I have shown how the men had long been inwardly envenomed one against another. 
   "Because Firmin is as poor as a rat, that's no reason why he should adopt that 
   hawhaw manner, and them high and mighty airs towards a man who gives him the 
   bread he eats," Mugford argued not unjustly. "What do I care for his being a 
   university man? I am as good as he is. I am better than his old scamp of a 
   father, who was a college man too, and lived in fine company. I made my own way 
   in the world, independent, and supported myself since I was fourteen years of 
   age, and helped my mother and brothers too, and that's more than my sub-editor 
   can say, who can't support himself yet. I could get fifty sub-editors as good as 
   he is, by calling out of the window into the street, I could. I say, hang 
   Firmin! I'm a-losing all patience with him." On the other hand, Mr. Philip was 
   in the habit of speaking his mind with equal candour. "What right has that 
   person to call me Firmin?" he asked. "I am Firmin to my equals and friends. I am 
   this man's labourer at four guineas a week. I give him his money's worth, and on 
   every Saturday evening we are quits. Call me Philip indeed, and strike me in the 
   side! I choke, sir, as I think of the confounded familiarity!" "Confound his 
   impudence!" was the cry, and the not unjust cry of the labourer and his 
   employer. The men should have been kept apart: and it was a most mistaken 
   Christian charity and female conspiracy which brought them together. "Another 
   invitation from Mugford. It was agreed that I was never to go again, and I won't 
   go," says Philip to his meek wife. "Write and say we are engaged, Charlotte." 
   "It is for the 18th of next month, and this is the 23rd," said poor Charlotte. 
   "We can't well say that we are engaged so far off." 
   "It is for one of his grand ceremony parties," urged the Little Sister. "You 
   can't come to no quarrelling there. He has a good heart. So have you. There's no 
   good quarrelling with him. Oh, Philip, do forgive, and be friends!" Philip 
   yielded to the remonstrances of the women, as we all do; and a letter was sent 
   to Hampstead, announcing that Mr. and Mrs. P. F. would have the honour, 
   In his quality of newspaper proprietor, musical professors and opera singers 
   paid much court to Mr. Mugford; and he liked to entertain them at his hospitable 
   table; to brag about his wines, cookery, plate, garden, prosperity, and private 
   virtue, during dinner, whilst the artists sate respectfully listening to him; 
   and to go to sleep and snore, or wake up and join cheerfully in a chorus, when 
   the professional people performed in the drawing-room. Now, there was a lady who 
   was once known on the theatre by the name of Mrs. Ravenswing, and who had been 
   forced on to the stage by the misconduct of her husband, a certain Walker, one 
   of the greatest scamps who ever entered a gaol. On Walker's death, this lady 
   married a Mr. Woolsey, a wealthy tailor, who retired from his business, as he 
   caused his wife to withdraw from hers. 
   Now, more worthy and honourable people do not live than Woolsey and his wife, as 
   those know who were acquainted with their history. Mrs. Woolsey is loud. Her h's 
   are by no means where they should be; her knife at dinner is often where it 
   should not be. She calls men aloud by their names, and without any prefix of 
   courtesy. She is very fond of porter, and has no scruple in asking for it. She 
   sits down to play the piano, and to sing with perfect good nature, and if you 
   look at her hands as they wander over the keys??well, I don't wish to say 
   anything unkind,??but I am forced to own that those hands are not so white as 
   the ivory which they thump. Woolsey sits in perfect rapture listening to his 
   wife. Mugford presses her to take a glass of "somethink" afterwards; and the 
   good-natured soul says she will take something 'ot. She sits and listens with 
   infinite patience and good-humour whilst the little Mugfords go through their 
   horrible little musical exercises; and these over, she is ready to go back to 
   the piano again, and sing more songs, and drink more 'ot. 
   I do not say that this was an elegant woman, or a fitting companion for Mrs. 
   Philip; but I know that Mrs. Woolsey was a good, clever, and kindly woman, and 
   that Philip behaved rudely to her. He never meant to be rude to her, he said; 
   but the truth is, he treated her, her husband, Mugford, and Mrs. Mugford, with a 
   haughty ill-humour which utterly exasperated and perplexed them. 
   About this poor lady, who was modest and innocent as Susannah, Philip had heard 
   some wicked elders at wicked clubs tell wicked stories in old times. There was 
   that old Trail, for instance, what woman escaped from his sneers and slander? 
   There were others who could be named, and whose testimony was equally 
   untruthful. On an ordinary occasion Philip would never have cared or squabbled 
   about a question of precedence, and would have taken any place assigned to him 
   at any table. But when Mrs. Woolsey, in crumpled satins and blowsy lace made her 
   appearance, and was eagerly and respectfully saluted by the host and hostess, 
   Philip remembered those early stories about the poor lady: his eyes flashed 
   wrath, and his breast beat with an indignation which almost choked him. Ask that 
   woman to meet my wife? he thought to himself, and looked so ferocious and 
   desperate that the timid little wife gazed with alarm at her Philip, and crept 
   up to him and whispered, "What is it, dear?" 
   Meanwhile, Mrs. Mugford and Mrs. Woolsey were in full colloquy about the 
   weather, the nursery, and so forth??and Woolsey and Mugford giving each other 
   the hearty grasp of friendship. Philip, then, scowling at the newly arrived 
   guests, turning his great hulking back upon the company and talking to his wife, 
   presented a not agreeable figure to his entertainer. 
   "Hang the fellow's pride!" thought Mugford. "He chooses to turn his back upon my 
   company, because Woolsey was a tradesman. An honest tailor is better than a 
   bankrupt, swindling doctor, I should think. Woolsey need not be ashamed to show 
   his face, I suppose. Why did you make me ask that fellar again, Mrs. M.? Don't 
   you see our society ain't good enough for him?" 
   Philip's conduct, then, so irritated Mugford, that when dinner was announced, he 
   stepped forward and offered his arm to Mrs. Woolsey; having intended in the 
   first instance to confer that honour upon Charlotte. "I'll show him," thought 
   Mugford, "that an honest tradesman's lady who pays his way, and is not afraid of 
   anybody, is better than my sub-editor's wife, the daughter of a bankrupt swell." 
   Though the dinner was illuminated by Mugford's grandest plate, and accompanied 
   by his very best wine, it was a gloomy and weary repast to several people 
   present, and Philip and Charlotte, and I daresay Mugford, thought it never would 
   be done. Mrs. Woolsey, to be sure, placidly ate her dinner, and drank her wine; 
   whilst, remembering these wicked legends against her, Philip sate before the 
   poor unconscious lady, silent, with glaring eyes, insolent and odious; so much 
   so, that Mrs. Woolsey imparted to Mrs. Mugford her surmise that the tall 
   gentleman must have got out of bed the wrong leg foremost. 
					     					 			r />   Well, Mrs. Woolsey's carriage and Mr. Firmin's cab were announced at the same 
   moment; and immediately Philip started up and beckoned his wife away. But Mrs. 
   Woolsey's carriage and lamps of course had the precedence; and this lady Mr. 
   Mugford accompanied to her carriage step. 
   He did not pay the same attention to Mrs. Firmin. Most likely he forgot. 
   Possibly he did not think etiquette required he should show that sort of 
   politeness to a sub-editor's wife: at any rate, he was not so rude as Philip 
   himself had been during the evening, but he stood in the hall looking at his 
   guests departing in their cab, when, in a sudden gust of passion, Philip stepped 
   out of the carriage, and stalked up to his host, who stood there in his own hall 
   confronting him, Philip declared, with a most impudent smile on his face. 
   "Come back to light a pipe I suppose? Nice thing for your wife, ain't it?" said 
   Mugford, relishing his own joke. 
   "I am come back, sir," said Philip, glaring at Mugford, "to ask how you dared 
   invite Mrs. Philip Firmin to meet that woman?" 
   Here, on his side, Mr. Mugford lost his temper, and from this moment his wrong 
   begins. When he was in a passion, the language used by Mr. Mugford was not, it 
   appears, choice. We have heard that when angry, he was in the habit of swearing 
   freely at his subordinates. He broke out on this occasion also with many oaths. 
   He told Philip that he would stand his impudence no longer; that he was as good 
   as a swindling doctor's son; that though he hadn't been to college he could buy 
   and pay them as had; and that if Philip liked to come into the back yard for ten 
   minutes, he'd give him one??two, and show him whether he was a man or not. Poor 
   Charlotte, who, indeed, fancied that her husband had gone back to light his 
   cigar, sat awhile unconscious in her cab, and supposed that the two gentlemen 
   were engaged on newspaper business. When Mugford began to pull his coat off, she 
   sat wondering, but not in the least understanding the meaning of the action. 
   Philip had described his employer as walking about his office without a coat and 
   using energetic language. 
   But when, attracted by the loudness of the talk, Mrs. Mugford came forth from 
   her neighbouring drawing-room, accompanied by such of her children as had not 
   yet gone to roost??when seeing Mugford pulling off his dress-coat, she began to 
   scream??when, lifting his voice over hers, Mugford poured forth oaths, and 
   frantically shook his fists at Philip, asking how that blackguard dared insult 
   him in his own house, and proposing to knock his head off at that moment??then 
   poor Char, in a wild alarm, sprang out of the cab, ran to her husband, whose 
   whole frame was throbbing, whose nostrils were snorting with passion. Then Mrs. 
   Mugford springing forward, placed her ample form before her husband's, and 
   calling Philip a great cowardly beast, asked him if he was going to attack that 
   little old man? Then Mugford dashing his coat down to the ground, called with 
   fresh oaths to Philip to come on. And, in fine, there was a most unpleasant row, 
   occasioned by Mr. Philip Firmin's hot temper. 
   CHAPTER VI. RES ANGUSTA DOMI. 
   To reconcile these two men was impossible, after such a quarrel as that 
   described in the last chapter. The only chance of peace was to keep the two men 
   apart. If they met, they would fly at each other. Mugford always persisted that 
   he could have got the better of his great hulking sub-editor, who did not know 
   the use of his fists. In Mugford's youthful time, bruising was a fashionable 
   art; and the old gentleman still believed in his own skill and prowess. "Don't 
   tell me," he would say; "though the fellar is as big as a life-guardsman, I 
   would have doubled him up in two minutes." I am very glad, for poor Charlotte's 
   sake and his own, that Philip did not undergo the doubling-up process. He 
   himself felt such a wrath and surprise at his employer as, I suppose, a lion 
   does when a little dog attacks him. I should not like to be that little dog; nor 
   does my modest and peaceful nature at all prompt and impel me to combat with 
   lions. 
   It was mighty well Mr. Philip Firmin had shown his spirit, and quarrelled with 
   his bread-and-butter; but when Saturday came, what philanthropist would hand 
   four sovereigns and four shillings over to Mr. F., as Mr. Burjoyce, the 
   publisher of the Pall Mall Gazette, had been accustomed to do? I will say for my 
   friend that a still keener remorse than that which he felt about money thrown 
   away attended him when he found that Mrs. Woolsey, towards whom he had cast a 
   sidelong stone of persecution, was a most respectable and honourable lady. "I 
   should like to go, sir, and grovel before her," Philip said, in his energetic 
   way. "If I see that tailor, I will request him to put his foot on my head, and 
   trample on me with his highlows. Oh, for shame! for shame! Shall I never learn 
   charity towards my neighbours, and always go on believing in the lies which 
   people tell me? When I meet that scoundrel Trail at the club, I must chastise 
   him. How dared he take away the reputation of an honest woman?" Philip's friends 
   besought him, for the sake of society and peace, not to carry this quarrel 
   farther. "If," we said, "every woman whom Trail has maligned had a champion who 
   should box Trail's ears at the club, what a vulgar, quarrelsome place that club 
   would become! My dear Philip, did you ever know Mr. Trail say a good word of man 
   or woman?" and by these or similar entreaties and arguments, we succeeded in 
   keeping the Queen's peace. 
   Yes: but how find another Pall Mall Gazette? Had Philip possessed seven thousand 
   pounds in the three per cents., his income would have been no greater than that 
   which he drew from Mugford's faithful bank. Ah! how wonderful ways and means 
   are! When I think how this very line, this very word, which I am writing 
   represents money, I am lost in a respectful astonishment. A man takes his own 
   case, as he says his own prayers, on behalf of himself and his family. I am 
   paid, we will say, for the sake of illustration, at the rate of sixpence per 
   line. With the words "Ah, how wonderful," to the words "per line," I can buy a 
   loaf, a piece of butter, a jug of milk, a modicum of tea,??actually enough to 
   make breakfast for the family; and the servants of the house; and the charwoman, 
   their servant, can shake up the tea-leaves with a fresh supply of water, sop the 
   crusts, and get a meal, tant bien que mal. Wife, children, guests, servants, 
   charwoman, we are all actually making a meal off Philip Firmin's bones as it 
   were. And my next-door neighbour, whom I see marching away to chambers, umbrella 
   in hand? And next door but one, the city man? And next door but two the 
   doctor!??I know the baker has left loaves at every one of their doors this 
   morning, that all their chimnies are smoking, and they will all have breakfast. 
   Ah, thank God for it! I hope, friend, you and I are not too proud to ask for our 
   daily bread, and to be grateful for getting it? Mr. Philip had to work for his, 
   in care and trouble, like other children of men:??to work for it, and I hope to 
   pray for it, too. It is a t 
					     					 			hought to me awful and beautiful, that of the daily 
   prayer, and of the myriads of fellow-men uttering it, in care and in sickness, 
   in doubt and in poverty, in health and in wealth. Panem nostrum da nobis hodie. 
   Philip whispers it by the bedside where wife and child lie sleeping, and goes to 
   his early labour with a stouter heart: as he creeps to his rest when the day's 
   labour is over, and the quotidian bread is earned, and breathes his hushed 
   thanks to the bountiful Giver of the meal. All over this world what an endless 
   chorus is singing of love, and thanks, and prayer. Day tells to day the wondrous 
   story, and night recounts it unto night.??How do I come to think of a sunrise 
   which I saw near twenty years ago on the Nile, when the river and sky flushed 
   and glowed with the dawning light, and as the luminary appeared, the boatmen 
   knelt on the rosy deck, and adored Allah? So, as thy sun rises, friend, over the 
   humble housetops round about your home, shall you wake many and many a day to 
   duty and labour. May the task have been honestly done when the night comes; and 
   the steward deal kindly with the labourer. 
   So two of Philip's cables cracked and gave way after a very brief strain, and 
   the poor fellow held by nothing now but that wonderful European Review 
   established by the mysterious Tregarvan. Actors, a people of superstitions and 
   traditions, opine that heaven, in some mysterious way, makes managers for their 
   benefit. In like manner, Review proprietors are sent to provide the pabulum for 
   us men of letters. With what complacency did my wife listen to the somewhat 
   long-winded and pompous oratory of Tregarvan! He pompous and commonplace? 
   Tregarvan spoke with excellent good sense. That wily woman never showed she was 
   tired of his conversation. She praised him to Philip behind his back, and would 
   not allow a word in his disparagement. As a doctor will punch your chest, your 
   liver, your heart, listen at your lungs, squeeze your pulse, and what not, so 
   this practitioner studied, shampooed, auscultated Tregarvan. Of course, he 
   allowed himself to be operated upon. Of course, he had no idea that the lady was 
   flattering, wheedling, humbugging him; but thought that he was a very 
   well-informed, eloquent man, who had seen and read a great deal, and had an 
   agreeable method of imparting his knowledge, and that the lady in question was a 
   sensible woman, naturally eager for more information. Go, Dalilah! I understand 
   your tricks! I know many another Omphale in London, who will coax Hercules away 
   from his club, to come and listen to her wheedling talk. 
   One great difficulty we had was to make Philip read Tregarvan's own articles in 
   the Review. He at first said he could not, or that he could not remember them; 
   so that there was no use in reading them. And Philip's new master used to make 
   artful allusions to his own writings in the course of conversation, so that our 
   unwary friend would find himself under examination in any casual interview with 
   Tregarvan, whose opinions on free-trade, malt-tax, income-tax, designs of 
   Russia, or what not,might be accepted or denied, but ought at least to be known. 
   We actually made Philip get up his owner's articles. We put questions to him, 
   privily, regarding them??"coached" him, according to the university phrase. My 
   wife humbugged that wretched Member of Parliament in a way which makes me 
   shudder, when I think of what hypocrisy the sex is capable. Those arts and 
   dissimulations with which she wheedles others, suppose she exercise them on me? 
   Horrible thought! No, angel! To others thou mayst be a coaxing hypocrite; to me 
   thou art all candour! Other men may have been humbugged by other women; but I am 
   not to be taken in by that sort of thing; and thou art all candour! 
   We had then so much per annum as editor. We were paid, besides, for our