forty. Her blood must have been a light pink. The heart that beat under that 
   pretty white chest, which she exposed so liberally, may have throbbed pretty 
   quickly once or twice with waltzing, but otherwise never rose or fell beyond its 
   natural gentle undulation. It may have had throbs of grief at a disappointment 
   occasioned by the milliner not bringing a dress home; or have felt some little 
   fluttering impulse of youthful passion when it was in short frock, and Master 
   Grimsby at the dancing-school showed some preference for another young pupil out 
   of the nursery. But feelings, and hopes, and blushes, and passions, now? Psha! 
   They pass away like nursery dreams. Now there are only proprieties. What is 
   love, young heart? It is two thousand a year, at the very lowest computation; 
   and with the present rise in wages and house-rent, that calculation can't last 
   very long. Love? Attachment? Look at Frank Maythorn, with his vernal blushes, 
   his leafy whiskers, his sunshiny, laughing face, and all the birds of spring 
   carolling in his jolly voice; and old General Pinwood hobbling in on his cork 
   leg, with his stars and orders, and leering round the room from under his 
   painted eyebrows. Will my modest nymph go to Maythorn, or to yonder leering 
   Satyr, who totters towards her in his white and rouge? Nonsense. She gives her 
   garland to the old man, to be sure. He is ten times as rich as the young one. 
   And so they went on in Arcadia itself, really. Not in that namby-pamby ballet 
   and idyll world, where they tripped up to each other in rhythm, and talked 
   hexameters; but in the real, downright no-mistake country??Arcadia??where 
   Tityrus, fluting to Amaryllis in the shade, had his pipe very soon put out when 
   Meliboeus (the great grazier) performed on his melodious, exquisite, 
   irresistible cow-horn; and where Daphne's mother dressed her up with ribbons and 
   drove her to market, and sold her, and swapped her, and bartered her like any 
   other lamb in the fair. This one has been trotted to the market so long now that 
   she knows the way herself. Her baa has been heard for??do not let us count how 
   many seasons. She has nibbled out of countless hands; frisked in many thousand 
   dances; come quite harmless away from goodness knows how many wolves. Ah! ye 
   lambs and raddled innocents of our Arcadia! Ah, old Ewe! Is it of your ladyship 
   this fable is narrated? I say it is as old as Cadmus, and man-and muttonkind. 
   So, when Philip comes to Beaunash Street, Agnes listens to him most kindly, 
   sweetly, gently, and affectionately. Her pulse goes up very nearly half a beat 
   when the echo of his horse's heels is heard in the quiet street. It undergoes a 
   corresponding depression when the daily grief of parting is encountered and 
   overcome. Blanche and Agnes don't love each other very passionately. If I may 
   say as much regarding those two lambkins, they butt at each other??they quarrel 
   with each other??but they have secret understandings. During Phil's visits the 
   girls remain together, you understand, or mamma is with the young people. Female 
   friends may come in to call on Mrs. Twysden, and the matrons whisper together, 
   and glance at the cousins, and look knowing. "Poor orphan boy!" mamma says to a 
   sister matron. "I am like a mother to him since my dear sister died. His own 
   home is so blank, and ours so merry, so affectionate! There may be intimacy, 
   tender regard, the utmost confidence between cousins??there may be future and 
   even closer ties between them??but you understand, dear Mrs. Matcham, no 
   engagement between them. He is eager, hot-headed, impetuous, and imprudent, as 
   we all know. She has not seen the world enough??is not sure of herself, poor 
   dear child. Therefore, every circumspection, every caution, is necessary. There 
   must be no engagement??no letters between them. My darling Agnes does not write 
   to ask him to dinner without showing the note to me or her father. My dearest 
   girls respect themselves." 
   "Of course, my dear Mrs. Twysden, they are admirable, both of them. Bless you, 
   darlings! Agnes, you look radiant! Ah, Rosa, my child, I wish you had dear 
   Blanche's complexion!" 
   "And isn't it monstrous keeping that poor boy hanging on until Mr. Woolcomb has 
   made up his mind about coming forward?" says dear Mrs. Matcham to her own 
   daughter, as her brougham-door closes on the pair. Here he comes! Here is his 
   cab. Maria Twysden is one of the smartest women in England?? that she is." 
   "How odd it is, mamma, that the beau cousin and Captain Woolcomb are always 
   calling, and never call together!" remarks the ing?nue. 
   "They might quarrel if they met. They say young Mr. Firmin is very quarrelsome 
   and impetuous!" says mamma. 
   "But how are they kept apart?" 
   "Chance, my dear! mere chance!" says mamma. And they agree to say it is 
   chance??and they agree to pretend to believe one another. And the girl and the 
   mother know everything about Woolcomb's property, everything about Philip's 
   property and expectations, everything about all the young men in London, and 
   those coming on. And Mrs. Matcham's girl fished for Captain Woolcomb last year 
   in Scotland, at Lochhookey; and stalked him to Paris; and they went down on 
   their knees to Lady Banbury when they heard of the theatricals at the Cross; and 
   pursued that man about until he is forced to say, "Confound me! hang me! it's 
   too bad of that woman and her daughter, it is now, I give you my honour it is! 
   And all the fellows chaff me! And she took a house in Regent's Park, opposite 
   our barracks, and asked for her daughter to learn to ride in our school??I'm 
   blest if she didn't, Mrs. Twysden! and I thought my black mare would have kicked 
   her off one day??I mean the daughter?? but she stuck on like grim death; and the 
   fellows call them Mrs. Grim Death and her daughter. Our surgeon called them so, 
   and a doocid rum fellow??and they chaff me about it, you know??ever so many of 
   the fellows do??and I'm not going to be had in that way by Mrs. Grim Death and 
   her daughter! No, not as I knows, if you please!" 
   "You are a dreadful man, and you gave her a dreadful name, Captain Woolcomb!" 
   says mamma. 
   "It wasn't me. It was the surgeon, you know, Miss Agnes: a doocid funny and 
   witty fellow, Nixon is?? and sent a thing once to Punch, Nixon did. I heard him 
   make the riddle in Albany Barracks, and it riled Foker so! You've no idea how it 
   riled Foker, for he's in it!" 
   "In it?" asks Agnes, with the gentle smile, the candid blue eyes??the same eyes, 
   expression, lips, that smile and sparkle at Philip. 
   "Here it is! Captain! Took it down. Wrote it into my pocket-book at once as 
   Nixon made it. 'All doctors like my first, that's clear!' Doctor Firmin does 
   that. Old Parr Street party! Don't you see, Miss Agnes? Fee! Don't you see?" 
   "Fee! Oh, you droll thing!" cries Agnes, smiling, radiant, very much puzzled. 
   "'My second,'" goes on the young officer??"'My second gives us Foker's beer!'" 
   "'My whole's the shortest month in all the year!' Don't you see, Mrs. Twysden? 
   Fee-Brewery, don't you see? February! A doocid good one, isn't it now? and I 
   wonder Punch never put it in. And upon my word, I used to spell it Febuary 
					     					 			 />   before, I did; and I daresay ever so many fellows do still. And I know the right 
   way now, and all from that riddle which Nixon made." 
   The ladies declare he is a droll man, and full of fun. He rattles on, artlessly 
   telling his little stories of sport, drink, adventure, in which the dusky little 
   man himself is a prominent figure. Not honey-mouthed Plato would be listened to 
   more kindly by those three ladies. A bland, frank smile shines over Talbot 
   Twysden's noble face, as he comes in from his office, and finds the creole 
   prattling. "What! you here, Woolcomb? Hey! Glad to see you!" And the gallant 
   hand goes out and meets and grasps Woolcomb's tiny kid glove. 
   "He has been so amusing, papa! He has been making us die with laughing! Tell 
   papa that riddle you made, Captain Woolcomb?" 
   "That riddle I made? That riddle Nixon, our surgeon, made. 'All doctors like my 
   first, that's clear,'" 
   And da capo. And the family, as he expounds this admirable rebus, gather round 
   the young officer in a group, and the curtain drops. 
   As in a theatre booth at a fair there are two or three performances in a day, so 
   in Beaunash Street a little genteel comedy is played twice:??at four o'clock 
   with Mr. Firmin, at five o'clock with Mr. Woolcomb; and for both young gentlemen 
   same smiles, same eyes, same voice, same welcome. Ah, bravo! ah, encore! 
   CHAPTER X. IN WHICH WE VISIT THE "ADMIRAL BYNG." 
   From long residence in Bohemia, and fatal love of bachelor ease and habits, 
   Master Philip's pure tastes were so destroyed, and his manners so perverted, 
   that he was actually indifferent to the pleasures of the refined home we have 
   just been describing; and, when Agnes was away, sometimes even when she was at 
   home, was quite relieved to get out of Beaunash Street. He is hardly twenty 
   yards from the door, when out of his pocket there comes a case; out of the case 
   there jumps an aromatic cigar, which is scattering fragrance around as he is 
   marching briskly northwards to his next house of call. The pace is even more 
   lively now than when he is hastening on what you call the wings of love to 
   Beaunash Street. At the house whither he is now going, he and the cigar are 
   always welcome. There is no need of munching orange chips, or chewing scented 
   pills, or flinging your weed away half a mile before you reach Thornhaugh 
   Street??the low, vulgar place. I promise you Phil may smoke at Brandon's, and 
   find others doing the same. He may set the house on fire, if so minded, such a 
   favourite is he there; and the Little Sister, with her kind, beaming smile, will 
   be there to bid him welcome. How that woman loved Phil, and how he loved her, is 
   quite a curiosity; and both of them used to be twitted with this attachment by 
   their mutual friends, and blush as they acknowledged it. Ever since the little 
   nurse had saved his life as a schoolboy, it was ? la vie ? la mort between them. 
   Phil's father's chariot used to come to Thornhaugh Street sometimes??at rare 
   times??and the doctor descend thence and have colloquies with the Little Sister. 
   She attended a patient or two of his. She was certainly very much better off in 
   her money matters in these late years, since she had known Dr. Firmin. Do you 
   think she took money from him? As a novelist, who knows everything about his 
   people, I am constrained to say, Yes. She took enough to pay some little bills 
   of her weak-minded old father, and send the bailiff's hand from his old collar. 
   But no more. "I think you owe him as much as that," she said to the doctor. But 
   as for compliments between them??"Dr. Firmin, I would die rather than be 
   beholden to you for anything," she said, with her little limbs all in a tremor, 
   and her eyes flashing anger. "How dare you, sir, after old days, be a coward, 
   and pay compliments to me; I will tell your son of you, sir!" and the little 
   woman looked as if she could have stabbed the elderly libertine there as he 
   stood. And he shrugged his handsome shoulders: blushed a little too, perhaps: 
   gave her one of his darkling looks, and departed. She had believed him once. She 
   had married him as she fancied. He had tired of her; forsaken her: left 
   her??left her even without a name. She had not known his for long years after 
   her trust and his deceit. "No, sir, I wouldn't have your name now, not if it 
   were a lord's, I wouldn't, and a coronet on your carriage. You are beneath me 
   now, Mr. Brand Firmin!" she had said. 
   How came she to love the boy so? Years back, in her own horrible extremity of 
   misery, she could remember a week or two of a brief, strange, exquisite 
   happiness, which came to her in the midst of her degradation and desertion, and 
   for a few days a baby in her arms, with eyes like Philip's. It was taken from 
   her, after a few days??only sixteen days. Insanity came upon her, as her dead 
   infant was carried away:??insanity, and fever, and struggle??ah! who knows how 
   dreadful? She never does. There is a gap in her life which she never can recal 
   quite. But George Brand Firmin, Esq., M.D., knows how very frequent are such 
   cases of mania, and that women who don't speak about them often will cherish 
   them for years after they appear to have passed away. The Little Sister says, 
   quite gravely, sometimes, "They are allowed to come back. They do come back. 
   Else what's the good of little cherubs bein' born, and smilin', and happy, and 
   beautiful??say, for sixteen days, and then an end? I've talked about it to many 
   ladies in grief sim'lar to mine was, and it comforts them. And when I saw that 
   child on his sick bed, and he lifted his eyes, I knew him, I tell you, Mrs. 
   Ridley. I don't speak about it; but I knew him, ma'am; my angel came back again. 
   I know him by the eyes. Look at 'em. Did you ever see such eyes? They look as if 
   they had seen heaven. His father's don't." Mrs. Ridley believes this theory 
   solemnly, and I think I know a lady, nearly connected with myself, who can't be 
   got quite to disown it. And this secret opinion to women in grief and sorrow 
   over their new-born lost infants Mrs. Brandon persists in imparting. "I know a 
   case," the nurse murmurs, "of a poor mother who lost her child at sixteen days 
   old; and sixteen years after, on the very day, she saw him again." 
   Philip knows so far of the Little Sister's story, that he is the object of this 
   delusion, and, indeed, it very strangely and tenderly affects him. He remembers 
   fitfully the illness through which the Little Sister tended him, the wild 
   paroxysms of his fever, his head throbbing on her shoulders??cool tamarind 
   drinks which she applied to his lips??great gusty night shadows flickering 
   through the bare school dormitory ??the little figure of the nurse gliding in 
   and out of the dark. He must be aware of the recognition, which we know of, and 
   which took place at his bedside, though he has never mentioned it??not to his 
   father, not to Caroline. But he clings to the woman and shrinks from the man. Is 
   it instinctive love and antipathy? The special reason for his quarrel with his 
   father the junior Firmin has never explicitly told me then or since. I have 
   known sons much more confidential, and who, when their fathers tripped and 
   stumbled, 
					     					 			 would bring their acquaintances to jeer at the patriarch in his fall. 
   One day, as Philip enters Thornhaugh Street, and the Sister's little parlour 
   there, fancy his astonishment on finding his father's dingy friend, the Rev. 
   Tufton Hunt, at his ease by the fireside. 
   "Surprised to see me here, eh?" says the dingy gentleman, with a sneer at 
   Philip's lordly face of wonder and disgust. "Mrs. Brandon and I turn out to be 
   very old friends." 
   "Yes, sir, old acquaintances," says the Little Sister, very gravely. 
   "The captain brought me home from the club at the Byngs. Jolly fellows the 
   Byngs. My service to you, Mr. Gann and Mrs. Brandon." And the two persons 
   addressed by the gentleman, who is "taking some refreshment," as the phrase is, 
   make a bow, in acknowledgment of this salutation. 
   "You should have been at Mr. Philip's call supper, Captain Gann," the divine 
   resumes. "That was a night! Tiptop swells??noblemen??first-rate claret. That 
   claret of your father's, Philip, is pretty nearly drunk down. And your song was 
   famous. Did you ever hear him sing, Mrs. Brandon?" 
   "Who do you mean by him?" says Philip, who always boiled with rage before this 
   man. 
   Caroline divines the antipathy. She lays a little hand on Philip's arm. "Mr. 
   Hunt has been having too much, I think," she says. "I did know him ever so long 
   ago, Philip!" 
   "What does he mean by Him?" again says Philip, snorting at Tufton Hunt. 
   "Him???Dr. Luther's hymn! 'Wein, Weiber und Gesang,' to be sure!" cries the 
   clergyman, humming the tune. "I learned it in Germany myself??passed a good deal 
   of time in Germany, Captain Gann??six months in a specially shady place??Quod 
   Strasse, in Frankfort-on-the-Maine??being persecuted by some wicked Jews there. 
   And there was another poor English chap in the place, too, who used to chirp 
   that song behind the bars, and died there and disappointed the Philistines. I've 
   seen a deal of life, I have; and met with a precious deal of misfortune; and 
   borne it pretty stoutly, too, since your father and I were at college together, 
   Philip. You don't do anything in this way? Not so early, eh? It's good rum, 
   Gann, and no mistake." And again the chaplain drinks to the captain, who waves 
   the dingy hand of hospitality towards his dark guest. 
   For several months past Hunt had now been a resident in London, and a pretty 
   constant visitor to Dr. Firmin's house. He came and went at his will. He made 
   the place his house of call; and in the doctor's trim, silent, orderly mansion, 
   was perfectly free, talkative, dirty, and familiar. Philip's loathing for the 
   man increased till it reached a pitch of frantic hatred. Mr. Phil, theoretically 
   a Radical, and almost a Republican (in opposition, perhaps, to his father, who 
   of course held the highly-respectable line of politics)?? Mr. Sansculotte Phil 
   was personally one of the most aristocratic and overbearing of young gentlemen; 
   and had a contempt and hatred for mean people, for base people, for servile 
   people, and especially for too familiar people, which was not a little amusing 
   sometimes, which was provoking often, but which he never was at the least pains 
   of disguising. His uncle and cousin Twysden, for example, he treated not half so 
   civilly as their footmen. Little Talbot humbled himself before Phil, and felt 
   not always easy in his company. Young Twysden hated him, and did not disguise 
   his sentiments at the club, or to their mutual acquaintance behind Phil's broad 
   back. And Phil, for his part, adopted towards his cousin a kick-me-down-stairs 
   manner, which I own must have been provoking to that gentleman, who was Phil's 
   senior by three years, a clerk in a public office, a member of several good 
   clubs, and altogether a genteel member of society. Phil would often forget 
   Ringwood Twysden's presence, and pursue his own conversation entirely regardless 
   of Ringwood's observations. He was very rude, I own. We have all of us our