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    The Newcomes

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    yonder poor invalid crawling along in her chair; yonder jolly fat lady

      examining the Brighton pebbles (I actually once saw a lady buy one), and

      her children wondering at the sticking-plaister portraits with gold hair,

      and gold stocks, and prodigious high-heeled boots, miracles of art, and

      cheap at seven-and-sixpence! It is the fashion to run down George IV.,

      but what myriads of Londoners ought to thank him for inventing Brighton!

      One of the best of physicians our city has ever known, is kind, cheerful,

      merry Doctor Brighton. Hail, thou purveyor of shrimps and honest

      prescriber of Southdown mutton! There is no mutton so good as Brighton

      mutton; no flys so pleasant as Brighton flys; nor any cliff so pleasant

      to ride on; no shops so beautiful to look at as the Brighton gimcrack

      shops, and the fruit shops, and the market. I fancy myself in Mrs.

      Honeyman's lodgings in Steyne Gardens, and in enjoyment of all these

      things.

      If the gracious reader has had losses in life, losses not so bad as to

      cause absolute want, or inflict upon him or her the bodily injury of

      starvation, let him confess that the evils of this poverty are by no

      means so great as his timorous fancy depicted. Say your money has been

      invested in West Diddlesex bonds, or other luckless speculations--the

      news of the smash comes; you pay your outlying bills with the balance at

      the banker's; you assemble your family and make them a fine speech; the

      wife of your bosom goes round and embraces the sons and daughters

      seriatim; nestling in your own waistcoat finally, in possession of which,

      she says (with tender tears and fond quotations from Holy Writ, God bless

      her!), and of the darlings round about, lies all her worldly treasure:

      the weeping servants are dismissed, their wages paid in full, and with a

      present of prayer- and hymn-books from their mistress; your elegant house

      in Harley Street is to let, and you subside into lodgings in Pentonville,

      or Kensington, or Brompton. How unlike the mansion where you paid taxes

      and distributed elegant hospitality for so many years!

      You subside into lodgings, I say, and you find yourself very tolerably

      comfortable. I am not sure that in her heart your wife is not happier

      than in what she calls her happy days. She will be somebody hereafter:

      she was nobody in Harley Street: that is, everybody else in her

      visiting-book, take the names all round, was as good as she. They had the

      very same entrees, plated ware, men to wait, etc., at all the houses

      where you visited in the street. Your candlesticks might be handsomer

      (and indeed they had a very fine effect upon the dinner-table), but then

      Mr. Jones's silver (or electro-plated) dishes were much finer. You had

      more carriages at your door on the evening of your delightful soirees

      than Mrs. Brown (there is no phrase more elegant, and to my taste, than

      that in which people are described as "seeing a great deal of carriage

      company"); but yet Mrs. Brown, from the circumstance of her being a

      baronet's niece, took precedence of your dear wife at most tables. Hence

      the latter charming woman's scorn at the British baronetcy, and her many

      jokes at the order. In a word, and in the height of your social

      prosperity, there was always a lurking dissatisfaction, and a something

      bitter, in the midst of the fountain of delights at which you were

      permitted to drink.

      There is no good (unless your taste is that way) in living in a society

      where you are merely the equal of everybody else. Many people give

      themselves extreme pains to frequent company where all around them are

      their superiors, and where, do what you will, you must be subject to

      continual mortification--(as, for instance, when Marchioness X. forgets

      you, and you can't help thinking that she cuts you on purpose; when

      Duchess Z. passes by in her diamonds, etc.). The true pleasure of life is

      to live with your inferiors. Be the cock of your village; the queen of

      your coterie; and, besides very great persons, the people whom Fate has

      specially endowed with this kindly consolation are those who have seen

      what are called better days--those who have had losses. I am like Caesar,

      and of a noble mind: if I cannot be first in Piccadilly, let me try

      Hatton Garden, and see whether I cannot lead the ton there. If I cannot

      take the lead at White's or the Travellers', let me be president of the

      Jolly Bandboys at the Bag of Nails, and blackball everybody who does not

      pay me honour. If my darling Bessy cannot go out of a drawing-room until

      a baronet's niece (ha! ha! a baronet's niece, forsooth!) has walked

      before her, let us frequent company where we shall be the first; and how

      can we be the first unless we select our inferiors for our associates?

      This kind of pleasure is to be had by almost everybody, and at scarce any

      cost. With a shilling's-worth of tea and muffins you can get as much

      adulation and respect as many people cannot purchase with a thousand

      pounds' worth of plate and profusion, hired footmen, turning their houses

      topsy-turvy, and suppers from Gunter's. Adulation!--why, the people who

      come to you give as good parties as you do. Respect!--the very menials,

      who wait behind your supper-table, waited at a duke's yesterday, and

      actually patronise you! O you silly spendthrift! you can buy flattery for

      twopence, and you spend ever so much money in entertaining your equals

      and betters, and nobody admires you!

      Now Aunt Honeyman was a woman of a thousand virtues; cheerful, frugal,

      honest, laborious, charitable, good-humoured, truth-telling, devoted to

      her family, capable of any sacrifice for those she loved; and when she

      came to have losses of money, Fortune straightway compensated her by many

      kindnesses which no income can supply. The good old lady admired the word

      gentlewoman of all others in the English vocabulary, and made all around

      her feel that such was her rank. Her mother's father was a naval captain;

      her father had taken pupils, got a living, sent his son to college, dined

      with the squire, published his volume of sermons, was liked in his

      parish, where Miss Honeyman kept house for him, was respected for his

      kindness and famous for his port wine; and so died, leaving about two

      hundred pounds a year to his two children, nothing to Clive Newcome's

      mother who had displeased him by her first marriage (an elopement with

      Ensign Casey) and subsequent light courses. Charles Honeyman spent his

      money elegantly in wine-parties at Oxford, and afterwards in foreign

      travel;--spent his money and as much of Miss Honeyman's as that worthy

      soul would give him. She was a woman of spirit and resolution. She

      brought her furniture to Brighton (believing that the whole place still

      fondly remembered her grandfather, Captain Nokes, who had resided there

      and his gallantry in Lord Rodney's action with the Count de Grasse), took

      a house, and let the upper floors to lodgers.

      The little brisk old lady brought a maid-servant out of the country with

      her, who was daughter to her father's clerk, and had learned her letters

      and worked her first sampler under Miss Honeyman's own eye, whom she

      a
    dored all through her life. No Indian begum rolling in wealth, no

      countess mistress of castles and townhouses, ever had such a faithful

      toady as Hannah Hicks was to her mistress. Under Hannah was a young lady

      from the workhouse, who called Hannah "Mrs. Hicks, mum," and who bowed in

      awe as much before that domestic as Hannah did before Miss Honeyman. At

      five o'clock in summer, at seven in winter (for Miss Honeyman, a good

      economist, was chary of candlelight), Hannah woke up little Sally, and

      these three women rose. I leave you to imagine what a row there was in

      the establishment if Sally appeared with flowers under her bonnet, gave

      signs of levity or insubordination, prolonged her absence when sent forth

      for the beer, or was discovered in flirtation with the baker's boy or the

      grocer's young man. Sally was frequently renewed. Miss Honeyman called

      all her young persons Sally; and a great number of Sallies were consumed

      in her house. The qualities of the Sally for the time-being formed a

      constant and delightful subject of conversation between Hannah and her

      mistress. The few friends who visited Miss Honeyman in her back-parlour

      had their Sallies, in discussing whose peculiarities of disposition these

      good ladies passed the hours agreeably over their tea.

      Many persons who let lodgings in Brighton have been servants themselves--

      are retired housekeepers, tradesfolk, and the like. With these

      surrounding individuals Hannah treated on a footing of equality, bringing

      to her mistress accounts of their various goings on; "how No. 6 was let;

      how No. 9 had not paid his rent again; how the first floor at 27 had game

      almost every day, and made-dishes from Mutton's; how the family who had

      taken Mrs. Bugsby's had left as usual after the very first night, the

      poor little infant blistered all over with bites on its little dear face;

      how the Miss Learys was going on shameful with the two young men,

      actially in their setting-room, mum, where one of them offered Miss Laura

      Leary a cigar; how Mrs. Cribb still went cuttin' pounds and pounds of

      meat off the lodgers' jints, emptying their tea-caddies, actially reading

      their letters. Sally had been told so by Polly the Cribb's maid, who was

      kep, how that poor child was kep, hearing language perfectly hawful!"

      These tales and anecdotes, not altogether redounding to their neighbours'

      credit, Hannah copiously collected and brought to her mistress's

      tea-table, or served at her frugal little supper when Miss Honeyman, the

      labours of the day over, partook of that cheerful meal. I need not say

      that such horrors as occurred at Mrs. Bugsby's never befell in Mrs.

      Honeyman's establishment. Every room was fiercely swept and sprinkled,

      and watched by cunning eyes which nothing could escape; curtains were

      taken down, mattresses explored, every bone in bed dislocated and washed

      as soon as a lodger took his departure. And as for cribbing meat or

      sugar, Sally might occasionally abstract a lump or two, or pop a

      veal-cutlet into her mouth while bringing the dishes downstairs:--Sallies

      would--giddy creatures bred in workhouses; but Hannah might be entrusted

      with untold gold and uncorked brandy; and Miss Honeyman would as soon

      think of cutting a slice off Hannah's nose and devouring it, as of

      poaching on her lodgers' mutton. The best mutton-broth, the best

      veal-cutlets, the best necks of mutton and French beans, the best fried

      fish and plumpest partridges, in all Brighton, were to be had at Miss

      Honeyman's--and for her favourites the best Indian curry and rice, coming

      from a distinguished relative, at present an officer in Bengal. But very

      few were admitted to this mark of Miss Honeyman's confidence. If a family

      did not go to church they were not in favour: if they went to a

      Dissenting meeting she had no opinion of them at all. Once there came to

      her house a quiet Staffordshire family who ate no meat on Fridays, and

      whom Miss Honeyman pitied as belonging to the Romish superstition; but

      when they were visited by two corpulent gentlemen in black, one of whom

      wore a purple underwaistcoat, before whom the Staffordshire lady

      absolutely sank down on her knees as he went into the drawing-room,--Miss

      Honeyman sternly gave warning to these idolaters. She would have no

      Jesuits in her premises. She showed Hannah the picture in Howell's

      Medulla of the martyrs burning at Smithfield: who said, "Lord bless you,

      mum," and hoped it was a long time ago. She called on the curate: and

      many and many a time, for years after, pointed out to her friends, and

      sometimes to her lodgers, the spot on the carpet where the poor benighted

      creature had knelt down. So she went on, respected by all her friends, by

      all her tradesmen, by herself not a little, talking of her previous

      "misfortunes" with amusing equanimity; as if her father's parsonage-house

      had been a palace of splendour, and the one-horse chaise (with the lamps

      for evenings) from which she had descended, a noble equipage. "But I know

      it is for the best, Clive," she would say to her nephew in describing

      those grandeurs, "and, thank heaven, can be resigned in that station in

      life to which it has pleased God to call me."

      The good lady was called the Duchess by her fellow-tradesfolk in the

      square in which she lived. (I don't know what would have come to her

      had she been told she was a tradeswoman!) Her butchers, bakers, and

      market-people paid her as much respect as though she had been a grandee's

      housekeeper out of Kemp Town. Knowing her station, she yet was kind to

      those inferior beings. She held affable conversations with them, she

      patronised Mr. Rogers, who was said to be worth a hundred thousand--

      two-hundred-thousand pounds (or lbs. was it?), and who said, "Law bless

      the old Duchess, she do make as much of a pound of veal cutlet as some

      would of a score of bullocks, but you see she's a lady born and a lady

      bred: she'd die before she'd owe a farden, and she's seen better days,

      you know." She went to see the grocer's wife on an interesting occasion,

      and won the heart of the family by tasting their candle. Her fishmonger

      (it was fine to hear her talk of "my fishmonger") would sell her a

      whiting as respectfully as if she had called for a dozen turbots and

      lobsters. It was believed by those good folks that her father had been a

      Bishop at the very least; and the better days which she had known were

      supposed to signify some almost unearthly prosperity. "I have always

      found, Hannah," the simple soul would say, "that people know their place,

      or can be very very easily made to find it if they lose it; and if a

      gentlewoman does not forget herself, her inferiors will not forget that

      she is a gentlewoman." "No indeed, mum, and I'm sure they would do no

      such thing, mum," says Hannah, who carries away the teapot for her own

      breakfast (to be transmitted to Sally for her subsequent refection),

      whilst her mistress washes her cup and saucer, as her mother had washed

      her own china many scores of years ago.

      If some of the surrounding lodging-house keepers, as I have no doubt they

      did, disliked the little Duchess for the airs which she gave herself, as


      they averred; they must have envied her too her superior prosperity, for

      there was scarcely ever a card in her window, whilst those ensigns in her

      neighbours' houses would remain exposed to the flies and the weather, and

      disregarded by passers-by for months together. She had many regular

      customers, or what should be rather called constant friends. Deaf old Mr.

      Cricklade came every winter for fourteen years, and stopped until the

      hunting was over; an invaluable man, giving little trouble, passing all

      day on horseback, and all night over his rubber at the club. The Misses

      Barkham, Barkhambury, Tunbridge Wells, whose father had been at college

      with Mr. Honeyman, came regularly in June for sea air, letting

      Barkhambury for the summer season. Then, for many years, she had her

      nephew, as we have seen; and kind recommendations from the clergymen of

      Brighton, and a constant friend in the celebrated Dr. Goodenough of

      London. who had been her father's private pupil, and of his college

      afterwards, who sent his patients from time to time down to her, and his

      fellow-physician, Dr. H----, who on his part would never take any fee

      from Miss Honeyman, except a packet of India curry-powder, a ham cured as

      she only knew how to cure them, and once a year, or so, a dish of her

      tea.

      "Was there ever such luck as that confounded old Duchess's?" says Mr.

      Gawler, coal-merchant and lodging-house keeper, next door but two, whose

      apartments were more odious in some respects than Mrs. Bugsby's own. "Was

      there ever such devil's own luck, Mrs. G.? It's only a fortnight ago as I

      read in the Sussex Advertiser the death of Miss Barkham, of Barkhambury,

      Tunbridge Wells, and thinks I, there's a spoke in your wheel, you

      stuck-up little old Duchess, with your cussed airs and impudence. And she

      ain't put her card up three days; and look yere, yere's two carriages,

      two maids, three children, one of them wrapped up in a Hinjar shawl--man

      hout a livery,--looks like a foring cove I think--lady in satin pelisse,

      and of course they go to the Duchess, be hanged to her! Of course it's

      our luck, nothing ever was like our luck. I'm blowed if I don't put a

      pistol to my 'ead, and end it, Mrs. G. There they go in--three, four,

      six, seven on 'em, and the man. That's the precious child's physic I

      suppose he's a-carryin' in the basket. Just look at the luggage. I say!

      There's a bloody hand on the first carriage. It's a baronet, is it? I

      'ope your ladyship's very well; and I 'ope Sir John will soon be down

      yere to join his family." Mr. Gawler makes sarcastic bows over the card

      in his bow-window whilst making this speech. The little Gawlers rush on

      to the drawing-room verandah themselves to examine the new arrivals.

      "This is Mrs. Honeyman's?" asks the gentleman designated by Mr. Gawler as

      "the foring cove," and hands in a card on which the words, "Miss

      Honeyman, 110, Steyne Gardens. J. Goodenough," are written in that

      celebrated physician's handwriting. "We want five bet-rooms, six bets,

      two or dree sitting-rooms. Have you got dese?"

      "Will you speak to my mistress?" says Hannah. And if it is a fact that

      Miss Honeyman does happen to be in the front parlour looking at the

      carriages, what harm is there in the circumstance, pray? Is not Gawler

      looking, and the people next door? Are not half a dozen little boys

      already gathered in the street (as if they started up out of the

      trap-doors for the coals), and the nursery maids in the stunted little

      garden, are not they looking through the bars of the square? "Please to

      speak to mistress," says Hannah, opening the parlour-door, and with a

      curtsey, "A gentleman about the apartments, mum."

      "Five bet-rooms," says the man, entering. "Six bets, two or dree

      sitting-rooms? We gome from Dr. Goodenough."

      "Are the apartments for you, sir?" says the little Duchess, looking up at

      the large gentleman.

      "For my lady," answers the man.

     


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