have a Hansom and a cigar. It was a blunder, and I am sorry for it??there! And 
   if I live to a hundred I can't say more." 
   "If you are sorry, Philip," said the father, "it is enough." "You remember, 
   Pendennis, when??when my son and I were not on this??on this footing," and he 
   looked up for a moment at a picture which was hanging over Phil's head??a 
   portrait of Phil's mother; the lady of whom my own mother spoke, on that evening 
   when we had talked of the boy's illness. Both the ladies had passed from the 
   world now, and their images were but painted shadows on the wall. 
   The father had accepted an apology, though the son had made none. I looked at 
   the elder Firmin's face, and the character written on it. I remembered such 
   particulars of his early history as had been told to me; and I perfectly 
   recalled that feeling of doubt and misliking which came over my mind when I 
   first saw the doctor's handsome face some few years previously, when my uncle 
   first took me to the doctor's in Old Parr Street; little Phil being then a 
   flaxen-headed, pretty child, who had just assumed his first trousers, and I a 
   fifth-form boy at school. 
   My father and Dr. Firmin were members of the medical profession. They had been 
   bred up as boys at the same school, whither families used to send their sons 
   from generation to generation, and long before people had ever learned that the 
   place was unwholesome. Grey Friars was smoky, certainly; I think in the time of 
   the plague great numbers of people were buried there. But had the school been 
   situated in the most picturesque swamp in England, the general health of the 
   boys could not have been better. We boys used to hear of epidemics occurring in 
   other schools, and were almost sorry that they did not come to ours, so that we 
   might shut up, and get longer vacations. Even that illness which subsequently 
   befel Phil Firmin himself attacked no one else??the boys all luckily going home 
   for the holidays on the very day of poor Phil's seizure; but of this illness 
   more anon. When it was determined that little Phil Firmin was to go to Grey 
   Friars, Phil's father bethought him that Major Pendennis, whom he met in the 
   world and society, had a nephew at the place, who might protect the little 
   fellow, and the major took his nephew to see Dr. and Mrs. Firmin one Sunday 
   after church, and we had lunch at Old Parr Street, and there little Phil was 
   presented to me, whom I promised to take under my protection. He was a simple 
   little man; an artless child, who had not the least idea of the dignity of a 
   fifth-form boy. He was quite unabashed in talking to me and other persons, and 
   has remained so ever since. He asked my uncle how he came to have such odd hair. 
   He partook freely of the delicacies on the table. I remember he hit me with his 
   little fist once or twice, which liberty at first struck me with a panic of 
   astonishment, and then with a sense of the ridiculous so exquisitely keen, that 
   I burst out into a fit of laughter. It was, you see, as if a stranger were to 
   hit the Pope in the ribs, and call him "Old boy;" as if Jack were to tweak one 
   of the giants by the nose; or Ensign Jones to ask the Duke of Wellington to take 
   wine. I had a strong sense of humour, even in those early days, and enjoyed this 
   joke accordingly. 
   "Philip!" cries mamma, "you will hurt Mr. Pendennis." 
   "I will knock him down!" shouts Phil. Fancy knocking me down,??ME, a fifth-form 
   boy! 
   "The child is a perfect Hercules," remarks the mother. 
   "He strangled two snakes in his cradle," says the doctor, looking at me. (It was 
   then, as I remember, I felt Dr. Fell towards him.) 
   "La, Dr. Firmin!" cries mamma, "I can't bear snakes. I remember there was one at 
   Rome, when we were walking one day; a great, large snake, and I hated it, and I 
   cried out, and I nearly fainted; and my uncle Ringwood said I ought to like 
   snakes, for one might be an agreeable rattle; and I have read of them being 
   charming in India, and I dare say you have, Mr. Pendennis, for I am told you are 
   very clever; and I am not in the least; I wish I were; but my husband is, 
   very??and so Phil will be. Will you be a very clever boy, dear? He was named 
   after my dear papa, who was killed at Busaco when I was quite, quite a little 
   thing, and we wore mourning, and we went to live with my uncle Ringwood 
   afterwards; but Maria and I had both our own fortunes; and I am sure I little 
   thought I should marry a physician??la, one of uncle Ringwood's grooms, I should 
   as soon have thought of marrying him!??but, you know, my husband is one of the 
   cleverest men in the world. Don't tell me,??you are, dearest, and you know it; 
   and when a man is clever I don't value his rank in life; no, not if he was that 
   fender; and I always said to uncle Ringwood, 'Talent I will marry, for talent I 
   adore;' and I did marry you, Dr. Firmin, you know I did, and this child is your 
   image. And you will be kind to him at school," says the poor lady, turning to 
   me, her eyes filling with tears, "for talent is always kind, except uncle 
   Ringwood, and he was very??" 
   "A little more wine, Mr. Pendennis?" said the doctor ??Doctor Fell still, though 
   he was most kind to me. "I shall put my little man under your care, and I know 
   you will keep him from harm. I hope you will do us the favour to come to Parr 
   Street whenever you are free. In my father's time we used to come home of a 
   Saturday from school, and enjoyed going to the play." And the doctor shook me 
   cordially by the hand, and, I must say, continued his kindness to me as long as 
   ever I knew him. When we went away, my uncle Pendennis told me many stories 
   about the great earl and family of Ringwood, and how Dr. Firmin had made a 
   match??a match of the affections??with this lady, daughter of Philip Ringwood, 
   who was killed at Busaco; and how she had been a great beauty, and was a perfect 
   grande dame always; and, if not the cleverest, certainly one of the kindest and 
   most amiable women in the world. 
   In those days I was accustomed to receive the opinions of my informant with such 
   respect that I at once accepted this statement as authentic. Mrs. Firmin's 
   portrait, indeed, was beautiful: it was painted by young Mr. Harlowe, that year 
   he was at Rome, and when in eighteen days he completed a copy of the 
   Transfiguration, to the admiration of all the Academy; but I, for my part, only 
   remember a lady weak, and thin, and faded, who never came out of her 
   dressing-room until a late hour in the afternoon, and whose superannuated smiles 
   and grimaces used to provoke my juvenile sense of humour. She used to kiss 
   Phil's brow; and, as she held the boy's hand in one of her lean ones, would say, 
   "Who would suppose such a great boy as that could be my son?" "Be kind to him 
   when I am gone," she sighed to me, one Sunday evening, when I was taking leave 
   of her, as her eyes filled with tears, and she placed the thin hand in mine for 
   the last time. The doctor, reading by the fire, turned round and scowled at her 
   from under his tall shining forehead. "You are nervous, Louisa, and had better 
   go to your room, I told you you had," he said, abruptly. "Young gentlemen, it is 
					     					 			 />   time for you to be off to Grey Friars. Is the cab at the door, Brice?" And he 
   took out his watch??his great shining watch, by which he had felt the pulses of 
   so many famous personages, whom his prodigious skill had rescued from disease. 
   And at parting, Phil flung his arms round his poor mother, and kissed her under 
   the glossy curls; the borrowed curls; and he looked his father resolutely in the 
   face (whose own glance used to fall before that of the boy), and bade him a 
   gruff goodnight, ere we set forth for Grey Friars. 
   CHAPTER II. AT SCHOOL AND AT HOME. 
   I dined yesterday with three gentlemen, whose time of life may be guessed by 
   their conversation, a great part of which consisted of Eton reminiscences and 
   lively imitations of Dr. Keate. Each one, as he described how he had been 
   flogged, mimicked to the best of his power the manner and the mode of operating 
   of the famous doctor. His little parenthetical remarks during the ceremony were 
   recalled with great facetiousness: the very hwhish of the rods was parodied with 
   thrilling fidelity, and after a good hour's conversation the subject was brought 
   to a climax by a description of that awful night when the doctor called up squad 
   after squad of boys from their beds in their respective boardinghouses, whipped 
   through the whole night, and castigated I don't know how many hundred rebels. 
   All these mature men laughed, prattled, rejoiced, and became young again, as 
   they recounted their stories; and each of them heartily and eagerly bade the 
   stranger to understand how Keate was a thorough gentleman. Having talked about 
   their floggings, I say, for an hour at least, they apologized to me for dwelling 
   upon a subject which after all was strictly local: but, indeed, their talk 
   greatly amused and diverted me, and I hope, and am quite ready, to hear all 
   their jolly stories over again. 
   Be not angry, patient reader of former volumes by the author of the present 
   history, if I am garrulous about Grey Friars, and go back to that ancient place 
   of education to find the heroes of our tale. We are but young once. When we 
   remember that time of youth, we are still young. He over whose head eight or 
   nine lustres have passed, if he wishes to write of boys, must recall the time 
   when he himself was a boy. Their habits change; their waists are longer or 
   shorter; their shirt-collars stick up more or less; but the boy is the boy in 
   King George's time as in that of his royal niece ??once our maiden queen, now 
   the anxious mother of many boys. And young fellows are honest, and merry, and 
   idle, and mischievous, and timid, and brave, and studious, and selfish, and 
   generous, and mean, and false, and truth-telling, and affectionate, and good, 
   and bad, now as in former days. He with whom we have mainly to do is a gentleman 
   of mature age now walking the street with boys of his own. He is not going to 
   perish in the last chapter of these memoirs??to die of consumption with his love 
   weeping by his bedside, or to blow his brains out in despair, because she has 
   been married to his rival, or killed out of a gig, or otherwise done for in the 
   last chapter but one. No, no; we will have no dismal endings. Philip Firmin is 
   well and hearty at this minute, owes no man a shilling, and can enjoy his glass 
   of port in perfect comfort. So, my dear miss, if you want a pulmonary romance, 
   the present won't suit you. So, young gentleman, if you are for melancholy, 
   despair, and sardonic satire, please to call at some other shop. That Philip 
   shall have his trials, is a matter of course??may they be interesting, though 
   they do not end dismally! That he shall fall and trip in his course sometimes, 
   is pretty certain. Ah, who does not upon this life-journey of ours? Is not our 
   want the occasion of our brother's charity, and thus does not good come out of 
   that evil? When the traveller (of whom the Master spoke) fell among the thieves, 
   his mishap was contrived to try many a heart beside his own??the Knave's who 
   robbed him, the Levite's and Priest's who passed him by as he lay bleeding, the 
   humble Samaritan's whose hand poured oil into his wound, and held out its 
   pittance to relieve him. 
   So little Philip Firmin was brought to school by his mamma in her carriage, who 
   entreated the housekeeper to have a special charge of that angelic child; and as 
   soon as the poor lady's back was turned, Mrs. Bunce emptied the contents of the 
   little boy's trunk into one of sixty or seventy little cupboards, wherein 
   reposed other boys' clothes and haberdashery: and then Mrs. Firmin requested to 
   see the Rev. Mr. X., in whose house Philip was to board, and besought him, and 
   explained many things to him, such as the exceeding delicacy of the child's 
   constitution, and Mr. X., who was very good-natured, patted the boy kindly on 
   the head, and sent for the other Philip, Philip Ringwood, Phil's cousin, who had 
   arrived at Grey Friars an hour or two before; and Mr. X. told Ringwood to take 
   care of the little fellow; and Mrs. Firmin, choking behind her 
   pocket-handkerchief, gurgled out a blessing on the grinning youth, and at one 
   time had an idea of giving Master Ringwood a sovereign, but paused, thinking he 
   was too big a boy, and that she might not take such a liberty, and presently she 
   was gone; and little Phil Firmin was introduced to the long-room and his 
   schoolfellows of Mr. X.'s house; and having plenty of money, and naturally 
   finding his way to the pastrycook's, the next day after school, he was met by 
   his cousin Ringwood and robbed of half the tarts which he had purchased. A 
   fortnight afterwards, the hospitable doctor and his wife asked their young 
   kinsman to Old Parr Street, Burlington Gardens, and the two boys went; but Phil 
   never mentioned anything to his parents regarding the robbery of tarts, being 
   deterred, perhaps, from speaking by awful threats of punishment which his cousin 
   promised to administer when they got back to school, in case of the little boy's 
   confession. Subsequently, Master Ringwood was asked once in every term to Old 
   Parr Street; but neither Mrs. Firmin, nor the doctor, nor Master Firmin liked 
   the baronet's son, and Mrs. Firmin pronounced him a violent, rude boy. 
   I, for my part, left school suddenly and early, and my little prot?g? behind me. 
   His poor mother, who had promised herself to come for him every Saturday, did 
   not keep her promise. Smithfield is a long way from Piccadilly; and an angry cow 
   once scratched the panels of her carriage, causing her footman to spring from 
   his board into a pig-pen, and herself to feel such a shock, that no wonder she 
   was afraid of visiting the City afterwards. The circumstances of this accident 
   she often narrated to us. Her anecdotes were not numerous, but she told them 
   repeatedly. In imagination, sometimes, I can hear her ceaseless, simple cackle; 
   see her faint eyes, as she prattles on unconsciously, and watch the dark looks 
   of her handsome, silent husband, scowling from under his eyebrows and smiling 
   behind his teeth. I daresay he ground those teeth with suppressed rage 
   sometimes. I daresay to bear with her endless volubility must have tasked his 
   endurance. He may have treated her ill, 
					     					 			 but she tried him. She, on her part, may 
   have been a not very wise woman, but she was kind to me. Did not her housekeeper 
   make me the best of tarts, and keep goodies from the company dinners for the 
   young gentlemen when they came home? Did not her husband give me of his fees? I 
   promise you, after I had seen Dr. Fell a few times, that first unpleasing 
   impression produced by his darkling countenance and sinister good looks wore 
   away. He was a gentleman. He had lived in the great world, of which he told 
   anecdotes delightful to boys to hear; and he passed the bottle to me as if I was 
   a man. 
   I hope and think I remembered the injunction of poor Mrs. Firmin to be kind to 
   her boy. As long as we stayed together at Grey Friars, I was Phil's champion, 
   whenever he needed my protection, though of course I could not always be present 
   to guard the little scapegrace from all the blows which were aimed at his young 
   face by pugilists of his own size. There were seven or eight years' difference 
   between us (he says ten, which is absurd, and which I deny); but I was always 
   remarkable for my affability, and, in spite of our disparity of age, would often 
   graciously accept the general invitation I had from his father for any Saturday 
   and Sunday when I would like to accompany Philip home. 
   Such an invitation is welcome to any schoolboy. To get away from Smithfield, and 
   show our best clothes in Bond Street, was always a privilege. To strut in the 
   Park on Sunday, and nod to the other fellows who were strutting there too, was 
   better than remaining at school, "doing Diatessaron," as the phrase used to be, 
   having that endless roast beef for dinner, and hearing two sermons in chapel. 
   There may have been more lively streets in London than Old Parr Street; but it 
   was pleasanter to be there than to look at Goswell Street over Grey Friars' 
   wall; and so the present biographer and reader's very humble servant found Dr. 
   Firmin's house an agreeable resort. Mamma was often ailing, or, if well, went 
   out into the world with her husband; in either case, we boys had a good dinner 
   provided for us, with the special dishes which Phil loved; and after dinner we 
   adjourned to the play, not being by any means too proud to sit in the pit with 
   Mr. Brice, the doctor's confidential man. On Sunday we went to church at Lady 
   Whittlesea's, and back to school in the evening; when the doctor almost always 
   gave us a fee. If he did not dine at home (and I own his absence did not much 
   damp our pleasure), Brice would lay a small enclosure on the young gentlemen's 
   coats, which we transferred to our pockets. I believe schoolboys disdain fees in 
   the present disinterested times. 
   Everything in Dr. Firmin's house was as handsome as might be, and yet somehow 
   the place was not cheerful. One's steps fell noiselessly on the faded Turkey 
   carpet; the room was large, and all save the dining-table in a dingy twilight. 
   The picture of Mrs. Firmin looked at us from the wall, and followed us about 
   with wild violet eyes. Philip Firmin had the same violet odd bright eyes, and 
   the same coloured hair of an auburn tinge; in the picture it fell in long wild 
   masses over the lady's back as she leaned with bare arms on a harp. Over the 
   sideboard was the doctor, in a black velvet coat and a fur collar, his hand on a 
   skull, like Hamlet. Skulls of oxen, horned, with wreaths, formed the cheerful 
   ornaments of the cornice. On the side-table glittered a pair of cups, given by 
   grateful patients, looking like receptacles rather for funereal ashes than for 
   festive flowers or wine. Brice, the butler, wore the gravity and costume of an 
   undertaker. The footman stealthily moved hither and thither, bearing the dinner 
   to us; we always spoke under our breath whilst we were eating it. "The room 
   don't look more cheerful of a morning when the patients are sitting here, I can