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    The Newcomes

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    maid was as tender-hearted at his departure as her mistress. He was

      ailing for a short time, when our cook performed prodigies of puddings

      and jellies to suit his palate. The youth who held the offices of butler

      and valet in our establishment--a lazy and greedy youth whom Martha

      scolded in vain--would jump up and leave his supper to carry a message to

      our Colonel. My heart is full as I remember the kind words which he said

      to me at parting, and as I think that we were the means of giving a

      little comfort to that stricken and gentle soul.

      Whilst the Colonel and his son stayed with us, letters of course passed

      between Clive and his family at Boulogne, but my wife remarked that the

      receipt of those letters appeared to give our friend but little pleasure.

      They were read in a minute, and he would toss them over to his father, or

      thrust them into his pocket with a gloomy face. "Don't you see," groans

      out Clive to me one evening, "that Rosa scarcely writes the letters, or

      if she does, that her mother is standing over her? That woman is the

      Nemesis of our life, Pen. How can I pay her off? Great God! how can I pay

      her off?" And so having spoken, his head fell between his hands, and as I

      watched him I saw a ghastly domestic picture before me of helpless pain,

      humiliating discord, stupid tyranny.

      What, I say again, are the so-called great ills of life compared to these

      small ones?

      The Colonel accompanied Clive to the lodgings which we had found for the

      young artist, in a quarter not far removed from the old house in Fitzroy

      Square, where some happy years of his youth had been spent. When sitters

      came to Clive--as at first they did in some numbers, many of his early

      friends being anxious to do him a service--the old gentleman was

      extraordinarily cheered and comforted. We could see by his face that

      affairs were going on well at the studio. He showed us the rooms which

      Rosey and the boy were to occupy. He prattled to our children and their

      mother, who was never tired of hearing him, about his grandson. He filled

      up the future nursery with a hundred little knick-knacks of his own

      contriving; and with wonderful cheap bargains, which he bought in his

      walks about Tottenham Court Road. He pasted a most elaborate book of

      prints and sketches for Boy. It was astonishing what notice Boy already

      took of pictures. He would have all the genius of his father. Would he

      had had a better grandfather than the foolish old man who had ruined all

      belonging to him!

      However much they like each other, men in the London world see their

      friends but seldom. The place is so vast that even next door is distant;

      the calls of business, society, pleasure, so multifarious that mere

      friendship can get or give but an occasional shake of the hand in the

      hurried moments of passage. Men must live their lives; and are perforce

      selfish, but not unfriendly. At a great need you know where to look for

      your friend, and he that he is secure of you. So I went very little to

      Howland Street, where Clive now lived; very seldom to Lamb Court, where

      my dear old friend Warrington still sate in his old chambers, though our

      meetings were none the less cordial when they occurred, and our trust in

      one another always the same. Some folks say the world is heartless: he

      who says so either prates commonplaces (the most likely and charitable

      suggestion), or is heartless himself, or is most singular and unfortunate

      in having made no friends. Many such a reasonable mortal cannot have: our

      nature, I think, not sufficing for that sort of polygamy. How many

      persons would you have to deplore your death; or whose death would you

      wish to deplore? Could our hearts let in such a harem of dear

      friendships, the mere changes and recurrences of grief and mourning would

      be intolerable, and tax our lives beyond their value. In a word, we carry

      our own burthen in the world; push and struggle along on our own affairs;

      are pinched by our own shoes--though Heaven forbid we should not stop and

      forget ourselves sometimes, when a friend cries out in his distress, or

      we can help a poor stricken wanderer in his way. As for good women--

      these, my worthy reader, are different from us--the nature of these is to

      love, and to do kind offices, and devise untiring charities:--so I would

      have you to know, that, though Mr. Pendennis was parcus suorum cultor et

      infrequens, Mrs. Laura found plenty of time to go from Westminster to

      Bloomsbury; and to pay visits to her Colonel and her Clive, both of whom

      she had got to love with all her heart again, now misfortune was on them;

      and both of whom returned her kindness with an affection blessing the

      bestower and the receiver; and making the husband proud and thankful

      whose wife had earned such a noble regard. What is the dearest praise of

      all to a man? his own--or that you should love those whom he loves? I see

      Laura Pendennis ever constant and tender and pure, ever ministering in

      her sacred office of kindness--bestowing love and followed by blessings.

      Which would I have, think you; that priceless crown hymeneal, or the

      glory of a Tenth Edition?

      Clive and his father had found not only a model friend in the lady above

      mentioned, but a perfect prize landlady in their happy lodgings. In her

      house, besides those apartments which Mr. Newcome had originally engaged,

      were rooms just sufficient to accommodate his wife, child, and servant,

      when they should come to him, with a very snug little upper chamber for

      the Colonel, close by Boy's nursery, where he liked best to be. "And if

      there is not room for the Campaigner, as you call her," says Mrs. Laura,

      with a shrug of her shoulders, "why, I am very sorry, but Clive must try

      and bear her absence as well as possible. After all, my dear Pen, you

      know he is married to Rosa and not to her mamma; and so, and so I think

      it will be quite best that they shall have their menage as before."

      The cheapness of the lodgings which the prize landlady let, the quantity

      of neat new furniture which she put in, the consultations which she had

      with my wife regarding these supplies, were quite singular to me. "Have

      you pawned your diamonds, you reckless little person, in order to supply

      all this upholstery?" "No, sir, I have not pawned my diamonds," Mrs.

      Laura answers; and I was left to think (if I thought on the matter at

      all) that the landlady's own benevolence had provided these good things

      for Clive. For the wife of Laura's husband was perforce poor; and she

      asked me for no more money at this time than at any other.

      At first, in spite of his grumbling, Clive's affairs looked so

      prosperous, and so many sitters came to him from amongst his old friends,

      that I was half inclined to believe with the Colonel and my wife, that he

      was a prodigious genius, and that his good fortune would go on

      increasing. Laura was for having Rosey return to her husband. Every wife

      ought to be with her husband. J. J. shook his head about the prosperity.

      "Let us see whether the Academy will have his pictures this year, and

      what a place they will give him," said Ridley. To do him justice, Clive

      th
    ought far more humbly of his compositions than Ridley did. Not a little

      touching was it to us, who had known the young men in former days, to see

      them in their changed positions. It was Ridley, whose genius and industry

      had put him in the rank of a patron--Ridley, the good industrious

      apprentice, who had won the prize of his art--and not one of his many

      admirers saluted his talent and success with such a hearty recognition as

      Clive, whose generous soul knew no envy, and who always fired and kindled

      at the success of his friends.

      When Mr. Clive used to go over to Boulogne from time to time to pay his

      dutiful visits to his wife, the Colonel did not accompany his son, but,

      during the latter's absence, would dine with Mrs. Pendennis.

      Though the preparations were complete in Howland Street, and Clive

      dutifully went over to Boulogne, Mrs. Pendennis remarked that he seemed

      still to hesitate about bringing his wife to London.

      Upon this Mr. Pendennis observed that some gentlemen were not

      particularly anxious about the society of their wives, and that this pair

      were perhaps better apart. Upon which Mrs. Pendennis, drubbing on the

      ground with a little foot, said, "Nonsense, for shame, Arthur! How can

      you speak so flippantly? Did he not swear before Heaven to love and

      cherish her, never to leave her, sir? Is not his duty his duty, sir?" (a

      most emphatic stamp of the foot). "Is she not his for better, or for

      worse?"

      "Including the Campaigner, my dear?" says Mr. P.

      "Don't laugh, sir! She must come to him. There is no room in Howland

      Street for Mrs. Mackenzie."

      "You artful scheming creature! We have some spare rooms. Suppose we ask

      Mrs. Mackenzie to come and live with us, my dear? and we could then have

      the benefit of the garrison anecdotes, and mess jocularities of your

      favourite, Captain Goby."

      "I could never bear the horrid man!" cried Mrs. Pendennis. And how can I

      tell why she disliked him?

      Everything being now ready for the reception of Clive's little family, we

      counselled our friend to go over to Boulogne, and bring back his wife and

      child, and then to make some final stipulation with the Campaigner. He

      saw, as well as we, that the presence and tyranny of that fatal woman

      destroyed his father's health and spirits--that the old man knew no peace

      or comfort in her neighbourhood, and was actually hastening to his grave

      under that dreadful and unremitting persecution. Mrs. Mackenzie made

      Clive scarcely less wretched than his father--she governed his household

      --took away his weak wife's allegiance and affection from him--and caused

      the wretchedness of every single person round about her. They ought to

      live apart. If she was too poor to subsist upon her widow's pension,

      which, in truth, was but a very small pittance, let Clive give up to her,

      say, the half of his wife's income of one hundred pounds a year. His

      prospects and present means of earning money were such that he might

      afford to do without that portion of his income; at any rate, he and his

      father would be cheaply ransomed at that price from their imprisonment to

      this intolerable person. "Go, Clive," said his counsellors, "and bring

      back your wife and child, and let us all be happy together." For, you

      see, those advisers opined that if we had written over to Mrs. Newcome

      --"Come"--she would have come with the Campaigner in her suite.

      Vowing that he would behave like a man of courage--and we knew that Clive

      had shown himself to be such in two or three previous battles--Clive

      crossed the water to bring back his little Rosey. Our good Colonel agreed

      to dine at our house during the days of his son's absence. I have said

      how beloved he was by young and old there--and he was kind enough to say

      afterwards, that no woman had made him so happy as Laura. We did not tell

      him--I know not from what reticence--that we had advised Clive to offer a

      bribe of fifty pounds a year to Mrs. Mackenzie; until about a fortnight

      after Clive's absence, and a week after his return, when news came that

      poor old Mrs. Mason was dead at Newcome, whereupon we informed the

      Colonel that he had another pensioner now in the Campaigner.

      Colonel Newcome was thankful that his dear old friend had gone out of the

      world in comfort and without pain. She had made a will long since,

      leaving all her goods and chattels to Thomas Newcome--but having no money

      to give, the Colonel handed over these to the old lady's faithful

      attendant, Keziah.

      Although many of the Colonel's old friends had parted from him or

      quarrelled with him in consequence of the ill success of the B. B. C.,

      there were two old ladies who yet remained faithful to him--Miss Cann,

      namely, and honest little Miss Honeyman of Brighton, who, when she heard

      of the return to London of her nephew and brother-in-law, made a railway

      journey to the metropolis (being the first time she ever engaged in that

      kind of travelling), rustled into Clive's apartments in Howland Street in

      her neatest silks, and looking not a day older than on that when we last

      beheld her; and after briskly scolding the young man for permitting his

      father to enter into money affairs--of which the poor dear Colonel was as

      ignorant as a baby--she gave them both to understand that she had a

      little sum at her banker's at their disposal--and besought the Colonel to

      remember that her house was his, and that she should be proud and happy

      to receive him as soon and as often and for as long a time as he would

      honour her with his company. "Is not my house full of your presents"--

      cried the stout little old lady--"have I not reason to be grateful to all

      the Newcomes--yes, to all the Newcomes;--for Miss Ethel and her family

      have come to me every year for months, and I don't quarrel with them, and

      I won't, although you do, sir? Is not this shawl--are not these jewels

      that I wear," she continued, pointing to those well-known ornaments, "my

      dear Colonel's gift? Did you not relieve my brother Charles in this

      country and procure for him his place in India? Yes, my dear friend--and

      though you have been imprudent in money matters, my obligations towards

      you, and my gratitude, and my affection are always the same." Thus Miss

      Honeyman spoke, with somewhat of a quivering voice at the end of her

      little oration, but with exceeding state and dignity--for she believed

      that her investment of two hundred pounds in that unlucky B. B. C., which

      failed for half a million, was a sum of considerable importance, and gave

      her a right to express her opinion to the Managers.

      Clive came back from Boulogne in a week, as we have said--but he came

      back without his wife, much to our alarm, and looked so exceedingly

      fierce and glum when we demanded the reason of his return without his

      family, that we saw wars and battles had taken place, and thought that in

      this last continental campaign the Campaigner had been too much for her

      friend.

      The Colonel, to whom Clive communicated, though with us the poor lad held

      his tongue, told my wife what had happened:--not all the battles; which

      no doubt raged at breakfast, di
    nner, supper, during the week of Clive's

      visit to Boulogne,--but the upshot of these engagements. Rosey, not

      unwilling in her first private talk with her husband to come to England

      with him and the boy, showed herself irresolute on the second day at

      breakfast, when the fire was opened on both sides; cried at dinner when

      fierce assaults took place, in which Clive had the advantage; slept

      soundly, but besought him to be very firm, and met the enemy at breakfast

      with a quaking heart; cried all that day during which, pretty well

      without cease, the engagement lasted; and when Clive might have conquered

      and brought her off, but the weather was windy and the sea was rough, and

      he was pronounced a brute to venture on it with a wife in Rosey's

      situation.

      Behind that "situation" the widow shielded herself. She clung to her

      adored child, and from that bulwark discharged abuse and satire at Clive

      and his father. He could not rout her out of her position. Having had the

      advantage on the first two or three days, on the four last he was beaten,

      and lost ground in each action. Rosey found that in her situation she

      could not part from her darling mamma. The Campaigner for her part

      averred that she might be reduced to beggary; that she might be robbed of

      her last farthing and swindled and cheated; that she might see her

      daughter's fortune flung away by unprincipled adventurers, and her

      blessed child left without even the comforts of life; but desert her in

      such a situation, she never would--no, never! Was not dear Rosa's health

      already impaired by the various shocks which she had undergone? Did she

      not require every comfort, every attendance? Monster! ask the doctor! She

      would stay with her darling child in spite of insult and rudeness and

      vulgarity. (Rosey's father was a King's officer, not a Company's officer,

      thank God!) She would stay as long at least as Rosey's situation

      continued, at Boulogne, if not in London, but with her child. They might

      refuse to send her money, having robbed her of all her own, but she would

      pawn her gown off her back for her child. Whimpers from Rosey--cries of

      "Mamma, mamma, compose yourself,"--convulsive sobs--clenched knuckles--

      flashing eyes--embraces rapidly clutched--laughs--stamps--snorts--from

      the dishevelled Campaigner; grinding teeth--livid fury and repeated

      breakages of the third commandment by Clive--I can fancy the whole scene.

      He returned to London without his wife, and when she came she brought

      Mrs. Mackenzie with her.

      CHAPTER LXXV

      Founder's Day at the Grey Friars

      Rosey came, bringing discord and wretchedness with her to her husband,

      and the sentence of death or exile to his dear old father, all of which

      we foresaw--all of which Clive's friends would have longed to prevent--

      all of which were inevitable under the circumstances. Clive's domestic

      affairs were often talked over by our little set. Warrington and F. B.

      knew of his unhappiness. We three had strongly opined that the women

      being together at Boulogne, should stay there and live there, Clive

      sending them over pecuniary aid as his means permitted. "They must hate

      each other pretty well by this time," growls George Warrington. "Why on

      earth should they not part?" "What a woman that Mrs. Mackenzie is!" cries

      F. B. "What an infernal tartar and catamaran! She who was so uncommonly

      smiling and soft-spoken, and such a fine woman, by jingo! What puzzles

      all women are!" F. B. sighed, and drowned further reflection in beer.

      On the other side, and most strongly advocating Rosey's return to Clive,

      was Mrs. Laura Pendennis; with certain arguments for which she had

      chapter and verse, and against which we of the separatist party had no

      appeal. "Did he marry her only for the days of her prosperity?" asked

      Laura. "Is it right, is it manly, that he should leave her now she is

      unhappy--poor little creature--no woman had ever more need of protection;

     


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