Augustus Melmotte was becoming greater
and greater in every direction, mightier
and mightier every day. He was learning to despise
mere lords, and to feel that he might almost domineer
over a duke. In truth he did recognize it as
a fact that he must either domineer over dukes, or
else go to the wall. It can hardly be said of
him that he had intended to play so high a game, but
the game that he had intended to play had become thus
high of its own accord. A man cannot always restrain
his own doings and keep them within the limits which
he had himself planned for them. They will very
often fall short of the magnitude to which his ambition
has aspired. They will sometimes soar higher
than his own imagination. So it had now been with
Mr Melmotte. He had contemplated great things;
but the things which he was achieving were beyond
his contemplation.
The reader will not have thought much
of Fisker on his arrival in England. Fisker was,
perhaps, not a man worthy of much thought. He
had never read a book. He had never written a
line worth reading. He had never said a prayer.
He cared nothing for humanity. He had sprung out
of some Californian gully, was perhaps ignorant of
his own father and mother, and had tumbled up in the
world on the strength of his own audacity. But,
such as he was, he had sufficed to give the necessary
impetus for rolling Augustus Melmotte onwards into
almost unprecedented commercial greatness. When
Mr Melmotte took his offices in Abchurch Lane, he
was undoubtedly a great man, but nothing so great
as when the South Central Pacific and Mexican Railway
had become not only an established fact, but a fact
established in Abchurch Lane. The great company
indeed had an office of its own, where the Board was
held; but everything was really managed in Mr Melmotte’s
own commercial sanctum. Obeying, no doubt, some
inscrutable law of commerce, the grand enterprise, ’perhaps
the grandest when you consider the amount of territory
manipulated, which has ever opened itself before the
eyes of a great commercial people,’ as Mr Fisker
with his peculiar eloquence observed through his nose,
about this time, to a meeting of shareholders at San
Francisco, had swung itself across from
California to London, turning itself to the centre
of the commercial world as the needle turns to the
pole, till Mr Fisker almost regretted the deed which
himself had done. And Melmotte was not only the
head, but the body also, and the feet of it all.
The shares seemed to be all in Melmotte’s pocket,
so that he could distribute them as he would; and
it seemed also that when distributed and sold, and
when bought again and sold again, they came back to
Melmotte’s pocket. Men were contented to
buy their shares and to pay their money, simply on
Melmotte’s word. Sir Felix had realized
a large portion of his winnings at cards, with
commendable prudence for one so young and extravagant, and
had brought his savings to the great man. The
great man had swept the earnings of the Beargarden
into his till, and had told Sir Felix that the shares
were his. Sir Felix had been not only contented,
but supremely happy. He could now do as Paul Montague
was doing, and Lord Alfred Grendall.
He could realize a perennial income, buying and selling.
It was only after the reflection of a day or two that
he found that he had as yet got nothing to sell.
It was not only Sir Felix that was admitted into these
good things after this fashion. Sir Felix was
but one among hundreds. In the meantime the bills
in Grosvenor Square were no doubt paid with punctuality, and
these bills must have been stupendous. The very
servants were as tall, as gorgeous, almost as numerous,
as the servants of royalty, and remunerated
by much higher wages. There were four coachmen
with egregious wigs, and eight footmen, not one with
a circumference of calf less than eighteen inches.
And now there appeared a paragraph
in the ‘Morning Breakfast Table,’ and
another appeared in the ‘Evening Pulpit,’
telling the world that Mr Melmotte had bought Pickering
Park, the magnificent Sussex property of Adolphus
Longestaffe, Esq., of Caversham. And it was so.
The father and son, who never had agreed before, and
who now had come to no agreement in the presence of
each other, had each considered that their affairs
would be safe in the hands of so great a man as Mr
Melmotte, and had been brought to terms. The purchase-money,
which was large, was to be divided between them.
The thing was done with the greatest ease, there
being no longer any delay as is the case when small
people are at work. The magnificence of Mr Melmotte
affected even the Longestaffe lawyers. Were I
to buy a little property, some humble cottage with
a garden, or you, O reader, unless you be
magnificent, the money to the last farthing
would be wanted, or security for the money more than
sufficient, before we should be able to enter in upon
our new home. But money was the very breath of
Melmotte’s nostrils, and therefore his breath
was taken for money. Pickering was his, and before
a week was over a London builder had collected masons
and carpenters by the dozen down at Chichester, and
was at work upon the house to make it fit to be a residence
for Madame Melmotte. There were rumours that
it was to be made ready for the Goodwood week, and
that the Melmotte entertainment during that festival
would rival the duke’s.
But there was still much to be done
in London before the Goodwood week should come round,
in all of which Mr Melmotte was concerned, and of
much of which Mr Melmotte was the very centre.
A member for Westminster had succeeded to a peerage,
and thus a seat was vacated. It was considered
to be indispensable to the country that Mr Melmotte
should go into Parliament, and what constituency could
such a man as Melmotte so fitly represent as one combining
as Westminster does all the essences of the metropolis?
There was the popular element, the fashionable element,
the legislative element, the legal element, and the
commercial element. Melmotte undoubtedly was the
man for Westminster. His thorough popularity
was evinced by testimony which perhaps was never before
given in favour of any candidate for any county or
borough. In Westminster there must of course be
a contest. A seat for Westminster is a thing
not to be abandoned by either political party without
a struggle. But, at the beginning of the affair,
when each party had to seek the most suitable candidate
which the country could supply, each party put its
hand upon Melmotte. And when the seat, and the
battle for the seat, were suggested to Melmotte, then
for the first time was that great man forced to descend
from the altitudes on which his mind generally dwelt,
and to decide whether he would enter Parliament as
a Conservative or a Liberal. He was not long
in convincing himself that the conservative element
in British Society stood the most in need of that
fiscal assistance which it would be in his province
to give; and on the next day every hoarding in London
declared to the world that Melmotte was the conservative
candidate for Westminster. It is needless to say
that his committee was made up of peers, bankers,
and publicans, with all that absence of class prejudice
for which the party has become famous since the ballot
was introduced among us. Some unfortunate Liberal
was to be made to run against him, for the sake of
the party; but the odds were ten to one on Melmotte.
This no doubt was a great matter, this
affair of the seat; but the dinner to be given to
the Emperor of China was much greater. It was
the middle of June, and the dinner was to be given
on Monday, 8th July, now three weeks hence; but
all London was already talking of it. The great
purport proposed was to show to the Emperor by this
banquet what an English merchant-citizen of London
could do. Of course there was a great amount
of scolding and a loud clamour on the occasion.
Some men said that Melmotte was not a citizen of London,
others that he was not a merchant, others again that
he was not an Englishman. But no man could deny
that he was both able and willing to spend the necessary
money; and as this combination of ability and will
was the chief thing necessary, they who opposed the
arrangement could only storm and scold. On the
20th of June the tradesmen were at work, throwing
up a building behind, knocking down walls, and generally
transmuting the house in Grosvenor Square in such a
fashion that two hundred guests might be able to sit
down to dinner in the dining-room of a British merchant.
But who were to be the two hundred?
It used to be the case that when a gentleman gave
a dinner he asked his own guests; but when
affairs become great, society can hardly be carried
on after that simple fashion. The Emperor of
China could not be made to sit at table without English
royalty, and English royalty must know whom it has
to meet, must select at any rate some of
its comrades. The minister of the day also had
his candidates for the dinner, in which
arrangement there was however no private patronage,
as the list was confined to the cabinet and their
wives. The Prime Minister took some credit to
himself in that he would not ask for a single ticket
for a private friend. But the Opposition as a
body desired their share of seats. Melmotte had
elected to stand for Westminster on the conservative
interest, and was advised that he must insist on having
as it were a conservative cabinet present, with its
conservative wives. He was told that he owed
it to his party, and that his party exacted payment
of the debt. But the great difficulty lay with
the city merchants. This was to be a city merchant’s
private feast, and it was essential that the Emperor
should meet this great merchant’s brother merchants
at the merchant’s board. No doubt the Emperor
would see all the merchants at the Guildhall; but
that would be a semi-public affair, paid for out of
the funds of a corporation. This was to be a private
dinner. Now the Lord Mayor had set his face against
it, and what was to be done? Meetings were held;
a committee was appointed; merchant guests were selected,
to the number of fifteen with their fifteen wives; and
subsequently the Lord Mayor was made a baronet on the
occasion of receiving the Emperor in the city.
The Emperor with his suite was twenty. Royalty
had twenty tickets, each ticket for guest and wife.
The existing Cabinet was fourteen; but the coming was
numbered at about eleven only; each one
for self and wife. Five ambassadors and five
ambassadresses were to be asked. There were to
be fifteen real merchants out of the city. Ten
great peers, with their peeresses,
were selected by the general committee of management.
There were to be three wise men, two poets, three
independent members of the House of Commons, two Royal
Academicians, three editors of papers, an African
traveller who had just come home, and a novelist; but
all these latter gentlemen were expected to come as
bachelors. Three tickets were to be kept over
for presentation to bores endowed with a power of making
themselves absolutely unendurable if not admitted at
the last moment, and ten were left for
the giver of the feast and his own family and friends.
It is often difficult to make things go smooth, but
almost all roughnesses may be smoothed at last with
patience and care, and money, and patronage.
But the dinner was not to be all.
Eight hundred additional tickets were to be issued
for Madame Melmotte’s evening entertainment,
and the fight for these was more internecine than
for seats at the dinner. The dinner-seats, indeed,
were handled in so statesmanlike a fashion that there
was not much visible fighting about them. Royalty
manages its affairs quietly. The existing Cabinet
was existing, and though there were two or three members
of it who could not have got themselves elected at
a single unpolitical club in London, they had a right
to their seats at Melmotte’s table. What
disappointed ambition there might be among conservative
candidates was never known to the public. Those
gentlemen do not wash their dirty linen in public.
The ambassadors of course were quiet, but we may be
sure that the Minister from the United States was
among the favoured five. The city bankers and
bigwigs, as has been already said, were at first unwilling
to be present, and therefore they who were not chosen
could not afterwards express their displeasure.
No grumbling was heard among the peers, and that which
came from the peeresses floated down into the current
of the great fight about the evening entertainment.
The poet laureate was of course asked, and the second
poet was as much a matter of course. Only two
Academicians had in this year painted royalty, so that
there was no ground for jealousy there. There
were three, and only three, specially insolent and
specially disagreeable independent members of Parliament
at that time in the House, and there was no difficulty
in selecting them. The wise men were chosen by
their age. Among editors of newspapers there
was some ill-blood. That Mr Alf and Mr Broune
should be selected was almost a matter of course.
They were hated accordingly, but still this was expected.
But why was Mr Booker there? Was it because he
had praised the Prime Minister’s translation
of Catullus? The African traveller chose himself
by living through all his perils and coming home.
A novelist was selected; but as royalty wanted another
ticket at the last moment, the gentleman was only asked
to come in after dinner. His proud heart, however,
resented the treatment, and he joined amicably with
his literary brethren in decrying the festival altogether.
We should be advancing too rapidly
into this portion of our story were we to concern
ourselves deeply at the present moment with the feud
as it raged before the evening came round, but it
may be right to indicate that the desire for tickets
at last became a burning passion, and a passion which
in the great majority of cases could not be indulged.
The value of the privilege was so great that Madame
Melmotte thought that she was doing almost more than
friendship called for when she informed her guest,
Miss Longestaffe, that unfortunately there would be
no seat for her at the dinner-table; but that, as payment
for her loss, she should receive an evening ticket
for herself and a joint ticket for a gentleman and
his wife. Georgiana was at first indignant, but
she accepted the compromise. What she did with
her tickets shall be hereafter told.
From all this I trust it will be understood
that the Mr Melmotte of the present hour was a very
different man from that Mr Melmotte who was introduced
to the reader in the early chapters of this chronicle.
Royalty was not to be smuggled in and out of his house
now without his being allowed to see it. No manoeuvres
now were necessary to catch a simple duchess.
Duchesses were willing enough to come. Lord Alfred
when he was called by his Christian name felt no aristocratic
twinges. He was only too anxious to make himself
more and more necessary to the great man. It
is true that all this came as it were by jumps, so
that very often a part of the world did not know on
what ledge in the world the great man was perched
at that moment. Miss Longestaffe who was staying
in the house did not at all know how great a man her
host was. Lady Monogram when she refused to go
to Grosvenor Square, or even to allow any one to come
out of the house in Grosvenor Square to her parties,
was groping in outer darkness. Madame Melmotte
did not know. Marie Melmotte did not know.
The great man did not quite know himself where, from
time to time, he was standing. But the world at
large knew. The world knew that Mr Melmotte was
to be Member for Westminster, that Mr Melmotte was
to entertain the Emperor of China, that Mr Melmotte
carried the South Central Pacific and Mexican Railway
in his pocket; and the world worshipped
Mr Melmotte.
In the meantime Mr Melmotte was much
troubled about his private affairs. He had promised
his daughter to Lord Nidderdale, and as he rose in
the world had lowered the price which he offered for
this marriage, not so much in the absolute
amount of fortune to be ultimately given, as in the
manner of giving it. Fifteen thousand a year
was to be settled on Marie and on her eldest son, and
twenty thousand pounds were to be paid into Nidderdale’s
hands six months after the marriage. Melmotte
gave his reasons for not paying this sum at once.
Nidderdale would be more likely to be quiet, if he
were kept waiting for that short time. Melmotte
was to purchase and furnish for them a house in town.
It was, too, almost understood that the young people
were to have Pickering Park for themselves, except
for a week or so at the end of July. It was absolutely
given out in the papers that Pickering was to be theirs.
It was said on all sides that Nidderdale was doing
very well for himself. The absolute money was
not perhaps so great as had been at first asked; but
then, at that time, Melmotte was not the strong rock,
the impregnable tower of commerce, the very navel
of the commercial enterprise of the world, as
all men now regarded him. Nidderdale’s
father, and Nidderdale himself, were, in the present
condition of things, content with a very much less
stringent bargain than that which they had endeavoured
at first to exact.
But, in the midst of all this, Marie,
who had at one time consented at her father’s
instance to accept the young lord, and who in some
speechless fashion had accepted him, told both the
young lord and her father, very roundly, that she
had changed her mind. Her father scowled at her
and told her that her mind in the matter was of no
concern. He intended that she should marry Lord
Nidderdale, and himself fixed some day in August for
the wedding. ’It is no use, father, for
I will never have him,’ said Marie.
‘Is it about that other scamp?’ he asked
angrily.
’If you mean Sir Felix Carbury,
it is about him. He has been to you and told
you, and therefore I don’t know why I need hold
my tongue.’
‘You’ll both starve, my
lady; that’s all.’ Marie however was
not so wedded to the grandeur which she encountered
in Grosvenor Square as to be afraid of the starvation
which she thought she might have to suffer if married
to Sir Felix Carbury. Melmotte had not time for
any long discussion. As he left her he took hold
of her and shook her. ‘By ,’
he said, ’if you run rusty after all I’ve
done for you, I’ll make you suffer. You
little fool; that man’s a beggar. He hasn’t
the price of a petticoat or a pair of stockings.
He’s looking only for what you haven’t
got, and shan’t have if you marry him. He
wants money, not you, you little fool!’
But after that she was quite settled
in her purpose when Nidderdale spoke to her.
They had been engaged and then it had been off; and
now the young nobleman, having settled everything
with the father, expected no great difficulty in resettling
everything with the girl. He was not very skilful
at making love, but he was thoroughly good-humoured,
from his nature anxious to please, and averse to give
pain. There was hardly any injury which he could
not forgive, and hardly any kindness which he would
not do, so that the labour upon himself
was not too great. ‘Well, Miss Melmotte,’
he said, ’governors are stern beings: are
they not?’
‘Is yours stern, my lord?’
’What I mean is that sons and
daughters have to obey them. I think you understand
what I mean. I was awfully spoony on you that
time before; I was indeed.’
‘I hope it didn’t hurt you much, Lord
Nidderdale.’
’That’s so like a woman;
that is. You know well enough that you and I
can’t marry without leave from the governors.’
‘Nor with it,’ said Marie, holding her
head.
’I don’t know how that
may be. There was some hitch somewhere, I
don’t quite know where.’ The hitch
had been with himself, as he demanded ready money.
’But it’s all right now. The old fellows
are agreed. Can’t we make a match of it,
Miss Melmotte?’
‘No, Lord Nidderdale; I don’t think we
can.’
‘Do you mean that?’
’I do mean it. When that
was going on before I knew nothing about it.
I have seen more of things since then.’
‘And you’ve seen somebody you like better
than me?’
’I say nothing about that, Lord
Nidderdale. I don’t think you ought to
blame me, my lord.’
‘Oh dear no.’
’There was something before,
but it was you that was off first. Wasn’t
it now?’
‘The governors were off, I think.’
’The governors have a right
to be off, I suppose. But I don’t think
any governor has a right to make anybody marry any
one.’
‘I agree with you there; I do indeed,’
said Lord Nidderdale.
’And no governor shall make
me marry. I’ve thought a great deal about
it since that other time, and that’s what I’ve
come to determine.’
’But I don’t know why
you shouldn’t just marry me because
you like me.’
‘Only, just because
I don’t. Well; I do like you, Lord Nidderdale.’
‘Thanks; so much!’
‘I like you ever so, only marrying
a person is different.’
‘There’s something in that, to be sure.’
‘And I don’t mind telling
you,’ said Marie with an almost solemn expression
on her countenance, ’because you are good-natured
and won’t get me into a scrape if you can help
it, that I do like somebody else; oh, so
much.’
‘I supposed that was it.’
‘That is it.’
’It’s a deuced pity.
The governors had settled everything, and we should
have been awfully jolly. I’d have gone in
for all the things you go in for; and though your
governor was screwing us up a bit, there would have
been plenty of tin to go on with. You couldn’t
think of it again?’
‘I tell you, my lord, I’m in
love.’
’Oh, ah; yes.
So you were saying. It’s an awful bore.
That’s all. I shall come to the party all
the same if you send me a ticket.’ And so
Nidderdale took his dismissal, and went away, not
however without an idea that the marriage would still
come off. There was always, so he
thought, such a bother about things before
they would get themselves fixed. This happened
some days after Mr Broune’s proposal to Lady
Carbury, more than a week since Marie had seen Sir
Felix. As soon as Lord Nidderdale was gone she
wrote again to Sir Felix begging that she might hear
from him, and entrusted her letter to Didon.