'Laocoon' which he was copying. The Scotchman's superior weight and age
   might have given the combat a different conclusion, had it endured long
   after Clive's brilliant opening attack with his right and left; but
   Professor Gandish came out of his painting-room at the sound of battle,
   and could scarcely credit his own eyes when he saw those of poor M'Collop
   so darkened. To do the Scotchman justice, he bore Clive no rancour. They
   became friends there, and afterwards at Rome, whither they subsequently
   went to pursue their studies. The fame of Mr. M'Collop as an artist has
   long since been established. His pictures of 'Lord Lovat in Prison,' and
   'Hogarth painting him,' of the 'Blowing up of the Kirk of Field' (painted
   for M'Collop of M'Collop), of the 'Torture of the Covenanters,' the
   'Murder of the Regent,' the 'Murder of Rizzio,' and other historical
   pieces, all of course from Scotch history, have established his
   reputation in South as well as in North Britain. No one would suppose
   from the gloomy character of his works that Sandy M'Collop is one of the
   most jovial souls alive. Within six months after their little difference,
   Clive and he were the greatest of friends, and it was by the former's
   suggestion that Mr. James Binnie gave Sandy his first commission, who
   selected the cheerful subject of 'The Young Duke of Rothsay starving in
   Prison.'
   During this period, Mr. Clive assumed the toga virilis, and beheld with
   inexpressible satisfaction the first growth of those mustachios which
   have since given him such a marked appearance.
   Being at Gandish's, and so near the dancing academy, what must he do but
   take lessons in the terpsichorean art too?--making himself as popular
   with the dancing folks as with the drawing folks, and the jolly king of
   his company everywhere. He gave entertainments to his fellow-students in
   the upper chambers in Fitzroy Square, which were devoted to his use,
   inviting his father and Mr. Binnie to those parties now and then. And
   songs were sung, and pipes were smoked, and many a pleasant supper eaten.
   There was no stint: but no excess. No young man was ever seen to quit
   those apartments the worse, as it is called, for liquor. Fred Bayham's
   uncle the Bishop could not be more decorous than F. B. as he left the
   Colonel's house, for the Colonel made that one of the conditions of his
   son's hospitality, that nothing like intoxication should ensue from it.
   The good gentleman did not frequent the parties of the juniors. He saw
   that his presence rather silenced the young men; and left them to
   themselves, confiding in Clive's parole, and went away to play his honest
   rubber of whist at the Club. And many a time he heard the young fellows'
   steps tramping by his bedchamber door, as he lay wakeful within, happy to
   think his son was happy.
   CHAPTER XVIII
   New Companions
   Clive used to give droll accounts of the young disciples at Gandish's,
   who were of various ages and conditions, and in whose company the young
   fellow took his place with that good temper and gaiety which have seldom
   deserted him in life, and have put him at ease wherever his fate has led
   him. He is, in truth, as much at home in a fine drawing-room as in a
   public-house parlour; and can talk as pleasantly to the polite mistress
   of the mansion, as to the jolly landlady dispensing her drinks from her
   bar. Not one of the Gandishites but was after a while well inclined to
   the young fellow; from Mr. Chivers, the senior pupil, down to the little
   imp Harry Hooker, who knew as much mischief at twelve years old, and
   could draw as cleverly as many a student of five-and-twenty; and Bob
   Trotter, the diminutive fag of the studio, who ran on all the young men's
   errands, and fetched them in apples, oranges, and walnuts. Clive opened
   his eyes with wonder when he first beheld these simple feasts, and the
   pleasure with which some of the young men partook of them. They were
   addicted to polonies; they did not disguise their love for Banbury cakes;
   they made bets in ginger-beer, and gave and took the odds in that
   frothing liquor. There was a young Hebrew amongst the pupils, upon whom
   his brother-students used playfully to press ham sandwiches, pork
   sausages, and the like. This young man (who has risen to great wealth
   subsequently, and was bankrupt only three months since) actually bought
   cocoa-nuts, and sold them at a profit amongst the lads. His pockets were
   never without pencil-cases, French chalk, garnet brooches, for which he
   was willing to bargain. He behaved very rudely to Gandish, who seemed to
   be afraid before him. It was whispered that the Professor was not
   altogether easy in his circumstances, and that the elder Moss had some
   mysterious hold over him. Honeyman and Bayham, who once came to see Clive
   at the studio, seemed each disturbed at beholding young Moss seated there
   (making a copy of the Marsyas). "Pa knows both those gents," he informed
   Clive afterwards, with a wicked twinkle of his Oriental eyes. "Step in,
   Mr. Newcome, any day you are passing down Wardour Street, and see if you
   don't want anything in our way." (He pronounced the words in his own way,
   saying: "Step id, Bister Doocob, ady day idto Vordor Street," etc.) This
   young gentleman could get tickets for almost all the theatres, which he
   gave or sold, and gave splendid accounts at Cavendish's of the brilliant
   masquerades. Clive was greatly diverted at beholding Mr. Moss at one of
   these entertainments, dressed in a scarlet coat and top-boots, and
   calling out, "Yoicks! Hark forward!" fitfully to another Orientalist, his
   younger brother, attired like a midshipman. Once Clive bought a
   half-dozen of theatre tickets from Mr. Moss, which he distributed to the
   young fellows of the studio. But, when this nice young man tried further
   to tempt him on the next day, "Mr. Moss," Clive said to him with much
   dignity, "I am very much obliged to you for your offer, but when I go to
   the play, I prefer paying at the doors."
   Mr. Chivers used to sit in one corner of the room, occupied over a
   lithographic stone. He was an uncouth and peevish young man; for ever
   finding fault with the younger pupils, whose butt he was. Next in rank
   and age was M'Collop, before named: and these two were at first more than
   usually harsh and captious with Clive, whose prosperity offended them,
   and whose dandified manners, free-and-easy ways, and evident influence
   over the younger scholars, gave umbrage to these elderly apprentices.
   Clive at first returned Mr. Chivers war for war, controlment for
   controlment; but when he found Chivers was the son of a helpless widow;
   that be maintained her by his lithographic vignettes for the
   music-sellers, and by the scanty remuneration of some lessons which he
   gave at a school at Highgate;--when Clive saw, or fancied he saw, the
   lonely senior eyeing with hungry eyes the luncheons of cheese and bread,
   and sweetstuff, which the young lads of the studio enjoyed, I promise you
   Mr. Clive's wrath against Chivers was speedily turned into compassion and
   kindness, and he sought, and no doubt found, means of feeding Chivers
					     					 			>   without offending his testy independence.
   Nigh to Gandish's was, and perhaps is, another establishment for teaching
   the art of design--Barker's, which had the additional dignity of a life
   academy and costume; frequented by a class of students more advanced than
   those of Gandish's. Between these and the Barkerites there was a constant
   rivalry and emulation, in and out of doors. Gandish sent more pupils to
   the Royal Academy; Gandish had brought up three medallists; and the last
   R.A. student sent to Rome was a Gandishite. Barker, on the contrary,
   scorned and loathed Trafalgar Square, and laughed at its art. Barker
   exhibited in Pall Mall and Suffolk Street: he laughed at old Gandish and
   his pictures, made mincemeat of his "Angli and Angeli," and tore "King
   Alfred" and his muffins to pieces. The young men of the respective
   schools used to meet at Lundy's coffee-house and billiard-room, and smoke
   there, and do battle. Before Clive and his friend J. J. came to
   Gandish's, the Barkerites were having the best of that constant match
   which the two academies were playing. Fred Bayham, who knew every
   coffee-house in town, and whose initials were scored on a thousand tavern
   doors, was for a while a constant visitor at Lundy's, played pool with
   the young men, and did not disdain to dip his beard into their
   porter-pots, when invited to partake of their drink; treated them
   handsomely when he was in cash himself; and was an honorary member of
   Barker's academy. Nay, when the guardsman was not forthcoming, who was
   standing for one of Barker's heroic pictures, Bayham bared his immense
   arms and brawny shoulders, and stood as Prince Edward, with Philippa
   sucking the poisoned wound. He would take his friends up to the picture
   in the Exhibition, and proudly point to it. "Look at that biceps, sir,
   and now look at this--that's Barker's masterpiece, sir, and that's the
   muscle of F. B., sir." In no company was F. B. greater than in the
   society of the artists, in whose smoky haunts and airy parlours he might
   often be found. It was from F. B. that Clive heard of Mr. Chivers'
   struggles and honest industry. A great deal of shrewd advice could F. B.
   give on occasion, and many a kind action and gentle office of charity was
   this jolly outlaw known to do and cause to be done. His advice to Clive
   was most edifying at this time of our young gentleman's life, and he owns
   that he was kept from much mischief by this queer counsellor.
   A few months after Clive and J. J. had entered at Gandish's, that academy
   began to hold its own against its rival. The silent young disciple was
   pronounced to be a genius. His copies were beautiful in delicacy and
   finish. His designs were for exquisite grace and richness of fancy. Mr.
   Gandish took to himself the credit for J. J.'s genius; Clive ever and
   fondly acknowledged the benefit he got from his friend's taste and bright
   enthusiasm and sure skill. As for Clive, if he was successful in the
   academy he was doubly victorious out of it. His person was handsome, his
   courage high, his gaiety and frankness delightful and winning. His money
   was plenty and he spent it like a young king. He could speedily beat all
   the club at Lundy's at billiards, and give points to the redoubted F. B.
   himself. He sang a famous song at their jolly supper-parties: and J. J.
   had no greater delight than to listen to his fresh voice, and watch the
   young conqueror at the billiard-table, where the balls seemed to obey
   him.
   Clive was not the most docile of Mr. Gandish's pupils. If he had not come
   to the studio on horseback, several of the young students averred,
   Gandish would not always have been praising him and quoting him as that
   professor certainly did. It must be confessed that the young ladies read
   the history of Clive's uncle in the Book of Baronets, and that Gandish
   jun., probably with an eye to business, made a design of a picture, in
   which, according to that veracious volume, one of the Newcomes was
   represented as going cheerfully to the stake at Smithfield, surrounded by
   some very ill-favoured Dominicans, whose arguments did not appear to make
   the least impression upon the martyr of the Newcome family. Sandy
   M'Collop devised a counter picture, wherein the barber-surgeon of King
   Edward the Confessor was drawn, operating upon the beard of that monarch.
   To which piece of satire Clive gallantly replied by a design,
   representing Sawney Bean M'Collop, chief of the clan of that name,
   descending from his mountains into Edinburgh, and his astonishment at
   beholding a pair of breeches for the first time. These playful jokes
   passed constantly amongst the young men of Gandish's studio. There was no
   one there who was not caricatured in one way or another. He whose eyes
   looked not very straight was depicted with a most awful squint. The youth
   whom nature had endowed with somewhat lengthy nose was drawn by the
   caricaturists with a prodigious proboscis. Little Bobby Moss, the young
   Hebrew artist from Wardour Street, was delineated with three hats and an
   old-clothes bag. Nor were poor J. J.'s round shoulders spared, until
   Clive indignantly remonstrated at the hideous hunchback pictures which
   the boys made of his friend, and vowed it was a shame to make jokes at
   such a deformity.
   Our friend, if the truth must be told regarding him, though one of the
   most frank, generous, and kind-hearted persons, is of a nature somewhat
   haughty and imperious, and very likely the course of life which he now
   led and the society which he was compelled to keep, served to increase
   some original defects in his character, and to fortify a certain
   disposition to think well of himself, with which his enemies not unjustly
   reproach him. He has been known very pathetically to lament that he was
   withdrawn from school too early, where a couple of years' further course
   of thrashings from his tyrant, old Hodge, he avers, would have done him
   good. He laments that he was not sent to college, where if a young man
   receives no other discipline, at least he acquires that of meeting with
   his equals in society and of assuredly finding his betters: whereas in
   poor Mr. Gandish's studio of art, our young gentleman scarcely found a
   comrade that was not in one way or other his flatterer, his inferior, his
   honest or dishonest admirer. The influence of his family's rank and
   wealth acted more or less on all those simple folks, who would run on his
   errands and vied with each other in winning the young nabob's favour. His
   very goodness of heart rendered him a more easy prey to their flattery,
   and his kind and jovial disposition led him into company from which he
   had been much better away. I am afraid that artful young Moss, whose
   parents dealt in pictures, furniture, gimcracks, and jewellery,
   victimised Clive sadly with rings and chains, shirt-studs and flaming
   shirt-pins, and such vanities, which the poor young rogue locked up in
   his desk generally, only venturing to wear them when he was out of his
   father's sight or of Mr. Binnie's, whose shrewd eyes watched him very
   keenly.
   Mr. Clive used to leave home every day shor 
					     					 			tly after noon, when he was
   supposed to betake himself to Gandish's studio. But was the young
   gentleman always at the drawing-board copying from the antique when his
   father supposed him to be so devotedly engaged? I fear his place was
   sometimes vacant. His friend J. J. worked every day and all day. Many a
   time the steady little student remarked his patron's absence, and no
   doubt gently remonstrated with him, but when Clive did come to his work
   he executed it with remarkable skill and rapidity; and Ridley was too
   fond of him to say a word at home regarding the shortcomings of the
   youthful scapegrace. Candid readers may sometimes have heard their friend
   Jones's mother lament that her darling was working too hard at college:
   or Harry's sisters express their anxiety lest his too rigorous attendance
   in chambers (after which he will persist in sitting up all night reading
   those dreary law books which cost such an immense sum of money) should
   undermine dear Henry's health; and to such acute persons a word is
   sufficient to indicate young Mr. Clive Newcome's proceedings. Meanwhile
   his father, who knew no more of the world than Harry's simple sisters or
   Jones's fond mother, never doubted that all Clive's doings were right,
   and that his boy was the best of boys.
   "If that young man goes on as charmingly as he has begun," Clive's
   cousin, Barnes Newcome, said of his kinsman, "he will be a paragon. I saw
   him last night at Vauxhall in company with young Moss, whose father does
   bills and keeps the bric-a-brac shop in Wardour Street. Two or three
   other gentlemen, probably young old-clothes-men, who had concluded for
   the day the labours of the bag, joined Mr. Newcome and his friend, and
   they partook of rack-punch in an arbour. He is a delightful youth, cousin
   Clive, and I feel sure he is about to be an honour to our family."
   CHAPTER XIX
   The Colonel at Home
   Our good Colonel's house had received a coat of paint, which, like Madame
   Latour's rouge in her latter days, only served to make her careworn face
   look more ghastly. The kitchens were gloomy. The stables were gloomy.
   Great black passages; cracked conservatory; dilapidated bathroom, with
   melancholy waters moaning and fizzing from the cistern; the great large
   blank stone staircase--were all so many melancholy features in the
   general countenance of the house; but the Colonel thought it perfectly,
   cheerful and pleasant, and furnished it in his rough-and-ready way. One
   day a cartload of chairs; the next a waggonful of fenders, fire-irons,
   and glass and crockery--a quantity of supplies, in a word, he poured into
   the place. There were a yellow curtain in the back drawing-room, and
   green curtains in the front. The carpet was an immense bargain, bought
   dirt cheap, sir, at a sale in Euston Square. He was against the purchase
   of a carpet for the stairs. What was the good of it? What did men want
   with stair-carpets? His own apartment contained a wonderful assortment of
   lumber. Shelves which he nailed himself, old Indian garments, camphor
   trunks. What did he want with gewgaws? anything was good enough for an
   old soldier. But the spare bedroom was endowed with all sorts of
   splendour: a bed as big as a general's tent, a cheval glass--whereas the
   Colonel shaved in a little cracked mirror, which cost him no more than
   King Stephen's breeches--and a handsome new carpet; while the boards of
   the Colonel's bedchamber were as bare--as bare as old Miss Scragg's
   shoulders, which would be so much more comfortable were they covered up.
   Mr. Binnie's bedchamber was neat, snug, and appropriate. And Clive had a
   study and bedroom at the top of the house, which he was allowed to
   furnish entirely according to his own taste. How he and Ridley revelled
   in Wardour Street! What delightful coloured prints of hunting, racing,
   and beautiful ladies, did they not purchase, mount with their own hands,