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    mother, I don't care if I shake hands with you. I ain't proud!"

      The Abbe laughed with great glee; and that very evening sent off to

      his Court a most ludicrous spicy description of the whole scene of

      meeting between this amiable father and child; in which he said that

      young Billings was the eleve favori of M. Kitch, Ecuyer, le bourreau

      de Londres, and which made the Duke's mistress laugh so much that

      she vowed that the Abbe should have a bishopric on his return: for,

      with such store of wisdom, look you, my son, was the world governed

      in those days.

      The Count and his offspring meanwhile conversed with some

      cordiality. The former informed the latter of all the diseases to

      which he was subject, his manner of curing them, his great

      consideration as chamberlain to the Duke of Bavaria; how he wore his

      Court suits, and of a particular powder which he had invented for

      the hair; how, when he was seventeen, he had run away with a

      canoness, egad! who was afterwards locked up in a convent, and grew

      to be sixteen stone in weight; how he remembered the time when

      ladies did not wear patches; and how the Duchess of Marlborough

      boxed his ears when he was so high, because he wanted to kiss her.

      All these important anecdotes took some time in the telling, and

      were accompanied by many profound moral remarks; such as, "I can't

      abide garlic, nor white-wine, stap me! nor Sauerkraut, though his

      Highness eats half a bushel per day. I ate it the first time at

      Court; but when they brought it me a second time, I

      refused--refused, split me and grill me if I didn't! Everybody

      stared; his Highness looked as fierce as a Turk; and that infernal

      Krahwinkel (my dear, I did for him afterwards)--that cursed

      Krahwinkel, I say, looked as pleased as possible, and whispered to

      Countess Fritsch, 'Blitzchen, Frau Grafinn,' says he, 'it's all over

      with Galgenstein.' What did I do? I had the entree, and demanded

      it. 'Altesse,' says I, falling on one knee, 'I ate no kraut at

      dinner to-day. You remarked it: I saw your Highness remark it.'

      "'I did, M. le Comte,' said his Highness, gravely.

      "I had almost tears in my eyes; but it was necessary to come to a

      resolution, you know. 'Sir,' said I, 'I speak with deep grief to

      your Highness, who are my benefactor, my friend, my father; but of

      this I am resolved, I WILL NEVER EAT SAUERKRAUT MORE: it don't

      agree with me. After being laid up for four weeks by the last dish

      of Sauerkraut of which I partook, I may say with confidence--IT

      DON'T agree with me. By impairing my health, it impairs my

      intellect, and weakens my strength; and both I would keep for your

      Highness's service.'

      "'Tut, tut!' said his Highness. 'Tut, tut, tut!' Those were his

      very words.

      "'Give me my sword or my pen,' said I. 'Give me my sword or my pen,

      and with these Maximilian de Galgenstein is ready to serve you; but

      sure,--sure, a great prince will pity the weak health of a faithful

      subject, who does not know how to eat Sauerkraut?' His Highness was

      walking about the room: I was still on my knees, and stretched

      forward my hand to seize his coat.

      "'GEHT ZUM TEUFEL, Sir!' said he, in a loud voice (it means 'Go to

      the deuce,' my dear),--'Geht zum Teufel, and eat what you like!'

      With this he went out of the room abruptly; leaving in my hand one

      of his buttons, which I keep to this day. As soon as I was alone,

      amazed by his great goodness and bounty, I sobbed aloud--cried like

      a child" (the Count's eyes filled and winked at the very

      recollection), "and when I went back into the card-room, stepping up

      to Krahwinkel, 'Count,' says I, 'who looks foolish now?'--Hey there,

      La Rose, give me the diamond-- Yes, that was the very pun I made,

      and very good it was thought. 'Krahwinkel,' says I, 'WHO LOOKS

      FOOLISH NOW?' and from that day to this I was never at a Court-day

      asked to eat Sauerkraut--NEVER!"

      "Hey there, La Rose! Bring me that diamond snuff-box in the drawer

      of my secretaire;" and the snuff-box was brought. "Look at it, my

      dear," said the Count, "for I saw you seemed to doubt. There is the

      button--the very one that came off his Grace's coat."

      Mr. Billings received it, and twisted it about with a stupid air.

      The story had quite mystified him; for he did not dare yet to think

      his father was a fool--his respect for the aristocracy prevented

      him.

      When the Count's communications had ceased, which they did as soon

      as the story of the Sauerkraut was finished, a silence of some

      minutes ensued. Mr. Billings was trying to comprehend the

      circumstances above narrated; his Lordship was exhausted; the

      chaplain had quitted the room directly the word Sauerkraut was

      mentioned--he knew what was coming. His Lordship looked for some

      time at his son; who returned the gaze with his mouth wide open.

      "Well," said the Count--"well, sir? What are you sitting there for?

      If you have nothing to say, sir, you had better go. I had you here

      to amuse me--split me--and not to sit there staring!"

      Mr. Billings rose in a fury.

      "Hark ye, my lad," said the Count, "tell La Rose to give thee five

      guineas, and, ah--come again some morning. A nice well-grown young

      lad," mused the Count, as Master Tommy walked wondering out of the

      apartment; "a pretty fellow enough, and intelligent too."

      "Well, he IS an odd fellow, my father," thought Mr. Billings, as he

      walked out, having received the sum offered to him. And he

      immediately went to call upon his friend Polly Briggs, from whom he

      had separated in the morning.

      What was the result of their interview is not at all necessary to

      the progress of this history. Having made her, however, acquainted

      with the particulars of his visit to his father, he went to his

      mother's, and related to her all that had occurred.

      Poor thing, she was very differently interested in the issue of it!

      CHAPTER X. SHOWING HOW GALGENSTEIN AND MRS. CAT RECOGNISE EACH

      OTHER IN MARYLEBONE GARDENS--AND HOW THE COUNT DRIVES HER HOME IN

      HIS CARRIAGE.

      About a month after the touching conversation above related, there

      was given, at Marylebone Gardens, a grand concert and entertainment,

      at which the celebrated Madame Amenaide, a dancer of the theatre at

      Paris, was to perform, under the patronage of several English and

      foreign noblemen; among whom was his Excellency the Bavarian Envoy.

      Madame Amenaide was, in fact, no other than the maitresse en titre

      of the Monsieur de Galgenstein, who had her a great bargain from the

      Duke de Rohan-Chabot at Paris.

      It is not our purpose to make a great and learned display here,

      otherwise the costumes of the company assembled at this fete might

      afford scope for at least half-a-dozen pages of fine writing; and we

      might give, if need were, specimens of the very songs and music sung

      on the occasion. Does not the Burney collection of music, at the

      British Museum, afford one an ample store of songs from which to

      choose? Are there not the memoirs of Colley Cibber? those of Mrs.


      Clark, the daughter of Colley? Is there not Congreve, and

      Farquhar--nay, and at a pinch, the "Dramatic Biography," or even the

      Spectator, from which the observant genius might borrow passages,

      and construct pretty antiquarian figments? Leave we these trifles

      to meaner souls! Our business is not with the breeches and

      periwigs, with the hoops and patches, but with the divine hearts of

      men, and the passions which agitate them. What need, therefore,

      have we to say that on this evening, after the dancing, the music,

      and the fireworks, Monsieur de Galgenstein felt the strange and

      welcome pangs of appetite, and was picking a cold chicken, along

      with some other friends in an arbour--a cold chicken, with an

      accompaniment of a bottle of champagne--when he was led to remark

      that a very handsome plump little person, in a gorgeous stiff damask

      gown and petticoat, was sauntering up and down the walk running

      opposite his supping-place, and bestowing continual glances towards

      his Excellency. The lady, whoever she was, was in a mask, such as

      ladies of high and low fashion wore at public places in those days,

      and had a male companion. He was a lad of only seventeen,

      marvellously well dressed--indeed, no other than the Count's own

      son, Mr. Thomas Billings; who had at length received from his mother

      the silver-hilted sword, and the wig, which that affectionate parent

      had promised to him.

      In the course of the month which had elapsed since the interview

      that has been described in the former chapter, Mr. Billings had

      several times had occasion to wait on his father; but though he had,

      according to her wishes, frequently alluded to the existence of his

      mother, the Count had never at any time expressed the slightest wish

      to renew his acquaintance with that lady; who, if she had seen him,

      had only seen him by stealth.

      The fact is, that after Billings had related to her the particulars

      of his first meeting with his Excellency; which ended, like many of

      the latter visits, in nothing at all; Mrs. Hayes had found some

      pressing business, which continually took her to Whitehall, and had

      been prowling from day to day about Monsieur de Galgenstein's

      lodgings. Four or five times in the week, as his Excellency stepped

      into his coach, he might have remarked, had he chosen, a woman in a

      black hood, who was looking most eagerly into his eyes: but those

      eyes had long since left off the practice of observing; and Madam

      Catherine's visits had so far gone for nothing.

      On this night, however, inspired by gaiety and drink, the Count had

      been amazingly stricken by the gait and ogling of the lady in the

      mask. The Reverend O'Flaherty, who was with him, and had observed

      the figure in the black cloak, recognised, or thought he recognised,

      her. "It is the woman who dogs your Excellency every day," said he.

      "She is with that tailor lad who loves to see people hanged--your

      Excellency's son, I mean." And he was just about to warn the Count

      of a conspiracy evidently made against him, and that the son had

      brought, most likely, the mother to play her arts upon him--he was

      just about, I say, to show to the Count the folly and danger of

      renewing an old liaison with a woman such as he had described Mrs.

      Cat to be, when his Excellency, starting up, and interrupting his

      ghostly adviser at the very beginning of his sentence, said, "Egad,

      l'Abbe, you are right--it IS my son, and a mighty smart-looking

      creature with him. Hey! Mr. What's-your-name--Tom, you rogue, don't

      you know your own father?" And so saying, and cocking his beaver on

      one side, Monsieur de Galgenstein strutted jauntily after Mr.

      Billings and the lady.

      It was the first time that the Count had formally recognised his

      son.

      "Tom, you rogue," stopped at this, and the Count came up. He had a

      white velvet suit, covered over with stars and orders, a neat modest

      wig and bag, and peach-coloured silk-stockings with silver clasps.

      The lady in the mask gave a start as his Excellency came forward.

      "Law, mother, don't squeege so," said Tom. The poor woman was

      trembling in every limb, but she had presence of mind to "squeege"

      Tom a great deal harder; and the latter took the hint, I suppose,

      and was silent.

      The splendid Count came up. Ye gods, how his embroidery glittered

      in the lamps! What a royal exhalation of musk and bergamot came

      from his wig, his handkerchief, and his grand lace ruffles and

      frills! A broad yellow riband passed across his breast, and ended

      at his hip in a shining diamond cross--a diamond cross, and a

      diamond sword-hilt! Was anything ever seen so beautiful? And might

      not a poor woman tremble when such a noble creature drew near to

      her, and deigned, from the height of his rank and splendour, to look

      down upon her? As Jove came down to Semele in state, in his habits

      of ceremony, with all the grand cordons of his orders blazing about

      his imperial person--thus dazzling, magnificent, triumphant, the

      great Galgenstein descended towards Mrs. Catherine. Her cheeks

      glowed red-hot under her coy velvet mask, her heart thumped against

      the whalebone prison of her stays. What a delicious storm of vanity

      was raging in her bosom! What a rush of long-pent recollections

      burst forth at the sound of that enchanting voice!

      As you wind up a hundred-guinea chronometer with a twopenny

      watch-key--as by means of a dirty wooden plug you set all the waters

      of Versailles a-raging, and splashing, and storming--in like manner,

      and by like humble agents, were Mrs. Catherine's tumultuous passions

      set going. The Count, we have said, slipped up to his son, and

      merely saying, "How do, Tom?" cut the young gentleman altogether,

      and passing round to the lady's side, said, "Madam, 'tis a charming

      evening--egad it is!" She almost fainted: it was the old voice.

      There he was, after seventeen years, once more at her side!

      Now I know what I could have done. I can turn out a quotation from

      Sophocles (by looking to the index) as well as another: I can throw

      off a bit of fine writing too, with passion, similes, and a moral at

      the end. What, pray, is the last sentence but one but the very

      finest writing? Suppose, for example, I had made Maximilian, as he

      stood by the side of Catherine, look up towards the clouds, and

      exclaim, in the words of the voluptuous Cornelius Nepos,

      'Aenaoi nephelai

      'Arthoomen phanerai

      Droseran phusin euageetoi, k.t.l. *

      * Anglicised version of the author's original Greek text.

      Or suppose, again, I had said, in a style still more popular:--

      The Count advanced towards the maiden. They both were mute for a

      while; and only the beating of her heart interrupted that thrilling

      and passionate silence. Ah, what years of buried joys and fears,

      hopes and disappointments, arose from their graves in the far past,

      and in those brief moments flitted before the united ones! How sad

      was that delicious retrospect, and oh, how sweet! The tears that

    &n
    bsp; rolled down the cheek of each were bubbles from the choked and

      moss-grown wells of youth; the sigh that heaved each bosom had some

      lurking odours in it--memories of the fragrance of boyhood, echoes

      of the hymns of the young heart! Thus is it ever--for these blessed

      recollections the soul always has a place; and while crime perishes,

      and sorrow is forgotten, the beautiful alone is eternal.

      "O golden legends, written in the skies!" mused De Galgenstein, "ye

      shine as ye did in the olden days! WE change, but YE speak ever the

      same language. Gazing in your abysmal depths, the feeble ratioci--"

      * * * * *

      There, now, are six columns* of the best writing to be found in this

      or any other book. Galgenstein has quoted Euripides thrice, Plato

      once, Lycophron nine times, besides extracts from the Latin syntax

      and the minor Greek poets. Catherine's passionate embreathings are

      of the most fashionable order; and I call upon the ingenious critic

      of the X---- newspaper to say whether they do not possess the real

      impress of the giants of the olden time--the real Platonic smack, in

      a word? Not that I want in the least to show off; but it is as

      well, every now and then, to show the public what one CAN do.

      (* There WERE six columns, as mentioned by the accurate Mr.

      Solomons; but we have withdrawn two pages and three-quarters,

      because, although our correspondent has been excessively eloquent,

      according to custom, we were anxious to come to the facts of the

      story.

      Mr. Solomons, by sending to our office, may have the cancelled

      passages.--O.Y.)

      Instead, however, of all this rant and nonsense, how much finer is

      the speech that the Count really did make! "It is a very fine

      evening,--egad it is!" The "egad" did the whole business: Mrs. Cat

      was as much in love with him now as ever she had been; and,

      gathering up all her energies, she said, "It is dreadful hot too, I

      think;" and with this she made a curtsey.

      "Stifling, split me!" added his Excellency. "What do you say,

      madam, to a rest in an arbour, and a drink of something cool?"

      "Sir!" said the lady, drawing back.

      "Oh, a drink--a drink by all means," exclaimed Mr. Billings, who was

      troubled with a perpetual thirst. "Come, mo--, Mrs. Jones, I mean.

      you're fond of a glass of cold punch, you know; and the rum here is

      prime, I can tell you."

      The lady in the mask consented with some difficulty to the proposal

      of Mr. Billings, and was led by the two gentlemen into an arbour,

      where she was seated between them; and some wax-candles being

      lighted, punch was brought.

      She drank one or two glasses very eagerly, and so did her two

      companions; although it was evident to see, from the flushed looks

      of both of them, that they had little need of any such stimulus.

      The Count, in the midst of his champagne, it must be said, had been

      amazingly stricken and scandalised by the appearance of such a youth

      as Billings in a public place with a lady under his arm. He was,

      the reader will therefore understand, in the moral stage of liquor;

      and when he issued out, it was not merely with the intention of

      examining Mr. Billings's female companion, but of administering to

      him some sound correction for venturing, at his early period of

      life, to form any such acquaintances. On joining Billings, his

      Excellency's first step was naturally to examine the lady. After

      they had been sitting for a while over their punch, he bethought him

      of his original purpose, and began to address a number of moral

      remarks to his son.

      We have already given some specimens of Monsieur de Galgenstein's

      sober conversation; and it is hardly necessary to trouble the reader

      with any further reports of his speeches. They were intolerably

      stupid and dull; as egotistical as his morning lecture had been, and

      a hundred times more rambling and prosy. If Cat had been in the

     


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