too, yet somehow she looks grander,"--and here the lad laughed again.
   "And do you know, I often think that as good a lady as Aunt Anne herself,
   is old Aunt Honeyman at Brighton--that is, in all essentials, you know.
   For she is not proud, and she is not vain, and she never says an unkind
   word behind anybody's back, and she does a deal of kindness to the poor
   without appearing to crow over them, you know; and she is not a bit
   ashamed of letting lodgings, or being poor herself, as sometimes I think
   some of our family----"
   "I thought we were going to speak no ill of them?" says the Colonel,
   smiling.
   "Well, it only slipped out unawares," says Clive, laughing; "but at
   Newcome when they go on about the Newcomes, and that great ass, Barnes
   Newcome, gives himself his airs, it makes me die of laughing. That time I
   went down to Newcome, I went to see old Aunt Sarah, and she told me
   everything, and showed me the room where my grandfather--you know; and do
   you know I was a little hurt at first, for I thought we were swells till
   then. And when I came back to school, where perhaps I had been giving
   myself airs, and bragging about Newcome, why, you know, I thought it was
   right to tell the fellows."
   "That's a man," said the Colonel, with delight; though had he said,
   "That's a boy," he had spoken more correctly. Indeed, how many men do we
   know in the world without caring to know who their fathers were? and how
   many more who wisely do not care to tell us? "That's a man," cries the
   Colonel; "never be ashamed of your father, Clive."
   "Ashamed of my father!" says Clive, looking up to him, and walking on as
   proud as a peacock. "I say," the lad resumed, after a pause--
   "Say what you say," said the father.
   "Is that all true what's in the Peerage--in the Baronetage, about Uncle
   Newcome and Newcome; about the Newcome who was burned at Smithfield;
   about the one that was at the battle of Bosworth; and the old old Newcome
   who was bar--that is, who was surgeon to Edward the Confessor, and was
   killed at Hastings? I am afraid it isn't; and yet I should like it to be
   true."
   "I think every man would like to come of an ancient and honourable race,"
   said the Colonel, in his honest way. "As you like your father to be an
   honourable man, why not your grandfather, and his ancestors before him?
   But if we can't inherit a good name, at least we can do our best to leave
   one, my boy; and that is an ambition which, please God, you and I will
   both hold by."
   With this simple talk the old and young gentleman beguiled their way,
   until they came into the western quarter of the town, where the junior
   member of the firm of Newcome Brothers had his house--a handsome and
   roomy mansion in Bryanstone Square. Colonel Newcome was bent on paying a
   visit to his sister-in-law, and as he knocked at the door, where the pair
   were kept waiting some little time, he could remark through the opened
   windows of the dining-room, that a great table was laid and every
   preparation made for a feast.
   "My brother said he was engaged to dinner to-day," said the Colonel.
   "Does Mrs. Newcome give parties when he is away?"
   "She invites all the company," answered Clive. "My uncle never asks any
   one without aunt's leave."
   The Colonel's countenance fell. He has a great dinner, and does not ask
   his own brother! Newcome thought. Why, if he had come to me in India with
   all his family, he might have stayed for a year, and I should have been
   offended if he had gone elsewhere.
   A hot menial, in a red waistcoat, came and opened the door; and without
   waiting for preparatory queries, said, "Not at home."
   "It's my father, John," said Clive; "my aunt will see Colonel Newcome."
   "Missis not at home," said the man. "Missis is gone in carriage--Not at
   this door!-Take them things down the area steps, young man!" bawls out
   the domestic. This latter speech was addressed to a pastrycook's boy,
   with a large sugar temple and many conical papers containing delicacies
   for dessert. "Mind the hice is here in time; or there'll be a blow-up
   with your governor,"--and John struggled back, closing the door on the
   astonished Colonel.
   "Upon my life, they actually shut the door in our faces," said the poor
   gentleman.
   "The man is very busy, sir. There's a great dinner. I'm sure my aunt
   would not refuse you," Clive interposed. "She is very kind. I suppose
   it's different here to what it is in India. here are the children in the
   square,--those are the girls in blue,--that's the French governess, the
   one with the mustachios and the yellow parasol. How d'ye do, Mary? How
   d'ye do, Fanny? This is my father,--this is your uncle."
   "Mesdemoiselles! Je vous ddfends de parler a qui que ce soit hors du
   squar!" screams out the lady of the mustachios; and she strode forward to
   call back her young charges.
   The Colonel addressed her in very good French. "I hope you will permit me
   to make acquaintance with my nieces," he said, "and with their
   instructress, of whom my son has given me such a favourable account."
   "Hem!" said Mademoiselle Lebrun, remembering the last fight she and Clive
   had had together, and a portrait of herself (with enormous whiskers)
   which the young scapegrace had drawn. "Monsieur is very good. But one
   cannot too early inculcate retenue and decorum to young ladies in a
   country where demoiselles seem for ever to forget that they are young
   ladies of condition. I am forced to keep the eyes of lynx upon these
   young persons, otherwise heaven knows what would come to them. Only
   yesterday, my back is turned for a moment, I cast my eyes on a book,
   having but little time for literature, monsieur--for literature, which I
   adore--when a cry makes itself to hear. I turn myself, and what do I see?
   Mesdemoiselles, your nieces, playing at criquette, with the Messieurs
   Smees--sons of Doctor Smees--young galopins, monsieur!" All this was
   shrieked with immense volubility and many actions of the hand and parasol
   across the square-railings to the amused Colonel, at whom the little
   girls peered through the bars.
   "Well, my dears, I should like to have a game at cricket with you, too,"
   says the kind gentleman, reaching them each a brown hand.
   "You, monsieur, c'est different--a man of your age! Salute monsieur, your
   uncle, mesdemoiselles. You conceive, monsieur, that I also must be
   cautious when I speak to a man so distinguished in a public squar." And
   she cast down her great eyes and hid those radiant orbs from the Colonel.
   Meanwhile, Colonel Newcome, indifferent to the direction which Miss
   Lebrun's eyes took, whether towards his hat or his boots, was surveying
   his little nieces with that kind expression which his face always wore
   when it was turned towards children. "Have you heard of your uncle in
   India?" he asked them.
   "No," says Maria.
   "Yes," says Fanny. "You know mademoiselle said" (mademoiselle at this
   moment was twittering her fingers, and, as it were, kissing them in the
   direction of a grand barouche that was advancing along the Square)--"you
					     					 			>   know mademoiselle said that if we were mechantes we should be sent to our
   uncle in India. I think I should like to go with you."
   "O you silly child!" cries Maria.
   "Yes I should, if Clive went too," says little Fanny.
   "Behold madam, who arrives from her promenade!" Miss Lebrun exclaimed;
   and, turning round, Colonel Newcome had the satisfaction of beholding,
   for the first time, his sister-in-law.
   A stout lady, with fair hair and a fine bonnet and pelisse (who knows
   what were the fine bonnets and pelisses of the year 183-?), was reclining
   in the barouche, the scarlet-plush integuments of her domestics blazing
   before and behind her. A pretty little foot was on the cushion opposite
   to her; feathers waved in her bonnet; a book was in her lap; an oval
   portrait of a gentleman reposed on her voluminous bosom. She wore another
   picture of two darling heads, with pink cheeks and golden hair, on one of
   her wrists, with many more chains, bracelets, bangles, and knick-knacks.
   A pair of dirty gloves marred the splendour of this appearance; a heap of
   books from the library strewed the back seat of the carriage, and showed
   that her habits were literary. Springing down from his station behind his
   mistress, the youth clad in the nether garments of red sammit discharged
   thunderclaps on the door of Mrs. Newcome's house, announcing to the whole
   Square that his mistress had returned to her abode. Since the fort
   saluted the Governor-General at ------, Colonel Newcome had never heard
   such a cannonading.
   Clive, with a queer twinkle of his eyes, ran towards his aunt.
   She bent over the carriage languidly towards him. She liked him. "What,
   you, Clive?" she said. "How come you away from school of a Thursday,
   sir?"
   "It is a holiday," says he. "My father is come; and he is come to see
   you."
   She bowed her head with an expression of affable surprise and majestic
   satisfaction. "Indeed, Clive!" she was good enough to exclaim and with an
   air which seemed to say, "Let him come up and be presented to me." The
   honest gentleman stepped forward and took off his hat and bowed, and
   stood bareheaded. She surveyed him blandly, and with infinite grace put
   forward one of the pudgy little hands in one of the dirty gloves. Can you
   fancy a twopenny-halfpenny baroness of King Francis's time patronising
   Bayard? Can you imagine Queen Guinever's lady's-maid's lady's maid being
   affable to Sir Lancelot? I protest there is nothing like the virtue of
   English women.
   "You have only arrived to-day, and you came to see me? That was very
   kind. N'est-ce pas que c'etoit bong de Mouseer le Collonel, mademoiselle?
   Madamaselle Lebrun, le Collonel Newcome, mong frere." (In a whisper, "My
   children's governess and my friend, a most superior woman.") "Was it not
   kind of Colonel Newcome to come to see me? Have you had a pleasant
   voyage? Did you come by St. Helena? Oh, how I envy you seeing the tomb of
   that great man! Nous parlong de Napolleong, mademoiselle, dong voter pere
   a ete le General favvory."
   "O Dieu! que n'ai je pu le voir," interjaculates mademoiselle. "Lui dont
   parle l'univers, dont mon pere m'a si souvent parle!" but this remark
   passes quite unnoticed by mademoiselle's friend, who continues:
   "Clive, donnez-moi voter bras. These are two of my girls. My boys are at
   school. I shall be so glad to introduce them to their uncle. This naughty
   boy might never have seen you, but that we took him home to Marblehead,
   after the scarlet fever, and made him well, didn't we, Clive? And we are
   all very fond of him, and you must not be jealous of his love for his
   aunt. We feel that we quite know you through him, and we know that you
   know us, and we hope you will like us. Do you think your pa will like us,
   Clive? Or perhaps you will like Lady Anne best? Yes; you have been to her
   first, of course? Not been? Oh! because she is not in town." Leaning
   fondly on the arm of Clive, mademoiselle standing grouped with the
   children hard by while John, with his hat off, stood at the opened door,
   Mr Newcome slowly uttered the above remarkable remarks to the Colonel, on
   the threshold of her house, which she never asked him to pass.
   "If you will come in to us at about ten this evening," she then said,
   "you will find some men, not undistinguished, who honour me of an
   evening. Perhaps they will be interesting to you, Colonel Newcome, as you
   are newly arrived in Europe. Not men of worldly rank, necessarily,
   although some of them are amongst the noblest of Europe. But my maxim is,
   that genius is an illustration, and merit is better than any pedigree.
   You have heard of Professor Bodgers? Count Poski? Doctor McGuffog, who is
   called in his native country the Ezekiel of Clackmannan? Mr. Shaloony,
   the great Irish patriot? our papers have told you of him. These and some
   more I have been good enough to promise me a visit to-night. A stranger
   coming to London could scarcely have a better opportunity of seeing some
   of our great illustrations of science and literature. And you will meet
   our own family--not Sir Brian's, who--who have other society and
   amusements--but mine. I hope Mr. Newcome and myself will never forget
   them. We have a few friends at dinner, and now I must go in and consult
   with Mrs. Hubbard, my housekeeper. Good-bye for the present. Mind, not
   later than ten, as Mr. Newcome must be up betimes in the morning, and our
   parties break up early. When Clive is a little older, I dare say we shall
   see him, too. Good-bye!" And again the Colonel was favoured with a shake
   of the glove, and the lady and her suite sailed up the stair, and passed
   in at the door.
   She had not the faintest idea but that the hospitality which she was
   offering to her kinsman was of the most cordial and pleasant kind. She
   fancied everything she did was perfectly right and graceful. She invited
   her husband's clerks to come through the rain at ten o'clock from Kentish
   Town; she asked artists to bring their sketch-books from Kensington, or
   luckless pianists to trudge with their music from Brompton. She rewarded
   them with a smile and a cup of tea, and thought they were made happy by
   her condescension. If, after two or three of these delightful evenings,
   they ceased to attend her receptions, she shook her little flaxen head,
   and sadly intimated that Mr. A. was getting into bad courses, or feared
   that Mr. B. found merely intellectual parties too quiet for him. Else,
   what young man in his senses could refuse such entertainment and
   instruction?
   CHAPTER VIII
   Mrs. Newcome at Home (a Small Early Party)
   To push on in the crowd, every male or female struggler must use his
   shoulders. If a better place than yours presents itself just beyond your
   neighbour, elbow him and take it. Look how a steadily purposed man or
   woman at court, at a ball, or exhibition, wherever there is a competition
   and a squeeze, gets the best place; the nearest the sovereign, if bent on
   kissing the royal hand; the closest to the grand stand, if minded to go
   to Ascot; the best view and hearing of the Rev. Mr. Thumpington, when all
 
					     					 			
   the town is rushing to hear that exciting divine; the largest quantity of
   ice, champagne, and seltzer, cold pate, or other his or her favourite
   flesh-pot, if gluttonously minded, at a supper whence hundreds of people
   come empty away. A woman of the world will marry her daughter and have
   done with her; get her carriage and be at home and asleep in bed; whilst
   a timid mamma has still her girl in the nursery, or is beseeching the
   servants in the cloakroom to look for her shawls, with which some one
   else has whisked away an hour ago. What a man has to do in society is to
   assert himself. Is there a good place at table? Take it. At the Treasury
   or the Home Office? Ask for it. Do you want to go to a party to which you
   are not invited? Ask to be asked. Ask A., ask B., ask Mrs. C., ask
   everybody you know: you will be thought a bore; but you will have your
   way. What matters if you are considered obtrusive, provided that you
   obtrude? By pushing steadily, nine hundred and ninety-nine people in a
   thousand will yield to you. Only command persons, and you may be pretty
   sure that a good number will obey. How well your money will have been
   laid out, O gentle reader, who purchase this; and, taking the maxim to
   heart, follow it through life! You may be sure of success. If your
   neighbour's foot obstructs you, stamp on it; and do you suppose he won't
   take it away?
   The proofs of the correctness of the above remarks I show in various
   members of the Newcome family. Here was a vulgar little woman, not clever
   nor pretty, especially; meeting Mr. Newcome casually, she ordered him to
   marry her, and he obeyed; as he obeyed her in everything else which she
   chose to order through life. Meeting Colonel Newcome on the steps of her
   house, she orders him to come to her evening party; and though he has not
   been to an evening party for five-and-thirty years--though he has not
   been to bed the night before--though he has no mufti-coat except one sent
   him out by Messrs. Stultz to India in the year 1821--he never once thinks
   of disobeying Mrs. Newcome's order, but is actually at her door at five
   minutes past ten, having arrayed himself to the wonderment of Clive, and
   left the boy to talk with his friend and fellow-passenger, Mr. Binnie,
   who has just arrived from Portsmouth, who has dined with him, and who, by
   previous arrangement, has taken up his quarters at the same hotel.
   This Stultz coat, a blue swallow-tail, with yellow buttons, now wearing a
   tinge of their native copper, a very high velvet collar on a level with
   the tips of the Captain's ears, with a high waist, indicated by two
   lapelles, and a pair of buttons high up in the wearer's back, a white
   waistcoat and scarlet under-waistcoat, and a pair of the never-failing
   duck trousers, complete Thomas Newcome's costume, along with the white
   hat in which we have seen him in the morning, and which was one of two
   dozen purchased by him some years since at public outcry, Burrumtollah.
   We have called him Captain purposely, while speaking of his coat, for he
   held that rank when the garment came out to him; and having been in the
   habit of considering it a splendid coat for twelve years past, he has not
   the least idea of changing his opinion.
   The Doctor McGuffog, Professor Bodgers, Count Poski, and all the lions
   present at Mrs. Newcome's reunion that evening, were completely eclipsed
   by Colonel Newcome. The worthy soul, who cared not the least about
   adorning himself, had a handsome diamond brooch of the year 1801--given
   him by poor Jack Cutler, who was knocked over by his side at Argaum--and
   wore this ornament in his desk for a thousand days and nights at a time;
   in his shirt-frill, on such parade evenings as he considered Mrs.
   Newcome's to be. The splendour of this jewel, and of his flashing
   buttons, caused all eyes to turn to him. There were many pairs of