that will always be led by some woman or another; and I'm only glad it
   should be a good one. They say his mother's serious, and that; but why
   shouldn't she bet?" continues honest Crackthorpe, puffing his cigar with
   great energy. "They say the old dowager doesn't believe in God nor devil:
   but that she's in such a funk to be left in the dark that she howls, and
   raises the doose's own delight if her candle goes out. Toppleton slept
   next room to her at Groningham, and heard her; didn't you, Top?"
   "Heard her howling like an old cat on the tiles," says Toppleton,--
   "thought she was at first. My man told me that she used to fling all
   sorts of things--boot-jacks and things, give you my honour--at her maid,
   and that the woman was all over black and blue."
   "Capital head that is Newcome has done of Jack Belsize!" says
   Crackthorpe, from out of his cigar.
   "And Kew's too--famous likeness! I say, Newcome, if you have 'em printed
   the whole brigade'll subscribe. Make your fortune, see if you won't,"
   cries Toppleton.
   "He's such a heavy swell, he don't want to make his fortune," ejaculates
   Butts.
   "Butts, old boy, he'll paint you for nothing, and send you to the
   Exhibition, where some widow will fall in love with you, and you shall be
   put as frontispiece for the 'Book of Beauty,' by Jove," cries another
   military satirist--to whom Butts:
   "You hold your tongue, you old Saracen's Head; they're going to have you
   done on the bear's-grease pots. I say, I suppose Jack's all right now.
   When did he write to you last, Cracky?"
   "He wrote from Palermo--a most jolly letter from him and Kew. He hasn't
   touched a card for nine months; is going to give up play. So is Frank,
   too, grown quite a good boy. So will you, too, Butts, you old miscreant,
   repent of your sins, pay your debts, and do something handsome for that
   poor deluded milliner in Albany Street. Jack says Kew's mother has
   written over to Lord Highgate a beautiful letter--and the old boy's
   relenting, and they'll come together again--Jack's eldest son now, you
   know. Bore for Lady Susan only having girls."
   "Not a bore for Jack, though," cries another. And what a good fellow Jack
   was; and what a trump Kew is; how famously he stuck by him: went to see
   him in prison and paid him out! and what good fellows we all are, in
   general, became the subject of the conversation, the latter part of which
   took place in the smoking-room of the Regent's Park Barracks, then
   occupied by that regiment of Life Guards of which Lord Kew and Mr.
   Belsize had been members. Both were still fondly remembered by their
   companions; and it was because Belsize had spoken very warmly of Clive's
   friendliness to him that Jack's friend the gallant Crackthorpe had been
   interested in our hero, and found an opportunity of making his
   acquaintance.
   With these frank and pleasant young men Clive soon formed a considerable
   intimacy: and if any of his older and peaceful friends chanced to take
   their afternoon airing in the Park, and survey the horsemen there, we
   might have the pleasure of beholding Mr. Newcome in Rotten Row, riding
   side by side with other dandies who had mustachios blonde or jet, who
   wore flowers in their buttons (themselves being flowers of spring), who
   rode magnificent thoroughbred horses, scarcely touching their stirrups
   with the tips of their varnished boots, and who kissed the most beautiful
   primrose-coloured kid gloves to lovely ladies passing them in the Ride.
   Clive drew portraits of half the officers of the Life Guards Green; and
   was appointed painter in ordinary to that distinguished corps. His
   likeness of the Colonel would make you die with laughing: his picture of
   the Surgeon was voted a masterpiece. He drew the men in the saddle, in
   the stable, in their flannel dresses, sweeping their flashing swords
   about, receiving lancers, repelling infantry,--nay, cutting--a sheep in
   two, as some of the warriors are known to be able to do at one stroke.
   Detachments of Life Guardsmen made their appearance in Charlotte Street,
   which was not very distant from their barracks; the most splendid cabs
   were seen prancing before his door; and curly-whiskered youths, of
   aristocratic appearance, smoking cigars out of his painting-room window.
   How many times did Clive's next-door neighbour, little Mr Finch, the
   miniature-painter, run to peep through his parlour blinds, hoping that a
   sitter was coming, and "a carriage-party" driving up! What wrath Mr.
   Scowler, A.R.A., was in, because a young hop-o'-my-thumb dandy, who wore
   gold chains and his collars turned down, should spoil the trade and draw
   portraits for nothing! Why did none of the young men come to Scowler?
   Scowler was obliged to own that Mr. Newcome had considerable talent, and
   a good knack at catching a likeness. He could not paint a bit, to be
   sure, but his heads in black-and-white were really tolerable; his
   sketches of horses very vigorous and lifelike. Mr. Gandish said if Clive
   would come for three or four years into his academy he could make
   something of him. Mr. Smee shook his head, and said he was afraid, that
   kind of loose, desultory study, that keeping of aristocratic company, was
   anything but favourable to a young artist--Smee, who would walk five
   miles to attend an evening party of ever so little a great man!
   CHAPTER XLIV
   In which Mr. Charles Honeyman appears in an Amiable Light
   Mr. Frederick Bayham waited at Fitzroy Square while Clive was yet talking
   with his friends there, and favoured that gentleman with his company home
   to the usual smoky refreshment. Clive always rejoiced in F. B.'s society,
   whether he was in a sportive mood, or, as now, in a solemn and didactic
   vein. F. B. had been more than ordinarily majestic all the evening. "I
   dare say you find me a good deal altered, Clive," he remarked; "I am a
   good deal altered. Since that good Samaritan, your kind father, had
   compassion on a poor fellow fallen among thieves (though I don't say,
   mind you, he was much better than his company), F. B. has mended some of
   his ways. I am trying a course of industry, sir. Powers, perhaps
   naturally great, have been neglected over the wine-cup and the die. I am
   beginning to feel my way; and my chiefs yonder, who have just walked home
   with their cigars in their mouths, and without as much as saying, F. B.,
   my boy, shall we go to the Haunt and have a cool lobster and a glass of
   table-beer,--which they certainly do not consider themselves to be,--I
   say, sir, the Politician and the Literary Critic" (there was a most
   sarcastic emphasis laid on these phrases, characterising Messrs.
   Warrington and Pendennis) "may find that there is a humble contributor to
   the Pall Mall Gazette, whose name, may be, the amateur shall one day
   reckon even higher than their own. Mr. Warrington I do not say so much--
   he is an able man, sir, an able man;--but there is that about your
   exceedin self-satisfied friend, Mr. Arthur Pendennis, which--well, well--
   let time show. You did not--get the--hem--paper at Rome and Naples, I
   suppose?"
   "Forbidden by the Inquisition," says 
					     					 			 Clive, delighted; "and at Naples the
   king furious against it."
   "I don't wonder they don't like it at Rome, sir. There's serious matter
   in it which may set the prelates of a certain Church rather in a tremor.
   You haven't read--the--ahem--the Pulpit Pencillings in the P. M. G.?
   Slight sketches, mental and corporeal, of our chief divines now in
   London--and signed Latimer?"
   "I don't do much in that way," said Clive.
   "So much the worse for you, my young friend. Not that I mean to judge any
   other fellow harshly--I mean any other fellow sinner harshly--or that I
   mean that those Pulpit Pencillings would be likely to do you any great
   good. But, such as they are, they have been productive of benefit.--Thank
   you, Mary, and my dear, the tap is uncommonly good, and I drink to your
   future husband's good health.--A glass of good sound beer refreshes after
   all that claret. Well, sir, to return to the Pencillings, pardon my
   vanity in saying, that though Mr. Pendennis laughs at them, they have
   been of essential service to the paper. They give it a character, they
   rally round it the respectable classes. They create correspondence. I
   have received many interesting letters, chiefly from females, about the
   Pencillings. Some complain that their favourite preachers are slighted;
   others applaud because the clergymen they sit under are supported by
   F. B. I am Laud Latimer, sir,--though I have heard the letters attributed
   to the Rev. Mr. Bunker, and to a Member of Parliament eminent in the
   religious world."
   "So you are the famous Laud Latimer?" cries Clive, who had, in fact, seen
   letters signed by those right reverend names in our paper.
   "Famous is hardly the word. One who scoffs at everything--I need not say
   I allude to Mr. Arthur Pendennis--would have had the letters signed--the
   Beadle, of the Parish. He calls me the Venerable Beadle sometimes--it
   being, I grieve to say, his way to deride grave subjects. You wouldn't
   suppose now, my young Clive, that the same hand which pens the Art
   criticisms, occasionally, when His Highness Pendennis is lazy, takes a
   minor theatre, or turns the sportive epigram, or the ephemeral paragraph,
   should adopt a grave theme on a Sunday, and chronicle the sermons of
   British divines? For eighteen consecutive Sunday evenings, Clive, in Mrs.
   Ridley's front parlour, which I now occupy, vice Miss Cann promoted, I
   have written the Pencillings--scarcely allowing a drop of refreshment,
   except under extreme exhaustion, to pass my lips. Pendennis laughs at the
   Pencillings. He wants to stop them; and says they bore the public.--I
   don't want to think a man is jealous, who was himself the cause of my
   engagement at the P. M. G.,--perhaps my powers were not developed then."
   "Pen thinks he writes better now than when he began," remarked Clive; "I
   have heard him say so."
   "His opinion of his own writings is high, whatever their date. Mine, sir,
   are only just coming into notice. They begin to know F. B., sir, in the
   sacred edifices of his metropolitan city. I saw the Bishop of London
   looking at me last Sunday week, and am sure his chaplain whispered him,
   'It's Mr. Bayham, my lord, nephew of your lordship's right reverend
   brother, the Lord Bishop of Bullocksmithy.' And last Sunday being at
   church--at Saint Mungo the Martyr's, Rev. Sawders--by Wednesday I got in
   a female hand--Mrs. Sawders's, no doubt--the biography of the Incumbent
   of St. Mungo; an account of his early virtues; a copy of his poems; and a
   hint that he was the gentleman destined for the vacant Deanery.
   "Ridley is not the only man I have helped in this world," F. B.
   continued. "Perhaps I should blush to own it--I do blush: but I feel the
   ties of early acquaintance, and I own that I have puffed your uncle,
   Charles Honeyman, most tremendously. It was partly for the sake of the
   Ridleys and the tick he owes 'em: partly for old times' sake. Sir, are
   you aware that things are greatly changed with Charles Honeyman, and that
   the poor F. B. has very likely made his fortune?"
   "I am delighted to hear it," cried Clive; "and how, F. B., have you
   wrought this miracle?"
   "By common sense and enterprise, lad--by a knowledge of the world and a
   benevolent disposition. You'll see Lady Whittlesea's Chapel bears a very
   different aspect now. That miscreant Sherrick owns that he owes me a
   turn, and has sent me a few dozen of wine--without any stamped paper on
   my part in return--as an acknowledgment of my service. It chanced, sir,
   soon after your departure for Italy, that going to his private residence
   respecting a little bill to which a heedless friend had put his hand,
   Sherrick invited me to partake of tea in the bosom of his family. I was
   thirsty--having walked in from Jack Straw's Castle at Hampstead, where
   poor Kitely and I had been taking a chop--and accepted the proffered
   entertainment. The ladies of the family gave us music after the domestic
   muffin--and then, sir, a great idea occurred to me. You know how
   magnificently Miss Sherrick and the mother sing? Thy sang Mozart, sir.
   Why, I asked of Sherrick, should those ladies who sing Mozart to a piano,
   not sing Handel to an organ?
   "'Dash it, you don't mean a hurdy-gurdy?'"
   "'Sherrick,' says I, 'you are no better than a heathen ignoramus. I mean
   why shouldn't they sing Handes Church Music, and Church Music in general
   in Lady Whittlesea's Chapel? Behind the screen up in the organ-loft
   what's to prevent 'em? By Jingo! Your singing-boys have gone to the Cave
   of Harmody; you and your choir have split--why should not these ladies
   lead it?' He caught at the idea. You never heard the chants more finely
   given--and they would be better still if the congregation would but hold
   their confounded tongues. It was an excellent though a harmless dodge,
   sir: and drew immensely, to speak profanely. They dress the part, sir, to
   admiration--a sort of nunlike costume they come in: Mrs. Sherrick has the
   soul of an artist still--by Jove, sir, when they have once smelt the
   lamps, the love of the trade never leaves 'em. The ladies actually
   practised by moonlight in the Chapel, and came over to Honeyman's to an
   oyster afterwards. The thing took, sir. People began to take box-seats, I
   mean, again:--and Charles Honeyman, easy in his mind through your noble
   father's generosity, perhaps inspirited by returning good fortune, has
   been preaching more eloquently than ever. He took some lessons of Husler,
   of the Haymarket, sir. His sermons are old, I believe; but so to speak,
   he has got them up with new scenery, dresses, and effects, sir. They have
   flowers, sir, about the buildin'--pious ladies are supposed to provide
   'em, but, entre nous, Sherrick contracts for them with Nathan, or some
   one in Covent Garden. And--don't tell this now, upon your honour!"
   "Tell what, F. B.?" asks Clive.
   "I got up a persecution against your uncle for Popish practices summoned
   a meetin' at the Running Footman, in Bolingbroke Street. Billings the
   butterman; Sharwood, the turner and blacking-maker; and the Honourable
   Phelin O'Curragh, Lord Scullabogue's son, made speeches. 
					     					 			 Two or three
   respectable families (your aunt, Mrs. What-d'-you-call-'em Newcome,
   amongst the number) quitted the Chapel in disgust--I wrote an article of
   controversial biography in the P. M. G.; set the business going in the
   daily press; and the thing was done, sir. That property is a paying one
   to the Incumbent, and to Sherrick over him. Charles's affairs are getting
   all right, sir. He never had the pluck to owe much, and if it be a sin to
   have wiped his slate clean, satisfied his creditors, and made Charles
   easy--upon my conscience, I must confess that F. B. has done it. I hope I
   may never do anything worse in this life, Clive. It ain't bad to see him
   doing the martyr, sir: Sebastian riddled with paper pellets; Bartholomew
   on a cold gridiron. Here comes the lobster. Upon my word, Mary, a finer
   fish I've seldom seen."
   Now surely this account of his uncle's affairs and prosperity was enough
   to send Clive to Lady Whittlesea's Chapel, and it was not because Miss
   Ethel had said that she and Lady Kew went there that Clive was induced to
   go there too? He attended punctually on the next Sunday, and in the
   incumbent's pew, whither the pew-woman conducted him, sate Mr. Sherrick
   in great gravity, with large gold pins, who handed him, at the anthem, a
   large, new, gilt hymn-book.
   An odour of millefleurs rustled by them as Charles Honeyman accompanied
   by his ecclesiastical valet, passed the pew from the vestry, and took his
   place at the desk. Formerly he used to wear a flaunting scarf over his
   surplice, which was very wide and full; and Clive remembered when as a
   boy he entered the sacred robing-room, how his uncle used to pat and puff
   out the scarf and the sleeves of his vestment, and to arrange the natty
   curl on his forehead and take his place, a fine example of florid church
   decoration. Now the scarf was trimmed down to be as narrow as your
   neckcloth, and hung loose and straight over the back; the ephod was cut
   straight and as close and short as might be,--I believe there was a
   little trimming of lace to the narrow sleeves, and a slight arabesque of
   tape, or other substance, round the edge of the surplice. As for the curl
   on the forehead, it was no more visible than the Maypole in the Strand,
   or the Cross at Charing. Honeyman's hair was parted down the middle,
   short in front, and curling delicately round his ears and the back of his
   head. He read the service in a swift manner, and with a gentle twang.
   When the music began, he stood with head on one side, and two slim
   fingers on the book, as composed as a statue in a mediaeval niche. It was
   fine to hear Sherrick, who had an uncommonly good voice, join in the
   musical parts of the service. The produce of the market-gardener
   decorated the church here and there; and the impresario of the
   establishment, having picked up a Flemish painted window from old Moss in
   Wardour Street, had placed it in his chapel. Labels of faint green and
   gold, with long Gothic letters painted thereon, meandered over the
   organ-loft and galleries, and strove to give as mediaeval a look to Lady
   Whittlesea's as the place was capable of assuming.
   In the sermon Charles dropped the twang with the surplice, and the priest
   gave way to the preacher. He preached short stirring discourses on the
   subjects of the day. It happened that a noble young prince, the hope of a
   nation, and heir of a royal house, had just then died by a sudden
   accident. Absalom, the son of David, furnished Honeyman with a parallel.
   He drew a picture of the two deaths, of the grief of kings, of the fate
   that is superior to them. It was, indeed, a stirring discourse, and
   caused thrills through the crowd to whom Charles imparted it. "Famous,
   ain't it?" says Sherrick, giving Clive a hand when the rite was over.
   "How he's come out, hasn't he? Didn't think he had it in him." Sherrick
   seemed to have become of late impressed with the splendour of Charles's