position. It broke out very soon after Mr. Woolcomb's attentions became a little

  particular; and she actually left London in consequence. It is true that he

  could follow her without difficulty, but so, for the matter of that, could

  Philip, as we have seen, when he came down and behaved so rudely to Captain

  Woolcomb. And before Philip came, poor Agnes could plead, "My father pressed me

  sair," as in the case of the notorious Mrs. Robin Gray.

  Father and mother both pressed her sair. Mrs. Twysden, I think I have mentioned,

  wrote an admirable letter, and was aware of her accomplishment. She used to

  write reams of gossip regularly every week to dear uncle Ringwood when he was in

  the country: and when her daughter Blanche married, she is said to have written

  several of her new son's sermons. As a Christian mother, was she not to give her

  daughter her advice at this momentous period of her life? That advice went

  against poor Philip's chances with his cousin, who was kept acquainted with all

  the circumstances of the controversy of which we have just seen the issue. I do

  not mean to say that Mrs. Twysden gave an impartial statement of case. What

  parties in a lawsuit do speak impartily on their own side or their adversaries'?

  Mrs. Twysden's view, as I have learned subsequently, and as imparted to her

  daughter, was this:?? That most unprincipled man, Dr. Firmin, who had already

  attempted, and unjustly, to deprive the Twysdens of a part of their property,

  had commenced in quite early life his career of outrage and wickedness against

  the Ringwood family. He had led dear Lord Ringwood's son, poor dear Lord

  Cinqbars, into a career of vice and extravagance which caused the premature

  death of that unfortunate young nobleman. Mr. Firmin had then made a marriage,

  in spite of the tears and entreaties of Mrs. Twysden, with her late unhappy

  sister, whose whole life had been made wretched by the doctor's conduct. But the

  climax of outrage and wickedness was, that when he??he, a low, penniless

  adventurer??married Colonel Ringwood's daughter, he was married already, as

  could be sworn by the repentant clergyman who had been forced, by threats of

  punishment which Dr. Firmin held over him, to perform the rite! "The mind"??Mrs.

  Talbot Twysden's fine mind??"shuddered at the thought of such wickedness." But

  most of all (for to think ill of any one whom she had once loved gave her pain)

  there was reason to believe that the unhappy Philip Firmin was his father's

  accomplice, and that he knew of his own illegitimacy, which he was determined to

  set aside by any fraud or artifice??(she trembled, she wept to have to say this:

  O heaven! that there should be such perversity in thy creatures!) And so little

  store did Philip set by his mother's honour, that he actually visited the

  abandoned woman who acquiesced in her own infamy, and had brought such

  unspeakable disgrace on the Ringwood family! The thought of this crime had

  caused Mrs. Twysden and her dear husband nights of sleepless anguish??had made

  them years and years older ??had stricken their hearts with a grief which must

  endure to the end of their days. With people so unscrupulous, so grasping, so

  artful as Dr. Firmin and (must she say?) his son, they were bound to be on their

  guard; and though they had avoided Philip, she had deemed it right, on the rare

  occasions when she and the young man whom she must now call her illegitimate

  nephew met, to behave as though she knew nothing of this most dreadful

  controversy.

  "And now, dearest child" ... Surely the moral is obvious? The dearest child

  "must see at once that any foolish plans which were formed in childish days and

  under former delusions must be cast aside for ever as impossible, as unworthy of

  a Twysden??of a Ringwood. Be not concerned for the young man himself," wrote

  Mrs. Twysden??"I blush that he should bear that dear father's name who was slain

  in honour on Busaco's glorious field. P. F. has associates amongst whom he has

  ever been much more at home than in our refined circle, and habits which will

  cause him to forget you only too easily. And if near you is one whose ardour

  shows itself in his every word and action, whose wealth and property may raise

  you to a place worthy of my child, need I say, a mother's, a father's blessing

  go with you." This letter was brought to Miss Twysden, at Brighton, by a special

  messenger; and the superscription announced that it was "honoured by Captain

  Grenville Woolcomb."

  Now when Miss Agnes has had a letter to this effect, from a mother in whose

  prudence and affection a child could surely confide; when she remembers all the

  abuse her brother lavishes against Philip, as, heaven bless some of them! dear

  relatives can best do; when she thinks how cold he has of late been??how he will

  come smelling of cigars??how he won't conform to the usages du monde, and has

  neglected all the decencies of society??how she often can't understand his

  strange rhapsodies about poetry, painting, and the like, nor how he can live

  with such associates as those who seem to delight him??and now how he is showing

  himself actually unprincipled and abetting his horrid father; when we consider

  mither pressing sair, and all these points in mither's favour, I don't think we

  can order Agnes to instant execution for the resolution to which she is coming.

  She will give him up??she will give him up. Good-by, Philip. Good-by the past.

  Be forgotten, be forgotten, fond words spoken in not unwilling ears! Be still

  and breathe not, eager lips, that have trembled so near to one another! Unlock,

  hands, and part for ever, that seemed to be formed for life's long journey! Ah,

  to part for ever is hard; but harder and more humiliating still to part without

  regret!

  That papa and mamma had influenced Miss Twysden in her behaviour my wife and I

  could easily imagine, when Philip, in his wrath and grief, came to us and poured

  out the feelings of his heart. My wife is a repository of men's secrets, and

  untiring consoler and comforter; and she knows many a sad story which we are not

  at liberty to tell, like this one of which this person, Mr. Firmin, has given us

  possession.

  "Father and mother's orders," shouts Philip, "I daresay, Mrs. Pendennis; but the

  wish was father to the thought of parting, and it was for the blackamoor's parks

  and acres that the girl jilted me. Look here. I told you just now that I slept

  perfectly well on that infernal night after I had said farewell to her. Well, I

  didn't. It was a lie. I walked ever so many times the whole length of the cliff,

  from Hove to Rottingdean almost, and then went to bed afterwards, and slept a

  little out of sheer fatigue. And as I was passing by Horizontal Place (??I

  happened to pass by there two or three times in the moonlight, like a great

  jackass??) you know those verses of mine which I have hummed here sometimes?"

  (hummed! he used to roar them!) "'When the locks of burnished gold, lady, shall

  to silver turn!' Never mind the rest. You know the verses about fidelity and old

  age? She was singing them on that night, to that negro. And I heard the beggar's

  voice say, 'Bravo!' through
the open windows."

  "Ah, Philip! it was cruel," says my wife, heartily pitying our friend's anguish

  and misfortune. "It was cruel indeed. I am sure we can feel for you. But think

  what certain misery a marriage with such a person would have been! Think of your

  warm heart given away for ever to that heartless creature."

  "Laura, Laura, have you not often warned me not to speak ill of people?" says

  Laura's husband.

  "I can't help it sometimes," cries Laura in a transport. "I try and do my best

  not to speak ill of my neighbours; but the worldliness of those people shocks me

  so that I can't bear to be near them. They are so utterly tied and bound by

  conventionalities, so perfectly convinced of their own excessive high-breeding,

  that they seem to me more odious and more vulgar than quite low people; and I am

  sure Mr. Philip's friend, the Little Sister, is infinitely more ladylike than

  his dreary aunt or either of his supercilious cousins!" Upon my word, when this

  lady did speak her mind, there was no mistaking her meaning.

  I believe Mr. Firmin took a considerable number of people into his confidence

  regarding this love affair. He is one of those individuals who can't keep their

  secrets; and when hurt he roars so loudly that all his friends can hear. It has

  been remarked that the sorrows of such persons do not endure very long; nor

  surely was there any great need in this instance that Philip's heart should wear

  a lengthened mourning. Ere long he smoked his pipes, he played his billiards, he

  shouted his songs; he rode in the Park for the pleasure of severely cutting his

  aunt and cousins when their open carriage passed, or of riding down Captain

  Woolcomb or his cousin Ringwood, should either of those worthies come in his

  way.

  One day, when the old Lord Ringwood came to town for his accustomed spring

  visit, Philip condescended to wait upon him, and was announced to his lordship

  just as Talbot Twysden and Ringwood his son were taking leave of their noble

  kinsman. Philip looked at them with a flashing eye and a distended nostril,

  according to his swaggering wont. I daresay they on their part bore a very mean

  and hangdog appearance; for my lord laughed at their discomfiture, and seemed

  immensely amused as they slunk out of the door when Philip came hectoring in.

  "So, sir, there has been a family row. Heard all about it: at least, their side.

  Your father did me the favour to marry my niece, having another wife already?"

  "Having no other wife already, sir??though my dear relations wish to show that

  he had."

  "Wanted your money; thirty thousand pounds is not a trifle. Ten thousand apiece

  for those children. And no more need of any confounded pinching and scraping, as

  they have to do at Beaunash Street. Affair off between you and Agnes? Absurd

  affair. So much the better."

  "Yes, sir, so much the better."

  "Have ten thousand apiece. Would have twenty thousand if they got yours. Quite

  natural to want it."

  "Quite."

  "Woolcomb a sort of negro, I understand. Fine property here: besides the West

  India rubbish. Violent man??so people tell me. Luckily Agnes seems a cool,

  easy-going woman, and must put up with the rough as well as the smooth in

  marrying a property like that. Very lucky for you that that woman persists there

  was no marriage with your father. Twysden says the doctor bribed her. Take it

  he's not got much money to bribe, unless you gave some of yours."

  "I don't bribe people to bear false witness, my lord?? and if??

  "Don't be in a huff; I didn't say so. Twysden says so??perhaps thinks so. When

  people are at law they believe anything of one another."

  "I don't know what other people may do, sir. If I had another man's money, I

  should not be easy until I had paid him back. Had my share of my grandfather's

  property not been lawfully mine??and for a few hours I thought it was

  not??please God, I would have given it up to its rightful owners??at least, my

  father would."

  "Why, hang it all, man, you don't mean to say your father has not settled with

  you?"

  Philip blushed a little. He had been rather surprised that there had been no

  settlement between him and his father.

  "I am only of age a few months, sir. I am not under any apprehension. I get my

  dividends regularly enough. One of my grandfather's trustees, General Baynes, is

  in India. He is to return almost immediately, or we should have sent a power of

  attorney out to him. There's no hurry about the business."

  Philip's maternal grandfather, and Lord Ringwood's brother, the late Colonel

  Philip Ringwood, had died possessed of but trifling property of his own; but his

  wife had brought him a fortune of sixty thousand pounds, which was settled on

  their children, and in the names of trustees??Mr. Briggs, a lawyer, and Colonel

  Baynes, an East India officer, and friend of Mrs. Philip Ringwood's family.

  Colonel Baynes had been in England some eight years before; and Philip

  remembered a kind old gentleman coming to see him at school, and leaving tokens

  of his bounty behind. The other trustee, Mr. Briggs, a lawyer of considerable

  county reputation, was dead long since, having left his affairs in an involved

  condition. During the trustee's absence and the son's minority, Philip's father

  received the dividends on his son's property, and liberally spent them on the

  boy, Indeed, I believe that for some little time at college, and during his

  first journeys abroad, Mr. Philip spent rather more than the income of his

  maternal inheritance, being freely supplied by his father, who told him not to

  stint himself. He was a sumptuous man, Dr.Firmin??openhanded ??subscribing to

  many charities??a lover of solemn good cheer. The doctor's dinners and the

  doctor's equipages were models in their way; and I remember the sincere respect

  with which my uncle the major (the family guide in such matters) used to speak

  of Dr. Firmin's taste. "No duchess in London, sir," he would say, "drove better

  horses than Mrs. Firmin. Sir George Warrender, sir, could not give a better

  dinner, sir, than that to which we sat down yesterday." And for the exercise of

  these civic virtues the doctor had the hearty respect of the good major.

  "Don't tell me, sir," on the other hand, Lord Ringwood would say; "I dined with

  the fellow once??a swaggering fellow, sir; but a servile fellow. The way he

  bowed and flattered was perfectly absurd. Those fellows think we like it??and we

  may. Even at my age, I like flattery??any quantity of it; and not what you call

  delicate, but strong, sir. I like a man to kneel down and kiss my shoestrings. I

  have my own opinion of him afterwards, but that is what I like??what all men

  like; and that is what Firmin gave in quantities. But you could see that his

  house was monstrously expensive. His dinner was excellent, and you saw it was

  good every day??not like your dinners, my good Maria; not like your wines,

  Twysden, which, hang it, I can't swallow, unless I send 'em in myself. Even at

  my own house, I don't give that kind of wine on common occasions which Firmin

  used to give. I drink the best mys
elf, of course, and give it to some who know;

  but I don't give it to common fellows, who come to hunting dinners, or to girls

  and boys who are dancing at my balls."

  "Yes; Mr. Firmin's dinners were very handsome?? and a pretty end came of the

  handsome dinners!" sighed Mrs. Twysden.

  "That's not the question; I am only speaking about the fellow's meat and drink,

  and they were both good. And it's my opinion, that fellow will have a good

  dinner wherever he goes."

  I had the fortune to be present at one of these feasts, which Lord Ringwood

  attended, and at which I met Philip's trustee, General Baynes, who had just

  arrived from India. I remember now the smallest details of the little

  dinner,??the brightness of the old plate, on which the doctor prided himself,

  and the quiet comfort, not to say splendour, of the entertainment. The general

  seemed to take a great liking to Philip, whose grandfather had been his special

  friend and comrade in arms. He thought he saw something of Philip Ringwood in

  Philip Firmin's face.

  "Ah, indeed!" growls Lord Ringwood.

  "You ain't a bit like him," says the downright general. "Never saw a handsomer

  or more openlooking fellow than Philip Ringwood."

  "Oh! I daresay I looked pretty open myself forty years ago," said my lord; "now

  I'm shut, I suppose. I don't see the least likeness in this young man to my

  brother."

  "That is some sherry as old as the century," whispers the host; "it is the same

  the Prince Regent liked so at a Mansion House dinner, five-and-twenty years

  ago."

  "Never knew anything about wine; was always tippling liqueurs and punch. What do

  you give for this sherry, doctor?"

  The doctor sighed, and looked up to the chandelier. "Drink it while it lasts, my

  good lord; but don't ask me the price. The fact is, I don't like to say what I

  gave for it."

  "You need not stint yourself in the price of sherry, doctor," cries the general

  gaily; "you have but one son, and he has a fortune of his own, as I happen to

  know. You haven't dipped it, master Philip?"

  "I fear, sir, I may have exceeded my income sometimes, in the last three years;

  but my father has helped me."

  "Exceeded nine hundred a-year! Upon my word! When I was a sub, my friends gave

  me fifty pounds a year, and I never was a shilling in debt! What are men coming

  to now?"

  "If doctors drink Prince Regent's sherry at ten guineas a dozen, what can you

  expect of their sons, General Baynes?" grumbles my lord.

  "My father gives you his best, my lord," says Philip gaily; "if you know of any

  better, he will get it for you. Si non, his utere mecum! Please to pass me that

  decanter, Pen!"

  I thought the old lord did not seem ill pleased at the young man's freedom; and

  now, as I recal it, think I can remember, that a peculiar silence and anxiety

  seemed to weigh upon our host??upon him whose face was commonly so anxious and

  sad.

  The famous sherry, which had made many voyages to Indian climes before it

  acquired its exquisite flavour, had travelled some three or four times round the

  doctor's polished table, when Brice, his man, entered with a letter on his

  silver tray. Perhaps Philip's eyes and mine exchanged glances in which ever so

  small a scintilla of mischief might sparkle. The doctor often had letters when

  he was entertaining his friends; and his patients had a knack of falling ill at

  awkward times.

  "Gracious heavens!" cries the doctor, when he read the despatch??it was a

  telegraphic message. "The poor Grand Duke!"

  "What Grand Duke?" asks the surly lord of Ringwood.

  "My earliest patron and friend??the Grand Duke of Groningen! Seized this morning

  at eleven at Potzendorff! Has sent for me. I promised to go to him if ever he

  had need of me. I must go! I can save the night-train yet. General! our visit to

  city must be deferred till my return. Get a portmanteau, Brice; and call a cab