
wings as it rose, directed my attention to a pool overgrown with rushes,
and half-sheltered on one side by a decayed tree, which, if one might
judge from the breadth and hollowness of its trunk, had been a refuge
to the wild bird, and a shelter to the wild cattle, at a time when such
were the only intruders upon its hospitality; and when the country, for
miles and leagues round, was honoured by as little of man’s care and
cultivation as was at present the rank waste which still nourished its
gnarled and venerable roots. There was something remarkably singular and
grotesque in the shape and sinuosity of its naked and spectral branches:
two of exceeding length stretched themselves forth, in the very
semblance of arms held out in the attitude of supplication; and the bend
of the trunk over the desolate pond, the form of the hoary and blasted
summit, and the hollow trunk, half riven asunder in the shape of limbs,
seemed to favour the gigantic deception. You might have imagined it an
antediluvian transformation, or a daughter of the Titan race, preserving
in her metamorphosis her attitude of entreaty to the merciless Olympian.

This was the only tree visible; for a turn of the road and the
unevenness of the ground, completely veiled the house we had passed,
and the few low firs and sycamores which made its only plantations. The
sullen pool--its ghost-like guardian--the dreary heath around, the rude
features of the country beyond, and the apparent absence of all human
habitation, conspired to make a scene of the most dispiriting and
striking desolation. I know not how to account for it, but as I gazed
around in silence, the whole place appeared to grow over my mind, as one
which I had seen, though dimly and drearily, before; and a nameless and
unaccountable presentiment of fear and evil sunk like ice into my heart.
We ascended the hill, and the rest of the road being of a kind better
adapted to expedition, we mended our pace and soon arrived at the goal
of our journey.

The race-ground had its customary compliment of knaves and fools--the
dupers and the duped. Poor Lady Chester, who had proceeded to the ground
by the high road (for the way we had chosen was inaccessible to those
who ride in chariots, and whose charioteers are set up in high places,)
was driving to and fro, the very picture of cold and discomfort; and the
few solitary carriages which honoured the course, looked as miserable
as if they were witnessing the funeral of their owner’s persons, rather
than the peril of their characters and purses.

As we rode along to the betting-post, Sir John Tyrrell passed us: Lord
Chester accosted him familiarly, and the baronet joined us. He had been
an old votary of the turf in his younger days, and he still preserved
all his ancient predilection in its favour.

It seemed that Chester had not met him for many years, and after a short
and characteristic conversation of “God bless me, how long since I
saw you!--d--d good horse you’re on--you look thin--admirable
condition--what have you been doing?--grand action--a’n’t we behind
hand?--famous fore-hand--recollect old Queensberry?--hot in the
mouth--gone to the devil--what are the odds?” Lord Chester asked Tyrrell
to go home with us. The invitation was readily accepted.

“With impotence of will We wheel, tho’ ghastly shadows interpose Round
us, and round each other.”--Shelley.

Now, then, arose the noise, the clatter, the swearing, the lying, the
perjury, the cheating, the crowd, the bustle, the hurry, the rush, the
heat, the ardour, the impatience, the hope, the terror, the rapture, the
agony of the race. Directly the first heat was over, one asked me one
thing, one bellowed another; I fled to Lord Chester, he did not heed me.
I took refuge with the marchioness; she was as sullen as an east wind
could make her. Lady Harriett would talk of nothing but the horses: Sir
Lionel would not talk at all. I was in the lowest pit of despondency,
and the devils that kept me there were as blue as Lady Chester’s nose.
Silent, sad, sorrowful, and sulky, I rode away from the crowd, and
moralized on its vicious propensities. One grows marvellously honest
when the species of cheating before us is not suited to one’s self.
Fortunately, my better angel reminded me, that about the distance of
three miles from the course lived an old college friend, blessed, since
we had met, with a parsonage and a wife. I knew his tastes too well to
imagine that any allurement of an equestrian nature could have seduced
him from the ease of his library and the dignity of his books; and
hoping, therefore, that I should find him at home, I turned my horse’s
head in an opposite direction, and rejoiced at the idea of my escape,
bade adieu to the course.

As I cantered across the far end of the heath, my horse started from an
object upon the ground; it was a man wrapped from head to foot in a
long horseman’s cloak, and so well guarded as to the face, from the
raw inclemency of the day, that I could not catch even a glimpse of the
features, through the hat and neck-shawl which concealed them. The
head was turned, with apparent anxiety, towards the distant throng; and
imagining the man belonging to the lower orders, with whom I am always
familiar, I addressed to him, en passant, some trifling remark on the
event of the race. He made no answer. There was something about him
which induced me to look back several moments after I had left
him behind. He had not moved an atom. There is such a certain
uncomfortableness always occasioned to the mind by stillness and mystery
united, that even the disguising garb, and motionless silence of the
man, innocent as I thought they must have been, impressed themselves
disagreeably on my meditations as I rode briskly on.

It is my maxim never to be unpleasantly employed, even in thought, if
I can help it; accordingly, I changed the course of my reflection, and
amused myself with wondering how matrimony and clerical dignity sat on
the indolent shoulders of my old acquaintance.



CHAPTER LXIII.

And as for me, tho’ that I can but lite On bookes for to read I me
delight, And to hem give I faith and full credence; And in mine heart
have hem in reverence, So heartily that there is game none, That fro’ my
bookes maketh me to gone.--Chaucer.

Christopher Clutterbuck was a common individual of a common order, but
little known in this busy and toiling world. I cannot flatter myself
that I am about to present to your notice that rara avis, a new
character--yet there is something interesting, and even unhacknied, in
the retired and simple class to which he belongs: and before I proceed
to a darker period in my memoirs, I feel a calm and tranquillizing
pleasure in the rest which a brief and imperfect delineation of my
college companion, affords me. My friend came up to the University
with the learning one about to quit the world might, with credit, have
boasted of possessing, and the simplicity one about to enter it would
have been ashamed to confess. Quiet and shy in his habits and his
manners, he was never seen out of the precincts of his apartment, except
in obedience to the stated calls of dinner, lectures, and chapel. Then
his small and stooping form might be marked, crossing the quadrangle
with a hurried step, and cautiously avoiding the smallest blade of the
barren grass-plots, which are forbidden ground to the feet of all the
lower orders of the collegiate oligarchy. Many were the smiles and
the jeers, from the worse natured and better appointed students, who
loitered idly along the court, at the rude garb and saturnine appearance
of the humble under-graduate; and the calm countenance of the grave, but
amiable man, who then bore the honour and onus of mathematical lecturer
at our college, would soften into a glance of mingled approbation and
pity, as he noted the eagerness which spoke from the wan cheek and
emaciated frame of the ablest of his pupils, hurrying--after each
legitimate interruption--to the enjoyment of the crabbed characters
and worm-worn volumes, which contained for him all the seductions of
pleasure, and all the temptations of youth.

It is a melancholy thing, which none but those educated at a college
can understand, to see the debilitated frames of the aspirants for
academical honours; to mark the prime--the verdure--the glory--the
life--of life wasted irrevocably away in a labor ineptiarum, which
brings no harvest either to others or themselves. For the poet, the
philosopher, the man of science, we can appreciate the recompence if we
commiserate the sacrifice; from the darkness of their retreat there
goes a light--from the silence of their studies there issues a voice, to
illumine or convince. We can imagine them looking from their privations
to the far visions of the future, and hugging to their hearts, in the
strength of no unnatural vanity, the reward which their labours are
certain hereafter to obtain. To those who can anticipate the vast
dominions of immortality among men, what boots the sterility of
the cabined and petty present? But the mere man of languages and
learning--the machine of a memory heavily but unprofitably employed--the
Columbus wasting at the galley oar the energies which should have
discovered a world--for him there is no day-dream of the future, no
grasp at the immortality of fame. Beyond the walls of his narrow room he
knows no object; beyond the elucidation of a dead tongue he indulges no
ambition; his life is one long school-day of lexicons and grammars--a
fabric of ice, cautiously excluded from a single sunbeam--elaborately
useless, ingeniously unprofitable; and leaving at the moment it melts
away, not a single trace of the space it occupied, or the labour it
cost.

At the time I went to the University, my poor collegian had attained all
the honours his employment could ever procure him. He had been a Pitt
scholar; he was a senior wrangler, and a Fellow of his college. It often
happened that I found myself next to him at dinner, and I was struck by
his abstinence, and pleased with his modesty, despite of the gaucherie
of his manner, and the fashion of his garb. By degrees I insinuated
myself into his acquaintance; and, as I had still some love of
scholastic lore, I took frequent opportunities of conversing with him
upon Horace, and consulting him upon Lucian.

Many a dim twilight have we sat together, reviving each other’s
recollection, and occasionally relaxing into the grave amusement of
capping verses. Then, if by any chance my ingenuity or memory enabled
me to puzzle my companion, his good temper would lose itself in a quaint
pettishness, or he would cite against me some line of Aristophanes,
and ask me, with a raised voice, and arched brow, to give him a fitting
answer to that. But if, as was much more frequently the case, he fairly
run me down into a pause and confession of inability, he would rub his
hands with a strange chuckle, and offer me, in the bounteousness of his
heart, to read aloud a Greek Ode of his own, while he treated me “to
a dish of tea.” There was much in the good man’s innocence, and
guilelessness of soul, which made me love him, and I did not rest till I
had procured him, before I left the University, the living which he
now held. Since then, he had married the daughter of a neighbouring
clergyman, an event of which he had duly informed me; but, though this
great step in the life of “a reading man,” had not taken place many
months since, I had completely, after a hearty wish for his domestic
happiness, consigned it to a dormant place in my recollection.

The house which I now began to approach was small, but comfortable;
perhaps there was something triste in the old-fashioned hedges, cut and
trimmed with mathematical precision, which surrounded the glebe, as well
as in the heavy architecture and dingy bricks of the reverend recluse’s
habitation. To make amends for this, there was also something peculiarly
still and placid about the appearance of the house, which must have
suited well the tastes and habits of the owner. A small, formal lawn
was adorned with a square fish-pond, bricked round, and covered with
the green weepings of four willows, which drooped over it, from their
station, at each corner. At the opposite side of this Pierian reservoir,
was a hermitage, or arbour of laurels, shaped in the stiff rusticity of
the Dutch school, in the prevalence of which it was probably planted;
behind this arbour, the ground, after a slight railing, terminated in an
orchard.

The sound I elicited from the gate bell seemed to ring through that
retired place with singular shrillness; and I observed at the opposite
window, all that bustle of drawing curtains, peeping faces, and hasty
retreats, which denote female anxiety and perplexity, at the unexpected
approach of a stranger.

After some time the parson’s single servant, a middle-aged, slovenly
man, in a loose frock, and buff kerseymere nondescripts, opened the
gate, and informed me that his master was at home. With a few earnest
admonitions to my admittor--who was, like the domestics of many richer
men, both groom and valet--respecting the safety of my borrowed horse, I
entered the house: the servant did not think it necessary to inquire my
name, but threw open the door of the study, with the brief introduction
of--“a gentleman, Sir.”

Clutterbuck was standing, with his back towards me, upon a pair of
library steps, turning over some dusky volumes; and below stood a pale,
cadaverous youth, with a set and serious countenance, that bore no small
likeness to Clutterbuck himself.

“Mon Dieu,” thought I, “he cannot have made such good use of his
matrimonial state as to have raised this lanky impression of himself in
the space of seven months?” The good man turned round and almost fell
off the steps with the nervous shock of beholding me so near him: he
descended with precipitation, and shook me so warmly and tightly by the
hand, that he brought tears into my eyes, as well as his own.

“Gently, my good friend,” said I--“parce precor, or you will force me to
say, ‘ibimus una ambo, flentes valido connexi foedere.’”

Clutterbuck’s eyes watered still more, when he heard the grateful sounds
of what to him was the mother tongue. He surveyed me from head to foot
with an air of benign and fatherly complacency, and dragging forth from
its sullen rest a large arm chair, on whose cushions of rusty horse-hair
sat an eternal cloud of classic dust, too sacred to be disturbed, he
plumped me down upon it, before I was aware of the cruel hospitality.

“Oh! my nether garments,” thought I. “Quantus sudor incrit Bedoso, to
restore you to your pristine purity.”

“But, whence come you?” said my host, who cherished rather a formal and
antiquated method of speech.

“From the Pythian games,” said I. “The campus hight Newmarket. Do I see
right, or is not yon insignis juvenis marvellously like you? Of a surety
he rivals the Titans, if he is only a seven months’ child!”

“Now, truly, my worthy friend,” answered Clutterbuck, “you indulge in
jesting! The boy is my nephew, a goodly child, and a painstaking. I hope
he will thrive at our gentle mother. He goes to Trinity next October.
Benjamin Jeremiah, my lad, this is my worthy friend and benefactor, of
whom I have often spoken; go, and order him of our best--he will partake
of our repast!”

“No, really,” I began; but Clutterbuck gently placed the hand, whose
strength of affection I had already so forcibly experienced, upon my
mouth. “Pardon me, my friend,” said he. “No stranger should depart till
he had broken bread with us, how much more then a friend! Go, Benjamin
Jeremiah, and tell your aunt that Mr. Pelham will dine with us; and
order, furthermore, that the barrel of oysters sent unto us as a
present, by my worthy friend Dr. Swallow’em, be dressed in the fashion
that seemeth best; they are a classic dainty, and we shall think of our
great masters the ancients whilst we devour them. And--stop, Benjamin
Jeremiah, see that we have the wine with the black seal; and--now--go,
Benjamin Jeremiah!”

“Well, my old friend,” said I, when the door closed upon the sallow and
smileless nephew, “how do you love the connubiale jugum? Do you give
the same advice as Socrates? I hope, at least, it is not from the same
experience.”

“Hem!” answered the grave Christopher, in a tone that struck me as
somewhat nervous and uneasy, “you are become quite a humourist since we
parted. I suppose you have been warming your wit by the lambent fires of
Horace and Aristophanes!”

“No,” said I, “the living allow those whose toilsome lot it is to mix
constantly with them, but little time to study the monuments of the
dead. But, in sober earnest, are you as happy as I wish you?”

Clutterbuck looked down for a moment, and then, turning towards the
table, laid one hand upon a MS., and pointed with the other to his
books. “With this society,” said he, “how can I be otherwise?”

I gave him no reply, but put my hand upon his MS. He made a modest and
coy effort to detain it, but I knew that writers were like women, and
making use of no displeasing force, I possessed myself of the paper.

It was a treatise on the Greek participle. My heart sickened within me;
but, as I caught the eager glance of the poor author, I brightened up
my countenance into an expression of pleasure, and appeared to read and
comment upon the difficiles nugae with an interest commensurate to
his own. Meanwhile the youth returned. He had much of that delicacy of
sentiment which always accompanies mental cultivation, of whatever sort
it may be. He went, with a scarlet blush over his thin face, to his
uncle, and whispered something in his ear, which, from the angry
embarrassment it appeared to occasion, I was at no loss to divine.

“Come,” said I, “we are too long acquainted for ceremony. Your placens
uxor, like all ladies in the same predicament, thinks your invitation
a little unadvised; and, in real earnest, I have so long a ride to
perform, that I would rather eat your oysters another day!”

“No, no,” said Clutterbuck, with greater eagerness than his even
temperament was often hurried into betraying--“no, I will go and reason
with her myself. ‘Wives, obey your husbands,’ saith the preacher!” And
the quondam senior wrangler almost upset his chair in the perturbation
with which he arose from it.

I laid my hand upon him. “Let me go myself,” said I, “since you will
have me dine with you. ‘The sex is ever to a stranger kind,’ and I shall
probably be more persuasive than you, in despite of your legitimate
authority.”

So saying, I left the room, with a curiosity more painful than pleasing,
to see the collegian’s wife. I arrested the man servant, and ordered him
to usher and announce me.

I was led instanter into the apartment where I had discovered all the
signs of female inquisitiveness, which I have before detailed. There I
discovered a small woman, in a robe equally slatternly and fine, with
a sharp pointed nose, small, cold, grey eyes, and a complexion high
towards the cheek bones, but waxing of a light green before it reached
the wide and querulous mouth, which, well I ween, seldom opened to
smile upon the unfortunate possessor of her charms. She, like the Rev.
Christopher, was not without her companions; a tall meagre woman,
of advanced age, and a girl, some years younger than herself, were
introduced to me as her mother and sister.

My entree occasioned no little confusion, but I knew well how to remedy
that. I held out my hand so cordially to the wife, that I enticed,
though with evident reluctance, two bony fingers into my own, which I
did not dismiss without a most mollifying and affectionate squeeze; and
drawing my chair close towards her, began conversing as familiarly as
if I had known the whole triad for years. I declared my joy at seeing
my old friend so happily settled--commented on the improvement of his
looks--ventured a sly joke at the good effects of matrimony--praised
a cat couchant, worked in worsted by the venerable hand of the eldest
matron--offered to procure her a real cat of the true Persian breed,
black ears four inches long, with a tail like a squirrel’s; and then
slid, all at once, into the unauthorized invitation of the good man of
the house.

“Clutterbuck,” said I, “has asked me very warmly to stay dinner; but,
before I accepted his offer, I insisted upon coming to see how far it
was confirmed by you. Gentlemen, you are aware, my dear Madam, know
nothing of these matters, and I never accept a married man’s invitation
till it has the sanction of his lady: I have an example of that at home.
My mother (Lady Frances) is the best-tempered woman in the world: but my
father could no more take the liberty (for I may truly call it such) to
ask even his oldest friend to dinner, without consulting the mistress
of the house, than he could think of flying. No one (says my mother, and
she says what is very true,) can tell about the household affairs,
but those who have the management of them; and in pursuance of this
aphorism, I dare not accept any invitation in this house, except from
its mistress.”

“Really,” said Mrs. Clutterbuck, colouring, with mingled embarrassment
and gratification, “you are very considerate and polite, Mr. Pelham:
I only wish Mr. Clutterbuck had half your attention to these things;
nobody can tell the trouble and inconvenience he puts me to. If I had
known, a little time before, that you were coming--but now I fear we
have nothing in the house; but if you can partake of our fare, such as
it is, Mr. Pelham--”

“Your kindness enchants me,” I exclaimed, “and I no longer scruple to
confess the pleasure I have in accepting my old friend’s offer.”

This affair being settled, I continued to converse for some minutes with
as much vivacity as I could summon to my aid, and when I went once more
to the library, it was with the comfortable impression of having left
those as friends, whom I had visited as foes.

The dinner hour was four, and till it came, Clutterbuck and I amused
ourselves “in commune wise and sage.” There was something high in the
sentiments and generous in the feelings of this man, which made me
the more regret the bias of mind which rendered them so unavailing. At
college he had never (illis dissimilis in nostro tempore natis) cringed
to the possessors of clerical power. In the duties of his station, as
dean of the college, he was equally strict to the black cap and the
lordly hat. Nay, when one of his private pupils, whose father was
possessed of more church preferment than any nobleman in the peerage,
disobeyed his repeated summons, and constantly neglected to attend his
instructions, he sent for him, resigned his tuition, and refused any
longer to accept a salary which the negligence of his pupil would
not allow him to requite. In his clerical tenets he was high: in his
judgment of others he was mild. His knowledge of the liberty of Greece
was not drawn from the ignorant historian of her republics; [Note: It
is really a disgrace to the University, that any of its colleges should
accept as a reference, or even tolerate as an author, the presumptuous
bigot who has bequeathed to us, in his History of Greece, the
masterpiece of a declaimer without energy, and of a pedant without
learning.] nor did he find in the contemplative mildness and gentle
philosophy of the ancients, nothing but a sanction for modern bigotry
and existing abuses.

It was a remarkable trait in his conversation, that though he indulged
in many references to the old authors, and allusions to classic customs,
he never deviated into the innumerable quotations with which his memory
was stored. No words, in spite of all the quaintness and antiquity of
his dialect, purely Latin or Greek, ever escaped his lips, except in our
engagements at capping verses, or when he was allured into accepting
a challenge of learning from some of its pretenders; then, indeed, he
could pour forth such a torrent of authorities as effectually silenced
his opponent; but these contests were rarely entered into, and these
triumphs moderately indulged. Yet he loved the use of quotations in
others, and I knew the greatest pleasure I could give him was in the
frequent use of them. Perhaps he thought it would seem like an empty
parade of learning in one who so confessedly possessed it, to deal in
the strange words of another tongue, and consequently rejected them,
while, with an innocent inconsistency, characteristic of the man, it
never occurred to him that there was any thing, either in the quaintness
of his dialect or the occupations of his leisure, which might subject
him to the same imputation of pedantry.

And yet, at times, when he warmed in his subject, there was a tone in
his language as well as sentiment, which might not be improperly termed
eloquent; and the real modesty and quiet enthusiasm of his nature,
took away from the impression he made, the feeling of pomposity and
affectation with which otherwise he might have inspired you.

“You have a calm and quiet habitation here,” said I; “the very rooks
seem to have something lulling in that venerable caw which it always
does me such good to hear.”

“Yes,” answered Clutterbuck, “I own that there is much that is grateful
to the temper of my mind in this retired spot. I fancy that I can the
better give myself up to the contemplation which makes, as it were, my
intellectual element and food. And yet I dare say that in this (as in
all other things) I do strongly err; for I remember that during my only
sojourn in London, I was wont to feel the sound of wheels and of the
throng of steps shake the windows of my lodging in the Strand, as if it
were but a warning to recal my mind more closely to its studies--of a
verity that noisy evidence of man’s labour reminded me how little the
great interests of this rolling world were to me, and the feeling of
solitude amongst the crowds without, made me cling more fondly to the
company I found within. For it seems that the mind is ever addicted to
contraries, and that when it be transplanted into a soil where all
its neighbours do produce a certain fruit, it doth, from a strange
perversity, bring forth one of a different sort. You would little
believe, my honoured friend, that in this lonely seclusion, I cannot
at all times prohibit my thoughts from wandering to that gay world of
London, which, during my tarry therein, occupied them in so partial
a degree. You smile, my friend, nevertheless it is true; and when you
reflect that I dwelt in the western department of the metropolis, near
unto the noble mansion of Somerset House, and consequently in the very
centre of what the idle call Fashion, you will not be so surprised at
the occasional migration of my thoughts.”

Here the worthy Clutterbuck paused and sighed slightly. “Do you farm
or cultivate your garden,” said I; “they are no ignoble nor unclassical
employments?”

“Unhappily,” answered Clutterbuck, “I am inclined to neither; my chest
pains me with a sharp and piercing pang when I attempt to stoop, and my
respiration is short and asthmatic; and, in truth, I seldom love to stir
from my books and papers. I go with Pliny to his garden, and with Virgil
to his farm; those mental excursions are the sole ones I indulge in; and
when I think of my appetite for application, and my love of idleness, I
am tempted to wax proud of the propensities which reverse the censure of
Tacitus on our German ancestors, and incline so fondly to quiet, while
they turn so restlessly from sloth.”

Here the speaker was interrupted by a long, low, dry cough, which
penetrated me to the heart. ‘Alas!’ thought I, as I heard it, and looked
upon my poor friend’s hectic and hollow cheek, ‘it is not only his mind
that will be the victim to the fatality of his studies.’

It was some moments before I renewed the conversation, and I had
scarcely done so before I was interrupted by the entrance of Benjamin
Jeremiah, with a message from his aunt that dinner would be ready in
a few minutes. Another long whisper to Christopher succeeded. The
ci-devant fellow of Trinity looked down at his garments with a perplexed
air. I saw at once that he had received a hint on the propriety of a
change of raiment. To give him due leisure for this, I asked the youth
to shew me a room in which I might perform the usual ablutions
previous to dinner, and followed him upstairs to a comfortless sort of
dressing-room, without a fire-place, where I found a yellow were jug
and basin, and a towel, of so coarse a huckaback, that I did not dare
adventure its rough texture next my complexion--my skin is not made for
such rude fellowship. While I was tenderly and daintily anointing my
hands with some hard water, of no Blandusian spring, and that vile
composition entitled Windsor soap, I heard the difficult breathing of
poor Clutterbuck on the stairs, and soon after he entered the adjacent
room. Two minutes more, and his servant joined him, for I heard the
rough voice of the domestic say, “There is no more of the wine with the
black seal left, Sir!”

“No more, good Dixon; you mistake grievously. I had two dozen not a week
since.”

“Don’t know, I’m sure, Sir!” answered Dixon, with a careless and half
impertinent accent; “but there are great things, like alligators, in the
cellar, which break all the bottles!”

“Alligators in my cellar!” said the astonished Clutterbuck.

“Yes, Sir--at least a venomous sort of reptile like them, which the
people about here call efts!”

“What!” said Clutterbuck, innocently, and evidently not seeing the irony
of his own question; “What! have the efts broken two dozen bottles in
a week? Of an exceeding surety, it is strange that a little creature
of the lizard species should be so destructive--perchance they have an
antipathy to the vinous smell; I will confer with my learned friend,
Dr. Dissectall, touching their strength and habits. Bring up some of the
port, then, good Dixon.”

“Yes, Sir. All the corn is out; I had none for the gentleman’s horse.”

“Why, Dixon, my memory fails me strangely, or I paid you the sum of four
pounds odd shillings for corn on Friday last.”

“Yes, Sir: but your cow and the chickens eat so much, and then blind
Dobbin has four feeds a day, and Farmer Johnson always puts his horse
in our stable, and Mrs. Clutterbuck and the ladies fed the jackass the
other day in the hired donkeychaise; besides, the rats and mice are
always at it.”

“It is a marvel unto me,” answered Clutterbuck, “how detrimental the
vermin race are; they seem to have noted my poor possessions as their
especial prey; remind me that I write to Dr. Dissectall to-morrow, good
Dixon.”

“Yes, Sir, and now I think of it--” but here Mr. Dixon was cut short
in his items, by the entrance of a third person, who proved to be Mrs.
Clutterbuck.

“What, not dressed yet, Mr. Clutterbuck; what a dawdler you are!--and
do look--was ever woman so used? you have wiped your razor upon my
nightcap--you dirty, slovenly--”

“I crave you many pardons; I own my error!” said Clutterbuck, in a
nervous tone of interruption.

“Error, indeed!” cried Mrs. Clutterbuck, in a sharp, overstretched,
querulous falsetto, suited to the occasion: “but this is always the
case--I am sure, my poor temper is tried to the utmost--and Lord help
thee, idiot! you have thrust those spindle legs of yours into your
coat-sleeves instead of your breeches!”

“Of a truth, good wife, your eyes are more discerning than mine; and my
legs, which are, as you say, somewhat thin, have indued themselves in
what appertaineth not unto them; but for all that, Dorothea, I am not
deserving of the epithet of idiot, with which you have been pleased
to favour me; although my humble faculties are indeed of no eminent or
surpassing order--”

“Pooh! pooh! Mr. Clutterbuck, I am sure, I don’t know what else you are,
muddling your head all day with those good-for-nothing books. And now
do tell me, how you could think of asking Mr. Pelham to dinner, when you
knew we had nothing in the world but hashed mutton and an apple pudding?
Is that the way, Sir, you disgrace your wife, after her condescension in
marrying you?”

“Really,” answered the patient Clutterbuck, “I was forgetful of those
matters; but my friend cares as little as myself, about the grosser
tastes of the table; and the feast of intellectual converse is all that
he desires in his brief sojourn beneath our roof.”

“Feast of fiddlesticks, Mr. Clutterbuck! did ever man talk such
nonsense?”

“Besides,” rejoined the master of the house, unheeding this
interruption, “we have a luxury even of the palate, than which there are
none more delicate, and unto which he, as well as myself, is, I know,
somewhat unphilosophically given; I speak of the oysters, sent here by
our good friend, Dr. Swallow’em.”

“What do you mean, Mr. Clutterbuck? My poor mother and I had those
oysters last night for our supper. I am sure she as well as my sister
are almost starved; but you are always wanting to be pampered up above
us all.”

“Nay, nay,” answered Clutterbuck, “you know you accuse me wrongfully,
Dorothea; but now I think of it, would it not be better to modulate the
tone of our conversation, seeing that our guest, (a circumstance which
until now quite escaped my recollection,) was shown into the next room,
for the purpose of washing his hands, the which, from their notable
cleanliness, seemed to me wholly unnecessary. I would not have him
overhear you, Dorothea, lest his kind heart should imagine me less happy
than--than it wishes me.”

“Good God, Mr. Clutterbuck!” were the only words I heard farther: and
with tears in my eyes, and a suffocating feeling in my throat, for the
matrimonial situation of my unfortunate friend, I descended into the
drawing-room. The only one yet there, was the pale nephew; he was
bending painfully over a book; I took it from him, it was “Bentley
upon Phalaris.” I could scarcely refrain from throwing it into the
fire--another victim, thought I--oh, the curse of an English education!
By and by, down came the mother and the sister, then Clutterbuck, and
lastly, bedizened out with gewgaws and trumpery--the wife. Born and
nurtured as I was in the art of the volto sciolto pensieri stretti, I
had seldom found a more arduous task of dissimulation than that which
I experienced now. However, the hope to benefit my friend’s situation
assisted me; the best way, I thought, of obtaining him more respect from
his wife, would be by showing her the respect he meets with from
others: accordingly, I sat down by her, and having first conciliated her
attention by some of that coin, termed compliments, in which there is
no counterfeit that does not have the universal effect of real, I
spoke with the most profound veneration of the talents and learning of
Clutterbuck--I dilated upon the high reputation he enjoyed--upon the
general esteem in which he was held--upon the kindness of his heart--the
sincerity of his modesty--the integrity of his honour--in short,
whatever I thought likely to affect her; most of all, I insisted upon
the high panegyrics bestowed upon him, by Lord this, and the Earl that,
and wound up, with adding that I was certain he would die a bishop. My
eloquence had its effect; all dinner time, Mrs. Clutterbuck treated her
husband with even striking consideration: my words seemed to have gifted
her with a new light, and to have wrought a thorough transformation in
her view of her lord and master’s character. Who knows not the truth,
that we have dim and short-sighted eyes to estimate the nature of our
own kin, and that we borrow the spectacles which alone enable us to
discern their merits or their failings from the opinion of strangers! It
may be readily supposed that the dinner did not pass without its share
of the ludicrous--that the waiter and the dishes, the family and the
host, would have afforded ample materials no less for the student
of nature in Hogarth, than of caricature in Bunbury; but I was too
seriously occupied in pursuing my object, and marking its success, to
have time even for a smile. Ah! if ever you would allure your son to
diplomacy, show him how subservient he may make it to benevolence.

When the women had retired, we drew our chairs near to each other, and
laying down my watch on the table, as I looked out upon the declining
day, I said, “Let us make the best of our time, I can only linger here
one half hour longer.”

“And how, my friend,” said Clutterbuck, “shall we learn the method
of making the best use of time? there, whether it be in the larger
segments, or the petty subdivisions of our life, rests the great enigma
of our being. Who is there that has ever exclaimed--(pardon my pedantry,
I am for once driven into Greek)--Euzexa! to this most difficult of the
sciences?”

“Come,” said I, “it is not for you, the favoured scholar--the honoured
academician--whose hours are never idly employed, to ask this question!”

“Your friendship makes too flattering the acumen of your judgment,”
 answered the modest Clutterbuck. “It has indeed been my lot to cultivate
the fields of truth, as transmitted unto our hands by the wise men of
old; and I have much to be thankful for, that I have, in the employ,
been neither curtailed in my leisure, nor abased in my independence--the
two great goods of a calm and meditative mind; yet are there moments in
which I am led to doubt of the wisdom of my pursuits: and when, with a
feverish and shaking hand, I put aside the books which have detained
me from my rest till the morning hour, and repair unto a couch often
baffled of slumber by the pains and discomforts of this worn and feeble
frame, I almost wish I could purchase the rude health of the peasant
by the exchange of an idle and imperfect learning for the ignorance,
content with the narrow world it possesses, because unconscious of the
limitless creation beyond. Yet, my dear and esteemed friend, there is a
dignified and tranquillizing philosophy in the writings of the ancients
which ought to teach me a better condition of mind; and when I have
risen from the lofty, albeit, somewhat melancholy strain, which swells
through the essays of the graceful and tender Cicero, I have indeed felt
a momentary satisfaction at my studies, and an elation even at the
petty success with which I have cherished them. But these are brief and
fleeting moments, and deserve chastisement for their pride. There is one
thing, my Pelham, which has grieved me bitterly of late, and that
is, that in the earnest attention which it is the--perhaps
fastidious--custom of our University, to pay to the minutiae of classic
lore, I do now oftentimes lose the spirit and beauty of the general
bearing; nay, I derive a far greater pleasure from the ingenious
amendment of a perverted text, than from all the turn and thought of the
sense itself: while I am straightening a crooked nail in the wine-cask,
I suffer the wine to evaporate; but to this I am somewhat reconciled,
when I reflect that it was also the misfortune of the great Porson, and
the elaborate Parr, men with whom I blush to find myself included in the
same sentence.”

“My friend,” said I, “I wish neither to wound your modesty, nor to
impugn your pursuits; but think you not that it would be better, both
for men and for yourself, that, while you are yet in the vigour of your
age and reason, you occupy your ingenuity and application in some more
useful and lofty work, than that which you suffered me to glance at in
your library; and moreover, as the great object of him who would perfect
his mind, is first to strengthen the faculties of his body, would it
not be prudent in you to lessen for a time your devotion to books; to
exercise yourself in the fresh air--to relax the bow, by loosing the
string; to mix more with the living, and impart to men in conversation,
as well as in writing, whatever the incessant labour of many years
may have hoarded? Come, if not to town, at least to its vicinity; the
profits of your living, if even tolerably managed, will enable you to
do so without inconvenience. Leave your books to their shelves, and your
flock to their curate, and--you shake your head--do I displease you?”

“No, no, my kind and generous adviser--but as the twig was set, the tree
must grow. I have not been without that ambition which, however vain and
sinful, is the first passion to enter the wayward and tossing vessel of
our soul, and the last to leave its stranded and shattered wreck; but
mine found and attained its object at an age, when in others it is, as
yet, a vague and unsettled feeling; and it feeds now rather upon the
recollections of what has been, than ventures forward on a sea of
untried and strange expectation. As for my studies! how can you, who
have, and in no moderate draught, drank of the old stream of Castaly,
how can you ask me now to change them? Are not the ancients my food, my
aliment, my solace in sorrow--my sympathizers, my very benefactors,
in joy? Take them away from me, and you take away the very winds which
purify and give motion to the obscure and silent current of my life.
Besides, my Pelham, it cannot have escaped your observation, that there
is little in my present state which promises a long increase of days:
the few that remain to me must glide away like their predecessors;
and whatever be the infirmities of my body, and the little harassments
which, I am led to suspect, do occasionally molest the most fortunate,
who link themselves unto the unstable and fluctuating part of creation,
which we term women, more especially in an hymeneal capacity--whatever
these may be, I have my refuge and my comforter in the golden-souled
and dreaming Plato, and the sententious wisdom of the less imaginative
Seneca. Nor, when I am reminded of my approaching dissolution by the
symptoms which do mostly at the midnight hour press themselves upon me,
is there a small and inglorious pleasure in the hope that I may meet
hereafter, in those islands of the blest which they dimly dreamt of, but
which are opened unto my vision, without a cloud, or mist, or shadow
of uncertainty and doubt, with those bright spirits which we do now
converse with so imperfectly; that I may catch from the very lips of
Homer the unclouded gorgeousness of fiction, and from the accents of
Archimedes, the unadulterated calculations of truth.”

Clutterbuck ceased, and the glow of his enthusiasm diffused itself over
his sunken eye and consumptive cheek. The boy, who had sat apart, and
silent, during our discourse, laid his head upon the table, and sobbed
audibly; and I rose, deeply affected, to offer to one for whom they
were, indeed, unavailing, the wishes and blessing of an eager, but not
hardened disciple of the world. We parted: on this earth we can never
meet again. The light has wasted itself away beneath the bushel. It
will be six weeks to-morrow since the meek and noble-minded academician
breathed his last.



CHAPTER LXIV.

‘Tis but a single murder.--Lillo: Fatal Curiosity.

It was in a melancholy and thoughtful mood that I rode away from the
parsonage. Numerous and hearty were the maledictions I bestowed upon a
system of education which, while it was so ineffective with the many,
was so pernicious to the few. Miserable delusion (thought I), that
encourages the ruin of health and the perversion of intellect by studies
that are as unprofitable to the world as they are destructive to the
possessor--that incapacitate him for public, and unfit him for private
life--and that, while they expose him to the ridicule of strangers,
render him the victim of his wife, and the prey of his domestic.

Busied in such reflections, I rode quickly on till I found myself once
more on the heath. I looked anxiously round for the conspicuous equipage
of Lady Chester, but in vain--the ground was thin--nearly all the higher
orders had retired--the common people, grouped together, and clamouring
noisily, were withdrawing: and the shrill voices of the itinerant
hawkers of cards and bills had at length subsided into silence. I rode
over the ground, in the hope of finding some solitary straggler of
our party. Alas! there was not one; and, with much reluctance at, and
distaste to, my lonely retreat, I turned in a homeward direction from
the course.

The evening had already set in, but there was a moon in the cold grey
sky, that I could almost have thanked in a sonnet for a light which I
felt was never more welcomely dispensed, when I thought of the cross
roads and dreary country I had to pass before I reached the longed for
haven of Chester Park. After I had left the direct road, the wind, which
had before been piercingly keen, fell, and I perceived a dark cloud
behind, which began slowly to overtake my steps. I care little, in
general, for the discomfort of a shower; yet, as when we are in one
misfortune we always exaggerate the consequence of a new one, I looked
upon my dark pursuer with a very impatient and petulant frown, and set
my horse on a trot, much more suitable to my inclination than his own.
Indeed, he seemed fully alive to the cornless state of the parson’s
stable, and evinced his sense of the circumstance by a very languid mode
of progression, and a constant attempt, whenever his pace abated, and I
suffered the rein to slumber upon his neck, to crop the rank grass that
sprung up on either side of our road. I had proceeded about three miles
on my way, when I heard the clatter of hoofs behind me. My even pace
soon suffered me to be overtaken, and, as the stranger checked his horse
when he was nearly by my side, I turned towards him, and beheld Sir John
Tyrrell.

“Well,” said he, “this is really fortunate--for I began to fear I should
have my ride, this cold evening, entirely to myself.”

“I imagined that you had long reached Chester Park by this time,” said
I. “Did not you leave the course with our party?”

“No,” answered Tyrrell, “I had business, at Newmarket, with a rascally
fellow of the name of Dawson. He lost to me rather a considerable wager,
and asked me to come to the town with him after the race, in order to
pay me. As he said he lived on the direct road to Chester Park, and
would direct and even accompany me, through all the difficult part of
the ride, I the less regretted not joining Chester and his party; and
you know, Pelham, that when pleasure pulls one way, and money another,
it is all over with the first. Well--to return to my rascal--would you
believe, that when we got to Newmarket, he left me at the inn, in order,
he said, to fetch the money; and after having kept me in a cold
room, with a smoky chimney, for more than an hour, without making his
appearance, I sallied out into the town, and found Mr. Dawson quietly
seated in a hell with that scoundrel Thornton, whom I did not conceive,
till then, he was acquainted with. It seems that he was to win, at
hazard, sufficient to pay his wager. You may fancy my anger, and the
consequent increase to it, when he rose from the table, approached me,
expressed his sorrow, d--d his ill luck, and informed me that he could
not pay me for three months. You know that I could not ride home with
such a fellow--he might have robbed me by the way--so I returned to my
inn--dined--ordered my horse, set off--en cavalier seul--inquired my way
of every passenger I passed, and after innumerable misdirections--here I
am.”

“I cannot sympathise with you,” said I, “since I am benefitted by your
misfortunes. But do you think it very necessary to trot so fast? I fear
my horse can scarcely keep up with yours.”

Tyrrell cast an impatient glance at my panting steed. “It is cursed
unlucky you should be so badly mounted, and we shall have a pelting
shower presently.”

In complaisance to Tyrrell, I endeavoured to accelerate my steed. The
roads were rough and stony, and I had scarcely got the tired animal into
a sharper trot, before--whether or no by some wrench among the deep ruts
and flinty causeway--he fell suddenly lame. The impetuosity of Tyrrell
broke out in oaths, and we both dismounted to examine the cause of my
horse’s hurt, in the hope that it might only be the intrusion of some
pebble between the shoe and the hoof. While we were yet investigating
the cause of our misfortune, two men on horseback overtook us. Tyrrell
looked up. “By Heaven,” said he, in a low tone, “it’s that dog Dawson,
and his worthy coadjutor, Tom Thornton.”

“What’s the matter, gentlemen?” cried the bluff voice of the latter.
“Can I be of any assistance?” and without waiting our reply, he
dismounted, and came up to us. He had no sooner felt the horse’s leg,
than he assured us it was a most severe strain, and that the utmost I
could effect would be to walk the brute gently home.

As Tyrrell broke out into impatient violence at this speech, the sharper
looked up at him with an expression of countenance I by no means liked;
but in a very civil, and even respectful tone, said, “If you want, Sir
John, to reach Chester Park sooner than Mr. Pelham can possibly do,
suppose you ride on with us, I will put you in the direct road before I
quit you.” (Good breeding, thought I, to propose leaving me to find my
own way through this labyrinth of ruts and stones!) However, Tyrrell,
who was in a vile humour, in no very courteous manner, refused the
offer, and added that he should continue with me as long as he could,
and did not doubt that when he left me he should be able to find his
own way. Thornton pressed the invitation still closer, and even offered,
sotto voce, to send Dawson on before, should the baronet object to his
company.

“Pray, Sir,” said Tyrrell, “leave me alone, and busy yourself about your
own affairs.” After so tart a reply, Thornton thought it useless to say
more; he remounted, and with a silent and swaggering nod of familiarity,
soon rode away with his companion.

“I am sorry,” said I, as we were slowly proceeding, “that you rejected
Thornton’s offer.”

“Why, to say truth,” answered Tyrrell, “I have so very bad an opinion
of him, that I was almost afraid to trust myself in his company on so
dreary a road. I have nearly (and he knows it), to the amount of two
thousand pounds about me; for I was very fortunate in my betting-book
today.”

“I know nothing about racing regulations,” said I; “but I thought one
never paid sums of that amount upon the ground?”

“Ah!” answered Tyrrell, “but I won this sum, which is L1,800., of a
country squire from Norfolk, who said he did not know when he should see
me again, and insisted on paying me on the spot: ‘faith I was not nice
in the matter. Thornton was standing by at the time, and I did not half
like the turn of his eye when he saw me put it up. Do you know, too,”
 continued Tyrrell, after a pause, “that I have had a d--d fellow dodging
me all day, and yesterday too; wherever I go, I am sure to see him. He
seems constantly, though distantly, to follow me; and what is worse, he
wraps himself up so well, and keeps at so cautious a distance, that I
can never catch a glimpse of his face.”

I know not why, but at that moment the recollection of the muffled
figure I had seen upon the course, flashed upon me.

“Does he wear a long horseman’s cloak?” said I.

“He does,” answered Tyrrell, in surprise: “have you observed him?”

“I saw such a person on the race ground,” replied I; “but only for an
instant!”

Farther conversation was suspended by a few heavy drops which fell upon
us; the cloud had passed over the moon, and was hastening rapidly and
loweringly over our heads. Tyrrell was neither of an age, a frame, nor a
temper, to be so indifferent to a hearty wetting as myself.

“God!” he cried, “you must put on that beast of your’s--I can’t get wet,
for all the horses in the world.”

I was not much pleased with the dictatorial tone of this remark. “It is
impossible,” said I, “especially as the horse is not my own, and seems
considerably lamer than at first; but let me not detain you.”

“Well!” cried Tyrrell, in a raised and angry voice, which pleased me
still less than his former remark; “but how am I to find my way, if I
leave you?”

“Keep straight on,” said I, “for a mile farther, then a sign-post will
direct you to the left; after a short time, you will have a steep hill
to descend, at the bottom of which is a large pool, and a singularly
shaped tree; then keep straight on, till you pass a house belonging to
Mr. Dawson--”

“Come, come, Pelham, make haste!” exclaimed Tyrrell, impatiently, as the
rain began now to descend fast and heavy.

“When you have passed that house,” I resumed coolly, rather enjoying his
petulance, “you must bear to the right for six miles, and you will be at
Chester Park in less than an hour.”

Tyrrell made no reply, but put spurs to his horse. The pattering rain
and the angry heavens soon drowned the last echoes of the receding
hoofclang.

For myself, I looked in vain for a tree; not even a shrub was to be
found; the fields lay bare on either side, with no other partition but
a dead hedge, and a deep dyke. “Patientia fit melius,” thought I, as
Horace said, and Vincent would say; and in order to divert my thoughts
from my situation, I turned them towards my diplomatic success with Lord
Chester. Presently, for I think scarcely five minutes had elapsed since
Tyrrell’s departure, a horseman passed me at a sharp pace; the moon was
hid by the dense cloud, and the night, though not wholly dark, was dim
and obscured, so that I could only catch the outline of the flitting
figure. A thrill of fear crept over me, when I saw that it was enveloped
in a horseman’s cloak. I soon rallied--“There are more cloaks in the
world than one,” said I to myself; “besides, even if it be Tyrrell’s
dodger, as he calls him, the baronet is better mounted than any
highwayman since the days of Du Val; and is, moreover, strong enough and
cunning enough to take admirable care of himself.” With this reflection
I dismissed the occurrence from my thoughts, and once more returned to
self-congratulations upon my own incomparable genius. “I shall now,”
 I thought, “have well earned my seat in parliament; Dawton will
indisputably be, if not the prime, the principal minister in rank and
influence. He cannot fail to promote me for his own sake, as well as
mine; and when I have once fairly got my legs in St. Stephen’s, I shall
soon have my hands in office: ‘power,’ says some one, ‘is a snake that
when it once finds a hole into which it can introduce its head, soon
manages to wriggle in the rest of its body.’” With such meditations I
endeavoured to beguile the time and cheat myself into forgetfulness of
the lameness of my horse, and the dripping wetness of his rider. At last
the storm began sullenly to subside: one impetuous torrent, ten-fold
more violent than those that had preceded it, was followed by a
momentary stillness, which was again broken by a short relapse of a less
formidable severity, and the moment it ceased, the beautiful moon broke
out, the cloud rolled heavily away, and the sky shone forth, as fair and
smiling as Lady--at a ball, after she has been beating her husband at
home.

But at that instant, or perhaps a second before the storm ceased, I
thought I heard the sound of a human cry. I paused, and my heart stood
still--I could have heard a gnat hum: the sound was not repeated; my ear
caught nothing but the plashing of the rain drops from the dead hedges,
and the murmur of the swollen dykes, as the waters pent within them
rolled hurriedly on. By and by, an owl came suddenly from behind me, and
screamed as it flapped across my path; that, too, went rapidly away:
and with a smile, at what I deemed my own fancy, I renewed my journey.
I soon came to the precipitous descent I have before mentioned; I
dismounted, for safety, from my drooping and jaded horse, and led him
down the hill. At a distance beyond I saw something dark moving on the
grass which bordered the road; as I advanced, it started forth from the
shadow, and fled rapidly before me, in the moonshine--it was a riderless
horse. A chilling foreboding seized me: I looked round for some weapon,
such as the hedge might afford; and finding a strong stick of tolerable
weight and thickness, I proceeded more cautiously, but more fearlessly
than before. As I wound down the hill, the moonlight fell full upon the
remarkable and lonely tree I had observed in the morning. Bare, wan, and
giant-like, as it rose amidst the surrounding waste, it borrowed even
a more startling and ghostly appearance from the cold and lifeless
moonbeams which fell around and upon it like a shroud. The retreating
animal I had driven before me, paused by this tree. I hastened my steps,
as if by an involuntary impulse, as well as the enfeebled animal I was
leading would allow me, and discovered a horseman galloping across the
waste at full speed. The ground over which he passed was steeped in
the moonshine, and I saw the long and disguising cloak, in which he was
developed, as clearly as by the light of day. I paused: and as I was
following him with my looks, my eye fell upon some obscure object by
the left side of the pool. I threw my horse’s rein over the hedge, and
firmly grasping my stick, hastened to the spot. As I approached the
object, I perceived that it was a human figure; it was lying still and
motionless; the limbs were half immersed in the water--the face was
turned upwards--the side and throat were wet with a deep red stain--it
was of blood; the thin, dark hairs of the head, were clotted together
over a frightful and disfiguring contusion. I bent over the face in
a shuddering and freezing silence. It was the countenance of Sir John
Tyrrell!



CHAPTER LXV.

Marry, he was dead--And the right valiant Barlquo walked too late,
Whom, you may say, if it please you, Fleance killed, For Fleance fled!
--Macbeth.

It is a fearful thing, even to the hardiest nerves, to find ourselves
suddenly alone with the dead. How much more so, if we have, but a
breathing interval before, moved and conversed with the warm and living
likeness of the motionless clay before us!

And this was the man from whom I had parted in coldness--almost in
anger--at a word--a breath! I took up the heavy hand--it fell from
my grasp, and as it did so, I thought a change passed over the livid
countenance. I was deceived; it was but a light cloud flitting over the
moon;--it rolled away, and the placid and guiltless light shone over
that scene of dread and blood, making more wild and chilling the
eternal contrast of earth and heaven--man and his Maker--passion and
immutability--dust and immortality.

But that was not a moment for reflection--a thousand thoughts hurried
upon me, and departed as swift and confusedly as they came. My mind
seemed a jarring and benighted chaos of the faculties which were its
elements; and I had stood several minutes over the corpse before, by a
vigorous effort, I shook off the stupor that possessed me, and began to
think of the course that it now behoved me to pursue.

The house I had noted in the morning was, I knew, within a few minutes’
walk of the spot; but it belonged to Dawson, upon whom the first weight
of my suspicions rested. I called to mind the disreputable character of
that man, and the still more daring and hardened one of his companion
Thornton. I remembered the reluctance of the deceased to accompany them,
and the well-grounded reason he assigned; and my suspicions amounting to
certainty, I resolved rather to proceed to Chester Park, and there
give the alarm, than to run the unnecessary risk of interrupting the
murderers in the very lair of their retreat. And yet, thought I, as I
turned slowly away, how, if they were the villains, is the appearance
and flight of the disguised horseman to be accounted for?

Then flashed upon my recollection all that Tyrrell had said of the
dogged pursuit of that mysterious person, and the circumstance of his
having passed me upon the road so immediately after Tyrrell had quitted
me. These reflections (associated with a name I did not dare breathe
even to myself, although I could not suppress a suspicion which
accounted at once for the pursuit, and even for the deed,) made me
waver in, and almost renounce my former condemnation of Thornton and
his friend: and by the time I reached the white gate and dwarfish avenue
which led to Dawson’s house, I resolved, at all events, to halt at the
solitary mansion, and mark the effect my information would cause.

A momentary fear for my own safety came across me, but was as instantly
dismissed;--for even supposing the friends were guilty, still it would
be no object to them to extend their remorseless villany to me; and I
knew that I could sufficiently command my own thoughts to prevent any
suspicion I might form, from mounting to my countenance, or discovering
itself in my manner.

There was a light in the upper story; it burned still and motionless.
How holy seemed the tranquillity of life, to the forced and fearful
silence of the death scene I had just witnessed! I rung twice at the
door--no one came to answer my summons, but the light in the upper
window moved hurriedly to and fro.

“They are coming,” said I to myself. No such thing--the casement above
was opened--I looked up, and discovered, to my infinite comfort and
delight, a blunderbuss protruded eight inches out of the window in a
direct line with my head; I receded close to the wall with no common
precipitation.

“Get away, you rascal,” said a gruff, but trembling voice, “or I’ll blow
your brains out.”

“My good Sir,” I replied, still keeping my situation, “I come on urgent
business, either to Mr. Thornton or Mr. Dawson; and you had better,
therefore, if the delay is not very inconvenient, defer the honour you
offer me, till I have delivered my message.”

“Master, and ‘Squire Thornton are not returned from Newmarket, and we
cannot let any one in till they come home,” replied the voice, in a
tone somewhat mollified by my rational remonstrance; and while I was
deliberating what rejoinder to make, a rough, red head, like Liston’s,
in a farce, poked itself cautiously out under cover of the blunderbuss,
and seemed to reconnoitre my horse and myself. Presently another head,
but attired in the more civilized gear of a cap and flowers, peeped over
the first person’s left shoulder; the view appeared to reassure them.

“Sir,” said the female, “my husband and Mr. Thornton are not returned;
and we have been so much alarmed of late, by an attack on the house,
that I cannot admit any one till their return.”

“Madam,” I replied, reverently doffing my hat, “I do not like to alarm
you by mentioning the information I should have given to Mr. Dawson;
only oblige me by telling them, on their return, to look beside the pool
on the common; they will then do as best pleases them.”

Upon this speech, which certainly was of no agreeable tendency, the
blunderbuss palpitated so violently, that I thought it highly imprudent
to tarry any longer in so immediate a vicinity; accordingly, I made
the best of my way out of the avenue, and once more resumed my road to
Chester Park.

I arrived there at length; the gentlemen were still in the dining-room.
I sent out for Lord Chester, and communicated the scene I had witnessed,
and the cause of my delay.

“What, Brown Bob lamed?” said he, “and Tyrrell--poor--poor fellow, how
shocking! we must send instantly. Here, John! Tom! Wilson!” and his
lordship shouted and rung the bell in an indescribable agitation.

The under butler appeared, and Lord Chester began--“My head groom--Sir
John Tyrrell is murdered--violent sprain in off leg--send lights with
Mr. Pelham--poor gentleman--an express instantly to Dr. Physicon--Mr.
Pelham will tell you all--Brown Bob--his throat cut from ear to
ear--what shall be done?” and with this coherent and explanatory
harangue, the marquis sunk down in his chair in a sort of hysteria.

The under butler looked at him in suspicious bewilderment. “Come,” said
I, “I will explain what his lordship means:” and, taking the man out of
the room, I gave him, in brief, the necessary particulars. I ordered a
fresh horse for myself, and four horsemen to accompany me. While
these were preparing, the news was rapidly spreading, and I was soon
surrounded by the whole house. Many of the men wished to accompany me;
and Lord Chester, who had at last recovered from his stupor, insisted
upon heading the search. We set off, to the number of fourteen, and
soon arrived at Dawson’s house: the light in the upper room was still
burning. We rang, and after a brief pause, Thornton himself opened the
door to us. He looked pale and agitated.

“How shocking!” he said directly--“we are only just returned from the
spot.”

“Accompany us, Mr. Thornton,” said I, sternly; and fixing my eye upon
him--

“Certainly,” was his immediate answer, without testifying any
confusion--“I will fetch my hat.” He went into the house for a moment.

“Do you suspect these people?” whispered Lord Chester.

“Not suspect,” said I, “but doubt.”

We proceeded down the avenue: “Where is Mr. Dawson?” said I to Thornton.

“Oh, within!” answered Thornton.

“Shall I fetch him?”

“Do,” was my brief reply.

Thornton was absent some minutes; when he re-appeared, Dawson was
following him. “Poor fellow,” said he to me in a low tone--“he was so
shocked by the sight, that he is still all in a panic; besides, as you
will see, he is half drunk still.”

I made no answer, but looked narrowly at Dawson; he was evidently,
as Thornton said, greatly intoxicated: his eyes swam, and his feet
staggered as he approached us; yet, through all the natural effects of
drunkenness, he seemed nervous and frightened. This, however, might be
the natural, and consequently innocent effect, of the mere sight of an
object so full of horror; and, accordingly, I laid little stress upon
it.

We reached the fatal spot: the body seemed perfectly unmoved. “Why,”
 said I, apart to Thornton, while all the rest were crowding fearfully
round the corpse--“why did you not take the body within?”

“I was going to return here with our servant for that purpose,” answered
the gambler; “for poor Dawson was both too drunk and too nervous to give
me any assistance.”

“And how came it,” I rejoined, eyeing him searchingly, “that you and
your friend had not returned home when I called there, although you had
both long since passed me on the road, and I had never overtaken you?”

Thornton, without any hesitation, replied--“because, during the violence
of the shower, we cut across the fields to an old shed, which we
recollected, and we remained there till the rain had ceased.”

“They are probably innocent,” thought I--and I turned to look once more
at the body which our companions had now raised. There was upon the head
a strong contusion, as if inflicted by some blunt and heavy instrument.
The fingers of the right hand were deeply gashed, and one of them almost
dissevered: the unfortunate man had, in all probability, grasped the
sharp weapon from which his other wounds proceeded; these were one wide
cut along the throat, and another in the side; either of them would have
occasioned his death.

In loosening the clothes another wound was discovered, but apparently of
a less fatal nature; and in lifting the body, the broken blade of a long
sharp instrument, like a case-knife, was discovered. It was the opinion
of the surgeon, who afterwards examined the body, that the blade had
been broken by coming in contact with one of the rib bones; and it
was by this that he accounted for the slightness of the last mentioned
wound. I looked carefully among the fern and long grass, to see if I
could discover any other token of the murderer: Thornton assisted me. At
the distance of some feet from the body, I thought I perceived something
glitter. I hastened to the place, and picked up a miniature. I was just
going to cry out, when Thornton whispered--“Hush! I know the picture; it
is as I suspected.”

An icy thrill ran through my very heart. With a desperate but trembling
hand, I cleansed from the picture the blood, in which, notwithstanding
its distance from the corpse, the grater part of it was bathed. I looked
upon the features; they were those of a young and singularly beautiful
female. I recognized them not: I turned to the other side of the
miniature; upon it were braided two locks of hair--one was the long,
dark ringlet of a woman, the other was of a light auburn. Beneath were
four letters. I looked eagerly at them. “My eyes are dim,” said I, in a
low tone to Thornton, “I cannot trace the initials.”

“But I can,” replied he, in the same whispered key, but with a savage
exultation, which made my heart stand still--“they are G. D., R. G.;
they are the initials of Gertrude Douglas and Reginald Glanville.”

I looked up at the speaker--our eyes met--I grasped his hand vehemently.
He understood me. “Put it up,” said he; “we will keep the secret.” All
this, so long in the recital, passed in the rapidity of a moment.

“Have you found any thing there, Pelham?” shouted one of our companions.

“No!” cried I, thrusting the miniature in my bosom, and turning
unconcernedly away.

We carried the corpse to Dawson’s house. The poor wife was in fits. We
heard her scream as we laid the body upon a table in the parlour.

“What more can be done?” said Lord Chester.

“Nothing,” was the general answer. No excitation makes the English
people insensible to the chance of catching cold!

“Let us go home, then, and send to the nearest magistrate,” exclaimed
our host: and this proposal required no repetition.

On our way, Chester said to me, “That fellow Dawson looked devilish
uneasy--don’t you still suspect him and his friend?”

“I do not!” answered I, emphatically.



VOLUME VI.



CHAPTER LXVI.

And now I’m the world alone, ............ But why for others should I
groan, When none will sigh for me?--Byron.

The whole country was in confusion at the news of the murder. All the
myrmidons of justice were employed in the most active research for the
murderers. Some few persons were taken up on suspicion, but were as
instantly discharged. Thornton and Dawson underwent a long and rigorous
examination; but no single tittle of evidence against them appeared:
they were consequently dismissed. The only suspicious circumstance
against them, was their delay on the road; but the cause given, the same
as Thornton had at first assigned to me, was probable and natural. The
shed was indicated, and, as if to confirm Thornton’s account, a glove
belonging to that person was found there. To crown all, my own evidence,
in which I was constrained to mention the circumstance of the muffled
horseman having passed me on the road, and being found by me on the spot
itself, threw the whole weight of suspicion upon that man, whoever he
might be.

All attempts, however, to discover him were in vain. It was ascertained
that a man, muffled in a cloak, was seen at Newmarket, but not
remarkably observed; it was also discovered, that a person so habited
had put up a grey horse to bait in one of the inns at Newmarket; but in
the throng of strangers, neither the horse nor its owner had drawn down
any particular remark.

On further inquiry, testimony differed; four or five men, in cloaks, had
left their horses at the stables; one ostler changed the colour of the
steed to brown, a second to black, a third deposed that the gentleman
was remarkably tall, and the waite swore solemnly he had given a glass
of brandy and water to an unked looking gentleman, in a cloak, who was
remarkably short. In fine, no material point could be proved, and though
the officers were still employed in active search, they could trace
nothing that promised a speedy discovery.

As for myself, as soon as I decently could, I left Chester Park, with
a most satisfactory dispatch in my pocket, from its possessor to Lord
Dawton, and found myself once more on the road to London!

Alas! how different were my thoughts! How changed the temper of my mind,
since I had last travelled that road. Then I was full of hope, energy,
ambition--of interest for Reginald Glanville--of adoration for his
sister; and now, I leaned back listless and dispirited, without a single
feeling to gladden the restless and feverish despair which, ever since
that night, had possessed me. What was ambition henceforth to me?
The most selfish amongst us must have some human being to whom to
refer--with whom to connect--to associate--to treasure the triumphs and
gratifications of self. Where now was such a being to me? My earliest
friend, for whom my esteem was the greater for his sorrows, my interest
the keener for his mystery, Reginald Glanville, was a murderer! a
dastardly, a barbarous felon, whom the chance of an instant might
convict!--and she--she, the only woman in the world I had ever really
loved--who had ever pierced the thousand folds of my ambitious and
scheming heart--she was the sister of the assassin!

Then came over my mind the savage and exulting eye of Thornton, when it
read the damning record of Glanville’s guilt; and in spite of my horror
at the crime of my former friend, I trembled for his safety: nor was I
satisfied with myself at my prevarication as a witness. It is true, that
I had told the truth, but I had concealed all the truth; and my heart
swelled proudly and bitterly against the miniature which I still
concealed in my bosom.

Light as I may seem to the reader, bent upon the pleasures and the
honours of the great world, as I really was, there had never, since I
had recognized and formed a decided code of principles, been a single
moment in which I had transgressed it; and perhaps I was sterner and
more inflexible in the tenets of my morality, such as they were, than
even the most zealous worshipper of the letter, as well as the spirit of
the law and the prophets, would require. Certainly there were many pangs
within me, when I reflected, that to save a criminal, in whose safety
I was selfishly concerned, I had tampered with my honour, paltered with
the truth, and broken what I felt to be a peremptory and inviolable
duty. Let it be for ever remembered, that once acknowledge and ascertain
that a principle is publicly good, and no possible private motive should
ever induce you to depart from it.

It was with a heightened pulse, and a burning cheek, that I entered
London; before midnight I was in a high fever; they sent for the
vultures of physic--I was bled copiously--I was kept quiet in bed for
six days, at the end of that time, my constitution and youth restored
me. I took up one of the newspapers listlessly: Glanville’s name struck
me; I read the paragraph which contained it--it was a high-flown and
fustian panegyric on his genius and promise. I turned to another column,
it contained a long speech he had the night before made in the House of
Commons.

“Can such things be?” thought I; yea, and thereby hangs a secret and an
anomaly in the human heart. A man may commit the greatest of crimes, and
(if no other succeed to it,) it changes not the current of his being--to
all the world--to all intents--for all objects, he may be the same.
He may equally serve his country--equally benefit his friends--be
generous--brave--benevolent, all that he was before. One crime, however
heinous, makes no revolution in the system--it is only the perpetual
course of sins, vices, follies, however insignificant they may seem,
which alters the nature and hardens the heart.

My mother was out of town when I returned there. They had written to her
during my illness, and while I was yet musing over the day’s journal, a
letter from her was put into my hand. I transcribe it.

“My Dearest Henry,

“How dreadfully uneasy I am about you: write to me directly. I would
come to town myself, but am staying with dear Lady Dawton, who wont hear
of my going; and I cannot offend her for your sake. By the by, why have
you not called upon Lord Dawton? but, I forgot, you have been ill. My
dear, dear child, I am wretched about you, and now pale your illness
will make you look! just too, as the best part of the season is coming
on. How unlucky! Pray, don’t wear a black cravat when you next call on
Lady Roseville; but choose a very fine baptiste one--it will make you
look rather delicate than ill. What physician do you have? I hope, in
God, that it is Sir Henry Halford. I shall be too miserable if it is
not. I am sure no one can conceive the anguish I suffer. Your father,
too, poor man, has been laid up with the gout for the last three days.
Keep up your spirits, my dearest child, and get some light books
to entertain you; but, pray, as soon as you are well, do go to Lord
Dawton’s--he is dying to see you; but be sure not to catch cold. How
did you like Lady Chester? Pray take the greatest care of yourself, and
write soon to

“Your wretched, and most

“Affectionate Mother,

“F. P.

“P.S. How dreadfully shocking about that poor Sir John Tyrrell!”


I tossed the letter from me. Heaven pardon me if the misanthropy of my
mood made me less grateful for the maternal solicitude than I should
otherwise have been.

I took up one of the numerous books with which my table was covered; it
was a worldly work of one of the French reasoners; it gave a new turn
to my thoughts--my mind reverted to its former projects of ambition.
Who does not know what active citizens private misfortune makes us? The
public is like the pools of Bethesda--we all hasten there, to plunge in
and rid ourselves of our afflictions.

I drew my portfeuille to me, and wrote to Lord Dawton. Three hours
after I had sent the note, he called upon me. I gave him Lord Chester’s
letter, but he had already received from that nobleman a notification of
my success. He was profuse in his compliments and thanks.

“And, do you know,” added the statesman, “that you have quite made a
conquest of Lord Guloseton? He speaks of you publicly in the highest
terms: I wish we could get him and his votes. We must be strengthened,
my dear Pelham; every thing depends on the crisis.”

“Are you certain of the cabinet?” I asked.

“Yes; it is not yet publicly announced, but it is fully known amongst
us, who comes in, and who stays out. I am to have the place of--.”

“I congratulate your lordship from my heart. What post do you design for
me?”

Lord Dawton changed countenance. “Why--really--Pelham, we have not
yet filled up the lesser appointments, but you shall be well
remembered--well, my dear Pelham, be sure of it.”

I looked at the noble speaker with a glance which, I flatter myself, is
peculiar to me. If, thought I, the embryo minister is playing upon me as
upon one of his dependant characters; if he dares forget what he owes
to my birth and zeal, I will grind myself to powder but I will shake him
out of his seat. The anger of the moment passed away.

“Lord Dawton,” said I, “one word, and I have done discussing my claims
for the present. Do you mean to place me in Parliament as soon as you
are in the cabinet? What else you intend for me, I question not.”

“Yes, assuredly, Pelham. How can you doubt it?”

“Enough!--and now read this letter from France.”

Two days after my interview with Lord Dawton, as I was riding leisurely
through the Green Park, in no very bright and social mood, one of the
favoured carriages, whose owners are permitted to say, “Hic iter est
nobis,” overtook me. A sweet voice ordered the coachman to stop, and
then addressed itself to me.

“What, the hero of Chester Park returned, without having once narrated
his adventures tome?”

“Beautiful Lady Roseville,” said I, “I plead guilty of negligence--not
treason. I forgot, it is true, to appear before you, but I forget not
the devotion of my duty now that I behold you. Command, and I obey.”

“See, Ellen,” said Lady Roseville, turning to a bending and blushing
countenance beside her, which I then first perceived--“See what it is
to be a knight errant; even his language, is worthy of Amadis of
Gaul--but--(again addressing me) your adventures are really too shocking
a subject to treat lightly. We lay our serious orders on you to come to
our castle this night: we shall be alone.”

“Willingly shall I repair to your bower, fayre ladie; but tell me, I
beseech you, how many persons are signified in the world ‘alone?’”

“Why,” answered Lady Roseville, “I fear we may have two or three people
with us; but I think, Ellen, we may promise our chevalier, that the
number shall not exceed twelve.”

I bowed and rode on. What worlds would I not have given to have touched
the hand of the countess’s companion, though only for an instant.
But--and that fearful but, chilled me, like an ice-bolt. I put spurs
to my horse, and dashed fiercely onwards. There was rather a high wind
stirring, and I bent my face from it, so as scarcely to see the course
of my spirited and impatient horse.

“What ho, Sir!--what ho!” cried a shrill voice--“for God’s sake, don’t
ride over me before dinner, whatever you do after it!”

I pulled up. “Ah, Lord Guloseton! how happy I am to see you; pray
forgive my blindness, and my horse’s stupidity.”

“‘Tis an ill wind,” answered the noble gourmand, “which blows nobody
good. An excellent proverb, the veracity of which is daily attested;
for, however unpleasant a keen wind may be, there is no doubt of its
being a marvellous whetter of that greatest of Heaven’s blessings--an
appetite. Little, however, did I expect, that besides blowing me a
relish for my saute de foie gras, it would also blow me one who might,
probably, be a partaker of my enjoyment. Honour me with your company at
dinner to-day.”

“What saloon will you dine in, my Lord Lucullus?” said I, in allusion to
the custom of the epicure, by whose name I addressed him.

“The saloon of Diana,” replied Guloseton--“for she must certainly have
shot the fine buck of which Lord H. sent me the haunch that we shall
have to-day. It is the true old Meynell breed. I ask you not to meet Mr.
So-and-so, and Lord What-dye-call-him: I ask you to meet a saute de foie
gras, and a haunch of venison.”

“I will most certainly pay them my respects. Never did I know before how
far things were better company than persons. Your lordship has taught me
that great truth.”

“God bless me,” cried Guloseton, with an air of vexation, “here comes
the Duke of Stilton, a horrid person, who told me the other day, at
my petit diner, when I apologized to him for some strange error of my
artiste’s, by which common vinegar had been substituted for Chili--who
told me--what think you he told me? You cannot guess; he told me,
forsooth, that he did not care what he eat; and, for his part, he could
make a very good dinner off a beef-steak! Why the deuce, then, did
he come and dine with me? Could he have said any thing more cutting?
Imagine my indignation, when I looked round my table and saw so many
good things thrown away upon such an idiot.”

Scarcely was the last word out of the gourmand’s mouth before the noble
personage so designated, joined us. It amused me to see Guloseton’s
contempt (which he scarcely took the pains to suppress) of a person whom
all Europe honoured, and his evident weariness of a companion, whose
society every one else would have coveted as the summum bonum of worldly
distinction. As for me, feeling any thing but social, I soon left the
ill-matched pair, and rode into the other park.

Just as I entered it, I perceived, on a dull, yet cross-looking pony,
Mr. Wormwood, of bitter memory. Although we had not met since our mutual
sojourn at Sir Lionel Garratt’s, and were then upon very cool terms of
acquaintance, he seemed resolved to recognize and claim me.

“My dear Sir,” said he, with a ghastly smile, “I am rejoiced once more
to see you; bless me, how pale you look. I heard you had been very ill.
Pray have you been yet to that man who professes to cure consumption in
the worst stages?”

“Yes,” said I, “he read me two or three letters of reference from the
patients he had cured. His last, he said, was a gentleman very far gone;
a Mr. Wormwood.”

“Oh, you are pleased to be facetious,” said the cynic, coldly--“but pray
do tell me about that horrid affair at Chester Park. How disagreeable it
must have been to you to be taken up on suspicion of the murder.”

“Sir,” said I, haughtily, “what do you mean?”

“Oh, you were not--wern’t you? Well, I always thought it unlikely; but
every one says so--”

“My dear Sir,” I rejoined, “how long is it since you have minded what
every body says? If I were so foolish, I should not be riding with you
now; but I have always said, in contradiction to every body, and even in
spite of being universally laughed at for my singular opinion, that
you, my dear Mr. Wormwood, were by no means silly, nor ignorant, nor
insolent, nor intrusive; that you were, on the contrary, a very decent
author, and a very good sort of man; and that you were so benevolent,
that you daily granted to some one or other, the greatest happiness in
your power: it is a happiness I am now about to enjoy, and it consists
in wishing you ‘good bye!’” And without waiting for Mr. Wormwood’s
answer, I gave the rein to my horse, and was soon lost among the crowd,
which had now began to assemble.

Hyde Park is a stupid place; the English make business an enjoyment,
and enjoyment a business--they are born without a smile--they rove about
public places like so many easterly winds--cold, sharp, and cutting; or
like a group of fogs on a frosty day, sent out of his hall by Boreas for
the express purpose of looking black at one another. When they ask you,
“how you do,” you would think they were measuring the length of your
coffin. They are ever, it is true, labouring to be agreeable; but they
are like Sisyphus, the stone they roll up the hill with so much toil,
runs down again, and hits you a thump on the legs. They are sometimes
polite, but invariably uncivil; their warmth is always artificial--their
cold never, they are stiff without dignity, and cringing without
manners. They offer you an affront, and call it “plain truth;” they
wound your feelings, and tell you it is manly “to speak their minds;” at
the same time, while they have neglected all the graces and charities
of artifice, they have adopted all its falsehood and deceit. While they
profess to abhor servility, they adulate the peerage--while they tell
you they care not a rush for the minister, they move heaven and earth
for an invitation from the minister’s wife. There is not another court
in Europe where such systematized meanness is carried on,--where they
will even believe you, when you assert that it exists. Abroad, you
can smile at the vanity of one class, and the flattery of another: the
first, is too well bred to affront, the latter, too graceful to disgust;
but here, the pride of a noblesse, (by the way, the most mushroom
in Europe,) knocks you down in a hail-storm, and the fawning of the
bourgeois makes you sick with hot water. Then their amusements--the
heat--the dust--the sameness--the slowness of that odious park in the
morning; and the same exquisite scene repeated in the evening, on the
condensed stage of a rout-room, where one has more heat, with less
air, and a narrower dungeon, with diminished possibility of escape!--we
wander about like the damned in the story of Vathek, and we pass our
lives, like the royal philosopher of Prussia, in conjugating the verb,
Je m’ennuie.



CHAPTER LXVII.

In solo vivendi causa palato est.--Juvenal.

They would talk of nothing but high life, and high-lived company; with
other fashionable topics, such as pictures, taste, Shakspeare, and the
musical glasses.--Vicar of Wakefield.

The reflections which closed the last CHAPTER, will serve to show that
I was in no very amiable or convivial temper, when I drove to Lord
Guloseton’s dinner. However, in the world, it matters little what may be
our real mood, the mask hides the bent brow and the writhing lip.

Guloseton was stretched on his sofa, gazing with upward eye at the
beautiful Venus which hung above his hearth. “You are welcome, Pelham; I
am worshipping my household divinity!”

I prostrated myself on the opposite sofa, and made some answer to the
classical epicure, which made us both laugh heartily. We then talked of
pictures, painters, poets, the ancients, and Dr. Henderson on Wines; we
gave ourselves up, without restraint, to the enchanting fascination
of the last-named subject, and our mutual enthusiasm confirming our
cordiality, we went down stairs to our dinner, as charmed with each
other as boon companions always should be.

“This is comme il faut,” said I, looking round at the well filled table,
and the sparkling spirits immersed in the ice-pails, “a genuine friendly
dinner. It is very rarely that I dare entrust myself to such extempore
hospitality--miserum est aliena vivere quadra;--a friendly dinner, a
family meal, are things from which I fly with undisguised aversion. It
is very hard, that in England, one cannot have a friend on pain of being
shot or poisoned; if you refuse his familiar invitations, he thinks you
mean to affront him, and says something rude, for which you are forced
to challenge him; if you accept them, you perish beneath the weight of
boiled mutton and turnips, or--”

“My dear friend,” interrupted Guloseton, with his mouth full, “it is
very true; but this is no time for talking, let us eat.”

I acknowledged the justice of the rebuke, and we did not interchange
another word beyond the exclamations of surprise, pleasure, admiration,
or dissatisfaction, called up by the objects which engrossed our
attention, till we found ourselves alone with our dessert.

When I thought my host had imbibed a sufficient quantity of wine, I once
more renewed my attack. I had tried him before upon that point of vanity
which is centered in power, and political consideration, but in vain; I
now bethought me of another.

“How few persons there are,” said I, “capable of giving even a tolerable
dinner--how many capable of admiring one worthy of estimation. I could
imagine no greater triumph for the ambitious epicure, than to see at
his board the first and most honoured persons of the state, all lost
in wonder at the depth, the variety, the purity, the munificence of his
taste; all forgetting, in the extorted respect which a gratified palate
never fails to produce, the more visionary schemes and projects which
usually occupy their thoughts;--to find those whom all England are
soliciting for posts and power, become, in their turn, eager and
craving aspirants for places--at his table;--to know that all the grand
movements of the ministerial body are planned and agitated over the
inspirations of his viands and the excitement of his wine--from a haunch
of venison, like the one of which we have partaken to-day, what noble
and substantial measures might arise? From a saute de foie, what
delicate subtleties of finesse might have their origin? from a ragout a
la financiere, what godlike improvements in taxation? Oh, could such
a lot be mine, I would envy neither Napoleon for the goodness of his
fortune, nor S--for the grandeur of his genius.”

Guloseton laughed. “The ardour of your enthusiasm blinds your
philosophy, my dear Pelham; like Montesquieu, the liveliness of your
fancy often makes you advance paradoxes which the consideration of your
judgment would afterwards condemn. For instance, you must allow, that
if one had all those fine persons at one’s table, one would be forced to
talk more, and consequently to eat less; moreover, you would either be
excited by your triumph, or you would not, that is indisputable; if you
are not excited you have the bore for nothing; if you are excited you
spoil your digestion: nothing is so detrimental to the stomach as the
feverish inquietude of the passions. All philosophies recommend calm
as the to kalon of their code; and you must perceive, that if, in the
course you advise, one has occasional opportunities of pride, one also
has those of mortification. Mortification! terrible word; how many
apoplexies have arisen from its source! No, Pelham, away with ambition;
fill your glass, and learn, at last, the secret of real philosophy.”

“Confound the man!” was my mental anathema.--“Long life to the Solomon
of sautes,” was my audible exclamation.

“There is something,” resumed Guloseton, “in your countenance and
manner, at once so frank, lively, and ingenuous, that one is not only
prepossessed in your favour, but desirous of your friendship. I tell
you, therefore, in confidence, that nothing more amuses me than to see
the courtship I receive from each party. I laugh at all the unwise and
passionate contests in which others are engaged, and I would as soon
think of entering into the chivalry of Don Quixote, or attacking the
visionary enemies of the Bedlamite, as of taking part in the fury of
politicians. At present, looking afar off at their delirium, I can
ridicule it; were I to engage in it, I should be hurt by it. I have
no wish to become the weeping, instead of the laughing, philosopher. I
sleep well now--I have no desire to sleep ill. I eat well--why should I
lose my appetite? I am undisturbed and unattacked in the enjoyments best
suited to my taste--for what purpose should I be hurried into the abuse
of the journalists and the witticisms of pamphleteers? I can ask those
whom I like to my house--why should I be forced into asking those whom
I do not like? In fine, my good Pelham, why should I sour my temper
and shorten my life, put my green old age into flannel and physic,
and become, from the happiest of sages, the most miserable of fools?
Ambition reminds me of what Bacon says of anger--‘It is like rain, it
breaks itself upon that which it falls on.’ Pelham, my boy, taste the
Chateau Margot.”

However hurt my vanity might be in having so ill succeeded in my
object, I could not help smiling with satisfaction at my entertainer’s
principles of wisdom. My diplomatic honour, however, was concerned, and
I resolved yet to gain him. If, hereafter, I succeeded, it was by a very
different method than I had yet taken; meanwhile, I departed from the
house of this modern Apicius with a new insight into the great book of
mankind, and a new conclusion from its pages; viz. that no virtue can
make so perfect a philosopher as the senses; there is no content like
that of the epicure--no active code of morals so difficult to conquer
as the inertness of his indolence; he is the only being in the world for
whom the present has a supremer gratification than the future.

My cabriolet soon whirled me to Lady Roseville’s door; the first person
I saw in the drawing-room, was Ellen. She lifted up her eyes with that
familiar sweetness with which they had long since began to welcome me.
“Her brother may perish on the gibbet!” was the thought that curdled my
blood, and I bowed distantly and passed on.

I met Vincent. He seemed dispirited and dejected. He already saw how ill
his party had succeeded; above all, he was enraged at the idea of the
person assigned by rumour to fill the place he had intended for himself.
This person was a sort of rival to his lordship, a man of quaintness and
quotation, with as much learning as Vincent, equal wit, and--but that
personage is still in office, and I will say no more, lest he should
think I flatter.

To our subject. It has probably been observed that Lord Vincent had
indulged less of late in that peculiar strain of learned humour formerly
his wont. The fact is, that he had been playing another part; he wished
to remove from his character that appearance of literary coxcombry
with which he was accused. He knew well how necessary, in the game of
politics, it is to appear no less a man of the world than of books;
and though he was not averse to display his clerkship and scholastic
information, yet he endeavoured to make them seem rather valuable for
their weight, than curious for their fashion. How few there are in the
world who retain, after a certain age, the character originally natural
to them! We all get, as it were, a second skin; the little foibles,
propensities, eccentricities, we first indulged through affectation,
conglomerate and encrust till the artificiality grows into nature.

“Pelham,” said Vincent, with a cold smile, “the day will be your’s;
the battle is not to the strong--the whigs will triumph. ‘Fugere
Pudor, verumque, fidesque; in quorum subiere locum fraudesque dolique
insidioeque et vis et amor sceleratus habendi.’”

“A pretty modest quotation,” said I. “You must allow at least, that the
amor sceleratus habendi was also, in some moderate degree, shared by the
Pudor and Fides which characterize your party; otherwise, I am at a loss
how to account for the tough struggle against us we have lately had the
honour of resisting.”

“Never mind,” replied Vincent, “I will not refute you,

“‘La richesse permet une juste fierte, Mais il faut etre souple avec
la pauvrete.’ It is not for us, the defeated, to argue with you the
victors. But pray, (continued Vincent, with a sneer which pleased me
not), pray, among this windfall of the Hesperian fruit, what nice little
apple will fall to your share?”

“My good Vincent, don’t let us anticipate; if any such apple should come
into my lap, let it not be that of discord between us.”

“Who talks of discord?” asked Lady Roseville, joining us.

“Lord Vincent,” said I, “fancies himself the celebrated fruit, on which
was written, detur pulcerrimoe, to be given to the fairest. Suffer me
therefore, to make him a present to your ladyship.”

Vincent muttered something which, as I really liked and esteemed him,
I was resolved not to hear; accordingly I turned to another part of
the room: there I found Lady Dawton--she was a tall, handsome woman,
as proud as a liberal’s wife ought to be. She received me with unusual
graciousness, and I sat myself beside her. Three dowagers, and an old
beau of the old school, were already sharing the conversation with the
haughty countess. I found that the topic was society.

“No,” said the old beau, who was entitled Mr. Clarendon, “society is
very different from what it was in my younger days. You remember, Lady
Paulet, those delightful parties at D--House? where shall we ever find
any thing like them? Such ease, such company--even the mixture was
so piquant, if one chanced to sit next a bourgeois, he was sure to be
distinguished for his wit or talent. People were not tolerated, as now,
merely for their riches.”

“True,” cried Lady Dawton, “it is the introduction of low persons,
without any single pretension, which spoils the society of the present
day!” And the three dowagers sighed amen, to this remark.

“And yet,” said I, “since I may safely say so here without being
suspected of a personality in the shape of a compliment, don’t you
think, that without any such mixture, we should be very indifferent
company? Do we not find those dinners and soirees the pleasantest where
we see a minister next to a punster, a poet to a prince, and a coxcomb
like me next to a beauty like Lady Dawton? The more variety there is in
the conversation, the more agreeable it becomes.”

“Very just,” answered Mr. Clarendon; “but it is precisely because I wish
for that variety that I dislike a miscellaneous society. If one does
not know the person beside whom one has the happiness of sitting, what
possible subject can one broach with any prudence. I put politics aside,
because, thanks to party spirit, we rarely meet those we are strongly
opposed to; but if we sneer at the methodists, our neighbour may be a
saint--if we abuse a new book, he may have written it--if we observe
that the tone of the piano-forte is bad, his father may have made it--if
we complain of the uncertainty of the banking interest, his uncle may
have been gazetted last week. I name no exaggerated instances; on the
contrary, I refer these general remarks to particular individuals, whom
all of us have probably met. Thus, you see, that a variety of topics is
prescribed in a mixed company, because some one or other of them will be
certain to offend.”

Perceiving that we listened to him with attention, Mr. Clarendon
continued--“Nor is this more than a minor objection to the great mixture
prevalent amongst us: a more important one may be found in the
universal imitation it produces. The influx of common persons being once
permitted, certain sets recede, as it were, from the contamination, and
contract into very diminished coteries. Living familiarly solely amongst
themselves, however they may be forced into visiting promiscuously, they
imbibe certain manners, certain peculiarities in mode and words--even
in an accent or a pronunciation, which are confined to themselves;
and whatever differs from these little eccentricities, they are apt to
condemn as vulgar and suburban. Now, the fastidiousness of these
sets making them difficult of intimate access, even to many of their
superiors in actual rank, those very superiors, by a natural feeling in
human nature, of prizing what is rare, even if it is worthless, are the
first to solicit their acquaintance; and, as a sign that they enjoy it,
to imitate those peculiarities which are the especial hieroglyphics of
this sacred few. The lower grades catch the contagion, and imitate those
they imagine most likely to know the proprietes of the mode; and thus
manners, unnatural to all, are transmitted second-hand, third-hand,
fourth-hand, till they are ultimately filtered into something worse
than no manners at all. Hence, you perceive all people timid, stiff,
unnatural, and ill at ease; they are dressed up in a garb which does not
fit them, to which they have never been accustomed, and are as little at
home as the wild Indian in the boots and garments of the more civilized
European.”

“And hence,” said I, “springs that universal vulgarity of idea, as well
as manner, which pervades all society--for nothing is so plebeian as
imitation.”

“A very evident truism!” said Clarendon--“what I lament most, is the
injudicious method certain persons took to change this order of things,
and diminish the desagremens of the mixture we speak of. I remember
well, when Almack’s was first set up, the intention was to keep away the
rich roturiers from a place, the tone of which was also intended to be
contrary to their own. For this purpose the patronesses were instituted,
the price of admission made extremely low, and all ostentatious
refreshments discarded: it was an admirable institution for the
interests of the little oligarchy who ruled it--but it has only
increased the general imitation and vulgarity. Perhaps the records of
that institution contain things more disgraceful to the aristocracy of
England, than the whole history of Europe can furnish. And how could the
Monsieur and Madame Jourdains help following the servile and debasing
example of Monseigneur le Duc et Pair?”

“How strange it is,” said one of the dowagers, “that of all the novels
on society with which we are annually inundated, there is scarcely one
which gives even a tolerable description of it.”

“Not strange,” said Clarendon, with a formal smile, “if your ladyship
will condescend to reflect. Most of the writers upon our little, great
world, have seen nothing of it: at most, they have been occasionally
admitted into the routs of the B.’s and C.’s, of the second, or rather
the third set. A very few are, it is true, gentlemen; but gentlemen,
who are not writers, are as bad as writers who are not gentlemen. In one
work, which, since it is popular, I will not name, there is a
stiffness and stiltedness in the dialogue and descriptions, perfectedly
ridiculous. The author makes his countesses always talking of their
family, and his earls always quoting the peerage. There is as much fuss
about state, and dignity, and pride, as if the greatest amongst us were
not far too busy with the petty affairs of the world to have time for
such lofty vanities. There is only one rule necessary for a clever
writer who wishes to delineate the beau monde. It is this: let him
consider that ‘dukes, and lords, and noble princes,’ eat, drink, talk,
move, exactly the same as any other class of civilized people--nay, the
very subjects in conversation are, for the most part, the same in
all sets--only, perhaps, they are somewhat more familiarly and easily
treated than among the lower orders, who fancy rank is distinguished by
pomposity, and that state affairs are discussed with the solemnity of a
tragedy--that we are always my lording and my ladying each other--that
we ridicule commoners, and curl our hair with Debrett’s Peerage.”

We all laughed at this speech, the truth of which we readily
acknowledged.

“Nothing,” said Lady Dawton, “amuses me more, than to see the great
distinction novel writers make between the titled and the untitled; they
seem to be perfectly unaware, that a commoner, of ancient family and
large fortune, is very often of far more real rank and estimation, and
even weight, in what they are pleased to term fashion, than many of
the members of the Upper House. And what amuses me as much, is the no
distinction they make between all people who have titles--Lord A--,
the little baron, is exactly the same as Lord Z--, the great marquess,
equally haughty and equally important.

“Mais, mon Dieu,” said a little French count, who had just joined
us; “how is it that you can expect to find a description of society
entertaining, when the society itself is so dull?--the closer the copy
the more tiresome it must be. Your manner, pour vous amuser, consists in
standing on a crowded staircase, and complaining that you are terribly
bored. L’on s’accoutume difficilement a une vie qui se passe sur
l’escalier.”

“It is very true,” said Clarendon, “we cannot defend ourselves. We are
a very sensible, thinking, brave, sagacious, generous, industrious,
noble-minded people; but it must be confessed, that we are terrible
bores to ourselves and all the rest of the world. Lady Paulet, if you
are going so soon, honour me by accepting my arm.”

“You should say your hand,” said the Frenchman.

“Pardon me,” answered the gallant old beau; “I say, with your brave
countryman when he lost his legs in battle, and was asked by a lady,
like the one who now leans on me, whether he would not sooner have lost
his arms? ‘No, Madam,’ said he, (and this, Monsieur le Comte, is the
answer I give to your rebuke) ‘I want my hands to guard my heart.’”

Finding our little knot was now broken up, I went into another part
of the room, and joined Vincent, Lady Roseville, Ellen, and one or two
other persons who were assembled round a table covered with books and
prints. Ellen was sitting on one side of Lady Roseville; there was a
vacant chair next her, but I avoided it, and seated myself on the other
side of Lady Roseville.

“Pray, Miss Glanville,” said Lord Vincent, taking up a thin volume, “do
you greatly admire the poems of this lady?”

“What, Mrs. Hemans?” answered Ellen. “I am more enchanted with her
poetry than I can express: if that is ‘The Forest Sanctuary’ which you
have taken up, I am sure you will bear me out in my admiration.”

Vincent turned over the leaves with the quiet cynicism of manner
habitual to him; but his countenance grew animated after he had read
two pages. “This is, indeed, beautiful,” said he, “really and genuinely
beautiful. How singular that such a work should not be more known; I
never met with it before. But whose pencil marks are these?”

“Mine, I believe,” said Ellen, modestly.

“Well,” said Lady Roseville, “I fear we shall never have any popular
poet in our time, now that Lord Byron is dead.”

“So the booksellers say,” replied Vincent; “but I doubt it: there will
be always a certain interregnum after the death of a great poet, during
which, poetry will be received with distaste, and chiefly for this
reason, that nearly all poetry about the same period, will be of the
same school as the most popular author. Now the public soon wearies of
this monotony; and no poetry, even equally beautiful with that of the
most approved writer, will become popular, unless it has the charm of
variety. It must not be perfect in the old school, it must be daring
in a new one;--it must effect a through revolution in taste, and build
itself a temple out of the ruins of the old worship. All this a great
genius may do, if he will take the pains to alter, radically, the style
he may have formed already. He must stoop to the apprenticeship before
he aspires to the mastery. C’est un metier que de faire un livre comme
de faire une pendule.”

“I must confess, for my part,” said Lord Edward Neville (an author of
some celebrity and more merit), “that I was exceedingly weary of those
doleful ditties with which we were favoured for so many years. No sooner
had Lord Byron declared himself unhappy, than every young gentleman with
a pale face and dark hair, used to think himself justified in frowning
in the glass and writing Odes to Despair. All persons who could scribble
two lines were sure to make them into rhymes of ‘blight’ and ‘night.’
Never was there so grand a penchant for the triste.”

“It would be interesting enough,” observed Vincent, “to trace the origin
of this melancholy mania. People are wrong to attribute it to poor Lord
Byron--it certainly came from Germany; perhaps Werter was the first hero
of that school.”

“There seems,” said I, “an unaccountable prepossession among all
persons, to imagine that whatever seems gloomy must be profound, and
whatever is cheerful must be shallow. They have put poor Philosophy into
deep mourning, and given her a coffin for a writing-desk, and a skull
for an inkstand.”

“Oh,” cried Vincent, “I remember some lines so applicable to your
remark, that I must forthwith interrupt you, in order to introduce them.
Madame de Stael said, in one of her works, that melancholy was a source
of perfection. Listen now to my author--

“‘Une femme nous dit, et nous prouve en effet, Qu’avant quelques mille
ans l’homme sera parfait, Qu’il devra cet etat a la melancolie. On sait
que la tristesse annonce le genie; Nous avons deja fait des progres
etonnans, Que de tristes ecrits--que de tristes romans! Des plus noires
horreurs nous sommes idolatres, Et la melancolie a gagne nos theatres.’”

“What!” cried I, “are you so well acquainted with my favourite book?”

“Your’s!” exclaimed Vincent. “Gods, what a sympathy; [La Gastronomie,
Poeme, par J. Berchoux.] it has long been my most familiar acquaintance;
but--

“‘Tell us what hath chanced to-day, That Caesar looks so sad?’”

My eye followed Vincent’s to ascertain the meaning of this question,
and rested upon Glanville, who had that moment entered the room. I might
have known that he was expected, by Lady Roseville’s abstraction, the
restlessness with which she started at times from her seat, and as
instantly resumed it; and her fond expecting looks towards the door,
every time it shut or opened, which denoted so strongly the absent and
dreaming heart of the woman who loves.

Glanville seemed paler than usual, and perhaps even sadder; but he was
less distrait and abstracted: no sooner did he see, than he approached
me, and extended his hand with great cordiality. His hand, thought I,
and I could not bring myself to accept it; I merely addressed him in
the common-place salutation. He looked hard and inquisitively at me, and
then turned abruptly away. Lady Roseville had risen from her chair--her
eyes followed him. He had thrown himself on a settee near the window.
She went up to him, and sate herself by his side. I turned--my face
burnt--my heart beat--I was now next to Ellen Glanville; she was looking
down, apparently employed with some engravings, but I thought her hand
(that small, delicate, Titania hand,) trembled.

There was a pause. Vincent was talking with the other occupiers of the
table; a woman, at such times, is always the first to speak. “We have
not seen you, Mr. Pelham,” said Ellen, “since your return to town.”

“I have been very ill,” I answered, and I felt my voice falter. Ellen
looked up anxiously at my face; I could not brook those large, deep,
tender eyes, and it now became my turn to occupy myself with the prints.

“You do look pale,” she said, in a low voice. I did not trust myself
with a further remark--dissimulator as I was to others, I was like a
guilty child before the woman I loved. There was another pause--at last
Ellen said, “How do you think my brother looks?”

I started; yes, he was her brother, and I was once more myself at that
thought. I answered so coldly and almost haughtily, that Ellen coloured,
and said, with some dignity, that she should join Lady Roseville. I
bowed slightly, and she withdrew to the countess. I seized my hat and
departed--but not utterly alone--I had managed to secrete the book which
Ellen’s hand had marked; through many a bitter day and sleepless night,
that book has been my only companion; I have it before me now, and it is
open at a page which is yet blistered with the traces of former tears.



CHAPTER LXVIII.

Our mistress is a little given to philosophy: what disputations shall we
have here by and by!--Gil Blas.

It was now but seldom that I met Ellen, for I went little into general
society, and grew every day more engrossed in political affairs.
Sometimes, however, when, wearied of myself, and my graver occupations,
I yielded to my mother’s solicitations, and went to one of the nightly
haunts of the goddess we term Pleasure, and the Greeks, Moria, the game
of dissipation (to use a Spanish proverb) shuffled us together. It
was then that I had the most difficult task of my life to learn and to
perform; to check the lip--the eye--the soul--to heap curb on curb, upon
the gushings of the heart, which daily and hourly yearned to overflow;
and to feel, that while the mighty and restless tides of passion
were thus fettered and restrained, all within was a parched and arid
wilderness, that wasted itself, for want of very moisture, away. Yet
there was something grateful in the sadness with which I watched her
form in the dance, or listened to her voice in the song; and I felt
soothed, and even happy, when my fancy flattered itself, that her step
never now seemed so light, as it was wont to be when in harmony with
mine, nor the songs that pleased her most, so gay as those that were
formerly her choice.

Distant and unobserved, I loved to feed my eyes upon her pale and
downcast cheek; to note the abstraction that came over her at moments,
even when her glance seemed brightest, and her lip most fluent; and to
know, that while a fearful mystery might for ever forbid the union of
our hands, there was an invisible, but electric chain, which connected
the sympathies of our hearts.

Ah! why is it, that the noblest of our passions should be also the most
selfish?--that while we would make all earthly sacrifice for the one
we love, we are perpetually demanding a sacrifice in return; that if we
cannot have the rapture of blessing, we find a consolation in the power
to afflict; and that we acknowledge, while we reprobate, the maxim
of the sage: “L’on veut faire tout le bonheur, ou, si cela ne se peut
ainsi, tout le malheur de ce qu’on aime.”

The beauty of Ellen was not of that nature, which rests solely upon
the freshness of youth, nor even the magic of expression; it was as
faultless as it was dazzling; no one could deny its excess or its
perfection; her praises came constantly to my ear into whatever society
I went. Say what we will of the power of love, it borrows greatly from
opinion; pride, above all things, sanctions and strengthens affection.
When all voices were united to panegyrize her beauty--when I knew, that
the powers of her wit--the charms of her conversation--the accurate
judgment, united to the sparkling imagination, were even more remarkable
characteristics of her mind, than loveliness of her person, I could not
but feel my ambition, as well as my tenderness, excited; I dwelt with
a double intensity on my choice, and with a tenfold bitterness on the
obstacles which forbade me to indulge it.

Yet there was one circumstance, to which, in spite of all the evidence
against Reginald, my mind still fondly and eagerly clung. In searching
the pockets of the unfortunate Tyrrell, the money he had mentioned to me
as being in his possession, could not be discovered. Had Glanville been
the murderer, at all events he could not have been the robber; it was
true that in the death scuffle, which in all probability took place, the
money might have fallen from the person of the deceased, either among
the long grass which grew rankly and luxuriantly around, or in the
sullen and slimy pool, close to which the murder was perpetrated; it was
also possible, that Thornton, knowing the deceased had so large a
sum about him, and not being aware that the circumstance had been
communicated to me or any one else, might not have been able (when he
and Dawson first went to the spot,) to resist so great a temptation.
However, there was a slight crevice in this fact, for a sunbeam of hope
to enter, and I was too sanguine, by habitual temperament and present
passion, not to turn towards it from the general darkness of my
thoughts.

With Glanville I was often brought into immediate contact. Both united
in the same party, and engaged in concerting the same measures, we
frequently met in public, and sometimes even alone. However, I was
invariably cold and distant, and Glanville confirmed rather than
diminished my suspicions, by making no commentary on my behaviour, and
imitating it in the indifference of his own. Yet, it was with a painful
and aching heart, that I marked, in his emaciated from and sunken cheek,
the gradual, but certain progress of disease and death; and while all
England rung with the renown of the young, but almost unrivalled orator,
and both parties united in anticipating the certainty and brilliancy
of his success, I felt how improbable it was, that, even if his crime
escaped the unceasing vigilance of justice, this living world would long
possess any traces of his genius but the remembrance of his name. There
was something in his love of letters, his habits of luxury and expence,
the energy of his mind--the solitude, the darkness, the hauteur, the
reserve, of his manners and life, which reminded me of the German
Wallenstein; nor was he altogether without the superstition of that
evil, but extraordinary man. It is true, that he was not addicted to
the romantic fables of astrology, but he was an earnest, though secret,
advocate of the world of spirits. He did not utterly disbelieve the
various stories of their return to earth, and their visits to the
living; and it would have been astonishing to me, had I been a less
diligent observer of human inconsistencies, to mark a mind otherwise
so reasoning and strong, in this respect so credulous and weak; and
to witness its reception of a belief, not only so adverse to ordinary
reflection, but so absolutely contradictory to the philosophy it
passionately cultivated, and the principles it obstinately espoused.

One evening, I, Vincent, and Clarendon, were alone at Lady Roseville’s,
when Reginald and his sister entered. I rose to depart; la belle
Contesse would not suffer it; and when I looked at Ellen, and saw her
blush at my glance, the weakness of my heart conquered, and I remained.

Our conversation turned partly upon books, and principally on the
science du coeur et du monde, for Lady Roseville was un peu philosophe,
as well as more than un peu litteraire; and her house, like those of
the Du Deffands and D’Epinays of the old French regime, was one where
serious subjects were cultivated, as well as the lighter ones; where it
was the mode to treat no less upon things than to scandalize persons;
and where maxims on men and reflections on manners, were as much in
their places, as strictures on the Opera and invitations to balls.

All who were now assembled were more or less suited to one another; all
were people of the world, and yet occasional students of the closet;
but all had a different method of expressing their learning or their
observations. Clarendon was dry, formal, shrewd, and possessed of the
suspicious philosophy common to men hacknied in the world. Vincent
relieved his learning by the quotation, or metaphor, or originality of
some sort with which it was expressed. Lady Roseville seldom spoke
much, but when she did, it was rather with grace than solidity. She was
naturally melancholy and pensive, and her observations partook of the
colourings of her mind; but she was also a dame de la cour, accustomed
to conceal, and her language was gay and trifling, while the sentiments
it clothed were pensive and sad.

Ellen Glanville was an attentive listener, but a diffident speaker.
Though her knowledge was even masculine for its variety and extent, she
was averse to displaying it; the childish, the lively, the tender, were
the outward traits of her character--the flowers were above, but the
mine was beneath; one noted the beauty of the former--one seldom dreamt
of the value of the latter.

Glanville’s favourite method of expressing himself was terse and
sententious. He did not love the labour of detail: he conveyed the
knowledge of years in a problem. Sometimes he was fanciful, sometimes
false; but, generally, dark, melancholy, and bitter.

As for me, I entered more into conversation at Lady Roseville’s than I
usually do elsewhere; being, according to my favourite philosophy, gay
on the serious, and serious on the gay; and, perhaps, this is a juster
method of treating the two than would be readily imagined: for things
which are usually treated with importance, are, for the most part,
deserving of ridicule; and those which we receive as trifles, swell
themselves into a consequence we little dreamt of, before they depart.

Vincent took up a volume: it was Shelley’s Posthumous Poems. “How
fine,” said he, “some of these are; but they are fine fragments of an
architecture in bad taste: they are imperfect in themselves, and faulty
in the school they belonged to; yet, such as they are, the master-hand
is evident upon them. They are like the pictures of Paul Veronese--often
offending the eye, often irritating the judgment, but redolent of
something vast and lofty--their very faults are majestic--this age,
perhaps no other will ever do them justice--but the disciples of future
schools will make glorious pillage of their remains. The writings
of Shelley would furnish matter for a hundred volumes: they are an
admirable museum of ill-arranged curiosities--they are diamonds,
awkwardly set; but one of them, in the hands of a skilful jeweller,
would be inestimable: and the poet of the future, will serve him as
Mercury did the tortoise in his own translation from Homer--make him
‘sing sweetly when he’s dead!’ Their lyres will be made out of his
shell.”

“If I judge rightly,” said Clarendon, “his literary faults were these:
he was too learned in his poetry, and too poetical in his learning.
Learning is the bane of a poet. Imagine how beautiful Petrarch would
be without his platonic conceits: fancy the luxuriant imagination of
Cowley, left to run wild among the lofty objects of nature, not the
minute peculiarities of art. Even Milton, who made a more graceful and
gorgeous use of learning than, perhaps, any other poet, would have
been far more popular if he had been more familiar. Poetry is for
the multitude--erudition for the few. In proportion as you mix them,
erudition will gain in readers, and poetry lose.”

“True,” said Glanville; “and thus the poetical, among philosophers, are
the most popular of their time; and the philosophical among poets, the
least popular of theirs.”

“Take care,” said Vincent, smiling, “that we are not misled by the point
of your deduction; the remark is true, but with a certain reservation,
viz. that the philosophy which renders a poet less popular, must be
the philosophy of learning, not of wisdom. Wherever it consists in
the knowledge of the plainer springs of the heart, and not in abstruse
inquiry into its metaphysical and hidden subtleties, it necessarily
increases the popularity of the poem; because, instead of being limited
to the few, it comes home to every one. Thus it is the philosophy of
Shakspeare, Byron, Horace, Pope, Moliere, which has put them into every
one’s hands and hearts--while that of Propertius, even of Lucretius,
of Cowley, and Shelley, makes us often throw down the book, because
it fatigues us with the scholar. Philosophy, therefore, only sins in
poetry, when, in the severe garb of learning, it becomes ‘harsh and
crabbed,’ and not ‘musical, as is Apollo’s lute.’”

“Alas!” said I, “how much more difficult than of yore, education is
become--formerly, it had only one object--to acquire learning; and now,
we have not only to acquire it, but to know what to do with it when
we have--nay, there are not a few cases where the very perfection of
learning will be to appear ignorant.”

“Perhaps,” said Glanville, “the very perfection of wisdom may consist
in retaining actual ignorance. Where was there ever the individual who,
after consuming years, life, health, in the pursuit of science, rested
satisfied with its success, or rewarded by its triumph? Common sense
tells us that the best method of employing life, is to enjoy it. Common
sense tells us, also, the ordinary means of this enjoyment; health,
competence, and the indulgence, but the moderate indulgence, of our
passions. What have these to do with science?”

“I might tell you,” replied Vincent, “that I myself have been no idle
nor inactive seeker after the hidden treasures of mind; and that, from
my own experience, I could speak of pleasure, pride, complacency, in
the pursuit, that were no inconsiderable augmenters of my stock of
enjoyment: but I have the candour to confess, also, that I have known
disappointment, mortification, despondency of mind, and infirmity
of body, that did more than balance the account. The fact is, in my
opinion, that the individual is a sufferer for his toils, but then
the mass is benefited by his success. It is we who reap, in idle
gratification, what the husbandman has sown in the bitterness of labour.
Genius did not save Milton from poverty and blindness--nor Tasso from
the madhouse--nor Galileo from the inquisition; they were the sufferers,
but posterity the gainers. The literary empire reverses the political;
it is not the many made for one--it is the one made for many; wisdom and
genius must have their martyrs as well as religion, and with the same
results, viz: semen ecclesioeest sanguis martyrorum. And this reflection
must console us for their misfortunes, for, perhaps, it was sufficient
to console them. In the midst of the most affecting passage in the most
wonderful work, perhaps, ever produced, for the mixture of universal
thought with individual interest--I mean the two last cantos of Childe
Harold--the poet warms from himself at his hopes of being remembered

“‘In his line With his land’s language.’

“And who can read the noble and heart-speaking apology of Algernon
Sidney, without entering into his consolation no less than his
misfortunes? Speaking of the law being turned into a snare instead of
a protection, and instancing its uncertainty and danger in the times of
Richard the Second, he says, ‘God only knows what will be the issue
of the like practices in these our days; perhaps he will in his mercy
speedily visit his afflicted people; I die in the faith that he will do
it, though I know not the time or ways.’”

“I love,” said Clarendon, “the enthusiasm which places comfort in so
noble a source; but, is vanity, think you, a less powerful agent than
philanthropy? is it not the desire of shining before men that prompts
us to whatever may effect it? and if it can create, can it not also
support? I mean, that if you allow that to shine, to eclater, to enjoy
praise, is no ordinary incentive to the commencement of great works, the
conviction of future success for this desire becomes no inconsiderable
reward. Grant, for instance, that this desire produced the ‘Paradise
Lost,’ and you will not deny that it might also support the poet through
his misfortunes. Do you think that he thought rather of the pleasure his
work should afford to posterity, than of the praises posterity should
extend to his work? Had not Cicero left us such frank confessions of
himself, how patriotic, how philanthropic we should have esteemed him;
now we know both his motive and meed was vanity, may we not extend
the knowledge of human nature which we have gained in this instance
by applying it to others? For my part, I should be loth to inquire how
great a quantum of vanity mingled with the haughty patriotism of Sidney,
or the unconquered spirit of Cato.”

Glanville bowed his head in approval. “But,” observed I, “why be so
uncharitable to this poor, and persecuted principle, since none of you
deny the good and great actions it effects; why stigmatize vanity as a
vice, when it creates, or, at least participates in, so many virtues? I
wonder the ancients did not erect the choicest of their temples to its
worship. Quant a moi, I shall henceforth only speak of it as the primum
mobile of whatever we venerate and admire, and shall think it the
highest compliment I can pay to a man, to tell him he is eminently
vain.”

“I incline to your opinion,” cried Vincent, laughing. “The reason we
dislike vanity in others, is because it is perpetually hurting our own.
Of all passions (if for the moment I may call it such) it is the most
indiscreet; it is for ever blabbing out its own secrets. If it would but
keep its counsel, it would be as graciously received in society, as
any other well-dressed and well-bred intruder of quality. Its garrulity
makes it despised. But in truth it must be clear, that vanity in itself
is neither a vice nor a virtue, any more than this knife, in itself,
is dangerous or useful; the person who employs gives it its qualities;
thus, for instance, a great mind desires to shine, or is vain, in
great actions; a frivolous one, in frivolities: and so on through the
varieties of the human intellect. But I cannot agree with Mr Clarendon,
that my admiration of Algernon Sidney (Cato I never did admire) would
be at all lessened by the discovery, that his resistance to tyranny in
a great measure originated in vanity, or that the same vanity consoled
him, when he fell a victim to that resistance; for what does it prove
but this, that, among the various feelings of his soul, indignation
at oppression, (so common to all men)--enthusiasm for liberty, (so
predominant in him)--the love of benefiting others--the noble pride
of being, in death, consistent with himself; among all these feelings,
among a crowd of others equally honourable and pure--there was also one,
and perhaps no inconsiderable feeling of desire, that his life and
death should be hereafter appreciated justly--contemptu famoe, contemni
virtutem--contempt of fame, is the contempt of virtue? Never consider
that vanity an offence, which limits itself to wishing for the praise of
good men for good actions: next to our own esteem, says the best of the
Roman philosophers, ‘it is a virtue to desire the esteem of others.’”

“By your emphasis on the word esteem,” said Lady Roseville, “I suppose
you attach some peculiar importance to the word?”

“I do,” answered Vincent. “I use it in contradistinction to admiration.
We may covet general admiration for a bad action--(for many bad actions
have the clinquant, which passes for real gold)--but one can expect
general esteem only for a good one.”

“From this distinction,” said Ellen, modestly, “may we not draw an
inference, which will greatly help us in our consideration of vanity;
may we not deem that vanity, which desires only the esteem of others to
be invariably a virtue, and that which only longs for admiration to be
frequently a vice?”

“We may admit your inference,” said Vincent; “and before I leave this
question, I cannot help remarking upon the folly of the superficial, who
imagine, by studying human motives, that philosophers wish to depreciate
human actions. To direct our admiration to a proper point, is surely
not to destroy it; yet how angry inconsiderate enthusiasts are, when we
assign real, in the place of exaggerated feelings. Thus the advocates
for the doctrine of utility--the most benevolent, because the most
indulgent, of all philosophies--are branded with the epithets of selfish
and interested; decriers of moral excellence, and disbelievers in
generous actions. Vice has no friend like the prejudices which call
themselves virtue. La pretexte ordinaire de ceux qui font le malheur des
autres est qu’ils veulent leur bien.”

My eyes were accidentally fixed on Glanville as Vincent ceased; he
looked up, and coloured faintly as he met my look; but he did not
withdraw his own--keenly and steadily we gazed upon each other, till
Ellen, turning round suddenly, remarked the unwonted meaning of our
looks, and placed her hand in her brother’s, with a sort of fear.

It was late; he rose to withdraw, and passing me, said in a low tone,
“A little while, and you shall know all.” I made no answer--he left the
room with Ellen.

“Lady Roseville has had but a dull evening, I fear, with our stupid
saws and antient instances,” said Vincent. The eyes of the person he
addressed were fixed upon the door; I was standing close by her, and
as the words struck her ear, she turned abruptly;--a tear fell upon my
hand--she perceived it, and though I would not look upon her face, I
saw that her very neck blushed; but she, like me, if she gave way to
feeling, had learnt too deep a lesson from the world, not readily to
resume her self-command; she answered Vincent railingly, upon his bad
compliment to us, and received our adieus with all her customary grace,
and more than her customary gaiety.



CHAPTER LXIX.

Ah! Sir, had I but bestowed half the pains in learning a trade, that I
have in learning to be a scoundrel, I might have been a rich man at this
day; but, rogue as I am, still I may be your friend, and that, perhaps,
when you least expect it.--Vicar of Wakefield.

What with the anxiety and uncertainty of my political prospects, the
continued dissipation in which I lived, and, above all, the unpropitious
state of my belle passion, my health gave way; my appetite forsook
me--my sleep failed me--a wrinkle settled itself under my left eye, and
my mother declared, that I should have no chance with an heiress: all
these circumstances together, were not without their weight. So I set
out one morning to Hampton Court, (with a volume of Bishop Berkely, and
a bottle of wrinkle water,) for the benefit of the country air.

It is by no means an unpleasant thing to turn one’s back upon the
great city, in the height of its festivities. Misanthropy is a charming
feeling for a short time, and one inhales the country, and animadverts
on the town, with the most melancholy satisfaction in the world. I sat
myself down at a pretty little cottage, a mile out of the town. From the
window of my drawing-room I revelled in the luxurious contemplation of
three pigs, one cow, and a straw-yard; and I could get to the Thames
in a walk of five minutes, by a short cut through a lime-kiln. Such
pleasing opportunities of enjoying the beauties of nature, are not often
to be met with: you may be sure, therefore, that I made the most of
them. I rose early, walked before breakfast, pour ma sante, and came
back with a most satisfactory head-ache, pour mes peines. I read
for just three hours, walked for two more, thought over Abernethy,
dyspepsia, and blue pills, till dinner; and absolutely forgot Lord
Dawton, ambition, Guloseton, epicurism--aye, all but--of course, reader,
you know whom I am about to except--the ladye of my love.

One bright, laughing day, I threw down my book an hour sooner than
usual, and sallied out with a lightness of foot and exhilaration of
spirit, to which I had long been a stranger. I had just sprung over a
stile that led into one of those green shady lanes, which make us feel
the old poets who loved, and lived for, Nature, were right in calling
our island “the merry England”--when I was startled by a short, quick
bark, on one side of the hedge. I turned sharply round; and, seated upon
the sward, was a man, apparently of the pedlar profession; a large
deal box was lying open before him; a few articles of linen, and female
dress, were scattered round, and the man himself appeared earnestly
occupied in examining the deeper recesses of his itinerant warehouse. A
small black terrier flew towards me with no friendly growl. “Down,” said
I: “all strangers are not foes, though the English generally think so.”

The man hastily looked up; perhaps he was struck with the quaintness of
my remonstrance to his canine companion; for, touching his hat, civilly,
he said--“The dog, Sir, is very quiet; he only means to give me the
alarm by giving it to you; for dogs seem to have no despicable insight
into human nature, and know well that the best of us may be taken by
surprise.”

“You are a moralist,” said I, not a little astonished in my turn by such
an address from such a person. “I could not have expected to stumble
upon a philosopher so easily. Have you any wares in your box likely to
suit me? if so, I should like to purchase of so moralizing a vendor?”

“No, Sir,” said the seeming pedlar, smiling, and yet at the same time
hurrying his goods into his box, and carefully turning the key--“no,
Sir, I am only a bearer of other men’s goods; my morals are all that I
can call my own, and those I will sell you at your own price.”

“You are candid, my friend,” said I, “and your frankness, alone, would
be inestimable in this age of deceit, and country of hypocrisy.”

“Ah, Sir!” said my new acquaintance, “I see already that you are one of
those persons who look to the dark side of things; for my part, I think
the present age the best that ever existed, and our own country the most
virtuous in Europe.”

“I congratulate you, Mr. Optimist, on your opinions,” quoth I, “but your
observation leads me to suppose, that you are both an historian and a
traveller: am I right?”

“Why,” answered the box-bearer, “I have dabbled a little in books, and
wandered not a little among men. I am just returned from Germany, and am
now going to my friends in London. I am charged with this box of goods;
God send me the luck to deliver it safe.”

“Amen,” said I; “and with that prayer and this trifle, I wish you a good
morning.”

“Thank you a thousand times, Sir, for both,” replied the man--“but do
add to your favours by informing me of the right road to the town of--

“I am going in that direction myself; if you choose to accompany me part
of the way, I can ensure your not missing the rest.”

“Your honour is too good!” returned he of the box, rising, and slinging
his fardel across him--“it is but seldom that a gentleman of your rank
will condescend to walk three paces with one of mine. You smile, Sir;
perhaps you think I should not class myself among gentlemen; and yet
I have as good a right to the name as most of the set. I belong to
no trade--I follow no calling: I rove where I list, and rest where I
please: in short, I know no occupation but my indolence, and no law but
my will. Now, Sir, may I not call myself a gentleman?”

“Of a surety!” quoth I; “you seem to me to hold a middle rank between a
half-pay captain and the king of the gipsies.”

“You have hit it, Sir,” rejoined my companion, with a slight laugh. He
was now by my side, and as we walked on, I had leisure more minutely to
examine him. He was a middle-sized, and rather athletic man, apparently
about the age of thirty-eight. He was attired in a dark blue frock coat,
which was neither shabby nor new, but ill made, and much too large
and long for its present possessor; beneath this was a faded velvet
waistcoat, that had formerly, like the Persian ambassador’s tunic,
“blushed with crimson, and blazed with gold;” but which might now have
been advantageously exchanged in Monmouth-street for the lawful sum
of two shillings and nine-pence; under this was an inner vest of the
cashmere shawl pattern, which seemed much too new for the rest of the
dress. Though his shirt was of a very unwashed hue, I remarked, with
some suspicion, that it was of a very respectable fineness; and a pin,
which might be paste, or could be diamond, peeped below a tattered and
dingy black kid stock, like a gipsey’s eye beneath her hair.

His trowsers were of a light grey, and Providence, or the tailor,
avenged itself upon them, for the prodigal length bestowed upon their
ill-sorted companion, the coat; for they were much too tight for the
muscular limbs they concealed, and rising far above the ankle, exhibited
the whole of a thick Wellington boot, which was the very picture of
Italy upon the map.

The face of the man was common-place and ordinary; one sees a hundred
such, every day, in Fleet-street or the ‘Change; the features were
small, irregular, and somewhat flat: yet, when you looked twice upon the
countenance, there was something marked and singular in the expression,
which fully atoned for the commonness of the features. The right
eye turned away from the left, in that watchful squint which seems
constructed on the same considerate plan as those Irish guns, made
for shooting round a corner; his eye-brows were large and shaggy, and
greatly resembled bramble bushes, in which his fox-like eyes had taken
refuge. Round these vulpine retreats were a labyrinthean maze of
those wrinkles, vulgarly called crow’s-feet;--deep, intricate, and
intersected, they seemed for all the world like the web of a chancery
suit. Singular enough, the rest of the countenance was perfectly smooth
and unindented; even the lines from the nostril to the corners of the
mouth, usually so deeply traced in men of his age, were scarcely more
apparent than in a boy of eighteen.

His smile was frank--his voice clear and hearty--his address open,
and much superior to his apparent rank of life, claiming somewhat of
equality, yet conceding a great deal of respect; but, notwithstanding
all these certainly favourable points, there was a sly and cunning
expression in his perverse and vigilant eye and all the wrinkled
demesnes in its vicinity, that made me mistrust even while I liked my
companion; perhaps, indeed, he was too frank, too familiar, too degage,
to be quite natural. Your honest men soon buy reserve by experience.
Rogues are communicative and open, because confidence and openness cost
them nothing. To finish the description of my new acquaintance, I should
observe, that there was something in his countenance, which struck me
as not wholly unfamiliar; it was one of those which we have not, in all
human probability, seen before, and yet, which (perhaps from their very
commonness) we imagine we have encountered a hundred times.

We walked on briskly, notwithstanding the warmth of the day; in fact,
the air was so pure, the grass so green, the laughing noonday so full
of the hum, the motion, and the life of creation, that the sensation
produced was rather that of freshness and invigoration, than of languor
and heat.

“We have a beautiful country, Sir,” said my hero of the box. “It is like
walking through a garden, after the more sterile and sullen features of
the Continent--a pure mind, Sir, loves the country; for my part, I am
always disposed to burst out in thanksgiving to Providence when I behold
its works, and, like the vallies in the psalm, I am ready to laugh and
sing.”

“An enthusiast,” said I, “as well as a philosopher!--perhaps (and I
believed it likely), I have the honour of addressing a poet also.”

“Why, Sir,” replied the man, “I have made verses in my life; in short,
there is little I have not done, for I was always a lover of variety;
but, perhaps, your honour will let me return the suspicion, Are you not
a favourite of the muse?”

“I cannot say that I am,” said I. “I value myself only on my common
sense--the very antipodes to genius, you know, according to the orthodox
belief.”

“Common sense!” repeated my companion, with a singular and meaning
smile, and a twinkle with his left eye. “Common sense. Ah, that is not
my forte, Sir. You, I dare say, are one of those gentlemen whom it is
very difficult to take in, either passively or actively, by appearance,
or in act? For my part, I have been a dupe all my life--a child might
cheat me! I am the most unsuspicious person in the world.”

“Too candid by half,” thought I; “the man is certainly a rascal; but
what’s that to me? I shall never see him again;” and true to my love
of never losing an opportunity of ascertaining individual character, I
observed, that I thought such an acquaintance very valuable, especially
if he were in trade; it was a pity, therefore, for my sake, that my
companion had informed me that he followed no calling.

“Why, Sir,” said he, “I am occasionally in employment; my nominal
profession is that of a broker. I buy shawls and handkerchiefs of poor
countesses, and retail them to rich plebeians. I fit up new married
couples with linen, at a more moderate rate than the shops, and procure
the bridegroom his present of jewels, at forty per cent. less than the
jewellers; nay, I am as friendly to an intrigue as a marriage; and when
I cannot sell my jewels, I will my good offices, A gentleman so handsome
as your honour, may have an affair upon your hands: if so, you may
rely upon my secrecy and zeal. In short, I am an innocent, good-natured
fellow, who does harm to no one for nothing, and good to every one for
something.”

“I admire your code,” quoth I, “and whenever I want a mediator between
Venus and myself, will employ you. Have you always followed your present
idle profession, or were you brought up to any other?”

“I was intended for a silversmith,” answered my friend; “but Providence
willed it otherwise; they taught me from childhood to repeat the Lord’s
prayer; Heaven heard me, and delivered me from temptation--there is,
indeed, something terribly seducing in the face of a silver spoon!”

“Well,” said I, “you are the honestest knave I ever met, and one would
trust you with one’s purse for the ingenuousness with which you own you
would steal it. Pray, think you it is probable that I have ever had the
happiness to meet you before? I cannot help fancying so--yet as I have
never been in the watch-house, or the Old Bailey, my reason tells me
that I must be mistaken.”

“Not at all, Sir,” returned my worthy; “I remember you well, for I
never saw a face like yours that I did not remember. I had the honour
of sipping some British liquors, in the same room with yourself one
evening; you were then in company with my friend Mr. Gordon.”

“Ha!” said I, “I thank ye for the hint; I now remember well, by the same
token, that he told me you were the most ingenious gentleman in
England; and that you had a happy propensity of mistaking other people’s
possessions for your own; I congratulate myself upon so desirable an
acquaintance.” [Note: See Vol. II, p. 127.]

My friend, who was indeed no other than Mr. Job Jonson, smiled with
his usual blandness, and made me a low bow of acknowledgment before he
resumed:

“No doubt, Sir, Mr. Gordon informed you right. I flatter myself few
gentlemen understand better than myself, the art of appropriation;
though I say it who should not say it, I deserve the reputation I have
acquired. Sir, I have always had ill fortune to struggle against, and
have always remedied it by two virtues--perseverance and ingenuity.
To give you an idea of my ill fortune, know that I have been taken
up twenty-three times, on suspicion; of my perseverance, know that
twenty-three times I have been taken up justly; and of my ingenuity,
know that I have been twenty-three times let off, because there was not
a tittle of legal evidence against me.”

“I venerate your talents, Mr. Jonson,” replied I, “if by the name of
Jonson it pleaseth you to be called, although, like the heathen deities,
I presume that you have many other titles, whereof some are more
grateful to your ears than others.”

“Nay,” answered the man of two virtues--“I am never ashamed of my
name; indeed, I have never done any thing to disgrace me. I have never
indulged in low company, nor profligate debauchery: whatever I
have executed by way of profession, has been done in a superior and
artistlike manner; not in the rude, bungling way of other adventurers.
Moreover, I have always had a taste for polite literature, and went
once as apprentice to a publishing bookseller, for the sole purpose
of reading the new works before they came out. In fine, I have never
neglected any opportunity of improving my mind; and the worst that can
be said against me is, that I have remembered my catechism, and taken
all possible pains ‘to learn and labour truly, to get my living, and
do my duty in that state of life, to which it has pleased Providence to
call me.’”

“I have often heard,” answered I, “that there is honour among thieves; I
am happy to learn from you, that there is also religion: your baptismal
sponsors must be proud of so diligent a godson.”

“They ought to be, Sir,” replied Mr. Jonson, “for I gave them the first
specimens of my address; the story is long, but if you ever give me an
opportunity, I will relate it.”

“Thank you,” said I; “meanwhile I must wish you good morning: your
road now lies to the right. I return you my best thanks for your
condescension, in accompanying so undistinguished an individual as
myself.”

“Oh, never mention it, your honour,” rejoined Mr. Jonson; “I am always
too happy to walk with a gentleman of your ‘common sense.’ Farewell,
Sir; may we meet again.”

So saying, Mr. Jonson struck into his new road, and we parted. [Note: If
any one should think this sketch from nature exaggerated, I refer him to
the “Memoirs of James Hardy Vaux.”]

I went home, musing on my adventure, and delighted with my adventurer.
When I was about three paces from the door of my home, I was accosted,
in a most pitiful tone, by a poor old beggar, apparently in the last
extreme of misery and disease. Notwithstanding my political economy, I
was moved into alms-giving, by a spectacle so wretched. I put my hand
into my pocket, my purse was gone; and, on searching the other, lo--my
handkerchief, my pocket-book, and a gold bracelet, which had belonged to
Madame D’Anville, had vanished too.

One does not keep company with men of two virtues, and receive
compliments upon one’s common sense for nothing!

The beggar still continued to importune me. “Give him some food and half
a crown,” said I, to my landlady. Two hours afterwards, she came up to
me--“Oh, Sir! my silver tea-pot--that villain, the beggar!”

A light flashed upon me--“Ah, Mr. Job Jonson! Mr. Job Jonson!” cried I,
in an indescribable rage; “out of my sight, woman! out of my sight!”
 I stopped short; my speech failed me. Never tell me that shame is the
companion of guilt--the sinful knave is never so ashamed of himself as
is the innocent fool who suffers by him.



CHAPTER LXX.

Then must I plunge again into the crowd, And follow all that peace
disdains to seek.--Byron.

In the quiet of my retreat I remained for eight days--during which time
I never looked once at a newspaper--imagine how great was my philosophy!
On the ninth, I began to think it high time I should hear from Dawton;
and finding that I had eaten two rolls for breakfast, and that my
untimely wrinkle began to assume a more mitigated appearance, I
bethought me once more of the “Beauties of Babylon.”

While I was in this kindly mood towards the great city and its
inhabitants, my landlady put two letters in my hand--one was from my
mother, the other from Guloseton. I opened the latter first; it ran
thus:

“Dear Pelham,

“I was very sorry to hear you had left town--and so unexpectedly too. I
obtained your address from Mivart’s, and hasten to avail myself of
it. Pray come to town immediately, I have received some chevreuil as
a present, and long for your opinion; it is too nice to keep: for all
things nice were made but to grow bad when nicest; as Moore, I believe,
says of flowers, substituting sweet and fleetest, for bad and nicest;
so, you see, you must come without loss of time.

“But you, my friend--how can you possibly have been spending your time?
I was kept awake all last night, by thinking what you could have for
dinner. Fish is out of the question in the country; chickens die of the
pip every where but in London; game is out of season; it is impossible
to send to Gibblet’s for meat; it is equally impossible to get it any
where else; and as for the only two natural productions of the country,
vegetables and eggs, I need no extraordinary penetration, to be certain,
that your cook cannot transmute the latter into an omelette aux huitres,
on the former into legumes a la creme.

“Thus, you see, by a series of undeniable demonstrations, you must
absolutely be in a state of starvation. At this thought, the tears rush
into my eyes: for heaven’s sake, for my sake, for your own sake, but
above all, for the sake of the chevreuil, hasten to London. I figure you
to myself in the last stage of atrophy--airy as a trifle, thin as the
ghost of a greyhound.

“I need say no more on the subject. I may rely on your own discretion,
to procure me the immediate pleasure of your company. Indeed, were I to
dwell longer on your melancholy situation, my feelings would overcome
me--Mais, revenons a nos moutons--(a most pertinent phrase, by the
by--oh! the French excel us in every thing, from the paramount science
of cookery, to the little art of conversation.)

“You must tell me your candid, your unbiased, your deliberate opinion
of chevreuil. For my part, I should not wonder at the mythology of
the northern heathen nations, which places hunting among the chief
enjoyments of their heaven, were chevreuil the object of their chace;
but nihil est omni parte beatum, it wants fat, my dear Pelham, it wants
fat: nor do I see how to remedy this defect; for were we by art to
supply the fat, we should deprive ourselves of the flavour bestowed
by nature; and this, my dear Pelham, was always my great argument for
liberty. Cooped, chained, and confined in cities, and slavery, all
things lose the fresh and generous tastes, which it is the peculiar
blessing of freedom and the country to afford.

“Tell me, my friend, what has been the late subject of your reflections?
My thoughts have dwelt much, and seriously, on the ‘terra incognita,’
the undiscovered tracts in the pays culinaire, which the profoundest
investigators have left untouched and unexplored in veal. But more of
this hereafter;--the lightness of a letter, is ill suited to the depths
of philosophical research.

“Lord Dawton sounded me upon my votes yesterday. ‘A thousand pities
too,’ said he, ‘that you never speak in the House of Lords.’ ‘Orator
fit,’ said I--orators are subject to apoplexy.

“Adieu, my dear friend, for friend you are, if the philosopher was right
in defining true friendship to consist in liking and disliking the same
things. [Seneca.] You hate parsnips au naturel--so do I; you love pates
du foie gras, et moi aussi--nous voila les meilleurs amis du monde.

“Guloseton.”

So much for my friend, thought I--and now for my mother, opening the
maternal epistle, which I herewith transcribe:

“My dear Henry,

“Lose no time in coming to town. Every day the ministers are filling up
the minor places, and it requires a great stretch of recollection in a
politician, to remember the absent. Mr. V--, said yesterday, at a
dinner party, where I was present, that Lord Dawton had promised him the
Borough of--. Now you know, my dear Henry, that was the very borough he
promised to you: you must see further into this; Lord Dawton, is a good
sort of man enough, but refused once to fight a duel; therefore, if he
has disregarded his honour in one instance, he may do so in another: at
all events, you have no time to lose.

“The young Duke of--gives a ball tomorrow evening: Mrs.--pays all the
expenses, and I know for a certainty that she will marry him in a week;
this as yet is a secret. There will be a great mixture, but the ball
will be worth going to: I have a card for you.

“Lady Huffemall and I think that we shall not patronize the future
duchess; but have not yet made up our minds. Lady Roseville, however,
speaks of the intended match with great respect, and says that since we
admit convenance, as the chief rule in matrimony, she never remembers an
instance in which it has been more consulted.

“There are to be several promotions in the peerage. Lord H--‘s friends
wish to give out that he will have a dukedom; Mais j’en doute. However,
he has well deserved it; for he not only gives the best dinners in town,
but the best account of them, in the Morning Post, afterwards; which I
think is very properly upholding the dignity of our order.

“I hope most earnestly that you do not (in your country retreat) neglect
your health; nor, I may add, your mind; and that you take an opportunity
every other day of practising waltzing, which you can very well do, with
the help of an arm-chair. I would send you down (did I not expect you
here so soon) Lord Mount E--‘s Musical Reminiscences; not only because
it is a very entertaining book; but because I wish you to pay much
greater attention to music than you seem inclined to do. T. H--who is
never very refined in his bon mots, says, that Lord M. seems to have
considered the world a concert, in which the best performer plays
first fiddle. It is, indeed, quite delightful to see the veneration
our musical friend has for the orchestra and its occupants. I wish to
heaven, my dear Henry, he could instil into you a little of his ardour.
I am quite mortified at times by your ignorance of tunes and operas:
nothing tells better in conversation, than a knowledge of music, as you
will one day or other discover.

“God bless you, my dearest Henry. Fully expecting you, I have sent to
engage your former rooms at Mivart’s; do not let me be disappointed.

“Yours,

“F. P.”


I read the above letter twice over, and felt my cheek glow and my heart
swell as I passed the passage relative to Lord Dawton and the borough.
The new minister had certainly, for some weeks since, been playing a
double part with me; it would long ago have been easy to procure me a
subordinate situation--still easier to place me in parliament; yet he
had contented himself with doubtful promises and idle civilities. What,
however, seemed to me most unaccountable was, his motive in breaking
or paltering with his engagement; he knew that I had served him and his
party better than half his corps; he professed, not only to me, but
to society, the highest opinion of my abilities, knowledge, and
application. He saw, consequently, how serviceable I could be as a
friend; and from the same qualities, joined to the rank of my birth
and connections, and the high and resentful temper of my mind, he might
readily augur that I could be equally influential as a foe.

With this reflection, I stilled the beating of my heart, and the fever
of my pulse. I crushed the obnoxious letter in my hand, walked thrice
up and down my room, paused at the bell--rung it violently--ordered post
horses instantly, and in less than an hour was on the road to London.

How different is the human mind, according to the difference of place.
In our passions, as in our creeds, we are the mere dependents of
geographical situation. Nay, the trifling variation of a single mile
will revolutionize the whole tides and torrents of our hearts. The man
who is meek, generous, benevolent, and kind in the country, enters the
scene of contest, and becomes forthwith fiery or mean, selfish or stern,
just as if the virtues were only for solitude, and the vices for the
city. I have ill expressed the above reflection; n’importe--so much the
better shall I explain my feelings at the time I speak of--for I was
then too eager and engrossed to attend to the niceties of words. On my
arrival at Mivart’s, I scarcely allowed myself time to change my dress
before I set out to Lord Dawton. He shall afford me an explanation,
I thought, or a recompence, or a revenge. I knocked at the door--the
minister was out. “Give him this card,” said I, haughtily, to the
porter, “and say I shall call to-morrow at three.”

I walked to Brookes’s--there I met Mr. V--. My acquaintance with him was
small, but he was a man of talent, and, what was more to my purpose, of
open manners. I went up to him, and we entered into conversation. “Is it
true,” said I; “that I am to congratulate you upon the certainty of your
return for Lord Dawton’s borough of--?”

“I believe so,” replied V--. “Lord Dawton engaged it to me last week,
and Mr. H--, the present member, has accepted the Chiltern Hundreds. You
know all our family support Lord Dawton warmly on the present crisis,
and my return for this borough was materially insisted upon. Such
things are, you see, Mr. Pelham, even in these virtuous days of
parliamentary purity.”

“True,” said I, dissembling my chagrin, “yourself and Dawton have made
an admirable exchange. Think you the ministry can be said to be fairly
seated?”

“By no means; every thing depends upon the motion of--, brought on next
week. Dawton looks to that as to the decisive battle for this session.”

Lord Gavelton now joined us, and I sauntered away with the utmost
(seeming) indifference. At the top of St. James’s-street, Lady
Roseville’s well known carriage passed me--she stopped for a moment. “We
shall meet at the Duke of--‘s to-night,” said she, “shall we not?”

“If you go--certainly,” I replied.

I went home to my solitary apartment, and if I suffered somewhat of the
torments of baffled hope and foiled ambition, the pang is not for the
spectator. My lighter moments are for the world--my deeper for myself;
and, like the Spartan boy, I would keep, even in the pangs of death, a
mantle over the teeth and fangs which are fastening upon my breast.



CHAPTER LXXI.

Nocet empta dolore voluptas.--Ovid.

The FIRST person I saw at the Duke of--‘s was Mr. Mivart--he officiated
as gentleman usher: the SECOND was my mother--she was, as usual,
surrounded by men, “the shades of heroes that have been,” remnants of
a former day, when the feet of the young and fair Lady Frances were
as light as her head, and she might have rivalled in the science de la
danse, even the graceful Duchess of B--d. Over the dandies of her own
time she still preserved her ancient empire; and it was amusing enough
to hear the address of the ci-devant jeunes hommes, who continued,
through habit, the compliments began thirty years since, through
admiration.

My mother was, indeed, what the world calls a very charming, agreeable
woman. Few persons were more popular in society; her manners were
perfection--her smile enchantment; she lived, moved, breathed, only for
the world, and the world was not ungrateful for the constancy of her
devotion. Yet, if her letters have given my readers any idea of her
character, they will perceive that the very desire of supremacy in ton,
gave (God forgive my filial impiety!) a sort of demi-vulgarism to her
ideas; for they who live wholly for the opinion of others, always want
that self-dignity which alone confers a high cast to the sentiments;
and the most really unexceptionable in mode, are frequently the least
genuinely patrician in mind.

I joined the maternal party, and Lady Frances soon took an opportunity
of whispering, “You are looking very well, and very handsome; I declare
you are not unlike me, especially about the eyes. I have just heard that
Miss Glanville will be a great heiress, for poor Sir Reginald
cannot live much longer. She is here to-night; pray do not lose the
opportunity.”

My cheek burnt like fire at this speech, and my mother, quietly
observing that I had a beautiful colour, and ought therefore immediately
to find out Miss Glanville, lest it should vanish by the least delay,
turned from me to speak of a public breakfast about shortly to be
given. I passed into the dancing-room; there I found Vincent; he was in
unusually good spirits.

“Well,” said he, with a sneer, “you have not taken your seat yet. I
suppose Lord Dawton’s representative, whose place you are to supply, is
like Theseus, sedet eternumque sedebit. A thousand pities you can’t
come in before next week; we shall then have fiery motions in the Lower
House, as the astrologers say.”

I smiled. “Ah, mon cher!” said I, “Sparta hath many a worthier son than
me! Meanwhile, how get on the noble Lords Lesborough and Lincoln? ‘sure
such a pair were never seen, so justly formed to meet by nature!’”

“Pooh!” said Vincent, coarsely, “they shall get on well enough, before
you get in. Look to yourself, and remember that ‘Caesar plays the
ingrate.’”

Vincent turned away; my eyes were rivetted on the ground; the beautiful
Lady--passed by me; “What, you in a reverie?” said she, laughing; “our
very host will turn thoughtful next!”

“Nay,” said I, “in your absence would you have me glad? However, if
Moore’s mythology be true--Beauty loves Folly the better for borrowing
something from Reason; but, come, this is a place not for the grave, but
the giddy. Let us join the waltzers.”

“I am engaged.”

“I know it! do you think I would dance with any woman who was not
engaged?--there would be no triumph to one’s vanity in that case.
Allons, ma belle, you must prefer me to an engagement;” and so saying, I
led off my prize.

Her intended partner was Mr. V--; just as we had joined the dancers, he
spied us out, and approached with his long, serious, respectful face;
the music struck up, and the next moment poor V. was very nearly struck
down. Fraught with the most political spite, I whirled up against him;
apologized with my blandest smile, and left him wiping his mouth, and
rubbing his shoulder, the most forlorn picture of Hope in adversity,
that can possibly be conceived.

I soon grew wearied of my partner, and leaving her to fate, rambled into
another room. There, seated alone, was Lady Roseville. I placed myself
beside her; there was a sort of freemasonry between her and myself; each
knew something more of the other than the world did, and we read his
or her heart, by other signs than words. I soon saw that she was in no
mirthful mood; so much the better--she was the fitter companion for a
baffled aspirant like me.

The room we were in was almost deserted, and finding ourselves
uninterrupted, the stream of our conversation flowed into sentiment.

“How little,” said Lady Roseville, “can the crowd know of the
individuals who compose it. As the most opposite colours may be blended
into one, and so lose their individual hues, and be classed under a
single name, so every one here will go home, and speak of the ‘gay
scene,’ without thinking for a moment how many breaking hearts may have
composed it.”

“I have often thought,” said I, “how harsh we are in our judgments of
others--how often we accuse those persons of being worldly, who merely
seem so to the world; who, for instance, that saw you in your brightest
moments, would ever suppose that you could make the confession you have
just made?”

“I would not make such a confession to many beside yourself,” answered
Lady Roseville; “nay, you need not thank me. I am some years older than
you; I have lived longer in the world; I have seen much of its various
characters; and my experience has taught me to penetrate and prize a
character like yours. While you seem frivolous to the superficial, I
know you to have a mind not only capable of the most solid and important
affairs, but habituated by reflection to consider them. You appear
effeminate, I know that none are more daring--indolent, none are more
actively ambitious--utterly selfish, and I know that no earthly interest
could bribe you into meanness or injustice--no, nor even into a venial
dereliction of principle. It is from this estimate of your character,
that I am frank and open to you. Besides, I recognize something in the
careful pride with which you conceal your higher and deeper feelings,
resembling the strongest actuating principle in my own mind. All
this interests me warmly in your fate; may it be as bright as my
presentiments forebode.”

I looked into the beautiful face of the speaker as she concluded;
perhaps, at that solitary moment, my heart was unfaithful to Ellen; but
the infidelity passed away like the breath from the mirror. Coxcomb as
I was, I knew well how passionless was the interest expressed for me.
Libertine as I had been, I knew, also, how pure may be the friendship of
a woman, provided she loves another.

I thanked Lady Roseville, warmly, for her opinion, “Perhaps,” I added,
“dared I solicit your advice, you would not find me wholly undeserving
of your esteem.”

“My advice,” answered Lady Roseville, “would be, indeed, worse than
useless, were it not regulated by a certain knowledge which, perhaps,
you do not possess. You seem surprised. Eh bien; listen to me--are
you not in no small degree lie with Lord Dawton?--do you not expect
something from him worthy of your rank and merit?”

“You do, indeed, surprise me,” said I. “However close my connection with
Lord Dawton may be, I thought it much more secret than it appears to
be. However, I own that I have a right to expect from Lord Dawton,
not, perhaps, a recompense of service, but, at least, a fulfilment of
promises. In this expectation I begin to believe I shall be deceived.”

“You will!” answered Lady Roseville. “Bend your head lower--the walls
have ears. You have a friend, an unwearied and earnest friend, with
those now in power; directly he heard that Mr. V--was promised the
borough, which he knew had been long engaged to you, he went straight to
Lord Dawton. He found him with Lord Clandonald; however, he opened the
matter immediately. He spoke with great warmth of your claims--he did
more--he incorporated them with his own, which are of no mean order, and
asked no other recompense for himself than the fulfilment of a long
made promise to you. Dawton was greatly confused, and Lord Clandonald
replied, for him, that certainly there was no denying your talents--that
they were very great--that you had, unquestionably, been of much service
to their party, and that, consequently, it must be politic to attach you
to their interests; but that there was a certain fierte, and assumption,
and he might say (mark the climax) independence about you, which could
not but be highly displeasing in one so young; moreover, that it was
impossible to trust to you--that you pledged yourself to no party--that
you spoke only of conditions and terms--that you treated the proposal
of placing you in parliament rather as a matter of favour on your part,
than on Lord Dawton’s--and, in a word, that there was no relying upon
you. Lord Dawton then took courage, and chimed in with a long panegyric
on V--, and a long account of what was due to him, and to the zeal
of his family, adding, that in a crisis like this, it was absolutely
necessary to engage a certain, rather than a doubtful and undecided
support; that, for his part, if he placed you in parliament, he thought
you quite as likely to prove a foe as a friend; that, owing to the
marriage of your uncle, your expectations were by no means commensurate
with your presumption, and that the same talents which made your claims
to favour, as an ally, created also no small danger in placing you in
any situation where you could become hurtful as an enemy. All this,
and much more to the same purpose, was strenuously insisted upon by the
worthy pair; and your friend was obliged to take his leave, perfectly
convinced that, unless you assumed a more complaisant bearing, or gave
a more decided pledge, to the new minister, it was hopeless for you to
expect any thing from him, at least, for the present. The fact is, he
stands too much in awe of you, and would rather keep you out of the
House than contribute an iota towards obtaining you a seat. Upon all
this, you may rely as certain.”

“I thank you from my heart,” said I, warmly, seizing and pressing Lady
Roseville’s hand. “You tell me what I have long suspected; I am now upon
my guard, and they shall find that I can offend as well as defend. But
it is no time for me to boast; oblige me by informing me of the name of
my unknown friend; I little thought there was a being in the world who
would stir three steps for Henry Pelham.”

“‘That friend,” replied Lady Roseville, with a faltering voice and a
glowing cheek, “was Sir Reginald Glanville.”

“What!” cried I, “repeat the name to me again, or--” I paused, and
recovered myself. “Sir Reginald Glanville,” I resumed haughtily, “is too
gracious to enter into my affairs. I must be strangely altered if I need
the officious zeal of any intermeddler to redress my wrongs.”

“Nay, Mr. Pelham,” said the countess, hastily, “you do Glanville--you do
yourself injustice. For him, there never passes a day in which he does
not mention you with the highest encomiums and the most affectionate
regard. He says, of late, that you have altered towards him, but that he
does not blame you--he never mentions the cause; if I am not intruding,
suffer me to inquire into it; perhaps (oh! how happy it would make me)
I may be able to reconcile you; if you knew--if you could but guess half
of the noble and lofty character of Reginald Glanville, you would suffer
no petty difference to divide you.”

“It is no petty difference,” said I, rising, “nor am I permitted to
mention the cause. Meanwhile, may God bless you, dearest Lady Roseville,
and preserve that kind and generous heart from worse pangs than those of
disappointed ambition, or betrayed trust.”

Lady Roseville looked down--her bosom heaved violently; she felt the
meaning of my words. I left her and St. J--‘s Square. I returned home to
court sleep as vainly as the monarch in the tragedy, and exclaim as idly
as the peasant in the farce, “Oh! that there were no House of Commons in
the world!”



CHAPTER LXXII.

Good Mr. Knave, give me my due, I like a tart as well as you; But I
would starve on good roast beef, Ere I would look so like a thief.--The
Queen of Hearts.

Nune vino pellite curas; Cras ingens iterabimus aequor. Horace.

The next morning I received a note from Guloseton, asking me to dine
with him at eight, to meet his chevreuil. I sent back an answer in the
affirmative, and then gave myself wholly up to considering what was the
best line of conduct to pursue with regard to Lord Dawton. “It would be
pleasant enough,” said Anger, “to go to him, to ask him boldly for
the borough so often pledged to you, and in case of his refusal, to
confront, to taunt, and to break with him.”

“True,” replied that more homely and less stage effect arguer, which
we term Knowledge of the world; “but this would be neither useful nor
dignified--common sense never quarrels with any one. Call upon Lord
Dawton, if you will--ask him for his promise, with your second best
smile, and receive his excuses with your very best. Then do as you
please--break with him or not--you can do either with grace and quiet;
never make a scene about any thing--reproach and anger always do make
a scene.” “Very true,” said I, in answer to the latter suggestion--and
having made up my mind, I repaired a quarter before three to Lord
Dawton’s House.

“Ah, Pelham,” said the little minister; “delighted to see you look so
much the better from the country air; you will stay in town now, I hope,
till the end of the season?”

“Certainly,” my lord, “or, at all events, till the prorogation of
parliament; how, indeed, could I do otherwise with your lordship’s kind
promise before my eyes. Mr.--, the member for your borough of--, has, I
believe, accepted the Chiltern Hundreds? I feel truly obliged to you for
so promptly fulfilling your promise to me.”

“Hem! my dear Pelham, hem!” murmured Lord Dawton. I bent forward as if
in the attitude of listening respect, but really the more clearly to
perceive, and closely to enjoy his confusion. He looked up and caught my
eye, and not being too much gratified with its involuntary expression,
he grew more and more embarrassed; at last he summoned courage.

“Why, my dear Sir,” he said, “I did, it is true, promise you that
borough; but individual friendship must frequently be sacrificed to the
public good. All our party insisted upon returning Mr. V--in place of
the late member: what could I do? I mentioned your claims, they all, to
a man, enlarged upon your rival’s: to be sure, he is an older person,
and his family is very powerful in the Lower House; in short, you
perceive, my dear Pelham--that is, you are aware--you can feel for the
delicacy of my situation--one could not appear too eager for one’s own
friends at first, and I was forced to concede.”

Lord Dawton was now fairly delivered of his speech; it was, therefore,
only left me to congratulate him on his offspring.

“My dear lord,” I began, “you could not have pleased me better: Mr. V.
is a most estimable man, and I would not, for the world, have had
you suspected of placing such a trifle as your own honour--that is
to say--your promise to me, before the commands--that is to say, the
interests--of your party; but no more of this now. Was your lordship at
the Duke of--‘s last night?”

Dawton seized joyfully the opportunity of changing the conversation, and
we talked and laughed on indifferent matters till I thought it time
to withdraw; this I did with the most cordial appearance of regard and
esteem; nor was it till I had fairly set my foot out of his door, that
I suffered myself to indulge the “black bile,” at my breast. I turned
towards the Green Park, and was walking slowly along the principal mall
with my hands behind me, and my eyes on the ground, when I heard my own
name uttered. On looking back, I perceived Lord Vincent on horseback; he
stopped, and conversed with me. In the humour I was in with Lord Dawton,
I received him with greater warmth than I had done of late; and he also,
being in a social mood, seemed so well satisfied with our rencontre, and
my behaviour, that he dismounted to walk with me.

“This park is a very different scene now,” said Vincent, “from what it
was in the times of ‘The Merry Monarch;’ yet it is still, a spot much
more to my taste, than its more gaudy and less classical brother of
Hyde. There is something pleasingly melancholy, in walking over places
haunted by history; for all of us live more in the past than the
present.”

“And how exactly alike in all ages,” said I, “men have been. On the very
spot we are on now, how many have been actuated by the same feelings
that now actuate us--how many have made perhaps exactly the same remark
just made by you. It is this universal identity, which forms our most
powerful link with those that have been--there is a satisfaction in
seeing how closely we resemble the Agamemnons of gone times, and we take
care to lose none of it, by thinking how closely we also resemble the
sordidi Thersites.”

“True,” replied Vincent, “if wise and great men did but know, how little
difference there is between them and the foolish or the mean, they would
not take such pains to be wise and great; to use the Chinese proverb,
‘they sacrifice a picture to get possession of its ashes.’ It is almost
a pity that the desire to progress should be so necessary to our being;
ambition is often a fine, but never a felicitous feeling. Cyprian, in a
beautiful passage on envy, calls it ‘the moth of the soul:’ but perhaps,
even that passion is less gnawing, less a ‘tabes pectoris,’ than
ambition. You are surprised at my heat--the fact is, I am enraged
at thinking how much we forfeit, when we look up only, and trample
unconsciously, in the blindness of our aspiration, on the affections
which strew our path. Now, you and I have been utterly estranged
from each other of late. Why?--for any dispute--any disagreement in
private--any discovery of meanness--treachery, unworthiness in the
other? No! merely because I dine with Lord Lincoln, and you with Lord
Dawton, voila tout. Well say the Jesuits, that they who live for the
public, must renounce all private ties; the very day we become citizens,
we are to cease to be men. Our privacy is like Leo Decimus; [Note: See
Jovius.] directly it dies, all peace, comfort, joy, and sociality are
to die with it; and an iron age, ‘barbara vis et dira malorum omnium
incommoda’ [Note: See Jovius.] to succeed.”

“It is a pity, that we struck into different paths,” said I; “no
pleasure would have been to me greater, than making our political
interests the same; but--” “Perhaps there is no but,” interrupted
Vincent; “perhaps, like the two knights in the hacknied story, we are
only giving different names to the same shield, because we view it on
different sides; let us also imitate them in their reconciliation, as
well as their quarrel, and since we have already run our lances against
each other, be convinced of our error, and make up our difference.”

I was silent; indeed, I did not like to trust myself to speak. Vincent
continued:

“I know,” said he, “and it is in vain for you to conceal it, that you
have been ill-used by Dawton. Mr. V. is my first cousin; he came to
me the day after the borough was given to him, and told me all that
Clandonald and Dawton had said to him at the time. Believe me, they did
not spare you;--the former, you have grievously offended; you know that
he has quarrelled irremediably with his son Dartmore, and he insists
that you are the friend and abettor of that ingenuous youth, in all his
debaucheries and extravagance--tu illum corrumpi sinis. I tell you this
without hesitation, for I know you are less vain than ambitious, and I
do not care about hurting you in the one point, if I advance you in the
other. As for me, I own to you candidly and frankly, that there is no
pains I would spare to secure you to our party. Join us, and you shall,
as I have often said, be on the parliamentary benches of our corps,
without a moment of unnecessary delay. More I cannot promise you,
because I cannot promise more to myself; but from that instant your
fortune, if I augur aught aright from your ability, will be in your own
hands. You shake your head--surely you must see, that there is not a
difference between two vehemently opposite parties to be reconciled--aut
numen aut Nebuchadrezar. There is but a verbal disagreement between us,
and we must own the wisdom of the sentence recorded in Aulus Gellius,
that ‘he is but a madman, who splits the weight of things upon the
hair-breadths of words.’ You laugh at the quaintness of the quotation;
quaint proverbs are often the truest.”

If my reader should think lightly of me, when I own that I felt wavering
and irresolute at the end of this speech, let him for a moment place
himself in my situation--let him feel indignant at the treachery, the
injustice, the ingratitude of one man; and, at the very height of his
resentment, let him be soothed, flattered, courted, by the offered
friendship and favour of another. Let him personally despise the former,
and esteem the latter; and let him, above all, be convinced as well as
persuaded of the truth of Vincent’s remark, viz. that no sacrifice
of principle, nor of measures, was required--nothing but an alliance
against men, not measures. And who were those men? bound to me by a
single tie--meriting from my gratitude a single consideration? No! the
men, above all others, who had offered me the greatest affront, and
deserved from me the smallest esteem.

But, however human feelings might induce me to waver, I felt that it was
not by them only I was to decide. I am not a man whose vices or virtues
are regulated by the impulse and passion of the moment; if I am quick
to act, I am habitually slow to deliberate. I turned to Vincent, and
pressed his hand: “I dare not trust myself to answer you now,” said
I: “give me till to-morrow; I shall then have both considered and
determined.”

I did not wait for his reply. I sprung from him, turned down the passage
which leads to Pall Mall, and hastened home once more to commune with my
own heart, and--not to be still.

In these confessions I have made no scruple of owning my errors and my
foibles; all that could occasion mirth, or benefit to the reader were
his own. I have kept a veil over the darker and stormier emotions of my
soul; all that could neither amuse nor instruct him, are mine!

Hours passed on--it became time to dress--I rung for Bedos--dressed with
my usual elaborateness of pains--great emotions interfere little with
the mechanical operations of life--and drove to Guloseton’s.

He was unusually entertaining; the dinner too was unusually good; but,
thinking that I was sufficiently intimate with my host not to be obliged
to belie my feelings, I remained distrait, absent, and dull.

“What is the matter with you, my friend?” said the good natured epicure;
“you have neither applauded my jokes, nor tasted my escallopes; and your
behaviour has trifled alike with my chevreuil, and my feelings.” The
proverb is right, in saying “Grief is communicative.” I confess that I
was eager to unbosom myself to one upon whose confidence I could depend.
Guloseton heard me with great attention and interest--“Little,” said he,
kindly, “little as I care for these matters myself, I can feel for those
who do: I wish I could serve you better than by advice. However, you
cannot, I imagine, hesitate to accept Vincent’s offer. What matters it
whether you sit on one bench or on another, so that you do not sit in a
thorough draught--or dine at Lord Lincoln’s, or Lord Dawton’s, so long
as the cooks are equally good? As for Dawton, I always thought him a
shuffling, mean fellow, who buys his wines at the second price, and
sells his offices at the first. Come, my dear fellow, let us drink to
his confusion.”

So saying, Guloseton filled my glass to the brim. He had sympathized
with me--I thought it, therefore, my duty to sympathize with him; nor
did we part till the eyes of the bon vivant saw more things in heaven
and earth, than are dreamt of in the philosophy of the sober.



VOLUME VII.



CHAPTER LXXIII.

Si ad honestatem nati sumus ea aut sola expetenda est, aut certe omni
pondere gravior est habenda quam reliqua omnia.--Tully.

Cas. Brutus, I do observe you now of late: I have not from your eyes
that gentleness, And shew of love as I was wont to have.--Julius
Caesar.

I rose at my usual early hour; sleep had tended to calm, and, I hope,
also, to better my feelings. I had now leisure to reflect, that I had
not embraced my party from any private or interested motive; it was not,
therefore, from a private or interested motive that I was justified in
deserting it. Our passions are terrible sophists! When Vincent had told
me, the day before, that it was from men, not measures, that I was to
change, and that such a change could scarcely deserve the name, my heart
adopted the assertion, and fancied it into truth.

I now began to perceive the delusion; were government as mechanically
perfect as it has never yet been (but as I trust it may yet be), it
would signify little who were the mere machines that regulated its
springs: but in a constitution like ours, the chief character of
which--pardon me, ye De Lolmites--is its uncertainty; where men
invariably make the measures square to the dimensions of their own
talent or desire; and where, reversing the maxim of the tailor, the
measures so rarely make the men; it required no penetration to see how
dangerous it was to entrust to the aristocratic prejudice of Lincoln,
or the vehement imbecility of Lesborough, the execution of the very same
measures which might safely be committed to the plain sense of Dawton,
and, above all, to the great and various talents of his coadjutors. But
what made the vital difference between the two parties was less in the
leaders than the body. In the Dawton faction, the best, the purest, the
wisest of the day were enrolled; they took upon themselves the origin
of all the active measures, and Lord Dawton was the mere channel through
which those measures flowed; the plain, the unpretending, and somewhat
feeble character of Lord Dawton’s mind, readily conceded to the abler
components of his party, the authority it was so desirable that they
should exert. In Vincent’s party, with the exception of himself, there
was scarcely an individual with the honesty requisite for loving the
projects they affected to propose, or the talents that were necessary
for carrying them into effect, even were their wishes sincere; nor were
either the haughty Lincoln, or his noisy and overbearing companion,
Lesborough, at all of a temper to suffer that quiet, yet powerful
interference of others, to which Dawton unhesitatingly submitted.

I was the more resolved to do all possible justice to Dawton’s party,
from the inclination I naturally had to lean towards the other; and
in all matters, where private pique or self-interest can possibly
penetrate, it has ever been the object of my maturer consideration to
direct my particular attention to that side of the question which such
undue partizans are the least likely to espouse. While I was gradually,
but clearly, feeling my way to a decision, I received the following note
from Guloseton:--

“I said nothing to you last night of what is now to be the subject of
my letter, lest you should suppose it arose rather from the heat of an
extempore conviviality, than its real source, viz. a sincere esteem for
your mind, a sincere affection for your heart, and a sincere sympathy in
your resentment and your interest.

“They tell me that Lord Dawton’s triumph or discomfiture rests entirely
upon the success of the motion upon--, brought before the House of
Commons, on the--. I care, you know, very little for my own part, which
way this question is decided; do not think, therefore, that I make any
sacrifice when I request you to suffer me to follow your advice in the
disposal of my four votes. I imagine, of course, that you would wish
them to adopt the contrary side to Lord Dawton; and upon receiving a
line from you to that effect, they shall be empowered to do so.

“Pray, oblige me also by taking the merit of this measure upon yourself,
and saying (wherever it may be useful to you), how entirely, both the
voters and their influence are at your disposal. I trust we shall yet
play the Bel to this Dragon, and fell him from his high places.

“Pity me, my dear friend; I dine out to-day, and feel already, by an
intuitive shudder, that the soup will be cold, and the sherry hot.
Adieu.

“Ever your’s,

“Guloseton.”

Now, then, my triumph, my vanity, and my revenge might be fully
gratified. I had before me a golden opportunity of displaying my own
power, and of humbling that of the minister. My heart swelled high at
the thought. Let it be forgiven me, if, for a single moment, my previous
calculations and morality vanished from my mind, and I saw only the
offer of Vincent, and the generosity of Guloseton. But I checked the
risings of my heart, and compelled my proud spirit to obedience.

I placed Guloseton’s letter before me, and as I read it once more in
order to reply to it, the disinterested kindness and delicacy of one,
whom I had long, in the injustice of my thoughts, censured as selfish,
came over me so forcibly, and contrasted so deeply with the hollowness
of friends more sounding, alike in their profession and their creeds,
that the tears streamed fast and gushingly from my eyes.

A thousand misfortunes are less affecting than a single kindness.

I wrote, in answer, a warm and earnest letter of thanks for an offer,
the judicious kindness of which penetrated me to the soul. I detailed,
at some length, the reasons which induced me to the decision I had
taken; I sketched also the nature of the very important motion about
to be brought before the House, and deduced from that sketch the
impossibility of conscientiously opposing Lord Dawton’s party in
the debate. I concluded with repeating the expressions my gratitude
suggested, and after declining all interference with Lord Guloseton’s
votes, ventured to add, that had I interfered, it would have been in
support of Dawton; not as a man, but a minister--not as an individual
friend, but a public servant.

I had just despatched this letter, when Vincent entered: I acquainted
him, though in the most respectful and friendly terms, with my
determination. He seemed greatly disappointed, and endeavoured to shake
my resolution; finding this was in vain, he appeared at last satisfied,
and even affected with my reasons. When we parted, it was with a
promise, confirmed by both, that no public variance should ever again
alter our private opinions of each other.

When I was once more alone, and saw myself brought back to the very foot
of the ladder I had so far and so fortunately climbed; when I saw
that, in rejecting all the overtures of my friends, I was left utterly
solitary and unaided among my foes--when I looked beyond and saw no
faint loophole of hope, no single stepping-stone on which to recommence
my broken, but unwearied career--perhaps one pang of regret and
repentance, at my determination, came across me: but there is something
marvellously restorative in a good conscience, and one soon learns to
look with hope to the future, when one can feel justified in turning
with pride to the past.

My horse came to the door at my usual hour for riding: with what
gladness I sprung upon his back, felt the free wind freshening over my
fevered cheek, and turned my rein towards the green lanes that border
the great city on its western side. I know few counsellors more
exhilarating than a spirited horse. I do not wonder that the Roman
emperor made a consul of his steed. On horseback I always best feel my
powers, and survey my resources; on horseback, I always originate my
noblest schemes, and plan their ablest execution. Give me but a light
rein, and a free bound, and I am Cicero--Cato--Caesar; dismount me, and
I become a mere clod of the earth which you condemn me to touch; fire,
energy, etheriality have departed; I am the soil without the sun--the
cask without the wine--the garments without the man.

I returned home with increased spirits and collected thoughts; I urged
my mind from my own situation, and suffered it to rest upon what Lady
Roseville had told me of Reginald Glanville’s interference in my behalf.
That extraordinary man still continued powerfully to excite my interest;
nor could I dwell, without some yearning of the kindlier affections,
upon his unsolicited, and, but for Lady Roseville’s communication,
unknown exertions in my cause. Although the officers of justice were
still actively employed in the pursuit of Tyrrell’s murderer, and
although the newspapers were still full of speculations on their
indifferent success, public curiosity had began to flag upon the
inquiry. I had, once or twice, been in Glanville’s company when the
murder was brought upon the tapis, and narrowly examined his behaviour
upon a subject which touched him so fearfully. I could not, however,
note any extraordinary confusion or change in his countenance; perhaps
the pale cheek grew somewhat paler, the dreaming eye more abstracted,
and the absent spirit more wandering than before; but many other causes
than guilt, could account for signs so doubtful and minute.

“You shall soon know all,” the last words which he had addressed to me,
yet rang in my ears, and most intensely did I anticipate the fulfilment
of this promise. My hopes too--those flatterers, so often the pleasing
antitheses of reason, whispered that this was not the pledge of a guilty
man; and yet he had said to Lady Roseville, that he did not wonder at
my estrangement from him: such words seemed to require a less favourable
construction than those he had addressed to me; and, in making
this mental remark, another, of no flattering nature to Glanville’s
disinterestedness, suggested itself; might not his interference for me
with Lord Dawton, arise rather from policy than friendship; might it not
occur to him, if, as I surmised, he was acquainted with my suspicions,
and acknowledged their dreadful justice, that it would be advisable
to propitiate my silence? Such were among the thousand thoughts which
flashed across me, and left my speculations in debate and doubt.

Nor did my reflections pass unnoticed the nature of Lady Roseville’s
affection for Glanville. From the seeming coldness and austerity of Sir
Reginald’s temperament, it was likely that this was innocent, at least
in act; and there was also something guileless in the manner in which
she appeared rather to exult in, than to conceal, her attachment. True
that she was bound to no ties; she had neither husband nor children,
for whose sake love became a crime: free and unfettered, if she gave her
heart to Glanville, it was also allowable to render the gift lawful and
perpetual by the blessing of the church.

Alas! how little can woman, shut up in her narrow and limited circle
of duties, know of the wandering life and various actions of her
lover. Little, indeed, could Lady Roseville, when, in the heat of her
enthusiasm, she spoke of the lofty and generous character of Glanville,
dream of the foul and dastardly crime of which he was more than
suspected; nor, while it was, perhaps, her fondest wish to ally herself
to his destiny, could her wildest fancies anticipate the felon’s fate,
which, if death came not in an hastier and kinder shape, must sooner or
later await him.

Of Thornton, I had neither seen nor heard aught since my departure from
Lord Chester’s; that reprieve was, however, shortly to expire. I had
scarcely got into Oxford-street, in my way homeward, when I perceived
him crossing the street with another man. I turned round to scrutinize
the features of his companion, and, in spite of a great change of dress,
a huge pair of false whiskers, and an artificial appearance of increased
age, my habit of observing countenances enabled me to recognize, on
the instant, my intellectual and virtuous friend, Mr. Job Jonson. They
disappeared in a shop, nor did I think it worth while further to observe
them, though I still bore a reminiscetory spite against Mr. Job
Jonson, which I was fully resolved to wreak, at the first favourable
opportunity.

I passed by Lady Roseville’s door. Though the hour was late, and I had,
therefore, but a slight chance of finding her at home, yet I thought
the chance worth the trouble of inquiry. To my agreeable surprise, I
was admitted: no one was in the drawing-room. The servant said, Lady
Roseville was at that moment engaged, but would very shortly see me, and
begged I would wait.

Agitated as I was by various reflections, I walked (in the restlessness
of my mood) to and fro the spacious rooms which formed Lady Roseville’s
apartments of reception. At the far end was a small boudoir, where none
but the goddess’s favoured few were admitted. As I approached towards
it, I heard voices, and the next moment recognised the deep tones of
Glanville. I turned hastily away, lest I should overhear the discourse;
but I had scarcely got three steps, when the convulsed sound of a
woman’s sob came upon my ear. Shortly afterwards, steps descended the
stairs, and the street door opened.

The minutes rolled on, and I became impatient. The servant
re-entered--Lady Roseville was so suddenly and seriously indisposed,
that she was unable to see me. I left the house, and, full of bewildered
conjectures, returned to my apartments.

The next day was one of the most important in my life. I was standing
wistfully by my fireplace, listening to a broken-winded hurdy-gurdy,
with the most mournful attention, stationed opposite to my window, when
Bedos announced Sir Reginald Glanville. It so happened, that I had that
morning taken the miniature I had found in the fatal field, from the
secret place in which I usually kept it, in order more closely to
examine it, lest any more convincing proof of its owner, than the
initials and Thornton’s interpretation, might be discovered by a minuter
investigation.

The picture was lying on the table when Glanville entered: my first
impulse was to seize and secrete it; my second to suffer it to remain,
and to watch the effect the sight of it might produce. In following
the latter, I thought it, however, as well to choose my own time for
discovering the miniature; and as I moved to the table, I threw my
handkerchief carelessly over it. Glanville came up to me at once, and
his countenance, usually close and reserved in its expression, assumed a
franker and bolder aspect.

“You have lately changed towards me,” he said:--“mindful of our former
friendship, I have come to demand the reason.”

“Can Sir Reginald Glanville’s memory,” answered I, “supply him with no
probable cause?”

“It can,” replied Glanville, “but I would not trust only to that. Sit
down, Pelham, and listen to me. I can read your thoughts, and I might
affect to despise their import--perhaps two years since I should--at
present I can pity and excuse them. I have come to you now, in the love
and confidence of our early days, to claim, as then, your good opinion
and esteem. If you require any explanation at my hands, it shall be
given. My days are approaching their end. I have made up my accounts
with others--I would do so with you. I confess, that I would fain leave
behind me in your breast, the same affectionate remembrance I might
heretofore have claimed, and which, whatever be your suspicions, I have
done nothing to forfeit. I have, moreover, a dearer interest than my own
to consult in this wish--you colour, Pelham--you know to whom I allude;
for my sister’s sake, if not for my own, you will hear me.”

Glanville paused for a moment. I raised the handkerchief from the
miniature--I pushed the latter towards him--“Do you remember this?” said
I, in a low tone.

With a wild cry, which thrilled through my heart, Glanville sprung
forward and seized it. He gazed eagerly and intensely upon it, and his
cheek flushed--his eyes sparkled--his breast heaved. The next moment he
fell back in his chair, in one of the half swoons, to which, upon any
sudden and violent emotion, the debilitating effects of his disease
subjected him.

Before I could come to his assistance he had recovered. He looked
wildly and fiercely upon me. “Speak,” he cried, “speak--where got you
this--where?--answer, for mercy’s sake!”

“Recollect yourself,” said I, sternly. “I found that token of your
presence upon the spot where Tyrrell was murdered.”

“True, true,” said Glanville, slowly, and in an absent and abstracted
tone. He ceased abruptly, and covered his face with his hands; from this
attitude he started with some sudden impulse.

“And tell me,” he said, in a low, inward, exulting tone, “was it--was it
red with the blood of the murdered man?”

“Wretch!” I exclaimed, “do you glory in your guilt?”

“Hold!” said Glanville, rising, with an altered and haughty air; “it is
not to your accusations that I am now to listen: if you are yet desirous
of weighing their justice before you decide upon them, you will have the
opportunity: I shall be at home at ten this night; come to me, and you
shall know all. At present, the sight of this picture has unnerved me.
Shall I see you?”

I made no other rejoinder than the brief expression of my assent, and
Glanville instantly left the room.

During the whole of that day, my mind was wrought up into a state of
feverish and preternatural excitation. I could not remain in the same
spot for an instant; my pulse beat with the irregularity of delirium.
For the last hour I placed my watch before me, and kept my eyes
constantly fixed upon it. Should any one think this exaggerated, let
him remember, that it was not only Glanville’s confession that I was
to hear; my own fate, my future connection with Ellen, rested upon
the story of that night. For myself, when I called to mind Glanville’s
acknowledgment of the picture, and his slow and involuntary remembrance
of the spot where it was found, I scarcely allowed my temper, sanguine
as it was, to hope.

Some minutes before the hour of ten I repaired to Glanville’s house. He
was alone--the picture was before him.

I drew my chair towards him in silence, and accidentally lifting up my
eyes, encountered the opposite mirror. I started at my own face; the
intensity and fearfulness of my interest had rendered it even more
hueless than that of my companion.

There was a pause for some moments, at the end of which Glanville thus
began.



CHAPTER LXXIV.

I do but hide Under these words, like embers, every spark Of that which
has consumed me. Quick and dark The grave is yawning;--as its roof shall
cover My limbs with dust and worms, under and over, So let oblivion hide
this grief. Julian and Maddalo.

With thee, the very future fled, I stand amid the past alone; A tomb
which still shall guard the dead Tho’ every earthlier trace be flown,
A tomb o’er which the weeds that love Decay--their wild luxuriance
wreathe! The cold and callous stone above--And only thou and death
beneath. From Unpublished Poems by ------.


THE HISTORY OF SIR REGINALD GLANVILLE.

“You remember my character at school--the difficulty with which you
drew me from the visionary and abstracted loneliness which, even at that
time, was more consonant to my taste, than all the sports and society
resorted to by other boys--and the deep, and, to you, inexplicable
delight with which I returned to my reveries and solitude again. That
character has continued through life the same; circumstances have
strengthened, not altered it. So has it been with you; the temper, the
habits, the tastes, so strongly contrasted with mine in boyhood, have
lost nothing of that contrast. Your ardour for the various ambition of
life is still the antipodes to my indifference; your daring, restless,
thoughtful, resolution in the pursuit, still shames my indolence and
abstraction. You are still the votary of the world, but will become its
conqueror--I its fugitive--and shall die its victim.

“After we parted at school, I went for a short time to a tutor’s
in--shire. Of this place I soon grew weary; and my father’s death
leaving me in a great measure at my own disposal, I lost no time in
leaving it. I was seized with that mania for travel common enough to
all persons of my youth and disposition. My mother allowed me an almost
unlimited command over the fortune hereafter to be my own; and, yielding
to my wishes, rather than her fears, she suffered me, at the age of
eighteen, to set out for the Continent alone. Perhaps the quiet and
reserve of my character made her think me less exposed to the dangers of
youth, than if I had been of a more active and versatile temper. This
is no uncommon mistake; a serious and contemplative disposition is,
however, often the worst formed to acquire readily the knowledge of
the world, and always the most calculated to suffer deeply from the
experience.

“I took up my residence for some time at Spa. It is, you know, perhaps,
a place dull enough to make gambling the only amusement; every one
played--and I did not escape the contagion; nor did I wish it: for, like
the minister Godolphin, I loved gaming for its own sake, because it was
a substitute for conversation. This habit brought me acquainted with Mr.
Tyrrell, who was then staying at Spa; he had not, at that time, quite
dissipated his fortune, but was daily progressing to so desirable a
consummation. A gambler’s acquaintance is readily made, and easily kept,
provided you gamble too.

“We became as intimate as the reserve of my habits ever suffered me to
become with any one, but you. He was many years older than me--had seen
a great deal of the world--had mixed much in its best societies, and, at
that time, whatever was the grossierete of his mind, had little of the
coarseness of manner which very soon afterwards distinguished him;
evil communication works rapidly in its results. Our acquaintance was,
therefore, natural enough, especially when it is considered that my
purse was entirely at his disposal--for borrowing is twice blessed, in
him that takes and him that gives--the receiver becomes complaisant and
conceding, and the lender thinks favourably of one he has obliged.

“We parted at Spa, under a mutual promise to write. I forget if this
promise was kept--probably not; we were not, however, the worse friends
for being bad correspondents. I continued my travels for about another
year; I then returned to England, the same melancholy and dreaming
enthusiast as before. It is true that we are the creatures of
circumstances; but circumstances are also, in a great measure, the
creatures of us. I mean, they receive their colour from the previous
bent of our own minds; what raises one would depress another, and what
vitiates my neighbour might correct me. Thus the experience of the
world makes some persons more worldly--others more abstracted, and the
indulgence of the senses becomes a violence to one mind, and a second
nature to another. As for me, I had tasted all the pleasures youth and
opulence can purchase, and was more averse to them than ever. I had
mixed with many varieties of men--I was still more rivetted to the
monotony of self.

“I cannot hope, while I mention these peculiarities, that I am a very
uncommon character; I believe the present age has produced many such.
Some time hence, it will be a curious inquiry to ascertain the causes
of that acute and sensitive morbidity of mind, which has been, and still
is, so epidemic a disease. You know me well enough to believe, that I am
not fond of the cant of assuming an artificial character, or of creating
a fictitious interest; and I am far from wishing to impose upon you
a malady of constitution for a dignity of mind. You must pardon my
prolixity. I own that it is very painful to me to come to the main part
of my confessions, and I am endeavouring to prepare myself by lingering
over the prelude.”

Glanville paused here for a few moments. In spite of the sententious
coolness with which he pretended to speak, I saw that he was powerfully
and painfully affected.

“Well,” he continued, “to resume the thread of my narrative; after I had
stayed some weeks with my mother and sister, I took advantage of
their departure for the continent, and resolved to make a tour through
England. Rich people, and I have always been very rich, get exceedingly
tired of the embarrassment of their riches. I seized with delight at
the idea of travelling without carriages and servants; I took merely a
favourite horse, and the black dog, poor Terror, which you see now at my
feet.

“The day I commenced this plan was to me the epoch of a new and terrible
existence. However, you must pardon me if I am not here sufficiently
diffuse. Suffice it, that I became acquainted with a being whom, for
the first and only time in my life, I loved! This miniature attempts to
express her likeness; the initials at the back, interwoven with my own,
are hers.”

“Yes,” said I, incautiously, “they are the initials of Gertrude
Douglas.”

“What!” cried Glanville, in a loud tone, which he instantly checked, and
continued in an indrawn, muttered whisper: “How long is it since I heard
that name! and now--now--” he broke off abruptly, and then said, with a
calmer voice, “I know not how you have learnt her name; perhaps you will
explain?”

“From Thornton,” said I.

“And has he told you more?” cried Glanville, as if gasping for
breath--the “history--the dreadful--”

“Not a word,” said I, hastily; “he was with me when I found the picture,
and he explained the initials.”

“It is well!” answered Glanville, recovering himself; “you will see
presently if I have reason to love that those foul and sordid lips
should profane the story I am about to relate. Gertrude was an only
daughter; though of gentle blood, she was no match for me, either in
rank or fortune. Did I say just now that the world had not altered me?
See my folly; one year before I saw her, and I should not have thought
her, but myself honoured by a marriage;--twelve little months had
sufficed to--God forgive me! I took advantage of her love--her
youth--her innocence--she fled with me--but not to the altar!”

Again Glanville paused, and again, by a violent effort, conquered his
emotion, and proceeded:

“Never let vice be done by halves--never let a man invest all his purer
affections in the woman he ruins--never let him cherish the kindness,
if he gratifies the selfishness, of his heart. A profligate, who really
loves his victim, is one of the most wretched of beings. In spite of my
successful and triumphant passion--in spite of the delirium of the first
intoxication of possession, and of the better and deeper delight of
a reciprocity of thought--feeling, sympathy, for the first time,
found;--in the midst of all the luxuries my wealth could produce, and of
the voluptuous and spring-like hues with which youth, health, and first
love, clothe the earth which the loved one treads, and the air which she
inhales: in spite of these, in spite of all, I was any thing but happy.
If Gertrude’s cheek seemed a shade more pale, or her eye less bright, I
remembered the sacrifice she had made me, and believed that she felt it
too. It was in vain, that, with a tender and generous devotion--never
found but in woman--she assured me that my love was a recompense for
all; the more touching was her tenderness, the more poignant my remorse.
I never loved but her; I have never, therefore, entered into the
common-place of passion, and I cannot, even to this day, look upon her
sex as ours do in general. I thought, I think so still, that ingratitude
to a woman is often a more odious offence--I am sure it contains a more
painful penalty--than ingratitude to a man. But enough of this; if you
know me, you can penetrate the nature of my feelings--if not, it is in
vain to expect your sympathy.

“I never loved living long in one place. We travelled over the greater
part of England and France. What must be the enchantment of love, when
accompanied with innocence and joy, when, even in sin, in remorse, in
grief, it brings us a rapture to which all other things are tame. Oh!
those were moments steeped in the very elixir of life; overflowing with
the hoarded fondness and sympathies of hearts too full for words, and
yet too agitated for silence, when we journeyed alone, and at night, and
as the shadows and stillness of the waning hours gathered round us, drew
closer to each other, and concentrated this breathing world in the deep
and embracing sentiment of our mutual love! It was then that I laid my
burning temples on her bosom, and felt, while my hand clasped her’s,
that my visions were realized, and my wandering spirit had sunk unto its
rest.

“I remember well that, one night, we were travelling through one of the
most beautiful parts of England it was in the very height and flush
of summer, and the moon (what scene of love--whether in reality, or
romance--has any thing of tenderness, or passion, or divinity, where her
light is not!) filled the intense skies of June with her presence, and
cast a sadder and paler beauty over Gertrude’s cheek. She was always of
a melancholy and despondent temper; perhaps, for that reason, she was
more congenial to my own; and when I gazed upon her that night, I was
not surprised to see her eyes filled with tears. ‘You will laugh at me,’
she said, as I kissed them off, and inquired into the cause; ‘but I feel
a presentiment that I cannot shake off; it tells me that you will travel
this road again before many months are past, and that I shall not
be with you, perhaps not upon the earth.’ She was right in all her
foreboding, but the suggestion of her death;--that came later.

“We took up our residence for some time at a beautiful situation, a
short distance from a small watering place. Here, to my great surprise,
I met with Tyrrell. He had come there partly to see a relation from whom
he had some expectations, and partly to recruit his health, which was
much broken by his irregularities and excesses. I could not refuse to
renew my old acquaintance with him, and, indeed, I thought him too much
of a man of the world, and of society, to feel with him that particular
delicacy, in regard to Gertrude, which made me in general shun
all intercourse with my former friends. He was in great pecuniary
embarrassment--much more deeply so than I then imagined; for I believed
the embarrassment to be only temporary. However, my purse was then, as
before, at his disposal, and he did not scruple to avail himself
very largely of my offers. He came frequently to our house; and poor
Gertrude, who thought I had, for her sake, made a real sacrifice in
renouncing my acquaintance, endeavoured to conquer her usual diffidence,
and that more painful feeling than diffidence, natural to her station,
and even to affect a pleasure in the society of my friend, which she was
very far from feeling.

“I was detained at--for several weeks by Gertrude’s confinement. The
child--happy being!--died a week after its birth. Gertrude was still
in bed, and unable to leave it, when I received a letter from Ellen, to
say, that my mother was then staying at Toulouse, and dangerously ill;
if I wished once more to see her, Ellen besought me to lose no time in
setting off for the continent. You may imagine my situation, or rather
you cannot, for you cannot conceive the smallest particle of that
intense love I bore to Gertrude. To you--to any other man, it might seem
no extraordinary hardship to leave her even for an uncertain period--to
me it was like tearing away the very life from my heart.

“I procured her a sort of half companion, and half nurse; I provided for
her every thing that the most anxious and fearful love could suggest;
and with a mind full of forebodings too darkly to be realized hereafter,
I hastened to the nearest seaport, and set sail for France.

“When I arrived at Toulouse my mother was much better, but still in a
very uncertain and dangerous state of health. I stayed with her for
more than a month, during which time every post brought me a line from
Gertrude, and bore back a message from ‘my heart to her’s’ in return.
This was no mean consolation, more especially when each letter spoke of
increasing health and strength. At the month’s end, I was preparing to
return--my mother was slowly recovering, and I no longer had any fears
on her account; but, there are links in our destiny fearfully interwoven
with each other, and ending only in the anguish of our ultimate doom.
The day before that fixed for my departure, I had been into a house
where an epidemic disease raged; that night I complained of oppressive
and deadly illness--before morning I was in a high fever.

“During the time I was sensible of my state, I wrote constantly to
Gertrude, and carefully concealed my illness; but for several days I was
delirious. When I recovered I called eagerly for my letters--there were
none--none! I could not believe I was yet awake; but days still passed
on, and not a line from England--from Gertrude. The instant I was able,
I insisted upon putting horses to my carriage; I could bear no longer
the torture of my suspense. By the most rapid journeys my debility would
allow me to bear, I arrived in England. I travelled down to--by the same
road that I had gone over with her; the words of her foreboding, at
that time, sunk like ice into my heart, ‘You will travel this road again
before many months are past, and I shall not be with you: perhaps, I
shall not be upon the earth.’ At that thought I could have called unto
the grave to open for me. Her unaccountable and lengthened silence,
in spite of all the urgency and entreaties of my letters for a reply,
filled me with presentiments the most fearful. Oh, God--oh, God, they
were nothing to the truth!

“At last I arrived at--; my carriage stopped at the very house--my whole
frame was perfectly frozen with dread--I trembled from limb to limb--the
ice of a thousand winters seemed curdling through my blood. The bell
rung--once, twice--no answer. I would have leaped out of the carriage--I
would have forced an entrance, but I was unable to move. A man fettered
and spell-bound by an incubus, is less helpless than I was. At last, an
old female I had never seen before, appeared.

“‘Where is she? How!’ I could utter no more--my eyes were fixed upon the
inquisitive and frightened countenance opposite to my own. Those eyes, I
thought, might have said all that my lips could not; I was deceived--the
old woman understood me no more than I did her; another person
appeared--I recognized the face--it was that of a girl, who had been one
of our attendants. Will you believe, that at that sight, the sight of
one I had seen before, and could associate with the remembrance of the
breathing, the living, the present Gertrude, a thrill of joy flashed
across me--my fears seemed to vanish--my spell to cease?

“I sprung from the carriage; I caught the girl by the robe. ‘Your
mistress,’ said I, ‘your mistress--she is well--she is alive--speak,
speak?’ The girl shrieked out; my eagerness, and, perhaps, my emaciated
and altered appearance, terrified her; but she had the strong nerves
of youth, and was soon re-assured. She requested me to step in, and
she would tell me all. My wife (Gertrude always went by that name), was
alive, and, she believed, well, but she had left that place some weeks
since. Trembling, and still fearful, but, comparatively, in Heaven, to
my former agony, I followed the girl and the old woman into the house.

“The former got me some water. ‘Now,’ said I, when I had drank a long
and hearty draught, ‘I am ready to hear all--my wife has left this
house, you say--for what place?’ The girl hesitated and looked down;
the old woman, who was somewhat deaf, and did not rightly understand my
questions, or the nature of the personal interest I had in the reply,
answered,--‘What does the gentleman want? the poor young lady who was
last here? Lord help her!’

“‘What of her?’ I called out, in a new alarm. ‘What of her? Where has
she gone? Who took her away?’

“‘Who took her?’ mumbled the old woman, fretful at my impatient tone;
‘Who took her? why, the mad doctor, to be sure!’

“I heard no more; my frame could support no longer the agonies my mind
had undergone; I fell lifeless on the ground.

“When I recovered, it was in the dead of night. I was in bed, the old
woman and the girl were at my side. I rose slowly and calmly. You know,
all men who have ever suffered much, know the strange anomalies of
despair--the quiet of our veriest anguish. Deceived by my bearing, I
learned, by degrees, from my attendants, that Gertrude had some weeks
since betrayed sudden symptoms of insanity; that these, in a very few
hours, arose to an alarming pitch.--From some reason the woman could
not explain, she had, a short time before, discarded the companion I had
left with her; she was, therefore, alone among servants. They sent
for the ignorant practitioners of the place; they tried their nostrums
without success; her madness increased; her attendants, with that
superstitious horror of insanity, common to the lower classes, became
more and more violently alarmed; the landlady insisted on her removal;
and--and--I told you, Peham--I told you--they sent her away--sent her to
a madhouse! All this I listened to!--all!--aye, and patiently! I noted
down the address of her present abode; it was about the distance of
twenty miles from--. I ordered fresh horses and set off immediately.

“I arrived there at day-break. It was a large, old house, which, like a
French hotel, seemed to have no visible door; dark and gloomy, the pile
appeared worthy of the purpose to which it was devoted. It was a long
time before we aroused any one to answer our call; at length, I was
ushered into a small parlour--how minutely I remember every article in
the room; what varieties there are in the extreme passions! sometimes
the same feeling will deaden all the senses--sometimes render them a
hundred fold more acute!--

“At last, a man of a smiling and rosy aspect appeared. He pointed to a
chair--rubbed his hands--and begged me to unfold my business; few words
sufficed to do that. I requested to see his patient; I demanded by what
authority she had been put under his care. The man’s face altered. He
was but little pleased with the nature of my visit. ‘The lady,’ he said,
coolly, ‘had been entrusted to his care, with an adequate remuneration,
by Mr. Tyrrell; without that gentleman’s permission he could not
think even of suffering me to see her. I controlled my passion; I knew
something, if not of the nature of private mad-houses, at least of that
of mankind. I claimed his patient as my wife; I expressed myself obliged
by his care, and begged his acceptance of a further remuneration,
which I tendered, and which was eagerly accepted. The way was now
cleared--there is no hell to which a golden branch will not win your
admittance.

“The man detained me no longer; he hastened to lead the way. We passed
through various long passages; sometimes the low moan of pain and
weakness came upon my ear--sometimes the confused murmur of the idiot’s
drivelling soliloquy. From one passage, at right angles with the one
through which we proceeded, came a fierce and thrilling shriek; it sunk
at once into silence--perhaps by the lash!

“We were now in a different department of the building--all was
silence--hushed deep--breathless: this seemed to me more awful than the
terrible sounds I had just heard. My guide went slowly on, sometimes
breaking the stillness of the dim gallery by the jingle of his
keys--sometimes by a muttered panegyric on himself and his humanity. I
neither heeded nor answered him.

“We read in the annals of the Inquisition, of every limb, nerve, sinew
of the victim, being so nicely and accurately strained to their utmost,
that the frame would not bear the additional screwing of a single hair
breadth. Such seemed my state. We came to a small door, at the right
hand; it was the last but one in the passage. We paused before it.
‘Stop,’ said I, ‘for one moment:’ and I was so faint and sick at heart,
that I leaned against the wall to recover myself, before I let him open
the door: when he did, it was a greater relief than I can express,
to see that all was utterly dark. ‘Wait, Sir,’ said the guide, as he
entered; and a sullen noise told me that he was unbarring the heavy
shutter.

“Slowly the grey cold light of the morning broke in: a dark figure was
stretched upon a wretched bed, at the far end of the room. She raised
herself at the sound. She turned her face towards me; I did not fall,
nor faint, nor shriek; I stood motionless, as if fixed into stone; and
yet it was Gertrude upon whom I gazed! Oh, Heaven! who but myself could
have recognized her? Her cheek was as the cheek of the dead--the hueless
skin clung to the bone--the eye was dull and glassy for one moment, the
next it became terribly and preternaturally bright--but not with the ray
of intellect, or consciousness, or recognition. She looked long and hard
at me; a voice, hollow and broken, but which still penetrated my heart,
came forth through the wan lips, that scarcely moved with the exertion.
‘I am very cold,’ it said--‘but if I complain, you will beat me.’ She
fell down again upon the bed, and hid her face.

“My guide, who was leaning carelessly by the window, turned to me with
a sort of smirk--‘This is her way, Sir,’ he said; ‘her madness is of a
very singular description: we have not, as yet, been able to discover
how far it extends; sometimes she seems conscious of the past, sometimes
utterly oblivious of every thing: for days she is perfectly silent, or,
at least, says nothing more than you have just heard; but, at times, she
raves so violently, that--that--but I never use force where it can be
helped.’

“I looked at the man, but I could not answer, unless I had torn him to
pieces on the spot. I turned away hastily from the room; but I did not
quit the house without Gertrude--I placed her in the carriage, by my
side--notwithstanding all the protestations and fears of the keeper:
these were readily silenced by the sum I gave him; it was large enough
to have liberated half his household. In fact, I gathered from his
conversation, that Tyrrell had spoken of Gertrude as an unhappy female
whom he himself had seduced, and would now be rid of. I thank you,
Pelham, for that frown, but keep your indignation till a fitter season
for it.

“I took my victim, for I then regarded her as such, to a secluded and
lonely spot: I procured for her whatever advice England could afford;
all was in vain. Night and day I was by her side, but she never, for
a moment, seemed to recollect me: yet were there times of fierce and
overpowering delirium, when my name was uttered in the transport of
the most passionate enthusiasm--when my features as absent, though not
present, were recalled and dwelt upon with all the minuteness of the
most faithful detail; and I knelt by her in all those moments, when no
other human being was near, and clasped her wan hand, and wiped the dew
from her forehead, and gazed upon her convulsed and changing face, and
called upon her in a voice which could once have allayed her wildest
emotions; and had the agony of seeing her eye dwell upon me with the
most estranged indifference and the most vehement and fearful aversion.
But ever and anon, she uttered words which chilled the very marrow of
my bones; words which I would not, dared not believe, had any meaning or
method in their madness--but which entered into my own brain, and
preyed there like the devouring of a fire. There was a truth in those
ravings--a reason in that incoherence--and my cup was not yet full.

“At last, one physician, who appeared to me to have more knowledge than
the rest of the mysterious workings of her dreadful disease, advised me
to take her to the scenes of her first childhood: ‘Those scenes,’ said
he, justly, ‘are in all stages of life, the most fondly remembered; and
I have noted, that in many cases of insanity, places are easier recalled
than persons: perhaps, if we can once awaken one link in the chain, it
will communicate to the rest.’

“I took this advice, and set off to Norfolk. Her early home was not many
miles distant from the churchyard where you once met me, and in that
churchyard her mother was buried. She had died before Gertrude’s flight;
the father’s death had followed it: perhaps my sufferings were a
just retribution. The house had gone into other hands, and I had no
difficulty in engaging it. Thank Heaven, I was spared the pain of seeing
any of Gertrude’s relations.

“It was night when we moved to the house. I had placed within the room
where she used to sleep, all the furniture and books, with which it
appeared, from my inquiries, to have been formerly filled. We laid her
in the bed that had held that faded and altered form, in its freshest
and purest years. I shrouded myself in one corner of the room, and
counted the dull minutes till the daylight dawned. I pass over the
detail of my recital--the experiment partially succeeded--would to God
that it had not! would that she had gone down to her grave with her
dreadful secret unrevealed! would--but--”

Here Glanville’s voice failed him, and there was a brief silence before
he recommenced.

“Gertrude now had many lucid intervals; but these my presence were
always sufficient to change into a delirious raving, even more
incoherent than her insanity had ever yet been. She would fly from me
with the most fearful cries, bury her face in her hands, and seem like
one oppressed and haunted by a supernatural visitation, as long as I
remained in the room; the moment I left her, she began, though slowly,
to recover.

“This was to me the bitterest affliction of all--to be forbidden to
nurse, to cherish, to tend her, was like taking from me my last hope!
But little can the thoughtless or the worldly dream of the depths of a
real love; I used to wait all day by her door, and it was luxury enough
to me to catch her accents or hear her move, or sigh, or even weep; and
all night, when she could not know of my presence, I used to lie down by
her bedside; and when I sank into a short and convulsed sleep, I saw her
once more, in my brief and fleeting dreams, in all the devoted love, and
glowing beauty, which had once constituted the whole of my happiness,
and my world.

“One day I had been called from my post by her door. They came to me
hastily--she was in strong convulsions. I flew up stairs, and supported
her in my arms till the fits had ceased: we then placed her in bed; she
never rose from it again; but on that bed of death, the words, as well
as the cause, of her former insanity, were explained--the mystery was
unravelled.

“It was a still and breathless night. The moon, which was at its
decrease, came through the half-closed shutters, and beneath its solemn
and eternal light, she yielded to my entreaties, and revealed all. The
man--my friend--Tyrrell--had polluted her ear with his addresses, and
when forbidden the house, had bribed the woman I had left with her,
to convey his letters--she was discharged--but Tyrrell was no ordinary
villain; he entered the house one evening, when no one but Gertrude was
there--Come near me, Pelham--nearer--bend down your ear--he used force,
violence! That night Gertrude’s senses deserted her--you know the rest.

“The moment that I gathered, from Gertrude’s broken sentences, their
meaning, that moment the demon entered into my soul. All human feelings
seemed to fly from my heart; it shrunk into one burning, and thirsty,
and fiery want--that was for revenge. I would have sprung from the
bedside, but Gertrude’s hand clung to me, and detained me; the damp,
chill grasp, grew colder and colder--it ceased--the hand fell--I
turned--one slight, but awful shudder, went over that face, made yet
more wan, by the light of the waning and ghastly moon--one convulsion
shook the limbs--one murmur passed the falling and hueless lips. I
cannot tell you the rest--you know--you can guess it.

“That day week we buried her in the lonely churchyard--where she had, in
her lucid moments, wished to lie--by the side of her mother.”



CHAPTER LXXV.

I BREATHED, But not the breath of human life; A serpent round my heart
was wreathed, And stung my very thought to strife.--The Giaour.

“Thank Heaven, the most painful part of my story is at an end. You will
now be able to account for our meeting in the church-yard at------. I
secured myself a lodging at a cottage not far from the spot which held
Gertrude’s remains. Night after night I wandered to that lonely place,
and longed for a couch beside the sleeper, whom I mourned in the
selfishness of my soul. I prostrated myself on the mound; I humbled
myself to tears. In the overflowing anguish of my heart I forgot all
that had aroused its stormier passions into life. Revenge, hatred,--all
vanished. I lifted up my face to the tender heavens: I called aloud to
the silent and placid air; and when I turned again to the unconscious
mound, I thought of nothing but the sweetness of our early love and the
bitterness of her early death. It was in such moments that your footstep
broke upon my grief: the instant others had seen me,--other eyes had
penetrated the sanctity of my regret,--from that instant, whatever was
more soft and holy in the passions and darkness of my mind seemed to
vanish away like a scroll. I again returned to the intense and withering
remembrance which was henceforward to make the very key and pivot of my
existence. I again recalled the last night of Gertrude’s life; I again
shuddered at the low murmured sounds, whose dreadful sense broke slowly
upon my soul. I again felt the cold-cold, slimy grasp of those wan and
dying fingers; and I again nerved my heart to an iron strength, and
vowed deep, deep-rooted, endless, implacable revenge.

“The morning after the night you saw me, I left my abode. I went to
London, and attempted to methodize my plans of vengeance. The first
thing to discover was Tyrrell’s present residence. By accident I heard
he was at Paris, and, within two hours of receiving the intelligence, I
set off for that city. On arriving there, the habits of the gambler
soon discovered him to my search. I saw him one night at a hell. He was
evidently in distressed circumstances, and the fortune of the table
was against him. Unperceived by him, I feasted my eyes on his changing
countenance, as those deadly and wearing transitions of feeling, only to
be produced by the gaming-table, passed over it. While I gazed upon him,
a thought of more exquisite and refined revenge than had yet occurred to
me flashed upon my mind. Occupied with the ideas it gave rise to, I went
into the adjoining room, which was quite empty. There I seated myself,
and endeavoured to develop more fully the rude and imperfect outline of
my scheme.

“The arch tempter favoured me with a trusty coadjutor in my designs. I
was lost in a revery, when I heard myself accosted by name. I looked
up, and beheld a man whom I had often seen with Tyrrell, both at Spa and
(the watering place, where, with Gertrude, I had met Tyrrell). He was a
person of low birth and character; but esteemed, from his love of
coarse humour and vulgar enterprise, a man of infinite parts--a sort
of Yorick--by the set most congenial to Tyrrell’s tastes. By this undue
reputation, and the levelling habit of gaming, to which he was addicted,
he was raised, in certain societies, much above his proper rank: need I
say that this man was Thornton? I was but slightly acquainted with
him; however, he accosted me cordially, and endeavoured to draw me into
conversation.

“‘Have you seen Tyrrell?’ said he, ‘he is at it again; what’s bred in
the bone, you know, etc.’ I turned pale with the mention of Tyrrell’s
name, and replied very laconically, to what purpose I forget. ‘Ah! ah!’
rejoined Thornton, eying me with an air of impertinent familiarity,
‘I see you have not forgiven him; he played you but a shabby trick at
------; seduced your mistress, or something of that sort; he told me all
about it: pray, how is the poor girl now?’

“I made no reply; I sank down and gasped for breath. All I had suffered
seemed nothing to the indignity I then endured. She--she--who had once
been my pride--my honour--life--to be thus spoken of--and--. I could not
pursue the idea. I rose hastily, looked at Thornton with a glance which
might have abashed a man less shameless and callous than himself, and
left the room.

“That night, as I tossed restless and feverish on my bed of, thorns, I
saw how useful Thornton might be to me in the prosecution of the scheme
I had entered into; and the next morning I sought him out, and purchased
(no very difficult matter) both his secrecy and his assistance. My plan
of vengeance, to one who had seen and observed less of the varieties of
human nature than you have done, might seem far-fetched and unnatural;
for while the superficial are ready to allow eccentricity as natural in
the coolness of ordinary life, they never suppose it can exist in
the heat of the passions,--as if, in such moments, anything was ever
considered absurd in the means which was favourable to the end. Were the
secrets of one passionate and irregulated heart laid bare, there would
be more romance in them than in all the fables which we turn from with
incredulity and disdain, as exaggerated and overdrawn.

“Among the thousand schemes for retribution which had chased each other
across my mind, the death of my victim was only the ulterior object.
Death, indeed--the pang of one moment--appeared to me but very feeble
justice for the life of lingering and restless anguish to which his
treachery had condemned me; but my penance, my doom, I could have
forgiven: it was the fate of a more innocent and injured being which
irritated the sting and fed the venom of my revenge. That revenge no
ordinary punishment could appease. If fanaticism can only be satisfied
by the rack and the flames, you may readily conceive a like unappeasable
fury in a hatred so deadly, so concentrated, and so just as mine; and if
fanaticism persuades itself into a virtue, so also did my hatred.

“The scheme which I resolved upon was to attach Tyrrell more and more
to the gaming-table, to be present at his infatuation, to feast my eyes
upon the feverish intensity of his suspense; to reduce him, step
by step, to the lowest abyss of poverty; to glut my soul with the
abjectness and humiliation of his penury; to strip him of all aid,
consolation, sympathy, and friendship; to follow him, unseen, to his
wretched and squalid home; to mark the struggles of the craving nature
with the loathing pride; and, finally, to watch the frame wear, the eye
sink, the lip grow livid, and all the terrible and torturing progress
of gnawing want to utter starvation. Then, in that last state, but not
before, I might reveal myself; stand by the hopeless and succourless
bed of death; shriek out in the dizzy ear a name, which could treble
the horrors of remembrance; snatch from the struggling and agonizing
conscience the last plank, the last straw, to which, in its madness, it
could cling, and blacken the shadows of departing life, by opening to
the shuddering sense the threshold of an impatient and yawning hell.

“Hurried away by the unhallowed fever of these projects, I thought
of nothing but their accomplishment. I employed Thornton, who still
maintained his intimacy with Tyrrell, to decoy him more and more to the
gambling-house; and, as the unequal chances of the public table were
not rapid enough in their termination to consummate the ruin even of an
impetuous and vehement gamester like Tyrrell so soon as my impatience
desired, Thornton took every opportunity of engaging him in private
play, and accelerating my object by the unlawful arts of which he was
master. My enemy was every day approaching the farthest verge of ruin;
near relations he had none,--all his distant ones he had disobliged;
all his friends, and even his acquaintance, he had fatigued by his
importunity or disgusted by his conduct. In the whole world there seemed
not a being who would stretch forth a helping hand to save him from the
total and penniless beggary to which he was hopelessly advancing. Out of
the wrecks of his former property and the generosity of former friends,
whatever he had already wrung had been immediately staked at the
gaming-house and as immediately lost.

“Perhaps this would not so soon have been the case, if Thornton had not
artfully fed and sustained his expectations. He had been long employed
by Tyrrell in a professional capacity, and he knew well all the
gamester’s domestic affairs: and when he promised, should things come
to the worst, to find some expedient to restore them, Tyrrell easily
adopted so flattering a belief.

“Meanwhile I had taken the name and disguise under favour of which you
met me at Paris, and Thornton had introduced me to Tyrrell as a young
Englishman of great wealth and still greater inexperience. The gambler
grasped eagerly at an acquaintance which Thornton readily persuaded him
he could turn to such account; and I had thus every facility of marking,
day by day, how my plot thickened and my vengeance hastened to its
triumph.

“This was not all. I said there was not in the wide world a being who
would have saved Tyrrell from the fate he deserved and was approaching.
I forgot, there was one who still clung to him with affection, and for
whom he still seemed to harbour the better and purer feelings of less
degraded and guilty times. This person (you will guess readily it was
a woman) I made it my especial business and care to wean away from my
prey; I would not suffer him a consolation he had denied to me. I used
all the arts of seduction to obtain the transfer of her affections.
Whatever promises and vows--whether of love or wealth--could effect were
tried; nor, at last, without success: I triumphed. The woman became
my slave. It was she who, whenever Tyrrell faltered in his course to
destruction, combated his scruples and urged on his reluctance; it was
she who informed me minutely of his pitiful finances, and assisted, to
her utmost, in expediting their decay. The still more bitter treachery
of deserting him in his veriest want I reserved till the fittest
occasion, and contemplated with a savage delight.

“I was embarrassed in my scheme by two circumstances: first, Thornton’s
acquaintance with you; and, secondly, Tyrrell’s receipt (some time
afterwards) of a very unexpected sum of two hundred pounds, in return
for renouncing all further and possible claim on the purchasers of his
estate. To the former, so far as it might interfere with my plans
or lead to my detection, you must pardon me for having put a speedy
termination: the latter threw me into great consternation; for Tyrrell’s
first idea was to renounce the gaming-table, and endeavour to live upon
the trifling pittance he had acquired as long as the utmost economy
would permit.

“This idea Margaret, the woman I spoke of, according to my instructions,
so artfully and successfully combated that Tyrrell yielded to his
natural inclination, and returned once more to the infatuation of his
favourite pursuit. However, I had become restlessly impatient for the
conclusion to this prefatory part of my revenge; and, accordingly,
Thornton and myself arranged that Tyrrell should be persuaded by the
former to risk all, even to his very last farthing, in a private game
with me. Tyrrell, who believed he should readily recruit himself by my
unskilfulness in the game, fell easily into the snare; and on the second
night of our engagement, he not only had lost the whole of his remaining
pittance, but had signed bonds owning to a debt of far greater amount
than he, at that time, could ever even have dreamt of possessing.

“Flushed, heated, almost maddened with my triumph, I yielded to the
exultation of the moment. I did not know you were so near,--I discovered
myself,--you remember the scene. I went joyfully home: and for the
first time since Gertrude’s death I was happy; but there I imagined my
vengeance only would begin; I revelled in the burning hope of marking
the hunger and extremity that must ensue. The next day, when Tyrrell
turned round, in his despair, for one momentary word of comfort from the
lips to which he believed, in the fond credulity of his heart, falsehood
and treachery never came, his last earthly friend taunted and deserted
him. Mark me, Pelham: I was by and heard her! But here my power of
retribution was to close: from the thirst still unslaked and unappeased,
the cup was abruptly snatched. Tyrrell disappeared; no one knew whither.
I set Thornton’s inquiries at work. A week afterwards he brought me word
that Tyrrell had died in extreme want, and from very despair. Will you
credit that, at hearing this news, my first sensations were only rage
and disappointment? True, he had died, died in all the misery my heart
could wish, but I had not seen him die; and the death-bed seemed to me
robbed of its bitterest pang.

“I know not to this day, though I have often questioned him, what
interest Thornton had in deceiving me by this tale: for my own part, I
believe that he himself was deceived; certain it is (for I inquired),
that a person very much answering to Tyrrell’s description had perished
in the state Thornton mentioned; and this might, therefore, in all
probability, have misled him.

“I left Paris, and returned, through Normandy, to England (where I
remained some weeks); there we again met: but I think we did not meet
till I had been persecuted by the insolence and importunity of Thornton.
The tools of our passions cut both ways: like the monarch who employed
strange beasts in his army, we find our treacherous allies less
destructive to others than ourselves. But I was not of a temper to brook
the tauntings or the encroachment of my own creature: it had been with
but an ill grace that I had endured his familiarity, when I absolutely
required his services; much less could I suffer his intrusion when those
services,--services not of love, but hire, were no longer necessary.
Thornton, like all persons of his stamp, had a low pride, which I was
constantly offending. He had mixed with men more than my equals in rank
on a familiar footing, and he could ill brook the hauteur with which my
disgust at his character absolutely constrained me to treat him. It is
true that the profuseness of my liberality was such that the mean wretch
stomached affronts for which he was so largely paid; but, with the
cunning and malicious spite natural to him, he knew well how to repay
them in kind. While he assisted, he affected to ridicule, my revenge;
and though he soon saw that he durst not, for his very life, breathe
a syllable openly against Gertrude or her memory, yet he contrived, by
general remarks and covert insinuations, to gall me to the very quick
and in the very tenderest point. Thus a deep and cordial antipathy to
each other arose and grew and strengthened, till, I believe, like the
fiends in hell, our mutual hatred became our common punishment.

“No sooner had I returned to England than I found him here awaiting my
arrival. He favoured me with frequent visits and requests for money.
Although not possessed of any secret really important affecting my
character, he knew well that he was possessed of one important to
my quiet; and he availed himself to the utmost of my strong and deep
aversion even to the most delicate recurrence to my love to Gertrude
and its unhallowed and disastrous termination. At length, however, he
wearied me. I found that he was sinking into the very dregs and refuse
of society, and I could not longer brook the idea of enduring his
familiarity and feeding his vices.

“I pass over any detail of my own feelings, as well as my outward and
worldly history. Over my mind a great change had passed: I was no longer
torn by violent and contending passions; upon the tumultuous sea a dead
and heavy torpor had fallen; the very winds, necessary for health, had
ceased:--I slept on the abyss without a surge.”

“One violent and engrossing passion is among the worst of all
immoralities, for it leaves the mind too stagnant and exhausted for
those activities and energies which constitute our real duties. However,
now that the tyrant feeling of my mind was removed, I endeavoured
to shake off the apathy it had produced, and return to the various
occupations and businesses of life. Whatever could divert me from my own
dark memories, or give a momentary motion to the stagnation of my mind,
I grasped at with the fondness and eagerness of a child. Thus, you
found me surrounding myself with luxuries which palled upon my taste the
instant that their novelty had passed: now striving for the vanity of
literary fame; now, for the emptier baubles which riches could procure.
At one time I shrouded myself in my closet, and brooded over the dogmas
of the learned and the errors of the wise; at another, I plunged into
the more engrossing and active pursuits of the living crowd which rolled
around me,--and flattered my heart, that amid the applause of senators
and the whirlpool of affairs, I could lull to rest the voices of the
past and the spectre of the dead.

“Whether these hopes were effectual, and the struggle not in vain,
this haggard and wasting form, drooping day by day into the grave, can
declare; but I said I would not dwell long upon this part of my history,
nor is it necessary. Of one thing only, not connected with the main part
of my confessions, it is right, for the sake of one tender and guiltless
being, that I should speak.

“In the cold and friendless world with which I mixed, there was a heart
which had years ago given itself wholly up to me. At that time I was
ignorant of the gift I so little deserved, or (for it was before I knew
Gertrude) I might have returned it, and been saved years of crime and
anguish. Since then, the person I allude to had married, and, by the
death of her husband, was once more free. Intimate with my family,
and more especially with my sister, she now met me constantly; her
compassion for the change she perceived in me, both in mind and person,
was stronger than even her reserve, and this is the only reason why I
speak of an attachment which ought otherwise to be concealed: I believe
that you already understand to whom I allude, and since you have
discovered her weakness, it is right that you should know also her
virtue; it is right that you should learn that it was not in her the
fantasy or passion of a moment, but a long and secreted love; that
you should learn that it was her pity, and no unfeminine disregard to
opinion, which betrayed her into imprudence; and that she is, at this
moment, innocent of everything but the folly of loving me.

“I pass on to the time when I discovered that I had been either
intentionally or unconsciously deceived, and that my enemy yet lived!
lived in honour, prosperity, and the world’s blessings. The information
was like removing a barrier from a stream hitherto pent into quiet and
restraint. All the stormy thoughts, feelings, and passions so long
at rest rushed again into a terrible and tumultuous action. The
newly-formed stratum of my mind was swept away; everything seemed a
wreck, a chaos, a convulsion of jarring elements; but this is a trite
and tame description of my feelings; words would be but commonplace to
express the revulsion which I experienced: yet, amidst all, there was
one paramount and presiding thought, to which the rest were as atoms
in the heap,--the awakened thought of vengeance!-but how was it to be
gratified?

“Placed as Tyrrell now was in the scale of society, every method of
retribution but the one formerly rejected seemed at an end. To that one,
therefore, weak and merciful as it appeared to me, I resorted; you took
my challenge to Tyrrell; you remember his behaviour: Conscience doth
indeed make cowards of us all! The letter enclosed to me in his to you
contained only the commonplace argument urged so often by those who have
injured us; namely, the reluctance at attempting our life after having
ruined our happiness. When I found that he had left London my rage knew
no bounds: I was absolutely frantic with indignation; the earth
reeled before my eyes; I was almost suffocated by the violence--the
whirlpool--of my emotions. I gave myself no time to think,--I left town
in pursuit of my foe.

“I found that--still addicted, though, I believed, not so madly as
before, to the old amusements--he was in the neighbourhood of Newmarket,
awaiting the races shortly to ensue. No sooner did I find his address
than I wrote him another challenge, still more forcibly and insultingly
worded than the one you took. In this I said that his refusal was of no
avail; that I had sworn that my vengeance should overtake him; and that
sooner or later, in the face of heaven and despite of hell, my oath
should be fulfilled. Remember those words, Pelham, I shall refer to them
hereafter.

“Tyrrell’s reply was short and contemptuous: he affected to treat me
as a madman. Perhaps (and I confess that the incoherence of my letter
authorized such suspicion) he believed I really was one. He concluded by
saying that if he received more of my letters, he should shelter himself
from my aggressions by the protection of the law.

“On receiving this reply, a stern, sullen, iron spirit entered into my
bosom. I betrayed no external mark of passion; I sat down in silence;
I placed the letter and Gertrude’s picture before me. There, still and
motionless, I remained for hours. I remember well I was awakened from my
gloomy revery by the clock, as it struck the first hour of the morning.
At that lone and ominous sound, the associations of romance and dread
which the fables of our childhood connect with it rushed coldly and
fearfully into my mind: the damp dews broke out upon my forehead and
the blood curdled in my limbs. In that moment I knelt down and vowed
a frantic and deadly oath--the words of which I would not now dare to
repeat--that before three days expired, hell should no longer be cheated
of its prey. I rose,--I flung myself on my bed, and slept.

“The next day I left my abode. I purchased a strong and swift horse;
and, disguising myself from head to foot in a long horseman’s cloak, I
set off alone, locking in my heart the calm and cold conviction that my
oath should be kept. I placed, concealed in my dress, two pistols; my
intention was to follow Tyrrell wherever he went, till we could find
ourselves alone, and without the chance of intrusion. It was then my
determination to force him into a contest, and that no trembling of the
hand, no error of the swimming sight, might betray my purpose, to place
us foot to foot, and the mouth of each pistol almost to the very temple
of each antagonist. Nor was I deterred for a moment from this resolution
by the knowledge that my own death must be as certain as my victim’s. On
the contrary, I looked forward to dying thus, and so baffling the more
lingering, but not less sure, disease which was daily wasting me away,
with the same fierce, yet not unquiet delight with which men have rushed
into battle, and sought out a death less bitter to them than life.

“For two days, though I each day saw Tyrrell, fate threw into my way
no opportunity of executing my design. The morning of the third
came,--Tyrrell was on the race-ground; sure that he would remain there
for some hours, I put up my wearied horse in the town, and, seating
myself in an obscure corner of the course, was contented with watching,
as the serpent does his victim, the distant motions of my enemy. Perhaps
you can recollect passing a man seated on the ground and robed in a
horseman’s cloak. I need not tell you that it was I whom you passed and
accosted. I saw you ride by me; but the moment you were gone I forgot
the occurrence. I looked upon the rolling and distant crowd as a child
views the figures of the phantasmagoria, scarcely knowing if my
eyes deceived me, feeling impressed with some stupefying and ghastly
sensation of dread, and cherishing the conviction that my life was not
as the life of the creatures that passed before me.

“The day waned: I went back for my horse; I returned to the course, and,
keeping at a distance as little suspicious as possible, followed the
motions of Tyrrell. He went back to the town, rested there, repaired
to a gaming-table, stayed in it a short time, returned to his inn, and
ordered his horse.

“In all these motions I followed the object of my pursuit; and my
heart bounded with joy when I at last saw him set out alone and in the
advancing twilight. I followed him till he left the main road. Now, I
thought, was my time. I redoubled my pace, and had nearly reached him,
when some horsemen appearing, constrained me again to slacken my pace.
Various other similar interruptions occurred to delay my plot. At length
all was undisturbed. I spurred my horse, and was nearly on the heels
of my enemy, when I perceived him join another man: this was you; I
clenched my teeth and drew my breath, as I once more retreated to a
distance. In a short time two men passed me, and I found that, owing to
some accident on the road, they stopped to assist you. It appears, by
your evidence on a subsequent event, that these men were Thornton and
his friend Dawson; at the time they passed too rapidly, and I was too
much occupied in my own dark thoughts, to observe them: still I kept
up to you and Tyrrell, sometimes catching the outlines of your figures
through the moon, light, at others (with the acute sense of anxiety),
only just distinguishing the clang of your horses’ hoofs on the stony
ground. At last a heavy shower came on: imagine my joy when Tyrrell left
you and rode off alone!

“I passed you, and followed my enemy as fast as my horse would permit;
but it was not equal to Tyrrell’s, which was almost at its full speed.
However, I came, at last, to a very steep and almost precipitous
descent. I was forced to ride slowly and cautiously; this, however, I
the less regarded, from my conviction that Tyrrell must be obliged
to use the same precaution. My hand was on my pistol with a grasp of
premeditated revenge, when a shrill, sharp, solitary cry broke on my
ear.

“No sound followed: all was silence. I was just approaching towards
the close of the descent, when a horse without its rider passed me.
The shower had ceased, and the moon broke from the cloud some minutes
before; by its light I recognized the horse rode by Tyrrell; perhaps, I
thought, it has thrown its master, and my victim will now be utterly in
my power. I pushed hastily forward in spite of the hill, not yet wholly
passed. I came to a spot of singular desolation: it was a broad patch
of waste land, a pool of water was on the right, and a remarkable and
withered tree hung over it. I looked round, but saw nothing of life
stirring. A dark and imperfectly developed object lay by the side of the
pond; I pressed forward: merciful God! my enemy had escaped my hand, and
lay in the stillness of death before me!”

“What!” I exclaimed, interrupting Glanville, for I could contain myself
no longer, “it was not by you then that Tyrrell fell?” With these
words, I grasped his hand; and, excited as I had been by my painful and
wrought-up interest in his recital, I burst into tears of gratitude and
joy. Reginald Glanville was innocent: Ellen was not the sister of an
assassin!

After a short pause, Glanville continued:

“I gazed upon the upward and distorted face, in a deep and sickening
silence; an awe, dark and undefined, crept over my heart: I stood
beneath the solemn and sacred heavens, and felt that the hand of God
was upon me; that a mysterious and fearful edict had gone forth; that
my headlong and unholy wrath had, in the very midst of its fury, been
checked, as if but the idle anger of a child; that the plan I had laid
in the foolish wisdom of my heart had been traced, step by step, by an
all-seeing eye, and baffled in the moment of its fancied success by an
inscrutable and awful doom. I had wished the death of my enemy: lo! my
wish was accomplished,--how, I neither knew nor guessed; there, a still
and senseless clod of earth, without power of offence or injury, he lay
beneath my feet: it seemed as if, in the moment of my uplifted arm, the
Divine Avenger had asserted His prerogative,--as if the angel which
had smitten the Assyrian had again swept forth, though against a meaner
victim; and while he punished the guilt of a human criminal, had set an
eternal barrier to the vengeance of a human foe!

“I dismounted from my horse, and bent over the murdered man. I drew from
my bosom the miniature, which never forsook me, and bathed the lifeless
resemblance of Gertrude in the blood of her betrayer. Scarcely had I
done so, before my ear caught the sound of steps; hastily I thrust, as I
thought, the miniature in my bosom, remounted, and rode hurriedly away.
At that hour, and for many which succeeded to it, I believe that all
sense was suspended. I was like a man haunted by a dream, and wandering
under its influence! or as one whom a spectre pursues, and for whose
eye the breathing and busy world is but as a land of unreal forms and
flitting shadows, teeming with the monsters of darkness and the terrors
of the tomb.

“It was not till the next day that I missed the picture. I returned to
the spot; searched it carefully, but in vain; the miniature could not
be found: I returned to town, and shortly afterwards the newspapers
informed me of what had subsequently occurred. I saw, with dismay, that
all appearances pointed to me as the criminal, and that the officers
of justice were at that moment tracing the clew which my cloak and the
color of my horse afforded them. My mysterious pursuit of Tyrrell, the
disguise I had assumed, the circumstance of my passing you on the road
and of my flight when you approached, all spoke volumes against me.
A stronger evidence yet remained, and it was reserved for Thornton to
indicate it; at this moment my life is in his hands. Shortly after my
return to town, he forced his way into my room, shut the door, bolted
it, and, the moment we were alone, said, with a savage and fiendish grin
of exultation and defiance, ‘Sir Reginald Glanville, you have many a
time and oft insulted me with your pride, and more with your gifts: now
it is my time to insult and triumph over you; know that one word of mine
could sentence you to the gibbet.’

“He then minutely summed up the evidence against me, and drew from
his pocket the threatening letter I had last written to Tyrrell. You
remember that therein I said my vengeance was sworn against him, and
that, sooner or later, it should overtake him. ‘Couple,’ said Thornton,
coldly, as he replaced the letter in his pocket,--‘couple these words
with the evidence already against you, and I would not buy your life at
a farthing’s value.’

“How Thornton came by this paper, so important to my safety, I know not:
but when he read it I was startled by the danger it brought upon me;
one glance sufficed to show me that I was utterly at the mercy of the
villain who stood before me; he saw and enjoyed my struggles.

“‘Now,’ said he, ‘we know each other: at present I want a thousand
pounds; you will not refuse it me, I am sure; when it is gone, I shall
call again; till then you can do without me.’ I flung him a check for
the money, and he departed.

“You may conceive the mortification I endured in this sacrifice of pride
to prudence; but those were no ordinary motives which induced me to
submit to it. Fast approaching to the grave, it mattered to me but
little whether a violent death should shorten a life to which a limit
was already set, and which I was far from being anxious to retain: but
I could not endure the thought of bringing upon my mother and my sister
the wretchedness and shame which the mere suspicion of a crime
so enormous would occasion them; and when my eye caught all the
circumstances arrayed against me, my pride seemed to suffer a less
mortification even in the course I adopted than in the thought of the
felon’s gaol and the criminal’s trial,--the hoots and execrations of the
mob, and the death and ignominious remembrance of the murderer.

“Stronger than either of these motives was my shrinking and loathing
aversion to whatever seemed likely to unrip the secret history of the
past. I sickened at the thought of Gertrude’s name and fate being bared
to the vulgar eye, and exposed to the comment, the strictures, the
ridicule of the gaping and curious public. It seemed to me, therefore,
but a very poor exertion of philosophy to conquer my feelings of
humiliation at Thornton’s insolence and triumph, and to console myself
with the reflection that a few months must rid me alike of his exactions
and my life.

“But, of late, Thornton’s persecutions and demands have risen to such
a height that I have been scarcely able to restrain my indignation and
control myself into compliance. The struggle is too powerful for my
frame: it is rapidly bringing on the fiercest and the last contest I
shall suffer, before ‘the wicked shall cease from troubling, and the
weary be at rest.’ Some days since I came to a resolution, which I am
now about to execute: it is to leave this country and take refuge on the
Continent. There I shall screen myself from Thornton’s pursuit and the
danger which it entails upon me; and there, unknown and undisturbed, I
shall await the termination of my disease.

“But two duties remained to me to fulfil before I departed; I have now
discharged them both. One was due to the warmhearted and noble being who
honoured me with her interest and affection,--the other to you. I went
yesterday to the former; I sketched the outline of that history which
I have detailed to you. I showed her the waste of my barren heart, and
spoke to her of the disease which was wearing me away. How beautiful is
the love of woman! She would have followed me over the world,--received
my last sigh, and seen me to the rest I shall find at length; and this
without a hope, or thought of recompense, even from the worthlessness of
my love.

“But enough!--of her my farewell has been taken. Your suspicions I have
seen and forgiven; for they were natural: it was due to me to remove
them; the pressure of your hand tells me that I have done so; but I had
another reason for my confessions. I have worn away the romance of my
heart, and I have now no indulgence for the little delicacies and petty
scruples which often stand in the way of our real happiness. I have
marked your former addresses to Ellen, and, I confess, with great
joy; for I know, amidst all your worldly ambition and the encrusted
artificiality of your exterior, how warm and generous is your real
heart,--how noble and intellectual is your real mind: and were my sister
tenfold more perfect than I believe her, I do not desire to find on
earth one more deserving of her than yourself. I have remarked your
late estrangement from Ellen; and while I guessed, I felt that, however
painful to me, I ought to remove, the cause: she loves you--though
perhaps you know it not--much and truly; and since my earlier life has
been passed in a selfish inactivity, I would fain let it close with the
reflection of having served two beings whom I prize so dearly, and the
hope that their happiness will commence with my death.

“And now, Pelham, I have done; I am weak and exhausted, and cannot bear
more--even of your society, now. Think over what I have last said,
and let me see you again to-morrow: on the day after, I leave England
forever.”



CHAPTER LXXVI.

But wilt thou accept not The worship the heart lifts above And the
Heavens reject not, The desire of the moth for the star, Of the night
for the morrow, The devotion to something afar From the sphere of our
sorrow?--P. B. Shelley.

It was not with a light heart--for I loved Glanville too well, not to
be powerfully affected by his history and approaching fate--but with
a chastised and sober joy, that I now beheld my friend innocent of the
guilt my suspicions had accused him of, and the only obstacle to my
marriage with his sister removed. True it was that the sword yet hung
over his head, and that while he lived, there could be no rational
assurance of his safety from the disgrace and death of the felon. In the
world’s eye, therefore, the barrier to my union with Ellen would
have been far from being wholly removed; but, at that moment, my
disappointments had disgusted me with the world, and I turned with a
double yearning of heart to her whose pure and holy love could be at
once my recompence and retreat.

Nor was this selfish consideration my only motive in the conduct I was
resolved to adopt; on the contrary, it was scarcely more prominent in my
mind, than those derived from giving to a friend who was now dearer
to me than ever, his only consolation on this earth, and to Ellen, the
safest protection, in case of any danger to her brother. With these, it
is true, were mingled feelings which, in happier circumstances, might
have been those of transport at a bright and successful termination to a
deep and devoted love; but these I had, while Glanville’s very life was
so doubtful, little right to indulge, and I checked them as soon as they
arose.

After a sleepless night, I repaired to Lady Glanville’s house. It was
long since I had been there, and the servant who admitted me, seemed
somewhat surprised at the earliness of my visit. I desired to see the
mother, and waited in the parlour till she came. I made but a scanty
exordium to my speech. In very few words I expressed my love to Ellen,
and besought her mediation in my behalf; nor did I think it would be
a slight consideration in my favour, with the fond mother, to mention
Glanville’s concurrence with my suit.

“Ellen is up stairs in the drawing-room,” said Lady Glanville. “I will
go and prepare her to receive you--if you have her consent, you have
mine.”

“Will you suffer me, then,” said I, “to forestal you? Forgive my
impatience, and let me see her before you do.”

Lady Glanville was a woman of the good old school, and stood somewhat
upon forms and ceremonies. I did not, therefore, await the answer, which
I foresaw might not be favourable to my success, but with my customary
assurance, left the room, and hastened up stairs. I entered the
drawing-room, and shut the door. Ellen was at the far end; and as I
entered with a light step, she did not perceive me till I was close by.

She started when she saw me; and her cheek, before very pale, deepened
into crimson. “Good Heavens! is it you,” she said, falteringly “I--I
thought--but--but--excuse me for an instant, I will call my mother.”

“Stay for one instant, I beseech you--it is from your mother that I
come--she has referred me to you.” And with a trembling and hurried
voice, for all my usual boldness forsook me, I poured forth, in rapid
and burning words, the history of my secret and hoarded love--its
doubts, fears, and hopes.

Ellen sunk back on her chair, overpowered and silent by her feelings,
and the vehemence of my own. I knelt, and took her hand; I covered it
with my kisses--it was not withdrawn from them. I raised my eyes,
and beheld in her’s all that my heart had hoped, but did not dare to
pourtray.

“You--you,” said she--when at last she found words--“I imagined that
you only thought of ambition and the world--I could not have dreamt of
this.” She ceased, blushing and embarrassed.

“It is true,” said I, “that you had a right to think so, for, till this
moment, I have never opened to you even a glimpse of my veiled heart,
and its secret and wild desires; but, do you think that my love was the
less a treasure, because it was hidden? or the less deep, because it was
cherished at the bottom of my soul? No--no; believe me that love was not
to be mingled with the ordinary objects of life--it was too pure to be
profaned by the levities and follies which are all of my nature that I
have permitted myself to develope to the world. Do not imagine,
that, because I have seemed an idler with the idle--selfish with the
interested--and cold, and vain, and frivolous, with those to whom such
qualities were both a passport and a virtue; do not imagine that I have
concealed within me nothing more worthy of you and of myself; my very
love for you shews, that I am wiser and better than I have seemed. Speak
to me, Ellen--may I call you by that name--one word--one syllable! speak
to me, and tell me that you have read my heart, and that you will not
reject it!”

There came no answer from those dear lips; but their soft and tender
smile told me that I might hope. That hour I still recall and bless!
that hour was the happiest of my life.



CHAPTER LXXVII.

A thousand crowns, or else lay down your head.--2nd Part of Henry VI.

From Ellen, I hastened to the house of Sir Reginald. The hall was in all
the confusion of approaching departure. I sprang over the paraphernalia
of books and boxes which obstructed my way, and bounded up the stairs.
Glanville was, as usual, alone: his countenance was less pale than it
had been lately, and when I saw it brighten as I approached, I hoped, in
the new happiness of my heart, that he might baffle both his enemy and
his disease.

I told him all that had just occurred between Ellen and myself. “And
now,” said I, as I clasped his hand, “I have a proposal to make, to
which you must accede: let me accompany you abroad; I will go with you
to whatever corner of the world you may select. We will plan together
every possible method of concealing our retreat. Upon the past I will
never speak to you. In your hours of solitude I will never disturb you
by an unwelcome and ill-timed sympathy. I will tend upon you, watch over
you, bear with you, with more than the love and tenderness of a brother.
You shall see me only when you wish it. Your loneliness shall never be
invaded. When you get better, as I presage you will, I will leave you to
come back to England, and provide for the worst, by ensuring your sister
a protector. I will then return to you alone, that your seclusion may
not be endangered by the knowledge, even of Ellen, and you shall have me
by your side till--till--”

“The last!” interrupted Glanville. “Too--too generous Pelham, I
feel--these tears (the first I have shed for a long, long time) tell
you, that I feel to the heart--your friendship and disinterested
attachment; but the moment your love for Ellen has become successful,
I will not tear you from its enjoyment. Believe me, all that I could
derive from your society, could not afford me half the happiness I
should have in knowing that you and Ellen were blest in each other.
No--no, my solitude will, at that reflection, be deprived of its sting.
You shall hear from me once again; my letter shall contain a request,
and your executing that last favour must console and satisfy the
kindness of your heart. For myself, I shall die as I have lived--alone.
All fellowship with my griefs would seem to me strange and unwelcome.”

I would not suffer Glanville to proceed. I interrupted him with fresh
arguments and entreaties, to which he seemed at last to submit, and I
was in the firm hope of having conquered his determination, when we were
startled by a sudden and violent noise in the hall.

“It is Thornton,” said Glanville, calmly. “I told them not to admit him,
and he is forcing his way.”

Scarcely had Sir Reginald said this, before Thornton burst abruptly into
the room.

Although it was scarcely noon, he was more than half intoxicated, and
his eyes swam in his head with a maudlin expression of triumph and
insolence, as he rolled towards us.

“Oh, oh! Sir Reginald,” he said, “thought of giving me the slip, eh?
Your d--d servants said you were out; but I soon silenced them. ‘Egad I
made them as nimble as cows in a cage--I have not learnt the use of my
fists for nothing. So, you’re going abroad to-morrow; without my leave,
too--pretty good joke that, indeed. Come, come, my brave fellow, you
need not scowl at me in that way. Why, you look as surly as a butcher’s
dog with a broken head.”

Glanville, who was lived with ill-suppressed rage, rose haughtily.

“Mr. Thornton,” he said, in a calm voice, although he was trembling in
his extreme passion, from head to foot, “I am not now prepared to submit
to your insolence and intrusion. You will leave this room instantly. If
you have any further demands upon me, I will hear them to-night at any
hour you please to appoint.”

“No, no, my fine fellow,” said Thornton, with a coarse chuckle; “you
have as much wit as three folks, two fools, and a madman; but you won’t
do me, for all that. The instant my back is turned, your’s will be
turned too; and by the time I call again, your honour will be half way
to Calais. But--bless my stars, Mr. Pelham, is that you? I really did
not see you before; I suppose you are not in the secret?”

“I have no secrets from Mr. Pelham,” said Glanville; “nor do I care
if you discuss the whole of your nefarious transactions with me in his
presence. Since you doubt my word, it is beneath my dignity to vindicate
it, and your business can as well be dispatched now, as hereafter. You
have heard rightly, that I intend leaving England to-morrow; and now,
Sir, what is your will?”

“By G--d, Sir Reginald Glanville!” exclaimed Thornton, who seemed stung
to the quick by Glanville’s contemptuous coldness, “you shall not leave
England without my leave. Ay, you may frown, but I say you shall not;
nay, you shall not budge a foot from this very room unless I cry, ‘Be it
so!’”

Glanville could no longer restrain himself. He would have sprung towards
Thornton, but I seized and arrested him. I read, in the malignant and
incensed countenance of his persecutor, all the danger to which a single
imprudence would have exposed him, and I trembled for his safety.

I whispered, as I forced him again to his seat, “Leave me alone to
settle with this man, and I will endeavour to free you from him.” I did
not tarry for his answer; but turning to Thornton, said to him coolly
but civilly: “Sir Reginald Glanville has acquainted me with the nature
of your very extraordinary demands upon him. Did he adopt my advice, he
would immediately place the affair in the hands of his legal advisers.
His ill health, however, his anxiety to leave England, and his wish to
sacrifice almost every thing to quiet, induce him, rather than take
this alternative, to silence your importunities, by acceding to claims,
however illegal and unjust. If, therefore, you now favour Sir Reginald
with your visit, for the purpose of making a demand previous to his
quitting England, and which, consequently, will be the last to which
he will concede, you will have the goodness to name the amount of your
claim, and should it be reasonable, I think Sir Reginald will authorize
me to say, that it shall be granted.”

“Well, now!” cried Thornton, “that’s what I call talking like a sensible
man; and though I am not fond of speaking to a third person, when the
principal is present, yet as you have always been very civil to me, I
have no objection to treating with you. Please to give Sir Reginald
this paper: if he will but take the trouble to sign it, he may go to the
Falls of Niagara for me! I won’t interrupt him--so he had better put pen
to paper, and get rid of me at once, for I know I am as welcome as snow
in harvest.”

I took the paper, which was folded up, and gave it to Glanville, who
leant back on his chair, half-exhausted by his rage. He glanced his
eye over it, and then tore it into a thousand pieces, and trampled it
beneath his feet: “Go!” exclaimed he, “go, rascal, and do your worst! I
will not make myself a beggar to enrich you. My whole fortune would but
answer this demand.”

“Do as you please, Sir Reginald,” answered Thornton, grinning, “do as
you please. It’s not a long walk from hence to Bow-street, nor a long
swing from Newgate to the gallows; do as you please, Sir Reginald, do as
you please!” and the villain flung himself at full length on the costly
ottoman, and eyed Glanville’s countenance with an easy and malicious
effrontery, which seemed to say, “I know you will struggle, but you
cannot help yourself.”

I took Glanville aside: “My dear friend,” said I, “believe me, that I
share your indignation to the utmost; but we must do any thing rather
than incense this wretch: what is his demand?”

“I speak literally,” replied Glanville, “when I say, that it covers
nearly the whole of my fortune; for my habits of extravagance have very
much curtailed my means: it is the exact sum I had set apart, for a
marriage gift to my sister, in addition to her own fortune.”

“Then,” said I, “you shall give it him; your sister has no longer any
necessity for a portion: her marriage with me prevents that--and with
regard to yourself, your wants are not many--such as it is, you can
share my fortune.”

“No--no--no!” cried Glanville; and his generous nature lashing him into
fresh rage, he broke from my grasp, and moved menacingly to Thornton.
That person still lay on the ottoman, regarding us with an air half
contemptuous, half exulting.

“Leave the room instantly,” said Glanville, “or you will repent it!”

“What! another murder, Sir Reginald!” said Thornton. “No, I am not a
sparrow, to have my neck wrenched by a woman’s hand like your’s. Give me
my demand--sign the paper, and I will leave you for ever and a day.”

“I will commit no such folly,” answered Glanville. “If you will accept
five thousand pounds, you shall have that sum; but were the rope on my
neck, you should not wring from me a farthing more!”

“Five thousand!” repeated Thornton; “a mere drop--a child’s toy--why,
you are playing with me, Sir Reginald--nay, I am a reasonable man,
and will abate a trifle or so of my just claims, but you must not take
advantage of my good nature. Make me snug and easy for life--let me keep
a brace of hunters--a cosey box--a bit of land to it, and a girl after
my own heart, and I’ll say quits with you. Now, Mr. Pelham, who is a
long-headed gentleman, and does not spit on his own blanket, knows well
enough that one can’t do all this for five thousand pounds; make it a
thousand a year--that is, give me a cool twenty thousand--and I won’t
exact another sous. Egad, this drinking makes one deuced thirsty--Mr.
Pelham, just reach me that glass of water--I hear bees in my head!”

Seeing that I did not stir, Thornton rose, with an oath against pride;
and swaggering towards the table, took up a tumbler of water, which
happened accidentally to be there: close by it was the picture of the
ill-fated Gertrude. The gambler, who was evidently so intoxicated as
to be scarcely conscious of his motions or words (otherwise, in all
probability, he would, to borrow from himself a proverb illustrative of
his profession, have played his cards better) took up the portrait.

Glanville saw the action, and was by his side in an instant. “Touch it
not with your accursed hands!” he cried, in an ungovernable fury. “Leave
your hold this instant, or I will dash you to pieces!”

Thornton kept a firm gripe of the picture. “Here’s a to-do!” said he
tauntingly: “was there ever such work about a poor--(using a word too
coarse for repetition) before?”

The word had scarcely passed his lips, when he was stretched at his
full length upon the ground. Nor did Glanville stop there. With all
the strength of his nervous and Herculean frame, fully requited for the
debility of disease by the fury of the moment, he seized the gamester as
if he had been an infant, and dragged him to the door: the next moment I
heard his heavy frame rolling down the stairs with no decorous slowness
of descent.

Glanville re-appeared. “Good God!” I cried, “what have you done?” But he
was too lost in his still unappeased rage to heed me. He leaned, panting
and breathless, against the wall, with clenched teeth, and a flashing
eye, rendered more terribly bright by the feverish lustre natural to his
disease.

Presently I heard Thornton re-ascend the stairs: he opened the door,
and entered but one pace. Never did human face wear a more fiendish
expression of malevolence and wrath. “Sir Reginald Glanville,” he said,
“I thank you heartily. He must have iron nails who scratches a bear.
You have sent me a challenge, and the hangman shall bring you my answer.
Good day, Sir Reginald--good day, Mr. Pelham;” and so saying, he shut
the door, and rapidly descending the stairs, was out of the house in an
instant.

“There is no time to be lost,” said I, “order post horses to your
carriage, and be gone instantly.”

“You are wrong,” replied Glanville, slowly recovering himself. “I must
not fly; it would be worse than useless; it would seem the strongest
argument against me. Remember that if Thornton has really gone to
inform against me, the officers of justice would arrest me long before I
reached Calais; or even if I did elude their pursuit so far, I should
be as much in their power in France as in England: but to tell you the
truth, I do not think Thornton will inform. Money, to a temper like his,
is a stronger temptation than revenge; and, before he has been three
minutes in the air, he will perceive the folly of losing the golden
harvest he may yet make of me for the sake of a momentary passion.
No--my best plan will be to wait here till to-morrow, as I originally
intended. In the meanwhile he will, in all probability, pay me another
visit, and I will make a compromise with his demands.”

Despite of my fears, I could not but see the justice of these
observations, the more especially as a still stronger argument than
any urged by Glanville, forced itself on my mind; this was my internal
conviction, that Thornton himself was guilty of the murder of Tyrrell,
and that, therefore, he would, for his own sake, avoid the new and
particularizing scrutiny into that dreadful event, which his accusation
of Glanville would necessarily occasion.

Both of us were wrong. Villains have passions as well as honest men; and
they will, therefore, forfeit their own interest in obedience to those
passions, while the calculations of prudence invariably suppose, that
that interest is their only rule. [Note: I mean “interest” in the
general, not the utilitarian, signification of the word.]

Glanville was so enfeebled by his late excitation, that he besought me
once more to leave him to himself. I did so, under a promise, that he
would admit me again in the evening; for notwithstanding my persuasion
that Thornton would not put his threats into execution, I could not
conquer a latent foreboding of dread and evil.



CHAPTER LXXVIII.

Away with him to prison--where is the provost?--Measure for Measure.

I returned home, perplexed by a thousand contradictory thoughts upon the
scene I had just witnessed; the more I reflected, the more I regretted
the fatality of the circumstances, that had tempted Glanville to accede
to Thornton’s demand; true it was, that Thornton’s self-regard might be
deemed a sufficient guarantee for his concealment of such extortionate
transactions: moreover, it was difficult to say, when the formidable
array of appearances against Glanville was considered, whether any other
line of conduct than that which he had adopted, could, with any safety,
have been pursued.

His feelings too, with regard to the unfortunate Gertrude, I could
fully enter into, and sympathize with: but, in spite of all these
considerations, it was with an inexpressible aversion that I
contemplated the idea of that tacit confession of guilt, which his
compliance with Thornton’s exactions so unhappily implied; it was,
therefore, a thought of some satisfaction, that my rash and hasty
advice, of a still further concession to those extortions, had not
been acceded to. My present intention was, in the event of Glanville’s
persevering to reject my offer of accompanying him, to remain in
England, for the purpose of sifting the murder, nor did I despair of
accomplishing this most desirable end, through the means of Dawson; for
there was but little doubt in my own mind that Thornton and himself
were the murderers, and I hoped that address or intimidation might win
a confession from Dawson, although it might probably be unavailing with
his hardened and crafty associate.

Occupied with these thoughts, I endeavoured to while away the hours
till the evening summoned me once more to the principal object of my
reflections. Directly Glanville’s door was opened, I saw by one glance,
that I had come too late; the whole house was in confusion; several of
the servants were in the hall, conferring with each other, with that
mingled mystery and agitation which always accompany the fears and
conjectures of the lower classes. I took aside the valet, who had lived
with Glanville for some years, and who was remarkably attached to his
master, and learnt, that somewhat more than an hour before. Mr. Thornton
had returned to the house accompanied by three men of very suspicious
appearance. “In short, Sir,” said the man, lowering his voice to a
whisper, “I knew one of them by sight; he was Mr. S., the Bowstreet
officer; with these men, Sir Reginald left the house, merely saying, in
his usual quiet manner, that he did not know when he should return.”

I concealed my perturbation, and endeavoured, as far as I was able,
to quiet the evident apprehensions of the servant. “At all events,
Seymour,” said I, “I know that I may trust you sufficiently, to warn you
against mentioning the circumstance any farther; above all, let me beg
of you to stop the mouths of those idle loiterers in the hall--and,
be sure, that you do not give any unnecessary alarm to Lady and Miss
Glanville.”

The poor man promised, with tears in his eyes, that he would obey my
injunctions; and with a calm face, but a sickening heart, I turned away
from the house. I knew not where to direct my wanderings; fortunately,
I recollected that I should, in all probability, be among the first
witnesses summoned on Glanville’s examination, and that, perhaps, by
the time I reached home, I might already receive an intimation to that
effect; accordingly, I retraced my steps, and, on re-entering my hotel,
was told by the waiter, with a mysterious air, that a gentleman was
waiting to see me. Seated by the window in my room, and wiping his
forehead with a red silk pocket-handkerchief, was a short, thickset man,
with a fiery and rugose complexion, not altogether unlike the aspect
of a mulberry; from underneath a pair of shaggy brows, peeped two
singularly small eyes, which made ample amends by their fire, for their
deficiency in size--they were black, brisk, and somewhat fierce in their
expression; a nose, of that shape, vulgarly termed bottle, formed the
“arch sublime,” the bridge, the twilight as it were, between the purple
sun-set of one cheek, and the glowing sun-rise of the other. His
mouth was small, and drawn up on each corner, like a purse--there was
something sour and crabbed about it; if it was like a purse, it was the
purse of a miser: a fair round chin had not been condemned to single
blessedness--on the contrary, it was like a farmer’s pillion, and
carried double; on either side of a very low forehead, hedged round by
closely mowed bristles, of a dingy black, were two enormous ears, of the
same intensely rubicund colour as that inflamed pendant of flesh which
adorns the throat of an enraged turkey-cock; ears so large, and so red,
I never beheld before--they were something preposterous.

This enchanting figure, which was attired in a sober suit of leaden
black, relieved by a long, gold watch-chain, and a plentiful decoration
of seals, rose at my entrance, with a solemn grunt, and a still more
solemn bow. I shut the door carefully, and asked him his business:--as
I had foreseen, it was a request from the magistrate at--, to attend a
private examination on the ensuing day.

“Sad thing, Sir, sad thing,” said Mr.--, “it would be quite shocking to
hang a gentleman of Sir Reginald Glanville’s quality--so distinguished
an orator too; sad thing, Sir,--very sad thing.”

“Oh!” said I, quietly, “there is not a doubt as to Sir Reginald’s
innocence of the crime laid to him; and, probably, Mr.--, I may call in
your assistance to-morrow, to ascertain the real murderers--I think I am
possessed of some clue.”

Mr.--pricked up his ears--those enormous ears. “Sir,” he said, “I shall
be happy to accompany you--very happy; give me the clue you speak of,
and I will soon find the villains. Horrid thing, Sir, murder--very
horrid. It’s too hard that a gentleman cannot take his ride home from
a race, or a merry-making, but he must have his throat cut from ear to
ear--ear to ear, Sir;” and with these words, the speaker’s own auricular
protuberances seemed to glow, as if in conscious horror, with a double
carnation.

“Very true, Mr.--!” said I; “say I will certainly attend the
examination--till then, good bye!” At this hint, my fiery faced friend
made me a low bow, and blazed out of the room, like the ghost of a
kitchen fire.

Left to myself, I revolved, earnestly and anxiously, every thing that
could tend to diminish the appearances against Glanville, and direct
suspicion to that quarter where I was confident the guilt rested. In
this endeavour I passed the time till morning, when I fell into an
uneasy slumber, which lasted some hours; when I awoke, it was almost
time to attend the magistrate’s appointment. I dressed hastily, and soon
found myself in the room of inquisition.

It is impossible to conceive a more courteous, and, yet, more equitable
man, than the magistrate whom I had the honour of attending. He spoke
with great feeling on the subject for which I was summoned--owned to me,
that Thornton’s statement was very clear and forcible--trusted that my
evidence would contradict an account which he was very loth to believe;
and then proceeded to the question. I saw, with an agony which I can
scarcely express, that all my answers made powerfully against the cause
I endeavoured to support. I was obliged to own, that a man on horseback
passed me soon after Tyrrell had quitted me; that, on coming to the
spot where the deceased was found, I saw this same horseman on the very
place; that I believed, nay, that I was sure (how could I evade this),
that that man was Sir Reginald Glanville.

Farther evidence, Thornton had already offered to adduce. He could
prove, that the said horseman had been mounted on a grey horse, sold to
a person answering exactly to the description of Sir Reginald Glanville;
moreover, that that horse was yet in the stables of the prisoner. He
produced a letter, which, he said, he had found upon the person of the
deceased, signed by Sir Reginald Glanville, and containing the most
deadly threats against his life; and, to crown all, he called upon me to
witness, that we had both discovered upon the spot where the murder was
committed, a picture belonging to the prisoner, since restored to him,
and now in his possession.

At the close of this examination, the worthy magistrate shook his head,
in evident distress! “I have known Sir Reginald Glanville personally,”
 said he: “in private as in public life, I have always thought him the
most upright and honourable of men. I feel the greatest pain in saying,
that it will be my duty fully to commit him for trial.”

I interrupted the magistrate; I demanded that Dawson should be produced:
“I have already,” said he, “inquired of Thornton respecting that person,
whose testimony is of evident importance; he tells me, that Dawson has
left the country, and can give me no clue to his address.”

“He lies!” cried I, in the abrupt anguish of my heart; “his associate
shall be produced. Hear me: I have been, next to Thornton, the chief
witness against the prisoner, and when I swear to you, that, in spite of
all appearances, I most solemnly believe in his innocence, you may rely
on my assurance, that there are circumstances in his favour, which have
not yet been considered, but which I will pledge myself hereafter to
adduce.” I then related to the private ear of the magistrate, my firm
conviction of the guilt of the accuser himself. I dwelt forcibly upon
the circumstance of Tyrrell’s having mentioned to me, that Thornton
was aware of the large sum he had on his person, and of the strange
disappearance of that sum, when his body was examined in the fatal
field. After noting how impossible it was that Glanville could
have stolen this money; I insisted strongly on the distressed
circumstances--the dissolute habits, and the hardened character of
Thornton--I recalled to the mind of the magistrate, the singularity
of Thornton’s absence from home when I called there, and the doubtful
nature of his excuse: much more I said, but all equally in vain. The
only point where I was successful, was in pressing for a delay, which
was granted to the passionate manner in which I expressed my persuasion
that I could confirm my suspicions by much stronger data before the
reprieve expired.

“It is very true,” said the righteous magistrate, “that there are
appearances somewhat against the witness; but certainly not tantamount
to any thing above a slight suspicion. If, however, you positively think
you can ascertain any facts, to elucidate this mysterious crime, and
point the inquiries of justice to another quarter, I will so far strain
the question, as to remand the prisoner to another day--let us say the
day after tomorrow. If nothing important can before then be found in his
favour, he must be committed for trial.”



CHAPTER LXXIX.

Nihil est furacius illo Non fuit Autolyci tam piccata manus.--Martial.

Quo teneam vultus mutantem Protea nodo?--Horace.

When I left the magistrate, I knew not whither my next step should
tend. There was, however, no time to indulge the idle stupor, which
Glanville’s situation at first occasioned; with a violent effort, I
shook it off, and bent all my mind to discover the best method to
avail myself, to the utmost, of the short reprieve I had succeeded in
obtaining; at length, one of those sudden thoughts which, from their
suddenness appear more brilliant than they really are, flashed upon my
mind. I remembered the accomplished character of Mr. Job Jonson, and
the circumstance of my having seen him in company with Thornton. Now,
although it was not very likely that Thornton should have made
Mr. Jonson his confidant, in any of those affairs which it was so
essentially his advantage to confine exclusively to himself; yet the
acuteness and penetration visible in the character of the worthy Job,
might not have lain so fallow during his companionship with Thornton,
but that it might have made some discoveries which would considerably
assist me in my researches; besides, as it is literally true in
the systematized roguery of London, that “birds of a feather flock
together,” it was by no means unlikely that the honest Job might be
honoured with the friendship of Mr. Dawson, as well as the company of
Mr. Thornton; in which case I looked forward with greater confidence to
the detection of the notable pair.

I could not, however, conceal from myself, that this was but a very
unstable and ill-linked chain of reasoning, and there were moments, when
the appearances against Glanville wore so close a semblance of truth,
that all my friendship could scarcely drive from my mind an intrusive
suspicion that he might have deceived me, and that the accusation might
not be groundless.

This unwelcome idea did not, however, at all lessen the rapidity with
which I hastened towards the memorable gin shop, where I had whilom met
Mr. Gordon--there I hoped to find either the address of that gentleman,
or of the “Club,” to which he had taken me, in company with Tringle and
Dartmore: either at this said club, or of that said gentleman, I thought
it not unlikely that I might hear some tidings of the person of Mr.
Job Jonson--if not, I was resolved to return to the office, and employ
Mr.--my mulberry-cheeked acquaintance of the last night, in a search
after the holy Job.

Fate saved me a world of trouble; as I was hastily walking onwards, I
happened to turn my eyes on the opposite side of the way, and discovered
a man dressed, in what the newspapers term, the very height of the
fashion, namely, in the most ostentatious attire that ever flaunted at
Margate, or blazoned in the Palais Royale. The nether garments of this
petit maitre, consisted of a pair of blue tight pantaloons, profusely
braided, and terminating in Hessian boots, adorned with brass spurs of
the most burnished resplendency; a black velvet waistcoat, studded with
gold stars, was backed by a green frock coat, covered, notwithstanding
the heat of the weather, with fur, and frogged and cordonne with the
most lordly indifference, both as to taste and expense: a small French
hat, which might not have been much too large for my Lord of P--, was
set jauntily in the centre of a system of long black curls, which
my eye, long accustomed to penetrate the arcana of habilatory art,
discovered at once to be a wig. A fierce black mustacheo, very much
curled, wandered lovingly from the upper lip, towards the eyes, which
had an unfortunate prepossession for eccentricity in their direction. To
complete the picture, we must suppose some colouring--and this consisted
in a very nice and delicate touch of the rouge pot, which could not be
called by so harsh a term as paint; say, rather that it was a tinge.

No sooner had I set my eyes upon this figure, than I crossed over to
the side of the way which it was adorning, and followed its motions at a
respectful but observant distance.

At length my freluquet marched into a jeweller’s shop in Oxford-street;
with a careless air, I affected, two minutes afterwards, to saunter
into the same shop; the shopman was shewing his bijouterie to him of the
Hessians with the greatest respect; and, beguiled by the splendour of
the wig and waistcoat, turned me over to his apprentice--another time,
I might have been indignant at perceiving that the air noble, on which
I piqued myself far more than all other gifts of nature, personal or
mental, was by no means so universally acknowledged as I had vainly
imagined--at that moment I was too occupied to think of my insulted
dignity. While I was pretending to appear wholly engrossed with some
seals, I kept a vigilant eye on my superb fellow customer: at last, I
saw him secrete a diamond ring, and thrust it, by a singular movement
of the fore finger, up the fur cuff of his capacious sleeve; presently,
some other article of minute size disappeared in the like manner.

The gentleman then rose, expressed himself very well satisfied by the
great taste of the jeweller, said he should look in again on Saturday,
when he hoped the set he had ordered would be completed, and gravely
took his departure amidst the prodigal bows of the shopman and his
helpmates; meanwhile, I bought a seal of small value, paid for it, and
followed my old acquaintance, for the reader has doubtless discovered,
long before this, that the gentleman was no other than Mr. Job Jonson.

Slowly and struttingly did the man of two virtues perform the whole
pilgrimage of Oxford-street. He stopped at Cumberland-gate, and, looking
round, with an air of gentlemanlike indecision, seemed to consider
whether or not he should join the loungers in the park: fortunately for
that well bred set, his doubts terminated in their favour, and Mr.
Job Jonson entered the park. Every one happened to be thronging to
Kensington Gardens, and the man of two virtues accordingly cut across
the park, as the shortest, but the least frequented way thither, in
order to confer upon them the dangerous honour of his company.

Directly I perceived that there were but few persons in the immediate
locality to observe me, and that those consisted of a tall guardsman
and his wife, a family of young children, with their nursery-maid, and
a debilitated East India captain; walking for the sake of his liver, I
overtook the incomparable Job, made him a low bow, and thus reverently
accosted him--

“Mr. Jonson, I am delighted once more to meet you--suffer me to remind
you of the very pleasant morning I passed with you in the neighbourhood
of Hampton Court. I perceive, by your mustachios and military dress,
that you have entered the army since that day; I congratulate the
British troops on such an admirable acquisition.”

Mr. Jonson’s assurance forsook him for a moment, but he lost no time in
regaining a quality which was so natural to his character. He assumed a
fierce look, and relevant sa moustache sourit amerement, like Voltaire’s
governor [Note: Don Fernand d’Ibarra in the “Candide”]--“D--n your
eyes, Sir,” he cried, “do you mean to insult me? I know none of your Mr.
Jonsons, and I never set my eyes upon you before.”

“Lookye, my dear Mr. Job Jonson,” replied I, “as I can prove not only
all I say, but much more that I shall not say--such as your little
mistakes just now, at the jeweller’s shop in Oxford-street, perhaps it
would be better for you not to oblige me to create a mob, and give you
in charge--pardon my abruptness of speech--to a constable!--Surely there
will be no need of such a disagreeable occurrence, when I assure you,
in the first place, that I perfectly forgive you for ridding me of
the unnecessary comforts of a pocket-book and handkerchief, the
unphilosophical appendage of a purse, and the effeminate gage d’amour
of a gold bracelet; nor is this all--it is perfectly indifferent to me,
whether you levy contributions on jewellers or gentlemen, and I am
very far from wishing to intrude upon your harmless occupations, or to
interfere with your innocent amusements. I see, Mr. Jonson, that you are
beginning to understand me; let me facilitate so desirable an end by
an additional information, that, since it is preceded with a promise
to open my purse, may tend somewhat to open your heart; I am, at this
moment, in great want of your assistance--favour me with it, and I will
pay you to your soul’s content. Are we friends now, Mr. Job Jonson?”

My old friend burst out into a loud laugh. “Well, Sir, I must say that
your frankness enchants me. I can no longer dissemble with you; indeed,
I perceive, it would be useless; besides, I always adored candour--it is
my favourite virtue. Tell me how I can help you, and you may command my
services.”

“One word,” said I: “will you be open and ingenuous with me? I shall ask
you certain questions, not in the least affecting your own safety, but
to which, if you would serve me, you must give me (and since candour is
your favourite virtue, this will be no difficult task) your most candid
replies. To strengthen you in so righteous a course, know also, that
the said replies will come verbatim before a court of law, and that,
therefore, it will be a matter of prudence to shape them as closely
to the truth as your inclinations will allow. To counterbalance this
information, which, I own, is not very inviting, I repeat, that the
questions asked you will be wholly foreign to your own affairs, and
that, should you prove of that assistance to me which I anticipate, I
will so testify my gratitude as to place you beyond the necessity
of pillaging rural young gentlemen and credulous shopkeepers for the
future;--all your present pursuits need only be carried on for your
private amusement.”

“I repeat, that you may command me,” returned Mr. Jonson, gracefully
putting his hand to his heart.

“Pray, then,” said I, “to come at once to the point, how long have you
been acquainted with Mr. Thomas Thornton?”

“For some months only,” returned Job, without the least embarrassment.

“And Mr. Dawson?” said I.

A slight change came over Jonson’s countenance: he hesitated. “Excuse
me, Sir,” said he; “but I am, really, perfectly unacquainted with you,
and I may be falling into some trap of the law, of which, Heaven knows,
I am as ignorant as a babe unborn.”

I saw the knavish justice of this remark; and in my predominating zeal
to serve Glanville, I looked upon the inconvenience of discovering
myself to a pickpocket and sharper, as a consideration not worth
attending to. In order, therefore, to remove his doubts, and, at
the same time, to have a more secret and undisturbed place for our
conference, I proposed to him to accompany me home; at first, Mr.
Jonson demurred, but I soon half persuaded and half intimidated him into
compliance.

Not particularly liking to be publicly seen with a person of his
splendid description and celebrated character, I made him walk before me
to Mivart’s, and I followed him closely, never turning my eye, either to
the right or the left, lest he should endeavour to escape me. There was
no fear of this, for Mr. Jonson was both a bold and a crafty man, and it
required, perhaps, but little of his penetration to discover that I was
no officer nor informer, and that my communication had been of a nature
likely enough to terminate in his advantage; there was, therefore, but
little need of his courage in accompanying me to my hotel.

There were a good many foreigners of rank at Mivart’s, and the waiters
took my companion for an ambassador at least:--he received their homage
with the mingled dignity and condescension natural to so great a man.

As the day was now far advanced, I deemed it but hospitable to offer Mr.
Job Jonson some edible refreshment. With the frankness on which he so
justly valued himself, he accepted my proposal. I ordered some cold
meat, and two bottles of wine; and, mindful of old maxims, deferred
my business till his repast was over. I conversed with him merely upon
ordinary topics, and, at another time, should have been much amused
by the singular mixture of impudence and shrewdness which formed the
stratum of his character.

At length his appetite was satisfied, and one of the bottles emptied;
with the other before him, his body easily reclining on my library
chair, his eyes apparently cast downwards, but ever and anon glancing
up at my countenance with a searching and curious look, Mr. Job Jonson
prepared himself for our conference; accordingly I began.

“You say that you are acquainted with Mr. Dawson; where is he at
present?”

“I don’t know,” answered Jonson, laconically.

“Come,” said I, “no trifling--if you do not know, you can learn.”

“Possibly I can, in the course of time,” rejoined honest Job.

“If you cannot tell me his residence at once,” said I, “our conference
is at an end; that is a leading feature in my inquiries.”

Jonson paused before he replied--“You have spoken to me frankly, let us
do nothing by halves--tell me, at once, the nature of the service I can
do you, and the amount of my reward, and then you shall have my answer.
With respect to Dawson, I will confess to you, that I did once know him
well, and that we have done many a mad prank together, which I should
not like the bugaboos and bulkies to know; you will, therefore, see that
I am naturally reluctant to tell you any thing about him, unless your
honour will inform me of the why and the wherefore.”

I was somewhat startled by this speech, and by the shrewd, cunning eye
which dwelt upon me, as it was uttered; but, however, I was by no means
sure, that acceding to his proposal would not be my readiest and
wisest way to the object I had in view. Nevertheless, there were some
preliminary questions to be got over first: perhaps Dawson might be too
dear a friend to the candid Job, for the latter to endanger his safety;
or perhaps, (and this was more probable,) Jonson might be perfectly
ignorant of any thing likely to aid me: in this case my communication
would be useless; accordingly I said, after a short consideration--

“Patience, my dear Mr. Jonson--patience, you shall know all in good
time; meanwhile I must--even for Dawson’s sake--question you blindfold.
What, now, if your poor friend Dawson were in imminent danger, and that
you might have the power to save him, would you not do all you could?”

The small, coarse features of Mr. Job, grew blank, with a curious sort
of disappointment: “Is that all?” said he. “No! unless I were well paid
for my pains in his behalf, he might go to Botany Bay, for all I care.”

“What!” I cried, in a tone of reproach, “is this your friendship?
I thought, just now, that you said Dawson had been an old and firm
associate of yours.”

“An old one, your honour; but not a firm one. A short time ago, I was
in great distress, and he and Thornton had, God knows how! about two
thousand pounds between them; but I could not worm a stiver out of
Dawson--that gripe-all, Thornton, got it all from him.”

“Two thousand pounds!” said I, in a calm voice, though my heart beat
violently; “that’s a great sum for a poor fellow like Dawson. How long
ago is it since he had it?”

“About two or three months,” answered Jonson.

“Pray, have you seen much of Dawson lately?” I asked.

“I have,” replied Jonson.

“Indeed!” said I. “I thought you told me, just now, that you were
unacquainted with his residence?”

“So I am,” replied Jonson, coldly, “it is not at his own house that I
ever see him.”

I was silent, for I was now rapidly and minutely weighing the benefits
and disadvantages of trusting Jonson as he had desired me to do.

To reduce the question to the simplest form of logic, he had either
the power of assisting my investigation, or he had not: if not, neither
could he much impede it, and therefore, it mattered little whether he
was in my confidence or not; if he had the power, the doubt was, whether
it would be better for me to benefit by it openly, or by stratagem; that
is--whether it were wiser to state the whole case to him, or continue
to gain whatever I was able by dint of a blind examination. Now, the
disadvantage of candour was, that if it were his wish to screen Dawson
and his friend, he would be prepared to do so, and even to put them on
their guard against my suspicions; but the indifference he had testified
with regard to Dawson seemed to render this probability very small. The
benefits of candour were more prominent: Job would then be fully aware
that his own safety was not at stake; and should I make it more his
interest to serve the innocent than the guilty, I should have the entire
advantage, not only of any actual information he might possess, but
of his skill and shrewdness in providing additional proof, or at least
suggesting advantageous hints. Moreover, in spite of my vanity and
opinion of my own penetration, I could not but confess, that it was
unlikely that my cross-examination should be very successful with so old
and experienced a sinner as Mr. Jonson. “Set a thief to catch a thief,”
 is among the wisest of wise sayings, and accordingly I resolved in
favour of a disclosure.

Drawing my chair close to Jonson’s, fixing my eye upon his countenance,
and throwing into my own the most open, yet earnest expression I could
summon, I briefly proceeded to sketch Glanville’s situation (only
concealing his name), and Thornton’s charges. I mentioned my own
suspicions of the accuser, and my desire of discovering Dawson, whom
Thornton appeared to me artfully to secrete. Lastly, I concluded, with
a solemn promise, that if my listener could, by any zeal, exertion,
knowledge, or contrivance of his own, procure the detection of the men,
whom I was convinced were the murderers, a pension of three hundred
pounds a-year should be immediately settled upon him.

During my communication, the patient Job sat mute and still, fixing his
eyes on the ground, and only betraying, by an occasional elevation
of the brows, that he took the slightest interest in the tale: when,
however, I touched upon the peroration, which so tenderly concluded with
the mention of three hundred pounds a-year, a visible change came over
the countenance of Mr. Jonson. He rubbed his hands with an air of great
content, and one sudden smile broke over his features, and almost buried
his eyes amid the intricate host of wrinkles it called forth: the smile
vanished as rapidly as it came, and Mr. Job turned round to me with a
solemn and sedate aspect.

“Well, your honour,” said he, “I’m glad you’ve told me all; we must see
what can be done. As for Thornton, I’m afraid we shan’t make much out
of him, for he’s an old offender, whose conscience is as hard as a
brick-bat; but, of Dawson, I hope better things. However, you must let
me go now, for this is a matter that requires a vast deal of private
consideration. I shall call upon you tomorrow, Sir, before ten o’clock,
since you say matters are so pressing; and, I trust, you will then see
that you have no reason to repent of the confidence you have placed in a
man of honour.”

So saying, Mr. Job Jonson emptied the remainder of the bottle into his
tumbler, held it up to the light with the gusto of a connoisseur, and
concluded his potations with a hearty smack of the lips, followed by a
long sigh.

“Ah, your honour!” said he, “good wine is a marvellous whetter of the
intellect; but your true philosopher is always moderate: for my part, I
never exceed my two bottles.”

And with these words, this true philosopher took his departure.

No sooner was I freed from his presence, than my thoughts flew to Ellen:
I had neither been able to call nor write the whole of the day; and I
was painfully fearful, lest my precautions with Sir Reginald’s valet had
been frustrated, and the alarm of his imprisonment reached her and Lady
Glanville. Harassed by this fear, I disregarded the lateness of the
hour, and immediately repaired to Berkeley-square.

Lady and Miss Glanville were alone and at dinner: the servant spoke with
his usual unconcern--“They are quite well?” said I, relieved, but still
anxious: and the servant replying in the affirmative, I again returned
home, and wrote a long, and, I hope, consoling letter to Sir Reginald.



VOLUME VIII.



CHAPTER LXXX.

K. Henry. Lord Say, Jack Cade hath sworn to have thy head.

Say. Ay, but I hope your Highness shall have his.--2nd Part of Henry
IV.

Punctual to his appointment, the next morning came Mr. Job Jonson. I had
been on the rack of expectation for the last three hours previous to
his arrival, and the warmth of my welcome must have removed any little
diffidence with which so shame-faced a gentleman might possibly have
been troubled.

At my request, he sat himself down, and seeing that my breakfast things
were on the table, remarked what a famous appetite the fresh air
always gave him. I took the hint, and pushed the rolls towards him. He
immediately fell to work, and for the next quarter of an hour, his mouth
was far too well occupied for the intrusive impertinence of words. At
last the things were removed, and Mr. Jonson began.

“I have thought well over the matter, your honour, and I believe we can
manage to trounce the rascals--for I agree with you, that there is not
a doubt that Thornton and Dawson are the real criminals; but the affair,
Sir, is one of the greatest difficulty and importance--nay, of the
greatest personal danger. My life may be the forfeit of my desire to
serve you--you will not, therefore, be surprised at my accepting your
liberal offer of three hundred a year, should I be successful; although
I do assure you, Sir, that it was my original intention to reject all
recompence, for I am naturally benevolent, and love doing a good
action. Indeed, Sir, if I were alone in the world, I should scorn any
remuneration, for virtue is its own reward; but a real moralist, your
honour, must not forget his duties on any consideration, and I have a
little family to whom my loss would be an irreparable injury; this,
upon my honour, is my only inducement for taking advantage of your
generosity;” and as the moralist ceased, he took out of his waistcoat
pocket a paper, which he handed to me with his usual bow of deference.

I glanced over it--it was a bond, apparently drawn up in all the legal
formalities, pledging myself, in case Job Jonson, before the expiration
of three days, gave that information which should lead to the detection
and punishment of the true murderers of Sir John Tyrrell, deceased,
to ensure to the said Job Jonson the yearly annuity of three hundred
pounds.

“It is with much pleasure that I shall sign this paper,” said I; “but
allow me (par parenthese) to observe, that since you only accept the
annuity for the sake of benefiting your little family, in case of your
death, this annuity, ceasing with your life, will leave your children as
pennyless as at present.”

“Pardon me, your honour,” rejoined Job, not a whit daunted at the truth
of my remark, “I can insure!”

“I forgot that,” said I, signing, and restoring the paper; “and now to
business.”

Jonson gravely and carefully looked over the interesting document I
returned to him, and carefully lapping it in three envelopes, inserted
it in a huge red pocket-book, which he thrust into an innermost pocket
in his waistcoat.

“Right, Sir,” said he, slowly, “to business. Before I begin, you must,
however, promise me, upon your honour as a gentleman, the strictest
secrecy, as to my communications.”

I readily agreed to this, so far as that secrecy did not impede my
present object; and Job being content with this condition, resumed.

“You must forgive me, if, in order to arrive at the point in question, I
set out from one which may seem to you a little distant.”

I nodded my assent, and Job continued.

“I have known Dawson for some years; my acquaintance with him commenced
at Newmarket, for I have always had a slight tendency to the turf. He
was a wild, foolish fellow, easily led into any mischief, but ever the
first to sneak out of it; in short, when he became one of us, which
his extravagance soon compelled him to do, we considered him as a very
serviceable tool, but one, that while he was quite wicked enough to
begin a bad action, was much too weak to go through with it; accordingly
he was often employed, but never trusted. By the word us, which I see
has excited your curiosity, I merely mean a body corporate, established
furtively, and restricted solely to exploits on the turf. I think it
right to mention this, because I have the honour to belong to many other
societies to which Dawson could never have been admitted. Well, Sir, our
club was at last broken up, and Dawson was left to shift for himself.
His father was still alive, and the young hopeful having quarrelled with
him, was in the greatest distress. He came to me with a pitiful story,
and a more pitiful face; so I took compassion upon the poor devil, and
procured him, by dint of great interest, admission into a knot of good
fellows, whom I visited, by the way, last night. Here I took him
under my especial care; and as far as I could, with such a dull-headed
dromedary, taught him some of the most elegant arts of my profession.
However, the ungrateful dog soon stole back to his old courses, and
robbed me of half my share of a booty to which I had helped him myself.
I hate treachery and ingratitude, your honour; they are so terribly
ungentlemanlike.

“I then lost sight of him, till between two and three months ago, when
he returned to town, and attended our meetings with Tom Thornton, who
had been chosen a member of the club some months before. Since we had
met, Dawson’s father had died, and I thought his flash appearance in
town arose from his new inheritance. I was mistaken: old Dawson had tied
up the property so tightly, that the young one could not scrape enough
to pay his debts; accordingly, before he came to town, he gave up his
life interest in the property to his creditors. However that be, Master
Dawson seemed at the top of Fortune’s wheel. He kept his horses, and
sported the set to champagne and venison; in short, there would have
been no end to his extravagance, had not Thornton sucked him like a
leech.

“It was about that time, that I asked Dawson for a trifle to keep me
from jail; for I was ill in bed, and could not help myself. Will you
believe, Sir, that the rascal told me to go and be d--d, and Thornton
said amen? I did not forget the ingratitude of my protege, though when
I recovered I appeared entirely to do so. No sooner could I walk about,
than I relieved all my necessities. He is but a fool who starves, with
all London before him. In proportion as my finances increased, Dawson’s
visibly decayed. With them, decreased also his spirits. He became
pensive and downcast; never joined any of our parties, and gradually
grew quite a useless member of the corporation. To add to his
melancholy, he was one morning present at the execution of an
unfortunate associate of ours: this made a deep impression upon him;
from that moment, he became thoroughly moody and despondent. He was
frequently heard talking to himself, could not endure to be left alone
in the dark, and began rapidly to pine away.

“One night, when he and I were seated together, he asked me if I never
repented of my sins, and then added, with a groan, that I had never
committed the heinous crime he had. I pressed him to confess, but he
would not. However, I coupled that half avowal with his sudden riches
and the mysterious circumstances of Sir John Tyrrell’s death, and dark
suspicions came into my mind. At that time, and indeed ever since Dawson
re-appeared, we were often in the habit of discussing the notorious
murder which then engrossed public attention; and as Dawson and Thornton
had been witnesses on the inquest, we frequently referred to them
respecting it. Dawson always turned pale, and avoided the subject;
Thornton, on the contrary, brazened it out with his usual impudence.
Dawson’s aversion to the mention of the murder now came into my
remembrance with double weight to strengthen my suspicions; and, on
conversing with one or two of our comrades, I found that my doubts
were more than shared, and that Dawson had frequently, when unusually
oppressed with his hypochondria, hinted at his committal of some
dreadful crime, and at his unceasing remorse for it.

“By degrees, Dawson grew worse and worse--his health decayed, he started
at a shadow--drank deeply, and spoke, in his intoxication, words that
made the hairs of our green men stand on end.

“We must not suffer this,” said Thornton, whose hardy effrontery enabled
him to lord it over the jolly boys, as if he were their dimber-damber;
“his ravings and humdurgeon will unman all our youngsters.” And so,
under this pretence, Thornton had the unhappy man conveyed away to a
secret asylum, known only to the chiefs of the gang, and appropriated
to the reception of persons who, from the same weakness as Dawson, were
likely to endanger others, or themselves. There many a poor wretch
has been secretly immured, and never suffered to revisit the light of
Heaven. The moon’s minions, as well as the monarch’s, must have their
state prisoners, and their state victims.

“Well, Sir, I shall not detain you much longer. Last night, after your
obliging confidence, I repaired to the meeting; Thornton was there, and
very much out of humour. When our messmates dropped off, and we were
alone, at one corner of the room, I began talking to him carelessly
about his accusation of your friend, whom I have since learnt is Sir
Reginald Glanville--an old friend of mine too; aye, you may look, Sir,
but I can stake my life to having picked his pocket one night at the
Opera. Thornton was greatly surprised at my early intelligence of a
fact, hitherto kept so profound a secret; however, I explained it
away by a boast of my skill in acquiring information: and he then
incautiously let out, that he was exceedingly vexed with himself for the
charge he had made against the prisoner, and very uneasy at the urgent
inquiries set on foot for Dawson. More and more convinced of his guilt,
I quitted the meeting, and went to Dawson’s retreat.

“For fear of his escape, Thornton had had him closely confined to one of
the most secret rooms in the house. His solitude and the darkness of
the place, combined with his remorse, had worked upon a mind, never
too strong, almost to insanity. He was writhing with the most acute and
morbid pangs of conscience that my experience, which has been pretty
ample, ever witnessed. The old hag, who is the Hecate (you see, Sir, I
have had a classical education) of the place, was very loth to admit
me to him, for Thornton had bullied her into a great fear of the
consequences of disobeying his instructions; but she did not dare
to resist my orders. Accordingly I had a long interview with the
unfortunate man; he firmly believes that Thornton intends to murder him;
and says, that if he could escape from his dungeon, he would surrender
himself up to the first magistrate he could find.

“I told him that an innocent man had been apprehended for the crime of
which I knew he and Thornton were guilty; and then taking upon myself
the office of a preacher, I exhorted him to atone, as far as possible,
for his past crime, by a full and faithful confession; that would
deliver the innocent, and punish the guilty. I held out to him the hope
that this confession might perhaps serve the purpose of king’s evidence,
and obtain him a pardon for his crime; and I promised to use my utmost
zeal and diligence to promote his escape from his present den.

“He said, in answer, that he did not wish to live; that he suffered the
greatest tortures of mind; and that the only comfort earth held out to
him would be to ease his remorse by a full acknowledgment of his crime,
and to hope for future mercy by expiating his offence on the scaffold;
all this, and much more, to the same purpose, the hen-hearted fellow
told me with sighs and groans. I would fain have taken his confession on
the spot, and carried it away with me, but he refused to give it to me,
or to any one but a parson, whose services he implored me to procure
him. I told him, at first, that the thing was impossible; but, moved by
his distress and remorse, I promised, at last, to bring one tonight,
who should both administer spiritual comfort to him and receive his
deposition. My idea at the moment was to disguise myself in the dress of
the pater cove, [Note: A parson, or minister--but generally applied to
a priest of the lowest order.] and perform the double job--since then I
have thought of a better scheme.

“As my character, you see, your honour, is not so highly prized by the
magistrates as it ought to be, any confession made to me might not be of
the same value as if it were made to any one else--to a gentleman like
you, for instance; and, moreover, it will not do for me to appear in
evidence against any of the fraternity; and for two reasons: first,
because I have taken a solemn oath never to do so; and, secondly,
because I have a very fair chance of joining Sir John Tyrrell in kingdom
come if I do. My present plan, therefore, if it meets your concurrence,
would be to introduce your honour as the parson, and for you to receive
the confession, which, indeed, you might take down in writing. This
plan, I candidly confess, is not without great difficulty and some
danger; for I have not only to impose you upon Dawson as a priest, but
also upon Brimstone Bess as one of our jolly boys; for I need not tell
you that any real parson might knock a long time at her door before it
could be opened to him. You must, therefore, be as mum as a mole, unless
she cants to you, and your answers must then be such as I shall dictate,
otherwise she may detect you, and, should any of the true men be in the
house, we should both come off worse than we went in.”

“My dear Mr. Job,” replied I, “there appears to me to be a much easier
plan than all this; and that is, simply to tell the Bow-street officers
where Dawson may be found, and I think they would be able to carry him
away from the arms of Mrs. Brimstone Bess without any great difficulty
or danger.”

Jonson smiled.

“I should not long enjoy my annuity, your honour, if I were to set the
runners upon our best hive. I should be stung to death before the week
was out. Even you, should you accompany me to-night, will never know
where the spot is situated, nor would you discover it again if you
searched all London, with the whole police at your back. Besides, Dawson
is not the only person in the house for whom the law is hunting--there
are a score others whom I have no desire to give up to the gallows--hid
among the odds and ends of the house, as snug as plums in a pudding. God
forbid that I should betray them, and for nothing too! No, your honour,
the only plan I can think of is the one I proposed; if you do not
approve of it, and it certainly is open to exception, I must devise some
other: but that may require delay.”

“No, my good Job,” replied I, “I am ready to attend you: but could
we not manage to release Dawson, as well as take his deposition?--his
personal evidence is worth all the written ones in the world.”

“Very true,” answered Job, “and if it be possible to give Bess the slip,
we will. However, let us not lose what we may get by grasping at what we
may not; let us have the confession first, and we’ll try for the release
afterwards. I have another reason for this, Sir, which, if you knew as
much of penitent prigs as I do, you would easily understand. However, it
may be explained by the old proverb, of ‘the devil was sick,’ As long
as Dawson is stowed away in a dark hole, and fancies devils in every
corner, he may be very anxious to make confessions, which, in broad
day-light, might not seem to him so desirable. Darkness and solitude are
strange stimulants to the conscience, and we may as well not lose any
advantage they give us.”

“You are an admirable reasoner,” cried I, “and I am impatient to
accompany you--at what hour shall it be?”

“Not much before midnight,” answered Jonson, “but your honour must
go back to school and learn lessons before then. Suppose Bess were
to address you thus: ‘Well you parish bull prig, are you for lushing
jackey, or pattering in the hum box?’ [Note: Well, you parson thief, are
you for drinking gin, or talking in the pulpit?] I’ll be bound you would
not know how to answer.”

“I am afraid you are right, Mr. Jonson,” said I, in a tone of
self-humiliation.

“Never mind,” replied the compassionate Job, “we are all born
ignorant--knowledge is not learnt in a day. A few of the most common and
necessary words in our St. Giles’s Greek, I shall be able to teach you
before night; and I will, beforehand, prepare the old lady for seeing a
young hand in the profession. As I must disguise you before we go, and
that cannot well be done here, suppose you dine with me at my lodgings.”

“I shall be too happy,” said I, not a little surprised at the offer.

“I am in Charlotte-street, Bloomsbury, No.--. You must ask for me by
the name of Captain Douglas,” said Job, with dignity, “and we’ll dine at
five, in order to have time for your preliminary initiation.”

“With all my heart,” said I; and Mr. Job Jonson then rose, and reminding
me of my promise of secrecy, took his departure.



CHAPTER LXXXI.

Pectus praeceptis format amicis.--Horace.

Est quodam prodire tenus, si non datur ultra.--Horace.

With all my love of enterprise and adventure, I cannot say that I
should have particularly chosen the project before me for my evening’s
amusement, had I been left solely to my own will; but Glanville’s
situation forbade me to think of self, and so far from shrinking at the
danger to which I was about to be exposed, I looked forward with the
utmost impatience to the hour of rejoining Jonson.

There was yet a long time upon my hands before five o’clock; and the
thought of Ellen left me in no doubt how it should be passed. I went
to Berkeley-square; Lady Glanville rose eagerly when I entered the
drawing-room.

“Have you seen Reginald?” said she, “or do you know where he has gone
to?”

I answered, carelessly, that he had left town for a few days, and, I
believed, merely upon a vague excursion, for the benefit of the country
air.

“You reassure us,” said Lady Glanville; “we have been quite alarmed by
Seymour’s manner. He appeared so confused when he told us Reginald left
town, that I really thought some accident had happened to him.”

I sate myself by Ellen, who appeared wholly occupied in the formation
of a purse. While I was whispering into her ear words, which brought
a thousand blushes to her cheek, Lady Glanville interrupted me, by an
exclamation of “Have you seen the papers to-day, Mr. Pelham?” and on my
reply in the negative, she pointed to an article in the Morning Herald,
which she said had occupied their conjectures all the morning--it ran
thus:--

“The evening before last, a person of rank and celebrity, was privately
carried before the Magistrate at--. Since then, he has undergone an
examination, the nature of which, as well as the name of the individual,
is as yet kept a profound secret.”

I believe that I have so firm a command over my countenance, that I
should not change tint nor muscle, to hear of the greatest calamity
that could happen to me. I did not therefore betray a single one of
the emotions this paragraph excited within me, but appeared, on the
contrary, as much at a loss as Lady Glanville, and wondered and guessed
with her, till she remembered my present situation in the family, and
left me alone with Ellen.

Why should the tete-a-tete of lovers be so uninteresting to the
world--when there is scarcely a being in it who has not loved. The
expressions of every other feeling comes home to us all--the expressions
of love weary and fatigue us. But the interview of that morning, was far
from resembling those which the maxims of love at that early period
of its existence would assert. I could not give myself up to happiness
which might so soon be disturbed, and though I veiled my anxiety and
coldness from Ellen, I felt it as a crime to indulge even the appearance
of transport, while Glanville lay alone, and in prison, with the charges
of murder yet uncontroverted, and the chances of its doom undiminshed.

The clock had struck four before I left Ellen’s, and without returning
to my hotel, I threw myself into a hackney coach, and drove to
Charlotte-street. The worthy Job received me with his wonted dignity and
ease; his lodgings consisted of a first floor, furnished according
to all the notions of Bloomsbury elegance--viz. new, glaring Brussels
carpeting; convex mirrors, with massy gilt frames, and eagles at the
summit; rosewood chairs, with chintz cushions; bright grates, with
a flower-pot, cut out of yellow paper, in each; in short, all that
especial neatness of upholstering paraphernalia, which Vincent used
not inaptly, to designate by the title of “the tea-chest taste.” Jonson
seemed not a little proud of his apartments--accordingly, I complimented
him upon their elegance.

“Under the rose be it spoken,” said he, “the landlady, who is a widow,
believes me to be an officer on half pay, and thinks I wish to marry
her; poor woman, my black locks and green coat have a witchery that
surprises even me: who would be a slovenly thief, when there are such
advantages in being a smart one?”

“Right, Mr. Jonson!” said I; “but shall I own to you that I am surprised
that a gentleman of your talents should stoop to the lower arts of the
profession. I always imagined that pickpocketing was a part of your
business left only to the plebeian purloiner; now I know, to my cost,
that you do not disdain that manual accomplishment.”

“Your honour speaks like a judge,” answered Job: “the fact is, that
I should despise what you rightly designate ‘the lower arts of the
profession,’ if I did not value myself upon giving them a charm, and
investing them with a dignity never bestowed upon them before. To give
you an idea of the superior dexterity with which I manage my slight of
hand, know, that four times I have been in that shop where you saw me
borrow the diamond ring, which you now remark upon my little finger; and
four times have I brought back some token of my visitations; nay, the
shopman is so far from suspecting me, that he has twice favoured me with
the piteous tale of the very losses I myself brought upon him; and I
make no doubt that I shall hear in a few days, the whole history of
the departed diamond, now in my keeping, coupled with your honour’s
appearance and custom. Allow that it would be a pity to suffer pride to
stand in the way of the talents with which Providence has blest me; to
scorn the little delicacies of art, which I execute so well, would, in
my opinion, be as absurd as for an epic poet to disdain the composition
of a perfect epigram, or a consummate musician, the melody of a
faultless song.”

“Bravo! Mr. Job,” said I; “a truly great man, you see, can confer
honour upon trifles.” More I might have said, but was stopt short by
the entrance of the landlady, who was a fine, fair, well dressed, comely
woman, of about thirty-nine years and eleven months; or, to speak less
precisely, between thirty and forty. She came to announce that dinner
was served below. We descended, and found a sumptuous repast of roast
beef and fish; this primary course was succeeded by that great dainty
with common people--a duck and green peas.

“Upon my word, Mr. Jonson,” said I, “you fare like a prince; your weekly
expenditure must be pretty considerable for a single gentleman.”

“I don’t know,” answered Jonson, with an air of lordly indifference--“I
have never paid my good hostess any coin but compliments, and, in all
probability, never shall.”

Was there ever a better illustration of Moore’s admonition--

‘O, ladies, beware of a gay young knight,

After dinner, we remounted to the apartments Job emphatically called his
own; and he then proceeded to initiate me in those phrases of the
noble language of “Flash,” which might best serve my necessities on the
approaching occasion. The slang part of my Cambridge education had made
me acquainted with some little elementary knowledge, which rendered
Jonson’s precepts less strange and abstruse. In this lecture, “sweet and
holy,” the hours passed away till it became time for me to dress. Mr.
Jonson then took me into the penetralia of his bed-room. I stumbled
against an enormous trunk. On hearing the involuntary anathema this
accident conjured up to my lips, Jonson said--“Ah, Sir!--do oblige me by
trying to move that box.”

I did so, but could not stir it an inch.

“Your honour never saw a jewel box so heavy before, I think,” said
Jonson, with a smile.

“A jewel box!” I repeated.

“Yes,” returned Jonson--“a jewel box, for it is full of precious stones!
When I go away--not a little in my good landlady’s books--I shall desire
her, very importantly, to take the greatest care of ‘my box.’ Egad! it
would be a treasure to MacAdam: he might pound its flinty contents into
a street.”

With these words, Mr. Jonson unlocked a wardrobe in the room, and
produced a full suit of rusty black.

“There!” said he, with an air of satisfaction--“there! this will be your
first step to the pulpit.”

I doffed my own attire, and with “some natural sighs,” at the deformity
of my approaching metamorphosis, I slowly inducted myself in the
clerical garments: they were much too wide, and a little too short for
me; but Jonson turned me round, as if I were his eldest son, breeched
for the first time--and declared, with an emphatical oath, that the
clothes fitted me to a hair.

My host next opened a tin dressing box, of large dimensions, from which
he took sundry powders, lotions, and paints. Nothing but my extreme
friendship for Glanville could ever have supported me through the
operation I then underwent. My poor complexion, thought I, with tears in
my eyes, it is ruined for ever. To crown all--Jonson robbed me, by four
clips of his scissars, of the luxuriant locks which, from the pampered
indulgence so long accorded to them, might have rebelled against the
new dynasty, which Jonson now elected to the crown. This consisted of
a shaggy, but admirably made wig, of a sandy colour. When I was thus
completely attired from head to foot, Job displayed me to myself before
a full length looking glass.

Had I gazed at the reflection for ever, I should not have recognized
either my form or visage. I thought my soul had undergone a real
transmigration, and not carried to its new body a particle of the
original one. What appeared the most singular was, that I did not seem
even to myself at all a ridiculous or outre figure; so admirably had
the skill of Mr. Jonson been employed. I overwhelmed him with encomiums,
which he took au pied de la lettre. Never, indeed, was there a man so
vain of being a rogue.

“But,” said I, “why this disguise? Your friends will, probably, be well
versed enough in the mysteries of metamorphosis, to see even through
your arts; and, as they have never beheld me before, it would very
little matter if I went in propria persona.”

“True,” answered Job, “but you don’t reflect that without disguise you
may hereafter be recognized; our friends walk in Bond-street, as well as
your honour; and, in that case, you might be shot without a second, as
the saying is.”

“You have convinced me,” said I; “and now, before we start, let me say
one word further respecting our object. I tell you, fairly, that I think
Dawson’s written deposition but a secondary point; and, for this reason,
should it not be supported by any circumstantial or local evidence,
hereafter to be ascertained, it may be quite insufficient fully to
acquit Glanville (in spite of all appearances), and criminate the real
murderers. If, therefore, it be possible to carry off Dawson, after
having secured his confession, we must. I think it right to insist more
particularly on this point, as you appeared to me rather averse to it
this morning.”

“I say ditto to your honour,” returned Job; “and you may be sure that I
shall do all in my power to effect your object, not only from that love
of virtue which is implanted in my mind, when no stronger inducement
leads me astray, but from the more worldly reminiscence, that the
annuity we have agreed upon is only to be given in case of success--not
merely for well meaning attempts. To say that I have no objection to the
release of Dawson, would be to deceive your honour; I own that I have;
and the objection is, first, my fear lest he should peach respecting
other affairs besides the murder of Sir John Tyrrell; and, secondly,
my scruples as to appearing to interfere with his escape. Both of these
chances expose me to great danger; however, one does not get three
hundred a year for washing one’s hands, and I must balance the one by
the other.”

“You are a sensible man, Mr. Job,” said I; “and I am sure you will
richly earn, and long enjoy your annuity.”

As I said this, the watchman beneath our window, called “past eleven,”
 and Jonson, starting up, hastily changed his own gay gear for a more
simple dress, and throwing over all a Scotch plaid, gave me a similar
one, in which I closely wrapped myself. We descended the stairs softly,
and Jonson let us out into the street, by the “open sesame” of a key,
which he retained about his person.



CHAPTER LXXXII.

Et cantare pares, et respondere parati.--Virgil.

As we walked on into Tottenham-court-road, where we expected to find a
hackney-coach, my companion earnestly and strenuously impressed on my
mind, the necessity of implicitly obeying any instructions or hints
he might give me in the course of our adventure. “Remember,” said he,
forcibly, “that the least deviation from them, will not only defeat
our object of removing Dawson, but even expose our lives to the most
imminent peril.” I faithfully promised to conform to the minutest tittle
of his instructions.

We came to a stand of coaches. Jonson selected one, and gave the
coachman an order; he took care it should not reach my ears. During the
half hour we passed in this vehicle, Job examined and reexamined me
in my “canting catechism,” as he termed it. He expressed himself
much pleased with the quickness of my parts, and honoured me with an
assurance that in less than three months he would engage to make me as
complete a ruffler as ever nailed a swell.

To this gratifying compliment I made the best return in my power.

“You must not suppose,” said Jonson--some minutes afterwards, “from
our use of this language, that our club consists of the lower order of
thieves--quite the contrary: we are a knot of gentlemen adventurers who
wear the best clothes, ride the best hacks, frequent the best gaming
houses, as well as the genteelest haunts, and sometimes keep the first
company in London. We are limited in number: we have nothing in common
with ordinary prigs, and should my own little private amusements (as you
appropriately term them) be known in the set, I should have a very
fair chance of being expelled for ungentlemanlike practices. We rarely
condescend to speak ‘flash’ to each other in our ordinary meetings, but
we find it necessary, for many shifts to which fortune sometimes drives
us. The house you are going this night to visit, is a sort of colony
we have established for whatever persons amongst us are in danger of
blood-money. [Rewards for the apprehension of thieves.] There they
sometimes lie concealed for weeks together, and are at last shipped off
for the continent, or enter the world under a new alias. To this refuge
of the distressed we also send any of the mess, who, like Dawson, are
troubled with qualms of conscience, which are likely to endanger the
commonwealth; there they remain, as in a hospital, till death, or a
cure, in short, we put the house, like its inmates, to any purposes
likely to frustrate our enemies, and serve ourselves. Old Brimstone
Bess, to whom I shall introduce you, is, as I before said, the guardian
of the place; and the language that respectable lady chiefly indulges
in, is the one into which you have just acquired so good an insight.
Partly in compliment to her, and partly from inclination, the dialect
adopted in her house, is almost entirely ‘flash;’ and you, therefore,
perceive the necessity of appearing not utterly ignorant of a tongue,
which is not only the language of the country, but one with which no
true boy, however high in his profession, is ever unacquainted.”

By the time Jonson had finished this speech, the coach stopped--I looked
eagerly out--Jonson observed the motion: “We have not got half-way yet,
your honour,” said he. We left the coach, which Jonson requested me to
pay, and walked on.

“Tell me frankly, Sir,” said Job, “do you know where you are?”

“Not in the least,” replied I, looking wistfully up a long, dull,
ill-lighted street.

Job rolled his sinister eye towards me with a searching look, and then
turning abruptly to the right, penetrated into a sort of covered lane,
or court, which terminated in an alley, that brought us suddenly to a
stand of three coaches; one of these Job hailed--we entered it--a secret
direction was given, and we drove furiously on, faster than I should
think the crazy body of hackney chariot ever drove before. I observed,
that we had now entered a part of the town, which was singularly
strange to me; the houses were old, and for the most part of the meanest
description; we appeared to me to be threading a labyrinth of alleys;
once, I imagined that I caught, through a sudden opening, a glimpse of
the river, but we passed so rapidly, that my eye might have deceived
me. At length we stopped: the coachman was again dismissed, and I again
walked onwards, under the guidance, and almost at the mercy of my honest
companion.

Jonson did not address me--he was silent and absorbed, and I had
therefore full leisure to consider my present situation. Though (thanks
to my physical constitution) I am as callous to fear as most men, a few
chilling apprehensions, certainly flitted across my mind, when I looked
round at the dim and dreary sheds--houses they were not--which were
on either side of our path; only here and there, a single lamp shed a
sickly light upon the dismal and intersecting lanes (though lane is
too lofty a word), through which our footsteps woke a solitary sound.
Sometimes this feeble light was altogether withheld, and I could
scarcely catch even the outline of my companion’s muscular frame.
However, he strode on through the darkness, with the mechanical rapidity
of one to whom every stone is familiar. I listened eagerly for the sound
of the watchman’s voice, in vain--that note was never heard in those
desolate recesses. My ear drank in nothing but the sound of our own
footsteps, or the occasional burst of obscene and unholy merriment from
some half-closed hovel, where infamy and vice were holding revels.
Now and then, a wretched thing, in the vilest extreme of want,
and loathsomeness, and rags, loitered by the unfrequent lamps, and
interrupted our progress with solicitations, which made my blood run
cold. By degrees even these tokens of life ceased--the last lamp was
entirely shut from our view--we were in utter darkness.

“We are near our journey’s end now,” whispered Jonson

At these words a thousand unwelcome reflections forced themselves
voluntarily on my mind: I was about to plunge into the most secret
retreat of men whose long habits of villany and desperate abandonment,
had hardened into a nature which had scarcely a sympathy with my own;
unarmed and defenceless, I was going to penetrate a concealment upon
which their lives perhaps depended; what could I anticipate from
their vengeance, but the sure hand and the deadly knife, which their
self-preservation would more than justify to such lawless reasoners. And
who was my companion? One, who literally gloried in the perfection of
his nefarious practices; and who, if he had stopped short of the worst
enormities, seemed neither to disown the principle upon which they were
committed, nor to balance for a moment between his interest and his
conscience.

Nor did he attempt to conceal from me the danger to which I was exposed;
much as his daring habits of life, and the good fortune which had
attended him, must have hardened his nerves, even he, seemed fully
sensible of the peril he incurred--a peril certainly considerably less
than that which attended my temerity. Bitterly did I repent, as these
reflections rapidly passed my mind, my negligence in not providing
myself with a single weapon in case of need: the worst pang of death, is
the falling without a struggle.

However, it was no moment for the indulgence of fear, it was rather
one of those eventful periods which so rarely occur in the monotony
of common life, when our minds are sounded to their utmost depths: and
energies of which we dreamt not, when at rest in their secret retreats,
arise like spirits at the summons of the wizard, and bring to the
invoking mind, an unlooked for and preternatural aid.

There was something too in the disposition of my guide, which gave me a
confidence in him, not warranted by the occupations of his life; an easy
and frank boldness, an ingenuous vanity of abilities, skilfully, though
dishonestly exerted, which had nothing of the meanness and mystery of an
ordinary villain, and which being equally prominent with the rascality
they adorned, prevented the attention from dwelling only upon the darker
shades of his character. Besides, I had so closely entwined his interest
with my own, that I felt there could be no possible ground either for
suspecting him of any deceit towards me, or of omitting any art or
exertion which could conduce to our mutual safety or our common end.

Forcing myself to dwell solely upon the more encouraging side of the
enterprise I had undertaken, we continued to move on, silent and in
darkness, for some minutes longer--Jonson then halted.

“Are you quite prepared, Sir?” said he, in a whisper: “if your heart
fails, in God’s name let us turn back: the least evident terror will be
as much as your life is worth.”

My thoughts were upon Sir Reginald and Ellen, as I replied--

“You have told and convinced me that I may trust is you, and I have no
fears; my present object is one as strong to me as life.”

“I would we had a glim,” rejoined Job, musingly; “I should like to see
your face: but will you give me your hand, Sir?”

I did, and Jonson held it in his own for more than a minute.

“‘Fore Heaven, Sir,” said he, at last, “I would you were one of us. You
would live a brave man and die a game one. Your pulse is like iron; and
your hand does not sway--no--not so much as to wave a dove’s feather; it
would be a burning shame if harm came to so stout a heart.” Job moved on
a few steps. “Now, Sir,” he whispered, “remember your flash; do exactly
as I may have occasion to tell you; and be sure to sit away from the
light, should we be in company.”

With these words he stopped. I perceived by the touch, for it was
too dark to see, that he was leaning down, apparently in a listening
attitude; presently, he tapped five times at what I supposed was a door,
though I afterwards discovered it was the shutter to a window; upon
this, a faint light broke through the crevices of the boards, and a low
voice uttered some sound, which my ear did not catch. Job replied, in
the same key, and in words which were perfectly unintelligible to me;
the light disappeared; Job moved round, as if turning a corner. I
heard the heavy bolts and bars of a door slowly withdraw; and in a few
moments, a harsh voice said, in the thieves’ dialect,

“Ruffling Job, my prince of prigs, is that you? are you come to the ken
alone, or do you carry double?”

“Ah, Bess, my covess, strike me blind if my sees don’t tout your bingo
muns in spite of the darkmans. Egad, you carry a bane blink aloft. Come
to the ken alone--no! my blowen; did not I tell you I should bring a
pater cove, to chop up the whiners for Dawson?”

“Stubble it, you ben, you deserve to cly the jerk for your patter; come
in, and be d--d to you.”

Upon this invitation, Jonson, seizing me by the arm, pushed me into the
house, and followed. “Go for a glim, Bess, to light in the parish bull
with proper respect. I’ll close the gig of the crib.”

At this order, delivered in an authoritative tone, the old woman,
mumbling “strange oaths” to herself, moved away; when she was out of
hearing, Job whispered,

“Mark, I shall leave the bolts undrawn, the door opens with a latch,
which you press thus--do not forget the spring; it is easy, but
peculiar; should you be forced to run for it, you will also remember,
above all, when you are out of the door, to turn to the right and go
straight forwards.”

The old woman now reappeared with a light, and Jonson ceased, and moved
hastily towards her: I followed. The old woman asked whether the door
had been carefully closed, and Jonson, with an oath at her doubts of
such a matter, answered in the affirmative.

We proceeded onwards, through a long and very narrow passage, till Bess
opened a small door to the left, and introduced us into a large room,
which, to my great dismay, I found already occupied by four men, who
were sitting, half immersed in smoke, by an oak table, with a capacious
bowl of hot liquor before them. At the back ground of this room, which
resembled the kitchen of a public house, was an enormous skreen, of
antique fashion; a low fire burnt sullenly in the grate, and beside it
was one of those high-backed chairs, seem frequently in old houses, and
old pictures. A clock stood in one corner, and in the opposite nook were
a flight of narrow stairs, which led downwards, probably to a cellar.
On a row of shelves, were various bottles of the different liquors
generally in request among the “flash” gentry, together with an
old-fashioned fiddle, two bridles, and some strange looking tools,
probably of more use to true boys than honest men.

Brimstone Bess was a woman about the middle size, but with bones and
sinews which would not have disgraced a prize-fighter; a cap, that might
have been cleaner, was rather thrown than put on the back of her head,
developing, to full advantage, the few scanty locks of grizzled ebon
which adorned her countenance. Her eyes large, black, and prominent,
sparkled with a fire half vivacious, half vixen. The nasal feature
was broad and fungous, and, as well as the whole of her capacious
physiognomy, blushed with the deepest scarlet: it was evident to see
that many a full bottle of “British compounds” had contributed to the
feeding of that burning and phosphoric illumination, which was, indeed,
“the outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace.”

The expression of the countenance was not wholly bad. Amidst the deep
traces of searing vice and unrestrained passion; amidst all that was
bold, and unfeminine, and fierce, and crafty, there was a latent look
of coarse good humour, a twinkle of the eye that bespoke a tendency to
mirth and drollery, and an upward curve of the lip that shewed, however
the human creature might be debased, it still cherished its grand
characteristic--the propensity to laughter.

The garb of this dame Leonarda was by no means of that humble nature
which one might have supposed. A gown of crimson silk, flounced and
furbelowed to the knees, was tastefully relieved by a bright yellow
shawl; and a pair of heavy pendants glittered in her ears, which were
of the size proper to receive “the big words” they were in the habit
of hearing. Probably this finery had its origin in the policy of her
guests, who had seen enough of life to know that age, which tames all
other passions, never tames the passion of dress in a woman’s mind.

No sooner did the four revellers set their eyes upon me than they all
rose.

“Zounds, Bess!” cried the tallest of them, “what cull’s this? Is this a
bowsing ken for every cove to shove his trunk in?”

“What ho, my kiddy,” cried Job, “don’t be glimflashy: why you’d cry beef
on a blater; the cove is a bob cull, and a pal of my own; and, moreover,
is as pretty a Tyburn blossom as ever was brought up to ride a horse
foaled by an acorn.”

Upon this commendatory introduction I was forthwith surrounded, and one
of the four proposed that I should be immediately “elected.”

This motion, which was probably no gratifying ceremony, Job negatived
with a dictatorial air, and reminded his comrades that however they
might find it convenient to lower themselves occasionally, yet that they
were gentlemen sharpers, and not vulgar cracksmen and cly-fakers,
and that, therefore, they ought to welcome me with the good breeding
appropriate to their station.

Upon this hint, which was received with mingled laughter and deference,
for Job seemed to be a man of might among these Philistines, the tallest
of the set, who bore the euphonious appellation of Spider-shanks,
politely asked me if I would “blow a cloud with him?” and, upon my
assent--for I thought such an occupation would be the best excuse for
silence--he presented me with a pipe of tobacco, to which dame Brimstone
applied a light, and I soon lent my best endeavours to darken still
further the atmosphere around us.

Mr. Job Jonson then began artfully to turn the conversation away from
me to the elder confederates of his crew; these were all spoken of
under certain singular appellations which might well baffle impertinent
curiosity. The name of one was “the Gimblet,” another “Crack Crib,” a
third, the “Magician,” a fourth, “Cherry coloured Jowl.” The tallest of
the present company was called (as I before said) “Spider-shanks,” and
the shortest “Fib Fakescrew;” Job himself was honoured by the venerabile
nomen of “Guinea Pig.” At last Job explained the cause of my appearance;
viz. his wish to pacify Dawson’s conscience by dressing up one of the
pals, whom the sinner could not recognize, as an “autem bawler,” and so
obtaining him the benefit of the clergy without endangering the gang
by his confession. This detail was received with great good humour,
and Job, watching his opportunity, soon after rose, and, turning to me,
said,

“Toddle, my bob cull. We must track up the dancers and tout the sinner.”

I wanted no other hint to leave my present situation.

“The ruffian cly thee, Guinea Pig, for stashing the lush,” said
Spider-shanks, helping himself out of the bowl, which was nearly empty.

“Stash the lush!” cried Mrs. Brimstone, “aye, and toddle off to Ruggins.
Why, you would not be boosing till lightman’s in a square crib like
mine, as if you were in a flash panny.”

“That’s bang up, mort!” cried Fib. “A square crib, indeed! aye, square
as Mr. Newman’s courtyard--ding boys on three sides, and the crap on the
fourth!”

This characteristic witticism was received with great applause; and
Jonson, taking a candlestick from the fair fingers of the exasperated
Mrs. Brimstone, the hand thus conveniently released, immediately
transferred itself to Fib’s cheeks, with so hearty a concussion, that
it almost brought the rash jester to the ground. Jonson and I lost not
a moment in taking advantage of the confusion this gentle remonstrance
appeared to occasion; but instantly left the room and closed the door.



CHAPTER LXXXIII.

‘Tis true that we are in great danger; The greater, therefore, should
our courage be.--Shakspeare.

We proceeded a short way, when we were stopped by a door; this Job
opened, and a narrow staircase, lighted from above, by a dim lamp, was
before us. We ascended, and found ourselves in a sort of gallery; here
hung another lamp, beneath which Job opened a closet.

“This is the place where Bess generally leaves the keys,” said he, “we
shall find them here, I hope.”

So saying, Master Job entered, leaving me in the passage, but soon
returned with a disappointed air.

“The old harridan has left them below,” said he, “I must go down for
them; your honour will wait here till I return.”

Suiting the action to the word, honest Job immediately descended,
leaving me alone with my own reflections. Just opposite to the closet
was the door of some apartment; I leant accidentally against it; it was
only a-jar, and gave way; the ordinary consequence in such accidents, is
a certain precipitation from the centre of gravity. I am not exempt from
the general lot; and accordingly entered the room in a manner entirely
contrary to that which my natural inclination would have prompted me to
adopt. My ear was accosted by a faint voice, which proceeded from a bed
at the opposite corner; it asked, in the thieves’ dialect, and in the
feeble accents of bodily weakness, who was there? I did not judge it
necessary to make any reply, but was withdrawing as gently as possible,
when my eye rested upon a table at the foot of the bed, upon which,
among two or three miscellaneous articles, were deposited a brace of
pistols, and one of those admirable swords, made according to the modern
military regulation, for the united purpose of cut and thrust. The light
which enabled me to discover the contents of the room, proceeded from
a rush-light placed in the grate; this general symptom of a
valetudinarian, together with some other little odd matters (combined
with the weak voice of the speaker), impressed me with the idea of
having intruded into the chamber of some sick member of the crew.
Emboldened by this notion, and by perceiving that the curtains were
drawn closely around the bed, so that the inmate could have optical
discernment of nothing that occurred without, I could not resist taking
two soft steps to the table, and quietly removing a weapon whose bright
face seemed to invite me as a long known and long tried friend.

This was not, however, done in so noiseless a manner, but what the voice
again addressed me, in a somewhat louder key, by the appellation of
“Brimstone Bess,” asking, with sundry oaths, “What was the matter?” and
requesting something to drink. I need scarcely say that, as before, I
made no reply, but crept out of the room as gently as possible, blessing
my good fortune for having thrown into my way a weapon with the use of
which, above all others, I was best acquainted. Scarcely had I regained
the passage, before Jonson re-appeared with the keys; I showed him my
treasure (for indeed it was of no size to conceal).

“Are you mad, Sir?” said he, “or do you think that the best way to avoid
suspicion, is to walk about with a drawn sword in your hand? I would
not have Bess see you for the best diamond I ever borrowed.” With these
words Job took the sword from my reluctant hand.

“Where did you get it?” said he.

I explained in a whisper, and Job, re-opening the door I had so
unceremoniously entered, laid the weapon softly on a chair that stood
within reach. The sick man, whose senses were of course rendered doubly
acute by illness, once more demanded in a fretful tone, who was there?
And Job replied, in the flash language, that Bess had sent him up to
look for her keys, which she imagined she had left there. The invalid
rejoined, by a request to Jonson to reach him a draught, and we had to
undergo a farther delay, until his petition was complied with; we then
proceeded up the passage, till we came to another flight of steps,
which led to a door: Job opened it, and we entered a room of no common
dimensions.

“This,” said he, “is Bess Brimstone’s sleeping apartment; whoever
goes into the passage that leads not only to Dawson’s room, but to
the several other chambers occupied by such of the gang as require
particular care, must pass first through this room. You see that bell
by the bedside--I assure you it is no ordinary tintannabulum; it
communicates with every sleeping apartment in the house, and is only
rung in cases of great alarm, when every boy must look well to himself;
there are two more of this description, one in the room which we have
just left, another in the one occupied by Spider-shanks, who is our
watch-dog, and keeps his kennel below. Those steps in the common room,
which seem to lead to a cellar, conduct to his den. As we shall have
to come back through this room, you see the difficulty of smuggling
Dawson--and if the old dame rung the alarm, the whole hive would be out
in a moment.”

After this speech, Job left the room, by opening a door at the opposite
end, which shewed us a passage, similar in extent and fashion, to the
one we had left below; at the very extremity of this was the entrance to
an apartment at which Jonson stopped.

“Here,” said he, taking from his pocket a small paper book, and an
ink-horn; “here, your honour, take these, you may want to note the heads
of Dawson’s confession, we are now at his door.” Job then applied one of
the keys of a tolerably sized bunch to the door, and the next moment we
were in Dawson’s apartment.

The room which, though low and narrow, was of considerable length, was
in utter darkness, and the dim and flickering light Jonson held, only
struggled with, rather than penetrated the thick gloom. About the centre
of the room stood the bed, and sitting upright on it, with a wan and
hollow countenance, bent eagerly towards us, was a meagre, attenuated
figure. My recollection of Dawson, whom, it will be remembered, I had
only seen once before, was extremely faint, but it had impressed me
with the idea of a middle sized and rather athletic man, with a fair and
florid complexion: the creature I now saw, was totally the reverse
of this idea. His cheeks were yellow and drawn in; his hand which was
raised, in the act of holding aside the curtains, was like the talons
of a famished vulture, so thin, so long, so withered in its hue and
texture.

No sooner did the advancing light allow him to see us distinctly, than
he half sprung from the bed, and cried, in that peculiar tone of
joy, which seems to throw off from the breast a suffocating weight of
previous terror and suspense, “Thank God, thank God! it is you at last;
and you have brought the clergyman--God bless you, Jonson, you are a
true friend to me.”

“Cheer up, Dawson,” said Job; “I have smuggled in this worthy gentleman,
who, I have no doubt, will be of great comfort to you--but you must be
open with him, and tell all.”

“That I will--that I will,” cried Dawson, with a wild and vindictive
expression of countenance--“if it be only to hang him. Here, Jonson,
give me your hand, bring the light nearer--I say--he, the devil--the
fiend--has been here to-day, and threatened to murder me; and I have
listened, and listened, all night, and thought I heard his step along
the passage, and up the stairs, and at the door; but it was nothing,
Job, nothing--and you are come at last, good, kind, worthy Job. Oh! ‘tis
so horrible to be left in the dark, and not sleep--and in this large,
large room, which looks like eternity at night--and one does fancy such
sights, Job--such horrid, horrid sights. Feel my wristband, Jonson, and
here at my back, you would think they had been pouring water over me,
but its only the cold sweat. Oh! it is a fearful thing to have a bad
conscience, Job; but you won’t leave me till daylight, now, that’s a
dear, good Job!”

“For shame, Dawson,” said Jonson; “pluck up, and be a man; you are like
a baby frightened by its nurse. Here’s the clergyman come to heal your
poor wounded conscience, will you hear him now?”

“Yes,” said Dawson; “yes!--but go out of the room--I can’t tell all if
you’re here; go, Job, go!--but you’re not angry with me--I don’t mean to
offend you.”

“Angry!” said Job; “Lord help the poor fellow! no, to be sure not. I’ll
stay outside the door till you’ve done with the clergyman--but make
haste, for the night’s almost over, and it’s as much as the parson’s
life is worth to stay here after daybreak.”

“I will make haste,” said the guilty man, tremulously; “but, Job, where
are you going--what are you doing? leave the light!--here, Job, by the
bed-side.”

Job did as he was desired, and quitted the room, leaving the door not so
firmly shut, but that he might hear, if the penitent spoke aloud, every
particular of his confession.

I seated myself on the side of the bed, and taking the skeleton hand
of the unhappy man, spoke to him in the most consolatory and comforting
words I could summon to my assistance. He seemed greatly soothed by my
efforts, and at last implored me to let him join me in prayer. I knelt
down, and my lips readily found words for that language, which, whatever
be the formula of our faith, seems, in all emotions which come home to
our hearts, the most natural method of expressing them. It is here, by
the bed of sickness, or remorse, that the ministers of God have their
real power! it is here, that their office is indeed a divine and
unearthly mission; and that in breathing balm and comfort, in healing
the broken heart, in raising the crushed and degraded spirit--they are
the voice, and oracle of the FATHER, who made us in benevolence, and
will judge of us in mercy! I rose, and after a short pause, Dawson, who
expressed himself impatient of the comfort of confession, thus began--

“I have no time, Sir, to speak of the earlier part of my life. I passed
it upon the race-course, and at the gaming-table--all that was, I know,
very wrong, and wicked; but I was a wild, idle boy, and eager for any
thing like enterprise or mischief. Well, Sir, it is now more than three
years ago since I first met one Tom Thornton; it was at a boxing match.
Tom was chosen chairman, at a sort of club of the farmers and yeomen;
and being a lively, amusing fellow, and accustomed to the company of
gentlemen, was a great favourite with all of us. He was very civil to
me, and I was quite pleased with his notice. I did not, however, see
much of him then, nor for more than two years afterwards; but some
months ago we met again. I was in very poor circumstances, so was he,
and this made us closer friends than we might otherwise have been. He
lived a great deal at the gambling-houses, and fancied he had discovered
a certain method of winning [Note: A very common delusion, both among
sharpers and their prey.] at hazard. So, whenever he could not find a
gentleman whom he could cheat with false dice, tricks at cards, he
would go into any hell to try his infallible game. I did not, however,
perceive, that he made a good livelihood by it; and though sometimes,
either by that method or some other, he had large sums of money in his
possession, yet they were spent as soon as acquired. The fact was, that
he was not a man who could ever grow rich; he was extremely extravagant
in all things--loved women and drinking, and was always striving to get
into the society of people above him. In order to do this, he affected
great carelessness of money; and if, at a race or a cock-fight, any real
gentlemen would go home with him, he would insist upon treating them to
the very best of every thing.

“Thus, Sir, he was always poor, and at his wit’s end, for means to
supply his extravagance. He introduced me to three or four gentlemen, as
he called them, but whom I have since found to be markers, sharpers,
and black-legs; and this set soon dissipated the little honesty my own
habits of life had left me. They never spoke of things by their right
names; and, therefore, those things never seemed so bad as they really
were--to swindle a gentleman, did not sound a crime, when it was called
‘macing a swell’--nor transportation a punishment, when it was termed,
with a laugh, ‘lagging a cove.’ Thus, insensibly, my ideas of right
and wrong, always obscure, became perfectly confused: and the habit of
treating all crimes as subjects of jest in familiar conversation, soon
made me regard them as matters of very trifling importance.

“Well, Sir, at Newmarket races, this Spring meeting, Thornton and I were
on the look out. He had come down to stay, during the races, at a house
I had just inherited from my father, but which was rather an expense
to me than an advantage; especially as my wife, who was an innkeeper’s
daughter, was very careless and extravagant. It so happened that we were
both taken in by a jockey, whom we had bribed very largely, and were
losers to a very considerable amount. Among other people, I lost to a
Sir John Tyrrell. I expressed my vexation to Thornton, who told me not
to mind it, but to tell Sir John that I would pay him if he came to the
town; and that he was quite sure we could win enough, by his certain
game at hazard, to pay off my debt. He was so very urgent, that I
allowed myself to be persuaded; though Thornton has since told me, that
his only motive was, to prevent Sir John’s going to the Marquess of
Chester’s (where he was invited) with my lord’s party; and so, to have
an opportunity of accomplishing the crime he then meditated.

“Accordingly, as Thornton desired, I asked Sir John Tyrrell to come with
me to Newmarket. He did so. I left him, joined Thornton, and went to the
gambling-house. Here we were engaged in Thornton’s sure game, when Sir
John entered. I went up and apologized for not paying, and said I would
pay him in three months. However, Sir John was very angry, and treated
me with such rudeness, that the whole table remarked it. When he
was gone, I told Thornton how hurt and indignant I was at Sir
John’s treatment. He incensed me still more--exaggerated Sir John’s
conduct--said that I had suffered the grossest insult, and, at last, put
me into such a passion, that I said, that if I was a gentleman, I would
fight Sir John Tyrrell across a table.

“When Thornton saw I was so moved, he took me out of the room, and
carried me to an inn. Here he ordered dinner, and several bottles of
wine. I never could bear much drink: he knew this, and artfully plied me
with wine till I scarcely knew what I did or said. He then talked
much of our destitute situation--affected to put himself out of the
question--said he was a single man, and could easily make shift upon a
potatoe--but that I was encumbered with a wife and child, whom I could
not suffer to starve. He then said, that Sir John Tyrrell had publicly
disgraced me--that I should be blown upon the course--that no gentleman
would bet with me again, and a great deal more of the same sort. Seeing
what an effect he had produced upon me, he then told me that he had
seen Sir John receive a large sum of money, that would more than pay our
debts, and set us up like gentlemen: and, at last, he proposed to me
to rob him. Intoxicated as I was, I was somewhat startled at this
proposition. However, the slang terms in which Thornton disguised the
greatness and danger of the offence, very much diminished both in my
eyes--so at length I consented.

“We went to Sir John’s inn, and learnt that he had just set out;
accordingly, we mounted our horses, and rode after him. The night had
already closed in. After we had got some distance from the main road,
into a lane, which led both to my house and to Chester Park--for the
former was on the direct way to my lord’s--we passed a man on horseback.
I only observed that he was wrapped in a cloak--but Thornton said,
directly we had passed him, ‘I know that man well--he has been following
Tyrrell all day--and though he attempts to screen himself, I have
penetrated his disguise; he is Tyrrell’s mortal enemy.’”

“‘Should the worst come to the worst,’ added Thornton, (words which I
did not at that moment understand) ‘we can make him bear the blame.’”

“When we had got some way further, we came up to Tyrrell and a
gentleman, whom, to our great dismay, we found that Sir John had
joined--the gentleman’s horse had met with an accident, and Thornton
dismounted to offer his assistance. He assured the gentleman, who proved
afterwards to be a Mr. Pelham, that the horse was quite lame, and that
he would scarcely be able to get it home; and he then proposed to Sir
John to accompany us, and said that we would put him in the right road;
this offer Sir John rejected very haughtily, and we rode on.

“‘It’s all up with us,’ said I; ‘since he has joined another person.’

“‘Not at all,’ replied Thornton; ‘for I managed to give the horse a sly
poke with my knife; and if I know any thing of Sir John Tyrrell, he
is much too impatient a spark to crawl along, a snail’s pace, with any
companion, especially with this heavy shower coming on.’

“‘But,’ said I, for I now began to recover from my intoxication, and
to be sensible of the nature of our undertaking, ‘the moon is up, and
unless this shower conceals it, Sir John will recognize us; so you see,
even if he leaves the gentleman, it will be no use, and we had much
better make haste home and go to bed.’

“Upon this, Thornton cursed me for a faint-hearted fellow, and said that
the cloud would effectually hide the moon--or, if not--he added--‘I know
how to silence a prating tongue.’ At these words I was greatly alarmed,
and said, that if he meditated murder as well as robbery, I would have
nothing further to do with it. Thornton laughed, and told me not to be
a fool. While we were thus debating, a heavy shower came on; we rode
hastily to a large tree, by the side of a pond--which, though bare and
withered, was the nearest shelter the country afforded, and was only
a very short distance from my house. I wished to go home--but Thornton
would not let me, and as I was always in the habit of yielding, I stood
with him, though very reluctantly, under the tree.

“Presently, we heard the trampling of a horse.

“‘It is he--it is he,’ cried Thornton, with a savage tone of
exultation--‘and alone!--Be ready--we must make a rush--I will be the
one to bid him to deliver--you hold your tongue.

“The clouds and rain had so overcast the night, that, although it
was not perfectly dark, it was sufficiently obscure to screen our
countenances. Just as Tyrrell approached, Thornton dashed forward, and
cried, in a feigned voice--‘Stand, on your peril!’ I followed, and we
were now both by Sir John’s side.

“He attempted to push by us--but Thornton seized him by the arm--there
was a stout struggle, in which, as yet, I had no share--at last, Tyrrell
got loose from Thornton, and I seized him--he set spurs to his horse,
which was a very spirited and strong animal--it reared upwards, and very
nearly brought me and my horse to the ground--at that instant, Thornton
struck the unfortunate man a violent blow across the head with the butt
end of his heavy whip--Sir John’s hat had fallen before in the struggle,
and the blow was so stunning that it felled him upon the spot. Thornton
dismounted, and made me do the same--‘There is no time to lose,’ said
he; ‘let us drag him from the roadside and rifle him.’ We accordingly
carried him (he was still senseless) to the side of the pond before
mentioned--while we were searching for the money Thornton spoke of, the
storm ceased, and the moon broke out--we were detained some moments by
the accident of Tyrrell’s having transferred his pocket-book from the
pocket Thornton had seen him put it in on the race ground to an inner
one.

“We had just discovered, and seized the pocket-book, when Sir John awoke
from his swoon, and his eyes opened upon Thornton, who was still bending
over him, and looking at the contents of the book to see that all was
right; the moonlight left Tyrrell in no doubt as to our persons; and
struggling hard to get up, he cried, ‘I know you! I know you! you shall
hang for this.’ No sooner had he uttered this imprudence, than it was
all over with him. ‘We will see that, Sir John,’ said Thornton,
setting his knee upon Tyrrell’s chest, and nailing him down. While thus
employed, he told me to feel in his coat-pocket for a case-knife.

“‘For God’s sake!’ cried Tyrrell, with a tone of agonizing terror which
haunts me still, ‘spare my life!’

“‘It is too late,’ said Thornton, deliberately, and taking the knife
from my hands, he plunged it into Sir John’s side, and as the blade was
too short to reach the vitals, Thornton drew it backwards and forwards
to widen the wound. Tyrrell was a strong man, and still continued to
struggle and call out for mercy--Thornton drew out the knife--Tyrrell
seized it by the blade, and his fingers were cut through before Thornton
could snatch it from his grasp; the wretched gentleman then saw all hope
was over; he uttered one loud, sharp, cry of despair. Thornton put one
hand to his mouth, and with the other gashed his throat from ear to ear.

“‘You have done for him, and for us now,’ said I, as Thornton slowly
rose from the body. ‘No,’ replied he, ‘look, he still moves;’ and sure
enough he did, but it was in the last agony. However, Thornton, to make
all sure, plunged the knife again into his body; the blade came into
contact with a bone, and snapped in two; so great was the violence of
the blow, that instead of remaining in the flesh, the broken piece fell
upon the ground among the long fern and grass.

“While we were employed in searching for it: Thornton, whose ears were
much sharper than mine, caught the sound of a horse. ‘Mount! mount,’ he
cried; ‘and let us be off.’ We sprung up on our horses, and rode away
as fast as we could. I wished to go home, as it was so near at hand; but
Thornton insisted on making to an old shed, about a quarter of a mile
across the fields; thither, therefore, we went.”

“Stop,” said I, “what did Thornton do with the remaining part of the
case-knife? did he throw it away, or carry it with him?”

“He took it with him,” answered Dawson, “for his name was engraved on a
silver plate, on the handle; and, he was therefore afraid of throwing it
into the pond, as I advised, lest at any time it should be discovered.
Close by the shed, there is a plantation of young firs of some extent.
Thornton and I entered, and he dug a hole with the broken blade of the
knife, and buried it, covering up the hole again with the earth.”

“Describe the place,” said I. Dawson paused, and seemed to recollect; I
was on the very tenterhooks of suspence, for I saw with one glance all
the importance of his reply.

After some moments, he shook his head; “I cannot describe the place,”
 said he, “for the wood is so thick: yet I know the exact spot so
well, that were I in any part of the plantation, I could point it out
immediately.”

I told him to pause again, and recollect himself; and, at all events,
to try to indicate the place. However, his account was so confused and
perplexed, that I was forced to give up the point in despair, and he
continued.

“After we had done this, Thornton told me to hold the horses, and said
he would go alone, to spy whether we might return; accordingly he did
so, and brought back word, in about half an hour, that he had crept
cautiously along till in sight of the place, and then throwing himself
down on his face by the ridge of a bank, had observed a man, (whom he
was sure was the person with a cloak we had passed, and whom, he said,
was Sir Reginald Glanville,) mount his horse on the very spot of the
murder, and ride off, while another person (Mr. Pelham), appeared, and
also discovered the fatal place.

“‘There is no doubt now,’ said he, ‘that we shall have the hue-and cry
upon us. However, if you are staunch and stout-hearted, no possible
danger can come to us; for you may leave me alone to throw the whole
guilt upon Sir Reginald Glanville.’

“‘We then mounted, and rode home. We stole up stairs by the
back-way--Thornton’s linen and hands were stained with blood. The former
he took off, locked up carefully, and burnt the first opportunity; the
latter he washed; and that the water might not lead to detection, drank
it. We then appeared as if nothing had occurred, and learnt that
Mr. Pelham had been to the house; but as, very fortunately, our
out-buildings had been lately robbed by some idle people, the wife and
servants had refused to admit him. I was thrown into great agitation,
and was extremely frightened. However, as Mr. Pelham had left a message
that we were to go to the pond, Thornton insisted upon our repairing
there to avoid suspicion.”

Dawson then proceeded to say, that, on their return, as he was still
exceedingly nervous, Thornton insisted on his going to bed. When our
party from Lord Chester’s came to the house, Thornton went into Dawson’s
room, and made him swallow a large tumbler of brandy; [Note: A common
practice with thieves, who fear the weak nerves of their accomplices.]
this intoxicated him so as to make him less sensible to his dangerous
situation. Afterwards, when the picture was found, which circumstance
Thornton communicated to him, along with that of the threatening letter
sent by Glanville to the deceased, which was discovered in Tyrrell’s
pocket-book, Dawson recovered courage; and justice being entirely thrown
on a wrong scent, he managed to pass his examination without suspicion.
He then went to town with Thornton, and constantly attended “the club”
 to which Jonson had before introduced him; at first, among his new
comrades, and while the novel flush of the money, he had so fearfully
acquired, lasted, he partially succeeded in stifling his remorse. But
the success of crime is too contrary to nature to continue long; his
poor wife, whom, in spite of her extravagant, and his dissolute habits,
he seemed really to love, fell ill, and died; on her deathbed she
revealed the suspicions she had formed of his crime, and said, that
those suspicions had preyed upon, and finally destroyed her health; this
awoke him from the guilty torpor of his conscience. His share of the
money, too, the greater part of which Thornton had bullied out of him,
was gone. He fell, as Job had said, into despondency and gloom, and
often spoke to Thornton so forcibly of his remorse, and so earnestly
of his gnawing and restless desire to appease his mind, by surrendering
himself to justice, that the fears of that villain grew, at length, so
thoroughly alarmed, as to procure his removal to his present abode.

It was here that his real punishment commenced; closely confined to his
apartment, at the remotest corner of the house, his solitude was never
broken but by the short and hurried visits of his female gaoler, and
(worse even than loneliness), the occasional invasions of Thornton.
There appeared to be in that abandoned wretch what, for the honour of
human nature, is but rarely found, viz., a love of sin, not for
its objects, but itself. With a malignity, doubly fiendish from its
inutility, he forbade Dawson the only indulgence he craved--a light,
during the dark hours; and not only insulted him for his cowardice, but
even added to his terrors, by threats of effectually silencing them.

These fears had so wildly worked upon the man’s mind, that prison
itself appeared to him an elysium to the hell he endured; and when his
confession was ended, I said, “If you can be freed from this place,
would you repeat before a magistrate all that you have now told me?”

He started up in delight at the very thought; in truth, besides his
remorse, and that inward and impelling voice which, in all the annals of
murder, seems to urge the criminal onwards to the last expiation of his
guilt--besides these, there mingled in his mind a sentiment of bitter,
yet cowardly, vengeance, against his inhuman accomplice; and perhaps
he found consolation for his own fate, in the hope of wreaking upon
Thornton’s head somewhat of the tortures that ruffian had inflicted upon
him.

I had taken down in my book the heads of the confession, and I now
hastened to Jonson, who, waiting without the door, had (as I had
anticipated) heard all.

“You see,” said I, “that, however satisfactory this recital has been, it
contains no secondary or innate proofs to confirm it; the only evidence
with which it could furnish us, would be the remnant of the broken
knife, engraved with Thornton’s name; but you have heard from Dawson’s
account, how impossible it would be in an extensive wood, for any to
discover the spot but himself. You will agree with me, therefore, that
we must not leave this house without Dawson.”

Job changed colour slightly.

“I see as clearly as you do,” said he, “that it will be necessary for my
annuity, and your friend’s full acquittal, to procure Dawson’s personal
evidence, but it is late now; the men may be still drinking below; Bess
may be still awake, and stirring; even if she sleeps, how could we pass
her room without disturbing her? I own that I do not see a chance of
effecting his escape to-night, without incurring the most probable peril
of having our throats cut. Leave it, therefore, to me to procure his
release as soon as possible--probably to-morrow, and let us now quietly
retire, content with what we have yet got.”

Hitherto I had implicitly obeyed Job; it was now my turn to command.
“Look you,” said I, calmly, but sternly, “I have come into this house
under your guidance solely, to procure the evidence of that man; the
evidence he has, as yet, given may not be worth a straw; and, since I
have ventured among the knives of your associates, it shall be for some
purpose. I tell you fairly that, whether you befriend or betray me, I
will either leave these walls with Dawson, or remain in them a corpse.”

“You are a bold blade, Sir,” said Jonson, who seemed rather to respect
than resent the determination of my tone, “and we will see what can be
done: wait here, your honour, while I go down to see if the boys are
gone to bed, and the coast is clear.”

Job descended, and I re-entered Dawson’s room. When I told him that we
were resolved, if possible, to effect his escape, nothing could exceed
his transport and gratitude; this was, indeed, expressed in so mean and
servile a manner, mixed with so many petty threats of vengeance against
Thornton, that I could scarcely conceal my disgust.

Jonson returned, and beckoned me out of the room.

“They are all in bed, Sir,” said he--“Bess as well as the rest; indeed,
the old girl has lushed so well at the bingo, that she sleeps as if her
next morrow was the day of judgment. I have, also, seen that the street
door is still unbarred, so that, upon the whole, we have, perhaps, as
good a chance to-night as we may ever have again. All my fear is about
that cowardly lubber. I have left both Bess’s doors wide open, so we
have nothing to do but to creep through; as for me, I am an old file,
and could steal my way through a sick man’s room, like a sunbeam through
a keyhole.”

“Well,” said I, in the same strain, “I am no elephant, and my dancing
master used to tell me I might tread on a butterfly’s wing without
brushing off a tint: poor Coulon! he little thought of the use his
lessons would be to me hereafter!--so let us be quick, Master Job.”

“Stop,” said Jonson; “I have yet a ceremony to perform with our caged
bird. I must put a fresh gag on his mouth; for though, if he escapes, I
must leave England, perhaps, for ever, for fear of the jolly boys, and,
therefore, care not what he blabs about me; yet there are a few fine
fellows amongst the club whom I would not have hurt for the Indies; so I
shall make Master Dawson take our last oath--the Devil himself would not
break that, I think! Your honour will stay outside the door, for we can
have no witness while it is administered.”

Job then entered; I stood without;--in a few minutes I heard Dawson’s
voice in the accents of supplication. Soon after Job returned, “The
craven dog won’t take the oath,” said he, “and may my right hand rot
above ground before it shall turn key for him unless he does.” But when
Dawson saw that Job had left the room, and withdrawn the light, the
conscience-stricken coward came to the door, and implored Job to return.
“Will you swear then?” said Jonson; “I will, I will,” was the answer.

Job then re-entered--minutes passed away--Job re-appeared, and Dawson
was dressed, and clinging hold of him--“All’s right,” said he to me,
with a satisfied air.

The oath had been taken--what it was I know not--but it was never
broken. [Note: Those conversant with the annals of Newgate, will know
how religiously the oaths of these fearful Freemasonries are kept.]

Dawson and Job went first--I followed--we passed the passage, and came
to the chamber of the sleeping Mrs. Brimstone. Job leant eagerly
forward to listen, before we entered; he took hold of Dawson’s arm, and
beckoning to me to follow, stole, with a step that a blind mole would
not have heard, across the room. Carefully did the practised thief veil
the candle he carried, with his hand, as he now began to pass by the
bed. I saw that Dawson trembled like a leaf, and the palpitation of his
limbs made his step audible and heavy. Just as they had half-way passed
the bed, I turned my look on Brimstone Bess, and observed, with a
shuddering thrill, her eyes slowly open, and fix upon the forms of my
companions. Dawson’s gaze had been bent in the same direction, and when
he met the full, glassy stare of the beldame’s eyes, he uttered a faint
scream. This completed our danger; had it not been for that exclamation,
Bess might, in the uncertain vision of drowsiness, have passed over the
third person, and fancied it was only myself and Jonson, in our way from
Dawson’s apartment; but no sooner had her ear caught the sound, than she
started up, and sat erect on her bed, gazing at us in mingled wrath and
astonishment.

That was a fearful moment--we stood rivetted to the spot! “Oh, my
kiddies,” cried Bess, at last finding speech, “you are in Queer-street,
I trow! Plant your stumps, Master Guinea Pig; you are going to stall
off the Daw’s baby in prime twig, eh? But Bess stags you, my cove! Bess
stags you.”

Jonson, looked irresolute for one instant; but the next he had decided.
“Run, run,” cried he, “for your lives,” and he and Dawson (to whom, fear
did indeed lend wings) were out of the room in an instant. I lost no
time in following their example; but the vigilant and incensed hag
was too quick for me; she pulled violently the bell, on which she
had already placed her hand: the alarm rang like an echo in a cavern;
below--around--far--near--from wall to wall--from chamber to chamber,
the sound seemed multiplied and repeated! and in the same breathing
point of time, she sprang from her bed, and seized me, just as I had
reached the door.

“On, on, on,” cried Jonson’s voice to Dawson, as they had already gained
the passage, and left the whole room, and the staircase beyond, in utter
darkness.

With a firm, muscular, nervous gripe, which almost shewed a masculine
strength, the hag clung to my throat and breast; behind, among some of
the numerous rooms in the passage we had left, I heard sounds, which
told too plainly how rapidly the alarm had spread. A door opened--steps
approached--my fate seemed fixed; but despair gave me energy: it was
no time for the ceremonials due to the beau sexe. I dashed Bess to the
ground, tore myself from her relaxing grasp, and fled down the steps
with all the precipitation the darkness would allow. I gained the
passage, at the far end of which hung the lamp, now weak and waning in
its socket; which, it will be remembered, burnt close by the sick man’s
chamber that I had so unintentionally entered. A thought flashed upon my
mind, and lent me new nerves and fresh speed; I flew along the passage,
guided by the dying light. The staircase I had left, shook with the
footsteps of my pursuers. I was at the door of the sick thief--I burst
it open--seized the sword as it lay within reach on the chair, where
Jonson had placed it, and feeling, at the touch of the familiar weapon,
as if the might of ten men had been transferred to my single arm, I
bounded down the stairs before me--passed the door at the bottom, which
Dawson had fortunately left open--flung it back almost upon the face of
my advancing enemies, and found myself in the long passage which led
to the street-door, in safety, but in the thickest darkness. A light
flashed from a door to the left; the door was that of the “Common Room”
 which we had first entered; it opened, and Spider-shanks, with one of
his comrades, looked forth; the former holding a light. I darted by
them, and, guided by their lamp, fled along the passage, and reached the
door. Imagine my dismay! when, either through accident, or by the desire
of my fugitive companions to impede pursuit, I found it unexpectedly
closed.

The two villains had now come up to me, close at their heels were two
more, probably my pursuers, from the upper apartments. Providentially
the passage was (as I before said) extremely narrow, and as long as no
fire-arms were used, nor a general rush resorted to, I had little doubt
of being able to keep the ruffians at bay, until I had hit upon the
method of springing the latch, and so winning my escape from the house.

While my left hand was employed in feeling the latch, I made such good
use of my right, as to keep my antagonists at a safe distance. The one
who was nearest to me, was Fib Fakescrew; he was armed with a weapon
exactly similar to my own. The whole passage rung with oaths and
threats. “Crash the cull--down with him--down with him, before he dubs
the jigger. Tip him the degen, Fib, fake him through and through; if he
pikes, we shall all be scragged.”

Hitherto, in the confusion I had not been able to recall Job’s
instructions in opening the latch; at last I remembered, and pressed,
the screw--the latch rose--I opened the door; but not wide enough to
scape through the aperture. The ruffians saw my escape at hand. “Rush
the b--cove! rush him!” cried the loud voice of one behind; and at
the word, Fib was thrown forwards upon the extended edge of my blade;
scarcely with an effort of my own arm, the sword entered his bosom, and
he fell at my feet bathed in blood; the motion which the men thought
would prove my destruction, became my salvation; staggered by the fall
of their companion they gave way: I seized advantage of the momentary
confusion--threw open the door, and, mindful of Job’s admonition, turned
to the right, and fled onwards, with a rapidity which baffled and mocked
pursuit.



CHAPTER LXXXIV.

Ille viam secat ad naves sociosque, revisit.--Virgil.

The day had already dawned, but all was still and silent; my footsteps
smote the solitary pavement with a strange and unanswered sound.
Nevertheless, though all pursuit had long ceased, I still continued
to run on mechanically, till, faint and breathless, I was forced into
pausing. I looked round, but could recognize nothing familiar in the
narrow and filthy streets; even the names of them were to me like an
unknown language. After a brief rest I renewed my wanderings, and at
length came to an alley, called River Lane; the name did not deceive
me, but brought me, after a short walk, to the Thames; there, to my
inexpressible joy, I discovered a solitary boatman, and transported
myself forthwith to the Whitehall-stairs.

Never, I ween, did gay gallant, in the decaying part of the season,
arrive at those stairs for the sweet purpose of accompanying his own
mistress, or another’s wife, to green Richmond, or sunny Hampton, with
more eager and animated delight than I felt at rejecting the arm of the
rough boatman, and leaping on the well-known stones. I hastened to that
stand of “jarvies” which has often been the hope and shelter of belated
member of St. Stephen’s, or bewetted fugitive from the Opera. I startled
a sleeping coachman, flung myself into his vehicle, and descended at
Mivart’s.

The drowsy porter surveyed, and told me to be gone; I had forgotten my
strange attire. “Pooh, my friend,” said I, “may not Mr. Pelham go to
a masquerade as well as his betters?” My voice and words undeceived my
Cerberus, and I was admitted; I hastened to bed, and no sooner had
I laid my head on my pillow, than I fell fast asleep. It must be
confessed, that I had deserved “tired Nature’s sweet restorer.”

I had not been above a couple of hours in the land of dreams, when I was
awakened by some one grasping my arm; the events of the past night
were so fresh in my memory, that I sprung up, as if the knife was at my
throat--my eyes opened upon the peaceful countenance of Mr. Job Jonson.

“Thank Heaven, Sir, you are safe! I had but a very faint hope of finding
you here when I came.”

“Why,” said I, rubbing my eyes, “it is very true that I am safe, honest
Job: but, I believe, I have few thanks to give you for a circumstance so
peculiarly agreeable to myself. It would have saved me much trouble, and
your worthy friend, Mr. Fib Fakescrew, some pain, if you had left the
door open instead of shutting me up with your club, as you are pleased
to call it.”

“Very true, Sir,” said Job, “and I am extremely sorry at the accident;
it was Dawson who shut the door, through utter unconsciousness, though
I told him especially not to do it--the poor dog did not know whether he
was on his head or his heels.”

“You have got him safe,” said I, quickly.

“Aye, trust me for that, your honour. I have locked him up at home while
I came here to look for you.”

“We will lose no time in transferring him to safer custody,” said I,
leaping out of bed; “but be off to--Street directly.”

“Slow and sure, Sir,” answered Jonson. “It is for you to do whatever
you please, but my part of the business is over. I shall sleep at Dover
tonight, and breakfast at Calais to-morrow. Perhaps it will not be
very inconvenient to your honour to furnish me with my first quarter’s
annuity in advance, and to see that the rest is duly paid into
Lafitte’s, at Paris, for the use of Captain Douglas. Where I shall live
hereafter is at present uncertain; but I dare say there will be few
corners except old England and new England, in which I shall not make
merry on your honour’s bounty.”

“Pooh! my good fellow,” rejoined I, “never desert a country to which
your talents do such credit; stay here, and reform on your annuity.
If ever I can accomplish my own wishes, I will consult your’s still
farther; for I shall always think of your services with gratitude,
though you did shut the door in my face.”

“No, Sir,” replied Job--“life is a blessing I would fain enjoy a few
years longer; and, at present, my sojourn in England would put it
woefully in danger of ‘club law.’ Besides, I begin to think that a good
character is a very agreeable thing, when not too troublesome: and, as I
have none left in England, I may as well make the experiment abroad.
If your honour will call at the magistrate’s, and take a warrant and an
officer, for the purpose of ridding me of my charge, at the very instant
I see my responsibility at an end, I will have the honour of bidding you
adieu.”

“Well, as you please,” said I. “Curse your scoundrel’s cosmetics! How
the deuce am I ever to regain my natural complexion? Look ye, sirrah!
you have painted me with a long wrinkle on the left side of my mouth,
big enough to engulph all the beauty I ever had. Why, water seems to
have no effect upon it!”

“To be sure not, Sir,” said Job, calmly--“I should be but a poor dauber,
if my paints washed off with a wet sponge.”

“Grant me patience,” cried I, in a real panic; “how, in the name
of Heaven, are they to wash off? Am I, before I have reached my
twenty-third year, to look like a methodist parson on the wrong side of
forty, you rascal!”

“The latter question, your honour can best answer,” returned Job. “With
regard to the former, I have an unguent here, if you will suffer me to
apply it, which will remove all other colours than those which nature
has bestowed upon you.”

With that, Job produced a small box; and, after a brief submission to
his skill, I had the ineffable joy of beholding myself restored to my
original state. Nevertheless, my delight was somewhat checked by the
loss of my ringlets: I thanked Heaven, however, that the damage had been
sustained after Ellen’s acceptation of my addresses. A lover confined to
one, should not be too destructive, for fear of the consequences to the
remainder of the female world: compassion is ever due to the fair sex.

My toilet being concluded, Jonson and I repaired to the magistrate’s. He
waited at the corner of the street, while I entered the house--

“‘Twere vain to tell what shook the holy man, Who looked, not lovingly,
at that divan.”

Having summoned to my aid the redoubted Mr.----, of mulberry-cheeked
recollection, we entered a hackney-coach, and drove to Jonson’s
lodgings, Job mounting guard on the box.

“I think, Sir,” said Mr.----, looking up at the man of two virtues,
“that I have had the pleasure of seeing that gentleman before.”

“Very likely,” said I; “he is a young man greatly about town.”

When we had safely lodged Dawson (who seemed more collected, and even
courageous, than I had expected) in the coach, Job beckoned me into a
little parlour. I signed him a draught on my bankers for one hundred
pounds--though at that time it was like letting the last drop from my
veins--and faithfully promised, should Dawson’s evidence procure the
desired end (of which, indeed, there was now no doubt), that the annuity
should be regularly paid, as he desired. We then took an affectionate
farewell of each other.

“Adieu, Sir!” said Job, “I depart into a new world--that of honest men!”

“If so,” said I, “adieu, indeed!--for on this earth we shall never meet
again!”

We returned to--Street. As I was descending from the coach, a female,
wrapped from head to foot in a cloak, came eagerly up to me, and seized
me by the arm. “For God’s sake,” said she, in a low, hurried voice,
“come aside, and speak to me for a single moment.” Consigning Dawson to
the sole charge of the officer, I did as I was desired. When we had got
some paces down the street, the female stopped. Though she held her veil
closely drawn over her face, her voice and air were not to be mistaken:
I knew her at once. “Glanville,” said she, with great agitation,
“Sir Reginald Glanville! tell me, is he in real danger?” She stopped
short--she could say no more.

“I trust not!” said I, appearing not to recognize the speaker.

“I trust not!” she repeated, “is that all!” And then the passionate
feelings of her sex overcoming every other consideration, she seized me
by the hand, and said--“Oh, Mr. Pelham, for mercy’s sake, tell me is he
in the power of that villain Thornton? you need disguise nothing from
me, I know all the fatal history.”

“Compose yourself, dear, dear Lady Roseville,” said I, soothingly; “for
it is in vain any longer to affect not to know you. Glanville is safe; I
have brought with me a witness whose testimony must release him.”

“God bless you, God bless you!” said Lady Roseville, and she burst into
tears; but she dried them directly, and recovering some portion of that
dignity which never long forsakes a woman of virtuous and educated mind,
she resumed, proudly, yet bitterly--“It is no ordinary motive, no motive
which you might reasonably impute to me, that has brought me here. Sir
Reginald Glanville can never be any thing more to me than a friend--but
of all friends, the most known and valued. I learned from his servant of
his disappearance; and my acquaintance with his secret history enabled
me to account for it in the most fearful manner. In short I--I--but
explanations are idle now; you will never say that you have seen me
here, Mr. Pelham: you will endeavour even to forget it--farewell.”

Lady Roseville, then drawing her cloak closely round her, left me with a
fleet and light step, and turning the corner of the street, disappeared.

I returned to my charge, I demanded an immediate interview with the
magistrate. “I have come,” said I, “to redeem my pledge, and acquit
the innocent.” I then briefly related my adventures, only concealing
(according to my promise) all description of my help-mate, Job; and
prepared the worthy magistrate for the confession and testimony of
Dawson. That unhappy man had just concluded his narration, when an
officer entered, and whispered the magistrate that Thornton was in
waiting.

“Admit him,” said Mr.----, aloud. Thornton entered with his usual easy
and swaggering air of effrontery; but no sooner did he set his eyes upon
Dawson, than a deadly and withering change passed over his countenance.
Dawson could not bridle the cowardly petulance of his spite--“They know
all, Thornton!” said he, with a look of triumph. The villain turned
slowly from him to us, muttering something we could not hear. He saw
upon my face, upon the magistrate’s, that his doom was sealed; his
desperation gave him presence of mind, and he made a sudden rush to the
door; the officers in waiting seized him. Why should I detail the
rest of the scene? He was that day fully committed for trial, and Sir
Reginald Glanville honourably released, and unhesitatingly acquitted.



CHAPTER LXXXV.

The main interest of my adventures--if, indeed, I may flatter myself
that they ever contained any--is now over; the mystery is explained, the
innocent acquitted, and the guilty condemned. Moreover, all obstacles
between the marriage of the unworthy hero, with the peerless heroine,
being removed, it would be but an idle prolixity to linger over the
preliminary details of an orthodox and customary courtship. Nor is it
for me to dilate upon the exaggerated expressions of gratitude, in
which the affectionate heart of Glanville found vent for my fortunate
exertions on his behalf. He was not willing that any praise to which
I might be entitled for them, should be lost. He narrated to Lady
Glanville and Ellen my adventures with the comrades of the worthy Job;
from the lips of the mother, and the eyes of the dear sister, came my
sweetest addition to the good fortune which had made me the instrument
of Glanville’s safety, and acquittal. I was not condemned to a long
protraction of that time, which, if it be justly termed the happiest of
our lives, we, (viz. all true lovers) through that perversity common to
human nature, most ardently wish to terminate.

On that day month which saw Glanville’s release, my bridals were
appointed. Reginald was even more eager than myself in pressing for an
early day: firmly persuaded that his end was rapidly approaching, his
most prevailing desire was to witness our union. This wish, and the
interest he took in our happiness, gave him an energy and animation
which impressed us with the deepest hopes for his ultimate recovery;
and the fatal disease to which he was a prey, nursed the fondness of
our hearts by the bloom of cheek, and brightness of eye, with which it
veiled its desolating and gathering progress.

From the eventful day on which I had seen Lady Roseville, in--Street,
we had not met. She had shut herself up in her splendid home, and the
newspapers teemed with regret, at the reported illness and certain
seclusion of one, whose fetes and gaieties had furnished them with their
brightest pages. The only one admitted to her was Ellen. To her, she
had for some time made no secret of her attachment--and of her the daily
news of Sir Reginald’s health was ascertained. Several times, when at
a late hour, I left Glanville’s apartments, I passed the figure of
a woman, closely muffled, and apparently watching before his
windows--which, owing to the advance of summer, were never closed--to
catch, perhaps, a view of his room, or a passing glimpse of his
emaciated and fading figure. If that sad and lonely vigil was kept by
her whom I suspected, deep, indeed, and mighty, was the love, which
could so humble the heart, and possess the spirit, of the haughty and
high-born Countess of Roseville.

I turn to a very different personage in this veritable histoire. My
father and mother were absent, at Lady H.’s, when my marriage was fixed;
to both of them I wrote for their approbation of my choice. From Lady
Frances I received the answer which I subjoin:--

“My dearest Son,

“Your father desires me to add his congratulations to mine, upon the
election you have made. I shall hasten to London, to be present at the
ceremony. Although you must not be offended with me, if I say, that with
your person, accomplishments, birth, and (above all) high ton, you might
have chosen among the loftiest, and wealthiest families in the country,
yet I am by no means displeased or disappointed with your future
wife, to say nothing of the antiquity of her name. (The Glanvilles
intermarried with the Pelhams, in the reign of Henry II.) It is a
great step to future distinction to marry a beauty, especially one so
celebrated as Miss Glanville--perhaps it is among the surest ways to the
cabinet. The forty thousand pounds which you say Miss Glanville is to
receive, makes, to be sure, but a slender income; though, when added
to your own, it would have been a great addition to the Glenmorris
property, if your uncle--I have no patience with him--had not married
again.

“However, you will lose no time in getting into the House--at all
events, the capital will ensure your return for a borough, and maintain
you comfortably, till you are in the administration; when of course
it matters very little what your fortune may be--tradesmen will be too
happy to have your name in their books; be sure, therefore, that the
money is not tied up. Miss Glanville must see that her own interest, as
well as yours, is concerned in your having the unfettered disposal of
a fortune, which, if restricted, you would find it impossible to live
upon. Pray, how is Sir Reginald Glanville? Is his cough as bad as ever?
He has no entailed property, I think?

“Will you order Stonor to have the house ready for us on Friday, when
I shall return home in time for dinner? Let me again congratulate you,
most sincerely, on your choice. I always thought you had more common
sense, as well as genius, than any young man, I ever knew: you have
shown it in this important step. Domestic happiness, my dearest Henry,
ought to be peculiarly sought for by every Englishman, however elevated
his station; and when I reflect upon Miss Glanville’s qualifications,
and her renommee as a belle celebree, I have no doubt of your possessing
the felicity you deserve. But be sure that the fortune is not settled
away from you; poor Sir Reginald is not (I believe) at all covetous or
worldly, and will not therefore insist upon the point.

“God bless you, and grant you every happiness.

“Ever, my dear Henry,

“Your very affectionate Mother,

“F. Pelham.”

“P.S. I think it will be better to give out that Miss Glanville has
eighty thousand pounds. Be sure, therefore, that you do not contradict
me.”


The days, the weeks flew away. Ah, happy days! yet, I do not regret
while I recal you! He that loves much, fears even in his best founded
hopes. What were the anxious longings for a treasure--in my view only,
not in my possession--to the deep joy of finding it for ever my own!
The day arrived--I was yet at my toilet, and Bedos, in the greatest
confusion (poor fellow, he was as happy as myself), when a letter
was brought me, stamped with the foreign post-mark. It was from the
exemplary Job Jonson; and though I did not even open it on that day, yet
it shall be more favoured by the reader--viz. if he will not pass over,
without reading, the following effusion--

“Rue des Moulins, No.__, Paris.

“Honoured Sir,

“I arrived in Paris safely, and reading in the English papers the full
success of our enterprise, as well as in the Morning Post of the--th,
your approaching marriage with Miss Glanville, I cannot refrain from the
liberty of congratulating you upon both, as well as of reminding you of
the exact day on which the first quarter of my annuity will be paid--it
is the--of--; for, I presume, your honour kindly made me a present
of the draft for one hundred pounds, in order to pay my travelling
expenses.

“I find that the boys are greatly incensed against me; but as Dawson was
too much bound by his oath, to betray a tittle against them, I trust
I shall, ultimately, pacify the club, and return to England. A true
patriot, Sir, never loves to leave his native country. Even were I
compelled to visit Van Diemen’s land, the ties of birth-place would be
so strong as to induce me to seize the first opportunity of returning.
I am not, your honour, very fond of the French--they are an idle,
frivolous, penurious, poor nation. Only think, Sir, the other day I saw
a gentleman of the most noble air secrete something at a cafe, which
could not clearly discern; as he wrapped it carefully in paper, before
he placed it in his pocket, I judged that it was a silver cream ewer,
at least; accordingly, I followed him out, and from pure curiosity--I
do assure your honour, it was from no other motive--I transferred this
purloined treasure to my own pocket. You will imagine, Sir, the interest
with which I hastened to a lonely spot in the Tuileries, and carefully
taking out the little packet, unfolded paper by paper, till I came--yes,
Sir, till I came to--five lumps of sugar! Oh, the French are a mean
people--a very mean people--I hope I shall soon be able to return to
England. Meanwhile, I am going into Holland, to see how those rich
burghers spend their time and their money. I suppose poor Dawson, as
well as the rascal Thornton, will be hung before you receive this--they
deserve it richly--it is such fellows who disgrace the profession. He is
but a very poor bungler who is forced to cut throats as well as pockets.
And now, your honour, wishing you all happiness with your lady,

“I beg to remain,

“Your very obedient humble Servant,

“Ferdinand De Courcy, etc.”


Struck with the joyous countenance of my honest valet, as I took my
gloves and hat from his hand, I could not help wishing to bestow upon
him a similar blessing to that I was about to possess. “Bedos,” said I,
“Bedos, my good fellow, you left your wife to come to me; you shall not
suffer by your fidelity: send for her--we will find room for her in our
future establishment.”

The smiling face of the Frenchman underwent a rapid change. “Ma
foi,” said he, in his own tongue; “Monsieur is too good. An excess of
happiness hardens the heart; and so, for fear of forgetting my gratitude
to Providence, I will, with Monsieur’s permission, suffer my adored wife
to remain where she is.”

After so pious a reply, I should have been worse than wicked had I
pressed the matter any farther.

I found all ready at Berkeley-square. Lady Glanville is one of those
good persons, who think a marriage out of church is no marriage at all;
to church, therefore, we went. Although Sir Reginald was now so reduced
that he could scarcely support the least fatigue, he insisted on giving
Ellen away. He was that morning, and had been, for the last two or three
days, considerably better, and our happiness seemed to grow less selfish
in our increasing hope of his recovery.

When we returned from church, our intention was to set off immediately
to--Hall, a seat which I had hired for our reception. On re-entering the
house, Glanville called me aside--I followed his infirm and tremulous
steps into a private apartment.

“Pelham,” said he, “we shall never meet again! no matter--you are now
happy, and I shall shortly be so. But there is one office I have yet to
request from your friendship; when I am dead, let me be buried by her
side, and let one tombstone cover both.”

I pressed his hand, and, with tears in my eyes, made him the promise he
required.

“It is enough,” said he; “I have no farther business with life. God
bless you, my friend--my brother; do not let a thought of me cloud your
happiness.”

He rose, and we turned to quit the room; Glanville was leaning on
my arm; when we had moved a few paces towards the door, he stopped
abruptly. Imagining that the pause proceeded from pain or debility, I
turned my eyes upon his countenance--a fearful and convulsive change was
rapidly passing over it--his eyes stared wildly upon vacancy.

“Merciful God--is it--can it be?” he said, in a low inward tone. At that
moment, I solemnly declare, whether from my sympathy with his feelings,
or from some more mysterious and undefinable cause, my whole frame
shuddered from limb to limb. I saw nothing--I heard nothing; but I felt,
as it were, within me some awful and ghostly presence, which had power
to curdle my blood into ice, and cramp my sinews into impotence; it was
as if some preternatural and shadowy object darkened across the mirror
of my soul--as if, without the medium of the corporeal senses, a spirit
spake to, and was answered by, a spirit.

The moment was over. I felt Glanville’s hand relax its grasp upon my
arm--he fell upon the floor--I raised him--a smile of ineffable serenity
and peace was upon his lips; his face was as the face of an angel, but
the spirit had passed away!



CHAPTER LXXXVI.

Now haveth good day, good men all, Haveth good day, young and old;
Haveth good day, both great and small, And graunt merci a thousand fold!
Gif ever I might full fain I wold, Don ought that were unto your leve
Christ keep you out of cares cold, For now ‘tis time to take my leave.
--Old Song.

Several months have now elapsed since my marriage. I am living quietly
in the country, among my books, and looking forward with calmness,
rather than impatience, to the time which shall again bring me before
the world. Marriage with me is not that sepulchre of all human hope and
energy which it often is with others. I am not more partial to my arm
chair, nor more averse to shaving, than of yore. I do not bound my
prospects to the dinner-hour, nor my projects to “migrations from the
blue bed to the brown.” Matrimony found me ambitious; it has not cured
me of the passion: but it has concentrated what was scattered, and
determined what was vague. If I am less anxious than formerly for the
reputation to be acquired in society, I am more eager for honour in the
world; and instead of amusing my enemies, and the saloon, I trust yet to
be useful to my friends and to mankind.

Whether this is a hope, altogether vain and idle; whether I have, in
the self-conceit common to all men, peculiarly prominent in myself,
overrated both the power and the integrity of my mind (for the one
is bootless without the other,) neither I nor the world can yet
tell. “Time,” says one of the fathers, “is the only touchstone which
distinguishes the prophet from the boaster.”

Meanwhile, gentle reader, during the two years which I purpose devoting
to solitude and study, I shall not be so occupied with my fields and
folios, as to render me uncourteous to thee. If ever thou hast known me
in the city, I give thee a hearty invitation to come and visit me in the
country. I promise thee, that my wines and viands shall not disgrace the
companion of Guloseton: nor my conversation be much duller than my book.
I will compliment thee on thy horses, thou shalt congratulate me upon my
wife. Over old wine we will talk over new events; and if we flag at the
latter, why, we will make ourselves amends with the former. In short, if
thou art neither very silly nor very wise, it shall be thine own fault
if we are not excellent friends.

I feel that it would be but poor courtesy in me, after having kept
company with Lord Vincent, through the tedious journey of three volumes,
to dismiss him now without one word of valediction. May he, in the
political course he has adopted, find all the admiration his talents
deserve; and if ever we meet as foes, let our heaviest weapon be a
quotation, and our bitterest vengeance a jest.

Lord Guloseton regularly corresponds with me, and his last letter
contained a promise to visit me in the course of the month, in order
to recover his appetite (which has been much relaxed of late) by the
country air.

My uncle wrote to me, three weeks since, announcing the death of the
infant Lady Glenmorris had brought him. Sincerely do I wish that his
loss may be supplied. I have already sufficient fortune for my wants,
and sufficient hope for my desires.

Thornton died as he had lived--the reprobate and the ruffian. “Pooh,”
 said he, in his quaint brutality, to the worthy clergyman, who attended
his last moments with more zeal than success; “Pooh, what’s the
difference between gospel and go--spell? we agree like a bell and its
clapper--you’re prating while I’m hanging.”

Dawson died in prison, penitent and in peace. Cowardice, which spoils
the honest man, often ameliorates the knave.

From Lord Dawton I have received a letter, requesting me to accept a
borough (in his gift), just vacated. It is a pity that generosity--such
a prodigal to those who do not want it--should often be such a niggard
to those who do. I need not specify my answer. One may as well be free
as dependant, when one can afford it; and I hope yet to teach Lord
Dawton, that to forgive the minister is not to forget the affront.
Meanwhile, I am content to bury myself in my retreat with my mute
teachers of logic and legislature, in order, hereafter, to justify his
lordship’s good opinion of my senatorial abilities. Farewell, Brutus, we
shall meet at Philippi!

It is some months since Lady Roseville left England; the last news we
received of her, informed us, that she was living at Sienna, in utter
seclusion, and very infirm health.

“The day drags thro’, though storms keep out the sun, And thus the heart
will break, yet brokenly live on.”

Poor Lady Glanville! the mother of one so beautiful, so gifted, and so
lost. What can I say of her which “you, and you, and you--” all who are
parents, cannot feel, a thousand times more acutely, in those recesses
of the heart too deep for words or tears. There are yet many hours in
which I find the sister of the departed in grief, that even her husband
cannot console; and I--I--my friend, my brother, have I forgotten thee
in death? I lay down the pen, I turn from my employment--thy dog is at
my feet, and looking at me, as if conscious of my thoughts, with an eye
almost as tearful as my own.

But it is not thus that I will part from my reader; our greeting was not
in sorrow, neither shall be our adieus. For thee, who hast gone with me
through the motley course of my confessions, I would fain trust that I
have sometimes hinted at thy instruction when only appearing to strive
for thy amusement. But on this I will not dwell; for the moral insisted
upon often loses its effect, and all that I will venture to hope is,
that I have opened to thee one true, and not utterly hacknied, page
in the various and mighty volume of mankind. In this busy and restless
world I have not been a vague speculator, nor an idle actor. While all
around me were vigilant, I have not laid me down to sleep--even for the
luxury of a poet’s dream. Like the school boy, I have considered study
as study, but action as delight.

Nevertheless, whatever I have seen, or heard, or felt, has been
treasured in my memory, and brooded over by my thoughts. I now place the
result before you,

“Sicut meus est mos, Nescio quid meditans nugarum;--
but not, perhaps,--totus in illis.”

Whatever society--whether in a higher or lower grade--I have portrayed,
my sketches have been taken rather as a witness than a copyist; for I
have never shunned that circle, nor that individual, which presented
life in a fresh view, or man in a new relation. It is right, however,
that I should add, that as I have not wished to be an individual
satirist, rather than a general observer, I have occasionally, in the
subordinate characters (such as Russelton and Gordon), taken only the
outline from truth, and filled up the colours at my leisure and my will.

With regard to myself I have been more candid. I have not only
shewn--non parca manu--my faults, but (grant that this is a much rarer
exposure) my foibles; and, in my anxiety for your entertainment, I have
not grudged you the pleasure of a laugh--even at my own expense. Forgive
me, then, if I am not a fashionable hero--forgive me if I have not wept
over a “blighted spirit,” nor boasted of a “British heart;” and allow
that, a man, who, in these days of alternate Werters and Worthies, is
neither the one nor the other, is, at least, a novelty in print, though,
I fear, common enough in life.

And, now my kind reader, having remembered the proverb, and in saying
one word to thee, having said two for myself, I will no longer detain
thee. Whatever thou mayest think of me and my thousand faults, both as
an author, and a man, believe me it is with a sincere and affectionate
wish for the accomplishment of my parting words, that I bid
thee--FAREWELL!





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Pelham — Complete" ***

Copyright 2023 LibraryBlog. All rights reserved.



Home