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    The Newcomes

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    wife's mother, whom my imprudence had impoverished,--that here was an

      honourable asylum which my friend could procure for me, and was not that

      better than to drain his purse? She was very much moved, sir--she is a

      very kind lady, though she passed for being very proud and haughty in

      India--so wrongly are people judged. And Lord H. said, in his rough way,

      'that, by Jove, if Tom Newcome took a thing into his obstinate old head

      no one could drive it out.' And so," said the Colonel, with his sad

      smile, "I had my own way. Lady H. was good enough to come and see me the

      very next day--and do you know, Pen, she invited me to go and live with

      them for the rest of my life--made me the most generous, the most

      delicate offers. But I knew I was right, and held my own. I am too old to

      work, Arthur: and better here whilst I am to stay, than elsewhere. Look!

      all this furniture came from H. House--and that wardrobe is full of

      linen, which she sent me. She has been twice to see me, and every officer

      in this hospital is as courteous to me as if I had my fine house."

      I thought of the psalm we had heard on the previous evening, and turned

      to it in the opened Bible, and pointed to the verse, "Though he fall, he

      shall not be utterly cast down: for the Lord upholdeth him." Thomas

      Newcome seeing my occupation, laid a kind, trembling hand on my shoulder;

      and then, putting on his glasses, with a smile bent over the volume. And

      who that saw him then, and knew him and loved him as I did--who would not

      have humbled his own heart, and breathed his inward prayer, confessing

      and adoring the Divine Will, which ordains these trials, these triumphs,

      these humiliations, these blest griefs, this crowning Love?

      I had the happiness of bringing Clive and his little boy to Thomas

      Newcome that evening; and heard the child's cry of recognition and

      surprise, and the old man calling the boy's name, as I closed the door

      upon that meeting; and by the night's mail I went down to Newcome, to the

      friends with whom my own family was already staying.

      Of course, my conscience-keeper at Rosebury was anxious to know about the

      school-dinner, and all the speeches made, and the guests assembled there;

      but she soot ceased to inquire about these when I came to give her the

      news of the discovery of our dear old friend in the habit of a Poor

      Brother of Grey Friars. She was very glad to hear that Clive and his

      little son had been reunited to the Colonel; and appeared to imagine at

      first, that there was some wonderful merit upon my part in bringing the

      three together.

      "Well--no great merit, Pen, as you will put it," says the Confessor; "but

      it was kindly thought, sir--and I like my husband when he is kind best;

      and don't wonder at your having made a stupid speech at the dinner, as

      you say you did, when you had this other subject to think of. That is a

      beautiful psalm, Pen, and those verses which you were reading when you

      saw him, especially beautiful."

      "But in the presence of eighty old gentlemen, who have all come to decay,

      and have all had to beg their bread in a manner, don't you think the

      clergyman might choose some other psalm?" asks Mr. Pendennis.

      "They were not forsaken utterly, Arthur," says Mrs. Laura, gravely: but

      rather declines to argue the point raised by me; namely, that the

      selection of that especial thirty-seventh psalm was not complimentary to

      those decayed old gentlemen.

      "All the psalms are good, sir," she says, "and this one, of course, is

      included," and thus the discussion closed.

      I then fell to a description of Howland Street, and poor Clive, whom I

      had found there over his work. A dubious maid scanned my appearance

      rather eagerly when I asked to see him. I found a picture-dealer

      chaffering with him over a bundle of sketches, and his little boy,

      already pencil in hand, lying in one corner of the room, the sun playing

      about his yellow hair. The child looked languid and pale, the father worn

      and ill. When the dealer at length took his bargains away, I gradually

      broke my errand to Clive, and told him from whence I had just come.

      He had thought his father in Scotland with Lord H.: and was immensely

      moved with the news which I brought.

      "I haven't written to him for a month. It's not pleasant the letters I

      have to write, Pen, and I can't make them pleasant. Up, Tommykin, and put

      on your cap." Tommykin jumps up. "Put on your cap, and tell them to take

      off your pinafore, tell grandmamma----"

      At that name Tommykin begins to cry.

      "Look at that!" says Clive, commencing to speak in the French language,

      which the child interrupts by calling out in that tongue. "I speak also

      French, papa."

      "Well, my child! You will like to come out with papa, and Betsy can dress

      you." He flings off his own paint-stained shooting-jacket as he talks,

      takes a frock-coat out of a carved wardrobe, and a hat from a helmet on

      the shelf. He is no longer the handsome splendid boy of old times. Can

      that be Clive, with that haggard face and slouched handkerchief? "I am

      not the dandy I was, Pen," he says bitterly.

      A little voice is heard crying overhead--and giving a kind of gasp the

      wretched father stops in some indifferent speech he was trying to make.

      "I can't help myself," he groans out; "my wife is so ill, she can't

      attend to the child. Mrs. Mackenzie manages the house for me--and--here!

      Tommy, Tommy! papa is coming!" Tommy has been crying again; and flinging

      open the studio door, Clive calls out, and dashes upstairs.

      I hear scuffling, stamping, loud voices, poor Tommy's scared little pipe

      --Clive's fierce objurgations, and the Campaigner's voice barking out--

      "Do, sir, do! with my child suffering in the next room. Behave like a

      brute to me, do. He shall not go! He shall not have the hat"--"He shall"

      --"Ah--ah!" A scream is heard. It is Clive tearing a child's hat out of

      the Campaigner's hands, with which, and a flushed face, he presently

      rushes downstairs, bearing little Tommy on his shoulder.

      "You see what I am come to, Pen," he says with a heartbroken voice,

      trying, with hands all of a tremble, to tie the hat on the boy's head. He

      laughs bitterly at the ill success of his endeavours. "Oh, you silly

      papa!" laughs Tommy, too.

      The door is flung open, and the red-faced Campaigner appears. Her face is

      mottled with wrath, her bandeaux of hair are disarranged upon her

      forehead, the ornaments of her cap, cheap, and dirty, and numerous, only

      give her a wilder appearance. She is in a large and dingy wrapper, very

      different from the lady who had presented herself a few months back to my

      wife--how different from the smiling Mrs. Mackenzie of old days!

      "He shall not go out of a winter day, sir," she breaks out. "I have his

      mother's orders, whom you are killing. Mr. Pendennis!" She starts,

      perceiving me for the first time, and her breast heaves, and she prepares

      for combat, and looks at me over her shoulder.

      "You and his father are the best judges upon this point, ma'am," said Mr.

      Pendennis, with a bow.

      "The child is delicate, sir," cries Mrs. Mackenzie; "and this
    winter----"

      "Enough of this," says Clive with a stamp, and passes through her guard

      with Tommy, and we descend the stairs, and at length are in the free

      street. Was it not best not to describe at full length this portion of

      poor Clive's history?

      CHAPTER LXXVI

      Christmas at Rosebury

      We have known our friend Florac under two aristocratic names, and might

      now salute him by a third, to which he was entitled, although neither he

      nor his wife ever chose to assume it. His father was lately dead, and M.

      Paul de Florac might sign himself Duc d'Ivry if he chose, but he was

      indifferent as to the matter, and his wife's friends indignant at the

      idea that their kinswoman, after having been a Princess, should descend

      to the rank of a mere Duchess. So Prince and Princess these good folks

      remained, being exceptions to that order, inasmuch as their friends could

      certainly put their trust in them.

      On his father's death Florac went to Paris, to settle the affairs of the

      paternal succession; and, having been for some time absent in his native

      country, returned to Rosebury for the winter, to resume that sport of

      which he was a distinguished amateur. He hunted in black during the

      ensuing season; and, indeed, henceforth laid aside his splendid attire

      and his allurements as a young man. His waist expanded, or was no longer

      confined by the cestus which had given it a shape. When he laid aside his

      black, his whiskers, too, went into a sort of half-mourning, and appeared

      in grey. "I make myself old, my friend," he said, pathetically; "I have

      no more neither twenty years nor forty." He went to Rosebury Church no

      more; but, with great order and sobriety, drove every Sunday to the

      neighbouring Catholic chapel at C---- Castle. We had an ecclesiastic or

      two to dine with us at Rosebury, one of whom I inclined to think was

      Florac's director.

      A reason, perhaps, for Paul's altered demeanour, was the presence of his

      mother at Rosebury. No politeness or respect could be greater than Paul's

      towards the Countess. Had she been a sovereign princess, Madame de Florac

      could not have been treated with more profound courtesy than she now

      received from her son. I think the humble-minded lady could have

      dispensed with some of his attentions; but Paul was a personage who

      demonstrated all his sentiments, and performed his various parts in life

      with the greatest vigour. As a man of pleasure, for instance, what more

      active roue than he? As a jeune homme, who could be younger, and for a

      longer time? As a country gentleman, or an l'homme d'affaires, he

      insisted upon dressing each character with the most rigid accuracy, and

      an exactitude that reminded one somewhat of Bouffe, or Ferville, at the

      play. I wonder whether, when is he quite old, he will think proper to

      wear a pigtail, like his old father? At any rate, that was a good part

      which the kind fellow was now acting, of reverence towards his widowed

      mother, and affectionate respect for her declining days. He not only felt

      these amiable sentiments, but he imparted them to his friends most

      freely, as his wont was. He used to weep freely,--quite unrestrained by

      the presence of the domestics, as English sentiment would be:--and when

      Madame de Florac quitted the room after dinner, would squeeze my hand and

      tell me with streaming eyes, that his mother was an angel. "Her life has

      been but a long trial, my friend," he would say. "Shall not I, who have

      caused her to shed so many tears, endeavour to dry some?" Of course the

      friends who liked him best encouraged him in an intention so pious.

      The reader has already been made acquainted with this lady by the letters

      of hers, which came into my possession some time after the events which I

      am at present narrating: my wife, through our kind friend, Colonel

      Newcome, had also had the honour of an introduction to Madame de Florac

      at Paris; and, on coming to Rosebury for the Christmas holidays, I found

      Laura and the children greatly in favour with the good Countess. She

      treated her son's wife with a perfect though distant courtesy. She was

      thankful to Madame de Moncontour for the latter's great goodness to her

      son. Familiar with but very few persons, she could scarcely be intimate

      with her homely daughter-in-law. Madame de Moncontour stood in the

      greatest awe of her; and, to do that good lady justice, admired and

      reverenced Paul's mother with all her simple heart. In truth, I think

      almost every one had a certain awe of Madame de Florac, except children,

      who came to her trustingly, and, as it were, by instinct. The habitual

      melancholy of her eyes vanished as they lighted upon young faces and

      infantile smiles. A sweet love beamed out of her countenance: an angelic

      smile shone over her face, as she bent towards them and caressed them.

      Her demeanour then, nay, her looks and ways at other times;--a certain

      gracious sadness, a sympathy with all grief, and pity for all pain; a

      gentle heart, yearning towards all children; and, for her own especially,

      feeling a love that was almost an anguish: in the affairs of the common

      world only a dignified acquiescence, as if her place was not in it, and

      her thoughts were in her Home elsewhere;--these qualities, which we had

      seen exemplified in another life, Laura and her husband watched in Madame

      de Florac, and we loved her because she was like our mother. I see in

      such women, the good and pure, the patient and faithful, the tried and

      meek, the followers of Him whose earthly life was divinely sad and

      tender.

      But, good as she was to us and to all, Ethel Newcome was the French

      lady's greatest favourite. A bond of extreme tenderness and affection

      united these two. The elder friend made constant visits to the younger at

      Newcome; and when Miss Newcome, as she frequently did, came to Rosebury,

      we used to see that they preferred to be alone; divining and respecting

      the sympathy which brought those two faithful hearts together. I can

      imagine now the two tall forms slowly pacing the garden walks, or

      turning, as they lighted on the young ones in their play. What was their

      talk! I never asked it. Perhaps Ethel never said what was in her heart,

      though, be sure, the other knew it. Though the grief of those they love

      is untold, women hear it; as they soothe it with unspoken consolations.

      To see the elder lady embrace her friend as they parted was something

      holy--a sort of saintlike salutation.

      Consulting the person from whom I had no secrets, we had thought best at

      first not to mention to our friends the place and position in which we

      had found our dear Colonel; at least to wait for a fitting opportunity on

      which we might break the news to those who held him in such affection. I

      told how Clive was hard at work, and hoped the best for him. Good-natured

      Madame de Moncontour was easily satisfied with my replies to her

      questions concerning our friend. Ethel only asked if he and her uncle

      were well, and once or twice made inquiries respecting Rosa and her

      child. And now it was that my wife told me, what I need no longer keep

      secret, of Ethel's extrem
    e anxiety to serve her distressed relatives, and

      how she, Laura, had already acted as Miss Newcome's almoner in furnishing

      and hiring those apartments, which Ethel believed were occupied by Clive

      and his father, and wife and child. And my wife further informed me with

      what deep grief Ethel had heard of her uncle's misfortune, and how, but

      that she feared to offend his pride, she longed to give him assistance.

      She had even ventured to offer to send him pecuniary help; but the

      Colonel (who never mentioned the circumstance to me any other of his

      friends), in a kind but very cold letter, had declined to be beholden to

      his niece for help.

      So I may have remained some days at Rosebury, and the real position of

      the two Newcomes was unknown to our friends there. Christmas Eve was

      come, and, according to a long-standing promise, Ethel Newcome and her

      two children had arrived from the Park, which dreary mansion, since his

      double defeat, Sir Barnes scarcely ever visited. Christmas was come, and

      Rosebury hall was decorated with holly. Florac did his best to welcome

      his friends, and strove to make the meeting gay, though in truth it was

      rather melancholy. The children, however, were happy: and they had

      pleasure enough, in the school festival, in the distribution of cloaks

      and blankets to the poor, and in Madame de Moncontour's gardens,

      delightful and beautiful though the winter was there.

      It was only a family meeting, Madame de Florac's widowhood not permitting

      her presence in large companies. Paul sate at his table between his

      mother and Mrs. Pendennis; Mr. Pendennis opposite to him, with Ethel and

      Madame de Moncontour on each side. The four children were placed between

      these personages, on whom Madame de Florac looked with her tender

      glances, and to whose little wants the kindest of hosts ministered with

      uncommon good-nature and affection. He was very soft-hearted about

      children. "Pourquoi n'en avons-nous pas, Jeanne? He! quoi n'en avons-nous

      pas?" he said, addressing his wife by her Christian name. The poor little

      lady looked kindly at her husband, and then gave a sigh, and turned and

      heaped cake upon the plate of the child next to her. No mamma or Aunt

      Ethel could interpose. It was a very light wholesome cake. Brown made it

      on purpose for the children, "the little darlings!" cries the Princess.

      The children were very happy at being allowed to sit up so late to

      dinner, at all the kindly amusements of the day, at the holly and

      mistletoe clustering round the lamps--the mistletoe, under which the

      gallant Florac, skilled in all British usages, vowed he would have his

      privilege. But the mistletoe was clustered round the lamp, the lamp was

      over the centre of the great round table--the innocent gratification

      which he proposed to himself was denied to M. Paul.

      In the greatest excitement and good-humour, our host at the dessert made

      us des speech. He carried a toast to the charming Ethel, another to the

      charming Mistriss Laura, another to his good fren', his brave frren', his

      'appy fren', Pendennis--'appy as possessor of such a wife, 'appy as

      writer of works destined to the immortality, etc. etc. The little

      children round about clapped their happy little hands, and laughed and

      crowed in chorus. And now the nursery and its guardians were about to

      retreat, when Florac said he had yet a speech, yet a toast--and he bade

      the butler pour wine into every one's glass--yet a toast--and he carried

      it to the health of our dear friends, of Clive and his father,--the good,

      the brave Colonel! "We who are happy," says he, "shall we not think of

      those who are good? We who love each other, shall we not remember those

      whom we all love?" He spoke with very great tenderness and feeling. "Ma

      bonne mere, thou too shalt drink this toast!" he said, taking his

      mother's hand, and kissing it. She returned his caress gently, and tasted

     


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