On the great, momentous, stupendous
day of the dinner, my beloved female reader may imagine
that Fitzroy Timmins was sent about his business at
an early hour in the morning, while the women began
to make preparations to receive their guests.
“There will be no need of your going to Fubsby’s,”
Mrs. Gashleigh said to him, with a look that drove
him out of doors. “Everything that we require
has been ordered there! You will please
to be back here at six o’clock, and not sooner:
and I presume you will acquiesce in my arrangements
about the wine?”
“O yes, mamma,” said the prostrate son-in-law.
“In so large a party a
party beyond some folks means expensive
wines are absurd. The light sherry
at 26s., the champagne at 42s.; and you are not to
go beyond 36s. for the claret and port after dinner.
Mind, coffee will be served; and you come up stairs
after two rounds of the claret.”
“Of course, of course,”
acquiesced the wretch; and hurried out of the house
to his chambers, and to discharge the commissions with
which the womankind had intrusted him.
As for Mrs. Gashleigh, you might have
heard her bawling over the house the whole day long.
That admirable woman was everywhere: in the kitchen
until the arrival of Truncheon, before whom she would
not retreat without a battle; on the stairs; in Fitzroy’s
dressing-room; and in Fitzroy minor’s nursery,
to whom she gave a dose of her own composition, while
the nurse was sent out on a pretext to make purchases
of garnish for the dishes to be served for the little
dinner. Garnish for the dishes! As if the
folks at Fubsby’s could not garnish dishes better
than Gashleigh, with her stupid old-world devices
of laurel-leaves, parsley, and cut turnips! Why,
there was not a dish served that day that was not
covered over with skewers, on which truffles, crayfish,
mushrooms, and forced-meat were impaled. When
old Gashleigh went down with her barbarian bunches
of holly and greens to stick about the meats, even
the cook saw their incongruity, and, at Truncheon’s
orders, flung the whole shrubbery into the dust-house,
where, while poking about the premises, you may be
sure Mrs. G. saw it.
Every candle which was to be burned
that night (including the tallow candle, which she
said was a good enough bed-light for Fitzroy) she
stuck into the candlesticks with her own hands, giving
her own high-shouldered plated candlesticks of the
year 1798 the place of honor. She upset all poor
Rosa’s floral arrangements, turning the nosegays
from one vase into the other without any pity, and
was never tired of beating, and pushing, and patting,
and WHAPPING the curtain and sofa draperies into shape
in the little drawing-room.
In Fitz’s own apartments she
revelled with peculiar pleasure. It has been
described how she had sacked his study and pushed away
his papers, some of which, including three cigars,
and the commencement of an article for the Law Magazine,
“Lives of the Sheriffs’ Officers,”
he has never been able to find to this day. Mamma
now went into the little room in the back regions,
which is Fitz’s dressing-room, (and was destined
to be a cloak-room,) and here she rummaged to her
heart’s delight.
In an incredibly short space of time
she examined all his outlying pockets, drawers, and
letters; she inspected his socks and handkerchiefs
in the top drawers; and on the dressing-table, his
razors, shaving-strop, and hair-oil. She carried
off his silver-topped scent-bottle out of his dressing-case,
and a half-dozen of his favorite pills (which Fitz
possesses in common with every well-regulated man),
and probably administered them to her own family.
His boots, glossy pumps, and slippers she pushed into
the shower-bath, where the poor fellow stepped into
them the next morning, in the midst of a pool in which
they were lying. The baby was found sucking his
boot-hooks the next day in the nursery; and as for
the bottle of varnish for his shoes, (which he generally
paints upon the trees himself, having a pretty taste
in that way,) it could never be found to the present
hour but it was remarked that the young Master Gashleighs,
when they came home for the holidays, always wore
lacquered highlows; and the reader may draw his conclusions
from that fact.
In the course of the day all the servants
gave Mrs. Timmins warning.
The cook said she coodn’t abear
it no longer, ’aving Mrs. G. always about her
kitching, with her fingers in all the saucepans.
Mrs. G. had got her the place, but she preferred one
as Mrs. G. didn’t get for her.
The nurse said she was come to nuss
Master Fitzroy, and knew her duty; his grandmamma
wasn’t his nuss, and was always aggrawating her, missus
must shoot herself elsewhere.
The housemaid gave utterance to the
same sentiments in language more violent.
Little Buttons bounced up to his mistress,
said he was butler of the family, Mrs. G. was always
poking about his pantry, and dam if he’d stand
it.
At every moment Rosa grew more and
more bewildered. The baby howled a great deal
during the day. His large china christening-bowl
was cracked by Mrs. Gashleigh altering the flowers
in it, and pretending to be very cool, whilst her
hands shook with rage.
“Pray go on, mamma,” Rosa
said with tears in her eyes. “Should you
like to break the chandelier?”
“Ungrateful, unnatural child!”
bellowed the other. “Only that I know you
couldn’t do without me, I’d leave the house
this minute.”
“As you wish,” said Rosa;
but Mrs. G. Didn’t wish: and in this
juncture Truncheon arrived.
That officer surveyed the dining-room,
laid the cloth there with admirable precision and
neatness; ranged the plate on the sideboard with graceful
accuracy, but objected to that old thing in the centre,
as he called Mrs. Gashleigh’s silver basket,
as cumbrous and useless for the table, where they
would want all the room they could get.
Order was not restored to the house,
nor, indeed, any decent progress made, until this
great man came: but where there was a revolt before,
and a general disposition to strike work and to yell
out defiance against Mrs. Gashleigh, who was sitting
bewildered and furious in the drawing-room where
there was before commotion, at the appearance of the
master-spirit, all was peace and unanimity: the
cook went back to her pans, the housemaid busied herself
with the china and glass, cleaning some articles and
breaking others, Buttons sprang up and down the stairs,
obedient to the orders of his chief, and all things
went well and in their season.
At six, the man with the wine came
from Binney and Latham’s. At a quarter
past six, Timmins himself arrived.
At half past six he might have been
heard shouting out for his varnished boots but we
know where those had been hidden and
for his dressing things; but Mrs. Gashleigh had put
them away.
As in his vain inquiries for these
articles he stood shouting, “Nurse! Buttons!
Rosa my dear!” and the most fearful exécrations
up and down the stairs, Mr. Truncheon came out on
him.
“Egscuse me, sir,” says
he, “but it’s impawsable. We can’t
dine twenty at that table not if you set
’em out awinder, we can’t.”
“What’s to be done?”
asked Fitzroy, in an agony; “they’ve all
said they’d come.”
“Can’t do it,” said
the other; “with two top and bottom and
your table is as narrow as a bench we can’t
hold more than heighteen, and then each person’s
helbows will be into his neighbor’s cheer.”
“Rosa! Mrs. Gashleigh!”
cried out Timmins, “come down and speak to this
gentl this ”
“Truncheon, sir,” said the man.
The women descended from the drawing-room.
“Look and see, ladies,” he said, inducting
them into the dining-room: “there’s
the room, there’s the table laid for heighteen,
and I defy you to squeege in more.”
“One person in a party always
fails,” said Mrs. Gashleigh, getting alarmed.
“That’s nineteen,”
Mr. Truncheon remarked. “We must knock another
hoff, Ma’m.” And he looked her hard
in the face.
Mrs. Gashleigh was very red and nervous,
and paced, or rather squeezed round the table (it
was as much as she could do). The chairs could
not be put any closer than they were. It was
impossible, unless the convive sat as a centre-piece
in the middle, to put another guest at that table.
“Look at that lady movin’
round, sir. You see now the difficklty. If
my men wasn’t thinner, they couldn’t hoperate
at all,” Mr. Truncheon observed, who seemed
to have a spite to Mrs. Gashleigh.
“What is to be done?” she said, with purple
accents.
“My dearest mamma,” Rosa
cried out, “you must stop at home how
sorry I am!” And she shot one glance at Fitzroy,
who shot another at the great Truncheon, who held
down his eyes. “We could manage with heighteen,”
he said, mildly.
Mrs. Gashleigh gave a hideous laugh.
She went away. At eight o’clock
she was pacing at the corner of the street, and actually
saw the company arrive. First came the Topham
Sawyers, in their light-blue carriage with the white
hammercloth and blue and white ribbons their
footmen drove the house down with the knocking.
Then followed the ponderous and snuff-colored
vehicle, with faded gilt wheels and brass earl’s
coronets all over it, the conveyance of the House
of Bungay. The Countess of Bungay and daughter
stepped out of the carriage. The fourteenth Earl
of Bungay couldn’t come.
Sir Thomas and Lady Gulpin’s
fly made its appearance, from which issued the General
with his star, and Lady Gulpin in yellow satin.
The Rowdys’ brougham followed next; after which
Mrs. Butt’s handsome equipage drove up.
The two friends of the house, young
gentlemen from the Temple, now arrived in cab N. We tossed up, in fact, which should pay
the fare.
Mr. Ranville Ranville walked, and
was dusting his boots as the Templars drove up.
Lord Castlemouldy came out of a twopenny omnibus.
Funnyman, the wag, came last, whirling up rapidly
in a hansom, just as Mrs. Gashleigh, with rage in
her heart, was counting that two people had failed,
and that there were only seventeen after all.
Mr. Truncheon passed our names to
Mr. Billiter, who bawled them out on the stairs.
Rosa was smiling in a pink dress, and looking as fresh
as an angel, and received her company with that grace
which has always characterized her.
The moment of the dinner arrived,
old Lady Bungay scuffled off on the arm of Fitzroy,
while the rear was brought up by Rosa and Lord Castlemouldy,
of Ballyshanvanvoght Castle, co, Tipperary. Some
fellows who had the luck took down ladies to dinner.
I was not sorry to be out of the way of Mrs. Rowdy,
with her dandified airs, or of that high and mighty
county princess, Mrs. Topham Sawyer.