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    The Newcomes

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    time, feeble lights were twinkling in the chamber windows of the Poor

      Brethren as we issued into the courts;--feeble lights illumining a dim,

      grey, melancholy old scene. Many a career, once bright, was flickering

      out here in the darkness; many a night was closing in. We went away

      silently from that quiet place; and in another minute were in the flare

      and din and tumult of London.

      "The Colonel is most likely gone to Clive's," I said. Would not Miss

      Newcome follow him thither? We consulted whether she should go. She took

      heart and said yes. "Drive, cabman, to Howland Street!" The horse was, no

      doubt, tired, for the journey seemed extraordinarily long; I think

      neither of us spoke a word on the way.

      I ran upstairs to prepare our friends for the visit. Clive, his wife, his

      father, and his mother-in-law were seated by a dim light in Mrs. Clive's

      sitting-room. Rosey on the sofa, as usual; the little boy on his

      grandfather's knees.

      I hardly made a bow to the ladies, so eager was I to communicate with

      Colonel Newcome. "I have just been to your quarters at Grey Friars, sir,"

      said I. "That is----"

      "You have been to the Hospital, sir! You need not be ashamed to mention

      it, as Colonel Newcome is not ashamed to go there," cried out the

      Campaigner. "Pray speak in your own language, Clive, unless there is

      something not fit for ladies to hear." Clive was growling out to me in

      German that there had just been a terrible scene, his father having, a

      quarter of an hour previously, let slip the secret about Grey Friars.

      "Say at once, Clive!" the Campaigner cried, rising in her might, and

      extending a great strong arm over her helpless child, "that Colonel

      Newcome owns that he has gone to live as a pauper in a hospital! He who

      has squandered his own money. He who has squandered my money. He who has

      squandered the money of that darling helpless child--compose yourself,

      Rosey my love!--has completed the disgrace of the family, by his present

      mean and unworthy--yes, I say, mean and unworthy and degraded conduct.

      Oh, my child, my blessed child! to think that your husband's father

      should have come to a workhouse!" Whilst this maternal agony bursts over

      her, Rosa, on the sofa, bleats and whimpers amongst the faded chintz

      cushions.

      I took Clive's hand, which was cast up to his head striking his forehead

      with mad impotent rage, whilst this fiend of a woman lashed his good

      father. The veins of his great fist were swollen, his whole body was

      throbbing and trembling with the helpless pain under which he writhed.

      "Colonel Newcome's friends, ma'am,", I said, "think very differently from

      you; and that he is a better judge than you, or any one else, of his own

      honour. We. all, who loved him in his prosperity, love and respect him

      more than ever for the manner in which he bears his misfortune. Do you

      suppose that his noble friend, the Earl of H----, would have counselled

      him to a step unworthy of a gentleman; that the Prince de Moncontour

      would applaud his conduct as he does, if he did not think it admirable?"

      I can hardly say with what scorn I used this argument, or what depth of

      contempt I felt for the woman whom I knew it would influence. "And at

      this minute," I added, "I have come from visiting the Gray Friars with

      one of the Colonel's relatives, whose love and respect for him is

      boundless; who longs to be reconciled to him, and who is waiting below,

      eager to shake his hand, and embrace Clive's wife."

      "Who is that?" says the Colonel, looking gently up, as he pats Boy's

      head.

      "Who is it, Pen?" says Clive. I said in a low voice, "Ethel;" and

      starting up and crying "Ethel! Ethel!" he ran from the room.

      Little Mrs. Rosa started up too on her sofa, clutching hold of the

      table-cover with her lean hand, and the two red spots on her cheeks

      burning more fiercely than ever. I could see what passion was beating in

      that poor little heart. Heaven help us! what a resting-place had friends

      and parents prepared for it! for shame!"

      "Miss Newcome, is it? My darling Rosa, get on your shawl!" cried the

      Campaigner, a grim smile lighting her face.

      "It is Ethel; Ethel is my niece. I used to love her when she was quite a

      little girl," says the Colonel, patting Boy on the head; "and she is a

      very good, beautiful little child--a very good child." The torture had

      been too much for that kind old heart: there were times when Thomas

      Newcome passed beyond it. What still maddened Clive, excited his father

      no more; the pain yonder woman inflicted, only felled and stupefied him.

      As the door opened, the little white-headed child trotted forward towards

      the visitor, and Ethel entered on Clive's arm, who was as haggard and

      pale as death. Little Boy, looking up at the stately lady, still followed

      beside her, as she approached her uncle, who remained sitting, his head

      bent to the ground. His thoughts were elsewhere. Indeed he was following

      the child, and about to caress it again.

      "Here is a friend, father!" says Clive, laying a hand on the old man's

      shoulder. "It is I, Ethel, uncle! "the young lady said, taking his hand;

      and kneeling down between his knees, she flung her arms round him, and

      kissed him, and wept on his shoulder.

      His consciousness had quite returned ere an instant was over. He embraced

      her with the warmth of his old affection, uttering many brief words of

      love, kindness, and tenderness, such as men speak when strongly moved.

      The little boy had come wondering up to the chair whilst this embrace

      took place, and Clive's tall figure bent over the three. Rosa's eyes were

      not good to look at, as she stared at the group with a ghastly smile.

      Mrs. Mackenzie surveyed the scene in haughty state, from behind the sofa

      cushions. She tried to take one of Rosa's lean hot hands. The poor child

      tore it away, leaving her rings behind her; lifted her hands to her face:

      and cried, cried as if her little heart would break. Ah me! what a story

      was there! what an outburst of pent-up feeling! what a passion of pain!

      The ring had fallen to the ground; the little boy crept towards it, and

      picked it up, and came towards his mother, fixing on her his large

      wondering eyes. "Mamma crying. Mamma's ring!" he said, holding up the

      circle of gold. With more feeling than I had ever seen her exhibit, she

      clasped the boy in her wasted arms. Great Heaven! what passion, jealousy,

      grief, despair, were tearing and trying all these hearts, that but for

      fate might have been happy?

      Clive went round, and with the utmost sweetness and tenderness hanging

      round his child and wife, soothed her with words of consolation, that in

      truth I scarce heard, being ashamed almost of being present at this

      sudden scene. No one, however, took notice of the witnesses; and even

      Mrs. Mackenzie's voice was silent for the moment. I dare say Clive's

      words were incoherent; but women have more presence of mind; and now

      Ethel, with a noble grace which I cannot attempt to describe, going up to

      Rosa, seated herself by her, spoke of her long grief at the differences

      between her dearest uncle and herself; o
    f her early days, when he had

      been as a father to her; of her wish, her hope that Rosa should love her

      as a sister; and of her belief that better days and happiness were in

      store for them all. And she spoke to the mother about her boy so

      beautiful and intelligent, and told her how she had brought up her

      brother's children, and hoped that this one too would call her Aunt

      Ethel. She would not stay now, might she come again? Would Rosa come to

      her with her little boy? Would he kiss her? He did so with a very good

      grace; but when Ethel at parting embraced the child's mother, Rosa's face

      wore a smile ghastly to look at, and the lips that touched Ethel's

      cheeks, were quite white.

      "I shall come and see you again to-morrow, uncle, may I not? I saw your

      room to-day, sir, and your housekeeper; such a nice old lady, and your

      black gown. And you shall put it on to-morrow, and walk with me, and show

      me the beautiful old buildings of that old hospital. And I shall come and

      make tea for you, the housekeeper says I may. Will you come down with me

      to my carriage? No, Mr. Pendennis must come;" and she quitted the room,

      beckoning me after her. "You will speak to Clive now, won't you?" she

      said, "and come to me this evening, and tell me all before you go to

      bed?" I went back, anxious in truth to the messenger of good tidings to

      my dear old friends.

      Brief as my absence had been, Mrs. Mackenzie had taken advantage of that

      moment again to outrage Clive and his father, and to announce that Rosa

      might go to see this Miss Newcome, whom people respected because she was

      rich, but whom she would never visit; no, never! "An insolent, proud,

      impertinent thing! Does she take me for a housemaid?" Mrs. Mackenzie had

      inquired.

      "Am I dust to be trampled beneath her feet? Am I a dog that she can't

      throw me a word?" Her arms were stretched out, and she was making this

      inquiry as to her own canine qualities as I re-entered the room, and

      remembered that Ethel had never once addressed a single word to Mrs.

      Mackenzie in the course of her visit.

      I affected not to perceive the incident, and presently said that I wanted

      to speak to Clive in his studio. Knowing that I had brought my friend one

      or two commissions for drawings, Mrs. Mackenzie was civil to me, and did

      not object to our colloquies.

      "Will you come too, and smoke a pipe, father?" says Clive.

      "Of course your father intends to stay to dinner?" says the Campaigner,

      with a scornful toss of her head. Clive groaned out as we were on the

      stair, "that he could not bear this much longer, by heavens he could

      not."

      "Give the Colonel his pipe, Clive," said I. "Now, sir, down with you in

      the sitter's chair, and smoke the sweetest cheroot you ever smoked in

      your life! My dear, dear old Clive! you need not bear with the Campaigner

      any longer; you may go to bed without this nightmare to-night if you

      like; you may have your father back under your roof again."

      "My dear Arthur! I must be back at ten, sir, back at ten, military time;

      drum beats; no--bell tolls at ten, and gates close;" and he laughed and

      shook his old head. "Besides, I am to see a young lady, sir; and she is

      coming to make tea for me, and I must speak to Mrs. Jones to have all

      things ready--all things ready;" and again the old man laughed as he

      spoke.

      His son looked at him and then at me with eyes full of sad meaning. "How

      do you mean, Arthur," Clive said, "that he can come and stay with me, and

      that that woman can go?"

      Then feeling in my pocket for Mr. Luce's letter, I grasped my dear Clive

      by the hand and bade him prepare for good news. I told him how

      providentially, two days since, Ethel, in the library at Newcome, looking

      into Orme's History of India, a book which old Mrs. Newcome had been

      reading on the night of her death, had discovered a paper, of which the

      accompanying letter enclosed a copy, and I gave my friend the letter.

      He opened it, and read it through. I cannot say that I saw any particular

      expression of wonder in his countenance, for somehow, all the while Clive

      perused this document, I was looking at the Colonel's sweet kind face.

      "It--it is Ethel's doing," said Clive, in a hurried voice. "There was no

      such letter."

      "Upon my honour," I answered, "there was. We came up to London with it

      last night, a few hours after she had found it. We showed it to Sir

      Barnes Newcome, who--who could not disown it. We took it to Mr. Luce, who

      recognised it at once, who was old Mrs. Newcome's man of business, and

      continues to be the family lawyer, and the family recognises the legacy

      and has paid it, and you may draw for it to-morrow, as you see. What a

      piece of good luck it is that it did not come before the B. B. C. time!

      That confounded Bundelcund Bank would have swallowed up this like all the

      rest."

      "Father! father! do you remember Orme's History of India?" cries Clive.

      "Orme's History! of course I do, I could repeat whole pages of it when I

      was a boy," says the old man, and began forthwith. "'The two battalions

      advanced against each other cannonading, until the French, coming to a

      hollow way, imagined that the English would not venture to pass it. But

      Major Lawrence ordered the sepoys and artillery--the sepoys and artillery

      to halt and defend the convoy against the Morattoes"--Morattoes Orme

      calls 'em. Ho! ho! I could repeat whole pages, sir."

      "It is the best book that ever was written," calls out Clive. The Colonel

      said he had not read it, but he was informed Mr. Mill's was a very

      learned history; he intended to read it. "Eh! there is plenty of time

      now," said the good Colonel. "I have all day long at Grey Friars,--after

      chapel, you know. Do you know, sir, when I was a boy I used what they

      call to tib out and run down to a public-house in Cistercian Lane--the

      Red Cowl sir,--and buy rum there? I was a terrible wild boy, Clivy. You

      weren't so, sir, thank Heaven! A terrible wild boy, and my poor father

      flogged me, though I think it was very hard on me. It wasn't the pain,

      you know: it wasn't the pain, but----" Here tears came into his eyes and

      he dropped his head on his hand, and the cigar from it fell on to the

      floor, burnt almost out, and scattering white ashes.

      Clive looked sadly at me. "He was often so at Boulogne, Arthur," he

      whispered; "after a scene with that--that woman yonder, his head would

      go: he never replied to her taunts; he bore her infernal cruelty without

      an unkind word--Oh! I pay her back, thank God I can pay her! But who

      shall pay her," he said, trembling in every limb, "for what she has made

      that good man suffer?"

      He turned to his father, who still sate lost in his meditations. "You

      need never go back to Grey Friars, father!" he cried out."

      "Not go back, Clivy? Must go back, boy, to say Adsum, when my name is

      called. Newcome! Adsum! Hey! that is what we used to say--we used to

      say!"

      "You need not go back, except to pack your things, and return and live

      with me and Boy," Clive continued, and he told Colonel Newcome rapidly

      the story o
    f the legacy. The old man seemed hardly to comprehend it. When

      he did, the news scarcely elated him; when Clive said "they could now pay

      Mrs. Mackenzie," the Colonel replied, "Quite right, quite right," and

      added up the sum, principal and interest, in which they were indebted to

      her--he knew it well enough, the good old man. "Of course we shall pay

      her, Clivy, when we can!" But in spite of what Clive had said he did not

      appear to understand the fact that the debt to Mrs. Mackenzie was now

      actually to be paid.

      As we were talking, a knock came to the studio door, and that summons was

      followed by the entrance of the maid, who said to Clive, "If you please,

      sir, Mrs. Mackenzie says, how long are you a-going to keep the dinner

      waiting?"

      "Come, father, come to dinner!" cries Clive; "and, Pen, you will come

      too, won't you?" he added; "it may be the last time you dine in such

      pleasant company. Come along," he whispered hurriedly. "I should like you

      to be there, it will keep her tongue quiet." As we proceeded to the

      dining-room, I gave the Colonel my arm; and the good man prattled to me

      something about Mrs. Mackenzie having taken shares in the Bundelcund

      Banking Company, and about her not being a woman of business, and

      fancying we had spent her money. "And I have always felt a wish that

      Clivy should pay her, and he will pay her, I know he will," says the

      Colonel; "and then we shall lead a quiet life, Arthur; for, between

      ourselves, some women are the deuce when they are angry, sir." And again

      he laughed, as he told me this sly news, and he bowed meekly his gentle

      old head as we entered the dining-room.

      That apartment was occupied by little Boy already seated in his high

      chair, and by the Campaigner only, who stood at the mantelpiece in a

      majestic attitude. On parting with her, before we adjourned to Clive's

      studio, I had made my bow and taken my leave in form, not supposing that

      I was about to enjoy her hospitality yet once again. My return did not

      seem to please her. "Does Mr. Pendennis favour us with his company to

      dinner again, Clive?" she said, turning to her son-in-law. Clive curtly

      said, Yes, he had asked Mr. Pendennis to stay.

      "You might at least have been so kind as to give me notice," says the

      Campaigner, still majestic, but ironical. "You will have but a poor meal,

      Mr. Pendennis; and one such as I'm not accustomed to give my guests."

      "Cold beef! what the deuce does it matter;" says Clive, beginning to

      carve the joint, which, hot, had served our yesterday's Christmas table.

      "It does matter, sir! I am not accustomed to treat my guests in this way

      Maria! who had been cutting that beef? Three pounds of that beef have been

      cut away since one o'clock to-day," and with flashing eyes, and a finger

      twinkling all over with rings, she pointed towards the guilty joint.

      Whether Maria had been dispensing secret charities, or kept company with

      an occult policeman partial to roast-beef, I do not know; but she looked

      very much alarmed, and said, Indeed, and indeed, mum, she had not touched

      a morsel of it!--not she.

      "Confound the beef!" says Clive, carving on.

      "She has been cutting it!" cries the Campaigner, bringing her fist down

      with a thump upon the table. "Mr. Pendennis! you saw the beef yesterday;

      eighteen pounds it weighed, and this is what comes up of it! As if there

      was not already ruin enough in the house!"

      "D--n the beef!" cries out Clive.

      "No! no! Thank God for our good dinner! Benedicti benedicamus, Clivy my

      boy," says the Colonel, in a tremulous voice.

      "Swear on, sir! let the child hear your oaths! Let my blessed child, who

      is too ill to sit at table and picks her bite! sweetbread on her sofa,--

      which her poor mother prepares for her, Mr. Pendennis,--which I cooked

      it, and gave it to her with these hands,--let her hear your curses and

     


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