RAKE’S PROGRESS.
Some short time before Mr. Foker’s
departure from Oxbridge, there had come up to Boniface,
a gentleman who had once, as it turned out, belonged
to the other University of Camford, which he had quitted
on account of some differences with the tutors and
authorities there. This gentleman, whose name
was Horace Bloundell, was of the ancient Suffolk family
of Bloundell-Bloundell, of Bloundell-Bloundell Hall,
Bloundell-Bloundellshire, as the young wags used to
call it; and no doubt it was on account of his descent
and because Dr. Donne, the master of Boniface, was
a Suffolk man, and related perhaps to the family, that
Mr. Horace Bloundell was taken in at Boniface, after
St. George’s and one or two other colleges had
refused to receive him. There was a living in
the family, which it was important for Mr. Bloundell
to hold; and, being in a dragoon regiment at the time
when his third brother, for whom the living was originally
intended, sickened and died, Mr. Bloundell determined
upon quitting crimson pantaloons and sable shakos
for the black coat and white neckcloth of the English
divine. The misfortunes which occurred at Camford
occasioned some slight disturbance to Mr. Bloundell’s
plans; but although defeated upon one occasion, the
resolute ex-dragoon was not dismayed, and set to work
to win victory elsewhere.
In Pen’s second year Major Pendennis
paid a brief visit to his nephew, and was introduced
to several of Pen’s university friends the
gentle and polite Lord Plinlimmon, the gallant and
open-hearted Magnus Charters, the sly and witty Harland;
the intrepid Ringwood, who was called Rupert in the
Union Debating Club, from his opinions and the bravery
of his blunders; Broadbent, styled Barebones Broadbent
from the republican nature of his opinions (he was
of a dissenting family from Bristol and a perfect
Boanerges of debate); Mr. Bloundell-Bloundell, finally,
who had at once taken his place among the select of
the University.
Major Pendennis, though he did not
understand Harland’s Greek quotations, or quite
appreciate Broadbent’s thick shoes and dingy
hands, was nevertheless delighted with the company
assembled round his nephew, and highly approved of
all the young men with the exception of that one who
gave himself the greatest airs in the society, and
affected most to have the manners of a man of the
world.
As he and Pen sate at breakfast on
the morning after the party in the rooms of the latter,
the major gave his opinions regarding the young men,
with whom he was in the greatest good humor. He
had regaled them with some of his stories, which,
though not quite so fresh in London (where people
have a diseased appetite for novelty in the way of
anecdotes), were entirely new at Oxbridge, and the
lads heard them with that honest sympathy, that eager
pleasure, that boisterous laughter, or that profound
respect, so rare in the metropolis, and which must
be so delightful to the professed racconteur.
Only once or twice during the telling of the anecdotes,
Mr. Bloundell’s face wore a look of scorn, or
betrayed by its expression that he was acquainted with
the tales narrated. Once he had the audacity
to question the accuracy of one of the particulars
of a tale as given by Major Pendennis, and gave his
own version of the anecdote, about which he knew he
was right, for he heard it openly talked of at the
club by So and so and T’other who were present
at the business. The youngsters present looked
up with wonder at their associate, who dared to interrupt
the major few of them could appreciate
that melancholy grace and politeness with which Major
Pendennis at once acceded to Mr. Bloundell’s
version of the story, and thanked him for correcting
his own error. They stared on the next occasion
of meeting, when Bloundell spoke in contemptuous terms
of old Pen, said every body knew old Pen, regular
old trencherman at Gaunt House, notorious old bore,
regular old fogy.
Major Pendennis, on his side, liked
Mr. Bloundell not a whit. These sympathies are
pretty sure to be mutual among men and women, and if,
for my part, some kind friend tells me that such and
such a man has been abusing me, I am almost sure,
on my own side, that I have a misliking to such and
such a man. We like or dislike each other, as
folks like or dislike the odor of certain flowers,
or the taste of certain dishes, or wines, or certain
books. We can’t tell why but,
as a general rule, all the reasons in the world will
not make us love Dr. Fell, and as sure as we dislike
him, we may be sure that he dislikes us.
So the major said, “Pen, my
boy, your dinner went off a merveille; you
did the honors very nicely you carved well I
am glad you learned to carve it is done
on the side-board now in most good houses, but is
still an important point, and may aid you in middle-life young
Lord Plinlimmon is a very amiable young man, quite
the image of his dear mother (whom I knew as Lady
Aquila Brownbill); and Lord Magnus’s republicanism
will wear off it sits prettily enough on
a young patrician in early life, though nothing is
so loathsome among persons of our rank Mr.
Broadbent seems to have much eloquence and considerable
reading; your friend Foker is always delightful:
but your acquaintance, Mr. Bloundell, struck me as
in all respects a most ineligible young man.
“Bless my soul, sir, Bloundell-Bloundell!”
cried Pen, laughing; “Why, sir, he’s the
most popular man of the University. We elected
him of the Barmecides the first week he came up had
a special meeting on purpose he’s
of an excellent family Suffolk Bloundells,
descended from Richard’s Blondel, bear a harp
in chief and motto O Mong Roy.”
“A man may have a very good
coat-of-arms, and be a tiger, my boy,” the major
said, chipping his egg; “that man is a tiger,
mark my word a low man. I will lay
a wager that he left his regiment, which was a good
one (for not a more respectable man than my friend
Lord Martingale never sate in a saddle), in bad odor.
There is the unmistakable look of slang, and bad habits
about this Mr. Bloundell. He frequents low gambling
houses and billiard hells, sir he haunts
third-rate clubs I know he does. I
know by his style. I never was mistaken in my
man yet. Did you remark the quantity of rings
and jewelry he wore? That person has Scamp written
on his countenance, if any man ever had. Mark
my words, and avoid him. Let us turn the conversation.
The dinner was a leetle too fine, but I don’t
object to your making a few extra frais when
you receive friends. Of course you don’t
do it often, and only those whom it is your interest
to feter. The cutlets were excellent, and
the souffle uncommonly light and good.
The third bottle of champagne was not necessary; but
you have a good income, and as long as you keep within
it, I shall not quarrel with you, my dear boy.”
Poor Pen! the worthy uncle little
knew how often those dinners took place, while the
reckless young Amphitryon delighted to show his hospitality
and skill in gourmandise. There is no art,
than that (so long to learn, so difficult to acquire,
so impossible and beyond the means of many unhappy
people!) about which boys are more anxious to have
an air of knowingness. A taste and knowledge of
wines and cookery appears to them to be the sign of
an accomplished roue and manly gentleman.
I like to see them wink at a glass of claret, as if
they had an intimate acquaintance with it, and discuss
a salmi poor boys it
is only when they grow old they know that they know
nothing of the science, when perhaps their conscience
whispers them that the science is in itself little
worth, and that a leg of mutton and content is as
good as the dinners of pontiffs. But little Pen,
in his character of admirable Crichton, thought it
necessary to be a great judge and practitioner of
dinners; we have just said how the college-cook respected
him, and shall soon have to deplore that that worthy
man so blindly trusted our Pen. In the third
year of the lad’s residence at Oxbridge, his
staircase was by no means encumbered with dish-covers
and desserts, and waiters carrying in dishes, and skips
opening iced champagne; crowds of different sorts
of attendants, with faces sulky or piteous, hung about
the outer oak, and assailed the unfortunate lad as
he issued out of his den.
Nor did his guardian’s advice
take any effect, or induce Mr. Pen to avoid the society
of the disreputable Mr. Bloundell. What young
men like in their companions is, what had got Pen
a great part of his own repute and popularity, a real
or supposed knowledge of life. A man who has seen
the world, or can speak of it with a knowing air a
roue, or Lovelace, who has his adventures to
relate, is sure of an admiring audience among boys.
It is hard to confess, but so it is. We respect
that sort of prowess. From our school-days we
have been taught to admire it. Are there five
in the hundred, out of the hundreds and hundreds of
English school-boys, brought up at our great schools
and colleges, that must not own at one time of their
lives to having read and liked Don Juan? Awful
propagation of evil! The idea of it should
make the man tremble who holds the pen, lest untruth,
or impurity, or unjust anger, or unjust praise escape
it.
One such diseased creature as this
is enough to infect a whole colony, and the tutors
of Boniface began to find the moral tone of their college
lowered, and their young men growing unruly and almost
ungentleman-like, soon after Mr. Bloundell’s
arrival at Oxbridge. The young magnates of the
neighboring great College of St. George’s, who
regarded Pen, and in whose society he lived, were
not taken in by Bloundell’s flashy graces, and
rakish airs of fashion. Broadbent called him Captain
Macheath, and said he would live to be hanged.
Foker, during his brief stay at the University with
Macheath, with characteristic caution declined to say
any thing in the captain’s disfavor, but hinted
to Pen that he had better have him for a partner at
whist than play against him, and better back him at
ecarte than bet on the other side. “You
see, he plays better than you do, Pen,” was
the astute young gentleman’s remark: “he
plays uncommonly well, the captain does; and
Pen, I wouldn’t take the odds too freely from
him, if I was you. I don’t think he’s
too flush of money, the captain ain’t.”
But beyond these dark suggestions and generalities,
the cautious Foker could not be got to speak.
Not that his advice would have had
more weight with a headstrong young man, than advice
commonly has with a lad who is determined on pursuing
his own way. Pen’s appetite for pleasure
was insatiable, and he rushed at it wherever it presented
itself with an eagerness which bespoke his fiery constitution
and youthful health. He called taking pleasure
“seeing life,” and quoted well-known maxims
from Terence, from Horace, from Shakspeare, to show
that one should do all that might become a man.
He bade fair to be utterly used up and a roue
in a few years, if he were to continue at the pace
at which he was going.
One night after a supper-party in
college, at which Pen and Macheath had been present,
and at which a little quiet vingt-et-un had
been played, (an amusement much pleasanter to men
in their second and third year than the boisterous
custom of singing songs, which bring the proctors about
the rooms, and which have grown quite stale by this
time, every man having expended his budget) as
the men had taken their caps and were going away,
after no great losses or winnings on any side, Mr.
Bloundell playfully took up a green wine-glass from
the supper-table, which had been destined to contain
iced champagne, but into which he inserted something
still more pernicious, namely a pair of dice, which
the gentleman took out of his waistcoat pocket, and
put into the glass. Then giving the glass a graceful
wave which showed that his hand was quite experienced
in the throwing of dice, he called, Seven’s the
main, and whisking the ivory cubes gently on the table,
swept them up lightly again from the cloth, and repeated
this process two or three times. The other men
looked on, Pen, of course, among the number, who had
never used the dice as yet, except to play a humdrum
game of backgammon at home.
Mr. Bloundell, who had a good voice,
began to troll out the chorus from Robert the Devil,
an opera then in great vogue, in which chorus many
of the men joined, especially Pen, who was in very
high spirits, having won a good number of shillings
and half-crowns at the vingt-et-un and
presently, instead of going home, most of the party
were seated round the table playing at dice, the green
glass going round from hand to hand until Pen finally
shivered it, after throwing six mains.
From that night Pen plunged into the
delights of the game of hazard, as eagerly as it was
his custom to pursue any new pleasure. Dice can
be played of mornings as well as after dinner or supper.
Bloundell would come into Pen’s rooms after
breakfast, and it was astonishing how quick the time
passed as the bones were rattling. They had little
quiet parties with closed doors, and Bloundell devised
a box lined with felt, so that the dice should make
no noise, and their tell-tale rattle not bring the
sharp-eared tutors up to the rooms. Bloundell,
Ringwood, and Pen were once very nearly caught by
Mr. Buck, who, passing in the Quadrangle, thought
he heard the words “Two to one on the caster,”
through Pen’s open window; but when the tutor
got into Arthur’s rooms he found the lads with
three Homers before them, and Pen said, he was trying
to coach the two other men, and asked Mr. Buck with
great gravity what was the present condition of the
River Scamander, and whether it was navigable or no?
Mr. Arthur Pendennis did not win much
money in these transactions with Mr. Bloundell, or
indeed gain good of any kind except a knowledge of
the odds at hazard, which he might have learned out
of books.
Captain Macheath had other accomplishments
which he exercised for Pen’s benefit. The
captain’s stories had a great and unfortunate
charm for Arthur, who was never tired of hearing Bloundell’s
histories of garrison conquests, and of his feats
in country-quarters. He had been at Paris, and
had plenty of legends about the Palais Royal, and the
Salon, and Frascati’s. He had gone to the
Salon one night, after a dinner at the Cafe de Paris,
“when we were all devilishly cut by Jove; and
on waking in the morning in my own rooms, I found
myself with twelve thousand francs under my pillow,
and a hundred and forty-nine Napoleons in one
of my boots. Wasn’t that a coup,
hay?” the captain said. Pen’s eyes
glistened with excitement as he heard this story.
He respected the man who could win such a sum of money.
He sighed, and said it would set him all right.
Macheath laughed, and told him to drink another drop
of Maraschino. “I could tell you stories
much more wonderful than that,” he added; and
so indeed the captain could have done, without any
further trouble than that of invention, with which
portion of the poetic faculty nature had copiously
endowed him.
He laughed to scorn Pen’s love
for Miss Fotheringay, when he came to hear of that
amour from Arthur, as he pretty soon did, for, we have
said, Pen was not averse to telling the story now to
his confidential friends, and he and they were rather
proud of the transaction. But Macheath took away
all Pen’s conceit on this head, not by demonstrating
the folly of the lad’s passion for an uneducated
woman much his senior in years, but by exposing his
absurd desire of gratifying his passion in a legitimate
way. “Marry her,” said he,
“you might as well marry ,”
and he named one of the most notorious actresses on
the stage. “She hadn’t a shred of
a character.” He knew twenty men who were
openly admirers of her, and named them and the sums
each had spent upon her. I know no kind of calumny
more frightful or frequent than this which takes away
the character of women, no men more reckless and mischievous
than those who lightly use it, and no kind of cowards
more despicable than the people who invent these slanders.
Is it, or not, a misfortune that a
man, himself of a candid disposition, and disposed,
like our friend Pen, to blurt out the truth on all
occasions, begins life by believing all that is said
to him? Would it be better for a lad to be less
trustful, and so less honest? It requires no
small experience of the world to know that a man, who
has no especial reason thereto, is telling you lies.
I am not sure whether it is not best to go on being
duped for a certain time. At all events, our honest
Pen had a natural credulity, which enabled him to accept
all statements which were made to him, and he took
every one of Captain Macheath’s figments as
if they had been the most unquestioned facts of history.
So Bloundell’s account about
Miss Fotheringay pained and mortified Pen exceedingly.
If he had been ashamed of his passion before what
were his feelings regarding it now, when the object
of so much pure flame and adoration turned out to
be only a worthless impostor, an impostor detected
by all but him? It never occurred to Pen to doubt
the fact, or to question whether the stories of a
man who, like his new friend, never spoke well of
any woman, were likely to be true.
One Easter vacation, when Pen had
announced to his mother and uncle his intention not
to go down, but stay at Oxbridge and read, Mr. Pen
was nevertheless induced to take a brief visit to
London in company with his friend Mr. Bloundell.
They put up at a hotel in Covent Garden, where Bloundell
had a tick, as he called it, and took the pleasures
of town very freely, after the wont of young University
men. Bloundell still belonged to a military club,
whither he took Pen to dine once or twice (the young
men would drive thither in a cab, trembling lest they
should meet Major Pendennis on his beat in Pall Mall),
and here Pen was introduced to a number of gallant
young fellows with spurs and mustaches, with whom
he drank pale-ale of mornings, and beat the town of
a night. Here he saw a deal of life, indeed; nor
in his career about the theaters and singing-houses
which these roaring young blades frequented, was he
very likely to meet his guardian. One night, nevertheless,
they were very near to each other: a plank only
separating Pen, who was in the boxes of the Museum
Theater, from the major, who was in Lord Steyne’s
box, along with that venerated nobleman. The Fotheringay
was in the pride of her glory. She had made a
hit; that is, she had drawn very good houses for nearly
a year, had starred the provinces with great eclat,
had come back to shine in London with somewhat diminished
luster, and now was acting with “ever increasing
attraction, &c.,” “triumph of the good
old British drama,” as the play-bills avowed,
to houses in which there was plenty of room for any
body who wanted to see her.
It was not the first time Pen had
seen her since that memorable day when the two had
parted in Chatteries. In the previous year,
when the town was making much of her, and the press
lauded her beauty, Pen had found a pretext for coming
to London in term-time, and had rushed off to the
theater to see his old flame. He recollected it
rather than renewed it. He remembered how ardently
he used to be on the look-out at Chatteries,
when the speech before Ophelia’s or Mrs. Haller’s
entrance on the stage was made by the proper actor.
Now, as the actor spoke he had a sort of feeble thrill:
as the house began to thunder with applause, and Ophelia
entered with her old bow and sweeping courtesy, Pen
felt a slight shock, and blushed very much as he looked
at her, and could not help thinking that all the house
was regarding him. He hardly heard her for the
first part of the play; and he thought with such rage
of the humiliation to which she had subjected him,
that he began to fancy he was jealous and in love
with her still. But that illusion did not last
very long. He ran round to the stage door of
the theater to see her if possible, but he did not
succeed. She passed indeed under his nose with
a female companion, but he did not know her nor
did she recognize him. The next night he came
in late, and staid very quietly for the after-piece,
and on the third and last night of his stay in London why,
Taglioni was going to dance at the opera Taglioni!
and there was to be Don Giovanni, which he admired
of all things in the world; so Mr. Pen went to Don
Giovanni and Taglioni.
This time the illusion about her was
quite gone. She was not less handsome, but she
was not the same, somehow. The light was gone
out of her eyes which used to flash there, or Pen’s
no longer were dazzled by it. The rich voice
spoke as of old, yet it did not make Pen’s bosom
thrill as formerly. He thought he could recognize
the brogue underneath; the accents seemed to him coarse
and false. It annoyed him to hear the same emphasis
on the same words only uttered a little louder; worse
than this, it annoyed him to think that he should
ever have mistaken that loud imitation for genius,
or melted at those mechanical sobs and sighs.
He felt that it was in another life almost, that it
was another man who had so madly loved her. He
was ashamed and bitterly humiliated, and very lonely.
Ah, poor Pen! the delusion is better than the truth
sometimes, and fine dreams than dismal waking.
They went and had an uproarious supper
that night, and Mr. Pen had a fine headache the next
morning, with which he went back to Oxbridge, having
spent all his ready money.
As all this narrative is taken from
Pen’s own confessions, so that the reader may
be assured of the truth of every word of it, and as
Pen himself never had any accurate notion of the manner
in which he spent his money, and plunged himself in
much deeper pecuniary difficulties, during his luckless
residence at Oxbridge University, it is, of course
impossible for me to give any accurate account of all
his involvements, beyond that general notion of his
way of life, which has been sketched a few pages back.
He does not speak too hardly of the roguery of the
University tradesmen, or of those in London whom he
honored with his patronage at the outset of his career.
Even Finch, the money-lender, to whom Bloundell introduced
him, and with whom he had various transactions, in
which the young rascal’s signature appeared upon
stamped paper, treated him, according to Pen’s
own account, with forbearance, and never mulcted him
of more than a hundred per cent. The old college-cook,
his fervent admirer, made him a private bill, offered
to send him in dinners up to the very last, and never
would have pressed his account to his dying day.
There was that kindness and frankness about Arthur
Pendennis, which won most people who came in contact
with him, and which, if it rendered him an easy prey
to rogues, got him, perhaps, more goodwill than he
merited from many honest men. It was impossible
to resist his good nature, or, in his worst moments,
not to hope for his rescue from utter ruin.
At the time of his full career of
University pleasure, he would leave the gayest party
to go and sit with a sick friend. He never knew
the difference between small and great in the treatment
of his acquaintances, however much the unlucky lad’s
tastes, which were of the sumptuous order, led him
to prefer good society; he was only too ready to share
his guinea with a poor friend, and when he got money,
had an irresistible propensity for paying, which he
never could conquer through life.
In his third year at College, the
duns began to gather awfully round about him, and
there was a levee at his oak which scandalized the
tutors, and would have scared many a stouter heart.
With some of these he used to battle, some he would
bully (under Mr. Bloundell’s directions, who
was a master in this art, though he took a degree in
no other), and some deprecate. And it is reported
of him that little Mary Frodsham, the daughter of
a certain poor gilder and frame-maker, whom Mr. Pen
had thought fit to employ, and who had made a number
of beautiful frames for his fine prints, coming to
Pendennis with a piteous tale that her father was
ill with the ague, and that there was an execution
in their house, Pen in an anguish of remorse rushed
away, pawned his grand watch and every single article
of jewelry except two old gold sleeve-buttons, which
had belonged to his father, and rushed with the proceeds
to Frodsham’s shop, where, with tears in his
eyes, and the deepest repentance and humility, he
asked the poor tradesman’s pardon.
This, young gentlemen, is not told
as an instance of Pen’s virtue, but rather of
his weakness. It would have been much more virtuous
to have had no prints at all. He still owed for
the baubles which he sold in order to pay Frodsham’s
bill, and his mother had cruelly to pinch herself
in order to discharge the jeweler’s account,
so that she was in the end the sufferer by the lad’s
impertinent fancies and follies. We are not presenting
Pen to you as a hero or a model, only as a lad, who,
in the midst of a thousand vanities and weaknesses,
has as yet some generous impulses, and is not altogether
dishonest.
We have said it was to the scandal
of Mr. Buck the tutor that Pen’s extravagances
became known: from the manner in which he entered
college, the associates he kept, and the introductions
of Doctor Portman and the major, Buck for a long time
thought that his pupil was a man of large property,
and wondered rather that he only wore a plain gown.
Once on going up to London to the levee with an address
from his Majesty’s Loyal University of Oxbridge,
Buck had seen Major Pendennis at Saint James’s
in conversation with two knights of the garter, in
the carriage of one of whom the dazzled tutor saw
the major whisked away after the levee. He asked
Pen to wine the instant he came back, let him off from
chapels and lectures more than ever, and felt perfectly
sure that he was a young gentleman of large estate.
Thus, he was thunderstruck when he
heard the truth, and received a dismal confession
from Pen. His University debts were large, and
the tutor had nothing to do, and of course Pen did
not acquaint him, with his London debts. What
man ever does tell all when pressed by his friends
about his liabilities? The tutor learned enough
to know that Pen was poor, that he had spent a handsome,
almost a magnificent allowance, and had raised around
him such a fine crop of debts, as it would be very
hard work for any man to mow down; for there is no
plant that grows so rapidly when once it has taken
root.
Perhaps it was because she was so
tender and good that Pen was terrified lest his mother
should know of his sins. “I can’t
bear to break it to her,” he said to the tutor
in an agony of grief, “O! sir, I’ve been
a villain to her” and he repented,
and he wished he had the time to come over again,
and he asked himself, “Why, why did his uncle
insist upon the necessity of living with great people,
and in how much did all his grand acquaintance profit
him?”
They were not shy, but Pen thought
they were, and slunk from them during his last terms
at college. He was as gloomy as a death’s-head
at parties, which he avoided of his own part, or to
which his young friends soon ceased to invite him.
Every body knew that Pendennis was “hard up.”
That man Bloundell, who could pay nobody, and who was
obliged to go down after three terms, was his ruin,
the men said. His melancholy figure might be
seen shirking about the lonely quadrangles in his battered
old cap and torn gown, and he who had been the pride
of the University but a year before, the man whom
all the young ones loved to look at, was now the object
of conversation at freshmen’s wine parties, and
they spoke of him with wonder and awe.
At last came the Degree examinations.
Many a young man of his year whose hob-nailed shoes
Pen had derided, and whose face or coat he had caricatured many
a man whom he had treated with scorn in the lecture-room
or crushed with his eloquence in the debating-club many
of his own set who had not half his brains, but a little
regularity and constancy of occupation, took high
places in the honors or passed with decent credit.
And where on the list was Pen the superb, Pen the wit
and dandy, Pen the poet and orator? Ah, where
was Pen the widow’s darling and sole pride?
Let us hide our heads, and shut up the page. The
lists came out; and a dreadful rumor rushed through
the University, that Pendennis of Boniface was plucked.