SPORTING IN FRANCE
RUM beggars, these French, said Mr. Jorrocks to himself, laying down the newspaper and taking a sip of Churchmans chocolate, as on the Sunday morning he sat with the Countess Benvolio, discussing rolls and butter, with Galignanis Messenger, for breakfast.
Rum beggars, indeed, said he, resuming the paper, and reading the programme of the amusements for the day, commencing with the hour of Protestant service at the Ambassadors chapel, followed on by Palace and Gallery of Pictures of the Palais RoyalReview with Military Music in the Place du CarouselHorse-races in the Champs de MarsFête in the Park of St. Cloud Combat dAnimaux, that is to say, dog-fighting and bull-baiting, at the Barrière du Combat, Tivoli, etc. etc. Its not werry right, but I suppose at Rome we must do as Romans do, with which comfortable reflection Mr. Jorrocks proposed that the Countess and he should go to the races. Madame was not partial to animals of any description, but having got a new hat and feathers, she consented to show them, on condition that they adjourned to the fête at St. Cloud in the evening.
Accordingly, about noon, the ostlers man of a neighbouring English livery stable, drew up a dark-coloured job cab, with a red-and-white striped calico lining, drawn by a venerable long-backed white horse, at the Countesss gateway in the Rue des Mauvais-Garçons, into which Mr. Jorrocks having handed her ladyship, and Agamemnon, who was attired in his chasseur uniform, having climbed up behind, the old horse, after two or three flourishes of his dirty white tail, as a sort of acknowledgment of the whip on his sides, got himself into motion, and proceeded on his way to the races. The Countess, being resolved to cut a dash, had persuaded our hero to add a smart second-hand cocked hat, with a flowing red-and-white feather, to the rest of his military attire; and the end of a scarlet handkerchief, peeping out at the breast of his embroidered frock-coat, gave him the appearance of wearing a decoration, and procured him the usual salute from the soldiers and veterans of the Hospital of Invalids, who were lounging about the ramparts and walks of the edifice. The Countesss costume was simple and elegant; a sky-blue satin pelisse with boots to match, and a white satin bonnet with white feathers tipped with blue, and delicate primrose-coloured gloves. Of course the head of the cab was well thrown back to exhibit the elegant inmates to the world.
Great respect is paid to the military in France, as Mr. Jorrocks found by all the hack cab and fiacre drivers pulling up and making way for him to pass, as the old crocodile-backed white horse slowly dragged its long length to the gateway of the Champ de Mars. Here the guard, both horse and foot, saluted him, which he politely acknowledged, under direction of the Countess, by raising his chapeau bras, and a subaltern was despatched by the officer in command to conduct him to the place appointed for the carriages to stand. But for this piece of attention Mr. Jorrocks would certainly have drawn up at the splendid building of the Ecole Militaire, standing as it does like a grand stand in the centre of the gravelly dusty plain of Champ de Mars. The officer, having speared his way through the crowd with the usual courtesy of a Frenchman, at length drew up the cab in a long line of anonymous vehicles under the rows of stunted elms by the stone-lined ditch, on the southern side of the plain, when, turning his charger round, he saluted Mr. Jorrocks, and bumped off at a trot. Mr. Jorrocks then stuck the pig-driving whip into the socket, and, throwing forward the apron, handed out the Countess, and installed Agamemnon in the cab.
A fine day and a crowd make the French people thoroughly happy, and on this afternoon the sun shone brightly and warmly on the land;still there was no apparently settled purpose for the assembling of the multitude, who formed themselves in groups upon the plain, or lined the grass-burnt mounds at the side, in most independent parties. The Champ de Mars forms a regular parallelogram of 2700 feet by 1320, and the course, which is of an oblong form, comprises a circuit of the whole, and is marked out with strong posts and ropes. Within the course, equestriansor more properly speaking, men on horsebackare admitted under the surveillance of a regiment of cavalry, while infantry and cavalry are placed in all directions with drawn swords and fixed bayonets to preserve order. Being a gravelly, sandy soil, in almost daily requisition for the exercise and training of troops, no symptoms of vegetation can be expected, and the course is as hard as the ride in Rotten Row or up to Kensington Gardens.
About the centre of the south side, near where the carriages were drawn up, a few temporary stands were erected for the royal family and visitors, the stand for the former being in the centre, and hung with scarlet and gold cloth, while the others were tastefully arranged with tri-coloured drapery. These are entered by tickets only, but there are always plenty of platforms formed by tables and chaises à louer (chairs to let) for those who dont mind risking their necks for a sight. Some few itinerants tramped about the plain, offering alternately tooth-picks, play-bills, and race-lists for sale. Mr. Jorrocks of course purchased one of the latter, which was decorated at the top with a woodcut representing three jockeys riding two horses, one with a whip as big as a broadsword. On pages 172 and 173 we subjoin the list as a specimen of Sporting in France.
Foreigners accuse the English of claiming every good-looking horse, and every well-built carriage met on the continent, as their own, but we think that few would be ambitious of laying claim to the honour of supplying France with jockeys or race-horses. Mr. Jorrocks, indeed, indifferent as he is to the affairs of the turf, could not suppress his conwiction of the difference between the flibberty-gibberty appearance of the Frenchmen, and the quiet, easy, close-sitting jockeys of Newmarket. The former all legs and elbows, spurting and pushing to the front at starting, in tawdry, faded jackets and nankeen shorts, just like the frowsy door-keepers of an Epsom gambling-booth; the latter in clean, neat-fitting leathers, well-cleaned boots, spick and span new jackets, feeling their horses mouths, quietly in the rear, with their whip hands resting on their thighs. Then such riding! A hulking Norman with his knees up to his chin, and a long, lean, half-starved-looking Frenchman set astride like a pair of tongs, with a wet sponge applied to his knees before starting, followed by a runaway English stable lad, in white cords and drab gaiters, and half a dozen others equally singular, spurring and tearing round and round, throwing the gravel and sand into each others faces, until the field was so separated as to render it difficult to say which was leading and which was tailing, for it is one of the rules of their races that each heat must be run in a certain time, consequently, though all the horses may be distanced, the winner keeps working away. Then what an absence of interest and enthusiasm on the part of the spectators! Three-fourths of them did not know where the horses started, scarcely a man knew their names, and the few tenpenny bets that were made, were sported upon the colour of the jackets. A Frenchman has no notion of racing, and it is on record that after a heat in which the winning horse, after making a waiting race, ran in at the finish, a Parisian observed, that although Annette had won at the finish, he thought the greater honour was due to Hercule, he having kept the lead the greater part of the distance. On some one explaining to him that the jockey on Annette had purposely made a waiting race, he was totally incredulous, asserting that he was sure the jockeys had too much amour propre to remain in the rear at any part of the race, when they might be in front.1
Moderate sport, said Mr. Jorrocks to himself, curling his mustachios, and jingling a handful of five-franc pieces in the pocket of his leathers,moderate sport indeed, and therefore he turned his back to the course and walked the Countess off towards the cab.
From beneath a low, tenth-rate-looking booth, called The Cottage of Content, supported by poles placed on the stunted trees of the avenue, and exhibiting on a blue board, John Jones, dealer in British beer, in gilt letters, there issued the sound of voices clamouring about odds and weights and scales; and on looking in, a score of ragamuffin-looking grooms, imitation jockeys, and the usual hangers-on of race-horses and liverystables, were seen drinking beer, smoking, playing at cards, dice, and chuck-farthing. Before the well-patched canvas curtain that flapped before the entrance, a crowd had collected round one of the horses which was in the care of five or six fellows, one to hold him, another to whistle to him, a third to whisk the flies away with a horses tail, a fourth to scrape him, a fifth to rinse his mouth out,while the stud-groom, a tall, gaunt, hairy-looking fellow, in his shirt sleeves, with ear-rings, a blue apron and trousers (more like a gardener than a groom), walked round and round with mystified dignity, sacréing and muttering, Ne parlez pas, ne parlez pas, as anyone approached who seemed likely to ask questions. Mr. Jorrocks, having well ascertained the importance of his hat and feather, pushed his way with the greatest coolness into the ring, just to cast his eye over the horse and see whether he was fit to go with the Surrey, and the stud-groom immediately took off his lavender-coloured foraging cap, and made two profound salaams, one to the Colonel, the other to the Countess. Mr. Jorrocks, all politeness, took off his chapeau, and no sooner was it in the air, than with a wild exclamation of surprise and delight, the groom screamed, O, Monsieur Shorrock, mon ami comment vous portez-vous? threw his arms round the Colonels neck, and kissed him on each cheek.
PROGRAMME DES COURSES DE CHEVAUX
QUI AURONT LIEU AU CHAMP DE MARS LE DIMANCHE A UNE HEURE, EN PRESENCE DE LL. MM. LE ROI ET LA REINE, ET DES PRINCES DE LA FAMILLE ROYALE, DEUX PRIX ROYAUX.
| Noms De Chevaux. | Signalemens Et Ages. | Noms Des Propriétaires. | Poids que les chevaux doivent porter. | Noms Des Jockeys. | Costumes Des Jockeys. | Notes sur les Chevaux. |
| Prix Royal de 5000 fr. pour les chevaux et jumens de deuxième espèce.En partie liée. |
| Moina | Bai-clair, 4 ans. | Haras de Meudon | 102l. | Tom Hall | Veste rouge, toque tricolore | Issu de Candid et de Miltonia. |
| Corisandre | Bai-brun, 5 ans. | M. Bonvié fils. | 115 | Tom Wilson | Veste orange, manches et toque noires | Issu dHolbein et de Lisbeth. |
| Flore | Bai-cerise, 4 ans. | M. de Laroque | 102 | Tony Montel | Veste noire, manches blanches, toque noire | Issue de Tigris et de Biche. |
| Eléanor | Alezan-brûlé, 5 ans. | M. de Royère. | 112 | Bernou | Veste verte, toque noire | Issue de Moulay et de Cadette. |
| Diomède | Bai, 4 ans. | M. le baron de la Bastide | 105 | Baptiste | Veste bleue, manches jaunes, toque bleue et jaune | Issu de Prémium et de Gabrielle. |
| Cirus | Bai-brun, 5 ans. | Lord Seymour | 115 | North | Veste orange, toque noire | Issu de Toley et de Miss. |
| Aline | Bai-clair, 4 ans. | M. Noel. | 102 | Tom | Veste ponceau, manches blanches, toque bleue | Issue de Snail et dune jument Normande. |
| Léonie | Alezan-doré, 5 ans. | M. Belhomme | 112 | Pichon | Veste jaune, toque verte | Issue de Massoud et dune fille de D-y-o. |
| Prix Royal de 6000 fr. pour les chevaux de jumens de deuxième espèce.En partie liée. |
| Young-Milton | Bai, 4 ans. | M. Fasquel | 105l. | Tom Webb | Veste et toque noires | Issu de Milton et de Betzi. |
| Mouna | Bai-clair, 4 ans. | M. de Laroque | 102 | Tony Montel | Veste noire, manches blanches, toque noire | Issu de Rainbow et de Mouna. |
| Paméla | Bai, 4 ans. | Haras de Meudon | 102 | Tom Hall | Veste rouge, toque tricolore. | Issue de Candid et de Géane. |
| Eglé | Gris-sanguin, 5 ans. | Lord Seymour | 112 | Mous | Veste orange, toque noire | Issu de Rainbow et de Young-Urganda. |
| Cédéric | Bai, 5 ans. | M. le baron de la Bastide | 115 | Baptiste | Veste bleue, manches jaunes, toque bleue et jaune | Issue de Candid et de Prestesse. |
| Young-Tandem | Bai-cerise, 4 ans. | M. Schickler | 105 | Webb | Veste rouge, toque noire | Issu de Multum-in-Parvo et dOida. |
| Oubiou | Alezan, 6 ans. | MM. Salvador et Tassinari | 121 | Tom Johns | Veste bleue, manches blanches, toque rouge | Issu dOubiou et dune fille de Stradlam-lad. |
| Coradin | Bai, 5 ans. | M. Moreil | 115 | René | Veste bleue, manches jaunes, toque bleue et jaune | Issu de Candid et de Prestesse. |
Nota.Les chevaux de première espèce sont ceux nés en France de pères et mères étrangers; ceux de la deuxième espèce sont ceux nés de pères et mères Français ou seulement de lun des deux.Chaque épreuve comprenda les deux tours du Champs de Mars.Les courses commenceront par la première épreuve des chevaux de deuxième espèce.La seconde course se fera pour la première épreuve des chevaux de première espèce; suivie de la deuxième épreuve des chevaux de deuxième espème: et elles seront terminées par la deuxième épreuve des chevaux de première espèce. |
Hold! roared the Colonel, half smothered in the embrace, and, disengaging himself, he drew back a few paces, putting his hand on the hilt of his sword, when in the training groom of Paris he recognized his friend the Baron of Newmarket. The abruptness of the incident disarmed Mr. Jorrocks of reflection, and being a man of impulse and warm affections, he at once forgave the novelty of the embrace, and most cordially joined hands with those of his friend. They then struck up a mixture of broken English, and equally broken French, in mutual inquiries after each others healths and movements, and presuming that Mr. Jorrocks was following up the sporting trade in Paris, the Baron most considerately gave him his best recommendations which horse to back, kindly betting with him himself, but, unfortunately, at each time assigning Mr. Jorrocks the losing horse. At length, being completely cleaned out, he declined any further transactions, and having got the Countess into the cab, was in the act of climbing in himself, when some one took him by the sword as he was hoisting himself up by the wooden apron, and drew him back to the ground. Holloa, Stubbs, my boy! cried he, Im werry appy to see ye, holding out his hand, and thereupon Mr. Stubbs took off his hat to the Countess. Well, now, the deuce be in these French, observed Mr. Jorrocks confidentially, in an undertone, as, resigning the reins to Agamemnon, he put his arm through the Yorkshiremans and drew out of hearing of the Countess behind the cabthe deuce be in them, I say. Theres that beggarly Baron as we met at Newmarket, has just diddled me out of four naps and a half, by getting me to back osses that he said were certain to win, and I really dont know how we are to make tongue and buckle meet, as the coachmen say. Somehow or other they are far too sharp for me. Cards, dominoes, dice, backgammon, and racing, all onethey inwariably beat me, and I declare I havent as much pewter as will coach me to Calais. The Yorkshireman, as may be supposed, was not in a condition to offer any great pecuniary assistance; but after a turn or two along the mound, he felt it would be a reproach on his country if he suffered his friend to be done by a Frenchman, and on consideration he thought of a trick that Monsieur would not be up to. Accordingly desiring Mr. Jorrocks to take him to the Baron, and behave with great cordiality, and agree to the proposal he should make, they set off in search of that worthy, who, after some trouble, they discovered in the Cottage of Content, entertaining John Jones and his comrades with an account of the manner in which he had fleeced Monsieur Shorrock. The Yorkshireman met him with the greatest delight, shook hands with him over and over again, and then began talking about racing, pigeon-shooting, and Newmarket, pretended to be full of money and very anxious for the Barons advice in laying it out. On hearing this, the Baron beckoned him to retire, and joining him in the avenue, walked him up and down, while he recommended his backing a horse that was notoriously amiss. The Yorkshireman consented, lost a nap with great good humour, and banteringly told the Baron he thought he could beat the horse on foot. This led them to talk of foot-racing, and at last the Yorkshireman offered to bet that Mr. Jorrocks would run fifty yards with him on his back before the Baron would run a hundred. Upon this the Baron scratched his head and looked very knowing, pretended to make a calculation, when the Yorkshireman affected fear, and professed his readiness to withdraw the offer. The Baron then plucked up his courage, and after some haggling, the match was made for six naps, the Yorkshireman reckoning the Baron might have ten francs in addition to what he had won of Mr. Jorrocks and himself. The money was then deposited in the hands of the Countess Benvolio, and away went the trio to the Cottage of Content, to get men and ropes to measure and keep the ground. The English jockeys and lads, though ready enough to pigeon a countryman themselves, have no notion of assisting a foreigner to do so, unless they share in the spoil, and the Baron being a notorious screw, they all seemed heartily glad to find him in a trap. Out then they all sallied, amid cheers and shouts, while John Jones, with a yard-wand in his hand, proceeded to measure a hundred yards along the low side of the mound. This species of amusement being far more in accordance with the taste of the French than anything in which horses are concerned, an immense mob flocked to the scene, and the Baron having explained how it was, and being considered a safe man to follow, numerous offers were made to bet against the performance of the match. The Yorkshireman, being a youth of discretion and accustomed to bet among strangers, got on five naps more with different parties, who, to prevent accidents, submitted to deposit the money with the Countess, and all things being adjusted, and the course cleared by a picket of infantry, Mr. Jorrocks ungirded his sword and depositing it with his frock-coat in the cab, walked up to the fifty yards he was to have for start. Now, Colonel, said the Yorkshireman, backing him to the mound, so that he might leap on without shaking him, put your best leg first, and its a hollow thing; if you dont fall, you must win,and thereupon taking Mr. Jorrockss cocked hat and feather from his head, he put it sideways on his own, so that he might not be recognized, and mounted his man. Mr. Jorrocks then took his place as directed by John Jones, and at a signal from himthe dropping of a blue cotton handkerchiefaway they started amid the shouts, the clapping of hands, and applause of the spectators, who covered the mound and lined the course on either side. Mr. Jorrockss action was not very capital, his jack-boots and leathers rather impeding his limbs, while the Baron had as little on him as decency would allow. The Yorkshireman feeling his man rather roll at the start, again cautioned him to take it easy, and after a dozen yards he got into a capital run, and though the lanky Baron came tearing along like an ill-fed grey-hound, Mr. Jorrocks had full two yards to spare, and ran past the soldier, who stood with his cap on his bayonet as a winning-post, amid the applause of his backers, the yells of his opponents, and the general acclamation of the spectators.
The Countess, anticipating the victory of her hero, had despatched Agamemnon early in the day for a chaplet of red and yellow immortelles, and having switched the old cab horse up to the winning-post, she gracefully descended, without showing more of her foot and ankle than was strictly correct, and decorated his brow with the wreath, as the Yorkshireman dismounted. Enthusiasm being always the order of the day in France, this act was greeted with the loudest acclamations, and, without giving him time to recover his wind, the populace bundled Mr. Jorrocks neck and shoulders into the cab, and, seizing the old horse by the head, paraded him down the entire length of the Champ de Mars, Mr. Jorrocks bowing and kissing his hands to the assembled multitude, in return for the vivas! the clapping of hands, and the waving of ribbons and handkerchiefs that greeted him as he went.
Popularity is but a fickle goddess, and in no country more fickle than in France. Ere the procession reached the end of the dusty plain, the mob had tailed off very considerably, and as the leader of the old white horse pulled him round to return, a fresh commotion in the distance, caused by the apprehension of a couple of pickpockets, drew away the few followers that remained, and the recently-applauded and belauded Mr. Jorrocks was left alone in his glory. He then pulled up, and taking the chaplet of immortelles from his brow, thrust it under the driving cushion of the cab, and proceeded to reinstate himself in his tight military frock, regird himself with his sword, and resume the cocked hat and feather.
Nothing was too good for Mr. Stubbs at that moment, and, had a pen and ink been ready, Mr. Jorrocks would have endorsed him a bill for any amount. Having completed his toilette, he gave the Yorkshireman the vacant seat in the cab, flopped the old horse well about the ears with the pig-driving whip, and trotted briskly up the line he had recently passed in triumphal procession, and wormed his way among the crowd in search of the Countess. There was nothing, however, to be seen of her, and after driving about, and poking his way on foot into all the crowds he could find, bolting up to every lady in blue, he looked at his great double-cased gold repeater, and finding it was near three oclock and recollecting the fête of St. Cloud, concluded her ladyship must have gone on, and Agamemnon, being anxious to see it, of course was of the same opinion, so again flopping the old horse about the ears, he cut away down the Champ de Mars, and, by the direction of Agamemnon, crossed the Seine by the Pont des Invalides, and gained the route to Versailles.
Here the genius of the people was apparent, for the road swarmed with voitures of every description, diligences, gondoles, co-cous, cabs, fiacres, omnibuses, dame-blanches, all rolling and rumbling along, occasionally interrupted by the lilting and tilting of a light English cab or tilbury, drawn by a thorough-bred, and driven by a dandy. The spirit of the old white horse even seemed roused, as he got among the carriages, and heard the tramping of hoofs and the jingling of bells round the necks of other horses, and he applied himself to the shafts with a vigour his enfeebled-looking frame appeared incapable of supplying. So they trotted on, and after a mile travelling at a foots pace after they got into close line, they reached the porte Maillot, and, resigning the cab to the discretion of Agamemnon, Mr. Jorrocks got himself brushed over by one of the gentry who ply in that profession at all public places, and tucking his sword under one arm, he thrust the other through Mr. Stubbss, and, John-Bull-like, strutted up the long broad grass avenue, through the low part of the wood of St. Cloud, as if all he saw belonged to himself. The scene was splendid, and nature, art, and the weather appeared confederated for effect. On the lofty heights arose the stately palace, looking down with placid grandeur on the full foliage of the venerable trees, over the beautiful gardens, the spouting fountains, the rushing cascades, and the gay and countless myriads that swarmed the avenues, while the circling river flowed calmly on, without a ripple on its surface, as if in ridicule of the sound of trumpets, the clang of cymbals, and the beat of drums that rent the air around.
Along the broad avenue were ranged shows of every descriptionwild beasts, giants, jugglers, tumblers, mountebanks, and monsters, while in spots sheltered from the sun by lofty trees were dancing places, swings, round-abouts, archery-butts, pistol-ranges, ball-kicking, and head-thumping places, montagnes-Suisses, all the concomitants of fairs and fêtesbeating Bartlemy-fair, as Mr. Jorrocks candidly confessed, all to nothing.
The chance of meeting the Countess Benvolio in such a multitude was very remote indeed, but, to tell the truth, Mr. Jorrocks never once thought of her, until having eat a couple of cold fowls and drunk a bottle of porter at an English booth, he felt in his pocket for his purse, and remembered it was in her keeping. Mr. Stubbs, however, settled the account, and in high glee Mr. Jorrocks resumed his peregrinations, visiting first one show, then another, shooting with pea-guns, then dancing a quadrille, until he was brought up short before a splendid green and gold round-about, whose magic circle contained two lions, two swans, two black horses, a tiger, and a giraffe. Lets have a ride, said he, jumping on to one of the black horses, and adjusting the stirrups to his length. The party was soon made up, and as the last comer crossed his tiger, the engine was propelled by the boys in the centre, and away they went at Derby pace. In six rounds Mr. Jorrocks lost his head, turned completely giddy, and bellowed out to them to stop. They took no heedall the rest were used to itand, after divers yells and ineffectual efforts to dismount, he fell to the ground like a sack. The machine was in full work at the time, and swept round three or four times before they could stop it. At last Mr. Stubbs got to him, and a pitiful plight he was in. He had fallen on his head, broken his feather, crushed his chapeau bras, lost his mustachios, was as pale as death, and very sick. Fortunately the accident happened near the gate leading to the town of St. Cloud, and thither, with the aid of two gendarmes, Mr. Stubbs conveyed the fallen hero, and having put him to bed at the Hôtel dAngleterre, he sent for a médecin, who of course shook his head, looked very wise, ordered him to drink warm watera never-failing specific in France and keep quiet. Finding he had an Englishman for a patient, the médecin dropped in every two hours, always concluding with the order encore leau chaud. A good sleep did more for Mr. Jorrocks than the doctor, and when the médecin called in the morning and repeated the injunction encore leau chaud, he bellowed out, Cuss your leau chaud, my stomach arnt a reserwoir! give me some wittles! The return of his appetite being a most favourable symptom, Mr. Stubbs discharged the doctor, and forthwith ordered a déjeuner à la fourchette, to which Mr. Jorrocks did pretty fair justice, though trifling in comparison with his usual performances. They then got into a Versailles diligence that stopped at the door, and, rattling along at a merry pace, very soon reached Paris and the Rue des Mauvais-Garçons.
Come up and see the Countess, said Mr. Jorrocks, as they arrived at the bottom of the dirty flight of stairs, and, with his hands behind his back and his sword dragging at his heels, he poked upstairs, and, opening the outer door, entered the apartment. He passed through the small ante-room, without observing his portmanteau and carpet-bag on the table, and there being no symptoms of the Countess in the next one, he walked forward into the bedroom beyond.
Before an English fireplace that Mr. Jorrocks himself had been at the expense of providing, snugly ensconced in the luxurious depths of a well-cushioned easy-chair sat a monstrous man with a green patch on his right eye, in slippers, loose hose, a dirty grey woollen dressing-gown and black silk nightcap, puffing away at a long meerschaum pipe, with a figure of Bacchus on the bowl. At a sight so unexpected, Mr. Jorrocks started back, but the smoker seemed quite unconcerned, and, casting an unmeaning grey eye at the intruder, puffed a long-drawn respiration from his mouth.
How now! roared Mr. Jorrocks, boiling into a rage, which caused the monster to start upon his legs as though he were galvanized, Vot brings you here?
Sprechen sie Deutsch? responded the smoker, opening his eye a little wider, and taking the pipe from his mouth. Speak English, you fool! bawled Mr. Jorrocks. Sie sind sehr unverschämt (you are very impudent), replied the Dutchman, with a thump on the table. Ill run you through the gizzard! rejoined Mr. Jorrocks, half drawing his sword,skin you alive, in fact! when in rushed the Countess and threw herself between them.
Now, Mynheer Van Rosembom, a burgomaster of Flushing, was an old friend of the Countesss, and an exceedingly good paying one, and having cast up that morning quite unexpectedly by the early diligence from Dunkirk, and the Countess being enraged at Mr. Jorrocks for not sharing the honours of his procession in the cab on the previous day, and believing, moreover, that his treasury was pretty well exhausted, thought she could not do better than instal Rosembom in his place, and retain the stakes she held for the Colonels board and lodging.
This arrangement she kept to herself, simply giving Rosembom, who was a not much better Frenchman than Col. Jorrocks, to understand that the room would be ready for him shortly, and Agamemnon was ordered to bundle Mr. Jorrockss clothes into his portmanteau and bag, and place them in readiness in the ante-room. Rosembom, fatigued with his journey, then retired to enjoy his pipe at his ease, while the Countess went to the Marché St. Honoré to buy some sour crout, roast beef, and prunes for his dinner.
Turn this great slush bucket out of my room! cried Mr. Jorrocks, as the Countess rushed into his apartment. Vots he doing here?
Doucement, mon cher Colonel, said she, clapping him on the back, he sall be my brodder.
Never such a thing! roared Mr. Jorrocks, eyeing him as he spoke. Never such a thing! no more than myselfout with him, I say, or Ill cut my sticktoute suitedirectly!
Avec tout mon cur! replied the Countess, her choler rising as she spoke. Youre another, rejoined Mr. Jorrocks, judging by her manner that she called him something offensiveVous êtes one mauvaise woman! Monsieur, said the Countess, her eyes flashing as she spoke, vous êtes un polisson!von rascal!von dem villain!un charlatan!von nasty bastelyross bif!dem dog, and thereupon she curled her fingers and set her teeth on edge as though she would tear his very eyes out. Rosembom, though he didnt exactly see the merits of the matter, exchanged his pipe for the poker,so what with this, the sword, and the nails, things wore a very belligerent aspect.
Mr. Stubbs, as usual, interposed, and the Countess, still keeping up the semblance of her rage, ordered them to quit her apartment directly, or she would have recourse to her old friends the police. Mr. Stubbs was quite agreeable to go, but hinted that she might as well hand over the stakes that had been entrusted to her keeping on the previous day; upon which she again indulged in a torrent of abuse, swore they were a couple of thieves, and that Mr. Jorrocks owed her far more than the amount for board and lodging. This made the Colonel stare, for on the supposition that he was a visitor, he had been firing away his money in all directions, playing at everything she proposed, buying her bonnets, perigord pies, hiring remises, and committing every species of extravagance, and now to be charged for what he thought was pure friendship, disgusted him beyond expression.
The Countess speedily summoned the porter, the man of letters of the establishment, and with his aid drew Mr. Jorrocks out a bill, which he described as reaching down each side of his body and round his waist, commencing with 2 francs for savon, and then proceeding in the daily routine of café, 1 franc; déjeuner à la fourchette, 5 francs; dîner avec vin, 10 francs; tea, 1 franc; souper, 3 francs; bougies, 2 francs; apartement, 3 francs; running him up a bill of 700 francs; and when Mr. Stubbs remonstrated on the exorbitance of the charges, she replied, It sall be, sare, as small monnae as sall be consistent avec my dignified respectability, you to charge.
There seemed no help for the matter, so Mr. Stubbs paid the balance, while Mr. Jorrocks, shocked at the duplicity of the Countess, the impudence of Rosembom, and the emptiness of his own pockets, bolted away without saying a word.
That very night the Malle-Poste bore them from the capital, with two cold fowls, three-quarters of a yard of bread, and a bottle of porter, for Mr. Jorrocks on the journey; and ere another sun went down, the sandy suburbs of Calais saw them toiling towards her ramparts, and rumbling over the drawbridges and under the portcullis that guard the entrance to her gloomy town. Calais! cold, cheerless, lifeless Calais! Whose soul has ever warmed as it approached thy town? but how many hearts have turned with sickening sorrow from the mirthless tinkling of thy bells!2
Well not stay here long, I guess, said Mr. Jorrocks, as the diligence pulled up at the post-office, and the conducteur requested the passengers to descend. Thats optional, said a bystander, who was waiting for his letters, looking at Mr. Jorrocks with an air as much as to say, What a rum-looking fellow you are! and not without reason, for the Colonel was attired in a blue sailors jacket, white leathers, and jack-boots, with the cocked hat and feather. The speaker was a middle-aged, middle-statured man, with a quick, intelligent eye, dressed in a single-breasted, green riding-coat, striped toilenette waistcoat, and drab trousers, with a whip in his hand. Thank you for nothing! replied Mr. Jorrocks, eyeing him in return, upon which the speaker turned to the clerk, and asked him if there were any letters for Monsieur Apperley or Nimrod. Nimrod! exclaimed Mr. Jorrocks, dropping on his knees as though he were shot, Oh, my vig! what have I done? Oh dear! oh dear! what a dumbfoundererflummoxed, I declare.
Hold up! old un, said Nimrod in astonishment. Why, whats the matter now? you dont owe me anything, I dare say!
Owe you anything! yes, I does, said Mr. Jorrocks, rising from the ground, I owes you a debt of gratitude that I can never wipe offyoull be in the day book and ledger of my memory for ever and a year.
Who are you? inquired Nimrod, becoming more and more puzzled, as he contrasted his dialect with his dress.
Who am I?Why, Im Mr. Jorrocks.
Jorrocks, by Jove! Whod have thought it? I declare I took you for a horse-marine. Give us your hand, old boy. Im proud to make your acquaintance.
Ditto to you, sir, twice repeated. I considers you the werry first man of the age!and thereupon they shook hands with uncommon warmth.
Youve been at Paris, I suppose, resumed Nimrod, after their respective digits were released; were you much gratified with what you saw? What pleased you mostthe Tuileries, Louvre, Garden of Plants, Père la Chaise, Notre Dame, or what?
Why now, to tell you the truth, singular as it may seem, I saw nothing but the Tuileries and Naughty Dame,I may say a werry naughty dame, for she fleeced me uncommonly, scarcely leaving me a dump to carry me home.
What, youve been among the ladies, have you? thats gay for a man at your time of life.
Yes, I certainlie have been among the ladies, Countesses I may saybut, dash my vig, they are a rum set, and made me pay for their acquaintance. The Countess Benwolio certainlie is a bad un.
Oh, the deuce!did that old devil catch you? inquired Nimrod.
Vot, do you know her?
Know her! ayeverybody here knows her with her black boy. Shes always on the road, and lives now by the flats she catches between Paris and the coast. She was an agent for Morrisons Pills,but having a fractious Scotch lodger that she couldnt get out, she physicked him so dreadfully that he nearly died, and the police took her licence away. But you are hungry, Mr. Jorrocks, come to my house and spend the evening, and tell me all about your travels.
Mr. Stubbs objected to this proposition, having just learned that the London packet sailed in an hour, so the trio adjourned to Mr. Roberts Royal Hotel, where over some strong eau-de-vie they cemented their acquaintance, and Mr. Jorrocks, finding that Nimrod was to be in England the following week, insisted upon his naming a day for dining in Great Coram Street.
Permits to embark having been considerately granted gratis3 by the government for a franc apiece, at the hour of ten our travellers stepped on board; and Mr. Jorrocks, having wrapped himself up in his martial cloak, lay down in the cabin, and, like Ulysses in Ithaca, as Nimrod would say, arrived in London asleep.