The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Newcomes

    Previous Page Next Page
    governess, or romping with her sisters; and when she had dinner at one

      o'clock; and when she wore a pinafore very likely--we secretly respected

      her as the future Countess of Kew, and mother of the Viscount Walham.

      Lord Kew was very happy with his bride, and very good to her. He took

      Lady Kew to Paris, for a marriage trip; but they lived almost altogether

      at Kewbury afterwards, where his lordship sowed tame oats now after his

      wild ones, and became one of the most active farmers of his county. He

      and the Newcomes were not very intimate friends; for Lord Kew was heard

      to say that he disliked Barnes more after his marriage than before. And

      the two sisters, Lady Clara and Lady Kew, had a quarrel on one occasion,

      when the latter visited London just before the dinner at which we have

      just assisted--nay, at which we are just assisting, took place,--a

      quarrel about Highgate's attentions to Ethel, very likely. Kew was

      dragged into it, and hot words passed between him and Jack Belsize; and

      Jack did not go down to Kewbury afterwards, though Kew's little boy was

      christened after him. All these interesting details about people of the

      very highest rank, we are supposed to whisper in the reader's ear as we

      are sitting at a Belgravian dinner-table. My dear Barmecide friend, isn't

      it pleasant to be in such fine company?

      And now we must tell how it is that Clive Newcome, Esq., whose eyes are

      flashing fire across the flowers of the table at Lord Highgate, who is

      making himself so agreeable to Miss Ethel--now we must tell how it is

      that Clive and his cousin Barnes have grown to be friends again.

      The Bundelcund Bank, which had been established for four years, had now

      grown to be one of the most flourishing commercial institutions in

      Bengal. Founded, as the prospectus announced, at a time when all private

      credit was shaken by the failure of the great Agency Houses, of which the

      downfall had carried dismay and ruin throughout the Presidency, the B. B.

      had been established on the only sound principle of commercial

      prosperity--that is association. The native capitalists, headed by the

      great firm of Rummun Loll and Co., of Calcutta, had largely embarked in

      the B. B., and the officers of the two services and the European

      mercantile body of Calcutta had been invited to take shares in an

      institution which, to merchants, native and English, civilian and

      military men, was alike advantageous and indispensable. How many young

      men of the latter services had been crippled for life by the ruinous cost

      of agencies, of which the profits to the agents themselves were so

      enormous! The shareholders of the B. B. were their own agents; and the

      greatest capitalist in India as well as the youngest ensign in the

      service might invest at the largest and safest premium, and borrow at the

      smallest interest, by becoming according to his means, a shareholder in

      the B. B. Their correspondents were established in each presidency and in

      every chief city of India, as well as at Sydney, Singapore, Canton, and,

      of course. London. With China they did, an immense opium-trade, of which

      the profits were so great, that it was only in private sittings of the B.

      B. managing committee that the details and accounts of these operations

      could be brought forward. Otherwise the books of the bank were open to

      every shareholder; and the ensign or the young civil servant was at

      liberty at any time to inspect his own private account as well as the

      common ledger. With New South Wales they carried on a vast trade in wool,

      supplying that great colony with goods, which their London agents enabled

      them to purchase in such a way as to give them the command of the market.

      As if to add to their prosperity, coppermines were discovered on lands in

      the occupation of the B. Banking Company, which gave the most astonishing

      returns. And throughout the vast territories of British India, through

      the great native firm of Rummun Loll and Co., the Bundelcund Banking

      Company had possession of the native markets. The order from Birmingham

      for idols alone (made with their copper and paid in their wool) was

      enough to make the Low Church party in England cry out; and a debate upon

      this subject actually took place in the House of Commons, of which the

      effect was to send up the shares of the Bundelcund Banking Company very

      considerably upon the London Exchange.

      The fifth half-yearly dividend was announced at twelve and a quarter per

      cent of the paid-up capital: the accounts from the copper-mine sent the

      dividend up to a still greater height, and carried the shares to an

      extraordinary premium. In the third year of the concern, the house of

      Hobson Brothers, of London, became the agents of the Bundelcund Banking

      Company of India and amongst our friends, James Binnie, who had prudently

      held out for some time and Clive Newcome, Esq., became shareholders,

      Clive's good father having paid the first instalments of the lad's shares

      up in Calcutta, and invested every rupee he could himself command in this

      enterprise. When Hobson Brothers joined it, no wonder James Binnie was

      convinced; Clive's friend, the Frenchman, and through that connexion the

      house of Higg, of Newcome and Manchester, entered into the affair; and

      amongst the minor contributors in England we may mention Miss Cann, who

      took a little fifty-pound-note share and dear old Miss Honeyman; and J.

      J., and his father, Ridley, who brought a small bag of saving--all

      knowing that their Colonel, who was eager that his friends should

      participate in his good fortune, would never lead them wrong. To Clive's

      surprise Mrs. Mackenzie, between whom and himself there was a

      considerable coolness, came to his chambers, and with a solemn injunction

      that the matter between them should be quite private, requested him to

      purchase 1500 pounds worth of Bundelcund shares for her and her darling

      girls, which he did, astonished to find the thrifty widow in possession

      of so much money. Had Mr. Pendennis's mind not been bent at this moment

      on quite other subjects, he might have increased his own fortune by the

      Bundelcund Bank speculation; but in these two years I was engaged in

      matrimonial affairs (having Clive Newcome, Esq., as my groomsman on a

      certain interesting occasion). When we returned from our tour abroad the

      India Bank shares were so very high that I did not care to purchase,

      though I found an affectionate letter from our good Colonel (enjoining me

      to make my fortune) awaiting me at the agent's, and my wife received a

      pair of beautiful Cashmere shawls from the same kind friend.

      CHAPTER XLIX

      Contains at least six more Courses and two Desserts

      The banker's dinner-party over, we returned to our apartments, having

      dropped Major Pendennis at his lodgings, and there, as the custom is

      amongst most friendly married couples, talked over the company and the

      dinner. I thought my wife would naturally have liked Sir Barnes Newcome,

      who was very attentive to her, took her to dinner as the bride, and

      talked ceaselessly to her during the whole entertainment.

      Laura said No--she did not know why--could there be any better reason?
    r />
      There was a tone about Sir Barnes Newcome she did not like--especially in

      his manner to women.

      I remarked that he spoke sharply and in a sneering manner to his wife,

      and treated one or two remarks which she made as if she was an idiot.

      Mrs. Pendennis flung up her head as much as to say, "and so she is."

      Mr. Pendennis. What, the wife too, my dear Laura! I should have thought

      such a pretty, simple, innocent young woman, with just enough good looks

      to make her pass muster, who is very well bred and not brilliant at all,

      --I should have thought such a one might have secured a sister's

      approbation.

      Mrs. Pendennis. You fancy we are all jealous of one another. No protests

      of ours can take that notion out of your heads. My dear Pen, I do not

      intend to try. We are not jealous of mediocrity: we are not patient of

      it. I dare say we are angry because we see men admire it so. You

      gentlemen, who pretend to be our betters, give yourselves such airs of

      protection, and profess such a lofty superiority over us, prove it by

      quitting the cleverest woman in the room for the first pair of bright

      eyes and dimpled cheeks that enter. It was those charms which attracted

      you in Lady Clara, sir.

      Pendennis. I think she is very pretty, and very innocent, and artless.

      Mrs. P. Not very pretty, and perhaps not so very artless.

      Pendennis. How can you tell, you wicked woman? Are you such a profound

      deceiver yourself, that you can instantly detect artifice in others? O

      Laura!

      Mrs. P. We can detect all sorts of things. The inferior animals have

      instincts, you know. (I must say my wife is always very satirical upon

      this point of the relative rank of the sexes.) One thing I am sure of is,

      that she is not happy; and oh, Pen! that she does not care much for her

      little girl.

      Pendennis. How do you know that, my dear?

      Mrs. P. We went upstairs to see the child after dinner. It was at my

      wish. The mother did not offer to go. The child was awake and crying.

      Lady Clara did not offer to take it. Ethel--Miss Newcome took it, rather

      to my surprise, for she seems very haughty; and the nurse, who I suppose

      was at supper, came running up at the noise, and then the poor little

      thing was quiet.

      Pendennis. I remember we heard the music as the dining-room door was

      open; and Newcome said, "That is what you will have to expect,

      Pendennis."

      Mrs. P. Hush, sir! If my baby cries, I think you must expect me to run

      out of the room. I liked Miss Newcome after seeing her with the poor

      little thing. She looked so handsome as she walked with it! I longed to

      have it myself.

      Pendennis. Tout vient a fin, a qui sait----

      Mrs. P. Don't be silly. What a dreadful dreadful place this great world

      of yours is, Arthur; where husbands do not seem to care for their wives;

      where mothers do not love their children; where children love their

      nurses best; where men talk what they call gallantry!

      Pendennis. What?

      Mrs. P. Yes, such as that dreary, languid, pale, bald, cadaverous,

      leering man whispered to me. Oh, how I dislike him! I am sure he is

      unkind to his wife. I am sure he has a bad temper; and if there is any

      excuse for----

      Pendennis. For what?

      Mrs. P. For nothing. But you heard yourself that he had a bad temper,

      and spoke sneeringly to his wife. What could make her marry him?

      Pendennis. Money, and the desire of papa and mamma. For the same reason

      Clive's flame, poor Miss Newcome, was brought out to-day; that vacant

      seat at her side was for Lord Farintosh. who did not come. And the

      Marquis not being present, the Baron took his innings. Did you not see

      how tender he was to her, and how fierce poor Clive looked?

      Mrs. P. Lord Highgate was very attentive to Miss Newcome, was he?

      Pendennis. And some years ago, Lord Highgate was breaking his heart

      about whom do you think? about Lady Clara Pulleyn, our hostess of last

      night. He was Jack Belsize then, a younger son, plunged over head and

      ears in debt; and of course there could be no marriage. Clive was present

      at Baden when a terrible scene took place, and carried off poor Jack to

      Switzerland and Italy, where he remained till his father died, and he

      came into the title in which he rejoices. And now he is off with the old

      love, Laura, and on with the new. Why do you look at me so? Are you

      thinking that other people have been in love two or three times too?

      Mrs. P. I am thinking that I should not like to live in London, Arthur.

      And this was all that Mrs. Laura could be brought to say. When this young

      woman chooses to be silent, there is no power that can extract a word

      from her. It is true that she is generally in the right; but that is only

      the more aggravating. Indeed, what can be more provoking, after a dispute

      with your wife, than to find it is you, and not she, who has been in the

      wrong?

      Sir Barnes Newcome politely caused us to understand that the

      entertainment of which we had just partaken was given in honour of the

      bride. Clive must needs not be outdone in hospitality; and invited us and

      others to a fine feast at the Star and Garter at Richmond, where Mrs.

      Pendennis was placed at his right hand. I smile as I think how much

      dining has been already commemorated in these veracious pages; but the

      story is an everyday record; and does not dining form a certain part of

      the pleasure and business of every day? It is at that pleasant hour that

      our set has the privilege of meeting the other. The morning man and woman

      alike devote to business; or pass mainly in the company of their own

      kind. John has his office; Jane her household, her nursery, her milliner,

      her daughters and their masters. In the country he has his hunting, his

      fishing, his farming, his letters; she her schools, her poor, her garden,

      or what not. Parted through the shining hours, and improving them, let us

      trust, we come together towards sunset only, we make merry and amuse

      ourselves. We chat with our pretty neighbour, or survey the young ones

      sporting; we make love and are jealous; we dance, or obsequiously turn

      over the leaves of Cecilia's music-book; we play whist, or go to sleep in

      the arm-chair, according to our ages and conditions. Snooze gently in thy

      arm-chair, thou easy bald-head! play your whist, or read your novel, or

      talk scandal over your work, ye worthy dowagers and fogies! Meanwhile the

      young ones frisk about, or dance, or sing, or laugh; or whisper behind

      curtains in moonlit windows; or shirk away into the garden, and come back

      smelling of cigars; nature having made them so to do.

      Nature at this time irresistibly impelled Clive Newcome towards

      love-making. It was pairing-season with him. Mr. Clive was now some

      three-and-twenty years old: enough has been said about his good looks,

      which were in truth sufficient to make him a match for the young lady on

      whom he had set his heart, and from whom, during this entertainment which

      he gave to my wife, he could never keep his eyes away for three minutes.

      Laura's did not need to be so keen as they wer
    e in order to see what poor

      Clive's condition was. She did not in the least grudge the young fellow's

      inattention to herself; or feel hurt that he did not seem to listen when

      she spoke; she conversed with J. J., her neighbour, who was very modest

      and agreeable; while her husband, not so well pleased, had Mrs. Hobson

      Newcome for his partner during the chief part of the entertainment. Mrs.

      Hobson and Lady Clara were the matrons who gave the sanction of their

      presence to this bachelor-party. Neither of their husbands could come to

      Clive's little fete; had they not the City and the House of Commons to

      attend? My uncle, Major Pendennis, was another of the guests; who for his

      part found the party was what you young fellows call very slow. Dreading

      Mrs. Hobson and her powers of conversation, the old gentleman nimbly

      skipped out of her neighbourhood, and fell by the side of Lord Highgate,

      to whom the Major was inclined to make himself very pleasant. But Lord

      Highgate's broad back was turned upon his neighbour, who was forced to

      tell stories to Captain Crackthorpe, which had amused dukes and marquises

      in former days, and were surely quite good enough for any baron in this

      realm. "Lord Highgate sweet upon la belle Newcome, is he?" said the testy

      Major afterwards. "He seemed to me to talk to Lady Clara the whole time.

      When I awoke in the garden after dinner, as Mrs. Hobson was telling one

      of her confounded long stories, I found her audience was diminished to

      one. Crackthorpe, Lord Highgate, and Lady Clara. we had all been sitting

      there when the bankeress cut in (in the mid of a very good story I was

      telling them, which entertained them very much), and never ceased talking

      till I fell off into a doze. When I roused myself, begad, she was still

      going on. Crackthorpe was off, smoking a cigar on the terrace: my Lord

      and Lady Clara were nowhere; and you four, with the little painter, were

      chatting cosily in another arbour. Behaved himself very well, the little

      painter. Doosid good dinner Ellis gave us. But as for Highgate being aux

      soins with la belle Banquiere, trust me, my boy, he is--upon my word, my

      dear, it seemed to me his thoughts went quite another way. To be sure,

      Lady Clara is a belle Banquiere too now. He, he, he! How could he say he

      had no carriage to go home in? He came down in Crackthorpe's cab, who

      passed us just now, driving back young What-dye-call the painter."

      Thus did the Major discourse, as we returned towards the City. I could

      see in the open carriage which followed us (Lady Clara Newcome's) Lord

      Highgate's white hat, by Clive's on the back seat.

      Laura looked at her husband. The same thought may have crossed their

      minds, though neither uttered it; but although Sir Barnes and Lady Clara

      Newcome offered us other civilities during our stay in London, no

      inducements could induce Laura to accept the proffered friendship of that

      lady. When Lady Clara called, my wife was not at home; when she invited

      us, Laura pleaded engagements. At first she bestowed on Miss Newcome,

      too, a share of this haughty dislike, and rejected the advances which

      that young lady, who professed to like my wife very much, made towards an

      intimacy. When I appealed to her (for Newcome's house was after all a

      very pleasant one, and you met the best people there), my wife looked at

      me with an expression of something like scorn, and said: "Why don't I

      like Miss Newcome? Of course because I am jealous of her--all women, you

      know, Arthur, are jealous of such beauties." I could get for a long while

      no better explanation than these sneers, for my wife's antipathy towards

      this branch of the Newcome family; but an event presently came which

      silenced my remonstrances, and showed to me, that Laura had judged Barnes

      and his wife only too well.

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025