Chapter XLVI
*
Struggles and Trials
Our friends at Brompton were meanwhile
passing their Christmas after their fashion and in a manner by no
means too cheerful.
Out of the hundred pounds a year, which
was about the amount of her income, the Widow Osborne had been in the
habit of giving up nearly three-fourths to her father and mother, for
the expenses of herself and her little boy. With #120 more, supplied
by Jos, this family of four people, attended by a single Irish
servant who also did for Clapp and his wife, might manage to live in
decent comfort through the year, and hold up their heads yet, and be
able to give a friend a dish of tea still, after the storms and
disappointments of their early life. Sedley still maintained his
ascendency over the family of Mr. Clapp, his ex-clerk. Clapp
remembered the time when, sitting on the edge of the chair, he tossed
off a bumper to the health of "Mrs. S—, Miss Emmy, and Mr.
Joseph in India," at the merchant's rich table in Russell
Square. Time magnified the splendour of those recollections in the
honest clerk's bosom. Whenever he came up from the kitchen-parlour to
the drawing-room and partook of tea or gin- and-water with Mr.
Sedley, he would say, "This was not what you was accustomed to
once, sir," and as gravely and reverentially drink the health of
the ladies as he had done in the days of their utmost prosperity. He
thought Miss 'Melia's playing the divinest music ever performed, and
her the finest lady. He never would sit down before Sedley at the
club even, nor would he have that gentleman's character abused by any
member of the society. He had seen the first men in London shaking
hands with Mr. S—; he said, "He'd known him in times when
Rothschild might be seen on 'Change with him any day, and he owed him
personally everythink."
Clapp, with the best of characters and
handwritings, had been able very soon after his master's disaster to
find other employment for himself. "Such a little fish as me can
swim in any bucket," he used to remark, and a member of the
house from which old Sedley had seceded was very glad to make use of
Mr. Clapp's services and to reward them with a comfortable salary. In
fine, all Sedley's wealthy friends had dropped off one by one, and
this poor ex- dependent still remained faithfully attached to him.
Out of the small residue of her income
which Amelia kept back for herself, the widow had need of all the
thrift and care possible in order to enable her to keep her darling
boy dressed in such a manner as became George Osborne's son, and to
defray the expenses of the little school to which, after much
misgiving and reluctance and many secret pangs and fears on her own
part, she had been induced to send the lad. She had sat up of nights
conning lessons and spelling over crabbed grammars and geography
books in order to teach them to Georgy. She had worked even at the
Latin accidence, fondly hoping that she might be capable of
instructing him in that language. To part with him all day, to send
him out to the mercy of a schoolmaster's cane and his schoolfellows'
roughness, was almost like weaning him over again to that weak
mother, so tremulous and full of sensibility. He, for his part,
rushed off to the school with the utmost happiness. He was longing
for the change. That childish gladness wounded his mother, who was
herself so grieved to part with him. She would rather have had him
more sorry, she thought, and then was deeply repentant within herself
for daring to be so selfish as to wish her own son to be unhappy.
Georgy made great progress in the
school, which was kept by a friend of his mother's constant admirer,
the Rev. Mr. Binny. He brought home numberless prizes and
testimonials of ability. He told his mother countless stories every
night about his school-companions: and what a fine fellow Lyons was,
and what a sneak Sniffin was, and how Steel's father actually
supplied the meat for the establishment, whereas Golding's mother
came in a carriage to fetch him every Saturday, and how Neat had
straps to his trowsers—might he have straps?—and how Bull Major
was so strong (though only in Eutropius) that it was believed he
could lick the Usher, Mr. Ward, himself. So Amelia learned to know
every one of the boys in that school as well as Georgy himself, and
of nights she used to help him in his exercises and puzzle her little
head over his lessons as eagerly as if she was herself going in the
morning into the presence of the master. Once, after a certain combat
with Master Smith, George came home to his mother with a black eye,
and bragged prodigiously to his parent and his delighted old
grandfather about his valour in the fight, in which, if the truth was
known he did not behave with particular heroism, and in which he
decidedly had the worst. But Amelia has never forgiven that Smith to
this day, though he is now a peaceful apothecary near Leicester
Square.
In these quiet labours and harmless
cares the gentle widow's life was passing away, a silver hair or two
marking the progress of time on her head and a line deepening ever so
little on her fair forehead. She used to smile at these marks of
time. "What matters it," she asked, "For an old woman
like me?" All she hoped for was to live to see her son great,
famous, and glorious, as he deserved to be. She kept his copy-books,
his drawings, and compositions, and showed them about in her little
circle as if they were miracles of genius. She confided some of these
specimens to Miss Dobbin, to show them to Miss Osborne, George's
aunt, to show them to Mr. Osborne himself—to make that old man
repent of his cruelty and ill feeling towards him who was gone. All
her husband's faults and foibles she had buried in the grave with
him: she only remembered the lover, who had married her at all
sacrifices, the noble husband, so brave and beautiful, in whose arms
she had hung on the morning when he had gone away to fight, and die
gloriously for his king. From heaven the hero must be smiling down
upon that paragon of a boy whom he had left to comfort and console
her. We have seen how one of George's grandfathers (Mr. Osborne), in
his easy chair in Russell Square, daily grew more violent and moody,
and how his daughter, with her fine carriage, and her fine horses,
and her name on half the public charity-lists of the town, was a
lonely, miserable, persecuted old maid. She thought again and again
of the beautiful little boy, her brother's son, whom she had seen.
She longed to be allowed to drive in the fine carriage to the house
in which he lived, and she used to look out day after day as she took
her solitary drive in the park, in hopes that she might see him. Her
sister, the banker's lady, occasionally condescended to pay her old
home and companion a visit in Russell Square. She brought a couple of
sickly children attended by a prim nurse, and in a faint genteel
giggling tone cackled to her sister about her fine acquaintance, and
how her little Frederick was the image of Lord Claud Lollypop and her
sweet Maria had been noticed by the Baroness as they were driving in
their donkey-chaise at Roehampton. She urged her to make her papa do
something for the darlings. Frederick she had determined should go
into the Guards; and if they made an elder son of him (and Mr.
Bullock was positively ruining and pinching himself to death to buy
land), how was the darling girl to be provided for? "I expect
YOU, dear," Mrs. Bullock would say, "for of course my share
of our Papa's property must go to the head of the house, you know.
Dear Rhoda McMull will disengage the whole of the Castletoddy
property as soon as poor dear Lord Castletoddy dies, who is quite
epileptic; and little Macduff McMull will be Viscount Castletoddy.
Both the Mr. Bludyers of Mincing Lane have settled their fortunes on
Fanny Bludyer's little boy. My darling Frederick must positively be
an eldest son; and—and do ask Papa to bring us back his account in
Lombard Street, will you, dear? It doesn't look well, his going to
Stumpy and Rowdy's." After which kind of speeches, in which
fashion and the main chance were blended together, and after a kiss,
which was like the contact of an oyster—Mrs. Frederick Bullock
would gather her starched nurslings and simper back into her
carriage.
Every visit which this leader of ton
paid to her family was more unlucky for her. Her father paid more
money into Stumpy and Rowdy's. Her patronage became more and more
insufferable. The poor widow in the little cottage at Brompton,
guarding her treasure there, little knew how eagerly some people
coveted it.
On that night when Jane Osborne had
told her father that she had seen his grandson, the old man had made
her no reply, but he had shown no anger—and had bade her good-night
on going himself to his room in rather a kindly voice. And he must
have meditated on what she said and have made some inquiries of the
Dobbin family regarding her visit, for a fortnight after it took
place, he asked her where was her little French watch and chain she
used to wear?
"I bought it with my money, sir,"
she said in a great fright.
"Go and order another like it, or
a better if you can get it," said the old gentleman and lapsed
again into silence.
Of late the Misses Dobbin more than
once repeated their entreaties to Amelia, to allow George to visit
them. His aunt had shown her inclination; perhaps his grandfather
himself, they hinted, might be disposed to be reconciled to him.
Surely, Amelia could not refuse such advantageous chances for the
boy. Nor could she, but she acceded to their overtures with a very
heavy and suspicious heart, was always uneasy during the child's
absence from her, and welcomed him back as if he was rescued out of
some danger. He brought back money and toys, at which the widow
looked with alarm and jealousy; she asked him always if he had seen
any gentleman—"Only old Sir William, who drove him about in
the four-wheeled chaise, and Mr. Dobbin, who arrived on the beautiful
bay horse in the afternoon—in the green coat and pink neck-cloth,
with the gold-headed whip, who promised to show him the Tower of
London and take him out with the Surrey hounds." At last, he
said, "There was an old gentleman, with thick eyebrows, and a
broad hat, and large chain and seals." He came one day as the
coachman was lunging Georgy round the lawn on the gray pony. "He
looked at me very much. He shook very much. I said 'My name is
Norval' after dinner. My aunt began to cry. She is always crying."
Such was George's report on that night.
Then Amelia knew that the boy had seen
his grandfather; and looked out feverishly for a proposal which she
was sure would follow, and which came, in fact, in a few days
afterwards. Mr. Osborne formally offered to take the boy and make him
heir to the fortune which he had intended that his father should
inherit. He would make Mrs. George Osborne an allowance, such as to
assure her a decent competency. If Mrs. George Osborne proposed to
marry again, as Mr. O. heard was her intention, he would not withdraw
that allowance. But it must be understood that the child would live
entirely with his grandfather in Russell Square, or at whatever other
place Mr. O. should select, and that he would be occasionally
permitted to see Mrs. George Osborne at her own residence. This
message was brought or read to her in a letter one day, when her
mother was from home and her father absent as usual in the City.
She was never seen angry but twice or
thrice in her life, and it was in one of these moods that Mr.
Osborne's attorney had the fortune to behold her. She rose up
trembling and flushing very much as soon as, after reading the
letter, Mr. Poe handed it to her, and she tore the paper into a
hundred fragments, which she trod on. "I marry again! I take
money to part from my child! Who dares insult me by proposing such a
thing? Tell Mr. Osborne it is a cowardly letter, sir—a cowardly
letter—I will not answer it. I wish you good morning, sir—and she
bowed me out of the room like a tragedy Queen," said the lawyer
who told the story.
Her parents never remarked her
agitation on that day, and she never told them of the interview. They
had their own affairs to interest them, affairs which deeply
interested this innocent and unconscious lady. The old gentleman, her
father, was always dabbling in speculation. We have seen how the wine
company and the coal company had failed him. But, prowling about the
City always eagerly and restlessly still, he lighted upon some other
scheme, of which he thought so well that he embarked in it in spite
of the remonstrances of Mr. Clapp, to whom indeed he never dared to
tell how far he had engaged himself in it. And as it was always Mr.
Sedley's maxim not to talk about money matters before women, they had
no inkling of the misfortunes that were in store for them until the
unhappy old gentleman was forced to make gradual confessions.
The bills of the little household,
which had been settled weekly, first fell into arrear. The
remittances had not arrived from India, Mr. Sedley told his wife with
a disturbed face. As she had paid her bills very regularly hitherto,
one or two of the tradesmen to whom the poor lady was obliged to go
round asking for time were very angry at a delay to which they were
perfectly used from more irregular customers. Emmy's contribution,
paid over cheerfully without any questions, kept the little company
in half-rations however. And the first six months passed away pretty
easily, old Sedley still keeping up with the notion that his shares
must rise and that all would be well.
No sixty pounds, however, came to help
the household at the end of the half year, and it fell deeper and
deeper into trouble—Mrs. Sedley, who was growing infirm and was
much shaken, remained silent or wept a great deal with Mrs. Clapp in
the kitchen. The butcher was particularly surly, the grocer insolent:
once or twice little Georgy had grumbled about the dinners, and
Amelia, who still would have been satisfied with a slice of bread for
her own dinner, could not but perceive that her son was neglected and
purchased little things out of her private purse to keep the boy in
health.
At last they told her, or told her such
a garbled story as people in difficulties tell. One day, her own
money having been received, and Amelia about to pay it over, she, who
had kept an account of the moneys expended by her, proposed to keep a
certain portion back out of her dividend, having contracted
engagements for a new suit for Georgy.
Then it came out that Jos's remittances
were not paid, that the house was in difficulties, which Amelia ought
to have seen before, her mother said, but she cared for nothing or
nobody except Georgy. At this she passed all her money across the
table, without a word, to her mother, and returned to her room to cry
her eyes out. She had a great access of sensibility too that day,
when obliged to go and countermand the clothes, the darling clothes
on which she had set her heart for Christmas Day, and the cut and
fashion of which she had arranged in many conversations with a small
milliner, her friend.
Hardest of all, she had to break the
matter to Georgy, who made a loud outcry. Everybody had new clothes
at Christmas. The others would laugh at him. He would have new
clothes. She had promised them to him. The poor widow had only kisses
to give him. She darned the old suit in tears. She cast about among
her little ornaments to see if she could sell anything to procure the
desired novelties. There was her India shawl that Dobbin had sent
her. She remembered in former days going with her mother to a fine
India shop on Ludgate Hill, where the ladies had all sorts of
dealings and bargains in these articles. Her cheeks flushed and her
eyes shone with pleasure as she thought of this resource, and she
kissed away George to school in the morning, smiling brightly after
him. The boy felt that there was good news in her look.
Packing up her shawl in a handkerchief
(another of the gifts of the good Major), she hid them under her
cloak and walked flushed and eager all the way to Ludgate Hill,
tripping along by the park wall and running over the crossings, so
that many a man turned as she hurried by him and looked after her
rosy pretty face. She calculated how she should spend the proceeds of
her shawl—how, besides the clothes, she would buy the books that he
longed for, and pay his half-year's schooling; and how she would buy
a cloak for her father instead of that old great-coat which he wore.
She was not mistaken as to the value of the Major's gift. It was a
very fine and beautiful web, and the merchant made a very good
bargain when he gave her twenty guineas for her shawl.
She ran on amazed and flurried with her
riches to Darton's shop, in St. Paul's Churchyard, and there
purchased the Parents' Assistant and the Sandford and Merton Georgy
longed for, and got into the coach there with her parcel, and went
home exulting. And she pleased herself by writing in the fly-leaf in
her neatest little hand, "George Osborne, A Christmas gift from
his affectionate- mother." The books are extant to this day,
with the fair delicate superscription.
She was going from her own room with
the books in her hand to place them on George's table, where he might
find them on his return from school, when in the passage, she and her
mother met. The gilt bindings of the seven handsome little volumes
caught the old lady's eye.
"What are those?" she said.
"Some books for Georgy,"
Amelia replied—I—I promised them to him at Christmas."
"Books!" cried the elder lady
indignantly, "Books, when the whole house wants bread! Books,
when to keep you and your son in luxury, and your dear father out of
gaol, I've sold every trinket I had, the India shawl from my back
even down to the very spoons, that our tradesmen mightn't insult us,
and that Mr. Clapp, which indeed he is justly entitled, being not a
hard landlord, and a civil man, and a father, might have his rent.
Oh, Amelia! you break my heart with your books and that boy of yours,
whom you are ruining, though part with him you will not. Oh, Amelia,
may God send you a more dutiful child than I have had! There's Jos,
deserts his father in his old age; and there's George, who might be
provided for, and who might be rich, going to school like a lord,
with a gold watch and chain round his neck—while my dear, dear old
man is without a sh—shilling." Hysteric sobs and cries ended
Mrs. Sedley's speech—it echoed through every room in the small
house, whereof the other female inmates heard every word of the
colloquy.
"Oh, Mother, Mother!" cried
poor Amelia in reply. "You told me nothing—I—I promised him
the books. I—I only sold my shawl this morning. Take the money—take
everything"—and with quivering hands she took out her silver,
and her sovereigns—her precious golden sovereigns, which she thrust
into the hands of her mother, whence they overflowed and tumbled,
rolling down the stairs.
And then she went into her room, and
sank down in despair and utter misery. She saw it all now. Her
selfishness was sacrificing the boy. But for her he might have
wealth, station, education, and his father's place, which the elder
George had forfeited for her sake. She had but to speak the words,
and her father was restored to competency and the boy raised to
fortune. Oh, what a conviction it was to that tender and stricken
heart!
Chapter XLVII
*
Gaunt House
All the world knows that Lord Steyne's
town palace stands in Gaunt Square, out of which Great Gaunt Street
leads, whither we first conducted Rebecca, in the time of the
departed Sir Pitt Crawley. Peering over the railings and through the
black trees into the garden of the Square, you see a few miserable
governesses with wan- faced pupils wandering round and round it, and
round the dreary grass-plot in the centre of which rises the statue
of Lord Gaunt, who fought at Minden, in a three-tailed wig, and
otherwise habited like a Roman Emperor. Gaunt House occupies nearly a
side of the Square. The remaining three sides are composed of
mansions that have passed away into dowagerism—tall, dark houses,
with window-frames of stone, or picked out of a lighter red. Little
light seems to be behind those lean, comfortless casements now, and
hospitality to have passed away from those doors as much as the laced
lacqueys and link-boys of old times, who used to put out their
torches in the blank iron extinguishers that still flank the lamps
over the steps. Brass plates have penetrated into the square—Doctors,
the Diddlesex Bank Western Branch—the English and European Reunion,
&c.—it has a dreary look—nor is my Lord Steyne's palace less
dreary. All I have ever seen of it is the vast wall in front, with
the rustic columns at the great gate, through which an old porter
peers sometimes with a fat and gloomy red face—and over the wall
the garret and bedroom windows, and the chimneys, out of which there
seldom comes any smoke now. For the present Lord Steyne lives at
Naples, preferring the view of the Bay and Capri and Vesuvius to the
dreary aspect of the wall in Gaunt Square.
A few score yards down New Gaunt
Street, and leading into Gaunt Mews indeed, is a little modest back
door, which you would not remark from that of any of the other
stables. But many a little close carriage has stopped at that door,
as my informant (little Tom Eaves, who knows everything, and who
showed me the place) told me. "The Prince and Perdita have been
in and out of that door, sir," he had often told me; "Marianne
Clarke has entered it with the Duke of ——. It conducts to the
famous petits appartements of Lord Steyne —one, sir, fitted up all
in ivory and white satin, another in ebony and black velvet; there is
a little banqueting-room taken from Sallust's house at Pompeii, and
painted by Cosway—a little private kitchen, in which every saucepan
was silver and all the spits were gold. It was there that Egalite
Orleans roasted partridges on the night when he and the Marquis of
Steyne won a hundred thousand from a great personage at ombre. Half
of the money went to the French Revolution, half to purchase Lord
Gaunt's Marquisate and Garter—and the remainder—" but it
forms no part of our scheme to tell what became of the remainder, for
every shilling of which, and a great deal more, little Tom Eaves, who
knows everybody's affairs, is ready to account.
Besides his town palace, the Marquis
had castles and palaces in various quarters of the three kingdoms,
whereof the descriptions may be found in the road-books—Castle
Strongbow, with its woods, on the Shannon shore; Gaunt Castle, in
Carmarthenshire, where Richard II was taken prisoner—Gauntly Hall
in Yorkshire, where I have been informed there were two hundred
silver teapots for the breakfasts of the guests of the house, with
everything to correspond in splendour; and Stillbrook in Hampshire,
which was my lord's farm, an humble place of residence, of which we
all remember the wonderful furniture which was sold at my lord's
demise by a late celebrated auctioneer.
The Marchioness of Steyne was of the
renowned and ancient family of the Caerlyons, Marquises of Camelot,
who have preserved the old faith ever since the conversion of the
venerable Druid, their first ancestor, and whose pedigree goes far
beyond the date of the arrival of King Brute in these islands.
Pendragon is the title of the eldest son of the house. The sons have
been called Arthurs, Uthers, and Caradocs, from immemorial time.
Their heads have fallen in many a loyal conspiracy. Elizabeth chopped
off the head of the Arthur of her day, who had been Chamberlain to
Philip and Mary, and carried letters between the Queen of Scots and
her uncles the Guises. A cadet of the house was an officer of the
great Duke and distinguished in the famous Saint Bartholomew
conspiracy. During the whole of Mary's confinement, the house of
Camelot conspired in her behalf. It was as much injured by its
charges in fitting out an armament against the Spaniards, during the
time of the Armada, as by the fines and confiscations levied on it by
Elizabeth for harbouring of priests, obstinate recusancy, and popish
misdoings. A recreant of James's time was momentarily perverted from
his religion by the arguments of that great theologian, and the
fortunes of the family somewhat restored by his timely weakness. But
the Earl of Camelot, of the reign of Charles, returned to the old
creed of his family, and they continued to fight for it, and ruin
themselves for it, as long as there was a Stuart left to head or to
instigate a rebellion.
Lady Mary Caerlyon was brought up at a
Parisian convent; the Dauphiness Marie Antoinette was her godmother.
In the pride of her beauty she had been married—sold, it was
said—to Lord Gaunt, then at Paris, who won vast sums from the
lady's brother at some of Philip of Orleans's banquets. The Earl of
Gaunt's famous duel with the Count de la Marche, of the Grey
Musqueteers, was attributed by common report to the pretensions of
that officer (who had been a page, and remained a favourite of the
Queen) to the hand of the beautiful Lady Mary Caerlyon. She was
married to Lord Gaunt while the Count lay ill of his wound, and came
to dwell at Gaunt House, and to figure for a short time in the
splendid Court of the Prince of Wales. Fox had toasted her. Morris
and Sheridan had written songs about her. Malmesbury had made her his
best bow; Walpole had pronounced her charming; Devonshire had been
almost jealous of her; but she was scared by the wild pleasures and
gaieties of the society into which she was flung, and after she had
borne a couple of sons, shrank away into a life of devout seclusion.
No wonder that my Lord Steyne, who liked pleasure and cheerfulness,
was not often seen after their marriage by the side of this
trembling, silent, superstitious, unhappy lady.
The before-mentioned Tom Eaves (who has
no part in this history, except that he knew all the great folks in
London, and the stories and mysteries of each family) had further
information regarding my Lady Steyne, which may or may not be true.
"The humiliations," Tom used to say, "which that woman
has been made to undergo, in her own house, have been frightful; Lord
Steyne has made her sit down to table with women with whom I would
rather die than allow Mrs. Eaves to associate—with Lady
Crackenbury, with Mrs. Chippenham, with Madame de la Cruchecassee,
the French secretary's wife (from every one of which ladies Tom
Eaves—who would have sacrificed his wife for knowing them—was too
glad to get a bow or a dinner) with the REIGNING FAVOURITE in a word.
And do you suppose that that woman, of that family, who are as proud
as the Bourbons, and to whom the Steynes are but lackeys, mushrooms
of yesterday (for after all, they are not of the Old Gaunts, but of a
minor and doubtful branch of the house); do you suppose, I say (the
reader must bear in mind that it is always Tom Eaves who speaks) that
the Marchioness of Steyne, the haughtiest woman in England, would
bend down to her husband so submissively if there were not some
cause? Pooh! I tell you there are secret reasons. I tell you that, in
the emigration, the Abbe de la Marche who was here and was employed
in the Quiberoon business with Puisaye and Tinteniac, was the same
Colonel of Mousquetaires Gris with whom Steyne fought in the year
'86—that he and the Marchioness met again—that it was after the
Reverend Colonel was shot in Brittany that Lady Steyne took to those
extreme practices of devotion which she carries on now; for she is
closeted with her director every day—she is at service at Spanish
Place, every morning, I've watched her there—that is, I've happened
to be passing there—and depend on it, there's a mystery in her
case. People are not so unhappy unless they have something to repent
of," added Tom Eaves with a knowing wag of his head; "and
depend on it, that woman would not be so submissive as she is if the
Marquis had not some sword to hold over her."
So, if Mr. Eaves's information be
correct, it is very likely that this lady, in her high station, had
to submit to many a private indignity and to hide many secret griefs
under a calm face. And let us, my brethren who have not our names in
the Red Book, console ourselves by thinking comfortably how miserable
our betters may be, and that Damocles, who sits on satin cushions and
is served on gold plate, has an awful sword hanging over his head in
the shape of a bailiff, or an hereditary disease, or a family secret,
which peeps out every now and then from the embroidered arras in a
ghastly manner, and will be sure to drop one day or the other in the
right place.
In comparing, too, the poor man's
situation with that of the great, there is (always according to Mr.
Eaves) another source of comfort for the former. You who have little
or no patrimony to bequeath or to inherit, may be on good terms with
your father or your son, whereas the heir of a great prince, such as
my Lord Steyne, must naturally be angry at being kept out of his
kingdom, and eye the occupant of it with no very agreeable glances.
"Take it as a rule," this sardonic old Laves would say,
"the fathers and elder sons of all great families hate each
other. The Crown Prince is always in opposition to the crown or
hankering after it. Shakespeare knew the world, my good sir, and when
he describes Prince Hal (from whose family the Gaunts pretend to be
descended, though they are no more related to John of Gaunt than you
are) trying on his father's coronet, he gives you a natural
description of all heirs apparent. If you were heir to a dukedom and
a thousand pounds a day, do you mean to say you would not wish for
possession? Pooh! And it stands to reason that every great man,
having experienced this feeling towards his father, must be aware
that his son entertains it towards himself; and so they can't but be
suspicious and hostile.
"Then again, as to the feeling of
elder towards younger sons. My dear sir, you ought to know that every
elder brother looks upon the cadets of the house as his natural
enemies, who deprive him of so much ready money which ought to be his
by right. I have often heard George Mac Turk, Lord Bajazet's eldest
son, say that if he had his will when he came to the title, he would
do what the sultans do, and clear the estate by chopping off all his
younger brothers' heads at once; and so the case is, more or less,
with them all. I tell you they are all Turks in their hearts. Pooh!
sir, they know the world." And here, haply, a great man coming
up, Tom Eaves's hat would drop off his head, and he would rush
forward with a bow and a grin, which showed that he knew the world
too—in the Tomeavesian way, that is. And having laid out every
shilling of his fortune on an annuity, Tom could afford to bear no
malice to his nephews and nieces, and to have no other feeling with
regard to his betters but a constant and generous desire to dine with
them.
Between the Marchioness and the natural
and tender regard of mother for children, there was that cruel
barrier placed of difference of faith. The very love which she might
feel for her sons only served to render the timid and pious lady more
fearful and unhappy. The gulf which separated them was fatal and
impassable. She could not stretch her weak arms across it, or draw
her children over to that side away from which her belief told her
there was no safety. During the youth of his sons, Lord Steyne, who
was a good scholar and amateur casuist, had no better sport in the
evening after dinner in the country than in setting the boys' tutor,
the Reverend Mr. Trail (now my Lord Bishop of Ealing) on her
ladyship's director, Father Mole, over their wine, and in pitting
Oxford against St. Acheul. He cried "Bravo, Latimer! Well said,
Loyola!" alternately; he promised Mole a bishopric if he would
come over, and vowed he would use all his influence to get Trail a
cardinal's hat if he would secede. Neither divine allowed himself to
be conquered, and though the fond mother hoped that her youngest and
favourite son would be reconciled to her church—his mother church—a
sad and awful disappointment awaited the devout lady—a
disappointment which seemed to be a judgement upon her for the sin of
her marriage.
My Lord Gaunt married, as every person
who frequents the Peerage knows, the Lady Blanche Thistlewood, a
daughter of the noble house of Bareacres, before mentioned in this
veracious history. A wing of Gaunt House was assigned to this couple;
for the head of the family chose to govern it, and while he reigned
to reign supreme; his son and heir, however, living little at home,
disagreeing with his wife, and borrowing upon post-obits such moneys
as he required beyond the very moderate sums which his father was
disposed to allow him. The Marquis knew every shilling of his son's
debts. At his lamented demise, he was found himself to be possessor
of many of his heir's bonds, purchased for their benefit, and devised
by his Lordship to the children of his younger son.
As, to my Lord Gaunt's dismay, and the
chuckling delight of his natural enemy and father, the Lady Gaunt had
no children—the Lord George Gaunt was desired to return from
Vienna, where he was engaged in waltzing and diplomacy, and to
contract a matrimonial alliance with the Honourable Joan, only
daughter of John Johnes, First Baron Helvellyn, and head of the firm
of Jones, Brown, and Robinson, of Threadneedle Street, Bankers; from
which union sprang several sons and daughters, whose doings do not
appertain to this story.
The marriage at first was a happy and
prosperous one. My Lord George Gaunt could not only read, but write
pretty correctly. He spoke French with considerable fluency; and was
one of the finest waltzers in Europe. With these talents, and his
interest at home, there was little doubt that his lordship would rise
to the highest dignities in his profession. The lady, his wife, felt
that courts were her sphere, and her wealth enabled her to receive
splendidly in those continental towns whither her husband's
diplomatic duties led him. There was talk of appointing him minister,
and bets were laid at the Travellers' that he would be ambassador ere
long, when of a sudden, rumours arrived of the secretary's
extraordinary behaviour. At a grand diplomatic dinner given by his
chief, he had started up and declared that a pate de foie gras was
poisoned. He went to a ball at the hotel of the Bavarian envoy, the
Count de Springbock- Hohenlaufen, with his head shaved and dressed as
a Capuchin friar. It was not a masked ball, as some folks wanted to
persuade you. It was something queer, people whispered. His
grandfather was so. It was in the family.
His wife and family returned to this
country and took up their abode at Gaunt House. Lord George gave up
his post on the European continent, and was gazetted to Brazil. But
people knew better; he never returned from that Brazil
expedition—never died there—never lived there—never was there
at all. He was nowhere; he was gone out altogether. "Brazil,"
said one gossip to another, with a grin— "Brazil is St. John's
Wood. Rio de Janeiro is a cottage surrounded by four walls, and
George Gaunt is accredited to a keeper, who has invested him with the
order of the Strait-Waistcoat." These are the kinds of epitaphs
which men pass over one another in Vanity Fair.
Twice or thrice in a week, in the
earliest morning, the poor mother went for her sins and saw the poor
invalid. Sometimes he laughed at her (and his laughter was more
pitiful than to hear him cry); sometimes she found the brilliant
dandy diplomatist of the Congress of Vienna dragging about a child's
toy, or nursing the keeper's baby's doll. Sometimes he knew her and
Father Mole, her director and companion; oftener he forgot her, as he
had done wife, children, love, ambition, vanity. But he remembered
his dinner-hour, and used to cry if his wine-and-water was not strong
enough.
It was the mysterious taint of the
blood; the poor mother had brought it from her own ancient race. The
evil had broken out once or twice in the father's family, long before
Lady Steyne's sins had begun, or her fasts and tears and penances had
been offered in their expiation. The pride of the race was struck
down as the first-born of Pharaoh. The dark mark of fate and doom was
on the threshold— the tall old threshold surmounted by coronets and
caned heraldry.
The absent lord's children meanwhile
prattled and grew on quite unconscious that the doom was over them
too. First they talked of their father and devised plans against his
return. Then the name of the living dead man was less frequently in
their mouth—then not mentioned at all. But the stricken old
grandmother trembled to think that these too were the inheritors of
their father's shame as well as of his honours, and watched sickening
for the day when the awful ancestral curse should come down on them.
This dark presentiment also haunted
Lord Steyne. He tried to lay the horrid bedside ghost in Red Seas of
wine and jollity, and lost sight of it sometimes in the crowd and
rout of his pleasures. But it always came back to him when alone, and
seemed to grow more threatening with years. "I have taken your
son," it said, "why not you? I may shut you up in a prison
some day like your son George. I may tap you on the head to-morrow,
and away go pleasure and honours, feasts and beauty, friends,
flatterers, French cooks, fine horses and houses—in exchange for a
prison, a keeper, and a straw mattress like George Gaunt's." And
then my lord would defy the ghost which threatened him, for he knew
of a remedy by which he could baulk his enemy.
So there was splendour and wealth, but
no great happiness perchance, behind the tall caned portals of Gaunt
House with its smoky coronets and ciphers. The feasts there were of
the grandest in London, but there was not overmuch content therewith,
except among the guests who sat at my lord's table. Had he not been
so great a Prince very few possibly would have visited him; but in
Vanity Fair the sins of very great personages are looked at
indulgently. "Nous regardons a deux fois" (as the French
lady said) before we condemn a person of my lord's undoubted quality.
Some notorious carpers and squeamish moralists might be sulky with
Lord Steyne, but they were glad enough to come when he asked them.
"Lord Steyne is really too bad,"
Lady Slingstone said, "but everybody goes, and of course I shall
see that my girls come to no harm." "His lordship is a man
to whom I owe much, everything in life," said the Right Reverend
Doctor Trail, thinking that the Archbishop was rather shaky, and Mrs.
Trail and the young ladies would as soon have missed going to church
as to one of his lordship's parties. "His morals are bad,"
said little Lord Southdown to his sister, who meekly expostulated,
having heard terrific legends from her mamma with respect to the
doings at Gaunt House; "but hang it, he's got the best dry
Sillery in Europe!" And as for Sir Pitt Crawley, Bart.—Sir
Pitt that pattern of decorum, Sir Pitt who had led off at missionary
meetings—he never for one moment thought of not going too. "Where
you see such persons as the Bishop of Ealing and the Countess of
Slingstone, you may be pretty sure, Jane," the Baronet would
say, "that we cannot be wrong. The great rank and station of
Lord Steyne put him in a position to command people in our station in
life. The Lord Lieutenant of a County, my dear, is a respectable man.
Besides, George Gaunt and I were intimate in early life; he was my
junior when we were attaches at Pumpernickel together."
In a word everybody went to wait upon
this great man—everybody who was asked, as you the reader (do not
say nay) or I the writer hereof would go if we had an invitation.
Chapter XLVIII
*
In Which the Reader Is Introduced to
the Very Best of Company
At last Becky's kindness and attention
to the chief of her husband's family were destined to meet with an
exceeding great reward, a reward which, though certainly somewhat
unsubstantial, the little woman coveted with greater eagerness than
more positive benefits. If she did not wish to lead a virtuous life,
at least she desired to enjoy a character for virtue, and we know
that no lady in the genteel world can possess this desideratum, until
she has put on a train and feathers and has been presented to her
Sovereign at Court. From that august interview they come out stamped
as honest women. The Lord Chamberlain gives them a certificate of
virtue. And as dubious goods or letters are passed through an oven at
quarantine, sprinkled with aromatic vinegar, and then pronounced
clean, many a lady, whose reputation would be doubtful otherwise and
liable to give infection, passes through the wholesome ordeal of the
Royal presence and issues from it free from all taint.
It might be very well for my Lady
Bareacres, my Lady Tufto, Mrs. Bute Crawley in the country, and other
ladies who had come into contact with Mrs. Rawdon Crawley to cry fie
at the idea of the odious little adventuress making her curtsey
before the Sovereign, and to declare that, if dear good Queen
Charlotte had been alive, she never would have admitted such an
extremely ill-regulated personage into her chaste drawing-room. But
when we consider that it was the First Gentleman in Europe in whose
high presence Mrs. Rawdon passed her examination, and as it were,
took her degree in reputation, it surely must be flat disloyalty to
doubt any more about her virtue. I, for my part, look back with love
and awe to that Great Character in history. Ah, what a high and noble
appreciation of Gentlewomanhood there must have been in Vanity Fair,
when that revered and august being was invested, by the universal
acclaim of the refined and educated portion of this empire, with the
title of Premier Gentilhomme of his Kingdom. Do you remember, dear
M—, oh friend of my youth, how one blissful night five-and-twenty
years since, the "Hypocrite" being acted, Elliston being
manager, Dowton and Liston performers, two boys had leave from their
loyal masters to go out from Slaughter-House School where they were
educated and to appear on Drury Lane stage, amongst a crowd which
assembled there to greet the king. THE KING? There he was. Beefeaters
were before the august box; the Marquis of Steyne (Lord of the Powder
Closet) and other great officers of state were behind the chair on
which he sat, HE sat—florid of face, portly of person, covered with
orders, and in a rich curling head of hair—how we sang God save
him! How the house rocked and shouted with that magnificent music.
How they cheered, and cried, and waved handkerchiefs. Ladies wept;
mothers clasped their children; some fainted with emotion. People
were suffocated in the pit, shrieks and groans rising up amidst the
writhing and shouting mass there of his people who were, and indeed
showed themselves almost to be, ready to die for him. Yes, we saw
him. Fate cannot deprive us of THAT. Others have seen Napoleon. Some
few still exist who have beheld Frederick the Great, Doctor Johnson,
Marie Antoinette, &c.— be it our reasonable boast to our
children, that we saw George the Good, the Magnificent, the Great.
Well, there came a happy day in Mrs.
Rawdon Crawley's existence when this angel was admitted into the
paradise of a Court which she coveted, her sister-in-law acting as
her godmother. On the appointed day, Sir Pitt and his lady, in their
great family carriage (just newly built, and ready for the Baronet's
assumption of the office of High Sheriff of his county), drove up to
the little house in Curzon Street, to the edification of Raggles, who
was watching from his greengrocer's shop, and saw fine plumes within,
and enormous bunches of flowers in the breasts of the new
livery-coats of the footmen.
Sir Pitt, in a glittering uniform,
descended and went into Curzon Street, his sword between his legs.
Little Rawdon stood with his face against the parlour window-panes,
smiling and nodding with all his might to his aunt in the carriage
within; and presently Sir Pitt issued forth from the house again,
leading forth a lady with grand feathers, covered in a white shawl,
and holding up daintily a train of magnificent brocade. She stepped
into the vehicle as if she were a princess and accustomed all her
life to go to Court, smiling graciously on the footman at the door
and on Sir Pitt, who followed her into the carriage.
Then Rawdon followed in his old Guards'
uniform, which had grown woefully shabby, and was much too tight. He
was to have followed the procession and waited upon his sovereign in
a cab, but that his good-natured sister-in-law insisted that they
should be a family party. The coach was large, the ladies not very
big, they would hold their trains in their laps—finally, the four
went fraternally together, and their carriage presently joined the
line of royal equipages which was making its way down Piccadilly and
St. James's Street, towards the old brick palace where the Star of
Brunswick was in waiting to receive his nobles and gentlefolks.
Becky felt as if she could bless the
people out of the carriage windows, so elated was she in spirit, and
so strong a sense had she of the dignified position which she had at
last attained in life. Even our Becky had her weaknesses, and as one
often sees how men pride themselves upon excellences which others are
slow to perceive: how, for instance, Comus firmly believes that he is
the greatest tragic actor in England; how Brown, the famous novelist,
longs to be considered, not a man of genius, but a man of fashion;
while Robinson, the great lawyer, does not in the least care about
his reputation in Westminster Hall, but believes himself incomparable
across country and at a five-barred gate—so to be, and to be
thought, a respectable woman was Becky's aim in life, and she got up
the genteel with amazing assiduity, readiness, and success. We have
said, there were times when she believed herself to be a fine lady
and forgot that there was no money in the chest at home—duns round
the gate, tradesmen to coax and wheedle—no ground to walk upon, in
a word. And as she went to Court in the carriage, the family
carriage, she adopted a demeanour so grand, self-satisfied,
deliberate, and imposing that it made even Lady Jane laugh. She
walked into the royal apartments with a toss of the head which would
have befitted an empress, and I have no doubt had she been one, she
would have become the character perfectly.
We are authorized to state that Mrs.
Rawdon Crawley's costume de cour on the occasion of her presentation
to the Sovereign was of the most elegant and brilliant description.
Some ladies we may have seen—we who wear stars and cordons and
attend the St. James's assemblies, or we, who, in muddy boots, dawdle
up and down Pall Mall and peep into the coaches as they drive up with
the great folks in their feathers—some ladies of fashion, I say, we
may have seen, about two o'clock of the forenoon of a levee day, as
the laced- jacketed band of the Life Guards are blowing triumphal
marches seated on those prancing music-stools, their cream-coloured
chargers—who are by no means lovely and enticing objects at that
early period of noon. A stout countess of sixty, decolletee, painted,
wrinkled with rouge up to her drooping eyelids, and diamonds
twinkling in her wig, is a wholesome and edifying, but not a pleasant
sight. She has the faded look of a St. James's Street illumination,
as it may be seen of an early morning, when half the lamps are out,
and the others are blinking wanly, as if they were about to vanish
like ghosts before the dawn. Such charms as those of which we catch
glimpses while her ladyship's carriage passes should appear abroad at
night alone. If even Cynthia looks haggard of an afternoon, as we may
see her sometimes in the present winter season, with Phoebus staring
her out of countenance from the opposite side of the heavens, how
much more can old Lady Castlemouldy keep her head up when the sun is
shining full upon it through the chariot windows, and showing all the
chinks and crannies with which time has marked her face! No.
Drawing-rooms should be announced for November, or the first foggy
day, or the elderly sultanas of our Vanity Fair should drive up in
closed litters, descend in a covered way, and make their curtsey to
the Sovereign under the protection of lamplight.
Our beloved Rebecca had no need,
however, of any such a friendly halo to set off her beauty. Her
complexion could bear any sunshine as yet, and her dress, though if
you were to see it now, any present lady of Vanity Fair would
pronounce it to be the most foolish and preposterous attire ever
worn, was as handsome in her eyes and those of the public, some
five-and-twenty years since, as the most brilliant costume of the
most famous beauty of the present season. A score of years hence that
too, that milliner's wonder, will have passed into the domain of the
absurd, along with all previous vanities. But we are wandering too
much. Mrs. Rawdon's dress was pronounced to be charmante on the
eventful day of her presentation. Even good little Lady Jane was
forced to acknowledge this effect, as she looked at her kinswoman,
and owned sorrowfully to herself that she was quite inferior in taste
to Mrs. Becky.
She did not know how much care,
thought, and genius Mrs. Rawdon had bestowed upon that garment.
Rebecca had as good taste as any milliner in Europe, and such a
clever way of doing things as Lady Jane little understood. The latter
quickly spied out the magnificence of the brocade of Becky's train,
and the splendour of the lace on her dress.
The brocade was an old remnant, Becky
said; and as for the lace, it was a great bargain. She had had it
these hundred years.
"My dear Mrs. Crawley, it must
have cost a little fortune," Lady Jane said, looking down at her
own lace, which was not nearly so good; and then examining the
quality of the ancient brocade which formed the material of Mrs.
Rawdon's Court dress, she felt inclined to say that she could not
afford such fine clothing, but checked that speech, with an effort,
as one uncharitable to her kinswoman.
And yet, if Lady Jane had known all, I
think even her kindly temper would have failed her. The fact is, when
she was putting Sir Pitt's house in order, Mrs. Rawdon had found the
lace and the brocade in old wardrobes, the property of the former
ladies of the house, and had quietly carried the goods home, and had
suited them to her own little person. Briggs saw her take them, asked
no questions, told no stories; but I believe quite sympathised with
her on this matter, and so would many another honest woman.
And the diamonds—"Where the
doose did you get the diamonds, Becky?" said her husband,
admiring some jewels which he had never seen before and which
sparkled in her ears and on her neck with brilliance and profusion.
Becky blushed a little and looked at
him hard for a moment. Pitt Crawley blushed a little too, and looked
out of window. The fact is, he had given her a very small portion of
the brilliants; a pretty diamond clasp, which confined a pearl
necklace which she wore—and the Baronet had omitted to mention the
circumstance to his lady.
Becky looked at her husband, and then
at Sir Pitt, with an air of saucy triumph—as much as to say, "Shall
I betray you?"
"Guess!" she said to her
husband. "Why, you silly man," she continued, "where
do you suppose I got them?—all except the little clasp, which a
dear friend of mine gave me long ago. I hired them, to be sure. I
hired them at Mr. Polonius's, in Coventry Street. You don't suppose
that all the diamonds which go to Court belong to the wearers; like
those beautiful stones which Lady Jane has, and which are much
handsomer than any which I have, I am certain."
"They are family jewels,"
said Sir Pitt, again looking uneasy. And in this family conversation
the carriage rolled down the street, until its cargo was finally
discharged at the gates of the palace where the Sovereign was sitting
in state.
The diamonds, which had created
Rawdon's admiration, never went back to Mr. Polonius, of Coventry
Street, and that gentleman never applied for their restoration, but
they retired into a little private repository, in an old desk, which
Amelia Sedley had given her years and years ago, and in which Becky
kept a number of useful and, perhaps, valuable things, about which
her husband knew nothing. To know nothing, or little, is in the
nature of some husbands. To hide, in the nature of how many women?
Oh, ladies! how many of you have surreptitious milliners' bills? How
many of you have gowns and bracelets which you daren't show, or which
you wear trembling?— trembling, and coaxing with smiles the husband
by your side, who does not know the new velvet gown from the old one,
or the new bracelet from last year's, or has any notion that the
ragged-looking yellow lace scarf cost forty guineas and that Madame
Bobinot is writing dunning letters every week for the money!
Thus Rawdon knew nothing about the
brilliant diamond ear-rings, or the superb brilliant ornament which
decorated the fair bosom of his lady; but Lord Steyne, who was in his
place at Court, as Lord of the Powder Closet, and one of the great
dignitaries and illustrious defences of the throne of England, and
came up with all his stars, garters, collars, and cordons, and paid
particular attention to the little woman, knew whence the jewels came
and who paid for them.
As he bowed over her he smiled, and
quoted the hackneyed and beautiful lines from The Rape of the Lock
about Belinda's diamonds, "which Jews might kiss and infidels
adore."
"But I hope your lordship is
orthodox," said the little lady with a toss of her head. And
many ladies round about whispered and talked, and many gentlemen
nodded and whispered, as they saw what marked attention the great
nobleman was paying to the little adventuress.
What were the circumstances of the
interview between Rebecca Crawley, nee Sharp, and her Imperial
Master, it does not become such a feeble and inexperienced pen as
mine to attempt to relate. The dazzled eyes close before that
Magnificent Idea. Loyal respect and decency tell even the imagination
not to look too keenly and audaciously about the sacred
audience-chamber, but to back away rapidly, silently, and
respectfully, making profound bows out of the August Presence.
This may be said, that in all London
there was no more loyal heart than Becky's after this interview. The
name of her king was always on her lips, and he was proclaimed by her
to be the most charming of men. She went to Colnaghi's and ordered
the finest portrait of him that art had produced, and credit could
supply. She chose that famous one in which the best of monarchs is
represented in a frock- coat with a fur collar, and breeches and silk
stockings, simpering on a sofa from under his curly brown wig. She
had him painted in a brooch and wore it—indeed she amused and
somewhat pestered her acquaintance with her perpetual talk about his
urbanity and beauty. Who knows! Perhaps the little woman thought she
might play the part of a Maintenon or a Pompadour.
But the finest sport of all after her
presentation was to hear her talk virtuously. She had a few female
acquaintances, not, it must be owned, of the very highest reputation
in Vanity Fair. But being made an honest woman of, so to speak, Becky
would not consort any longer with these dubious ones, and cut Lady
Crackenbury when the latter nodded to her from her opera-box, and
gave Mrs. Washington White the go-by in the Ring. "One must, my
dear, show one is somebody," she said. "One mustn't be seen
with doubtful people. I pity Lady Crackenbury from my heart, and Mrs.
Washington White may be a very good-natured person. YOU may go and
dine with them, as you like your rubber. But I mustn't, and won't;
and you will have the goodness to tell Smith to say I am not at home
when either of them calls."
The particulars of Becky's costume were
in the newspapers—feathers, lappets, superb diamonds, and all the
rest. Lady Crackenbury read the paragraph in bitterness of spirit and
discoursed to her followers about the airs which that woman was
giving herself. Mrs. Bute Crawley and her young ladies in the country
had a copy of the Morning Post from town, and gave a vent to their
honest indignation. "If you had been sandy-haired, green-eyed,
and a French rope- dancer's daughter," Mrs. Bute said to her
eldest girl (who, on the contrary, was a very swarthy, short, and
snub-nosed young lady), "You might have had superb diamonds
forsooth, and have been presented at Court by your cousin, the Lady
Jane. But you're only a gentlewoman, my poor dear child. You have
only some of the best blood in England in your veins, and good
principles and piety for your portion. I, myself, the wife of a
Baronet's younger brother, too, never thought of such a thing as
going to Court—nor would other people, if good Queen Charlotte had
been alive." In this way the worthy Rectoress consoled herself,
and her daughters sighed and sat over the Peerage all night.
A few days after the famous
presentation, another great and exceeding honour was vouchsafed to
the virtuous Becky. Lady Steyne's carriage drove up to Mr. Rawdon
Crawley's door, and the footman, instead of driving down the front of
the house, as by his tremendous knocking he appeared to be inclined
to do, relented and only delivered in a couple of cards, on which
were engraven the names of the Marchioness of Steyne and the Countess
of Gaunt. If these bits of pasteboard had been beautiful pictures, or
had had a hundred yards of Malines lace rolled round them, worth
twice the number of guineas, Becky could not have regarded them with
more pleasure. You may be sure they occupied a conspicuous place in
the china bowl on the drawing-room table, where Becky kept the cards
of her visitors. Lord! lord! how poor Mrs. Washington White's card
and Lady Crackenbury's card—which our little friend had been glad
enough to get a few months back, and of which the silly little
creature was rather proud once—Lord! lord! I say, how soon at the
appearance of these grand court cards, did those poor little
neglected deuces sink down to the bottom of the pack. Steyne!
Bareacres, Johnes of Helvellyn! and Caerylon of Camelot! we may be
sure that Becky and Briggs looked out those august names in the
Peerage, and followed the noble races up through all the
ramifications of the family tree.
My Lord Steyne coming to call a couple
of hours afterwards, and looking about him, and observing everything
as was his wont, found his ladies' cards already ranged as the trumps
of Becky's hand, and grinned, as this old cynic always did at any
naive display of human weakness. Becky came down to him presently;
whenever the dear girl expected his lordship, her toilette was
prepared, her hair in perfect order, her mouchoirs, aprons, scarfs,
little morocco slippers, and other female gimcracks arranged, and she
seated in some artless and agreeable posture ready to receive
him—whenever she was surprised, of course, she had to fly to her
apartment to take a rapid survey of matters in the glass, and to trip
down again to wait upon the great peer.
She found him grinning over the bowl.
She was discovered, and she blushed a little. "Thank you,
Monseigneur," she said. "You see your ladies have been
here. How good of you! I couldn't come before—I was in the kitchen
making a pudding."
"I know you were, I saw you
through the area-railings as I drove up," replied the old
gentleman.
"You see everything," she
replied.
"A few things, but not that, my
pretty lady," he said good- naturedly. "You silly little
fibster! I heard you in the room overhead, where I have no doubt you
were putting a little rouge on— you must give some of yours to my
Lady Gaunt, whose complexion is quite preposterous—and I heard the
bedroom door open, and then you came downstairs."
"Is it a crime to try and look my
best when YOU come here?" answered Mrs. Rawdon plaintively, and
she rubbed her cheek with her handkerchief as if to show there was no
rouge at all, only genuine blushes and modesty in her case. About
this who can tell? I know there is some rouge that won't come off on
a pocket-handkerchief, and some so good that even tears will not
disturb it.
"Well," said the old
gentleman, twiddling round his wife's card, "you are bent on
becoming a fine lady. You pester my poor old life out to get you into
the world. You won't be able to hold your own there, you silly little
fool. You've got no money."
"You will get us a place,"
interposed Becky, "as quick as possible."
"You've got no money, and you want
to compete with those who have. You poor little earthenware pipkin,
you want to swim down the stream along with the great copper kettles.
All women are alike. Everybody is striving for what is not worth the
having! Gad! I dined with the King yesterday, and we had neck of
mutton and turnips. A dinner of herbs is better than a stalled ox
very often. You will go to Gaunt House. You give an old fellow no
rest until you get there. It's not half so nice as here. You'll be
bored there. I am. My wife is as gay as Lady Macbeth, and my
daughters as cheerful as Regan and Goneril. I daren't sleep in what
they call my bedroom. The bed is like the baldaquin of St. Peter's,
and the pictures frighten me. I have a little brass bed in a
dressing-room, and a little hair mattress like an anchorite. I am an
anchorite. Ho! ho! You'll be asked to dinner next week. And gare aux
femmes, look out and hold your own! How the women will bully you!"
This was a very long speech for a man of few words like my Lord
Steyne; nor was it the first which he uttered for Becky's benefit on
that day.
Briggs looked up from the work-table at
which she was seated in the farther room and gave a deep sigh as she
heard the great Marquis speak so lightly of her sex.
"If you don't turn off that
abominable sheep-dog," said Lord Steyne, with a savage look over
his shoulder at her, "I will have her poisoned."
"I always give my dog dinner from
my own plate," said Rebecca, laughing mischievously; and having
enjoyed for some time the discomfiture of my lord, who hated poor
Briggs for interrupting his tete-a-tete with the fair Colonel's wife,
Mrs. Rawdon at length had pity upon her admirer, and calling to
Briggs, praised the fineness of the weather to her and bade her to
take out the child for a walk.
"I can't send her away,"
Becky said presently, after a pause, and in a very sad voice. Her
eyes filled with tears as she spoke, and she turned away her head.
"You owe her her wages, I
suppose?" said the Peer.
"Worse than that," said
Becky, still casting down her eyes; "I have ruined her."
"Ruined her? Then why don't you
turn her out?" the gentleman asked.
"Men do that," Becky answered
bitterly. "Women are not so bad as you. Last year, when we were
reduced to our last guinea, she gave us everything. She shall never
leave me, until we are ruined utterly ourselves, which does not seem
far off, or until I can pay her the utmost farthing."
"—— it, how much is it?"
said the Peer with an oath. And Becky, reflecting on the largeness of
his means, mentioned not only the sum which she had borrowed from
Miss Briggs, but one of nearly double the amount.
This caused the Lord Steyne to break
out in another brief and energetic expression of anger, at which
Rebecca held down her head the more and cried bitterly. "I could
not help it. It was my only chance. I dare not tell my husband. He
would kill me if I told him what I have done. I have kept it a secret
from everybody but you— and you forced it from me. Ah, what shall I
do, Lord Steyne? for I am very, very unhappy!"
Lord Steyne made no reply except by
beating the devil's tattoo and biting his nails. At last he clapped
his hat on his head and flung out of the room. Rebecca did not rise
from her attitude of misery until the door slammed upon him and his
carriage whirled away. Then she rose up with the queerest expression
of victorious mischief glittering in her green eyes. She burst out
laughing once or twice to herself, as she sat at work, and sitting
down to the piano, she rattled away a triumphant voluntary on the
keys, which made the people pause under her window to listen to her
brilliant music.
That night, there came two notes from
Gaunt House for the little woman, the one containing a card of
invitation from Lord and Lady Steyne to a dinner at Gaunt House next
Friday, while the other enclosed a slip of gray paper bearing Lord
Steyne's signature and the address of Messrs. Jones, Brown, and
Robinson, Lombard Street.
Rawdon heard Becky laughing in the
night once or twice. It was only her delight at going to Gaunt House
and facing the ladies there, she said, which amused her so. But the
truth was that she was occupied with a great number of other
thoughts. Should she pay off old Briggs and give her her conge?
Should she astonish Raggles by settling his account? She turned over
all these thoughts on her pillow, and on the next day, when Rawdon
went out to pay his morning visit to the Club, Mrs. Crawley (in a
modest dress with a veil on) whipped off in a hackney-coach to the
City: and being landed at Messrs. Jones and Robinson's bank,
presented a document there to the authority at the desk, who, in
reply, asked her "How she would take it?"
She gently said "she would take a
hundred and fifty pounds in small notes and the remainder in one
note": and passing through St. Paul's Churchyard stopped there
and bought the handsomest black silk gown for Briggs which money
could buy; and which, with a kiss and the kindest speeches, she
presented to the simple old spinster.
Then she walked to Mr. Raggles,
inquired about his children affectionately, and gave him fifty pounds
on account. Then she went to the livery-man from whom she jobbed her
carriages and gratified him with a similar sum. "And I hope this
will be a lesson to you, Spavin," she said, "and that on
the next drawing-room day my brother, Sir Pitt, will not be
inconvenienced by being obliged to take four of us in his carriage to
wait upon His Majesty, because my own carriage is not forthcoming."
It appears there had been a difference on the last drawing-room day.
Hence the degradation which the Colonel had almost suffered, of being
obliged to enter the presence of his Sovereign in a hack cab.
These arrangements concluded, Becky
paid a visit upstairs to the before-mentioned desk, which Amelia
Sedley had given her years and years ago, and which contained a
number of useful and valuable little things—in which private museum
she placed the one note which Messrs. Jones and Robinson's cashier
had given her.
Chapter XLIX
*
In Which We Enjoy Three Courses and a
Dessert
When the ladies of Gaunt House were at
breakfast that morning, Lord Steyne (who took his chocolate in
private and seldom disturbed the females of his household, or saw
them except upon public days, or when they crossed each other in the
hall, or when from his pit-box at the opera he surveyed them in their
box on the grand tier) his lordship, we say, appeared among the
ladies and the children who were assembled over the tea and toast,
and a battle royal ensued apropos of Rebecca.
"My Lady Steyne," he said, "I
want to see the list for your dinner on Friday; and I want you, if
you please, to write a card for Colonel and Mrs. Crawley."
"Blanche writes them," Lady
Steyne said in a flutter. "Lady Gaunt writes them."
"I will not write to that person,"
Lady Gaunt said, a tall and stately lady, who looked up for an
instant and then down again after she had spoken. It was not good to
meet Lord Steyne's eyes for those who had offended him.
"Send the children out of the
room. Go!" said he pulling at the bell-rope. The urchins, always
frightened before him, retired: their mother would have followed too.
"Not you," he said. "You stop."
"My Lady Steyne," he said,
"once more will you have the goodness to go to the desk and
write that card for your dinner on Friday?"
"My Lord, I will not be present at
it," Lady Gaunt said; "I will go home."
"I wish you would, and stay there.
You will find the bailiffs at Bareacres very pleasant company, and I
shall be freed from lending money to your relations and from your own
damned tragedy airs. Who are you to give orders here? You have no
money. You've got no brains. You were here to have children, and you
have not had any. Gaunt's tired of you, and George's wife is the only
person in the family who doesn't wish you were dead. Gaunt would
marry again if you were."
"I wish I were," her Ladyship
answered with tears and rage in her eyes.
"You, forsooth, must give yourself
airs of virtue, while my wife, who is an immaculate saint, as
everybody knows, and never did wrong in her life, has no objection to
meet my young friend Mrs. Crawley. My Lady Steyne knows that
appearances are sometimes against the best of women; that lies are
often told about the most innocent of them. Pray, madam, shall I tell
you some little anecdotes about my Lady Bareacres, your mamma?"
"You may strike me if you like,
sir, or hit any cruel blow," Lady Gaunt said. To see his wife
and daughter suffering always put his Lordship into a good humour.
"My sweet Blanche," he said,
"I am a gentleman, and never lay my hand upon a woman, save in
the way of kindness. I only wish to correct little faults in your
character. You women are too proud, and sadly lack humility, as
Father Mole, I'm sure, would tell my Lady Steyne if he were here. You
mustn't give yourselves airs; you must be meek and humble, my
blessings. For all Lady Steyne knows, this calumniated, simple,
good-humoured Mrs. Crawley is quite innocent—even more innocent
than herself. Her husband's character is not good, but it is as good
as Bareacres', who has played a little and not paid a great deal, who
cheated you out of the only legacy you ever had and left you a pauper
on my hands. And Mrs. Crawley is not very well-born, but she is not
worse than Fanny's illustrious ancestor, the first de la Jones."
"The money which I brought into
the family, sir," Lady George cried out—
"You purchased a contingent
reversion with it," the Marquis said darkly. "If Gaunt
dies, your husband may come to his honours; your little boys may
inherit them, and who knows what besides? In the meanwhile, ladies,
be as proud and virtuous as you like abroad, but don't give ME any
airs. As for Mrs. Crawley's character, I shan't demean myself or that
most spotless and perfectly irreproachable lady by even hinting that
it requires a defence. You will be pleased to receive her with the
utmost cordiality, as you will receive all persons whom I present in
this house. This house?" He broke out with a laugh. "Who is
the master of it? and what is it? This Temple of Virtue belongs to
me. And if I invite all Newgate or all Bedlam here, by —— they
shall be welcome."
After this vigorous allocution, to one
of which sort Lord Steyne treated his "Hareem" whenever
symptoms of insubordination appeared in his household, the
crestfallen women had nothing for it but to obey. Lady Gaunt wrote
the invitation which his Lordship required, and she and her
mother-in-law drove in person, and with bitter and humiliated hearts,
to leave the cards on Mrs. Rawdon, the reception of which caused that
innocent woman so much pleasure.
There were families in London who would
have sacrificed a year's income to receive such an honour at the
hands of those great ladies. Mrs. Frederick Bullock, for instance,
would have gone on her knees from May Fair to Lombard Street, if Lady
Steyne and Lady Gaunt had been waiting in the City to raise her up
and say, "Come to us next Friday"—not to one of the great
crushes and grand balls of Gaunt House, whither everybody went, but
to the sacred, unapproachable, mysterious, delicious entertainments,
to be admitted to one of which was a privilege, and an honour, and a
blessing indeed.
Severe, spotless, and beautiful, Lady
Gaunt held the very highest rank in Vanity Fair. The distinguished
courtesy with which Lord Steyne treated her charmed everybody who
witnessed his behaviour, caused the severest critics to admit how
perfect a gentleman he was, and to own that his Lordship's heart at
least was in the right place.
The ladies of Gaunt House called Lady
Bareacres in to their aid, in order to repulse the common enemy. One
of Lady Gaunt's carriages went to Hill Street for her Ladyship's
mother, all whose equipages were in the hands of the bailiffs, whose
very jewels and wardrobe, it was said, had been seized by those
inexorable Israelites. Bareacres Castle was theirs, too, with all its
costly pictures, furniture, and articles of vertu—the magnificent
Vandykes; the noble Reynolds pictures; the Lawrence portraits, tawdry
and beautiful, and, thirty years ago, deemed as precious as works of
real genius; the matchless Dancing Nymph of Canova, for which Lady
Bareacres had sat in her youth—Lady Bareacres splendid then, and
radiant in wealth, rank, and beauty—a toothless, bald, old woman
now—a mere rag of a former robe of state. Her lord, painted at the
same time by Lawrence, as waving his sabre in front of Bareacres
Castle, and clothed in his uniform as Colonel of the Thistlewood
Yeomanry, was a withered, old, lean man in a greatcoat and a Brutus
wig, slinking about Gray's Inn of mornings chiefly and dining alone
at clubs. He did not like to dine with Steyne now. They had run races
of pleasure together in youth when Bareacres was the winner. But
Steyne had more bottom than he and had lasted him out. The Marquis
was ten times a greater man now than the young Lord Gaunt of '85, and
Bareacres nowhere in the race—old, beaten, bankrupt, and broken
down. He had borrowed too much money of Steyne to find it pleasant to
meet his old comrade often. The latter, whenever he wished to be
merry, used jeeringly to ask Lady Gaunt why her father had not come
to see her. "He has not been here for four months," Lord
Steyne would say. "I can always tell by my cheque-book
afterwards, when I get a visit from Bareacres. What a comfort it is,
my ladies, I bank with one of my sons' fathers-in-law, and the other
banks with me!"
Of the other illustrious persons whom
Becky had the honour to encounter on this her first presentation to
the grand world, it does not become the present historian to say
much. There was his Excellency the Prince of Peterwaradin, with his
Princess—a nobleman tightly girthed, with a large military chest,
on which the plaque of his order shone magnificently, and wearing the
red collar of the Golden Fleece round his neck. He was the owner of
countless flocks. "Look at his face. I think he must be
descended from a sheep," Becky whispered to Lord Steyne. Indeed,
his Excellency's countenance, long, solemn, and white, with the
ornament round his neck, bore some resemblance to that of a venerable
bell-wether.
There was Mr. John Paul Jefferson
Jones, titularly attached to the American Embassy and correspondent
of the New York Demagogue, who, by way of making himself agreeable to
the company, asked Lady Steyne, during a pause in the conversation at
dinner, how his dear friend, George Gaunt, liked the Brazils? He and
George had been most intimate at Naples and had gone up Vesuvius
together. Mr. Jones wrote a full and particular account of the
dinner, which appeared duly in the Demagogue. He mentioned the names
and titles of all the guests, giving biographical sketches of the
principal people. He described the persons of the ladies with great
eloquence; the service of the table; the size and costume of the
servants; enumerated the dishes and wines served; the ornaments of
the sideboard; and the probable value of the plate. Such a dinner he
calculated could not be dished up under fifteen or eighteen dollars
per head. And he was in the habit, until very lately, of sending over
proteges, with letters of recommendation to the present Marquis of
Steyne, encouraged to do so by the intimate terms on which he had
lived with his dear friend, the late lord. He was most indignant that
a young and insignificant aristocrat, the Earl of Southdown, should
have taken the pas of him in their procession to the dining- room.
"Just as I was stepping up to offer my hand to a very pleasing
and witty fashionable, the brilliant and exclusive Mrs. Rawdon
Crawley,"—he wrote—"the young patrician interposed
between me and the lady and whisked my Helen off without a word of
apology. I was fain to bring up the rear with the Colonel, the lady's
husband, a stout red-faced warrior who distinguished himself at
Waterloo, where he had better luck than befell some of his brother
redcoats at New Orleans."
The Colonel's countenance on coming
into this polite society wore as many blushes as the face of a boy of
sixteen assumes when he is confronted with his sister's
schoolfellows. It has been told before that honest Rawdon had not
been much used at any period of his life to ladies' company. With the
men at the Club or the mess room, he was well enough; and could ride,
bet, smoke, or play at billiards with the boldest of them. He had had
his time for female friendships too, but that was twenty years ago,
and the ladies were of the rank of those with whom Young Marlow in
the comedy is represented as having been familiar before he became
abashed in the presence of Miss Hardcastle. The times are such that
one scarcely dares to allude to that kind of company which thousands
of our young men in Vanity Fair are frequenting every day, which
nightly fills casinos and dancing-rooms, which is known to exist as
well as the Ring in Hyde Park or the Congregation at St. James's—but
which the most squeamish if not the most moral of societies is
determined to ignore. In a word, although Colonel Crawley was now
five-and-forty years of age, it had not been his lot in life to meet
with a half dozen good women, besides his paragon of a wife. All
except her and his kind sister Lady Jane, whose gentle nature had
tamed and won him, scared the worthy Colonel, and on occasion of his
first dinner at Gaunt House he was not heard to make a single remark
except to state that the weather was very hot. Indeed Becky would
have left him at home, but that virtue ordained that her husband
should be by her side to protect the timid and fluttering little
creature on her first appearance in polite society.
On her first appearance Lord Steyne
stepped forward, taking her hand, and greeting her with great
courtesy, and presenting her to Lady Steyne, and their ladyships, her
daughters. Their ladyships made three stately curtsies, and the elder
lady to be sure gave her hand to the newcomer, but it was as cold and
lifeless as marble.
Becky took it, however, with grateful
humility, and performing a reverence which would have done credit to
the best dancer-master, put herself at Lady Steyne's feet, as it
were, by saying that his Lordship had been her father's earliest
friend and patron, and that she, Becky, had learned to honour and
respect the Steyne family from the days of her childhood. The fact is
that Lord Steyne had once purchased a couple of pictures of the late
Sharp, and the affectionate orphan could never forget her gratitude
for that favour.
The Lady Bareacres then came under
Becky's cognizance—to whom the Colonel's lady made also a most
respectful obeisance: it was returned with severe dignity by the
exalted person in question.
"I had the pleasure of making your
Ladyship's acquaintance at Brussels, ten years ago," Becky said
in the most winning manner. "I had the good fortune to meet Lady
Bareacres at the Duchess of Richmond's ball, the night before the
Battle of Waterloo. And I recollect your Ladyship, and my Lady
Blanche, your daughter, sitting in the carriage in the porte-cochere
at the Inn, waiting for horses. I hope your Ladyship's diamonds are
safe."
Everybody's eyes looked into their
neighbour's. The famous diamonds had undergone a famous seizure, it
appears, about which Becky, of course, knew nothing. Rawdon Crawley
retreated with Lord Southdown into a window, where the latter was
heard to laugh immoderately, as Rawdon told him the story of Lady
Bareacres wanting horses and "knuckling down by Jove," to
Mrs. Crawley. "I think I needn't be afraid of THAT woman,"
Becky thought. Indeed, Lady Bareacres exchanged terrified and angry
looks with her daughter and retreated to a table, where she began to
look at pictures with great energy.
When the Potentate from the Danube made
his appearance, the conversation was carried on in the French
language, and the Lady Bareacres and the younger ladies found, to
their farther mortification, that Mrs. Crawley was much better
acquainted with that tongue, and spoke it with a much better accent
than they. Becky had met other Hungarian magnates with the army in
France in 1816-17. She asked after her friends with great interest
The foreign personages thought that she was a lady of great
distinction, and the Prince and the Princess asked severally of Lord
Steyne and the Marchioness, whom they conducted to dinner, who was
that petite dame who spoke so well?
Finally, the procession being formed in
the order described by the American diplomatist, they marched into
the apartment where the banquet was served, and which, as I have
promised the reader he shall enjoy it, he shall have the liberty of
ordering himself so as to suit his fancy.
But it was when the ladies were alone
that Becky knew the tug of war would come. And then indeed the little
woman found herself in such a situation as made her acknowledge the
correctness of Lord Steyne's caution to her to beware of the society
of ladies above her own sphere. As they say, the persons who hate
Irishmen most are Irishmen; so, assuredly, the greatest tyrants over
women are women. When poor little Becky, alone with the ladies, went
up to the fire- place whither the great ladies had repaired, the
great ladies marched away and took possession of a table of drawings.
When Becky followed them to the table of drawings, they dropped off
one by one to the fire again. She tried to speak to one of the
children (of whom she was commonly fond in public places), but Master
George Gaunt was called away by his mamma; and the stranger was
treated with such cruelty finally, that even Lady Steyne herself
pitied her and went up to speak to the friendless little woman.
"Lord Steyne," said her
Ladyship, as her wan cheeks glowed with a blush, "says you sing
and play very beautifully, Mrs. Crawley—I wish you would do me the
kindness to sing to me."
"I will do anything that may give
pleasure to my Lord Steyne or to you," said Rebecca, sincerely
grateful, and seating herself at the piano, began to sing.
She sang religious songs of Mozart,
which had been early favourites of Lady Steyne, and with such
sweetness and tenderness that the lady, lingering round the piano,
sat down by its side and listened until the tears rolled down her
eyes. It is true that the opposition ladies at the other end of the
room kept up a loud and ceaseless buzzing and talking, but the Lady
Steyne did not hear those rumours. She was a child again—and had
wandered back through a forty years' wilderness to her convent
garden. The chapel organ had pealed the same tones, the organist, the
sister whom she loved best of the community, had taught them to her
in those early happy days. She was a girl once more, and the brief
period of her happiness bloomed out again for an hour—she started
when the jarring doors were flung open, and with a loud laugh from
Lord Steyne, the men of the party entered full of gaiety.
He saw at a glance what had happened in
his absence, and was grateful to his wife for once. He went and spoke
to her, and called her by her Christian name, so as again to bring
blushes to her pale face—"My wife says you have been singing
like an angel," he said to Becky. Now there are angels of two
kinds, and both sorts, it is said, are charming in their way.
Whatever the previous portion of the
evening had been, the rest of that night was a great triumph for
Becky. She sang her very best, and it was so good that every one of
the men came and crowded round the piano. The women, her enemies,
were left quite alone. And Mr. Paul Jefferson Jones thought he had
made a conquest of Lady Gaunt by going up to her Ladyship and
praising her delightful friend's first- rate singing.
Chapter L
*
Contains a Vulgar Incident
The Muse, whoever she be, who presides
over this Comic History must now descend from the genteel heights in
which she has been soaring and have the goodness to drop down upon
the lowly roof of John Sedley at Brompton, and describe what events
are taking place there. Here, too, in this humble tenement, live
care, and distrust, and dismay. Mrs. Clapp in the kitchen is
grumbling in secret to her husband about the rent, and urging the
good fellow to rebel against his old friend and patron and his
present lodger. Mrs. Sedley has ceased to visit her landlady in the
lower regions now, and indeed is in a position to patronize Mrs.
Clapp no longer. How can one be condescending to a lady to whom one
owes a matter of forty pounds, and who is perpetually throwing out
hints for the money? The Irish maidservant has not altered in the
least in her kind and respectful behaviour; but Mrs. Sedley fancies
that she is growing insolent and ungrateful, and, as the guilty thief
who fears each bush an officer, sees threatening innuendoes and hints
of capture in all the girl's speeches and answers. Miss Clapp, grown
quite a young woman now, is declared by the soured old lady to be an
unbearable and impudent little minx. Why Amelia can be so fond of
her, or have her in her room so much, or walk out with her so
constantly, Mrs. Sedley cannot conceive. The bitterness of poverty
has poisoned the life of the once cheerful and kindly woman. She is
thankless for Amelia's constant and gentle bearing towards her; carps
at her for her efforts at kindness or service; rails at her for her
silly pride in her child and her neglect of her parents. Georgy's
house is not a very lively one since Uncle Jos's annuity has been
withdrawn and the little family are almost upon famine diet.
Amelia thinks, and thinks, and racks
her brain, to find some means of increasing the small pittance upon
which the household is starving. Can she give lessons in anything?
paint card-racks? do fine work? She finds that women are working
hard, and better than she can, for twopence a day. She buys a couple
of begilt Bristol boards at the Fancy Stationer's and paints her very
best upon them— a shepherd with a red waistcoat on one, and a pink
face smiling in the midst of a pencil landscape—a shepherdess on
the other, crossing a little bridge, with a little dog, nicely
shaded. The man of the Fancy Repository and Brompton Emporium of Fine
Arts (of whom she bought the screens, vainly hoping that he would
repurchase them when ornamented by her hand) can hardly hide the
sneer with which he examines these feeble works of art. He looks
askance at the lady who waits in the shop, and ties up the cards
again in their envelope of whitey-brown paper, and hands them to the
poor widow and Miss Clapp, who had never seen such beautiful things
in her life, and had been quite confident that the man must give at
least two guineas for the screens. They try at other shops in the
interior of London, with faint sickening hopes. "Don't want
'em," says one. "Be off," says another fiercely.
Three-and-sixpence has been spent in vain— the screens retire to
Miss Clapp's bedroom, who persists in thinking them lovely.
She writes out a little card in her
neatest hand, and after long thought and labour of composition, in
which the public is informed that "A Lady who has some time at
her disposal, wishes to undertake the education of some little girls,
whom she would instruct in English, in French, in Geography, in
History, and in Music—address A. O., at Mr. Brown's"; and she
confides the card to the gentleman of the Fine Art Repository, who
consents to allow it to lie upon the counter, where it grows dingy
and fly-blown. Amelia passes the door wistfully many a time, in hopes
that Mr. Brown will have some news to give her, but he never beckons
her in. When she goes to make little purchases, there is no news for
her. Poor simple lady, tender and weak—how are you to battle with
the struggling violent world?
She grows daily more care-worn and sad,
fixing upon her child alarmed eyes, whereof the little boy cannot
interpret the expression. She starts up of a night and peeps into his
room stealthily, to see that he is sleeping and not stolen away. She
sleeps but little now. A constant thought and terror is haunting her.
How she weeps and prays in the long silent nights—how she tries to
hide from herself the thought which will return to her, that she
ought to part with the boy, that she is the only barrier between him
and prosperity. She can't, she can't. Not now, at least. Some other
day. Oh! it is too hard to think of and to bear.
A thought comes over her which makes
her blush and turn from herself—her parents might keep the
annuity—the curate would marry her and give a home to her and the
boy. But George's picture and dearest memory are there to rebuke her.
Shame and love say no to the sacrifice. She shrinks from it as from
something unholy, and such thoughts never found a resting-place in
that pure and gentle bosom.
The combat, which we describe in a
sentence or two, lasted for many weeks in poor Amelia's heart, during
which she had no confidante; indeed, she could never have one, as she
would not allow to herself the possibility of yielding, though she
was giving way daily before the enemy with whom she had to battle.
One truth after another was marshalling itself silently against her
and keeping its ground. Poverty and misery for all, want and
degradation for her parents, injustice to the boy—one by one the
outworks of the little citadel were taken, in which the poor soul
passionately guarded her only love and treasure.
At the beginning of the struggle, she
had written off a letter of tender supplication to her brother at
Calcutta, imploring him not to withdraw the support which he had
granted to their parents and painting in terms of artless pathos
their lonely and hapless condition. She did not know the truth of the
matter. The payment of Jos's annuity was still regular, but it was a
money-lender in the City who was receiving it: old Sedley had sold it
for a sum of money wherewith to prosecute his bootless schemes. Emmy
was calculating eagerly the time that would elapse before the letter
would arrive and be answered. She had written down the date in her
pocket-book of the day when she dispatched it. To her son's guardian,
the good Major at Madras, she had not communicated any of her griefs
and perplexities. She had not written to him since she wrote to
congratulate him on his approaching marriage. She thought with
sickening despondency, that that friend—the only one, the one who
had felt such a regard for her—was fallen away.
One day, when things had come to a very
bad pass—when the creditors were pressing, the mother in hysteric
grief, the father in more than usual gloom, the inmates of the family
avoiding each other, each secretly oppressed with his private
unhappiness and notion of wrong —the father and daughter happened
to be left alone together, and Amelia thought to comfort her father
by telling him what she had done. She had written to Joseph—an
answer must come in three or four months. He was always generous,
though careless. He could not refuse, when he knew how straitened
were the circumstances of his parents.
Then the poor old gentleman revealed
the whole truth to her—that his son was still paying the annuity,
which his own imprudence had flung away. He had not dared to tell it
sooner. He thought Amelia's ghastly and terrified look, when, with a
trembling, miserable voice he made the confession, conveyed
reproaches to him for his concealment. "Ah!" said he with
quivering lips and turning away, "you despise your old father
now!"
"Oh, papal it is not that,"
Amelia cried out, falling on his neck and kissing him many times.
"You are always good and kind. You did it for the best. It is
not for the money—it is—my God! my God! have mercy upon me, and
give me strength to bear this trial"; and she kissed him again
wildly and went away.
Still the father did not know what that
explanation meant, and the burst of anguish with which the poor girl
left him. It was that she was conquered. The sentence was passed. The
child must go from her—to others—to forget her. Her heart and her
treasure—her joy, hope, love, worship—her God, almost! She must
give him up, and then—and then she would go to George, and they
would watch over the child and wait for him until he came to them in
Heaven.
She put on her bonnet, scarcely knowing
what she did, and went out to walk in the lanes by which George used
to come back from school, and where she was in the habit of going on
his return to meet the boy. It was May, a half-holiday. The leaves
were all coming out, the weather was brilliant; the boy came running
to her flushed with health, singing, his bundle of school-books
hanging by a thong. There he was. Both her arms were round him. No,
it was impossible. They could not be going to part. "What is the
matter, Mother?" said he; "you look very pale."
"Nothing, my child," she said
and stooped down and kissed him.
That night Amelia made the boy read the
story of Samuel to her, and how Hannah, his mother, having weaned
him, brought him to Eli the High Priest to minister before the Lord.
And he read the song of gratitude which Hannah sang, and which says,
who it is who maketh poor and maketh rich, and bringeth low and
exalteth—how the poor shall be raised up out of the dust, and how,
in his own might, no man shall be strong. Then he read how Samuel's
mother made him a little coat and brought it to him from year to year
when she came up to offer the yearly sacrifice. And then, in her
sweet simple way, George's mother made commentaries to the boy upon
this affecting story. How Hannah, though she loved her son so much,
yet gave him up because of her vow. And how she must always have
thought of him as she sat at home, far away, making the little coat;
and Samuel, she was sure, never forgot his mother; and how happy she
must have been as the time came (and the years pass away very quick)
when she should see her boy and how good and wise he had grown. This
little sermon she spoke with a gentle solemn voice, and dry eyes,
until she came to the account of their meeting—then the discourse
broke off suddenly, the tender heart overflowed, and taking the boy
to her breast, she rocked him in her arms and wept silently over him
in a sainted agony of tears.
Her mind being made up, the widow began
to take such measures as seemed right to her for advancing the end
which she proposed. One day, Miss Osborne, in Russell Square (Amelia
had not written the name or number of the house for ten years—her
youth, her early story came back to her as she wrote the
superscription) one day Miss Osborne got a letter from Amelia which
made her blush very much and look towards her father, sitting
glooming in his place at the other end of the table.
In simple terms, Amelia told her the
reasons which had induced her to change her mind respecting her boy.
Her father had met with fresh misfortunes which had entirely ruined
him. Her own pittance was so small that it would barely enable her to
support her parents and would not suffice to give George the
advantages which were his due. Great as her sufferings would be at
parting with him she would, by God's help, endure them for the boy's
sake. She knew that those to whom he was going would do all in their
power to make him happy. She described his disposition, such as she
fancied it—quick and impatient of control or harshness, easily to
be moved by love and kindness. In a postscript, she stipulated that
she should have a written agreement, that she should see the child as
often as she wished—she could not part with him under any other
terms.
"What? Mrs. Pride has come down,
has she?" old Osborne said, when with a tremulous eager voice
Miss Osborne read him the letter. "Reg'lar starved out, hey? Ha,
ha! I knew she would." He tried to keep his dignity and to read
his paper as usual—but he could not follow it. He chuckled and
swore to himself behind the sheet.
At last he flung it down and, scowling
at his daughter, as his wont was, went out of the room into his study
adjoining, from whence he presently returned with a key. He flung it
to Miss Osborne.
"Get the room over mine—his room
that was—ready," he said. "Yes, sir," his daughter
replied in a tremble. It was George's room. It had not been opened
for more than ten years. Some of his clothes, papers, handkerchiefs,
whips and caps, fishing-rods and sporting gear, were still there. An
Army list of 1814, with his name written on the cover; a little
dictionary he was wont to use in writing; and the Bible his mother
had given him, were on the mantelpiece, with a pair of spurs and a
dried inkstand covered with the dust of ten years. Ah! since that ink
was wet, what days and people had passed away! The writing-book,
still on the table, was blotted with his hand.
Miss Osborne was much affected when she
first entered this room with the servants under her. She sank quite
pale on the little bed. "This is blessed news, m'am—indeed,
m'am," the housekeeper said; "and the good old times is
returning, m'am. The dear little feller, to be sure, m'am; how happy
he will be! But some folks in May Fair, m'am, will owe him a grudge,
m'am"; and she clicked back the bolt which held the window-sash
and let the air into the chamber.
"You had better send that woman
some money," Mr. Osborne said, before he went out. "She
shan't want for nothing. Send her a hundred pound."
"And I'll go and see her
to-morrow?" Miss Osborne asked.
"That's your look out. She don't
come in here, mind. No, by ——, not for all the money in London.
But she mustn't want now. So look out, and get things right."
With which brief speeches Mr. Osborne took leave of his daughter and
went on his accustomed way into the City.
"Here, Papa, is some money,"
Amelia said that night, kissing the old man, her father, and putting
a bill for a hundred pounds into his hands. "And—and, Mamma,
don't be harsh with Georgy. He—he is not going to stop with us
long." She could say nothing more, and walked away silently to
her room. Let us close it upon her prayers and her sorrow. I think we
had best speak little about so much love and grief.
Miss Osborne came the next day,
according to the promise contained in her note, and saw Amelia. The
meeting between them was friendly. A look and a few words from Miss
Osborne showed the poor widow that, with regard to this woman at
least, there need be no fear lest she should take the first place in
her son's affection. She was cold, sensible, not unkind. The mother
had not been so well pleased, perhaps, had the rival been better
looking, younger, more affectionate, warmer-hearted. Miss Osborne, on
the other hand, thought of old times and memories and could not but
be touched with the poor mother's pitiful situation. She was
conquered, and laying down her arms, as it were, she humbly
submitted. That day they arranged together the preliminaries of the
treaty of capitulation.
George was kept from school the next
day, and saw his aunt. Amelia left them alone together and went to
her room. She was trying the separation—as that poor gentle Lady
Jane Grey felt the edge of the axe that was to come down and sever
her slender life. Days were passed in parleys, visits, preparations.
The widow broke the matter to Georgy with great caution; she looked
to see him very much affected by the intelligence. He was rather
elated than otherwise, and the poor woman turned sadly away. He
bragged about the news that day to the boys at school; told them how
he was going to live with his grandpapa his father's father, not the
one who comes here sometimes; and that he would be very rich, and
have a carriage, and a pony, and go to a much finer school, and when
he was rich he would buy Leader's pencil-case and pay the tart-woman.
The boy was the image of his father, as his fond mother thought.
Indeed I have no heart, on account of
our dear Amelia's sake, to go through the story of George's last days
at home.
At last the day came, the carriage
drove up, the little humble packets containing tokens of love and
remembrance were ready and disposed in the hall long since—George
was in his new suit, for which the tailor had come previously to
measure him. He had sprung up with the sun and put on the new
clothes, his mother hearing him from the room close by, in which she
had been lying, in speechless grief and watching. Days before she had
been making preparations for the end, purchasing little stores for
the boy's use, marking his books and linen, talking with him and
preparing him for the change— fondly fancying that he needed
preparation.
So that he had change, what cared he?
He was longing for it. By a thousand eager declarations as to what he
would do, when he went to live with his grandfather, he had shown the
poor widow how little the idea of parting had cast him down. "He
would come and see his mamma often on the pony," he said. "He
would come and fetch her in the carriage; they would drive in the
park, and she should have everything she wanted." The poor
mother was fain to content herself with these selfish demonstrations
of attachment, and tried to convince herself how sincerely her son
loved her. He must love her. All children were so: a little anxious
for novelty, and—no, not selfish, but self-willed. Her child must
have his enjoyments and ambition in the world. She herself, by her
own selfishness and imprudent love for him had denied him his just
rights and pleasures hitherto.
I know few things more affecting than
that timorous debasement and self-humiliation of a woman. How she
owns that it is she and not the man who is guilty; how she takes all
the faults on her side; how she courts in a manner punishment for the
wrongs which she has not committed and persists in shielding the real
culprit! It is those who injure women who get the most kindness from
them—they are born timid and tyrants and maltreat those who are
humblest before them.
So poor Amelia had been getting ready
in silent misery for her son's departure, and had passed many and
many a long solitary hour in making preparations for the end. George
stood by his mother, watching her arrangements without the least
concern. Tears had fallen into his boxes; passages had been scored in
his favourite books; old toys, relics, treasures had been hoarded
away for him, and packed with strange neatness and care—and of all
these things the boy took no note. The child goes away smiling as the
mother breaks her heart. By heavens it is pitiful, the bootless love
of women for children in Vanity Fair.
A few days are past, and the great
event of Amelia's life is consummated. No angel has intervened. The
child is sacrificed and offered up to fate, and the widow is quite
alone.
The boy comes to see her often, to be
sure. He rides on a pony with a coachman behind him, to the delight
of his old grandfather, Sedley, who walks proudly down the lane by
his side. She sees him, but he is not her boy any more. Why, he rides
to see the boys at the little school, too, and to show off before
them his new wealth and splendour. In two days he has adopted a
slightly imperious air and patronizing manner. He was born to
command, his mother thinks, as his father was before him.
It is fine weather now. Of evenings on
the days when he does not come, she takes a long walk into
London—yes, as far as Russell Square, and rests on the stone by the
railing of the garden opposite Mr. Osborne's house. It is so pleasant
and cool. She can look up and see the drawing-room windows
illuminated, and, at about nine o'clock, the chamber in the upper
story where Georgy sleeps. She knows—he has told her. She prays
there as the light goes out, prays with an humble heart, and walks
home shrinking and silent. She is very tired when she comes home.
Perhaps she will sleep the better for that long weary walk, and she
may dream about Georgy.
One Sunday she happened to be walking
in Russell Square, at some distance from Mr. Osborne's house (she
could see it from a distance though) when all the bells of Sabbath
were ringing, and George and his aunt came out to go to church; a
little sweep asked for charity, and the footman, who carried the
books, tried to drive him away; but Georgy stopped and gave him
money. May God's blessing be on the boy! Emmy ran round the square
and, coming up to the sweep, gave him her mite too. All the bells of
Sabbath were ringing, and she followed them until she came to the
Foundling Church, into which she went. There she sat in a place
whence she could see the head of the boy under his father's
tombstone. Many hundred fresh children's voices rose up there and
sang hymns to the Father Beneficent, and little George's soul
thrilled with delight at the burst of glorious psalmody. His mother
could not see him for awhile, through the mist that dimmed her eyes.
Chapter LI
*
In Which a Charade Is Acted Which May
or May Not Puzzle the Reader
After Becky's appearance at my Lord
Steyne's private and select parties, the claims of that estimable
woman as regards fashion were settled, and some of the very greatest
and tallest doors in the metropolis were speedily opened to her—doors
so great and tall that the beloved reader and writer hereof may hope
in vain to enter at them. Dear brethren, let us tremble before those
august portals. I fancy them guarded by grooms of the chamber with
flaming silver forks with which they prong all those who have not the
right of the entree. They say the honest newspaper-fellow who sits in
the hall and takes down the names of the great ones who are admitted
to the feasts dies after a little time. He can't survive the glare of
fashion long. It scorches him up, as the presence of Jupiter in full
dress wasted that poor imprudent Semele—a giddy moth of a creature
who ruined herself by venturing out of her natural atmosphere. Her
myth ought to be taken to heart amongst the Tyburnians, the
Belgravians—her story, and perhaps Becky's too. Ah, ladies!—ask
the Reverend Mr. Thurifer if Belgravia is not a sounding brass and
Tyburnia a tinkling cymbal. These are vanities. Even these will pass
away. And some day or other (but it will be after our time, thank
goodness) Hyde Park Gardens will be no better known than the
celebrated horticultural outskirts of Babylon, and Belgrave Square
will be as desolate as Baker Street, or Tadmor in the wilderness.
Ladies, are you aware that the great
Pitt lived in Baker Street? What would not your grandmothers have
given to be asked to Lady Hester's parties in that now decayed
mansion? I have dined in it— moi qui vous parle, I peopled the
chamber with ghosts of the mighty dead. As we sat soberly drinking
claret there with men of to-day, the spirits of the departed came in
and took their places round the darksome board. The pilot who
weathered the storm tossed off great bumpers of spiritual port; the
shade of Dundas did not leave the ghost of a heeltap. Addington sat
bowing and smirking in a ghastly manner, and would not be behindhand
when the noiseless bottle went round; Scott, from under bushy
eyebrows, winked at the apparition of a beeswing; Wilberforce's eyes
went up to the ceiling, so that he did not seem to know how his glass
went up full to his mouth and came down empty; up to the ceiling
which was above us only yesterday, and which the great of the past
days have all looked at. They let the house as a furnished lodging
now. Yes, Lady Hester once lived in Baker Street, and lies asleep in
the wilderness. Eothen saw her there—not in Baker Street, but in
the other solitude.
It is all vanity to be sure, but who
will not own to liking a little of it? I should like to know what
well-constituted mind, merely because it is transitory, dislikes
roast beef? That is a vanity, but may every man who reads this have a
wholesome portion of it through life, I beg: aye, though my readers
were five hundred thousand. Sit down, gentlemen, and fall to, with a
good hearty appetite; the fat, the lean, the gravy, the horse-radish
as you like it—don't spare it. Another glass of wine, Jones, my
boy—a little bit of the Sunday side. Yes, let us eat our fill of
the vain thing and be thankful therefor. And let us make the best of
Becky's aristocratic pleasures likewise—for these too, like all
other mortal delights, were but transitory.
The upshot of her visit to Lord Steyne
was that His Highness the Prince of Peterwaradin took occasion to
renew his acquaintance with Colonel Crawley, when they met on the
next day at the Club, and to compliment Mrs. Crawley in the Ring of
Hyde Park with a profound salute of the hat. She and her husband were
invited immediately to one of the Prince's small parties at Levant
House, then occupied by His Highness during the temporary absence
from England of its noble proprietor. She sang after dinner to a very
little comite. The Marquis of Steyne was present, paternally
superintending the progress of his pupil.
At Levant House Becky met one of the
finest gentlemen and greatest ministers that Europe has produced—the
Duc de la Jabotiere, then Ambassador from the Most Christian King,
and subsequently Minister to that monarch. I declare I swell with
pride as these august names are transcribed by my pen, and I think in
what brilliant company my dear Becky is moving. She became a constant
guest at the French Embassy, where no party was considered to be
complete without the presence of the charming Madame Ravdonn Cravley.
Messieurs de Truffigny (of the Perigord family) and Champignac, both
attaches of the Embassy, were straightway smitten by the charms of
the fair Colonel's wife, and both declared, according to the wont of
their nation (for who ever yet met a Frenchman, come out of England,
that has not left half a dozen families miserable, and brought away
as many hearts in his pocket-book?), both, I say, declared that they
were au mieux with the charming Madame Ravdonn.
But I doubt the correctness of the
assertion. Champignac was very fond of ecarte, and made many parties
with the Colonel of evenings, while Becky was singing to Lord Steyne
in the other room; and as for Truffigny, it is a well-known fact that
he dared not go to the Travellers', where he owed money to the
waiters, and if he had not had the Embassy as a dining-place, the
worthy young gentleman must have starved. I doubt, I say, that Becky
would have selected either of these young men as a person on whom she
would bestow her special regard. They ran of her messages, purchased
her gloves and flowers, went in debt for opera-boxes for her, and
made themselves amiable in a thousand ways. And they talked English
with adorable simplicity, and to the constant amusement of Becky and
my Lord Steyne, she would mimic one or other to his face, and
compliment him on his advance in the English language with a gravity
which never failed to tickle the Marquis, her sardonic old patron.
Truffigny gave Briggs a shawl by way of winning over Becky's
confidante, and asked her to take charge of a letter which the simple
spinster handed over in public to the person to whom it was
addressed, and the composition of which amused everybody who read it
greatly. Lord Steyne read it, everybody but honest Rawdon, to whom it
was not necessary to tell everything that passed in the little house
in May Fair.
Here, before long, Becky received not
only "the best" foreigners (as the phrase is in our noble
and admirable society slang), but some of the best English people
too. I don't mean the most virtuous, or indeed the least virtuous, or
the cleverest, or the stupidest, or the richest, or the best born,
but "the best,"—in a word, people about whom there is no
question—such as the great Lady Fitz-Willis, that Patron Saint of
Almack's, the great Lady Slowbore, the great Lady Grizzel Macbeth
(she was Lady G. Glowry, daughter of Lord Grey of Glowry), and the
like. When the Countess of Fitz-Willis (her Ladyship is of the
Kingstreet family, see Debrett and Burke) takes up a person, he or
she is safe. There is no question about them any more. Not that my
Lady Fitz-Willis is any better than anybody else, being, on the
contrary, a faded person, fifty-seven years of age, and neither
handsome, nor wealthy, nor entertaining; but it is agreed on all
sides that she is of the "best people." Those who go to her
are of the best: and from an old grudge probably to Lady Steyne (for
whose coronet her ladyship, then the youthful Georgina Frederica,
daughter of the Prince of Wales's favourite, the Earl of
Portansherry, had once tried), this great and famous leader of the
fashion chose to acknowledge Mrs. Rawdon Crawley; made her a most
marked curtsey at the assembly over which she presided; and not only
encouraged her son, St. Kitts (his lordship got his place through
Lord Steyne's interest), to frequent Mrs. Crawley's house, but asked
her to her own mansion and spoke to her twice in the most public and
condescending manner during dinner. The important fact was known all
over London that night. People who had been crying fie about Mrs.
Crawley were silent. Wenham, the wit and lawyer, Lord Steyne's
right-hand man, went about everywhere praising her: some who had
hesitated, came forward at once and welcomed her; little Tom Toady,
who had warned Southdown about visiting such an abandoned woman, now
besought to be introduced to her. In a word, she was admitted to be
among the "best" people. Ah, my beloved readers and
brethren, do not envy poor Becky prematurely—glory like this is
said to be fugitive. It is currently reported that even in the very
inmost circles, they are no happier than the poor wanderers outside
the zone; and Becky, who penetrated into the very centre of fashion
and saw the great George IV face to face, has owned since that there
too was Vanity.
We must be brief in descanting upon
this part of her career. As I cannot describe the mysteries of
freemasonry, although I have a shrewd idea that it is a humbug, so an
uninitiated man cannot take upon himself to portray the great world
accurately, and had best keep his opinions to himself, whatever they
are.
Becky has often spoken in subsequent
years of this season of her life, when she moved among the very
greatest circles of the London fashion. Her success excited, elated,
and then bored her. At first no occupation was more pleasant than to
invent and procure (the latter a work of no small trouble and
ingenuity, by the way, in a person of Mrs. Rawdon Crawley's very
narrow means)—to procure, we say, the prettiest new dresses and
ornaments; to drive to fine dinner parties, where she was welcomed by
great people; and from the fine dinner parties to fine assemblies,
whither the same people came with whom she had been dining, whom she
had met the night before, and would see on the morrow—the young men
faultlessly appointed, handsomely cravatted, with the neatest glossy
boots and white gloves—the elders portly, brass-buttoned,
noble-looking, polite, and prosy—the young ladies blonde, timid,
and in pink—the mothers grand, beautiful, sumptuous, solemn, and in
diamonds. They talked in English, not in bad French, as they do in
the novels. They talked about each others' houses, and characters,
and families—just as the Joneses do about the Smiths. Becky's
former acquaintances hated and envied her; the poor woman herself was
yawning in spirit. "I wish I were out of it," she said to
herself. "I would rather be a parson's wife and teach a Sunday
school than this; or a sergeant's lady and ride in the regimental
waggon; or, oh, how much gayer it would be to wear spangles and
trousers and dance before a booth at a fair."
"You would do it very well,"
said Lord Steyne, laughing. She used to tell the great man her ennuis
and perplexities in her artless way— they amused him.
"Rawdon would make a very good
Ecuyer—Master of the Ceremonies— what do you call him—the man
in the large boots and the uniform, who goes round the ring cracking
the whip? He is large, heavy, and of a military figure. I recollect,"
Becky continued pensively, "my father took me to see a show at
Brookgreen Fair when I was a child, and when we came home, I made
myself a pair of stilts and danced in the studio to the wonder of all
the pupils."
"I should have liked to see it,"
said Lord Steyne.
"I should like to do it now,"
Becky continued. "How Lady Blinkey would open her eyes, and Lady
Grizzel Macbeth would stare! Hush! silence! there is Pasta beginning
to sing." Becky always made a point of being conspicuously
polite to the professional ladies and gentlemen who attended at these
aristocratic parties—of following them into the corners where they
sat in silence, and shaking hands with them, and smiling in the view
of all persons. She was an artist herself, as she said very truly;
there was a frankness and humility in the manner in which she
acknowledged her origin, which provoked, or disarmed, or amused
lookers-on, as the case might be. "How cool that woman is,"
said one; "what airs of independence she assumes, where she
ought to sit still and be thankful if anybody speaks to her!"
"What an honest and good-natured soul she is!" said
another. "What an artful little minx" said a third. They
were all right very likely, but Becky went her own way, and so
fascinated the professional personages that they would leave off
their sore throats in order to sing at her parties and give her
lessons for nothing.
Yes, she gave parties in the little
house in Curzon Street. Many scores of carriages, with blazing lamps,
blocked up the street, to the disgust of No. 100, who could not rest
for the thunder of the knocking, and of 102, who could not sleep for
envy. The gigantic footmen who accompanied the vehicles were too big
to be contained in Becky's little hall, and were billeted off in the
neighbouring public-houses, whence, when they were wanted, call-boys
summoned them from their beer. Scores of the great dandies of London
squeezed and trod on each other on the little stairs, laughing to
find themselves there; and many spotless and severe ladies of ton
were seated in the little drawing-room, listening to the professional
singers, who were singing according to their wont, and as if they
wished to blow the windows down. And the day after, there appeared
among the fashionable reunions in the Morning Post a paragraph to the
following effect:
"Yesterday, Colonel and Mrs.
Crawley entertained a select party at dinner at their house in May
Fair. Their Excellencies the Prince and Princess of Peterwaradin, H.
E. Papoosh Pasha, the Turkish Ambassador (attended by Kibob Bey,
dragoman of the mission), the Marquess of Steyne, Earl of Southdown,
Sir Pitt and Lady Jane Crawley, Mr. Wagg, &c. After dinner Mrs.
Crawley had an assembly which was attended by the Duchess (Dowager)
of Stilton, Duc de la Gruyere, Marchioness of Cheshire, Marchese
Alessandro Strachino, Comte de Brie, Baron Schapzuger, Chevalier
Tosti, Countess of Slingstone, and Lady F. Macadam, Major-General and
Lady G. Macbeth, and (2) Miss Macbeths; Viscount Paddington, Sir
Horace Fogey, Hon. Sands Bedwin, Bobachy Bahawder," and an &c.,
which the reader may fill at his pleasure through a dozen close lines
of small type.
And in her commerce with the great our
dear friend showed the same frankness which distinguished her
transactions with the lowly in station. On one occasion, when out at
a very fine house, Rebecca was (perhaps rather ostentatiously)
holding a conversation in the French language with a celebrated tenor
singer of that nation, while the Lady Grizzel Macbeth looked over her
shoulder scowling at the pair.
"How very well you speak French,"
Lady Grizzel said, who herself spoke the tongue in an Edinburgh
accent most remarkable to hear.
"I ought to know it," Becky
modestly said, casting down her eyes. "I taught it in a school,
and my mother was a Frenchwoman."
Lady Grizzel was won by her humility
and was mollified towards the little woman. She deplored the fatal
levelling tendencies of the age, which admitted persons of all
classes into the society of their superiors, but her ladyship owned
that this one at least was well behaved and never forgot her place in
life. She was a very good woman: good to the poor; stupid, blameless,
unsuspicious. It is not her ladyship's fault that she fancies herself
better than you and me. The skirts of her ancestors' garments have
been kissed for centuries; it is a thousand years, they say, since
the tartans of the head of the family were embraced by the defunct
Duncan's lords and councillors, when the great ancestor of the House
became King of Scotland.
Lady Steyne, after the music scene,
succumbed before Becky, and perhaps was not disinclined to her. The
younger ladies of the house of Gaunt were also compelled into
submission. Once or twice they set people at her, but they failed.
The brilliant Lady Stunnington tried a passage of arms with her, but
was routed with great slaughter by the intrepid little Becky. When
attacked sometimes, Becky had a knack of adopting a demure ingenue
air, under which she was most dangerous. She said the wickedest
things with the most simple unaffected air when in this mood, and
would take care artlessly to apologize for her blunders, so that all
the world should know that she had made them.
Mr. Wagg, the celebrated wit, and a led
captain and trencher-man of my Lord Steyne, was caused by the ladies
to charge her; and the worthy fellow, leering at his patronesses and
giving them a wink, as much as to say, "Now look out for sport,"
one evening began an assault upon Becky, who was unsuspiciously
eating her dinner. The little woman, attacked on a sudden, but never
without arms, lighted up in an instant, parried and riposted with a
home-thrust, which made Wagg's face tingle with shame; then she
returned to her soup with the most perfect calm and a quiet smile on
her face. Wagg's great patron, who gave him dinners and lent him a
little money sometimes, and whose election, newspaper, and other jobs
Wagg did, gave the luckless fellow such a savage glance with the eyes
as almost made him sink under the table and burst into tears. He
looked piteously at my lord, who never spoke to him during dinner,
and at the ladies, who disowned him. At last Becky herself took
compassion upon him and tried to engage him in talk. He was not asked
to dinner again for six weeks; and Fiche, my lord's confidential man,
to whom Wagg naturally paid a good deal of court, was instructed to
tell him that if he ever dared to say a rude thing to Mrs. Crawley
again, or make her the butt of his stupid jokes, Milor would put
every one of his notes of hand into his lawyer's hands and sell him
up without mercy. Wagg wept before Fiche and implored his dear friend
to intercede for him. He wrote a poem in favour of Mrs. R. C., which
appeared in the very next number of the Harum-scarum Magazine, which
he conducted. He implored her good- will at parties where he met her.
He cringed and coaxed Rawdon at the club. He was allowed to come back
to Gaunt House after a while. Becky was always good to him, always
amused, never angry.
His lordship's vizier and chief
confidential servant (with a seat in parliament and at the dinner
table), Mr. Wenham, was much more prudent in his behaviour and
opinions than Mr. Wagg. However much he might be disposed to hate all
parvenus (Mr. Wenham himself was a staunch old True Blue Tory, and
his father a small coal-merchant in the north of England), this
aide-de-camp of the Marquis never showed any sort of hostility to the
new favourite, but pursued her with stealthy kindnesses and a sly and
deferential politeness which somehow made Becky more uneasy than
other people's overt hostilities.
How the Crawleys got the money which
was spent upon the entertainments with which they treated the polite
world was a mystery which gave rise to some conversation at the time,
and probably added zest to these little festivities. Some persons
averred that Sir Pitt Crawley gave his brother a handsome allowance;
if he did, Becky's power over the Baronet must have been
extraordinary indeed, and his character greatly changed in his
advanced age. Other parties hinted that it was Becky's habit to levy
contributions on all her husband's friends: going to this one in
tears with an account that there was an execution in the house;
falling on her knees to that one and declaring that the whole family
must go to gaol or commit suicide unless such and such a bill could
be paid. Lord Southdown, it was said, had been induced to give many
hundreds through these pathetic representations. Young Feltham, of
the —th Dragoons (and son of the firm of Tiler and Feltham, hatters
and army accoutrement makers), and whom the Crawleys introduced into
fashionable life, was also cited as one of Becky's victims in the
pecuniary way. People declared that she got money from various simply
disposed persons, under pretence of getting them confidential
appointments under Government. Who knows what stories were or were
not told of our dear and innocent friend? Certain it is that if she
had had all the money which she was said to have begged or borrowed
or stolen, she might have capitalized and been honest for life,
whereas,—but this is advancing matters.
The truth is, that by economy and good
management—by a sparing use of ready money and by paying scarcely
anybody—people can manage, for a time at least, to make a great
show with very little means: and it is our belief that Becky's
much-talked-of parties, which were not, after all was said, very
numerous, cost this lady very little more than the wax candles which
lighted the walls. Stillbrook and Queen's Crawley supplied her with
game and fruit in abundance. Lord Steyne's cellars were at her
disposal, and that excellent nobleman's famous cooks presided over
her little kitchen, or sent by my lord's order the rarest delicacies
from their own. I protest it is quite shameful in the world to abuse
a simple creature, as people of her time abuse Becky, and I warn the
public against believing one-tenth of the stories against her. If
every person is to be banished from society who runs into debt and
cannot pay—if we are to be peering into everybody's private life,
speculating upon their income, and cutting them if we don't approve
of their expenditure—why, what a howling wilderness and intolerable
dwelling Vanity Fair would be! Every man's hand would be against his
neighbour in this case, my dear sir, and the benefits of civilization
would be done away with. We should be quarrelling, abusing, avoiding
one another. Our houses would become caverns, and we should go in
rags because we cared for nobody. Rents would go down. Parties
wouldn't be given any more. All the tradesmen of the town would be
bankrupt. Wine, wax-lights, comestibles, rouge, crinoline-petticoats,
diamonds, wigs, Louis- Quatorze gimcracks, and old china, park hacks,
and splendid high- stepping carriage horses—all the delights of
life, I say,—would go to the deuce, if people did but act upon
their silly principles and avoid those whom they dislike and abuse.
Whereas, by a little charity and mutual forbearance, things are made
to go on pleasantly enough: we may abuse a man as much as we like,
and call him the greatest rascal unhanged—but do we wish to hang
him therefore? No. We shake hands when we meet. If his cook is good
we forgive him and go and dine with him, and we expect he will do the
same by us. Thus trade flourishes—civilization advances; peace is
kept; new dresses are wanted for new assemblies every week; and the
last year's vintage of Lafitte will remunerate the honest proprietor
who reared it.
At the time whereof we are writing,
though the Great George was on the throne and ladies wore gigots and
large combs like tortoise- shell shovels in their hair, instead of
the simple sleeves and lovely wreaths which are actually in fashion,
the manners of the very polite world were not, I take it, essentially
different from those of the present day: and their amusements pretty
similar. To us, from the outside, gazing over the policeman's
shoulders at the bewildering beauties as they pass into Court or
ball, they may seem beings of unearthly splendour and in the
enjoyment of an exquisite happiness by us unattainable. It is to
console some of these dissatisfied beings that we are narrating our
dear Becky's struggles, and triumphs, and disappointments, of all of
which, indeed, as is the case with all persons of merit, she had her
share.
At this time the amiable amusement of
acting charades had come among us from France, and was considerably
in vogue in this country, enabling the many ladies amongst us who had
beauty to display their charms, and the fewer number who had
cleverness to exhibit their wit. My Lord Steyne was incited by Becky,
who perhaps believed herself endowed with both the above
qualifications, to give an entertainment at Gaunt House, which should
include some of these little dramas—and we must take leave to
introduce the reader to this brilliant reunion, and, with a
melancholy welcome too, for it will be among the very last of the
fashionable entertainments to which it will be our fortune to conduct
him.
A portion of that splendid room, the
picture gallery of Gaunt House, was arranged as the charade theatre.
It had been so used when George III was king; and a picture of the
Marquis of Gaunt is still extant, with his hair in powder and a pink
ribbon, in a Roman shape, as it was called, enacting the part of Cato
in Mr. Addison's tragedy of that name, performed before their Royal
Highnesses the Prince of Wales, the Bishop of Osnaburgh, and Prince
William Henry, then children like the actor. One or two of the old
properties were drawn out of the garrets, where they had lain ever
since, and furbished up anew for the present festivities.
Young Bedwin Sands, then an elegant
dandy and Eastern traveller, was manager of the revels. An Eastern
traveller was somebody in those days, and the adventurous Bedwin, who
had published his quarto and passed some months under the tents in
the desert, was a personage of no small importance. In his volume
there were several pictures of Sands in various oriental costumes;
and he travelled about with a black attendant of most unprepossessing
appearance, just like another Brian de Bois Guilbert. Bedwin, his
costumes, and black man, were hailed at Gaunt House as very valuable
acquisitions.
He led off the first charade. A Turkish
officer with an immense plume of feathers (the Janizaries were
supposed to be still in existence, and the tarboosh had not as yet
displaced the ancient and majestic head-dress of the true believers)
was seen couched on a divan, and making believe to puff at a
narghile, in which, however, for the sake of the ladies, only a
fragrant pastille was allowed to smoke. The Turkish dignitary yawns
and expresses signs of weariness and idleness. He claps his hands and
Mesrour the Nubian appears, with bare arms, bangles, yataghans, and
every Eastern ornament— gaunt, tall, and hideous. He makes a salaam
before my lord the Aga.
A thrill of terror and delight runs
through the assembly. The ladies whisper to one another. The black
slave was given to Bedwin Sands by an Egyptian pasha in exchange for
three dozen of Maraschino. He has sewn up ever so many odalisques in
sacks and tilted them into the Nile.
"Bid the slave-merchant enter,"
says the Turkish voluptuary with a wave of his hand. Mesrour conducts
the slave-merchant into my lord's presence; he brings a veiled female
with him. He removes the veil. A thrill of applause bursts through
the house. It is Mrs. Winkworth (she was a Miss Absolom) with the
beautiful eyes and hair. She is in a gorgeous oriental costume; the
black braided locks are twined with innumerable jewels; her dress is
covered over with gold piastres. The odious Mahometan expresses
himself charmed by her beauty. She falls down on her knees and
entreats him to restore her to the mountains where she was born, and
where her Circassian lover is still deploring the absence of his
Zuleikah. No entreaties will move the obdurate Hassan. He laughs at
the notion of the Circassian bridegroom. Zuleikah covers her face
with her hands and drops down in an attitude of the most beautiful
despair. There seems to be no hope for her, when—when the Kislar
Aga appears.
The Kislar Aga brings a letter from the
Sultan. Hassan receives and places on his head the dread firman. A
ghastly terror seizes him, while on the Negro's face (it is Mesrour
again in another costume) appears a ghastly joy. "Mercy! mercy!"
cries the Pasha: while the Kislar Aga, grinning horribly, pulls out—a
bow-string.
The curtain draws just as he is going
to use that awful weapon. Hassan from within bawls out, "First
two syllables"—and Mrs. Rawdon Crawley, who is going to act in
the charade, comes forward and compliments Mrs. Winkworth on the
admirable taste and beauty of her costume.
The second part of the charade takes
place. It is still an Eastern scene. Hassan, in another dress, is in
an attitude by Zuleikah, who is perfectly reconciled to him. The
Kislar Aga has become a peaceful black slave. It is sunrise on the
desert, and the Turks turn their heads eastwards and bow to the sand.
As there are no dromedaries at hand, the band facetiously plays "The
Camels are coming." An enormous Egyptian head figures in the
scene. It is a musical one— and, to the surprise of the oriental
travellers, sings a comic song, composed by Mr. Wagg. The Eastern
voyagers go off dancing, like Papageno and the Moorish King in The
Magic Flute. "Last two syllables," roars the head.
The last act opens. It is a Grecian
tent this time. A tall and stalwart man reposes on a couch there.
Above him hang his helmet and shield. There is no need for them now.
Ilium is down. Iphigenia is slain. Cassandra is a prisoner in his
outer halls. The king of men (it is Colonel Crawley, who, indeed, has
no notion about the sack of Ilium or the conquest of Cassandra), the
anax andron is asleep in his chamber at Argos. A lamp casts the broad
shadow of the sleeping warrior flickering on the wall—the sword and
shield of Troy glitter in its light. The band plays the awful music
of Don Juan, before the statue enters.
Aegisthus steals in pale and on tiptoe.
What is that ghastly face looking out balefully after him from behind
the arras? He raises his dagger to strike the sleeper, who turns in
his bed, and opens his broad chest as if for the blow. He cannot
strike the noble slumbering chieftain. Clytemnestra glides swiftly
into the room like an apparition—her arms are bare and white—her
tawny hair floats down her shoulders—her face is deadly pale—and
her eyes are lighted up with a smile so ghastly that people quake as
they look at her.
A tremor ran through the room. "Good
God!" somebody said, "it's Mrs. Rawdon Crawley."
Scornfully she snatches the dagger out
of Aegisthus's hand and advances to the bed. You see it shining over
her head in the glimmer of the lamp, and—and the lamp goes out,
with a groan, and all is dark.
The darkness and the scene frightened
people. Rebecca performed her part so well, and with such ghastly
truth, that the spectators were all dumb, until, with a burst, all
the lamps of the hall blazed out again, when everybody began to shout
applause. "Brava! brava!" old Steyne's strident voice was
heard roaring over all the rest. "By—, she'd do it too,"
he said between his teeth. The performers were called by the whole
house, which sounded with cries of "Manager! Clytemnestra!"
Agamemnon could not be got to show in his classical tunic, but stood
in the background with Aegisthus and others of the performers of the
little play. Mr. Bedwin Sands led on Zuleikah and Clytemnestra. A
great personage insisted on being presented to the charming
Clytemnestra. "Heigh ha? Run him through the body. Marry
somebody else, hay?" was the apposite remark made by His Royal
Highness.
"Mrs. Rawdon Crawley was quite
killing in the part," said Lord Steyne. Becky laughed, gay and
saucy looking, and swept the prettiest little curtsey ever seen.
Servants brought in salvers covered
with numerous cool dainties, and the performers disappeared to get
ready for the second charade- tableau.
The three syllables of this charade
were to be depicted in pantomime, and the performance took place in
the following wise:
First syllable. Colonel Rawdon Crawley,
C.B., with a slouched hat and a staff, a great-coat, and a lantern
borrowed from the stables, passed across the stage bawling out, as if
warning the inhabitants of the hour. In the lower window are seen two
bagmen playing apparently at the game of cribbage, over which they
yawn much. To them enters one looking like Boots (the Honourable G.
Ringwood), which character the young gentleman performed to
perfection, and divests them of their lower coverings; and presently
Chambermaid (the Right Honourable Lord Southdown) with two
candlesticks, and a warming-pan. She ascends to the upper apartment
and warms the bed. She uses the warming-pan as a weapon wherewith she
wards off the attention of the bagmen. She exits. They put on their
night-caps and pull down the blinds. Boots comes out and closes the
shutters of the ground-floor chamber. You hear him bolting and
chaining the door within. All the lights go out. The music plays
Dormez, dormez, chers Amours. A voice from behind the curtain says,
"First syllable."
Second syllable. The lamps are lighted
up all of a sudden. The music plays the old air from John of Paris,
Ah quel plaisir d'etre en voyage. It is the same scene. Between the
first and second floors of the house represented, you behold a sign
on which the Steyne arms are painted. All the bells are ringing all
over the house. In the lower apartment you see a man with a long slip
of paper presenting it to another, who shakes his fists, threatens
and vows that it is monstrous. "Ostler, bring round my gig,"
cries another at the door. He chucks Chambermaid (the Right
Honourable Lord Southdown) under the chin; she seems to deplore his
absence, as Calypso did that of that other eminent traveller Ulysses.
Boots (the Honourable G. Ringwood) passes with a wooden box,
containing silver flagons, and cries "Pots" with such
exquisite humour and naturalness that the whole house rings with
applause, and a bouquet is thrown to him. Crack, crack, crack, go the
whips. Landlord, chambermaid, waiter rush to the door, but just as
some distinguished guest is arriving, the curtains close, and the
invisible theatrical manager cries out "Second syllable."
"I think it must be 'Hotel,'"
says Captain Grigg of the Life Guards; there is a general laugh at
the Captain's cleverness. He is not very far from the mark.
While the third syllable is in
preparation, the band begins a nautical medley—"All in the
Downs," "Cease Rude Boreas," "Rule Britannia,"
"In the Bay of Biscay O!"—some maritime event is about to
take place. A ben is heard ringing as the curtain draws aside. "Now,
gents, for the shore!" a voice exclaims. People take leave of
each other. They point anxiously as if towards the clouds, which are
represented by a dark curtain, and they nod their heads in fear. Lady
Squeams (the Right Honourable Lord Southdown), her lap-dog, her bags,
reticules, and husband sit down, and cling hold of some ropes. It is
evidently a ship.
The Captain (Colonel Crawley, C.B.),
with a cocked hat and a telescope, comes in, holding his hat on his
head, and looks out; his coat tails fly about as if in the wind. When
he leaves go of his hat to use his telescope, his hat flies off, with
immense applause. It is blowing fresh. The music rises and whistles
louder and louder; the mariners go across the stage staggering, as if
the ship was in severe motion. The Steward (the Honourable G.
Ringwood) passes reeling by, holding six basins. He puts one rapidly
by Lord Squeams—Lady Squeams, giving a pinch to her dog, which
begins to howl piteously, puts her pocket-handkerchief to her face,
and rushes away as for the cabin. The music rises up to the wildest
pitch of stormy excitement, and the third syllable is concluded.
There was a little ballet, "Le
Rossignol," in which Montessu and Noblet used to be famous in
those days, and which Mr. Wagg transferred to the English stage as an
opera, putting his verse, of which he was a skilful writer, to the
pretty airs of the ballet. It was dressed in old French costume, and
little Lord Southdown now appeared admirably attired in the disguise
of an old woman hobbling about the stage with a faultless crooked
stick.
Trills of melody were heard behind the
scenes, and gurgling from a sweet pasteboard cottage covered with
roses and trellis work. "Philomele, Philomele," cries the
old woman, and Philomele comes out.
More applause—it is Mrs. Rawdon
Crawley in powder and patches, the most ravissante little Marquise in
the world.
She comes in laughing, humming, and
frisks about the stage with all the innocence of theatrical youth—she
makes a curtsey. Mamma says "Why, child, you are always laughing
and singing," and away she goes, with—
THE ROSE UPON MY BALCONY
The rose upon my balcony the morning
air perfuming Was leafless all the winter time and pining for the
spring; You ask me why her breath is sweet and why her cheek is
blooming, It is because the sun is out and birds begin to sing.
The nightingale, whose melody is
through the greenwood ringing, Was silent when the boughs were bare
and winds were blowing keen: And if, Mamma, you ask of me the reason
of his singing, It is because the sun is out and all the leaves are
green.
Thus each performs his part, Mamma, the
birds have found their voices, The blowing rose a flush, Mamma, her
bonny cheek to dye; And there's sunshine in my heart, Mamma, which
wakens and rejoices, And so I sing and blush, Mamma, and that's the
reason why.
During the intervals of the stanzas of
this ditty, the good-natured personage addressed as Mamma by the
singer, and whose large whiskers appeared under her cap, seemed very
anxious to exhibit her maternal affection by embracing the innocent
creature who performed the daughter's part. Every caress was received
with loud acclamations of laughter by the sympathizing audience. At
its conclusion (while the music was performing a symphony as if ever
so many birds were warbling) the whole house was unanimous for an
encore: and applause and bouquets without end were showered upon the
Nightingale of the evening. Lord Steyne's voice of applause was
loudest of all. Becky, the nightingale, took the flowers which he
threw to her and pressed them to her heart with the air of a
consummate comedian. Lord Steyne was frantic with delight. His
guests' enthusiasm harmonized with his own. Where was the beautiful
black-eyed Houri whose appearance in the first charade had caused
such delight? She was twice as handsome as Becky, but the brilliancy
of the latter had quite eclipsed her. All voices were for her.
Stephens, Caradori, Ronzi de Begnis, people compared her to one or
the other, and agreed with good reason, very likely, that had she
been an actress none on the stage could have surpassed her. She had
reached her culmination: her voice rose trilling and bright over the
storm of applause, and soared as high and joyful as her triumph.
There was a ball after the dramatic entertainments, and everybody
pressed round Becky as the great point of attraction of the evening.
The Royal Personage declared with an oath that she was perfection,
and engaged her again and again in conversation. Little Becky's soul
swelled with pride and delight at these honours; she saw fortune,
fame, fashion before her. Lord Steyne was her slave, followed her
everywhere, and scarcely spoke to any one in the room beside, and
paid her the most marked compliments and attention. She still
appeared in her Marquise costume and danced a minuet with Monsieur de
Truffigny, Monsieur Le Duc de la Jabotiere's attache; and the Duke,
who had all the traditions of the ancient court, pronounced that
Madame Crawley was worthy to have been a pupil of Vestris, or to have
figured at Versailles. Only a feeling of dignity, the gout, and the
strongest sense of duty and personal sacrifice prevented his
Excellency from dancing with her himself, and he declared in public
that a lady who could talk and dance like Mrs. Rawdon was fit to be
ambassadress at any court in Europe. He was only consoled when he
heard that she was half a Frenchwoman by birth. "None but a
compatriot," his Excellency declared, "could have performed
that majestic dance in such a way."
Then she figured in a waltz with
Monsieur de Klingenspohr, the Prince of Peterwaradin's cousin and
attache. The delighted Prince, having less retenue than his French
diplomatic colleague, insisted upon taking a turn with the charming
creature, and twirled round the ball-room with her, scattering the
diamonds out of his boot-tassels and hussar jacket until his Highness
was fairly out of breath. Papoosh Pasha himself would have liked to
dance with her if that amusement had been the custom of his country.
The company made a circle round her and applauded as wildly as if she
had been a Noblet or a Taglioni. Everybody was in ecstacy; and Becky
too, you may be sure. She passed by Lady Stunnington with a look of
scorn. She patronized Lady Gaunt and her astonished and mortified
sister-in- law—she ecrased all rival charmers. As for poor Mrs.
Winkworth, and her long hair and great eyes, which had made such an
effect at the commencement of the evening—where was she now?
Nowhere in the race. She might tear her long hair and cry her great
eyes out, but there was not a person to heed or to deplore the
discomfiture.
The greatest triumph of all was at
supper time. She was placed at the grand exclusive table with his
Royal Highness the exalted personage before mentioned, and the rest
of the great guests. She was served on gold plate. She might have had
pearls melted into her champagne if she liked—another Cleopatra—and
the potentate of Peterwaradin would have given half the brilliants
off his jacket for a kind glance from those dazzling eyes. Jabotiere
wrote home about her to his government. The ladies at the other
tables, who supped off mere silver and marked Lord Steyne's constant
attention to her, vowed it was a monstrous infatuation, a gross
insult to ladies of rank. If sarcasm could have killed, Lady
Stunnington would have slain her on the spot.
Rawdon Crawley was scared at these
triumphs. They seemed to separate his wife farther than ever from him
somehow. He thought with a feeling very like pain how immeasurably
she was his superior.
When the hour of departure came, a
crowd of young men followed her to her carriage, for which the people
without bawled, the cry being caught up by the link-men who were
stationed outside the tall gates of Gaunt House, congratulating each
person who issued from the gate and hoping his Lordship had enjoyed
this noble party.
Mrs. Rawdon Crawley's carriage, coming
up to the gate after due shouting, rattled into the illuminated
court-yard and drove up to the covered way. Rawdon put his wife into
the carriage, which drove off. Mr. Wenham had proposed to him to walk
home, and offered the Colonel the refreshment of a cigar.
They lighted their cigars by the lamp
of one of the many link-boys outside, and Rawdon walked on with his
friend Wenham. Two persons separated from the crowd and followed the
two gentlemen; and when they had walked down Gaunt Square a few score
of paces, one of the men came up and, touching Rawdon on the
shoulder, said, "Beg your pardon, Colonel, I vish to speak to
you most particular." This gentleman's acquaintance gave a loud
whistle as the latter spoke, at which signal a cab came clattering up
from those stationed at the gate of Gaunt House—and the
aide-de-camp ran round and placed himself in front of Colonel
Crawley.
That gallant officer at once knew what
had befallen him. He was in the hands of the bailiffs. He started
back, falling against the man who had first touched him.
"We're three on us—it's no use
bolting," the man behind said.
"It's you, Moss, is it?" said
the Colonel, who appeared to know his interlocutor. "How much is
it?"
"Only a small thing,"
whispered Mr. Moss, of Cursitor Street, Chancery Lane, and assistant
officer to the Sheriff of Middlesex— "One hundred and
sixty-six, six and eight-pence, at the suit of Mr. Nathan."
"Lend me a hundred, Wenham, for
God's sake," poor Rawdon said—"I've got seventy at home."
"I've not got ten pounds in the
world," said poor Mr. Wenham—"Good night, my dear
fellow."
"Good night," said Rawdon
ruefully. And Wenham walked away—and Rawdon Crawley finished his
cigar as the cab drove under Temple Bar.
Chapter LII
*
In Which Lord Steyne Shows Himself in a
Most Amiable Light
When Lord Steyne was benevolently
disposed, he did nothing by halves, and his kindness towards the
Crawley family did the greatest honour to his benevolent
discrimination. His lordship extended his good-will to little Rawdon:
he pointed out to the boy's parents the necessity of sending him to a
public school, that he was of an age now when emulation, the first
principles of the Latin language, pugilistic exercises, and the
society of his fellow-boys would be of the greatest benefit to the
boy. His father objected that he was not rich enough to send the
child to a good public school; his mother that Briggs was a capital
mistress for him, and had brought him on (as indeed was the fact)
famously in English, the Latin rudiments, and in general learning:
but all these objections disappeared before the generous perseverance
of the Marquis of Steyne. His lordship was one of the governors of
that famous old collegiate institution called the Whitefriars. It had
been a Cistercian Convent in old days, when the Smithfield, which is
contiguous to it, was a tournament ground. Obstinate heretics used to
be brought thither convenient for burning hard by. Henry VIII, the
Defender of the Faith, seized upon the monastery and its possessions
and hanged and tortured some of the monks who could not accommodate
themselves to the pace of his reform. Finally, a great merchant
bought the house and land adjoining, in which, and with the help of
other wealthy endowments of land and money, he established a famous
foundation hospital for old men and children. An extern school grew
round the old almost monastic foundation, which subsists still with
its middle-age costume and usages—and all Cistercians pray that it
may long flourish.
Of this famous house, some of the
greatest noblemen, prelates, and dignitaries in England are
governors: and as the boys are very comfortably lodged, fed, and
educated, and subsequently inducted to good scholarships at the
University and livings in the Church, many little gentlemen are
devoted to the ecclesiastical profession from their tenderest years,
and there is considerable emulation to procure nominations for the
foundation. It was originally intended for the sons of poor and
deserving clerics and laics, but many of the noble governors of the
Institution, with an enlarged and rather capricious benevolence,
selected all sorts of objects for their bounty. To get an education
for nothing, and a future livelihood and profession assured, was so
excellent a scheme that some of the richest people did not disdain
it; and not only great men's relations, but great men themselves,
sent their sons to profit by the chance—Right Rev. prelates sent
their own kinsmen or the sons of their clergy, while, on the other
hand, some great noblemen did not disdain to patronize the children
of their confidential servants—so that a lad entering this
establishment had every variety of youthful society wherewith to
mingle.
Rawdon Crawley, though the only book
which he studied was the Racing Calendar, and though his chief
recollections of polite learning were connected with the floggings
which he received at Eton in his early youth, had that decent and
honest reverence for classical learning which all English gentlemen
feel, and was glad to think that his son was to have a provision for
life, perhaps, and a certain opportunity of becoming a scholar. And
although his boy was his chief solace and companion, and endeared to
him by a thousand small ties, about which he did not care to speak to
his wife, who had all along shown the utmost indifference to their
son, yet Rawdon agreed at once to part with him and to give up his
own greatest comfort and benefit for the sake of the welfare of the
little lad. He did not know how fond he was of the child until it
became necessary to let him go away. When he was gone, he felt more
sad and downcast than he cared to own—far sadder than the boy
himself, who was happy enough to enter a new career and find
companions of his own age. Becky burst out laughing once or twice
when the Colonel, in his clumsy, incoherent way, tried to express his
sentimental sorrows at the boy's departure. The poor fellow felt that
his dearest pleasure and closest friend was taken from him. He looked
often and wistfully at the little vacant bed in his dressing-room,
where the child used to sleep. He missed him sadly of mornings and
tried in vain to walk in the park without him. He did not know how
solitary he was until little Rawdon was gone. He liked the people who
were fond of him, and would go and sit for long hours with his
good-natured sister Lady Jane, and talk to her about the virtues, and
good looks, and hundred good qualities of the child.
Young Rawdon's aunt, we have said, was
very fond of him, as was her little girl, who wept copiously when the
time for her cousin's departure came. The elder Rawdon was thankful
for the fondness of mother and daughter. The very best and honestest
feelings of the man came out in these artless outpourings of paternal
feeling in which he indulged in their presence, and encouraged by
their sympathy. He secured not only Lady Jane's kindness, but her
sincere regard, by the feelings which he manifested, and which he
could not show to his own wife. The two kinswomen met as seldom as
possible. Becky laughed bitterly at Jane's feelings and softness; the
other's kindly and gentle nature could not but revolt at her sister's
callous behaviour.
It estranged Rawdon from his wife more
than he knew or acknowledged to himself. She did not care for the
estrangement. Indeed, she did not miss him or anybody. She looked
upon him as her errand-man and humble slave. He might be ever so
depressed or sulky, and she did not mark his demeanour, or only
treated it with a sneer. She was busy thinking about her position, or
her pleasures, or her advancement in society; she ought to have held
a great place in it, that is certain.
It was honest Briggs who made up the
little kit for the boy which he was to take to school. Molly, the
housemaid, blubbered in the passage when he went away—Molly kind
and faithful in spite of a long arrear of unpaid wages. Mrs. Becky
could not let her husband have the carriage to take the boy to
school. Take the horses into the City!—such a thing was never heard
of. Let a cab be brought. She did not offer to kiss him when he went,
nor did the child propose to embrace her; but gave a kiss to old
Briggs (whom, in general, he was very shy of caressing), and consoled
her by pointing out that he was to come home on Saturdays, when she
would have the benefit of seeing him. As the cab rolled towards the
City, Becky's carriage rattled off to the park. She was chattering
and laughing with a score of young dandies by the Serpentine as the
father and son entered at the old gates of the school—where Rawdon
left the child and came away with a sadder purer feeling in his heart
than perhaps that poor battered fellow had ever known since he
himself came out of the nursery.
He walked all the way home very
dismally, and dined alone with Briggs. He was very kind to her and
grateful for her love and watchfulness over the boy. His conscience
smote him that he had borrowed Briggs's money and aided in deceiving
her. They talked about little Rawdon a long time, for Becky only came
home to dress and go out to dinner—and then he went off uneasily to
drink tea with Lady Jane, and tell her of what had happened, and how
little Rawdon went off like a trump, and how he was to wear a gown
and little knee-breeches, and how young Blackball, Jack Blackball's
son, of the old regiment, had taken him in charge and promised to be
kind to him.
In the course of a week, young
Blackball had constituted little Rawdon his fag, shoe-black, and
breakfast toaster; initiated him into the mysteries of the Latin
Grammar; and thrashed him three or four times, but not severely. The
little chap's good-natured honest face won his way for him. He only
got that degree of beating which was, no doubt, good for him; and as
for blacking shoes, toasting bread, and fagging in general, were
these offices not deemed to be necessary parts of every young English
gentleman's education?
Our business does not lie with the
second generation and Master Rawdon's life at school, otherwise the
present tale might be carried to any indefinite length. The Colonel
went to see his son a short time afterwards and found the lad
sufficiently well and happy, grinning and laughing in his little
black gown and little breeches.
His father sagaciously tipped
Blackball, his master, a sovereign, and secured that young
gentleman's good-will towards his fag. As a protege of the great Lord
Steyne, the nephew of a County member, and son of a Colonel and C.B.,
whose name appeared in some of the most fashionable parties in the
Morning Post, perhaps the school authorities were disposed not to
look unkindly on the child. He had plenty of pocket-money, which he
spent in treating his comrades royally to raspberry tarts, and he was
often allowed to come home on Saturdays to his father, who always
made a jubilee of that day. When free, Rawdon would take him to the
play, or send him thither with the footman; and on Sundays he went to
church with Briggs and Lady Jane and his cousins. Rawdon marvelled
over his stories about school, and fights, and fagging. Before long,
he knew the names of all the masters and the principal boys as well
as little Rawdon himself. He invited little Rawdon's crony from
school, and made both the children sick with pastry, and oysters, and
porter after the play. He tried to look knowing over the Latin
grammar when little Rawdon showed him what part of that work he was
"in." "Stick to it, my boy," he said to him with
much gravity, "there's nothing like a good classical education!
Nothing!"
Becky's contempt for her husband grew
greater every day. "Do what you like—dine where you please—go
and have ginger-beer and sawdust at Astley's, or psalm-singing with
Lady Jane—only don't expect me to busy myself with the boy. I have
your interests to attend to, as you can't attend to them yourself. I
should like to know where you would have been now, and in what sort
of a position in society, if I had not looked after you."
Indeed, nobody wanted poor old Rawdon at the parties whither Becky
used to go. She was often asked without him now. She talked about
great people as if she had the fee-simple of May Fair, and when the
Court went into mourning, she always wore black.
Little Rawdon being disposed of, Lord
Steyne, who took such a parental interest in the affairs of this
amiable poor family, thought that their expenses might be very
advantageously curtailed by the departure of Miss Briggs, and that
Becky was quite clever enough to take the management of her own
house. It has been narrated in a former chapter how the benevolent
nobleman had given his protegee money to pay off her little debt to
Miss Briggs, who however still remained behind with her friends;
whence my lord came to the painful conclusion that Mrs. Crawley had
made some other use of the money confided to her than that for which
her generous patron had given the loan. However, Lord Steyne was not
so rude as to impart his suspicions upon this head to Mrs. Becky,
whose feelings might be hurt by any controversy on the
money-question, and who might have a thousand painful reasons for
disposing otherwise of his lordship's generous loan. But he
determined to satisfy himself of the real state of the case, and
instituted the necessary inquiries in a most cautious and delicate
manner.
In the first place he took an early
opportunity of pumping Miss Briggs. That was not a difficult
operation. A very little encouragement would set that worthy woman to
talk volubly and pour out all within her. And one day when Mrs.
Rawdon had gone out to drive (as Mr. Fiche, his lordship's
confidential servant, easily learned at the livery stables where the
Crawleys kept their carriage and horses, or rather, where the
livery-man kept a carriage and horses for Mr. and Mrs. Crawley)—my
lord dropped in upon the Curzon Street house—asked Briggs for a cup
of coffee—told her that he had good accounts of the little boy at
school—and in five minutes found out from her that Mrs. Rawdon had
given her nothing except a black silk gown, for which Miss Briggs was
immensely grateful.
He laughed within himself at this
artless story. For the truth is, our dear friend Rebecca had given
him a most circumstantial narration of Briggs's delight at receiving
her money—eleven hundred and twenty-five pounds—and in what
securities she had invested it; and what a pang Becky herself felt in
being obliged to pay away such a delightful sum of money. "Who
knows," the dear woman may have thought within herself, "perhaps
he may give me a little more?" My lord, however, made no such
proposal to the little schemer—very likely thinking that he had
been sufficiently generous already.
He had the curiosity, then, to ask Miss
Briggs about the state of her private affairs—and she told his
lordship candidly what her position was—how Miss Crawley had left
her a legacy—how her relatives had had part of it—how Colonel
Crawley had put out another portion, for which she had the best
security and interest— and how Mr. and Mrs. Rawdon had kindly
busied themselves with Sir Pitt, who was to dispose of the remainder
most advantageously for her, when he had time. My lord asked how much
the Colonel had already invested for her, and Miss Briggs at once and
truly told him that the sum was six hundred and odd pounds.
But as soon as she had told her story,
the voluble Briggs repented of her frankness and besought my lord not
to tell Mr. Crawley of the confessions which she had made. "The
Colonel was so kind—Mr. Crawley might be offended and pay back the
money, for which she could get no such good interest anywhere else."
Lord Steyne, laughing, promised he never would divulge their
conversation, and when he and Miss Briggs parted he laughed still
more.
"What an accomplished little devil
it is!" thought he. "What a splendid actress and manager!
She had almost got a second supply out of me the other day; with her
coaxing ways. She beats all the women I have ever seen in the course
of all my well-spent life. They are babies compared to her. I am a
greenhorn myself, and a fool in her hands—an old fool. She is
unsurpassable in lies." His lordship's admiration for Becky rose
immeasurably at this proof of her cleverness. Getting the money was
nothing—but getting double the sum she wanted, and paying nobody—it
was a magnificent stroke. And Crawley, my lord thought—Crawley is
not such a fool as he looks and seems. He has managed the matter
cleverly enough on his side. Nobody would ever have supposed from his
face and demeanour that he knew anything about this money business;
and yet he put her up to it, and has spent the money, no doubt. In
this opinion my lord, we know, was mistaken, but it influenced a good
deal his behaviour towards Colonel Crawley, whom he began to treat
with even less than that semblance of respect which he had formerly
shown towards that gentleman. It never entered into the head of Mrs.
Crawley's patron that the little lady might be making a purse for
herself; and, perhaps, if the truth must be told, he judged of
Colonel Crawley by his experience of other husbands, whom he had
known in the course of the long and well-spent life which had made
him acquainted with a great deal of the weakness of mankind. My lord
had bought so many men during his life that he was surely to be
pardoned for supposing that he had found the price of this one.
He taxed Becky upon the point on the
very first occasion when he met her alone, and he complimented her,
good-humouredly, on her cleverness in getting more than the money
which she required. Becky was only a little taken aback. It was not
the habit of this dear creature to tell falsehoods, except when
necessity compelled, but in these great emergencies it was her
practice to lie very freely; and in an instant she was ready with
another neat plausible circumstantial story which she administered to
her patron. The previous statement which she had made to him was a
falsehood—a wicked falsehood—she owned it. But who had made her
tell it? "Ah, my Lord," she said, "you don't know all
I have to suffer and bear in silence; you see me gay and happy before
you—you little know what I have to endure when there is no
protector near me. It was my husband, by threats and the most savage
treatment, forced me to ask for that sum about which I deceived you.
It was he who, foreseeing that questions might be asked regarding the
disposal of the money, forced me to account for it as I did. He took
the money. He told me he had paid Miss Briggs; I did not want, I did
not dare to doubt him. Pardon the wrong which a desperate man is
forced to commit, and pity a miserable, miserable woman." She
burst into tears as she spoke. Persecuted virtue never looked more
bewitchingly wretched.
They had a long conversation, driving
round and round the Regent's Park in Mrs. Crawley's carriage
together, a conversation of which it is not necessary to repeat the
details, but the upshot of it was that, when Becky came home, she
flew to her dear Briggs with a smiling face and announced that she
had some very good news for her. Lord Steyne had acted in the noblest
and most generous manner. He was always thinking how and when he
could do good. Now that little Rawdon was gone to school, a dear
companion and friend was no longer necessary to her. She was grieved
beyond measure to part with Briggs, but her means required that she
should practise every retrenchment, and her sorrow was mitigated by
the idea that her dear Briggs would be far better provided for by her
generous patron than in her humble home. Mrs. Pilkington, the
housekeeper at Gauntly Hall, was growing exceedingly old, feeble, and
rheumatic: she was not equal to the work of superintending that vast
mansion, and must be on the look out for a successor. It was a
splendid position. The family did not go to Gauntly once in two
years. At other times the housekeeper was the mistress of the
magnificent mansion—had four covers daily for her table; was
visited by the clergy and the most respectable people of the
county—was the lady of Gauntly, in fact; and the two last
housekeepers before Mrs. Pilkington had married rectors of
Gauntly—but Mrs. P. could not, being the aunt of the present
Rector. The place was not to be hers yet, but she might go down on a
visit to Mrs. Pilkington and see whether she would like to succeed
her.
What words can paint the ecstatic
gratitude of Briggs! All she stipulated for was that little Rawdon
should be allowed to come down and see her at the Hall. Becky
promised this—anything. She ran up to her husband when he came home
and told him the joyful news. Rawdon was glad, deuced glad; the
weight was off his conscience about poor Briggs's money. She was
provided for, at any rate, but— but his mind was disquiet. He did
not seem to be all right, somehow. He told little Southdown what Lord
Steyne had done, and the young man eyed Crawley with an air which
surprised the latter.
He told Lady Jane of this second proof
of Steyne's bounty, and she, too, looked odd and alarmed; so did Sir
Pitt. "She is too clever and—and gay to be allowed to go from
party to party without a companion," both said. "You must
go with her, Rawdon, wherever she goes, and you must have somebody
with her—one of the girls from Queen's Crawley, perhaps, though
they were rather giddy guardians for her."
Somebody Becky should have. But in the
meantime it was clear that honest Briggs must not lose her chance of
settlement for life, and so she and her bags were packed, and she set
off on her journey. And so two of Rawdon's out-sentinels were in the
hands of the enemy.
Sir Pitt went and expostulated with his
sister-in-law upon the subject of the dismissal of Briggs and other
matters of delicate family interest. In vain she pointed out to him
how necessary was the protection of Lord Steyne for her poor husband;
how cruel it would be on their part to deprive Briggs of the position
offered to her. Cajolements, coaxings, smiles, tears could not
satisfy Sir Pitt, and he had something very like a quarrel with his
once admired Becky. He spoke of the honour of the family, the
unsullied reputation of the Crawleys; expressed himself in indignant
tones about her receiving those young Frenchmen—those wild young
men of fashion, my Lord Steyne himself, whose carriage was always at
her door, who passed hours daily in her company, and whose constant
presence made the world talk about her. As the head of the house he
implored her to be more prudent. Society was already speaking lightly
of her. Lord Steyne, though a nobleman of the greatest station and
talents, was a man whose attentions would compromise any woman; he
besought, he implored, he commanded his sister-in-law to be watchful
in her intercourse with that nobleman.
Becky promised anything and everything
Pitt wanted; but Lord Steyne came to her house as often as ever, and
Sir Pitt's anger increased. I wonder was Lady Jane angry or pleased
that her husband at last found fault with his favourite Rebecca? Lord
Steyne's visits continuing, his own ceased, and his wife was for
refusing all further intercourse with that nobleman and declining the
invitation to the charade-night which the marchioness sent to her;
but Sir Pitt thought it was necessary to accept it, as his Royal
Highness would be there.
Although he went to the party in
question, Sir Pitt quitted it very early, and his wife, too, was very
glad to come away. Becky hardly so much as spoke to him or noticed
her sister-in-law. Pitt Crawley declared her behaviour was
monstrously indecorous, reprobated in strong terms the habit of
play-acting and fancy dressing as highly unbecoming a British female,
and after the charades were over, took his brother Rawdon severely to
task for appearing himself and allowing his wife to join in such
improper exhibitions.
Rawdon said she should not join in any
more such amusements—but indeed, and perhaps from hints from his
elder brother and sister, he had already become a very watchful and
exemplary domestic character. He left off his clubs and billiards. He
never left home. He took Becky out to drive; he went laboriously with
her to all her parties. Whenever my Lord Steyne called, he was sure
to find the Colonel. And when Becky proposed to go out without her
husband, or received invitations for herself, he peremptorily ordered
her to refuse them: and there was that in the gentleman's manner
which enforced obedience. Little Becky, to do her justice, was
charmed with Rawdon's gallantry. If he was surly, she never was.
Whether friends were present or absent, she had always a kind smile
for him and was attentive to his pleasure and comfort. It was the
early days of their marriage over again: the same good humour,
prevenances, merriment, and artless confidence and regard. "How
much pleasanter it is," she would say, "to have you by my
side in the carriage than that foolish old Briggs! Let us always go
on so, dear Rawdon. How nice it would be, and how happy we should
always be, if we had but the money!" He fell asleep after dinner
in his chair; he did not see the face opposite to him, haggard,
weary, and terrible; it lighted up with fresh candid smiles when he
woke. It kissed him gaily. He wondered that he had ever had
suspicions. No, he never had suspicions; all those dumb doubts and
surly misgivings which had been gathering on his mind were mere idle
jealousies. She was fond of him; she always had been. As for her
shining in society, it was no fault of hers; she was formed to shine
there. Was there any woman who could talk, or sing, or do anything
like her? If she would but like the boy! Rawdon thought. But the
mother and son never could be brought together.
And it was while Rawdon's mind was
agitated with these doubts and perplexities that the incident
occurred which was mentioned in the last chapter, and the unfortunate
Colonel found himself a prisoner away from home.
Chapter LIII
*
A Rescue and a Catastrophe
Friend Rawdon drove on then to Mr.
Moss's mansion in Cursitor Street, and was duly inducted into that
dismal place of hospitality. Morning was breaking over the cheerful
house-tops of Chancery Lane as the rattling cab woke up the echoes
there. A little pink-eyed Jew-boy, with a head as ruddy as the rising
morn, let the party into the house, and Rawdon was welcomed to the
ground-floor apartments by Mr. Moss, his travelling companion and
host, who cheerfully asked him if he would like a glass of something
warm after his drive.
The Colonel was not so depressed as
some mortals would be, who, quitting a palace and a placens uxor,
find themselves barred into a spunging-house; for, if the truth must
be told, he had been a lodger at Mr. Moss's establishment once or
twice before. We have not thought it necessary in the previous course
of this narrative to mention these trivial little domestic incidents:
but the reader may be assured that they can't unfrequently occur in
the life of a man who lives on nothing a year.
Upon his first visit to Mr. Moss, the
Colonel, then a bachelor, had been liberated by the generosity of his
aunt; on the second mishap, little Becky, with the greatest spirit
and kindness, had borrowed a sum of money from Lord Southdown and had
coaxed her husband's creditor (who was her shawl, velvet-gown, lace
pocket-handkerchief, trinket, and gim-crack purveyor, indeed) to take
a portion of the sum claimed and Rawdon's promissory note for the
remainder: so on both these occasions the capture and release had
been conducted with the utmost gallantry on all sides, and Moss and
the Colonel were therefore on the very best of terms.
"You'll find your old bed,
Colonel, and everything comfortable," that gentleman said, "as
I may honestly say. You may be pretty sure its kep aired, and by the
best of company, too. It was slep in the night afore last by the
Honorable Capting Famish, of the Fiftieth Dragoons, whose Mar took
him out, after a fortnight, jest to punish him, she said. But, Law
bless you, I promise you, he punished my champagne, and had a party
ere every night—reglar tip-top swells, down from the clubs and the
West End—Capting Ragg, the Honorable Deuceace, who lives in the
Temple, and some fellers as knows a good glass of wine, I warrant
you. I've got a Doctor of Diwinity upstairs, five gents in the
coffee-room, and Mrs. Moss has a tably- dy-hoty at half-past five,
and a little cards or music afterwards, when we shall be most happy
to see you."
"I'll ring when I want anything,"
said Rawdon and went quietly to his bedroom. He was an old soldier,
we have said, and not to be disturbed by any little shocks of fate. A
weaker man would have sent off a letter to his wife on the instant of
his capture. "But what is the use of disturbing her night's
rest?" thought Rawdon. "She won't know whether I am in my
room or not. It will be time enough to write to her when she has had
her sleep out, and I have had mine. It's only a hundred-and-seventy,
and the deuce is in it if we can't raise that." And so, thinking
about little Rawdon (whom he would not have know that he was in such
a queer place), the Colonel turned into the bed lately occupied by
Captain Famish and fell asleep. It was ten o'clock when he woke up,
and the ruddy- headed youth brought him, with conscious pride, a fine
silver dressing-case, wherewith he might perform the operation of
shaving. Indeed Mr. Moss's house, though somewhat dirty, was splendid
throughout. There were dirty trays, and wine-coolers en permanence on
the sideboard, huge dirty gilt cornices, with dingy yellow satin
hangings to the barred windows which looked into Cursitor Street—
vast and dirty gilt picture frames surrounding pieces sporting and
sacred, all of which works were by the greatest masters—and fetched
the greatest prices, too, in the bill transactions, in the course of
which they were sold and bought over and over again. The Colonel's
breakfast was served to him in the same dingy and gorgeous plated
ware. Miss Moss, a dark-eyed maid in curl-papers, appeared with the
teapot, and, smiling, asked the Colonel how he had slep? And she
brought him in the Morning Post, with the names of all the great
people who had figured at Lord Steyne's entertainment the night
before. It contained a brilliant account of the festivities and of
the beautiful and accomplished Mrs. Rawdon Crawley's admirable
personifications.
After a lively chat with this lady (who
sat on the edge of the breakfast table in an easy attitude displaying
the drapery of her stocking and an ex-white satin shoe, which was
down at heel), Colonel Crawley called for pens and ink, and paper,
and being asked how many sheets, chose one which was brought to him
between Miss Moss's own finger and thumb. Many a sheet had that
dark-eyed damsel brought in; many a poor fellow had scrawled and
blotted hurried lines of entreaty and paced up and down that awful
room until his messenger brought back the reply. Poor men always use
messengers instead of the post. Who has not had their letters, with
the wafers wet, and the announcement that a person is waiting in the
hall?
Now on the score of his application,
Rawdon had not many misgivings.
DEAR BECKY, (Rawdon wrote)
I HOPE YOU SLEPT WELL. Don't be
FRIGHTENED if I don't bring you in your COFFY. Last night as I was
coming home smoaking, I met with an ACCADENT. I was NABBED by Moss of
Cursitor Street—from whose GILT AND SPLENDID PARLER I write
this—the same that had me this time two years. Miss Moss brought in
my tea—she is grown very FAT, and, as usual, had her STOCKENS DOWN
AT HEAL.
It's Nathan's business—a
hundred-and-fifty—with costs, hundred- and-seventy. Please send me
my desk and some CLOTHS—I'm in pumps and a white tye (something
like Miss M's stockings)—I've seventy in it. And as soon as you get
this, Drive to Nathan's—offer him seventy-five down, and ASK HIM TO
RENEW—say I'll take wine—we may as well have some dinner sherry;
but not PICTURS, they're too dear.
If he won't stand it. Take my ticker
and such of your things as you can SPARE, and send them to Balls—we
must, of coarse, have the sum to-night. It won't do to let it stand
over, as to-morrow's Sunday; the beds here are not very CLEAN, and
there may be other things out against me—I'm glad it an't Rawdon's
Saturday for coming home. God bless you.
Yours in haste, R. C. P.S. Make haste
and come.
This letter, sealed with a wafer, was
dispatched by one of the messengers who are always hanging about Mr.
Moss's establishment, and Rawdon, having seen him depart, went out in
the court-yard and smoked his cigar with a tolerably easy mind—in
spite of the bars overhead—for Mr. Moss's court-yard is railed in
like a cage, lest the gentlemen who are boarding with him should take
a fancy to escape from his hospitality.
Three hours, he calculated, would be
the utmost time required, before Becky should arrive and open his
prison doors, and he passed these pretty cheerfully in smoking, in
reading the paper, and in the coffee-room with an acquaintance,
Captain Walker, who happened to be there, and with whom he cut for
sixpences for some hours, with pretty equal luck on either side.
But the day passed away and no
messenger returned—no Becky. Mr. Moss's tably-dy-hoty was served at
the appointed hour of half-past five, when such of the gentlemen
lodging in the house as could afford to pay for the banquet came and
partook of it in the splendid front parlour before described, and
with which Mr. Crawley's temporary lodging communicated, when Miss M.
(Miss Hem, as her papa called her) appeared without the curl-papers
of the morning, and Mrs. Hem did the honours of a prime boiled leg of
mutton and turnips, of which the Colonel ate with a very faint
appetite. Asked whether he would "stand" a bottle of
champagne for the company, he consented, and the ladies drank to his
'ealth, and Mr. Moss, in the most polite manner, "looked towards
him."
In the midst of this repast, however,
the doorbell was heard—young Moss of the ruddy hair rose up with
the keys and answered the summons, and coming back, told the Colonel
that the messenger had returned with a bag, a desk and a letter,
which he gave him. "No ceramony, Colonel, I beg," said Mrs.
Moss with a wave of her hand, and he opened the letter rather
tremulously. It was a beautiful letter, highly scented, on a pink
paper, and with a light green seal.
MON PAUVRE CHER PETIT, (Mrs. Crawley
wrote)
I could not sleep ONE WINK for thinking
of what had become of my odious old monstre, and only got to rest in
the morning after sending for Mr. Blench (for I was in a fever), who
gave me a composing draught and left orders with Finette that I
should be disturbed ON NO ACCOUNT. So that my poor old man's
messenger, who had bien mauvaise mine Finette says, and sentoit le
Genievre, remained in the hall for some hours waiting my bell. You
may fancy my state when I read your poor dear old ill-spelt letter.
Ill as I was, I instantly called for
the carriage, and as soon as I was dressed (though I couldn't drink a
drop of chocolate—I assure you I couldn't without my monstre to
bring it to me), I drove ventre a terre to Nathan's. I saw him—I
wept—I cried—I fell at his odious knees. Nothing would mollify
the horrid man. He would have all the money, he said, or keep my poor
monstre in prison. I drove home with the intention of paying that
triste visite chez mon oncle (when every trinket I have should be at
your disposal though they would not fetch a hundred pounds, for some,
you know, are with ce cher oncle already), and found Milor there with
the Bulgarian old sheep-faced monster, who had come to compliment me
upon last night's performances. Paddington came in, too, drawling and
lisping and twiddling his hair; so did Champignac, and his
chef—everybody with foison of compliments and pretty
speeches—plaguing poor me, who longed to be rid of them, and was
thinking every moment of the time of mon pauvre prisonnier.
When they were gone, I went down on my
knees to Milor; told him we were going to pawn everything, and begged
and prayed him to give me two hundred pounds. He pish'd and psha'd in
a fury—told me not to be such a fool as to pawn—and said he would
see whether he could lend me the money. At last he went away,
promising that he would send it me in the morning: when I will bring
it to my poor old monster with a kiss from his affectionate
BECKY
I am writing in bed. Oh I have such a
headache and such a heartache!
When Rawdon read over this letter, he
turned so red and looked so savage that the company at the table
d'hote easily perceived that bad news had reached him. All his
suspicions, which he had been trying to banish, returned upon him.
She could not even go out and sell her trinkets to free him. She
could laugh and talk about compliments paid to her, whilst he was in
prison. Who had put him there? Wenham had walked with him. Was
there.... He could hardly bear to think of what he suspected. Leaving
the room hurriedly, he ran into his own—opened his desk, wrote two
hurried lines, which he directed to Sir Pitt or Lady Crawley, and
bade the messenger carry them at once to Gaunt Street, bidding him to
take a cab, and promising him a guinea if he was back in an hour.
In the note he besought his dear
brother and sister, for the sake of God, for the sake of his dear
child and his honour, to come to him and relieve him from his
difficulty. He was in prison, he wanted a hundred pounds to set him
free—he entreated them to come to him.
He went back to the dining-room after
dispatching his messenger and called for more wine. He laughed and
talked with a strange boisterousness, as the people thought.
Sometimes he laughed madly at his own fears and went on drinking for
an hour, listening all the while for the carriage which was to bring
his fate back.
At the expiration of that time, wheels
were heard whirling up to the gate—the young janitor went out with
his gate-keys. It was a lady whom he let in at the bailiff's door.
"Colonel Crawley," she said,
trembling very much. He, with a knowing look, locked the outer door
upon her—then unlocked and opened the inner one, and calling out,
"Colonel, you're wanted," led her into the back parlour,
which he occupied.
Rawdon came in from the dining-parlour
where all those people were carousing, into his back room; a flare of
coarse light following him into the apartment where the lady stood,
still very nervous.
"It is I, Rawdon," she said
in a timid voice, which she strove to render cheerful. "It is
Jane." Rawdon was quite overcome by that kind voice and
presence. He ran up to her—caught her in his arms— gasped out
some inarticulate words of thanks and fairly sobbed on her shoulder.
She did not know the cause of his emotion.
The bills of Mr. Moss were quickly
settled, perhaps to the disappointment of that gentleman, who had
counted on having the Colonel as his guest over Sunday at least; and
Jane, with beaming smiles and happiness in her eyes, carried away
Rawdon from the bailiff's house, and they went homewards in the cab
in which she had hastened to his release. "Pitt was gone to a
parliamentary dinner," she said, "when Rawdon's note came,
and so, dear Rawdon, I—I came myself"; and she put her kind
hand in his. Perhaps it was well for Rawdon Crawley that Pitt was
away at that dinner. Rawdon thanked his sister a hundred times, and
with an ardour of gratitude which touched and almost alarmed that
soft-hearted woman. "Oh," said he, in his rude, artless
way, "you—you don't know how I'm changed since I've known you,
and—and little Rawdy. I—I'd like to change somehow. You see I
want—I want—to be—" He did not finish the sentence, but
she could interpret it. And that night after he left her, and as she
sat by her own little boy's bed, she prayed humbly for that poor
way-worn sinner.
Rawdon left her and walked home
rapidly. It was nine o'clock at night. He ran across the streets and
the great squares of Vanity Fair, and at length came up breathless
opposite his own house. He started back and fell against the
railings, trembling as he looked up. The drawing-room windows were
blazing with light. She had said that she was in bed and ill. He
stood there for some time, the light from the rooms on his pale face.
He took out his door-key and let
himself into the house. He could hear laughter in the upper rooms. He
was in the ball-dress in which he had been captured the night before.
He went silently up the stairs, leaning against the banisters at the
stair-head. Nobody was stirring in the house besides—all the
servants had been sent away. Rawdon heard laughter within—laughter
and singing. Becky was singing a snatch of the song of the night
before; a hoarse voice shouted "Brava! Brava!"—it was
Lord Steyne's.
Rawdon opened the door and went in. A
little table with a dinner was laid out—and wine and plate. Steyne
was hanging over the sofa on which Becky sat. The wretched woman was
in a brilliant full toilette, her arms and all her fingers sparkling
with bracelets and rings, and the brilliants on her breast which
Steyne had given her. He had her hand in his, and was bowing over it
to kiss it, when Becky started up with a faint scream as she caught
sight of Rawdon's white face. At the next instant she tried a smile,
a horrid smile, as if to welcome her husband; and Steyne rose up,
grinding his teeth, pale, and with fury in his looks.
He, too, attempted a laugh—and came
forward holding out his hand. "What, come back! How d'ye do,
Crawley?" he said, the nerves of his mouth twitching as he tried
to grin at the intruder.
There was that in Rawdon's face which
caused Becky to fling herself before him. "I am innocent,
Rawdon," she said; "before God, I am innocent." She
clung hold of his coat, of his hands; her own were all covered with
serpents, and rings, and baubles. "I am innocent. Say I am
innocent," she said to Lord Steyne.
He thought a trap had been laid for
him, and was as furious with the wife as with the husband. "You
innocent! Damn you," he screamed out. "You innocent! Why
every trinket you have on your body is paid for by me. I have given
you thousands of pounds, which this fellow has spent and for which he
has sold you. Innocent, by —! You're as innocent as your mother,
the ballet-girl, and your husband the bully. Don't think to frighten
me as you have done others. Make way, sir, and let me pass"; and
Lord Steyne seized up his hat, and, with flame in his eyes, and
looking his enemy fiercely in the face, marched upon him, never for a
moment doubting that the other would give way.
But Rawdon Crawley springing out,
seized him by the neckcloth, until Steyne, almost strangled, writhed
and bent under his arm. "You lie, you dog!" said Rawdon.
"You lie, you coward and villain!" And he struck the Peer
twice over the face with his open hand and flung him bleeding to the
ground. It was all done before Rebecca could interpose. She stood
there trembling before him. She admired her husband, strong, brave,
and victorious.
"Come here," he said. She
came up at once.
"Take off those things." She
began, trembling, pulling the jewels from her arms, and the rings
from her shaking fingers, and held them all in a heap, quivering and
looking up at him. "Throw them down," he said, and she
dropped them. He tore the diamond ornament out of her breast and
flung it at Lord Steyne. It cut him on his bald forehead. Steyne wore
the scar to his dying day.
"Come upstairs," Rawdon said
to his wife. "Don't kill me, Rawdon," she said. He laughed
savagely. "I want to see if that man lies about the money as he
has about me. Has he given you any?"
"No," said Rebecca, "that
is—"
"Give me your keys," Rawdon
answered, and they went out together.
Rebecca gave him all the keys but one,
and she was in hopes that he would not have remarked the absence of
that. It belonged to the little desk which Amelia had given her in
early days, and which she kept in a secret place. But Rawdon flung
open boxes and wardrobes, throwing the multifarious trumpery of their
contents here and there, and at last he found the desk. The woman was
forced to open it. It contained papers, love-letters many years
old—all sorts of small trinkets and woman's memoranda. And it
contained a pocket-book with bank-notes. Some of these were dated ten
years back, too, and one was quite a fresh one—a note for a
thousand pounds which Lord Steyne had given her.
"Did he give you this?"
Rawdon said.
"Yes," Rebecca answered.
"I'll send it to him to-day,"
Rawdon said (for day had dawned again, and many hours had passed in
this search), "and I will pay Briggs, who was kind to the boy,
and some of the debts. You will let me know where I shall send the
rest to you. You might have spared me a hundred pounds, Becky, out of
all this—I have always shared with you."
"I am innocent," said Becky.
And he left her without another word.
What were her thoughts when he left
her? She remained for hours after he was gone, the sunshine pouring
into the room, and Rebecca sitting alone on the bed's edge. The
drawers were all opened and their contents scattered about—dresses
and feathers, scarfs and trinkets, a heap of tumbled vanities lying
in a wreck. Her hair was falling over her shoulders; her gown was
torn where Rawdon had wrenched the brilliants out of it. She heard
him go downstairs a few minutes after he left her, and the door
slamming and closing on him. She knew he would never come back. He
was gone forever. Would he kill himself?—she thought—not until
after he had met Lord Steyne. She thought of her long past life, and
all the dismal incidents of it. Ah, how dreary it seemed, how
miserable, lonely and profitless! Should she take laudanum, and end
it, to have done with all hopes, schemes, debts, and triumphs? The
French maid found her in this position—sitting in the midst of her
miserable ruins with clasped hands and dry eyes. The woman was her
accomplice and in Steyne's pay. "Mon Dieu, madame, what has
happened?" she asked.
What had happened? Was she guilty or
not? She said not, but who could tell what was truth which came from
those lips, or if that corrupt heart was in this case pure?
All her lies and her schemes, an her
selfishness and her wiles, all her wit and genius had come to this
bankruptcy. The woman closed the curtains and, with some entreaty and
show of kindness, persuaded her mistress to lie down on the bed. Then
she went below and gathered up the trinkets which had been lying on
the floor since Rebecca dropped them there at her husband's orders,
and Lord Steyne went away.
Chapter LIV
*
Sunday After the Battle
The mansion of Sir Pitt Crawley, in
Great Gaunt Street, was just beginning to dress itself for the day,
as Rawdon, in his evening costume, which he had now worn two days,
passed by the scared female who was scouring the steps and entered
into his brother's study. Lady Jane, in her morning-gown, was up and
above stairs in the nursery superintending the toilettes of her
children and listening to the morning prayers which the little
creatures performed at her knee. Every morning she and they performed
this duty privately, and before the public ceremonial at which Sir
Pitt presided and at which all the people of the household were
expected to assemble. Rawdon sat down in the study before the
Baronet's table, set out with the orderly blue books and the letters,
the neatly docketed bills and symmetrical pamphlets, the locked
account-books, desks, and dispatch boxes, the Bible, the Quarterly
Review, and the Court Guide, which all stood as if on parade awaiting
the inspection of their chief.
A book of family sermons, one of which
Sir Pitt was in the habit of administering to his family on Sunday
mornings, lay ready on the study table, and awaiting his judicious
selection. And by the sermon-book was the Observer newspaper, damp
and neatly folded, and for Sir Pitt's own private use. His gentleman
alone took the opportunity of perusing the newspaper before he laid
it by his master's desk. Before he had brought it into the study that
morning, he had read in the journal a flaming account of "Festivities
at Gaunt House," with the names of all the distinguished
personages invited by tho Marquis of Steyne to meet his Royal
Highness. Having made comments upon this entertainment to the
housekeeper and her niece as they were taking early tea and hot
buttered toast in the former lady's apartment, and wondered how the
Rawding Crawleys could git on, the valet had damped and folded the
paper once more, so that it looked quite fresh and innocent against
the arrival of the master of the house.
Poor Rawdon took up the paper and began
to try and read it until his brother should arrive. But the print
fell blank upon his eyes, and he did not know in the least what he
was reading. The Government news and appointments (which Sir Pitt as
a public man was bound to peruse, otherwise he would by no means
permit the introduction of Sunday papers into his household), the
theatrical criticisms, the fight for a hundred pounds a side between
the Barking Butcher and the Tutbury Pet, the Gaunt House chronicle
itself, which contained a most complimentary though guarded account
of the famous charades of which Mrs. Becky had been the heroine—all
these passed as in a haze before Rawdon, as he sat waiting the
arrival of the chief of the family.
Punctually, as the shrill-toned bell of
the black marble study clock began to chime nine, Sir Pitt made his
appearance, fresh, neat, smugly shaved, with a waxy clean face, and
stiff shirt collar, his scanty hair combed and oiled, trimming his
nails as he descended the stairs majestically, in a starched cravat
and a grey flannel dressing-gown—a real old English gentleman, in a
word—a model of neatness and every propriety. He started when he
saw poor Rawdon in his study in tumbled clothes, with blood-shot
eyes, and his hair over his face. He thought his brother was not
sober, and had been out all night on some orgy. "Good gracious,
Rawdon," he said, with a blank face, "what brings you here
at this time of the morning? Why ain't you at home?"
"Home," said Rawdon with a
wild laugh. "Don't be frightened, Pitt. I'm not drunk. Shut the
door; I want to speak to you."
Pitt closed the door and came up to the
table, where he sat down in the other arm-chair—that one placed for
the reception of the steward, agent, or confidential visitor who came
to transact business with the Baronet—and trimmed his nails more
vehemently than ever.
"Pitt, it's all over with me,"
the Colonel said after a pause. "I'm done."
"I always said it would come to
this," the Baronet cried peevishly, and beating a tune with his
clean-trimmed nails. "I warned you a thousand times. I can't
help you any more. Every shilling of my money is tied up. Even the
hundred pounds that Jane took you last night were promised to my
lawyer to-morrow morning, and the want of it will put me to great
inconvenience. I don't mean to say that I won't assist you
ultimately. But as for paying your creditors in full, I might as well
hope to pay the National Debt. It is madness, sheer madness, to think
of such a thing. You must come to a compromise. It's a painful thing
for the family, but everybody does it. There was George Kitely, Lord
Ragland's son, went through the Court last week, and was what they
call whitewashed, I believe. Lord Ragland would not pay a shilling
for him, and—"
"It's not money I want,"
Rawdon broke in. "I'm not come to you about myself. Never mind
what happens to me."
"What is the matter, then?"
said Pitt, somewhat relieved.
"It's the boy," said Rawdon
in a husky voice. "I want you to promise me that you will take
charge of him when I'm gone. That dear good wife of yours has always
been good to him; and he's fonder of her than he is of his . . .—Damn
it. Look here, Pitt—you know that I was to have had Miss Crawley's
money. I wasn't brought up like a younger brother, but was always
encouraged to be extravagant and kep idle. But for this I might have
been quite a different man. I didn't do my duty with the regiment so
bad. You know how I was thrown over about the money, and who got it."
"After the sacrifices I have made,
and the manner in which I have stood by you, I think this sort of
reproach is useless," Sir Pitt said. "Your marriage was
your own doing, not mine."
"That's over now," said
Rawdon. "That's over now." And the words were wrenched from
him with a groan, which made his brother start.
"Good God! is she dead?" Sir
Pitt said with a voice of genuine alarm and commiseration.
"I wish I was," Rawdon
replied. "If it wasn't for little Rawdon I'd have cut my throat
this morning—and that damned villain's too."
Sir Pitt instantly guessed the truth
and surmised that Lord Steyne was the person whose life Rawdon wished
to take. The Colonel told his senior briefly, and in broken accents,
the circumstances of the case. "It was a regular plan between
that scoundrel and her," he said. "The bailiffs were put
upon me; I was taken as I was going out of his house; when I wrote to
her for money, she said she was ill in bed and put me off to another
day. And when I got home I found her in diamonds and sitting with
that villain alone." He then went on to describe hurriedly the
personal conflict with Lord Steyne. To an affair of that nature, of
course, he said, there was but one issue, and after his conference
with his brother, he was going away to make the necessary
arrangements for the meeting which must ensue. "And as it may
end fatally with me," Rawdon said with a broken voice, "and
as the boy has no mother, I must leave him to you and Jane, Pitt—only
it will be a comfort to me if you will promise me to be his friend."
The elder brother was much affected,
and shook Rawdon's hand with a cordiality seldom exhibited by him.
Rawdon passed his hand over his shaggy eyebrows. "Thank you,
brother," said he. "I know I can trust your word."
"I will, upon my honour," the
Baronet said. And thus, and almost mutely, this bargain was struck
between them.
Then Rawdon took out of his pocket the
little pocket-book which he had discovered in Becky's desk, and from
which he drew a bundle of the notes which it contained. "Here's
six hundred," he said—"you didn't know I was so rich. I
want you to give the money to Briggs, who lent it to us—and who was
kind to the boy—and I've always felt ashamed of having taken the
poor old woman's money. And here's some more—I've only kept back a
few pounds—which Becky may as well have, to get on with." As
he spoke he took hold of the other notes to give to his brother, but
his hands shook, and he was so agitated that the pocket-book fell
from him, and out of it the thousand-pound note which had been the
last of the unlucky Becky's winnings.
Pitt stooped and picked them up, amazed
at so much wealth. "Not that," Rawdon said. "I hope to
put a bullet into the man whom that belongs to." He had thought
to himself, it would be a fine revenge to wrap a ball in the note and
kill Steyne with it.
After this colloquy the brothers once
more shook hands and parted. Lady Jane had heard of the Colonel's
arrival, and was waiting for her husband in the adjoining
dining-room, with female instinct, auguring evil. The door of the
dining-room happened to be left open, and the lady of course was
issuing from it as the two brothers passed out of the study. She held
out her hand to Rawdon and said she was glad he was come to
breakfast, though she could perceive, by his haggard unshorn face and
the dark looks of her husband, that there was very little question of
breakfast between them. Rawdon muttered some excuses about an
engagement, squeezing hard the timid little hand which his
sister-in-law reached out to him. Her imploring eyes could read
nothing but calamity in his face, but he went away without another
word. Nor did Sir Pitt vouchsafe her any explanation. The children
came up to salute him, and he kissed them in his usual frigid manner.
The mother took both of them close to herself, and held a hand of
each of them as they knelt down to prayers, which Sir Pitt read to
them, and to the servants in their Sunday suits or liveries, ranged
upon chairs on the other side of the hissing tea-urn. Breakfast was
so late that day, in consequence of the delays which had occurred,
that the church-bells began to ring whilst they were sitting over
their meal; and Lady Jane was too ill, she said, to go to church,
though her thoughts had been entirely astray during the period of
family devotion.
Rawdon Crawley meanwhile hurried on
from Great Gaunt Street, and knocking at the great bronze Medusa's
head which stands on the portal of Gaunt House, brought out the
purple Silenus in a red and silver waistcoat who acts as porter of
that palace. The man was scared also by the Colonel's dishevelled
appearance, and barred the way as if afraid that the other was going
to force it. But Colonel Crawley only took out a card and enjoined
him particularly to send it in to Lord Steyne, and to mark the
address written on it, and say that Colonel Crawley would be all day
after one o'clock at the Regent Club in St. James's Street—not at
home. The fat red-faced man looked after him with astonishment as he
strode away; so did the people in their Sunday clothes who were out
so early; the charity- boys with shining faces, the greengrocer
lolling at his door, and the publican shutting his shutters in the
sunshine, against service commenced. The people joked at the
cab-stand about his appearance, as he took a carriage there, and told
the driver to drive him to Knightsbridge Barracks.
All the bells were jangling and tolling
as he reached that place. He might have seen his old acquaintance
Amelia on her way from Brompton to Russell Square, had he been
looking out. Troops of schools were on their march to church, the
shiny pavement and outsides of coaches in the suburbs were thronged
with people out upon their Sunday pleasure; but the Colonel was much
too busy to take any heed of these phenomena, and, arriving at
Knightsbridge, speedily made his way up to the room of his old friend
and comrade Captain Macmurdo, who Crawley found, to his satisfaction,
was in barracks.
Captain Macmurdo, a veteran officer and
Waterloo man, greatly liked by his regiment, in which want of money
alone prevented him from attaining the highest ranks, was enjoying
the forenoon calmly in bed. He had been at a fast supper-party, given
the night before by Captain the Honourable George Cinqbars, at his
house in Brompton Square, to several young men of the regiment, and a
number of ladies of the corps de ballet, and old Mac, who was at home
with people of all ages and ranks, and consorted with generals,
dog-fanciers, opera-dancers, bruisers, and every kind of person, in a
word, was resting himself after the night's labours, and, not being
on duty, was in bed.
His room was hung round with boxing,
sporting, and dancing pictures, presented to him by comrades as they
retired from the regiment, and married and settled into quiet life.
And as he was now nearly fifty years of age, twenty-four of which he
had passed in the corps, he had a singular museum. He was one of the
best shots in England, and, for a heavy man, one of the best riders;
indeed, he and Crawley had been rivals when the latter was in the
Army. To be brief, Mr. Macmurdo was lying in bed, reading in Bell's
Life an account of that very fight between the Tutbury Pet and the
Barking Butcher, which has been before mentioned—a venerable
bristly warrior, with a little close-shaved grey head, with a silk
nightcap, a red face and nose, and a great dyed moustache.
When Rawdon told the Captain he wanted
a friend, the latter knew perfectly well on what duty of friendship
he was called to act, and indeed had conducted scores of affairs for
his acquaintances with the greatest prudence and skill. His Royal
Highness the late lamented Commander-in-Chief had had the greatest
regard for Macmurdo on this account, and he was the common refuge of
gentlemen in trouble.
"What's the row about, Crawley, my
boy?" said the old warrior. "No more gambling business,
hay, like that when we shot Captain Marker?"
"It's about—about my wife,"
Crawley answered, casting down his eyes and turning very red.
The other gave a whistle. "I
always said she'd throw you over," he began—indeed there were
bets in the regiment and at the clubs regarding the probable fate of
Colonel Crawley, so lightly was his wife's character esteemed by his
comrades and the world; but seeing the savage look with which Rawdon
answered the expression of this opinion, Macmurdo did not think fit
to enlarge upon it further.
"Is there no way out of it, old
boy?" the Captain continued in a grave tone. "Is it only
suspicion, you know, or—or what is it? Any letters? Can't you keep
it quiet? Best not make any noise about a thing of that sort if you
can help it." "Think of his only finding her out now,"
the Captain thought to himself, and remembered a hundred particular
conversations at the mess-table, in which Mrs. Crawley's reputation
had been torn to shreds.
"There's no way but one out of
it," Rawdon replied—"and there's only a way out of it for
one of us, Mac—do you understand? I was put out of the
way—arrested—I found 'em alone together. I told him he was a liar
and a coward, and knocked him down and thrashed him."
"Serve him right," Macmurdo
said. "Who is it?"
Rawdon answered it was Lord Steyne.
"The deuce! a Marquis! they said
he—that is, they said you—"
"What the devil do you mean?"
roared out Rawdon; "do you mean that you ever heard a fellow
doubt about my wife and didn't tell me, Mac?"
"The world's very censorious, old
boy," the other replied. "What the deuce was the good of my
telling you what any tom-fools talked about?"
"It was damned unfriendly, Mac,"
said Rawdon, quite overcome; and, covering his face with his hands,
he gave way to an emotion, the sight of which caused the tough old
campaigner opposite him to wince with sympathy. "Hold up, old
boy," he said; "great man or not, we'll put a bullet in
him, damn him. As for women, they're all so."
"You don't know how fond I was of
that one," Rawdon said, half- inarticulately. "Damme, I
followed her like a footman. I gave up everything I had to her. I'm a
beggar because I would marry her. By Jove, sir, I've pawned my own
watch in order to get her anything she fancied; and she she's been
making a purse for herself all the time, and grudged me a hundred
pound to get me out of quod." He then fiercely and incoherently,
and with an agitation under which his counsellor had never before
seen him labour, told Macmurdo the circumstances of the story. His
adviser caught at some stray hints in it. "She may be innocent,
after all," he said. "She says so. Steyne has been a
hundred times alone with her in the house before."
"It may be so," Rawdon
answered sadly, "but this don't look very innocent": and he
showed the Captain the thousand-pound note which he had found in
Becky's pocket-book. "This is what he gave her, Mac, and she kep
it unknown to me; and with this money in the house, she refused to
stand by me when I was locked up." The Captain could not but own
that the secreting of the money had a very ugly look.
Whilst they were engaged in their
conference, Rawdon dispatched Captain Macmurdo's servant to Curzon
Street, with an order to the domestic there to give up a bag of
clothes of which the Colonel had great need. And during the man's
absence, and with great labour and a Johnson's Dictionary, which
stood them in much stead, Rawdon and his second composed a letter,
which the latter was to send to Lord Steyne. Captain Macmurdo had the
honour of waiting upon the Marquis of Steyne, on the part of Colonel
Rawdon Crawley, and begged to intimate that he was empowered by the
Colonel to make any arrangements for the meeting which, he had no
doubt, it was his Lordship's intention to demand, and which the
circumstances of the morning had rendered inevitable. Captain
Macmurdo begged Lord Steyne, in the most polite manner, to appoint a
friend, with whom he (Captain M.M.) might communicate, and desired
that the meeting might take place with as little delay as possible.
In a postscript the Captain stated that
he had in his possession a bank-note for a large amount, which
Colonel Crawley had reason to suppose was the property of the Marquis
of Steyne. And he was anxious, on the Colonel's behalf, to give up
the note to its owner.
By the time this note was composed, the
Captain's servant returned from his mission to Colonel Crawley's
house in Curzon Street, but without the carpet-bag and portmanteau,
for which he had been sent, and with a very puzzled and odd face.
"They won't give 'em up,"
said the man; "there's a regular shinty in the house, and
everything at sixes and sevens. The landlord's come in and took
possession. The servants was a drinkin' up in the drawingroom. They
said—they said you had gone off with the plate, Colonel"—the
man added after a pause—"One of the servants is off already.
And Simpson, the man as was very noisy and drunk indeed, says nothing
shall go out of the house until his wages is paid up."
The account of this little revolution
in May Fair astonished and gave a little gaiety to an otherwise very
triste conversation. The two officers laughed at Rawdon's
discomfiture.
"I'm glad the little 'un isn't at
home," Rawdon said, biting his nails. "You remember him,
Mac, don't you, in the Riding School? How he sat the kicker to be
sure! didn't he?"
"That he did, old boy," said
the good-natured Captain.
Little Rawdon was then sitting, one of
fifty gown boys, in the Chapel of Whitefriars School, thinking, not
about the sermon, but about going home next Saturday, when his father
would certainly tip him and perhaps would take him to the play.
"He's a regular trump, that boy,"
the father went on, still musing about his son. "I say, Mac, if
anything goes wrong—if I drop—I should like you to—to go and
see him, you know, and say that I was very fond of him, and that.
And—dash it—old chap, give him these gold sleeve-buttons: it's
all I've got." He covered his face with his black hands, over
which the tears rolled and made furrows of white. Mr. Macmurdo had
also occasion to take off his silk night- cap and rub it across his
eyes.
"Go down and order some
breakfast," he said to his man in a loud cheerful voice.
"What'll you have, Crawley? Some devilled kidneys and a
herring—let's say. And, Clay, lay out some dressing things for the
Colonel: we were always pretty much of a size, Rawdon, my boy, and
neither of us ride so light as we did when we first entered the
corps." With which, and leaving the Colonel to dress himself,
Macmurdo turned round towards the wall, and resumed the perusal of
Bell's Life, until such time as his friend's toilette was complete
and he was at liberty to commence his own.
This, as he was about to meet a lord,
Captain Macmurdo performed with particular care. He waxed his
mustachios into a state of brilliant polish and put on a tight cravat
and a trim buff waistcoat, so that all the young officers in the
mess-room, whither Crawley had preceded his friend, complimented Mac
on his appearance at breakfast and asked if he was going to be
married that Sunday.
Chapter LV
*
In Which the Same Subject is Pursued
Becky did not rally from the state of
stupor and confusion in which the events of the previous night had
plunged her intrepid spirit until the bells of the Curzon Street
Chapels were ringing for afternoon service, and rising from her bed
she began to ply her own bell, in order to summon the French maid who
had left her some hours before.
Mrs. Rawdon Crawley rang many times in
vain; and though, on the last occasion, she rang with such vehemence
as to pull down the bell- rope, Mademoiselle Fifine did not make her
appearance—no, not though her mistress, in a great pet, and with
the bell-rope in her hand, came out to the landing-place with her
hair over her shoulders and screamed out repeatedly for her
attendant.
The truth is, she had quitted the
premises for many hours, and upon that permission which is called
French leave among us After picking up the trinkets in the
drawing-room, Mademoiselle had ascended to her own apartments, packed
and corded her own boxes there, tripped out and called a cab for
herself, brought down her trunks with her own hand, and without ever
so much as asking the aid of any of the other servants, who would
probably have refused it, as they hated her cordially, and without
wishing any one of them good-bye, had made her exit from Curzon
Street.
The game, in her opinion, was over in
that little domestic establishment. Fifine went off in a cab, as we
have known more exalted persons of her nation to do under similar
circumstances: but, more provident or lucky than these, she secured
not only her own property, but some of her mistress's (if indeed that
lady could be said to have any property at all)—and not only
carried off the trinkets before alluded to, and some favourite
dresses on which she had long kept her eye, but four richly gilt
Louis Quatorze candlesticks, six gilt albums, keepsakes, and Books of
Beauty, a gold enamelled snuff-box which had once belonged to Madame
du Barri, and the sweetest little inkstand and mother-of-pearl
blotting book, which Becky used when she composed her charming little
pink notes, had vanished from the premises in Curzon Street together
with Mademoiselle Fifine, and all the silver laid on the table for
the little festin which Rawdon interrupted. The plated ware
Mademoiselle left behind her was too cumbrous, probably for which
reason, no doubt, she also left the fire irons, the chimney-glasses,
and the rosewood cottage piano.
A lady very like her subsequently kept
a milliner's shop in the Rue du Helder at Paris, where she lived with
great credit and enjoyed the patronage of my Lord Steyne. This person
always spoke of England as of the most treacherous country in the
world, and stated to her young pupils that she had been affreusement
vole by natives of that island. It was no doubt compassion for her
misfortunes which induced the Marquis of Steyne to be so very kind to
Madame de Saint-Amaranthe. May she flourish as she deserves—she
appears no more in our quarter of Vanity Fair.
Hearing a buzz and a stir below, and
indignant at the impudence of those servants who would not answer her
summons, Mrs. Crawley flung her morning robe round her and descended
majestically to the drawing-room, whence the noise proceeded.
The cook was there with blackened face,
seated on the beautiful chintz sofa by the side of Mrs. Raggles, to
whom she was administering Maraschino. The page with the sugar-loaf
buttons, who carried about Becky's pink notes, and jumped about her
little carriage with such alacrity, was now engaged putting his
fingers into a cream dish; the footman was talking to Raggles, who
had a face full of perplexity and woe—and yet, though the door was
open, and Becky had been screaming a half-dozen of times a few feet
off, not one of her attendants had obeyed her call. "Have a
little drop, do'ee now, Mrs. Raggles," the cook was saying as
Becky entered, the white cashmere dressing-gown flouncing around her.
"Simpson! Trotter!" the
mistress of the house cried in great wrath. "How dare you stay
here when you heard me call? How dare you sit down in my presence?
Where's my maid?" The page withdrew his fingers from his mouth
with a momentary terror, but the cook took off a glass of Maraschino,
of which Mrs. Raggles had had enough, staring at Becky over the
little gilt glass as she drained its contents. The liquor appeared to
give the odious rebel courage.
"YOUR sofy, indeed!" Mrs.
Cook said. "I'm a settin' on Mrs. Raggles's sofy. Don't you
stir, Mrs. Raggles, Mum. I'm a settin' on Mr. and Mrs. Raggles's
sofy, which they bought with honest money, and very dear it cost 'em,
too. And I'm thinkin' if I set here until I'm paid my wages, I shall
set a precious long time, Mrs. Raggles; and set I will, too—ha!
ha!" and with this she filled herself another glass of the
liquor and drank it with a more hideously satirical air.
"Trotter! Simpson! turn that
drunken wretch out," screamed Mrs. Crawley.
"I shawn't," said Trotter the
footman; "turn out yourself. Pay our selleries, and turn me out
too. WE'LL go fast enough."
"Are you all here to insult me?"
cried Becky in a fury; "when Colonel Crawley comes home I'll—"
At this the servants burst into a horse
haw-haw, in which, however, Raggles, who still kept a most melancholy
countenance, did not join. "He ain't a coming back," Mr.
Trotter resumed. "He sent for his things, and I wouldn't let 'em
go, although Mr. Raggles would; and I don't b'lieve he's no more a
Colonel than I am. He's hoff, and I suppose you're a goin' after him.
You're no better than swindlers, both on you. Don't be a bullyin' ME.
I won't stand it. Pay us our selleries, I say. Pay us our selleries."
It was evident, from Mr. Trotter's flushed countenance and defective
intonation, that he, too, had had recourse to vinous stimulus.
"Mr. Raggles," said Becky in
a passion of vexation, "you will not surely let me be insulted
by that drunken man?" "Hold your noise, Trotter; do now,"
said Simpson the page. He was affected by his mistress's deplorable
situation, and succeeded in preventing an outrageous denial of the
epithet "drunken" on the footman's part.
"Oh, M'am," said Raggles, "I
never thought to live to see this year day: I've known the Crawley
family ever since I was born. I lived butler with Miss Crawley for
thirty years; and I little thought one of that family was a goin' to
ruing me—yes, ruing me"—said the poor fellow with tears in
his eyes. "Har you a goin' to pay me? You've lived in this 'ouse
four year. You've 'ad my substance: my plate and linning. You ho me a
milk and butter bill of two 'undred pound, you must 'ave noo laid
heggs for your homlets, and cream for your spanil dog."
"She didn't care what her own
flesh and blood had," interposed the cook. "Many's the
time, he'd have starved but for me."
"He's a charaty-boy now, Cooky,"
said Mr. Trotter, with a drunken "ha! ha!"—and honest
Raggles continued, in a lamentable tone, an enumeration of his
griefs. All he said was true. Becky and her husband had ruined him.
He had bills coming due next week and no means to meet them. He would
be sold up and turned out of his shop and his house, because he had
trusted to the Crawley family. His tears and lamentations made Becky
more peevish than ever.
"You all seem to be against me,"
she said bitterly. "What do you want? I can't pay you on Sunday.
Come back to-morrow and I'll pay you everything. I thought Colonel
Crawley had settled with you. He will to-morrow. I declare to you
upon my honour that he left home this morning with fifteen hundred
pounds in his pocket-book. He has left me nothing. Apply to him. Give
me a bonnet and shawl and let me go out and find him. There was a
difference between us this morning. You all seem to know it. I
promise you upon my word that you shall all be paid. He has got a
good appointment. Let me go out and find him."
This audacious statement caused Raggles
and the other personages present to look at one another with a wild
surprise, and with it Rebecca left them. She went upstairs and
dressed herself this time without the aid of her French maid. She
went into Rawdon's room, and there saw that a trunk and bag were
packed ready for removal, with a pencil direction that they should be
given when called for; then she went into the Frenchwoman's garret;
everything was clean, and all the drawers emptied there. She
bethought herself of the trinkets which had been left on the ground
and felt certain that the woman had fled. "Good Heavens! was
ever such ill luck as mine?" she said; "to be so near, and
to lose all. Is it all too late?" No; there was one chance more.
She dressed herself and went away
unmolested this time, but alone. It was four o'clock. She went
swiftly down the streets (she had no money to pay for a carriage),
and never stopped until she came to Sir Pitt Crawley's door, in Great
Gaunt Street. Where was Lady Jane Crawley? She was at church. Becky
was not sorry. Sir Pitt was in his study, and had given orders not to
be disturbed—she must see him—she slipped by the sentinel in
livery at once, and was in Sir Pitt's room before the astonished
Baronet had even laid down the paper.
He turned red and started back from her
with a look of great alarm and horror.
"Do not look so," she said.
"I am not guilty, Pitt, dear Pitt; you were my friend once.
Before God, I am not guilty. I seem so. Everything is against me. And
oh! at such a moment! just when all my hopes were about to be
realized: just when happiness was in store for us."
"Is this true, what I see in the
paper then?" Sir Pitt said—a paragraph in which had greatly
surprised him.
"It is true. Lord Steyne told me
on Friday night, the night of that fatal ball. He has been promised
an appointment any time these six months. Mr. Martyr, the Colonial
Secretary, told him yesterday that it was made out. That unlucky
arrest ensued; that horrible meeting. I was only guilty of too much
devotedness to Rawdon's service. I have received Lord Steyne alone a
hundred times before. I confess I had money of which Rawdon knew
nothing. Don't you know how careless he is of it, and could I dare to
confide it to him?" And so she went on with a perfectly
connected story, which she poured into the ears of her perplexed
kinsman.
It was to the following effect. Becky
owned, and with prefect frankness, but deep contrition, that having
remarked Lord Steyne's partiality for her (at the mention of which
Pitt blushed), and being secure of her own virtue, she had determined
to turn the great peer's attachment to the advantage of herself and
her family. "I looked for a peerage for you, Pitt," she
said (the brother-in-law again turned red). "We have talked
about it. Your genius and Lord Steyne's interest made it more than
probable, had not this dreadful calamity come to put an end to all
our hopes. But, first, I own that it was my object to rescue my dear
husband—him whom I love in spite of all his ill usage and
suspicions of me—to remove him from the poverty and ruin which was
impending over us. I saw Lord Steyne's partiality for me," she
said, casting down her eyes. "I own that I did everything in my
power to make myself pleasing to him, and as far as an honest woman
may, to secure his—his esteem. It was only on Friday morning that
the news arrived of the death of the Governor of Coventry Island, and
my Lord instantly secured the appointment for my dear husband. It was
intended as a surprise for him—he was to see it in the papers
to-day. Even after that horrid arrest took place (the expenses of
which Lord Steyne generously said he would settle, so that I was in a
manner prevented from coming to my husband's assistance), my Lord was
laughing with me, and saying that my dearest Rawdon would be consoled
when he read of his appointment in the paper, in that shocking
spun—bailiff's house. And then—then he came home. His suspicions
were excited,—the dreadful scene took place between my Lord and my
cruel, cruel Rawdon—and, O my God, what will happen next? Pitt,
dear Pitt! pity me, and reconcile us!" And as she spoke she
flung herself down on her knees, and bursting into tears, seized hold
of Pitt's hand, which she kissed passionately.
It was in this very attitude that Lady
Jane, who, returning from church, ran to her husband's room directly
she heard Mrs. Rawdon Crawley was closeted there, found the Baronet
and his sister-in-law.
"I am surprised that woman has the
audacity to enter this house," Lady Jane said, trembling in
every limb and turning quite pale. (Her Ladyship had sent out her
maid directly after breakfast, who had communicated with Raggles and
Rawdon Crawley's household, who had told her all, and a great deal
more than they knew, of that story, and many others besides). "How
dare Mrs. Crawley to enter the house of—of an honest family?"
Sir Pitt started back, amazed at his
wife's display of vigour. Becky still kept her kneeling posture and
clung to Sir Pitt's hand.
"Tell her that she does not know
all: Tell her that I am innocent, dear Pitt," she whimpered out.
"Upon-my word, my love, I think
you do Mrs. Crawley injustice," Sir Pitt said; at which speech
Rebecca was vastly relieved. "Indeed I believe her to be—"
"To be what?" cried out Lady
Jane, her clear voice thrilling and, her heart beating violently as
she spoke. "To be a wicked woman—a heartless mother, a false
wife? She never loved her dear little boy, who used to fly here and
tell me of her cruelty to him. She never came into a family but she
strove to bring misery with her and to weaken the most sacred
affections with her wicked flattery and falsehoods. She has deceived
her husband, as she has deceived everybody; her soul is black with
vanity, worldliness, and all sorts of crime. I tremble when I touch
her. I keep my children out of her sight."
"Lady Jane!" cried Sir Pitt,
starting up, "this is really language—" "I have been
a true and faithful wife to you, Sir Pitt," Lady Jane continued,
intrepidly; "I have kept my marriage vow as I made it to God and
have been obedient and gentle as a wife should. But righteous
obedience has its limits, and I declare that I will not bear
that—that woman again under my roof; if she enters it, I and my
children will leave it. She is not worthy to sit down with Christian
people. You—you must choose, sir, between her and me"; and
with this my Lady swept out of the room, fluttering with her own
audacity, and leaving Rebecca and Sir Pitt not a little astonished at
it.
As for Becky, she was not hurt; nay,
she was pleased. "It was the diamond-clasp you gave me,"
she said to Sir Pitt, reaching him out her hand; and before she left
him (for which event you may be sure my Lady Jane was looking out
from her dressing-room window in the upper story) the Baronet had
promised to go and seek out his brother, and endeavour to bring about
a reconciliation.
Rawdon found some of the young fellows
of the regiment seated in the mess-room at breakfast, and was induced
without much difficulty to partake of that meal, and of the devilled
legs of fowls and soda- water with which these young gentlemen
fortified themselves. Then they had a conversation befitting the day
and their time of life: about the next pigeon-match at Battersea,
with relative bets upon Ross and Osbaldiston; about Mademoiselle
Ariane of the French Opera, and who had left her, and how she was
consoled by Panther Carr; and about the fight between the Butcher and
the Pet, and the probabilities that it was a cross. Young Tandyman, a
hero of seventeen, laboriously endeavouring to get up a pair of
mustachios, had seen the fight, and spoke in the most scientific
manner about the battle and the condition of the men. It was he who
had driven the Butcher on to the ground in his drag and passed the
whole of the previous night with him. Had there not been foul play he
must have won it. All the old files of the Ring were in it; and
Tandyman wouldn't pay; no, dammy, he wouldn't pay. It was but a year
since the young Cornet, now so knowing a hand in Cribb's parlour, had
a still lingering liking for toffy, and used to be birched at Eton.
So they went on talking about dancers,
fights, drinking, demireps, until Macmurdo came down and joined the
boys and the conversation. He did not appear to think that any
especial reverence was due to their boyhood; the old fellow cut in
with stories, to the full as choice as any the youngest rake present
had to tell—nor did his own grey hairs nor their smooth faces
detain him. Old Mac was famous for his good stories. He was not
exactly a lady's man; that is, men asked him to dine rather at the
houses of their mistresses than of their mothers. There can scarcely
be a life lower, perhaps, than his, but he was quite contented with
it, such as it was, and led it in perfect good nature, simplicity,
and modesty of demeanour.
By the time Mac had finished a copious
breakfast, most of the others had concluded their meal. Young Lord
Varinas was smoking an immense Meerschaum pipe, while Captain Hugues
was employed with a cigar: that violent little devil Tandyman, with
his little bull-terrier between his legs, was tossing for shillings
with all his might (that fellow was always at some game or other)
against Captain Deuceace; and Mac and Rawdon walked off to the Club,
neither, of course, having given any hint of the business which was
occupying their minds. Both, on the other hand, had joined pretty
gaily in the conversation, for why should they interrupt it?
Feasting, drinking, ribaldry, laughter, go on alongside of all sorts
of other occupations in Vanity Fair—the crowds were pouring out of
church as Rawdon and his friend passed down St. James's Street and
entered into their Club.
The old bucks and habitues, who
ordinarily stand gaping and grinning out of the great front window of
the Club, had not arrived at their posts as yet—the newspaper-room
was almost empty. One man was present whom Rawdon did not know;
another to whom he owed a little score for whist, and whom, in
consequence, he did not care to meet; a third was reading the
Royalist (a periodical famous for its scandal and its attachment to
Church and King) Sunday paper at the table, and looking up at Crawley
with some interest, said, "Crawley, I congratulate you."
"What do you mean?" said the
Colonel.
"It's in the Observer and the
Royalist too," said Mr. Smith.
"What?" Rawdon cried, turning
very red. He thought that the affair with Lord Steyne was already in
the public prints. Smith looked up wondering and smiling at the
agitation which the Colonel exhibited as he took up the paper and,
trembling, began to read.
Mr. Smith and Mr. Brown (the gentleman
with .whom Rawdon had the outstanding whist account) had been talking
about the Colonel just before he came in.
"It is come just in the nick of
time," said Smith. "I suppose Crawley had not a shilling in
the world."
"It's a wind that blows everybody
good," Mr. Brown said. "He can't go away without paying me
a pony he owes me."
"What's the salary?" asked
Smith.
"Two or three thousand,"
answered the other. "But the climate's so infernal, they don't
enjoy it long. Liverseege died after eighteen months of it, and the
man before went off in six weeks, I hear."
"Some people say his brother is a
very clever man. I always found him a d—— bore," Smith
ejaculated. "He must have good interest, though. He must have
got the Colonel the place."
"He!" said Brown. with a
sneer. "Pooh. It was Lord Steyne got it.
"How do you mean?"
"A virtuous woman is a crown to
her husband," answered the other enigmatically, and went to read
his papers.
Rawdon, for his part, read in the
Royalist the following astonishing paragraph:
GOVERNORSHIP OF COVENTRY ISLAND.—H.M.S.
Yellowjack, Commander Jaunders, has brought letters and papers from
Coventry Island. H. E. Sir Thomas Liverseege had fallen a victim to
the prevailing fever at Swampton. His loss is deeply felt in the
flourishing colony. We hear that the Governorship has been offered to
Colonel Rawdon Crawley, C.B., a distinguished Waterloo officer. We
need not only men of acknowledged bravery, but men of administrative
talents to superintend the affairs of our colonies, and we have no
doubt that the gentleman selected by the Colonial Office to fill the
lamented vacancy which has occurred at Coventry Island is admirably
calculated for the post which he is about to occupy."
"Coventry Island! Where was it?
Who had appointed him to the government? You must take me out as your
secretary, old boy," Captain Macmurdo said laughing; and as
Crawley and his friend sat wondering and perplexed over the
announcement, the Club waiter brought in to the Colonel a card on
which the name of Mr. Wenham was engraved, who begged to see Colonel
Crawley.
The Colonel and his aide-de-camp went
out to meet the gentleman, rightly conjecturing that he was an
emissary of Lord Steyne. "How d'ye do, Crawley? I am glad to see
you," said Mr. Wenham with a bland smile, and grasping Crawley's
hand with great cordiality.
"You come, I suppose, from—"
"Exactly," said Mr. Wenham.
"Then this is my friend Captain
Macmurdo, of the Life Guards Green."
"Delighted to know Captain
Macmurdo, I'm sure," Mr. Wenham said and tendered another smile
and shake of the hand to the second, as he had done to the principal.
Mac put out one finger, armed with a buckskin glove, and made a very
frigid bow to Mr. Wenham over his tight cravat. He was, perhaps,
discontented at being put in communication with a pekin, and thought
that Lord Steyne should have sent him a Colonel at the very least.
"As Macmurdo acts for me, and
knows what I mean," Crawley said, "I had better retire and
leave you together."
"Of course," said Macmurdo.
"By no means, my dear Colonel,"
Mr. Wenham said; "the interview which I had the honour of
requesting was with you personally, though the company of Captain
Macmurdo cannot fail to be also most pleasing. In fact, Captain, I
hope that our conversation will lead to none but the most agreeable
results, very different from those which my friend Colonel Crawley
appears to anticipate."
"Humph!" said Captain
Macmurdo. Be hanged to these civilians, he thought to himself, they
are always for arranging and speechifying. Mr. Wenham took a chair
which was not offered to him—took a paper from his pocket, and
resumed—
"You have seen this gratifying
announcement in the papers this morning, Colonel? Government has
secured a most valuable servant, and you, if you accept office, as I
presume you will, an excellent appointment. Three thousand a year,
delightful climate, excellent government-house, all your own way in
the Colony, and a certain promotion. I congratulate you with all my
heart. I presume you know, gentlemen, to whom my friend is indebted
for this piece of patronage?"
"Hanged if I know," the
Captain said; his principal turned very red.
"To one of the most generous and
kindest men in the world, as he is one of the greatest—to my
excellent friend, the Marquis of Steyne."
"I'll see him d— before I take
his place," growled out Rawdon.
"You are irritated against my
noble friend," Mr. Wenham calmly resumed; "and now, in the
name of common sense and justice, tell me why?"
"WHY?" cried Rawdon in
surprise.
"Why? Dammy!" said the
Captain, ringing his stick on the ground.
"Dammy, indeed," said Mr.
Wenham with the most agreeable smile; "still, look at the matter
as a man of the world—as an honest man— and see if you have not
been in the wrong. You come home from a journey, and find—what?—my
Lord Steyne supping at your house in Curzon Street with Mrs. Crawley.
Is the circumstance strange or novel? Has he not been a hundred times
before in the same position? Upon my honour and word as a
gentleman"—Mr. Wenham here put his hand on his waistcoat with
a parliamentary air—"I declare I think that your suspicions
are monstrous and utterly unfounded, and that they injure an
honourable gentleman who has proved his good-will towards you by a
thousand benefactions—and a most spotless and innocent lady."
"You don't mean to say that—that
Crawley's mistaken?" said Mr. Macmurdo.
"I believe that Mrs. Crawley is as
innocent as my wife, Mrs. Wenham," Mr. Wenham said with great
energy. "I believe that, misled by an infernal jealousy, my
friend here strikes a blow against not only an infirm and old man of
high station, his constant friend and benefactor, but against his
wife, his own dearest honour, his son's future reputation, and his
own prospects in life."
"I will tell you what happened,"
Mr. Wenham continued with great solemnity; "I was sent for this
morning by my Lord Steyne, and found him in a pitiable state, as, I
need hardly inform Colonel Crawley, any man of age and infirmity
would be after a personal conflict with a man of your strength. I say
to your face; it was a cruel advantage you took of that strength,
Colonel Crawley. It was not only the body of my noble and excellent
friend which was wounded— his heart, sir, was bleeding. A man whom
he had loaded with benefits and regarded with affection had subjected
him to the foulest indignity. What was this very appointment, which
appears in the journals of to-day, but a proof of his kindness to
you? When I saw his Lordship this morning I found him in a state
pitiable indeed to see, and as anxious as you are to revenge the
outrage committed upon him, by blood. You know he has given his
proofs, I presume, Colonel Crawley?"
"He has plenty of pluck,"
said the Colonel. "Nobody ever said he hadn't."
"His first order to me was to
write a letter of challenge, and to carry it to Colonel Crawley. One
or other of us," he said, "must not survive the outrage of
last night."
Crawley nodded. "You're coming to
the point, Wenham," he said.
"I tried my utmost to calm Lord
Steyne. Good God! sir," I said, "how I regret that Mrs.
Wenham and myself had not accepted Mrs. Crawley's invitation to sup
with her!"
"She asked you to sup with her?"
Captain Macmurdo said.
"After the opera. Here's the note
of invitation—stop—no, this is another paper—I thought I had h,
but it's of no consequence, and I pledge you my word to the fact. If
we had come—and it was only one of Mrs. Wenham's headaches which
prevented us—she suffers under them a good deal, especially in the
spring—if we had come, and you had returned home, there would have
been no quarrel, no insult, no suspicion—and so it is positively
because my poor wife has a headache that you are to bring death down
upon two men of honour and plunge two of the most excellent and
ancient families in the kingdom into disgrace and sorrow."
Mr. Macmurdo looked at his principal
with the air of a man profoundly puzzled, and Rawdon felt with a kind
of rage that his prey was escaping him. He did not believe a word of
the story, and yet, how discredit or disprove it?
Mr. Wenham continued with the same
fluent oratory, which in his place in Parliament he had so often
practised—"I sat for an hour or more by Lord Steyne's bedside,
beseeching, imploring Lord Steyne to forego his intention of
demanding a meeting. I pointed out to him that the circumstances were
after all suspicious—they were suspicious. I acknowledge it—any
man in your position might have been taken in—I said that a man
furious with jealousy is to all intents and purposes a madman, and
should be as such regarded—that a duel between you must lead to the
disgrace of all parties concerned—that a man of his Lordship's
exalted station had no right in these days, when the most atrocious
revolutionary principles, and the most dangerous levelling doctrines
are preached among the vulgar, to create a public scandal; and that,
however innocent, the common people would insist that he was guilty.
In fine, I implored him not to send the challenge."
"I don't believe one word of the
whole story," said Rawdon, grinding his teeth. "I believe
it a d—— lie, and that you're in it, Mr. Wenham. If the challenge
don't come from him, by Jove it shall come from me."
Mr. Wenham turned deadly pale at this
savage interruption of the Colonel and looked towards the door.
But he found a champion in Captain
Macmurdo. That gentleman rose up with an oath and rebuked Rawdon for
his language. "You put the affair into my hands, and you shall
act as I think fit, by Jove, and not as you do. You have no right to
insult Mr. Wenham with this sort of language; and dammy, Mr. Wenham,
you deserve an apology. And as for a challenge to Lord Steyne, you
may get somebody else to carry it, I won't. If my lord, after being
thrashed, chooses to sit still, dammy let him. And as for the affair
with—with Mrs. Crawley, my belief is, there's nothing proved at
all: that your wife's innocent, as innocent as Mr. Wenham says she
is; and at any rate that you would be a d—fool not to take the
place and hold your tongue."
"Captain Macmurdo, you speak like
a man of sense," Mr. Wenham cried out, immensely relieved—"I
forget any words that Colonel Crawley has used in the irritation of
the moment."
"I thought you would," Rawdon
said with a sneer.
"Shut your mouth, you old
stoopid," the Captain said good-naturedly. "Mr. Wenham
ain't a fighting man; and quite right, too."
"This matter, in my belief,"
the Steyne emissary cried, "ought to be buried in the most
profound oblivion. A word concerning it should never pass these
doors. I speak in the interest of my friend, as well as of Colonel
Crawley, who persists in considering me his enemy."
"I suppose Lord Steyne won't talk
about it very much," said Captain Macmurdo; "and I don't
see why our side should. The affair ain't a very pretty one, any way
you take it, and the less said about it the better. It's you are
thrashed, and not us; and if you are satisfied, why, I think, we
should be."
Mr. Wenham took his hat, upon this, and
Captain Macmurdo following him to the door, shut it upon himself and
Lord Steyne's agent, leaving Rawdon chafing within. When the two were
on the other side, Macmurdo looked hard at the other ambassador and
with an expression of anything but respect on his round jolly face.
"You don't stick at a trifle, Mr.
Wenham," he said.
"You flatter me, Captain
Macmurdo," answered the other with a smile. "Upon my honour
and conscience now, Mrs. Crawley did ask us to sup after the opera."
"Of course; and Mrs. Wenham had
one of her head-aches. I say, I've got a thousand-pound note here,
which I will give you if you will give me a receipt, please; and I
will put the note up in an envelope for Lord Steyne. My man shan't
fight him. But we had rather not take his money."
"It was all a mistake—all a
mistake, my dear sir," the other said with the utmost innocence
of manner; and was bowed down the Club steps by Captain Macmurdo,
just as Sir Pitt Crawley ascended them. There was a slight
acquaintance between these two gentlemen, and the Captain, going back
with the Baronet to the room where the latter's brother was, told Sir
Pitt, in confidence, that he had made the affair all right between
Lord Steyne and the Colonel.
Sir Pitt was well pleased, of course,
at this intelligence, and congratulated his brother warmly upon the
peaceful issue of the affair, making appropriate moral remarks upon
the evils of duelling and the unsatisfactory nature of that sort of
settlement of disputes.
And after this preface, he tried with
all his eloquence to effect a reconciliation between Rawdon and his
wife. He recapitulated the statements which Becky had made, pointed
out the probabilities of their truth, and asserted his own firm
belief in her innocence.
But Rawdon would not hear of it. "She
has kep money concealed from me these ten years," he said "She
swore, last night only, she had none from Steyne. She knew it was all
up, directly I found it. If she's not guilty, Pitt, she's as bad as
guilty, and I'll never see her again—never." His head sank
down on his chest as he spoke the words, and he looked quite broken
and sad.
"Poor old boy," Macmurdo
said, shaking his head.
Rawdon Crawley resisted for some time
the idea of taking the place which had been procured for him by so
odious a patron, and was also for removing the boy from the school
where Lord Steyne's interest had placed him. He was induced, however,
to acquiesce in these benefits by the entreaties of his brother and
Macmurdo, but mainly by the latter, pointing out to him what a fury
Steyne would be in to think that his enemy's fortune was made through
his means.
When the Marquis of Steyne came abroad
after his accident, the Colonial Secretary bowed up to him and
congratulated himself and the Service upon having made so excellent
an appointment. These congratulations were received with a degree of
gratitude which may be imagined on the part of Lord Steyne.
The secret of the rencontre between him
and Colonel Crawley was buried in the profoundest oblivion, as Wenham
said; that is, by the seconds and the principals. But before that
evening was over it was talked of at fifty dinner-tables in Vanity
Fair. Little Cackleby himself went to seven evening parties and told
the story with comments and emendations at each place. How Mrs.
Washington White revelled in it! The Bishopess of Ealing was shocked
beyond expression; the Bishop went and wrote his name down in the
visiting- book at Gaunt House that very day. Little Southdown was
sorry; so you may be sure was his sister Lady Jane, very sorry. Lady
Southdown wrote it off to her other daughter at the Cape of Good
Hope. It was town-talk for at least three days, and was only kept out
of the newspapers by the exertions of Mr. Wagg, acting upon a hint
from Mr. Wenham.
The bailiffs and brokers seized upon
poor Raggles in Curzon Street, and the late fair tenant of that poor
little mansion was in the meanwhile—where? Who cared! Who asked
after a day or two? Was she guilty or not? We all know how charitable
the world is, and how the verdict of Vanity Fair goes when there is a
doubt. Some people said she had gone to Naples in pursuit of Lord
Steyne, whilst others averred that his Lordship quitted that city and
fled to Palermo on hearing of Becky's arrival; some said she was
living in Bierstadt, and had become a dame d'honneur to the Queen of
Bulgaria; some that she was at Boulogne; and others, at a
boarding-house at Cheltenham.
Rawdon made her a tolerable annuity,
and we may be sure that she was a woman who could make a little money
go a great way, as the saying is. He would have paid his debts on
leaving England, could he have got any Insurance Office to take his
life, but the climate of Coventry Island was so bad that he could
borrow no money on the strength of his salary. He remitted, however,
to his brother punctually, and wrote to his little boy regularly
every mail. He kept Macmurdo in cigars and sent over quantities of
shells, cayenne pepper, hot pickles, guava jelly, and colonial
produce to Lady Jane. He sent his brother home the Swamp Town
Gazette, in which the new Governor was praised with immense
enthusiasm; whereas the Swamp Town Sentinel, whose wife was not asked
to Government House, declared that his Excellency was a tyrant,
compared to whom Nero was an enlightened philanthropist. Little
Rawdon used to like to get the papers and read about his Excellency.
His mother never made any movement to
see the child. He went home to his aunt for Sundays and holidays; he
soon knew every bird's nest about Queen's Crawley, and rode out with
Sir Huddlestone's hounds, which he admired so on his first
well-remembered visit to Hampshire.
Chapter LVI
*
Georgy is Made a Gentleman
Georgy Osborne was now fairly
established in his grandfather's mansion in Russell Square, occupant
of his father's room in the house and heir apparent of all the
splendours there. The good looks, gallant bearing, and gentlemanlike
appearance of the boy won the grandsire's heart for him. Mr. Osborne
was as proud of him as ever he had been of the elder George.
The child had many more luxuries and
indulgences than had been awarded his father. Osborne's commerce had
prospered greatly of late years. His wealth and importance in the
City had very much increased. He had been glad enough in former days
to put the elder George to a good private school; and a commission in
the army for his son had been a source of no small pride to him; for
little George and his future prospects the old man looked much
higher. He would make a gentleman of the little chap, was Mr.
Osborne's constant saying regarding little Georgy. He saw him in his
mind's eye, a collegian, a Parliament man, a Baronet, perhaps. The
old man thought he would die contented if he could see his grandson
in a fair way to such honours. He would have none but a tip-top
college man to educate him—none of your quacks and pretenders—no,
no. A few years before, he used to be savage, and inveigh against all
parsons, scholars, and the like declaring that they were a pack of
humbugs, and quacks that weren't fit to get their living but by
grinding Latin and Greek, and a set of supercilious dogs that
pretended to look down upon British merchants and gentlemen, who
could buy up half a hundred of 'em. He would mourn now, in a very
solemn manner, that his own education had been neglected, and
repeatedly point out, in pompous orations to Georgy, the necessity
and excellence of classical acquirements.
When they met at dinner the grandsire
used to ask the lad what he had been reading during the day, and was
greatly interested at the report the boy gave of his own studies,
pretending to understand little George when he spoke regarding them.
He made a hundred blunders and showed his ignorance many a time. It
did not increase the respect which the child had for his senior. A
quick brain and a better education elsewhere showed the boy very soon
that his grandsire was a dullard, and he began accordingly to command
him and to look down upon him; for his previous education, humble and
contracted as it had been, had made a much better gentleman of Georgy
than any plans of his grandfather could make him. He had been brought
up by a kind, weak, and tender woman, who had no pride about anything
but about him, and whose heart was so pure and whose bearing was so
meek and humble that she could not but needs be a true lady. She
busied herself in gentle offices and quiet duties; if she never said
brilliant things, she never spoke or thought unkind ones; guileless
and artless, loving and pure, indeed how could our poor little Amelia
be other than a real gentlewoman!
Young Georgy lorded over this soft and
yielding nature; and the contrast of its simplicity and delicacy with
the coarse pomposity of the dull old man with whom he next came in
contact made him lord over the latter too. If he had been a Prince
Royal he could not have been better brought up to think well of
himself.
Whilst his mother was yearning after
him at home, and I do believe every hour of the day, and during most
hours of the sad lonely nights, thinking of him, this young gentleman
had a number of pleasures and consolations administered to him, which
made him for his part bear the separation from Amelia very easily.
Little boys who cry when they are going to school cry because they
are going to a very uncomfortable place. It is only a few who weep
from sheer affection. When you think that the eyes of your childhood
dried at the sight of a piece of gingerbread, and that a plum cake
was a compensation for the agony of parting with your mamma and
sisters, oh my friend and brother, you need not be too confident of
your own fine feelings.
Well, then, Master George Osborne had
every comfort and luxury that a wealthy and lavish old grandfather
thought fit to provide. The coachman was instructed to purchase for
him the handsomest pony which could be bought for money, and on this
George was taught to ride, first at a riding-school, whence, after
having performed satisfactorily without stirrups, and over the
leaping-bar, he was conducted through the New Road to Regent's Park,
and then to Hyde Park, where he rode in state with Martin the
coachman behind him. Old Osborne, who took matters more easily in the
City now, where he left his affairs to his junior partners, would
often ride out with Miss O. in the same fashionable direction. As
little Georgy came cantering up with his dandified air and his heels
down, his grandfather would nudge the lad's aunt and say, "Look,
Miss O." And he would laugh, and his face would grow red with
pleasure, as he nodded out of the window to the boy, as the groom
saluted the carriage, and the footman saluted Master George. Here too
his aunt, Mrs. Frederick Bullock (whose chariot might daily be seen
in the Ring, with bullocks or emblazoned on the panels and harness,
and three pasty-faced little Bullocks, covered with cockades and
feathers, staring from the windows) Mrs. Frederick Bullock, I say,
flung glances of the bitterest hatred at the little upstart as he
rode by with his hand on his side and his hat on one ear, as proud as
a lord.
Though he was scarcely eleven years of
age, Master George wore straps and the most beautiful little boots
like a man. He had gilt spurs, and a gold-headed whip, and a fine pin
in his handkerchief, and the neatest little kid gloves which Lamb's
Conduit Street could furnish. His mother had given him a couple of
neckcloths, and carefully hemmed and made some little shirts for him;
but when her Eli came to see the widow, they were replaced by much
finer linen. He had little jewelled buttons in the lawn shirt fronts.
Her humble presents had been put aside—I believe Miss Osborne had
given them to the coachman's boy. Amelia tried to think she was
pleased at the change. Indeed, she was happy and charmed to see the
boy looking so beautiful.
She had had a little black profile of
him done for a shilling, and this was hung up by the side of another
portrait over her bed. One day the boy came on his accustomed visit,
galloping down the little street at Brompton, and bringing, as usual,
all the inhabitants to the windows to admire his splendour, and with
great eagerness and a look of triumph in his face, he pulled a case
out of his great-coat —it was a natty white great-coat, with a cape
and a velvet collar— pulled out a red morocco case, which he gave
her.
"I bought it with my own money,
Mamma," he said. "I thought you'd like it."
Amelia opened the case, and giving a
little cry of delighted affection, seized the boy and embraced him a
hundred times. It was a miniature-of himself, very prettily done
(though not half handsome enough, we may be sure, the widow thought).
His grandfather had wished to have a picture of him by an artist
whose works, exhibited in a shop-window, in Southampton Row, had
caught the old gentleman's eye; and George, who had plenty of money,
bethought him of asking the painter how much a copy of the little
portrait would cost, saying that he would pay for it out of his own
money and that he wanted to give it to his mother. The pleased
painter executed it for a small price, and old Osborne himself, when
he heard of the incident, growled out his satisfaction and gave the
boy twice as many sovereigns as he paid for the miniature.
But what was the grandfather's pleasure
compared to Amelia's ecstacy? That proof of the boy's affection
charmed her so that she thought no child in the world was like hers
for goodness. For long weeks after, the thought of his love made her
happy. She slept better with the picture under her pillow, and how
many many times did she kiss it and weep and pray over it! A small
kindness from those she loved made that timid heart grateful. Since
her parting with George she had had no such joy and consolation.
At his new home Master George ruled
like a lord; at dinner he invited the ladies to drink wine with the
utmost coolness, and took off his champagne in a way which charmed
his old grandfather. "Look at him," the old man would say,
nudging his neighbour with a delighted purple face, "did you
ever see such a chap? Lord, Lord! he'll be ordering a dressing-case
next, and razors to shave with; I'm blessed if he won't."
The antics of the lad did not, however,
delight Mr. Osborne's friends so much as they pleased the old
gentleman. It gave Mr. Justice Coffin no pleasure to hear Georgy cut
into the conversation and spoil his stories. Colonel Fogey was not
interested in seeing the little boy half tipsy. Mr. Sergeant Toffy's
lady felt no particular gratitude, when, with a twist of his elbow,
he tilted a glass of port-wine over her yellow satin and laughed at
the disaster; nor was she better pleased, although old Osborne was
highly delighted, when Georgy "whopped" her third boy (a
young gentleman a year older than Georgy, and by chance home for the
holidays from Dr. Tickleus's at Ealing School) in Russell Square.
George's grandfather gave the boy a couple of sovereigns for that
feat and promised to reward him further for every boy above his own
size and age whom he whopped in a similar manner. It is difficult to
say what good the old man saw in these combats; he had a vague notion
that quarrelling made boys hardy, and that tyranny was a useful
accomplishment for them to learn. English youth have been so educated
time out of mind, and we have hundreds of thousands of apologists and
admirers of injustice, misery, and brutality, as perpetrated among
children. Flushed with praise and victory over Master Toffy, George
wished naturally to pursue his conquests further, and one day as he
was strutting about in prodigiously dandified new clothes, near St.
Pancras, and a young baker's boy made sarcastic comments upon his
appearance, the youthful patrician pulled off his dandy jacket with
great spirit, and giving it in charge to the friend who accompanied
him (Master Todd, of Great Coram Street, Russell Square, son of the
junior partner of the house of Osborne and Co.), George tried to whop
the little baker. But the chances of war were unfavourable this time,
and the little baker whopped Georgy, who came home with a rueful
black eye and all his fine shirt frill dabbled with the claret drawn
from his own little nose. He told his grandfather that he had been in
combat with a giant, and frightened his poor mother at Brompton with
long, and by no means authentic, accounts of the battle.
This young Todd, of Coram Street,
Russell Square, was Master George's great friend and admirer. They
both had a taste for painting theatrical characters; for hardbake and
raspberry tarts; for sliding and skating in the Regent's Park and the
Serpentine, when the weather permitted; for going to the play,
whither they were often conducted, by Mr. Osborne's orders, by
Rowson, Master George's appointed body-servant, with whom they sat in
great comfort in the pit.
In the company of this gentleman they
visited all the principal theatres of the metropolis; knew the names
of all the actors from Drury Lane to Sadler's Wells; and performed,
indeed, many of the plays to the Todd family and their youthful
friends, with West's famous characters, on their pasteboard theatre.
Rowson, the footman, who was of a generous disposition, would not
unfrequently, when in cash, treat his young master to oysters after
the play, and to a glass of rum-shrub for a night-cap. We may be
pretty certain that Mr. Rowson profited in his turn by his young
master's liberality and gratitude for the pleasures to which the
footman inducted him.
A famous tailor from the West End of
the town—Mr. Osborne would have none of your City or Holborn
bunglers, he said, for the boy (though a City tailor was good enough
for HIM)—was summoned to ornament little George's person, and was
told to spare no expense in so doing. So, Mr. Woolsey, of Conduit
Street, gave a loose to his imagination and sent the child home fancy
trousers, fancy waistcoats, and fancy jackets enough to furnish a
school of little dandies. Georgy had little white waistcoats for
evening parties, and little cut velvet waistcoats for dinners, and a
dear little darling shawl dressing-gown, for all the world like a
little man. He dressed for dinner every day, "like a regular
West End swell," as his grandfather remarked; one of the
domestics was affected to his special service, attended him at his
toilette, answered his bell, and brought him his letters always on a
silver tray.
Georgy, after breakfast, would sit in
the arm-chair in the dining- room and read the Morning Post, just
like a grown-up man. "How he DU dam and swear," the
servants would cry, delighted at his precocity. Those who remembered
the Captain his father, declared Master George was his Pa, every inch
of him. He made the house lively by his activity, his imperiousness,
his scolding, and his good-nature.
George's education was confided to a
neighbouring scholar and private pedagogue who "prepared young
noblemen and gentlemen for the Universities, the senate, and the
learned professions: whose system did not embrace the degrading
corporal severities still practised at the ancient places of
education, and in whose family the pupils would find the elegances of
refined society and the confidence and affection of a home." It
was in this way that the Reverend Lawrence Veal of Hart Street,
Bloomsbury, and domestic Chaplain to the Earl of Bareacres, strove
with Mrs. Veal his wife to entice pupils.
By thus advertising and pushing
sedulously, the domestic Chaplain and his Lady generally succeeded in
having one or two scholars by them—who paid a high figure and were
thought to be in uncommonly comfortable quarters. There was a large
West Indian, whom nobody came to see, with a mahogany complexion, a
woolly head, and an exceedingly dandyfied appearance; there was
another hulking boy of three-and-twenty whose education had been
neglected and whom Mr. and Mrs. Veal were to introduce into the
polite world; there were two sons of Colonel Bangles of the East
India Company's Service: these four sat down to dinner at Mrs. Veal's
genteel board, when Georgy was introduced to her establishment.
Georgy was, like some dozen other
pupils, only a day boy; he arrived in the morning under the
guardianship of his friend Mr. Rowson, and if it was fine, would ride
away in the afternoon on his pony, followed by the groom. The wealth
of his grandfather was reported in the school to be prodigious. The
Rev. Mr. Veal used to compliment Georgy upon it personally, warning
him that he was destined for a high station; that it became him to
prepare, by sedulity and docility in youth, for the lofty duties to
which he would be called in mature age; that obedience in the child
was the best preparation for command in the man; and that he
therefore begged George would not bring toffee into the school and
ruin the health of the Masters Bangles, who had everything they
wanted at the elegant and abundant table of Mrs. Veal.
With respect to learning, "the
Curriculum," as Mr. Veal loved to call it, was of prodigious
extent, and the young gentlemen in Hart Street might learn a
something of every known science. The Rev. Mr. Veal had an orrery, an
electrifying machine, a turning lathe, a theatre (in the wash-house),
a chemical apparatus, and what he called a select library of all the
works of the best authors of ancient and modern times and languages.
He took the boys to the British Museum and descanted upon the
antiquities and the specimens of natural history there, so that
audiences would gather round him as he spoke, and all Bloomsbury
highly admired him as a prodigiously well-informed man. And whenever
he spoke (which he did almost always), he took care to produce the
very finest and longest words of which the vocabulary gave him the
use, rightly judging that it was as cheap to employ a handsome,
large, and sonorous epithet, as to use a little stingy one.
Thus he would say to George in school,
"I observed on my return home from taking the indulgence of an
evening's scientific conversation with my excellent friend Doctor
Bulders—a true archaeologian, gentlemen, a true archaeologian—that
the windows of your venerated grandfather's almost princely mansion
in Russell Square were illuminated as if for the purposes of
festivity. Am I right in my conjecture that Mr. Osborne entertained a
society of chosen spirits round his sumptuous board last night?"
Little Georgy, who had considerable
humour, and used to mimic Mr. Veal to his face with great spirit and
dexterity, would reply that Mr. V. was quite correct in his surmise.
"Then those friends who had the
honour of partaking of Mr. Osborne's hospitality, gentlemen, had no
reason, I will lay any wager, to complain of their repast. I myself
have been more than once so favoured. (By the way, Master Osborne,
you came a little late this morning, and have been a defaulter in
this respect more than once.) I myself, I say, gentlemen, humble as I
am, have been found not unworthy to share Mr. Osborne's elegant
hospitality. And though I have feasted with the great and noble of
the world—for I presume that I may call my excellent friend and
patron, the Right Honourable George Earl of Bareacres, one of the
number—yet I assure you that the board of the British merchant was
to the full as richly served, and his reception as gratifying and
noble. Mr. Bluck, sir, we will resume, if you please, that passage of
Eutropis, which was interrupted by the late arrival of Master
Osborne."
To this great man George's education
was for some time entrusted. Amelia was bewildered by his phrases,
but thought him a prodigy of learning. That poor widow made friends
of Mrs. Veal, for reasons of her own. She liked to be in the house
and see Georgy coming to school there. She liked to be asked to Mrs.
Veal's conversazioni, which took place once a month (as you were
informed on pink cards, with AOHNH engraved on them), and where the
professor welcomed his pupils and their friends to weak tea and
scientific conversation. Poor little Amelia never missed one of these
entertainments and thought them delicious so long as she might have
Georgy sitting by her. And she would walk from Brompton in any
weather, and embrace Mrs. Veal with tearful gratitude for the
delightful evening she had passed, when, the company having retired
and Georgy gone off with Mr. Rowson, his attendant, poor Mrs. Osborne
put on her cloaks and her shawls preparatory to walking home.
As for the learning which Georgy
imbibed under this valuable master of a hundred sciences, to judge
from the weekly reports which the lad took home to his grandfather,
his progress was remarkable. The names of a score or more of
desirable branches of knowledge were printed in a table, and the
pupil's progress in each was marked by the professor. In Greek Georgy
was pronounced aristos, in Latin optimus, in French tres bien, and so
forth; and everybody had prizes for everything at the end of the
year. Even Mr. Swartz, the wooly- headed young gentleman, and
half-brother to the Honourable Mrs. Mac Mull, and Mr. Bluck, the
neglected young pupil of three-and-twenty from the agricultural
district, and that idle young scapegrace of a Master Todd before
mentioned, received little eighteen-penny books, with "Athene"
engraved on them, and a pompous Latin inscription from the professor
to his young friends.
The family of this Master Todd were
hangers-on of the house of Osborne. The old gentleman had advanced
Todd from being a clerk to be a junior partner in his establishment.
Mr. Osborne was the godfather of young
Master Todd (who in subsequent life wrote Mr. Osborne Todd on his
cards and became a man of decided fashion), while Miss Osborne had
accompanied Miss Maria Todd to the font, and gave her protegee a
prayer-book, a collection of tracts, a volume of very low church
poetry, or some such memento of her goodness every year. Miss O.
drove the Todds out in her carriage now and then; when they were ill,
her footman, in large plush smalls and waistcoat, brought jellies and
delicacies from Russell Square to Coram Street. Coram Street trembled
and looked up to Russell Square indeed, and Mrs. Todd, who had a
pretty hand at cutting out paper trimmings for haunches of mutton,
and could make flowers, ducks, &c., out of turnips and carrots in
a very creditable manner, would go to "the Square," as it
was called, and assist in the preparations incident to a great
dinner, without even so much as thinking of sitting down to the
banquet. If any guest failed at the eleventh hour, Todd was asked to
dine. Mrs. Todd and Maria came across in the evening, slipped in with
a muffled knock, and were in the drawing-room by the time Miss
Osborne and the ladies under her convoy reached that apartment—and
ready to fire off duets and sing until the gentlemen came up. Poor
Maria Todd; poor young lady! How she had to work and thrum at these
duets and sonatas in the Street, before they appeared in public in
the Square!
Thus it seemed to be decreed by fate
that Georgy was to domineer over everybody with whom he came in
contact, and that friends, relatives, and domestics were all to bow
the knee before the little fellow. It must be owned that he
accommodated himself very willingly to this arrangement. Most people
do so. And Georgy liked to play the part of master and perhaps had a
natural aptitude for it.
In Russell Square everybody was afraid
of Mr. Osborne, and Mr. Osborne was afraid of Georgy. The boy's
dashing manners, and offhand rattle about books and learning, his
likeness to his father (dead unreconciled in Brussels yonder) awed
the old gentleman and gave the young boy the mastery. The old man
would start at some hereditary feature or tone unconsciously used by
the little lad, and fancy that George's father was again before him.
He tried by indulgence to the grandson to make up for harshness to
the elder George. People were surprised at his gentleness to the boy.
He growled and swore at Miss Osborne as usual, and would smile when
George came down late for breakfast.
Miss Osborne, George's aunt, was a
faded old spinster, broken down by more than forty years of dulness
and coarse usage. It was easy for a lad of spirit to master her. And
whenever George wanted anything from her, from the jam-pots in her
cupboards to the cracked and dry old colours in her paint-box (the
old paint-box which she had had when she was a pupil of Mr. Smee and
was still almost young and blooming), Georgy took possession of the
object of his desire, which obtained, he took no further notice of
his aunt.
For his friends and cronies, he had a
pompous old schoolmaster, who flattered him, and a toady, his senior,
whom he could thrash. It was dear Mrs. Todd's delight to leave him
with her youngest daughter, Rosa Jemima, a darling child of eight
years old. The little pair looked so well together, she would say
(but not to the folks in "the Square," we may be sure) "who
knows what might happen? Don't they make a pretty little couple?"
the fond mother thought.
The broken-spirited, old, maternal
grandfather was likewise subject to the little tyrant. He could not
help respecting a lad who had such fine clothes and rode with a groom
behind him. Georgy, on his side, was in the constant habit of hearing
coarse abuse and vulgar satire levelled at John Sedley by his
pitiless old enemy, Mr. Osborne. Osborne used to call the other the
old pauper, the old coal-man, the old bankrupt, and by many other
such names of brutal contumely. How was little George to respect a
man so prostrate? A few months after he was with his paternal
grandfather, Mrs. Sedley died. There had been little love between her
and the child. He did not care to show much grief. He came down to
visit his mother in a fine new suit of mourning, and was very angry
that he could not go to a play upon which he had set his heart.
The illness of that old lady had been
the occupation and perhaps the safeguard of Amelia. What do men know
about women's martyrdoms? We should go mad had we to endure the
hundredth part of those daily pains which are meekly borne by many
women. Ceaseless slavery meeting with no reward; constant gentleness
and kindness met by cruelty as constant; love, labour, patience,
watchfulness, without even so much as the acknowledgement of a good
word; all this, how many of them have to bear in quiet, and appear
abroad with cheerful faces as if they felt nothing. Tender slaves
that they are, they must needs be hypocrites and weak.
From her chair Amelia's mother had
taken to her bed, which she had never left, and from which Mrs.
Osborne herself was never absent except when she ran to see George.
The old lady grudged her even those rare visits; she, who had been a
kind, smiling, good-natured mother once, in the days of her
prosperity, but whom poverty and infirmities had broken down. Her
illness or estrangement did not affect Amelia. They rather enabled
her to support the other calamity under which she was suffering, and
from the thoughts of which she was kept by the ceaseless calls of the
invalid. Amelia bore her harshness quite gently; smoothed the uneasy
pillow; was always ready with a soft answer to the watchful,
querulous voice; soothed the sufferer with words of hope, such as her
pious simple heart could best feel and utter, and closed the eyes
that had once looked so tenderly upon her.
Then all her time and tenderness were
devoted to the consolation and comfort of the bereaved old father,
who was stunned by the blow which had befallen him, and stood utterly
alone in the world. His wife, his honour, his fortune, everything he
loved best had fallen away from him. There was only Amelia to stand
by and support with her gentle arms the tottering, heart-broken old
man. We are not going to write the history: it would be too dreary
and stupid. I can see Vanity Fair yawning over it d'avance.
One day as the young gentlemen were
assembled in the study at the Rev. Mr. Veal's, and the domestic
chaplain to the Right Honourable the Earl of Bareacres was spouting
away as usual, a smart carriage drove up to the door decorated with
the statue of Athene, and two gentlemen stepped out. The young
Masters Bangles rushed to the window with a vague notion that their
father might have arrived from Bombay. The great hulking scholar of
three-and-twenty, who was crying secretly over a passage of
Eutropius, flattened his neglected nose against the panes and looked
at the drag, as the laquais de place sprang from the box and let out
the persons in the carriage.
"It's a fat one and a thin one,"
Mr. Bluck said as a thundering knock came to the door.
Everybody was interested, from the
domestic chaplain himself, who hoped he saw the fathers of some
future pupils, down to Master Georgy, glad of any pretext for laying
his book down.
The boy in the shabby livery with the
faded copper buttons, who always thrust himself into the tight coat
to open the door, came into the study and said, "Two gentlemen
want to see Master Osborne." The professor had had a trifling
altercation in the morning with that young gentleman, owing to a
difference about the introduction of crackers in school-time; but his
face resumed its habitual expression of bland courtesy as he said,
"Master Osborne, I give you full permission to go and see your
carriage friends—to whom I beg you to convey the respectful
compliments of myself and Mrs. Veal."
Georgy went into the reception-room and
saw two strangers, whom he looked at with his head up, in his usual
haughty manner. One was fat, with mustachios, and the other was lean
and long, in a blue frock-coat, with a brown face and a grizzled
head.
"My God, how like he is!"
said the long gentleman with a start. "Can you guess who we are,
George?"
The boy's face flushed up, as it did
usually when he was moved, and his eyes brightened. "I don't
know the other," he said, "but I should think you must be
Major Dobbin."
Indeed it was our old friend. His voice
trembled with pleasure as he greeted the boy, and taking both the
other's hands in his own, drew the lad to him.
"Your mother has talked to you
about me—has she?" he said.
"That she has," Georgy
answered, "hundreds and hundreds of times."
Chapter LVII
*
Eothen
It was one of the many causes for
personal pride with which old Osborne chose to recreate himself that
Sedley, his ancient rival, enemy, and benefactor, was in his last
days so utterly defeated and humiliated as to be forced to accept
pecuniary obligations at the hands of the man who had most injured
and insulted him. The successful man of the world cursed the old
pauper and relieved him from time to time. As he furnished George
with money for his mother, he gave the boy to understand by hints,
delivered in his brutal, coarse way, that George's maternal
grandfather was but a wretched old bankrupt and dependant, and that
John Sedley might thank the man to whom he already owed ever so much
money for the aid which his generosity now chose to administer.
George carried the pompous supplies to his mother and the shattered
old widower whom it was now the main business of her life to tend and
comfort. The little fellow patronized the feeble and disappointed old
man.
It may have shown a want of "proper
pride" in Amelia that she chose to accept these money benefits
at the hands of her father's enemy. But proper pride and this poor
lady had never had much acquaintance together. A disposition
naturally simple and demanding protection; a long course of poverty
and humility, of daily privations, and hard words, of kind offices
and no returns, had been her lot ever since womanhood almost, or
since her luckless marriage with George Osborne. You who see your
betters bearing up under this shame every day, meekly suffering under
the slights of fortune, gentle and unpitied, poor, and rather
despised for their poverty, do you ever step down from your
prosperity and wash the feet of these poor wearied beggars? The very
thought of them is odious and low. "There must be classes—there
must be rich and poor," Dives says, smacking his claret (it is
well if he even sends the broken meat out to Lazarus sitting under
the window). Very true; but think how mysterious and often
unaccountable it is—that lottery of life which gives to this man
the purple and fine linen and sends to the other rags for garments
and dogs for comforters.
So I must own that, without much
repining, on the contrary with something akin to gratitude, Amelia
took the crumbs that her father- in-law let drop now and then, and
with them fed her own parent. Directly she understood it to be her
duty, it was this young woman's nature (ladies, she is but thirty
still, and we choose to call her a young woman even at that age) it
was, I say, her nature to sacrifice herself and to fling all that she
had at the feet of the beloved object. During what long thankless
nights had she worked out her fingers for little Georgy whilst at
home with her; what buffets, scorns, privations, poverties had she
endured for father and mother! And in the midst of all these solitary
resignations and unseen sacrifices, she did not respect herself any
more than the world respected her, but I believe thought in her heart
that she was a poor-spirited, despicable little creature, whose luck
in life was only too good for her merits. O you poor women! O you
poor secret martyrs and victims, whose life is a torture, who are
stretched on racks in your bedrooms, and who lay your heads down on
the block daily at the drawing-room table; every man who watches your
pains, or peers into those dark places where the torture is
administered to you, must pity you—and—and thank God that he has
a beard. I recollect seeing, years ago, at the prisons for idiots and
madmen at Bicetre, near Paris, a poor wretch bent down under the
bondage of his imprisonment and his personal infirmity, to whom one
of our party gave a halfpenny worth of snuff in a cornet or "screw"
of paper. The kindness was too much for the poor epileptic creature.
He cried in an anguish of delight and gratitude: if anybody gave you
and me a thousand a year, or saved our lives, we could not be so
affected. And so, if you properly tyrannize over a woman, you will
find a h'p'orth of kindness act upon her and bring tears into her
eyes, as though you were an angel benefiting her.
Some such boons as these were the best
which Fortune allotted to poor little Amelia. Her life, begun not
unprosperously, had come down to this—to a mean prison and a long,
ignoble bondage. Little George visited her captivity sometimes and
consoled it with feeble gleams of encouragement. Russell Square was
the boundary of her prison: she might walk thither occasionally, but
was always back to sleep in her cell at night; to perform cheerless
duties; to watch by thankless sick-beds; to suffer the harassment and
tyranny of querulous disappointed old age. How many thousands of
people are there, women for the most part, who are doomed to endure
this long slavery?—who are hospital nurses without wages—sisters
of Charity, if you like, without the romance and the sentiment of
sacrifice—who strive, fast, watch, and suffer, unpitied, and fade
away ignobly and unknown.
The hidden and awful Wisdom which
apportions the destinies of mankind is pleased so to humiliate and
cast down the tender, good, and wise, and to set up the selfish, the
foolish, or the wicked. Oh, be humble, my brother, in your
prosperity! Be gentle with those who are less lucky, if not more
deserving. Think, what right have you to be scornful, whose virtue is
a deficiency of temptation, whose success may be a chance, whose rank
may be an ancestor's accident, whose prosperity is very likely a
satire.
They buried Amelia's mother in the
churchyard at Brompton, upon just such a rainy, dark day as Amelia
recollected when first she had been there to marry George. Her little
boy sat by her side in pompous new sables. She remembered the old
pew-woman and clerk. Her thoughts were away in other times as the
parson read. But that she held George's hand in her own, perhaps she
would have liked to change places with.... Then, as usual, she felt
ashamed of her selfish thoughts and prayed inwardly to be
strengthened to do her duty.
So she determined with all her might
and strength to try and make her old father happy. She slaved,
toiled, patched, and mended, sang and played backgammon, read out the
newspaper, cooked dishes, for old Sedley, walked him out sedulously
into Kensington Gardens or the Brompton Lanes, listened to his
stories with untiring smiles and affectionate hypocrisy, or sat
musing by his side and communing with her own thoughts and
reminiscences, as the old man, feeble and querulous, sunned himself
on the garden benches and prattled about his wrongs or his sorrows.
What sad, unsatisfactory thoughts those of the widow were! The
children running up and down the slopes and broad paths in the
gardens reminded her of George, who was taken from her; the first
George was taken from her; her selfish, guilty love, in both
instances, had been rebuked and bitterly chastised. She strove to
think it was right that she should be so punished. She was such a
miserable wicked sinner. She was quite alone in the world.
I know that the account of this kind of
solitary imprisonment is insufferably tedious, unless there is some
cheerful or humorous incident to enliven it—a tender gaoler, for
instance, or a waggish commandant of the fortress, or a mouse to come
out and play about Latude's beard and whiskers, or a subterranean
passage under the castle, dug by Trenck with his nails and a
toothpick: the historian has no such enlivening incident to relate in
the narrative of Amelia's captivity. Fancy her, if you please, during
this period, very sad, but always ready to smile when spoken to; in a
very mean, poor, not to say vulgar position of life; singing songs,
making puddings, playing cards, mending stockings, for her old
father's benefit. So, never mind, whether she be a heroine or no; or
you and I, however old, scolding, and bankrupt—may we have in our
last days a kind soft shoulder on which to lean and a gentle hand to
soothe our gouty old pillows.
Old Sedley grew very fond of his
daughter after his wife's death, and Amelia had her consolation in
doing her duty by the old man.
But we are not going to leave these two
people long in such a low and ungenteel station of life. Better days,
as far as worldly prosperity went, were in store for both. Perhaps
the ingenious reader has guessed who was the stout gentleman who
called upon Georgy at his school in company with our old friend Major
Dobbin. It was another old acquaintance returned to England, and at a
time when his presence was likely to be of great comfort to his
relatives there.
Major Dobbin having easily succeeded in
getting leave from his good- natured commandant to proceed to Madras,
and thence probably to Europe, on urgent private affairs, never
ceased travelling night and day until he reached his journey's end,
and had directed his march with such celerity that he arrived at
Madras in a high fever. His servants who accompanied him brought him
to the house of the friend with whom he had resolved to stay until
his departure for Europe in a state of delirium; and it was thought
for many, many days that he would never travel farther than the
burying-ground of the church of St. George's, where the troops should
fire a salvo over his grave, and where many a gallant officer lies
far away from his home.
Here, as the poor fellow lay tossing in
his fever, the people who watched him might have heard him raving
about Amelia. The idea that he should never see her again depressed
him in his lucid hours. He thought his last day was come, and he made
his solemn preparations for departure, setting his affairs in this
world in order and leaving the little property of which he was
possessed to those whom he most desired to benefit. The friend in
whose house he was located witnessed his testament. He desired to be
buried with a little brown hair-chain which he wore round his neck
and which, if the truth must be known, he had got from Amelia's maid
at Brussels, when the young widow's hair was cut off, during the
fever which prostrated her after the death of George Osborne on the
plateau at Mount St. John.
He recovered, rallied, relapsed again,
having undergone such a process of blood-letting and calomel as
showed the strength of his original constitution. He was almost a
skeleton when they put him on board the Ramchunder East Indiaman,
Captain Bragg, from Calcutta, touching at Madras, and so weak and
prostrate that his friend who had tended him through his illness
prophesied that the honest Major would never survive the voyage, and
that he would pass some morning, shrouded in flag and hammock, over
the ship's side, and carrying down to the sea with him the relic that
he wore at his heart. But whether it was the sea air, or the hope
which sprung up in him afresh, from the day that the ship spread her
canvas and stood out of the roads towards home, our friend began to
amend, and he was quite well (though as gaunt as a greyhound) before
they reached the Cape. "Kirk will be disappointed of his
majority this time," he said with a smile; "he will expect
to find himself gazetted by the time the regiment reaches home."
For it must be premised that while the Major was lying ill at Madras,
having made such prodigious haste to go thither, the gallant —th,
which had passed many years abroad, which after its return from the
West Indies had been baulked of its stay at home by the Waterloo
campaign, and had been ordered from Flanders to India, had received
orders home; and the Major might have accompanied his comrades, had
he chosen to wait for their arrival at Madras.
Perhaps he was not inclined to put
himself in his exhausted state again under the guardianship of
Glorvina. "I think Miss O'Dowd would have done for me," he
said laughingly to a fellow-passenger, "if we had had her on
board, and when she had sunk me, she would have fallen upon you,
depend upon it, and carried you in as a prize to Southampton, Jos, my
boy."
For indeed it was no other than our
stout friend who was also a passenger on board the Ramchunder. He had
passed ten years in Bengal. Constant dinners, tiffins, pale ale and
claret, the prodigious labour of cutcherry, and the refreshment of
brandy-pawnee which he was forced to take there, had their effect
upon Waterloo Sedley. A voyage to Europe was pronounced necessary for
him—and having served his full time in India and had fine
appointments which had enabled him to lay by a considerable sum of
money, he was free to come home and stay with a good pension, or to
return and resume that rank in the service to which his seniority and
his vast talents entitled him.
He was rather thinner than when we last
saw him, but had gained in majesty and solemnity of demeanour. He had
resumed the mustachios to which his services at Waterloo entitled
him, and swaggered about on deck in a magnificent velvet cap with a
gold band and a profuse ornamentation of pins and jewellery about his
person. He took breakfast in his cabin and dressed as solemnly to
appear on the quarter-deck as if he were going to turn out for Bond
Street, or the Course at Calcutta. He brought a native servant with
him, who was his valet and pipe-bearer and who wore the Sedley crest
in silver on his turban. That oriental menial had a wretched life
under the tyranny of Jos Sedley. Jos was as vain of his person as a
woman, and took as long a time at his toilette as any fading beauty.
The youngsters among the passengers, Young Chaffers of the 150th, and
poor little Ricketts, coming home after his third fever, used to draw
out Sedley at the cuddy-table and make him tell prodigious stories
about himself and his exploits against tigers and Napoleon. He was
great when he visited the Emperor's tomb at Longwood, when to these
gentlemen and the young officers of the ship, Major Dobbin not being
by, he described the whole battle of Waterloo and all but announced
that Napoleon never would have gone to Saint Helena at all but for
him, Jos Sedley.
After leaving St. Helena he became very
generous, disposing of a great quantity of ship stores, claret,
preserved meats, and great casks packed with soda-water, brought out
for his private delectation. There were no ladies on board; the Major
gave the pas of precedency to the civilian, so that he was the first
dignitary at table, and treated by Captain Bragg and the officers of
the Ramchunder with the respect which his rank warranted. He
disappeared rather in a panic during a two-days' gale, in which he
had the portholes of his cabin battened down, and remained in his cot
reading the Washerwoman of Finchley Common, left on board the
Ramchunder by the Right Honourable the Lady Emily Hornblower, wife of
the Rev. Silas Hornblower, when on their passage out to the Cape,
where the Reverend gentleman was a missionary; but, for common
reading, he had brought a stock of novels and plays which he lent to
the rest of the ship, and rendered himself agreeable to all by his
kindness and condescension.
Many and many a night as the ship was
cutting through the roaring dark sea, the moon and stars shining
overhead and the bell singing out the watch, Mr. Sedley and the Major
would sit on the quarter- deck of the vessel talking about home, as
the Major smoked his cheroot and the civilian puffed at the hookah
which his servant prepared for him.
In these conversations it was wonderful
with what perseverance and ingenuity Major Dobbin would manage to
bring the talk round to the subject of Amelia and her little boy.
Jos, a little testy about his father's misfortunes and unceremonious
applications to him, was soothed down by the Major, who pointed out
the elder's ill fortunes and old age. He would not perhaps like to
live with the old couple, whose ways and hours might not agree with
those of a younger man, accustomed to different society (Jos bowed at
this compliment); but, the Major pointed out, how advantageous it
would be for Jos Sedley to have a house of his own in London, and not
a mere bachelor's establishment as before; how his sister Amelia
would be the very person to preside over it; how elegant, how gentle
she was, and of what refined good manners. He recounted stories of
the success which Mrs. George Osborne had had in former days at
Brussels, and in London, where she was much admired by people of very
great fashion; and he then hinted how becoming it would be for Jos to
send Georgy to a good school and make a man of him, for his mother
and her parents would be sure to spoil him. In a word, this artful
Major made the civilian promise to take charge of Amelia and her
unprotected child. He did not know as yet what events had happened in
the little Sedley family, and how death had removed the mother, and
riches had carried off George from Amelia. But the fact is that every
day and always, this love-smitten and middle-aged gentleman was
thinking about Mrs. Osborne, and his whole heart was bent upon doing
her good. He coaxed, wheedled, cajoled, and complimented Jos Sedley
with a perseverance and cordiality of which he was not aware himself,
very likely; but some men who have unmarried sisters or daughters
even, may remember how uncommonly agreeable gentlemen are to the male
relations when they are courting the females; and perhaps this rogue
of a Dobbin was urged by a similar hypocrisy.
The truth is, when Major Dobbin came on
board the Ramchumder, very sick, and for the three days she lay in
the Madras Roads, he did not begin to rally, nor did even the
appearance and recognition of his old acquaintance, Mr. Sedley, on
board much cheer him, until after a conversation which they had one
day, as the Major was laid languidly on the deck. He said then he
thought he was doomed; he had left a little something to his godson
in his will, and he trusted Mrs. Osborne would remember him kindly
and be happy in the marriage she was about to make. "Married?
not the least," Jos answered; "he had heard from her: she
made no mention of the marriage, and by the way, it was curious, she
wrote to say that Major Dobbin was going to be married, and hoped
that HE would be happy." What were the dates of Sedley's letters
from Europe? The civilian fetched them. They were two months later
than the Major's; and the ship's surgeon congratulated himself upon
the treatment adopted by him towards his new patient, who had been
consigned to shipboard by the Madras practitioner with very small
hopes indeed; for, from that day, the very day that he changed the
draught, Major Dobbin began to mend. And thus it was that deserving
officer, Captain Kirk, was disappointed of his majority.
After they passed St. Helena, Major
Dobbin's gaiety and strength was such as to astonish all his fellow
passengers. He larked with the midshipmen, played single-stick with
the mates, ran up the shrouds like a boy, sang a comic song one night
to the amusement of the whole party assembled over their grog after
supper, and rendered himself so gay, lively, and amiable that even
Captain Bragg, who thought there was nothing in his passenger, and
considered he was a poor-spirited feller at first, was constrained to
own that the Major was a reserved but well-informed and meritorious
officer. "He ain't got distangy manners, dammy," Bragg
observed to his first mate; "he wouldn't do at Government House,
Roper, where his Lordship and Lady William was as kind to me, and
shook hands with me before the whole company, and asking me at dinner
to take beer with him, before the Commander-in-Chief himself; he
ain't got manners, but there's something about him—" And thus
Captain Bragg showed that he possessed discrimination as a man, as
well as ability as a commander.
But a calm taking place when the
Ramchunder was within ten days' sail of England, Dobbin became so
impatient and ill-humoured as to surprise those comrades who had
before admired his vivacity and good temper. He did not recover until
the breeze sprang up again, and was in a highly excited state when
the pilot came on board. Good God, how his heart beat as the two
friendly spires of Southampton came in sight.
Chapter LVIII
*
Our Friend the Major
Our Major had rendered himself so
popular on board the Ramchunder that when he and Mr. Sedley descended
into the welcome shore-boat which was to take them from the ship, the
whole crew, men and officers, the great Captain Bragg himself leading
off, gave three cheers for Major Dobbin, who blushed very much and
ducked his head in token of thanks. Jos, who very likely thought the
cheers were for himself, took off his gold-laced cap and waved it
majestically to his friends, and they were pulled to shore and landed
with great dignity at the pier, whence they proceeded to the Royal
George Hotel.
Although the sight of that magnificent
round of beef, and the silver tankard suggestive of real British
home-brewed ale and porter, which perennially greet the eyes of the
traveller returning from foreign parts who enters the coffee-room of
the George, are so invigorating and delightful that a man entering
such a comfortable snug homely English inn might well like to stop
some days there, yet Dobbin began to talk about a post-chaise
instantly, and was no sooner at Southampton than he wished to be on
the road to London. Jos, however, would not hear of moving that
evening. Why was he to pass a night in a post-chaise instead of a
great large undulating downy feather-bed which was there ready to
replace the horrid little narrow crib in which the portly Bengal
gentleman had been confined during the voyage? He could not think of
moving till his baggage was cleared, or of travelling until he could
do so with his chillum. So the Major was forced to wait over that
night, and dispatched a letter to his family announcing his arrival,
entreating from Jos a promise to write to his own friends. Jos
promised, but didn't keep his promise. The Captain, the surgeon, and
one or two passengers came and dined with our two gentlemen at the
inn, Jos exerting himself in a sumptuous way in ordering the dinner
and promising to go to town the next day with the Major. The landlord
said it did his eyes good to see Mr. Sedley take off his first pint
of porter. If I had time and dared to enter into digressions, I would
write a chapter about that first pint of porter drunk upon English
ground. Ah, how good it is! It is worth-while to leave home for a
year, just to enjoy that one draught.
Major Dobbin made his appearance the
next morning very neatly shaved and dressed, according to his wont.
Indeed, it was so early in the morning that nobody was up in the
house except that wonderful Boots of an inn who never seems to want
sleep; and the Major could hear the snores of the various inmates of
the house roaring through the corridors as he creaked about in those
dim passages. Then the sleepless Boots went shirking round from door
to door, gathering up at each the Bluchers, Wellingtons, Oxonians,
which stood outside. Then Jos's native servant arose and began to get
ready his master's ponderous dressing apparatus and prepare his
hookah; then the maidservants got up, and meeting the dark man in the
passages, shrieked, and mistook him for the devil. He and Dobbin
stumbled over their pails in the passages as they were scouring the
decks of the Royal George. When the first unshorn waiter appeared and
unbarred the door of the inn, the Major thought that the time for
departure was arrived, and ordered a post-chaise to be fetched
instantly, that they might set off.
He then directed his steps to Mr.
Sedley's room and opened the curtains of the great large family bed
wherein Mr. Jos was snoring. "Come, up! Sedley," the Major
said, "it's time to be off; the chaise will be at the door in
half an hour."
Jos growled from under the counterpane
to know what the time was; but when he at last extorted from the
blushing Major (who never told fibs, however they might be to his
advantage) what was the real hour of the morning, he broke out into a
volley of bad language, which we will not repeat here, but by which
he gave Dobbin to understand that he would jeopardy his soul if he
got up at that moment, that the Major might go and be hanged, that he
would not travel with Dobbin, and that it was most unkind and
ungentlemanlike to disturb a man out of his sleep in that way; on
which the discomfited Major was obliged to retreat, leaving Jos to
resume his interrupted slumbers.
The chaise came up presently, and the
Major would wait no longer.
If he had been an English nobleman
travelling on a pleasure tour, or a newspaper courier bearing
dispatches (government messages are generally carried much more
quietly), he could not have travelled more quickly. The post-boys
wondered at the fees he flung amongst them. How happy and green the
country looked as the chaise whirled rapidly from mile-stone to
mile-stone, through neat country towns where landlords came out to
welcome him with smiles and bows; by pretty roadside inns, where the
signs hung on the elms, and horses and waggoners were drinking under
the chequered shadow of the trees; by old halls and parks; rustic
hamlets clustered round ancient grey churches—and through the
charming friendly English landscape. Is there any in the world like
it? To a traveller returning home it looks so kind—it seems to
shake hands with you as you pass through it. Well, Major Dobbin
passed through all this from Southampton to London, and without
noting much beyond the milestones along the road. You see he was so
eager to see his parents at Camberwell.
He grudged the time lost between
Piccadilly and his old haunt at the Slaughters', whither he drove
faithfully. Long years had passed since he saw it last, since he and
George, as young men, had enjoyed many a feast, and held many a revel
there. He had now passed into the stage of old-fellow-hood. His hair
was grizzled, and many a passion and feeling of his youth had grown
grey in that interval. There, however, stood the old waiter at the
door, in the same greasy black suit, with the same double chin and
flaccid face, with the same huge bunch of seals at his fob, rattling
his money in his pockets as before, and receiving the Major as if he
had gone away only a week ago. "Put the Major's things in
twenty-three, that's his room," John said, exhibiting not the
least surprise. "Roast fowl for your dinner, I suppose. You
ain't got married? They said you was married—the Scotch surgeon of
yours was here. No, it was Captain Humby of the thirty-third, as was
quartered with the —th in Injee. Like any warm water? What do you
come in a chay for—ain't the coach good enough?" And with
this, the faithful waiter, who knew and remembered every officer who
used the house, and with whom ten years were but as yesterday, led
the way up to Dobbin's old room, where stood the great moreen bed,
and the shabby carpet, a thought more dingy, and all the old black
furniture covered with faded chintz, just as the Major recollected
them in his youth.
He remembered George pacing up and down
the room, and biting his nails, and swearing that the Governor must
come round, and that if he didn't, he didn't care a straw, on the day
before he was married. He could fancy him walking in, banging the
door of Dobbin's room, and his own hard by—
"You ain't got young," John
said, calmly surveying his friend of former days.
Dobbin laughed. "Ten years and a
fever don't make a man young, John," he said. "It is you
that are always young—no, you are always old."
"What became of Captain Osborne's
widow?" John said. "Fine young fellow that. Lord, how he
used to spend his money. He never came back after that day he was
marched from here. He owes me three pound at this minute. Look here,
I have it in my book. 'April 10, 1815, Captain Osborne: '3 pounds.' I
wonder whether his father would pay me," and so saying, John of
the Slaughters' pulled out the very morocco pocket-book in which he
had noted his loan to the Captain, upon a greasy faded page still
extant, with many other scrawled memoranda regarding the bygone
frequenters of the house.
Having inducted his customer into the
room, John retired with perfect calmness; and Major Dobbin, not
without a blush and a grin at his own absurdity, chose out of his kit
the very smartest and most becoming civil costume he possessed, and
laughed at his own tanned face and grey hair, as he surveyed them in
the dreary little toilet-glass on the dressing-table.
"I'm glad old John didn't forget
me," he thought. "She'll know me, too, I hope." And he
sallied out of the inn, bending his steps once more in the direction
of Brompton.
Every minute incident of his last
meeting with Amelia was present to the constant man's mind as he
walked towards her house. The arch and the Achilles statue were up
since he had last been in Piccadilly; a hundred changes had occurred
which his eye and mind vaguely noted. He began to tremble as he
walked up the lane from Brompton, that well-remembered lane leading
to the street where she lived. Was she going to be married or not? If
he were to meet her with the little boy—Good God, what should he
do? He saw a woman coming to him with a child of five years old—was
that she? He began to shake at the mere possibility. When he came up
to the row of houses, at last, where she lived, and to the gate, he
caught hold of it and paused. He might have heard the thumping of his
own heart. "May God Almighty bless her, whatever has happened,"
he thought to himself. "Psha! she may be gone from here,"
he said and went in through the gate.
The window of the parlour which she
used to occupy was open, and there were no inmates in the room. The
Major thought he recognized the piano, though, with the picture over
it, as it used to be in former days, and his perturbations were
renewed. Mr. Clapp's brass plate was still on the door, at the
knocker of which Dobbin performed a summons.
A buxom-looking lass of sixteen, with
bright eyes and purple cheeks, came to answer the knock and looked
hard at the Major as he leant back against the little porch.
He was as pale as a ghost and could
hardly falter out the words— "Does Mrs. Osborne live here?"
She looked him hard in the face for a
moment—and then turning white too—said, "Lord bless me—it's
Major Dobbin." She held out both her hands shaking—"Don't
you remember me?" she said. "I used to call you Major
Sugarplums." On which, and I believe it was for the first time
that he ever so conducted himself in his life, the Major took the
girl in his arms and kissed her. She began to laugh and cry
hysterically, and calling out "Ma, Pa!" with all her voice,
brought up those worthy people, who had already been surveying the
Major from the casement of the ornamental kitchen, and were
astonished to find their daughter in the little passage in the
embrace of a great tall man in a blue frock-coat and white duck
trousers.
"I'm an old friend," he
said—not without blushing though. "Don't you remember me, Mrs.
Clapp, and those good cakes you used to make for tea? Don't you
recollect me, Clapp? I'm George's godfather, and just come back from
India." A great shaking of hands ensued—Mrs. Clapp was greatly
affected and delighted; she called upon heaven to interpose a vast
many times in that passage.
The landlord and landlady of the house
led the worthy Major into the Sedleys' room (whereof he remembered
every single article of furniture, from the old brass ornamented
piano, once a natty little instrument, Stothard maker, to the screens
and the alabaster miniature tombstone, in the midst of which ticked
Mr. Sedley's gold watch), and there, as he sat down in the lodger's
vacant arm-chair, the father, the mother, and the daughter, with a
thousand ejaculatory breaks in the narrative, informed Major Dobbin
of what we know already, but of particulars in Amelia's history of
which he was not aware—namely of Mrs. Sedley's death, of George's
reconcilement with his grandfather Osborne, of the way in which the
widow took on at leaving him, and of other particulars of her life.
Twice or thrice he was going to ask about the marriage question, but
his heart failed him. He did not care to lay it bare to these people.
Finally, he was informed that Mrs. O. was gone to walk with her pa in
Kensington Gardens, whither she always went with the old gentleman
(who was very weak and peevish now, and led her a sad life, though
she behaved to him like an angel, to be sure), of a fine afternoon,
after dinner.
"I'm very much pressed for time,"
the Major said, "and have business to-night of importance. I
should like to see Mrs. Osborne tho'. Suppose Miss Polly would come
with me and show me the way?"
Miss Polly was charmed and astonished
at this proposal. She knew the way. She would show Major Dobbin. She
had often been with Mr. Sedley when Mrs. O. was gone—was gone
Russell Square way—and knew the bench where he liked to sit. She
bounced away to her apartment and appeared presently in her best
bonnet and her mamma's yellow shawl and large pebble brooch, of which
she assumed the loan in order to make herself a worthy companion for
the Major.
That officer, then, in his blue
frock-coat and buckskin gloves, gave the young lady his arm, and they
walked away very gaily. He was glad to have a friend at hand for the
scene which he dreaded somehow. He asked a thousand more questions
from his companion about Amelia: his kind heart grieved to think that
she should have had to part with her son. How did she bear it? Did
she see him often? Was Mr. Sedley pretty comfortable now in a worldly
point of view? Polly answered all these questions of Major Sugarplums
to the very best of her power.
And in the midst of their walk an
incident occurred which, though very simple in its nature, was
productive of the greatest delight to Major Dobbin. A pale young man
with feeble whiskers and a stiff white neckcloth came walking down
the lane, en sandwich—having a lady, that is, on each arm. One was
a tall and commanding middle- aged female, with features and a
complexion similar to those of the clergyman of the Church of England
by whose side she marched, and the other a stunted little woman with
a dark face, ornamented by a fine new bonnet and white ribbons, and
in a smart pelisse, with a rich gold watch in the midst of her
person. The gentleman, pinioned as he was by these two ladies,
carried further a parasol, shawl, and basket, so that his arms were
entirely engaged, and of course he was unable to touch his hat in
acknowledgement of the curtsey with which Miss Mary Clapp greeted
him.
He merely bowed his head in reply to
her salutation, which the two ladies returned with a patronizing air,
and at the same time looking severely at the individual in the blue
coat and bamboo cane who accompanied Miss Polly.
"Who's that?" asked the
Major, amused by the group, and after he had made way for the three
to pass up the lane. Mary looked at him rather roguishly.
"That is our curate, the Reverend
Mr. Binny (a twitch from Major Dobbin), and his sister Miss B. Lord
bless us, how she did use to worret us at Sunday-school; and the
other lady, the little one with a cast in her eye and the handsome
watch, is Mrs. Binny—Miss Grits that was; her pa was a grocer, and
kept the Little Original Gold Tea Pot in Kensington Gravel Pits. They
were married last month, and are just come back from Margate. She's
five thousand pound to her fortune; but her and Miss B., who made the
match, have quarrelled already."
If the Major had twitched before, he
started now, and slapped the bamboo on the ground with an emphasis
which made Miss Clapp cry, "Law," and laugh too. He stood
for a moment, silent, with open mouth, looking after the retreating
young couple, while Miss Mary told their history; but he did not hear
beyond the announcement of the reverend gentleman's marriage; his
head was swimming with felicity. After this rencontre he began to
walk double quick towards the place of his destination—and yet they
were too soon (for he was in a great tremor at the idea of a meeting
for which he had been longing any time these ten years)—through the
Brompton lanes, and entering at the little old portal in Kensington
Garden wall.
"There they are," said Miss
Polly, and she felt him again start back on her arm. She was a
confidante at once of the whole business. She knew the story as well
as if she had read it in one of her favourite novel-books—Fatherless
Fanny, or the Scottish Chiefs.
"Suppose you were to run on and
tell her," the Major said. Polly ran forward, her yellow shawl
streaming in the breeze.
Old Sedley was seated on a bench, his
handkerchief placed over his knees, prattling away, according to his
wont, with some old story about old times to which Amelia had
listened and awarded a patient smile many a time before. She could of
late think of her own affairs, and smile or make other marks of
recognition of her father's stories, scarcely hearing a word of the
old man's tales. As Mary came bouncing along, and Amelia caught sight
of her, she started up from her bench. Her first thought was that
something had happened to Georgy, but the sight of the messenger's
eager and happy face dissipated that fear in the timorous mother's
bosom.
"News! News!" cried the
emissary of Major Dobbin. "He's come! He's come!"
"Who is come?" said Emmy,
still thinking of her son.
"Look there," answered Miss
Clapp, turning round and pointing; in which direction Amelia looking,
saw Dobbin's lean figure and long shadow stalking across the grass.
Amelia started in her turn, blushed up, and, of course, began to cry.
At all this simple little creature's fetes, the grandes eaux were
accustomed to play. He looked at her—oh, how fondly—as she came
running towards him, her hands before her, ready to give them to him.
She wasn't changed. She was a little pale, a little stouter in
figure. Her eyes were the same, the kind trustful eyes. There were
scarce three lines of silver in her soft brown hair. She gave him
both her hands as she looked up flushing and smiling through her
tears into his honest homely face. He took the two little hands
between his two and held them there. He was speechless for a moment.
Why did he not take her in his arms and swear that he would never
leave her? She must have yielded: she could not but have obeyed him.
"I—I've another arrival to
announce," he said after a pause.
"Mrs. Dobbin?" Amelia said,
making a movement back—why didn't he speak?
"No," he said, letting her
hands go: "Who has told you those lies? I mean, your brother Jos
came in the same ship with me, and is come home to make you all
happy."
"Papa, Papa!" Emmy cried out,
"here are news! My brother is in England. He is come to take
care of you. Here is Major Dobbin."
Mr. Sedley started up, shaking a great
deal and gathering up his thoughts. Then he stepped forward and made
an old-fashioned bow to the Major, whom he called Mr. Dobbin, and
hoped his worthy father, Sir William, was quite well. He proposed to
call upon Sir William, who had done him the honour of a visit a short
time ago. Sir William had not called upon the old gentleman for eight
years—it was that visit he was thinking of returning.
"He is very much shaken,"
Emmy whispered as Dobbin went up and cordially shook hands with the
old man.
Although he had such particular
business in London that evening, the Major consented to forego it
upon Mr. Sedley's invitation to him to come home and partake of tea.
Amelia put her arm under that of her young friend with the yellow
shawl and headed the party on their return homewards, so that Mr.
Sedley fell to Dobbin's share. The old man walked very slowly and
told a number of ancient histories about himself and his poor Bessy,
his former prosperity, and his bankruptcy. His thoughts, as is usual
with failing old men, were quite in former times. The present, with
the exception of the one catastrophe which he felt, he knew little
about. The Major was glad to let him talk on. His eyes were fixed
upon the figure in front of him—the dear little figure always
present to his imagination and in his prayers, and visiting his
dreams wakeful or slumbering.
Amelia was very happy, smiling, and
active all that evening, performing her duties as hostess of the
little entertainment with the utmost grace and propriety, as Dobbin
thought. His eyes followed her about as they sat in the twilight. How
many a time had he longed for that moment and thought of her far away
under hot winds and in weary marches, gentle and happy, kindly
ministering to the wants of old age, and decorating poverty with
sweet submission— as he saw her now. I do not say that his taste
was the highest, or that it is the duty of great intellects to be
content with a bread- and-butter paradise, such as sufficed our
simple old friend; but his desires were of this sort, whether for
good or bad, and, with Amelia to help him, he was as ready to drink
as many cups of tea as Doctor Johnson.
Amelia seeing this propensity,
laughingly encouraged it and looked exceedingly roguish as she
administered to him cup after cup. It is true she did not know that
the Major had had no dinner and that the cloth was laid for him at
the Slaughters', and a plate laid thereon to mark that the table was
retained, in that very box in which the Major and George had sat many
a time carousing, when she was a child just come home from Miss
Pinkerton's school.
The first thing Mrs. Osborne showed the
Major was Georgy's miniature, for which she ran upstairs on her
arrival at home. It was not half handsome enough of course for the
boy, but wasn't it noble of him to think of bringing it to his
mother? Whilst her papa was awake she did not talk much about Georgy.
To hear about Mr. Osborne and Russell Square was not agreeable to the
old man, who very likely was unconscious that he had been living for
some months past mainly on the bounty of his richer rival, and lost
his temper if allusion was made to the other.
Dobbin told him all, and a little more
perhaps than all, that had happened on board the Ramchunder, and
exaggerated Jos's benevolent dispositions towards his father and
resolution to make him comfortable in his old days. The truth is that
during the voyage the Major had impressed this duty most strongly
upon his fellow- passenger and extorted promises from him that he
would take charge of his sister and her child. He soothed Jos's
irritation with regard to the bills which the old gentleman had drawn
upon him, gave a laughing account of his own sufferings on the same
score and of the famous consignment of wine with which the old man
had favoured him, and brought Mr. Jos, who was by no means an
ill-natured person when well-pleased and moderately flattered, to a
very good state of feeling regarding his relatives in Europe.
And in fine I am ashamed to say that
the Major stretched the truth so far as to tell old Mr. Sedley that
it was mainly a desire to see his parent which brought Jos once more
to Europe.
At his accustomed hour Mr. Sedley began
to doze in his chair, and then it was Amelia's opportunity to
commence her conversation, which she did with great eagerness—it
related exclusively to Georgy. She did not talk at all about her own
sufferings at breaking from him, for indeed, this worthy woman,
though she was half-killed by the separation from the child, yet
thought it was very wicked in her to repine at losing him; but
everything concerning him, his virtues, talents, and prospects, she
poured out. She described his angelic beauty; narrated a hundred
instances of his generosity and greatness of mind whilst living with
her; how a Royal Duchess had stopped and admired him in Kensington
Gardens; how splendidly he was cared for now, and how he had a groom
and a pony; what quickness and cleverness he had, and what a
prodigiously well-read and delightful person the Reverend Lawrence
Veal was, George's master. "He knows EVERYTHING," Amelia
said. "He has the most delightful parties. You who are so
learned yourself, and have read so much, and are so clever and
accomplished—don't shake your head and say no—HE always used to
say you were—you will be charmed with Mr. Veal's parties. The last
Tuesday in every month. He says there is no place in the bar or the
senate that Georgy may not aspire to. Look here," and she went
to the piano-drawer and drew out a theme of Georgy's composition.
This great effort of genius, which is still in the possession of
George's mother, is as follows:
On Selfishness—Of all the vices which
degrade the human character, Selfishness is the most odious and
contemptible. An undue love of Self leads to the most monstrous
crimes and occasions the greatest misfortunes both in States and
Families. As a selfish man will impoverish his family and often bring
them to ruin, so a selfish king brings ruin on his people and often
plunges them into war.
Example: The selfishness of Achilles,
as remarked by the poet Homer, occasioned a thousand woes to the
Greeks—muri Achaiois alge etheke—(Hom. Il. A. 2). The selfishness
of the late Napoleon Bonaparte occasioned innumerable wars in Europe
and caused him to perish, himself, in a miserable island—that of
Saint Helena in the Atlantic Ocean.
We see by these examples that we are
not to consult our own interest and ambition, but that we are to
consider the interests of others as well as our own.
George S. Osborne Athene House, 24
April, 1827
"Think of him writing such a hand,
and quoting Greek too, at his age," the delighted mother said.
"Oh, William," she added, holding out her hand to the
Major, "what a treasure Heaven has given me in that boy! He is
the comfort of my life—and he is the image of—of him that's
gone!"
"Ought I to be angry with her for
being faithful to him?" William thought. "Ought I to be
jealous of my friend in the grave, or hurt that such a heart as
Amelia's can love only once and for ever? Oh, George, George, how
little you knew the prize you had, though." This sentiment
passed rapidly through William's mind as he was holding Amelia's
hand, whilst the handkerchief was veiling her eyes.
"Dear friend," she said,
pressing the hand which held hers, "how good, how kind you
always have been to me! See! Papa is stirring. You will go and see
Georgy tomorrow, won't you?"
"Not to-morrow," said poor
old Dobbin. "I have business." He did not like to own that
he had not as yet been to his parents' and his dear sister Anne—a
remissness for which I am sure every well- regulated person will
blame the Major. And presently he took his leave, leaving his address
behind him for Jos, against the latter's arrival. And so the first
day was over, and he had seen her.
When he got back to the Slaughters',
the roast fowl was of course cold, in which condition he ate it for
supper. And knowing what early hours his family kept, and that it
would be needless to disturb their slumbers at so late an hour, it is
on record, that Major Dobbin treated himself to half-price at the
Haymarket Theatre that evening, where let us hope he enjoyed himself.
Chapter LIX
*
The Old Piano
The Major's visit left old John Sedley
in a great state of agitation and excitement. His daughter could not
induce him to settle down to his customary occupations or amusements
that night. He passed the evening fumbling amongst his boxes and
desks, untying his papers with trembling hands, and sorting and
arranging them against Jos's arrival. He had them in the greatest
order—his tapes and his files, his receipts, and his letters with
lawyers and correspondents; the documents relative to the wine
project (which failed from a most unaccountable accident, after
commencing with the most splendid prospects), the coal project (which
only a want of capital prevented from becoming the most successful
scheme ever put before the public), the patent saw-mills and sawdust
consolidation project, &c., &c. All night, until a very late
hour, he passed in the preparation of these documents, trembling
about from one room to another, with a quivering candle and shaky
hands. Here's the wine papers, here's the sawdust, here's the coals;
here's my letters to Calcutta and Madras, and replies from Major
Dobbin, C.B., and Mr. Joseph Sedley to the same. "He shall find
no irregularity about ME, Emmy," the old gentleman said.
Emmy smiled. "I don't think Jos
will care about seeing those papers, Papa," she said.
"You don't know anything about
business, my dear," answered the sire, shaking his head with an
important air. And it must be confessed that on this point Emmy was
very ignorant, and that is a pity some people are so knowing. All
these twopenny documents arranged on a side table, old Sedley covered
them carefully over with a clean bandanna handkerchief (one out of
Major Dobbin's lot) and enjoined the maid and landlady of the house,
in the most solemn way, not to disturb those papers, which were
arranged for the arrival of Mr. Joseph Sedley the next morning, "Mr.
Joseph Sedley of the Honourable East India Company's Bengal Civil
Service."
Amelia found him up very early the next
morning, more eager, more hectic, and more shaky than ever. "I
didn't sleep much, Emmy, my dear," he said. "I was thinking
of my poor Bessy. I wish she was alive, to ride in Jos's carriage
once again. She kept her own and became it very well." And his
eyes filled with tears, which trickled down his furrowed old face.
Amelia wiped them away, and smilingly kissed him, and tied the old
man's neckcloth in a smart bow, and put his brooch into his best
shirt frill, in which, in his Sunday suit of mourning, he sat from
six o'clock in the morning awaiting the arrival of his son.
However, when the postman made his
appearance, the little party were put out of suspense by the receipt
of a letter from Jos to his sister, who announced that he felt a
little fatigued after his voyage, and should not be able to move on
that day, but that he would leave Southampton early the next morning
and be with his father and mother at evening. Amelia, as she read out
the letter to her father, paused over the latter word; her brother,
it was clear, did not know what had happened in the family. Nor could
he, for the fact is that, though the Major rightly suspected that his
travelling companion never would be got into motion in so short a
space as twenty-four hours, and would find some excuse for delaying,
yet Dobbin had not written to Jos to inform him of the calamity which
had befallen the Sedley family, being occupied in talking with Amelia
until long after post-hour.
There are some splendid tailors' shops
in the High Street of Southampton, in the fine plate-glass windows of
which hang gorgeous waistcoats of all sorts, of silk and velvet, and
gold and crimson, and pictures of the last new fashions, in which
those wonderful gentlemen with quizzing glasses, and holding on to
little boys with the exceeding large eyes and curly hair, ogle ladies
in riding habits prancing by the Statue of Achilles at Apsley House.
Jos, although provided with some of the most splendid vests that
Calcutta could furnish, thought he could not go to town until he was
supplied with one or two of these garments, and selected a crimson
satin, embroidered with gold butterflies, and a black and red velvet
tartan with white stripes and a rolling collar, with which, and a
rich blue satin stock and a gold pin, consisting of a five-barred
gate with a horseman in pink enamel jumping over it, he thought he
might make his entry into London with some dignity. For Jos's former
shyness and blundering blushing timidity had given way to a more
candid and courageous self-assertion of his worth. "I don't care
about owning it," Waterloo Sedley would say to his friends, "I
am a dressy man"; and though rather uneasy if the ladies looked
at him at the Government House balls, and though he blushed and
turned away alarmed under their glances, it was chiefly from a dread
lest they should make love to him that he avoided them, being averse
to marriage altogether. But there was no such swell in Calcutta as
Waterloo Sedley, I have heard say, and he had the handsomest turn-
out, gave the best bachelor dinners, and had the finest plate in the
whole place.
To make these waistcoats for a man of
his size and dignity took at least a day, part of which he employed
in hiring a servant to wait upon him and his native and in
instructing the agent who cleared his baggage, his boxes, his books,
which he never read, his chests of mangoes, chutney, and
curry-powders, his shawls for presents to people whom he didn't know
as yet, and the rest of his Persicos apparatus.
At length, he drove leisurely to London
on the third day and in the new waistcoat, the native, with
chattering teeth, shuddering in a shawl on the box by the side of the
new European servant; Jos puffing his pipe at intervals within and
looking so majestic that the little boys cried Hooray, and many
people thought he must be a Governor-General. HE, I promise, did not
decline the obsequious invitation of the landlords to alight and
refresh himself in the neat country towns. Having partaken of a
copious breakfast, with fish, and rice, and hard eggs, at
Southampton, he had so far rallied at Winchester as to think a glass
of sherry necessary. At Alton he stepped out of the carriage at his
servant's request and imbibed some of the ale for which the place is
famous. At Farnham he stopped to view the Bishop's Castle and to
partake of a light dinner of stewed eels, veal cutlets, and French
beans, with a bottle of claret. He was cold over Bagshot Heath, where
the native chattered more and more, and Jos Sahib took some
brandy-and-water; in fact, when he drove into town he was as full of
wine, beer, meat, pickles, cherry-brandy, and tobacco as the
steward's cabin of a steam-packet. It was evening when his carriage
thundered up to the little door in Brompton, whither the affectionate
fellow drove first, and before hieing to the apartments secured for
him by Mr. Dobbin at the Slaughters'.
All the faces in the street were in the
windows; the little maidservant flew to the wicket-gate; the Mesdames
Clapp looked out from the casement of the ornamented kitchen; Emmy,
in a great flutter, was in the passage among the hats and coats; and
old Sedley in the parlour inside, shaking all over. Jos descended
from the post-chaise and down the creaking swaying steps in awful
state, supported by the new valet from Southampton and the shuddering
native, whose brown face was now livid with cold and of the colour of
a turkey's gizzard. He created an immense sensation in the passage
presently, where Mrs. and Miss Clapp, coming perhaps to listen at the
parlour door, found Loll Jewab shaking upon the hall- bench under the
coats, moaning in a strange piteous way, and showing his yellow
eyeballs and white teeth.
For, you see, we have adroitly shut the
door upon the meeting between Jos and the old father and the poor
little gentle sister inside. The old man was very much affected; so,
of course, was his daughter; nor was Jos without feeling. In that
long absence of ten years, the most selfish will think about home and
early ties. Distance sanctifies both. Long brooding over those lost
pleasures exaggerates their charm and sweetness. Jos was unaffectedly
glad to see and shake the hand of his father, between whom and
himself there had been a coolness—glad to see his little sister,
whom he remembered so pretty and smiling, and pained at the
alteration which time, grief, and misfortune had made in the
shattered old man. Emmy had come out to the door in her black clothes
and whispered to him of her mother's death, and not to speak of it to
their father. There was no need of this caution, for the elder Sedley
himself began immediately to speak of the event, and prattled about
it, and wept over it plenteously. It shocked the Indian not a little
and made him think of himself less than the poor fellow was
accustomed to do.
The result of the interview must have
been very satisfactory, for when Jos had reascended his post-chaise
and had driven away to his hotel, Emmy embraced her father tenderly,
appealing to him with an air of triumph, and asking the old man
whether she did not always say that her brother had a good heart?
Indeed, Joseph Sedley, affected by the
humble position in which he found his relations, and in the
expansiveness and overflowing of heart occasioned by the first
meeting, declared that they should never suffer want or discomfort
any more, that he was at home for some time at any rate, during which
his house and everything he had should be theirs: and that Amelia
would look very pretty at the head of his table—until she would
accept one of her own.
She shook her head sadly and had, as
usual, recourse to the waterworks. She knew what he meant. She and
her young confidante, Miss Mary, had talked over the matter most
fully, the very night of the Major's visit, beyond which time the
impetuous Polly could not refrain from talking of the discovery which
she had made, and describing the start and tremor of joy by which
Major Dobbin betrayed himself when Mr. Binny passed with his bride
and the Major learned that he had no longer a rival to fear. "Didn't
you see how he shook all over when you asked if he was married and he
said, 'Who told you those lies?' Oh, M'am," Polly said, "he
never kept his eyes off you, and I'm sure he's grown grey athinking
of you."
But Amelia, looking up at her bed, over
which hung the portraits of her husband and son, told her young
protegee never, never, to speak on that subject again; that Major
Dobbin had been her husband's dearest friend and her own and George's
most kind and affectionate guardian; that she loved him as a
brother—but that a woman who had been married to such an angel as
that, and she pointed to the wall, could never think of any other
union. Poor Polly sighed: she thought what she should do if young Mr.
Tomkins, at the surgery, who always looked at her so at church, and
who, by those mere aggressive glances had put her timorous little
heart into such a flutter that she was ready to surrender at
once,—what she should do if he were to die? She knew he was
consumptive, his cheeks were so red and he was so uncommon thin in
the waist.
Not that Emmy, being made aware of the
honest Major's passion, rebuffed him in any way, or felt displeased
with him. Such an attachment from so true and loyal a gentleman could
make no woman angry. Desdemona was not angry with Cassio, though
there is very little doubt she saw the Lieutenant's partiality for
her (and I for my part believe that many more things took place in
that sad affair than the worthy Moorish officer ever knew of); why,
Miranda was even very kind to Caliban, and we may be pretty sure for
the same reason. Not that she would encourage him in the least—the
poor uncouth monster—of course not. No more would Emmy by any means
encourage her admirer, the Major. She would give him that friendly
regard, which so much excellence and fidelity merited; she would
treat him with perfect cordiality and frankness until he made his
proposals, and THEN it would be time enough for her to speak and to
put an end to hopes which never could be realized.
She slept, therefore, very soundly that
evening, after the conversation with Miss Polly, and was more than
ordinarily happy, in spite of Jos's delaying. "I am glad he is
not going to marry that Miss O'Dowd," she thought. "Colonel
O'Dowd never could have a sister fit for such an accomplished man as
Major William." Who was there amongst her little circle who
would make him a good wife? Not Miss Binny, she was too old and
ill-tempered; Miss Osborne? too old too. Little Polly was too young.
Mrs. Osborne could not find anybody to suit the Major before she went
to sleep.
The same morning brought Major Dobbin a
letter to the Slaughters' Coffee-house from his friend at
Southampton, begging dear Dob to excuse Jos for being in a rage when
awakened the day before (he had a confounded headache, and was just
in his first sleep), and entreating Dob to engage comfortable rooms
at the Slaughters' for Mr. Sedley and his servants. The Major had
become necessary to Jos during the voyage. He was attached to him,
and hung upon him. The other passengers were away to London. Young
Ricketts and little Chaffers went away on the coach that day—Ricketts
on the box, and taking the reins from Botley; the Doctor was off to
his family at Portsea; Bragg gone to town to his co-partners; and the
first mate busy in the unloading of the Ramchunder. Mr. Joe was very
lonely at Southampton, and got the landlord of the George to take a
glass of wine with him that day, at the very hour at which Major
Dobbin was seated at the table of his father, Sir William, where his
sister found out (for it was impossible for the Major to tell fibs)
that he had been to see Mrs. George Osborne.
Jos was so comfortably situated in St.
Martin's Lane, he could enjoy his hookah there with such perfect
ease, and could swagger down to the theatres, when minded, so
agreeably, that, perhaps, he would have remained altogether at the
Slaughters' had not his friend, the Major, been at his elbow. That
gentleman would not let the Bengalee rest until he had executed his
promise of having a home for Amelia and his father. Jos was a soft
fellow in anybody's hands, Dobbin most active in anybody's concerns
but his own; the civilian was, therefore, an easy victim to the
guileless arts of this good-natured diplomatist and was ready to do,
to purchase, hire, or relinquish whatever his friend thought fit.
Loll Jewab, of whom the boys about St. Martin's Lane used to make
cruel fun whenever he showed his dusky countenance in the street, was
sent back to Calcutta in the Lady Kicklebury East Indiaman, in which
Sir William Dobbin had a share, having previously taught Jos's
European the art of preparing curries, pilaus, and pipes. It was a
matter of great delight and occupation to Jos to superintend the
building of a smart chariot which he and the Major ordered in the
neighbouring Long Acre: and a pair of handsome horses were jobbed,
with which Jos drove about in state in the park, or to call upon his
Indian friends. Amelia was not seldom by his side on these
excursions, when also Major Dobbin would be seen in the back seat of
the carriage. At other times old Sedley and his daughter took
advantage of it, and Miss Clapp, who frequently accompanied her
friend, had great pleasure in being recognized as she sat in the
carriage, dressed in the famous yellow shawl, by the young gentleman
at the surgery, whose face might commonly be seen over the
window-blinds as she passed.
Shortly after Jos's first appearance at
Brompton, a dismal scene, indeed, took place at that humble cottage
at which the Sedleys had passed the last ten years of their life.
Jos's carriage (the temporary one, not the chariot under
construction) arrived one day and carried off old Sedley and his
daughter—to return no more. The tears that were shed by the
landlady and the landlady's daughter at that event were as genuine
tears of sorrow as any that have been outpoured in the course of this
history. In their long acquaintanceship and intimacy they could not
recall a harsh word that had been uttered by Amelia She had been all
sweetness and kindness, always thankful, always gentle, even when
Mrs. Clapp lost her own temper and pressed for the rent. When the
kind creature was going away for good and all, the landlady
reproached herself bitterly for ever having used a rough expression
to her—how she wept, as they stuck up with wafers on the window, a
paper notifying that the little rooms so long occupied were to let!
They never would have such lodgers again, that was quite clear.
After-life proved the truth of this melancholy prophecy, and Mrs.
Clapp revenged herself for the deterioration of mankind by levying
the most savage contributions upon the tea-caddies and legs of mutton
of her locataires. Most of them scolded and grumbled; some of them
did not pay; none of them stayed. The landlady might well regret
those old, old friends, who had left her.
As for Miss Mary, her sorrow at
Amelia's departure was such as I shall not attempt to depict. From
childhood upwards she had been with her daily and had attached
herself so passionately to that dear good lady that when the grand
barouche came to carry her off into splendour, she fainted in the
arms of her friend, who was indeed scarcely less affected than the
good-natured girl. Amelia loved her like a daughter. During eleven
years the girl had been her constant friend and associate. The
separation was a very painful one indeed to her. But it was of course
arranged that Mary was to come and stay often at the grand new house
whither Mrs. Osborne was going, and where Mary was sure she would
never be so happy as she had been in their humble cot, as Miss Clapp
called it, in the language of the novels which she loved.
Let us hope she was wrong in her
judgement. Poor Emmy's days of happiness had been very few in that
humble cot. A gloomy Fate had oppressed her there. She never liked to
come back to the house after she had left it, or to face the landlady
who had tyrannized over her when ill-humoured and unpaid, or when
pleased had treated her with a coarse familiarity scarcely less
odious. Her servility and fulsome compliments when Emmy was in
prosperity were not more to that lady's liking. She cast about notes
of admiration all over the new house, extolling every article of
furniture or ornament; she fingered Mrs. Osborne's dresses and
calculated their price. Nothing could be too good for that sweet
lady, she vowed and protested. But in the vulgar sycophant who now
paid court to her, Emmy always remembered the coarse tyrant who had
made her miserable many a time, to whom she had been forced to put up
petitions for time, when the rent was overdue; who cried out at her
extravagance if she bought delicacies for her ailing mother or
father; who had seen her humble and trampled upon her.
Nobody ever heard of these griefs,
which had been part of our poor little woman's lot in life. She kept
them secret from her father, whose improvidence was the cause of much
of her misery. She had to bear all the blame of his misdoings, and
indeed was so utterly gentle and humble as to be made by nature for a
victim.
I hope she is not to suffer much more
of that hard usage. And, as in all griefs there is said to be some
consolation, I may mention that poor Mary, when left at her friend's
departure in a hysterical condition, was placed under the medical
treatment of the young fellow from the surgery, under whose care she
rallied after a short period. Emmy, when she went away from Brompton,
endowed Mary with every article of furniture that the house
contained, only taking away her pictures (the two pictures over the
bed) and her piano— that little old piano which had now passed into
a plaintive jingling old age, but which she loved for reasons of her
own. She was a child when first she played on it, and her parents
gave it her. It had been given to her again since, as the reader may
remember, when her father's house was gone to ruin and the instrument
was recovered out of the wreck.
Major Dobbin was exceedingly pleased
when, as he was superintending the arrangements of Jos's new
house—which the Major insisted should be very handsome and
comfortable—the cart arrived from Brompton, bringing the trunks and
bandboxes of the emigrants from that village, and with them the old
piano. Amelia would have it up in her sitting-room, a neat little
apartment on the second floor, adjoining her father's chamber, and
where the old gentleman sat commonly of evenings.
When the men appeared then bearing this
old music-box, and Amelia gave orders that it should be placed in the
chamber aforesaid, Dobbin was quite elated. "I'm glad you've
kept it," he said in a very sentimental manner. "I was
afraid you didn't care about it."
"I value it more than anything I
have in the world," said Amelia.
"Do you, Amelia?" cried the
Major. The fact was, as he had bought it himself, though he never
said anything about it, it never entered into his head to suppose
that Emmy should think anybody else was the purchaser, and as a
matter of course he fancied that she knew the gift came from him. "Do
you, Amelia?" he said; and the question, the great question of
all, was trembling on his lips, when Emmy replied—
"Can I do otherwise?—did not he
give it me?"
"I did not know," said poor
old Dob, and his countenance fell.
Emmy did not note the circumstance at
the time, nor take immediate heed of the very dismal expression which
honest Dobbin's countenance assumed, but she thought of it
afterwards. And then it struck her, with inexpressible pain and
mortification too, that it was William who was the giver of the
piano, and not George, as she had fancied. It was not George's gift;
the only one which she had received from her lover, as she
thought—the thing she had cherished beyond all others—her dearest
relic and prize. She had spoken to it about George; played his
favourite airs upon it; sat for long evening hours, touching, to the
best of her simple art, melancholy harmonies on the keys, and weeping
over them in silence. It was not George's relic. It was valueless
now. The next time that old Sedley asked her to play, she said it was
shockingly out of tune, that she had a headache, that she couldn't
play.
Then, according to her custom, she
rebuked herself for her pettishness and ingratitude and determined to
make a reparation to honest William for the slight she had not
expressed to him, but had felt for his piano. A few days afterwards,
as they were seated in the drawing-room, where Jos had fallen asleep
with great comfort after dinner, Amelia said with rather a faltering
voice to Major Dobbin—
"I have to beg your pardon for
something."
"About what?" said he.
"About—about that little square
piano. I never thanked you for it when you gave it me, many, many
years ago, before I was married. I thought somebody else had given
it. Thank you, William." She held out her hand, but the poor
little woman's heart was bleeding; and as for her eyes, of course
they were at their work.
But William could hold no more.
"Amelia, Amelia," he said, "I did buy it for you. I
loved you then as I do now. I must tell you. I think I loved you from
the first minute that I saw you, when George brought me to your
house, to show me the Amelia whom he was engaged to. You were but a
girl, in white, with large ringlets; you came down singing—do you
remember?—and we went to Vauxhall. Since then I have thought of but
one woman in the world, and that was you. I think there is no hour in
the day has passed for twelve years that I haven't thought of you. I
came to tell you this before I went to India, but you did not care,
and I hadn't the heart to speak. You did not care whether I stayed or
went."
"I was very ungrateful,"
Amelia said.
"No, only indifferent,"
Dobbin continued desperately. "I have nothing to make a woman to
be otherwise. I know what you are feeling now. You are hurt in your
heart at the discovery about the piano, and that it came from me and
not from George. I forgot, or I should never have spoken of it so. It
is for me to ask your pardon for being a fool for a moment, and
thinking that years of constancy and devotion might have pleaded with
you."
"It is you who are cruel now,"
Amelia said with some spirit. "George is my husband, here and in
heaven. How could I love any other but him? I am his now as when you
first saw me, dear William. It was he who told me how good and
generous you were, and who taught me to love you as a brother. Have
you not been everything to me and my boy? Our dearest, truest,
kindest friend and protector? Had you come a few months sooner
perhaps you might have spared me that—that dreadful parting. Oh, it
nearly killed me, William—but you didn't come, though I wished and
prayed for you to come, and they took him too away from me. Isn't he
a noble boy, William? Be his friend still and mine"—and here
her voice broke, and she hid her face on his shoulder.
The Major folded his arms round her,
holding her to him as if she was a child, and kissed her head. "I
will not change, dear Amelia," he said. "I ask for no more
than your love. I think I would not have it otherwise. Only let me
stay near you and see you often."
"Yes, often," Amelia said.
And so William was at liberty to look and long—as the poor boy at
school who has no money may sigh after the contents of the
tart-woman's tray.
Chapter LX
*
Returns to the Genteel World
Good fortune now begins to smile upon
Amelia. We are glad to get her out of that low sphere in which she
has been creeping hitherto and introduce her into a polite circle—not
so grand and refined as that in which our other female friend, Mrs.
Becky, has appeared, but still having no small pretensions to
gentility and fashion. Jos's friends were all from the three
presidencies, and his new house was in the comfortable Anglo-Indian
district of which Moira Place is the centre. Minto Square, Great
Clive Street, Warren Street, Hastings Street, Ochterlony Place,
Plassy Square, Assaye Terrace ("gardens" was a felicitous
word not applied to stucco houses with asphalt terraces in front, so
early as 1827)—who does not know these respectable abodes of the
retired Indian aristocracy, and the quarter which Mr. Wenham calls
the Black Hole, in a word? Jos's position in life was not grand
enough to entitle him to a house in Moira Place, where none can live
but retired Members of Council, and partners of Indian firms (who
break, after having settled a hundred thousand pounds on their wives,
and retire into comparative penury to a country place and four
thousand a year); he engaged a comfortable house of a second- or
third-rate order in Gillespie Street, purchasing the carpets, costly
mirrors, and handsome and appropriate planned furniture by Seddons
from the assignees of Mr. Scape, lately admitted partner into the
great Calcutta House of Fogle, Fake, and Cracksman, in which poor
Scape had embarked seventy thousand pounds, the earnings of a long
and honourable life, taking Fake's place, who retired to a princely
park in Sussex (the Fogles have been long out of the firm, and Sir
Horace Fogle is about to be raised to the peerage as Baron
Bandanna)—admitted, I say, partner into the great agency house of
Fogle and Fake two years before it failed for a million and plunged
half the Indian public into misery and ruin.
Scape, ruined, honest, and
broken-hearted at sixty-five years of age, went out to Calcutta to
wind up the affairs of the house. Walter Scape was withdrawn from
Eton and put into a merchant's house. Florence Scape, Fanny Scape,
and their mother faded away to Boulogne, and will be heard of no
more. To be brief, Jos stepped in and bought their carpets and
sideboards and admired himself in the mirrors which had reflected
their kind handsome faces. The Scape tradesmen, all honourably paid,
left their cards, and were eager to supply the new household. The
large men in white waistcoats who waited at Scape's dinners,
greengrocers, bank-porters, and milkmen in their private capacity,
left their addresses and ingratiated themselves with the butler. Mr.
Chummy, the chimney-purifier, who had swept the last three families,
tried to coax the butler and the boy under him, whose duty it was to
go out covered with buttons and with stripes down his trousers, for
the protection of Mrs. Amelia whenever she chose to walk abroad.
It was a modest establishment. The
butler was Jos's valet also, and never was more drunk than a butler
in a small family should be who has a proper regard for his master's
wine. Emmy was supplied with a maid, grown on Sir William Dobbin's
suburban estate; a good girl, whose kindness and humility disarmed
Mrs. Osborne, who was at first terrified at the idea of having a
servant to wait upon herself, who did not in the least know how to
use one, and who always spoke to domestics with the most reverential
politeness. But this maid was very useful in the family, in
dexterously tending old Mr. Sedley, who kept almost entirely to his
own quarter of the house and never mixed in any of the gay doings
which took place there.
Numbers of people came to see Mrs.
Osborne. Lady Dobbin and daughters were delighted at her change of
fortune, and waited upon her. Miss Osborne from Russell Square came
in her grand chariot with the flaming hammer-cloth emblazoned with
the Leeds arms. Jos was reported to be immensely rich. Old Osborne
had no objection that Georgy should inherit his uncle's property as
well as his own. "Damn it, we will make a man of the feller,"
he said; "and I'll see him in Parliament before I die. You may
go and see his mother, Miss O., though I'll never set eyes on her":
and Miss Osborne came. Emmy, you may be sure, was very glad to see
her, and so be brought nearer to George. That young fellow was
allowed to come much more frequently than before to visit his mother.
He dined once or twice a week in Gillespie Street and bullied the
servants and his relations there, just as he did in Russell Square.
He was always respectful to Major
Dobbin, however, and more modest in his demeanour when that gentleman
was present. He was a clever lad and afraid of the Major. George
could not help admiring his friend's simplicity, his good humour, his
various learning quietly imparted, his general love of truth and
justice. He had met no such man as yet in the course of his
experience, and he had an instinctive liking for a gentleman. He hung
fondly by his godfather's side, and it was his delight to walk in the
parks and hear Dobbin talk. William told George about his father,
about India and Waterloo, about everything but himself. When George
was more than usually pert and conceited, the Major made jokes at
him, which Mrs. Osborne thought very cruel. One day, taking him to
the play, and the boy declining to go into the pit because it was
vulgar, the Major took him to the boxes, left him there, and went
down himself to the pit. He had not been seated there very long
before he felt an arm thrust under his and a dandy little hand in a
kid glove squeezing his arm. George had seen the absurdity of his
ways and come down from the upper region. A tender laugh of
benevolence lighted up old Dobbin's face and eyes as he looked at the
repentant little prodigal. He loved the boy, as he did everything
that belonged to Amelia. How charmed she was when she heard of this
instance of George's goodness! Her eyes looked more kindly on Dobbin
than they ever had done. She blushed, he thought, after looking at
him so.
Georgy never tired of his praises of
the Major to his mother. "I like him, Mamma, because he knows
such lots of things; and he ain't like old Veal, who is always
bragging and using such long words, don't you know? The chaps call
him 'Longtail' at school. I gave him the name; ain't it capital? But
Dob reads Latin like English, and French and that; and when we go out
together he tells me stories about my Papa, and never about himself;
though I heard Colonel Buckler, at Grandpapa's, say that he was one
of the bravest officers in the army, and had distinguished himself
ever so much. Grandpapa was quite surprised, and said, 'THAT feller!
Why, I didn't think he could say Bo to a goose'—but I know he
could, couldn't he, Mamma?"
Emmy laughed: she thought it was very
likely the Major could do thus much.
If there was a sincere liking between
George and the Major, it must be confessed that between the boy and
his uncle no great love existed. George had got a way of blowing out
his cheeks, and putting his hands in his waistcoat pockets, and
saying, "God bless my soul, you don't say so," so exactly
after the fashion of old Jos that it was impossible to refrain from
laughter. The servants would explode at dinner if the lad, asking for
something which wasn't at table, put on that countenance and used
that favourite phrase. Even Dobbin would shoot out a sudden peal at
the boy's mimicry. If George did not mimic his uncle to his face, it
was only by Dobbin's rebukes and Amelia's terrified entreaties that
the little scapegrace was induced to desist. And the worthy civilian
being haunted by a dim consciousness that the lad thought him an ass,
and was inclined to turn him into ridicule, used to be extremely
timorous and, of course, doubly pompous and dignified in the presence
of Master Georgy. When it was announced that the young gentleman was
expected in Gillespie Street to dine with his mother, Mr. Jos
commonly found that he had an engagement at the Club. Perhaps nobody
was much grieved at his absence. On those days Mr. Sedley would
commonly be induced to come out from his place of refuge in the upper
stories, and there would be a small family party, whereof Major
Dobbin pretty generally formed one. He was the ami de la maison—old
Sedley's friend, Emmy's friend, Georgy's friend, Jos's counsel and
adviser. "He might almost as well be at Madras for anything WE
see of him," Miss Ann Dobbin remarked at Camberwell. Ah! Miss
Ann, did it not strike you that it was not YOU whom the Major wanted
to marry?
Joseph Sedley then led a life of
dignified otiosity such as became a person of his eminence. His very
first point, of course, was to become a member of the Oriental Club,
where he spent his mornings in the company of his brother Indians,
where he dined, or whence he brought home men to dine.
Amelia had to receive and entertain
these gentlemen and their ladies. From these she heard how soon Smith
would be in Council; how many lacs Jones had brought home with him,
how Thomson's House in London had refused the bills drawn by Thomson,
Kibobjee, and Co., the Bombay House, and how it was thought the
Calcutta House must go too; how very imprudent, to say the least of
it, Mrs. Brown's conduct (wife of Brown of the Ahmednuggur
Irregulars) had been with young Swankey of the Body Guard, sitting up
with him on deck until all hours, and losing themselves as they were
riding out at the Cape; how Mrs. Hardyman had had out her thirteen
sisters, daughters of a country curate, the Rev: Felix Rabbits, and
married eleven of them, seven high up in the service; how Hornby was
wild because his wife would stay in Europe, and Trotter was appointed
Collector at Ummerapoora. This and similar talk took place at the
grand dinners all round. They had the same conversation; the same
silver dishes; the same saddles of mutton, boiled turkeys, and
entrees. Politics set in a short time after dessert, when the ladies
retired upstairs and talked about their complaints and their
children.
Mutato nomine, it is all the same.
Don't the barristers' wives talk about Circuit? Don't the soldiers'
ladies gossip about the Regiment? Don't the clergymen's ladies
discourse about Sunday-schools and who takes whose duty? Don't the
very greatest ladies of all talk about that small clique of persons
to whom they belong? And why should our Indian friends not have their
own conversation?—only I admit it is slow for the laymen whose fate
it sometimes is to sit by and listen.
Before long Emmy had a visiting-book,
and was driving about regularly in a carriage, calling upon Lady
Bludyer (wife of Major- General Sir Roger Bludyer, K.C.B., Bengal
Army); Lady Huff, wife of Sir G. Huff, Bombay ditto; Mrs. Pice, the
Lady of Pice the Director, &c. We are not long in using ourselves
to changes in life. That carriage came round to Gillespie Street
every day; that buttony boy sprang up and down from the box with
Emmy's and Jos's visiting-cards; at stated hours Emmy and the
carriage went for Jos to the Club and took him an airing; or, putting
old Sedley into the vehicle, she drove the old man round the Regent's
Park. The lady's maid and the chariot, the visiting-book and the
buttony page, became soon as familiar to Amelia as the humble routine
of Brompton. She accommodated herself to one as to the other. If Fate
had ordained that she should be a Duchess, she would even have done
that duty too. She was voted, in Jos's female society, rather a
pleasing young person—not much in her, but pleasing, and that sort
of thing.
The men, as usual, liked her artless
kindness and simple refined demeanour. The gallant young Indian
dandies at home on furlough— immense dandies these—chained and
moustached—driving in tearing cabs, the pillars of the theatres,
living at West End hotels— nevertheless admired Mrs. Osborne, liked
to bow to her carriage in the park, and to be admitted to have the
honour of paying her a morning visit. Swankey of the Body Guard
himself, that dangerous youth, and the greatest buck of all the
Indian army now on leave, was one day discovered by Major Dobbin
tete-a-tete with Amelia, and describing the sport of pig-sticking to
her with great humour and eloquence; and he spoke afterwards of a d—d
king's officer that's always hanging about the house—a long, thin,
queer-looking, oldish fellow—a dry fellow though, that took the
shine out of a man in the talking line.
Had the Major possessed a little more
personal vanity he would have been jealous of so dangerous a young
buck as that fascinating Bengal Captain. But Dobbin was of too simple
and generous a nature to have any doubts about Amelia. He was glad
that the young men should pay her respect, and that others should
admire her. Ever since her womanhood almost, had she not been
persecuted and undervalued? It pleased him to see how kindness bought
out her good qualities and how her spirits gently rose with her
prosperity. Any person who appreciated her paid a compliment to the
Major's good judgement— that is, if a man may be said to have good
judgement who is under the influence of Love's delusion.
After Jos went to Court, which we may
be sure he did as a loyal subject of his Sovereign (showing himself
in his full court suit at the Club, whither Dobbin came to fetch him
in a very shabby old uniform) he who had always been a staunch
Loyalist and admirer of George IV, became such a tremendous Tory and
pillar of the State that he was for having Amelia to go to a
Drawing-room, too. He somehow had worked himself up to believe that
he was implicated in the maintenance of the public welfare and that
the Sovereign would not be happy unless Jos Sedley and his family
appeared to rally round him at St. James's.
Emmy laughed. "Shall I wear the
family diamonds, Jos?" she said.
"I wish you would let me buy you
some," thought the Major. "I should like to see any that
were too good for you."
Chapter LXI
*
In Which Two Lights are Put Out
There came a day when the round of
decorous pleasures and solemn gaieties in which Mr. Jos Sedley's
family indulged was interrupted by an event which happens in most
houses. As you ascend the staircase of your house from the drawing
towards the bedroom floors, you may have remarked a little arch in
the wall right before you, which at once gives light to the stair
which leads from the second story to the third (where the nursery and
servants' chambers commonly are) and serves for another purpose of
utility, of which the undertaker's men can give you a notion. They
rest the coffins upon that arch, or pass them through it so as not to
disturb in any unseemly manner the cold tenant slumbering within the
black ark.
That second-floor arch in a London
house, looking up and down the well of the staircase and commanding
the main thoroughfare by which the inhabitants are passing; by which
cook lurks down before daylight to scour her pots and pans in the
kitchen; by which young master stealthily ascends, having left his
boots in the hall, and let himself in after dawn from a jolly night
at the Club; down which miss comes rustling in fresh ribbons and
spreading muslins, brilliant and beautiful, and prepared for conquest
and the ball; or Master Tommy slides, preferring the banisters for a
mode of conveyance, and disdaining danger and the stair; down which
the mother is fondly carried smiling in her strong husband's arms, as
he steps steadily step by step, and followed by the monthly nurse, on
the day when the medical man has pronounced that the charming patient
may go downstairs; up which John lurks to bed, yawning, with a
sputtering tallow candle, and to gather up before sunrise the boots
which are awaiting him in the passages—that stair, up or down which
babies are carried, old people are helped, guests are marshalled to
the ball, the parson walks to the christening, the doctor to the
sick-room, and the undertaker's men to the upper floor—what a
memento of Life, Death, and Vanity it is—that arch and stair—if
you choose to consider it, and sit on the landing, looking up and
down the well! The doctor will come up to us too for the last time
there, my friend in motley. The nurse will look in at the curtains,
and you take no notice—and then she will fling open the windows for
a little and let in the air. Then they will pull down all the front
blinds of the house and live in the back rooms— then they will send
for the lawyer and other men in black, &c. Your comedy and mine
will have been played then, and we shall be removed, oh, how far,
from the trumpets, and the shouting, and the posture- making. If we
are gentlefolks they will put hatchments over our late domicile, with
gilt cherubim, and mottoes stating that there is "Quiet in
Heaven." Your son will new furnish the house, or perhaps let it,
and go into a more modern quarter; your name will be among the
"Members Deceased" in the lists of your clubs next year.
However much you may be mourned, your widow will like to have her
weeds neatly made—the cook will send or come up to ask about
dinner—the survivor will soon bear to look at your picture over the
mantelpiece, which will presently be deposed from the place of
honour, to make way for the portrait of the son who reigns.
Which of the dead are most tenderly and
passionately deplored? Those who love the survivors the least, I
believe. The death of a child occasions a passion of grief and
frantic tears, such as your end, brother reader, will never inspire.
The death of an infant which scarce knew you, which a week's absence
from you would have caused to forget you, will strike you down more
than the loss of your closest friend, or your first-born son—a man
grown like yourself, with children of his own. We may be harsh and
stern with Judah and Simeon—our love and pity gush out for
Benjamin, the little one. And if you are old, as some reader of this
may be or shall be old and rich, or old and poor—you may one day be
thinking for yourself— "These people are very good round about
me, but they won't grieve too much when I am gone. I am very rich,
and they want my inheritance—or very poor, and they are tired of
supporting me."
The period of mourning for Mrs.
Sedley's death was only just concluded, and Jos scarcely had had time
to cast off his black and appear in the splendid waistcoats which he
loved, when it became evident to those about Mr. Sedley that another
event was at hand, and that the old man was about to go seek for his
wife in the dark land whither she had preceded him. "The state
of my father's health," Jos Sedley solemnly remarked at the
Club, "prevents me from giving any LARGE parties this season:
but if you will come in quietly at half-past six, Chutney, my boy,
and fake a homely dinner with one or two of the old set—I shall be
always glad to see you." So Jos and his acquaintances dined and
drank their claret among themselves in silence, whilst the sands of
life were running out in the old man's glass upstairs. The
velvet-footed butler brought them their wine, and they composed
themselves to a rubber after dinner, at which Major Dobbin would
sometimes come and take a hand; and Mrs. Osborne would occasionally
descend, when her patient above was settled for the night, and had
commenced one of those lightly troubled slumbers which visit the
pillow of old age.
The old man clung to his daughter
during this sickness. He would take his broths and medicines from
scarcely any other hand. To tend him became almost the sole business
of her life. Her bed was placed close by the door which opened into
his chamber, and she was alive at the slightest noise or disturbance
from the couch of the querulous invalid. Though, to do him justice,
he lay awake many an hour, silent and without stirring, unwilling to
awaken his kind and vigilant nurse.
He loved his daughter with more
fondness now, perhaps, than ever he had done since the days of her
childhood. In the discharge of gentle offices and kind filial duties,
this simple creature shone most especially. "She walks into the
room as silently as a sunbeam," Mr. Dobbin thought as he saw her
passing in and out from her father's room, a cheerful sweetness
lighting up her face as she moved to and fro, graceful and noiseless.
When women are brooding over their children, or busied in a
sick-room, who has not seen in their faces those sweet angelic beams
of love and pity?
A secret feud of some years' standing
was thus healed, and with a tacit reconciliation. In these last
hours, and touched by her love and goodness, the old man forgot all
his grief against her, and wrongs which he and his wife had many a
long night debated: how she had given up everything for her boy; how
she was careless of her parents in their old age and misfortune, and
only thought of the child; how absurdly and foolishly, impiously
indeed, she took on when George was removed from her. Old Sedley
forgot these charges as he was making up his last account, and did
justice to the gentle and uncomplaining little martyr. One night when
she stole into his room, she found him awake, when the broken old man
made his confession. "Oh, Emmy, I've been thinking we were very
unkind and unjust to you," he said and put out his cold and
feeble hand to her. She knelt down and prayed by his bedside, as he
did too, having still hold of her hand. When our turn comes, friend,
may we have such company in our prayers!
Perhaps as he was lying awake then, his
life may have passed before him—his early hopeful struggles, his
manly successes and prosperity, his downfall in his declining years,
and his present helpless condition—no chance of revenge against
Fortune, which had had the better of him—neither name nor money to
bequeath—a spent- out, bootless life of defeat and disappointment,
and the end here! Which, I wonder, brother reader, is the better lot,
to die prosperous and famous, or poor and disappointed? To have, and
to be forced to yield; or to sink out of life, having played and lost
the game? That must be a strange feeling, when a day of our life
comes and we say, "To-morrow, success or failure won't matter
much, and the sun will rise, and all the myriads of mankind go to
their work or their pleasure as usual, but I shall be out of the
turmoil."
So there came one morning and sunrise
when all the world got up and set about its various works and
pleasures, with the exception of old John Sedley, who was not to
fight with fortune, or to hope or scheme any more, but to go and take
up a quiet and utterly unknown residence in a churchyard at Brompton
by the side of his old wife.
Major Dobbin, Jos, and Georgy followed
his remains to the grave, in a black cloth coach. Jos came on purpose
from the Star and Garter at Richmond, whither he retreated after the
deplorable event. He did not care to remain in the house, with
the—under the circumstances, you understand. But Emmy stayed and
did her duty as usual. She was bowed down by no especial grief, and
rather solemn than sorrowful. She prayed that her own end might be as
calm and painless, and thought with trust and reverence of the words
which she had heard from her father during his illness, indicative of
his faith, his resignation, and his future hope.
Yes, I think that will be the better
ending of the two, after all. Suppose you are particularly rich and
well-to-do and say on that last day, "I am very rich; I am
tolerably well known; I have lived all my life in the best society,
and thank Heaven, come of a most respectable family. I have served my
King and country with honour. I was in Parliament for several years,
where, I may say, my speeches were listened to and pretty well
received. I don't owe any man a shilling: on the contrary, I lent my
old college friend, Jack Lazarus, fifty pounds, for which my
executors will not press him. I leave my daughters with ten thousand
pounds apiece—very good portions for girls; I bequeath my plate and
furniture, my house in Baker Street, with a handsome jointure, to my
widow for her life; and my landed property, besides money in the
funds, and my cellar of well-selected wine in Baker Street, to my
son. I leave twenty pound a year to my valet; and I defy any man
after I have gone to find anything against my character." Or
suppose, on the other hand, your swan sings quite a different sort of
dirge and you say, "I am a poor blighted, disappointed old
fellow, and have made an utter failure through life. I was not
endowed either with brains or with good fortune, and confess that I
have committed a hundred mistakes and blunders. I own to having
forgotten my duty many a time. I can't pay what I owe. On my last bed
I lie utterly helpless and humble, and I pray forgiveness for my
weakness and throw myself, with a contrite heart, at the feet of the
Divine Mercy." Which of these two speeches, think you, would be
the best oration for your own funeral? Old Sedley made the last; and
in that humble frame of mind, and holding by the hand of his
daughter, life and disappointment and vanity sank away from under
him.
"You see," said old Osborne
to George, "what comes of merit, and industry, and judicious
speculations, and that. Look at me and my banker's account. Look at
your poor Grandfather Sedley and his failure. And yet he was a better
man than I was, this day twenty years—a better man, I should say,
by ten thousand pound."
Beyond these people and Mr. Clapp's
family, who came over from Brompton to pay a visit of condolence, not
a single soul alive ever cared a penny piece about old John Sedley,
or remembered the existence of such a person.
When old Osborne first heard from his
friend Colonel Buckler (as little Georgy had already informed us) how
distinguished an officer Major Dobbin was, he exhibited a great deal
of scornful incredulity and expressed his surprise how ever such a
feller as that should possess either brains or reputation. But he
heard of the Major's fame from various members of his society. Sir
William Dobbin had a great opinion of his son and narrated many
stories illustrative of the Major's learning, valour, and estimation
in the world's opinion. Finally, his name appeared in the lists of
one or two great parties of the nobility, and this circumstance had a
prodigious effect upon the old aristocrat of Russell Square.
The Major's position, as guardian to
Georgy, whose possession had been ceded to his grandfather, rendered
some meetings between the two gentlemen inevitable; and it was in one
of these that old Osborne, a keen man of business, looking into the
Major's accounts with his ward and the boy's mother, got a hint,
which staggered him very much, and at once pained and pleased him,
that it was out of William Dobbin's own pocket that a part of the
fund had been supplied upon which the poor widow and the child had
subsisted.
When pressed upon the point, Dobbin,
who could not tell lies, blushed and stammered a good deal and
finally confessed. "The marriage," he said (at which his
interlocutor's face grew dark) "was very much my doing. I
thought my poor friend had gone so far that retreat from his
engagement would have been dishonour to him and death to Mrs.
Osborne, and I could do no less, when she was left without resources,
than give what money I could spare to maintain her."
"Major D.," Mr. Osborne said,
looking hard at him and turning very red too—"you did me a
great injury; but give me leave to tell you, sir, you are an honest
feller. There's my hand, sir, though I little thought that my flesh
and blood was living on you—" and the pair shook hands, with
great confusion on Major Dobbin's part, thus found out in his act of
charitable hypocrisy.
He strove to soften the old man and
reconcile him towards his son's memory. "He was such a noble
fellow," he said, "that all of us loved him, and would have
done anything for him. I, as a young man in those days, was flattered
beyond measure by his preference for me, and was more pleased to be
seen in his company than in that of the Commander-in-Chief. I never
saw his equal for pluck and daring and all the qualities of a
soldier"; and Dobbin told the old father as many stories as he
could remember regarding the gallantry and achievements of his son.
"And Georgy is so like him," the Major added.
"He's so like him that he makes me
tremble sometimes," the grandfather said.
On one or two evenings the Major came
to dine with Mr. Osborne (it was during the time of the sickness of
Mr. Sedley), and as the two sat together in the evening after dinner,
all their talk was about the departed hero. The father boasted about
him according to his wont, glorifying himself in recounting his son's
feats and gallantry, but his mood was at any rate better and more
charitable than that in which he had been disposed until now to
regard the poor fellow; and the Christian heart of the kind Major was
pleased at these symptoms of returning peace and good-will. On the
second evening old Osborne called Dobbin William, just as he used to
do at the time when Dobbin and George were boys together, and the
honest gentleman was pleased by that mark of reconciliation.
On the next day at breakfast, when Miss
Osborne, with the asperity of her age and character, ventured to make
some remark reflecting slightingly upon the Major's appearance or
behaviour—the master of the house interrupted her. "You'd have
been glad enough to git him for yourself, Miss O. But them grapes are
sour. Ha! ha! Major William is a fine feller."
"That he is, Grandpapa," said
Georgy approvingly; and going up close to the old gentleman, he took
a hold of his large grey whiskers, and laughed in his face
good-humouredly, and kissed him. And he told the story at night to
his mother, who fully agreed with the boy. "Indeed he is,"
she said. "Your dear father always said so. He is one of the
best and most upright of men." Dobbin happened to drop in very
soon after this conversation, which made Amelia blush perhaps, and
the young scapegrace increased the confusion by telling Dobbin the
other part of the story. "I say, Dob," he said, "there's
such an uncommon nice girl wants to marry you. She's plenty of tin;
she wears a front; and she scolds the servants from morning till
night." "Who is it?" asked Dobbin. "It's Aunt
O.," the boy answered. "Grandpapa said so. And I say, Dob,
how prime it would be to have you for my uncle." Old Sedley's
quavering voice from the next room at this moment weakly called for
Amelia, and the laughing ended.
That old Osborne's mind was changing
was pretty clear. He asked George about his uncle sometimes, and
laughed at the boy's imitation of the way in which Jos said
"God-bless-my-soul" and gobbled his soup. Then he said,
"It's not respectful, sir, of you younkers to be imitating of
your relations. Miss O., when you go out adriving to-day, leave my
card upon Mr. Sedley, do you hear? There's no quarrel betwigst me and
him anyhow."
The card was returned, and Jos and the
Major were asked to dinner— to a dinner the most splendid and
stupid that perhaps ever Mr. Osborne gave; every inch of the family
plate was exhibited, and the best company was asked. Mr. Sedley took
down Miss O. to dinner, and she was very gracious to him; whereas she
hardly spoke to the Major, who sat apart from her, and by the side of
Mr. Osborne, very timid. Jos said, with great solemnity, it was the
best turtle soup he had ever tasted in his life, and asked Mr.
Osborne where he got his Madeira.
"It is some of Sedley's wine,"
whispered the butler to his master. "I've had it a long time,
and paid a good figure for it, too," Mr. Osborne said aloud to
his guest, and then whispered to his right- hand neighbour how he had
got it "at the old chap's sale."
More than once he asked the Major
about—about Mrs. George Osborne— a theme on which the Major could
be very eloquent when he chose. He told Mr. Osborne of her
sufferings—of her passionate attachment to her husband, whose
memory she worshipped still—of the tender and dutiful manner in
which she had supported her parents, and given up her boy, when it
seemed to her her duty to do so. "You don't know what she
endured, sir," said honest Dobbin with a tremor in his voice,
"and I hope and trust you will be reconciled to her. If she took
your son away from you, she gave hers to you; and however much you
loved your George, depend on it, she loved hers ten times more."
"By God, you are a good feller,
sir," was all Mr. Osborne said. It had never struck him that the
widow would feel any pain at parting from the boy, or that his having
a fine fortune could grieve her. A reconciliation was announced as
speedy and inevitable, and Amelia's heart already began to beat at
the notion of the awful meeting with George's father.
It was never, however, destined to take
place. Old Sedley's lingering illness and death supervened, after
which a meeting was for some time impossible. That catastrophe and
other events may have worked upon Mr. Osborne. He was much shaken of
late, and aged, and his mind was working inwardly. He had sent for
his lawyers, and probably changed something in his will. The medical
man who looked in pronounced him shaky, agitated, and talked of a
little blood and the seaside; but he took neither of these remedies.
One day when he should have come down
to breakfast, his servant missing him, went into his dressing-room
and found him lying at the foot of the dressing-table in a fit. Miss
Osborne was apprised; the doctors were sent for; Georgy stopped away
from school; the bleeders and cuppers came. Osborne partially
regained cognizance, but never could speak again, though he tried
dreadfully once or twice, and in four days he died. The doctors went
down, and the undertaker's men went up the stairs, and all the
shutters were shut towards the garden in Russell Square. Bullock
rushed from the City in a hurry. "How much money had he left to
that boy? Not half, surely? Surely share and share alike between the
three?" It was an agitating moment.
What was it that poor old man tried
once or twice in vain to say? I hope it was that he wanted to see
Amelia and be reconciled before he left the world to one dear and
faithful wife of his son: it was most likely that, for his will
showed that the hatred which he had so long cherished had gone out of
his heart.
They found in the pocket of his
dressing-gown the letter with the great red seal which George had
written him from Waterloo. He had looked at the other papers too,
relative to his son, for the key of the box in which he kept them was
also in his pocket, and it was found the seals and envelopes had been
broken—very likely on the night before the seizure—when the
butler had taken him tea into his study, and found him reading in the
great red family Bible.
When the will was opened, it was found
that half the property was left to George, and the remainder between
the two sisters. Mr. Bullock to continue, for their joint benefit,
the affairs of the commercial house, or to go out, as he thought fit.
An annuity of five hundred pounds, chargeable on George's property,
was left to his mother, "the widow of my beloved son, George
Osborne," who was to resume the guardianship of the boy.
"Major William Dobbin, my beloved
son's friend," was appointed executor; "and as out of his
kindness and bounty, and with his own private funds, he maintained my
grandson and my son's widow, when they were otherwise without means
of support" (the testator went on to say) "I hereby thank
him heartily for his love and regard for them, and beseech him to
accept such a sum as may be sufficient to purchase his commission as
a Lieutenant-Colonel, or to be disposed of in any way he may think
fit."
When Amelia heard that her
father-in-law was reconciled to her, her heart melted, and she was
grateful for the fortune left to her. But when she heard how Georgy
was restored to her, and knew how and by whom, and how it was
William's bounty that supported her in poverty, how it was William
who gave her her husband and her son—oh, then she sank on her
knees, and prayed for blessings on that constant and kind heart; she
bowed down and humbled herself, and kissed the feet, as it were, of
that beautiful and generous affection.
And gratitude was all that she had to
pay back for such admirable devotion and benefits—only gratitude!
If she thought of any other return, the image of George stood up out
of the grave and said, "You are mine, and mine only, now and
forever."
William knew her feelings: had he not
passed his whole life in divining them?
When the nature of Mr. Osborne's will
became known to the world, it was edifying to remark how Mrs. George
Osborne rose in the estimation of the people forming her circle of
acquaintance. The servants of Jos's establishment, who used to
question her humble orders and say they would "ask Master"
whether or not they could obey, never thought now of that sort of
appeal. The cook forgot to sneer at her shabby old gowns (which,
indeed, were quite eclipsed by that lady's finery when she was
dressed to go to church of a Sunday evening), the others no longer
grumbled at the sound of her bell, or delayed to answer that summons.
The coachman, who grumbled that his 'osses should be brought out and
his carriage made into an hospital for that old feller and Mrs. O.,
drove her with the utmost alacrity now, and trembling lest he should
be superseded by Mr. Osborne's coachman, asked "what them there
Russell Square coachmen knew about town, and whether they was fit to
sit on a box before a lady?" Jos's friends, male and female,
suddenly became interested about Emmy, and cards of condolence
multiplied on her hall table. Jos himself, who had looked on her as a
good-natured harmless pauper, to whom it was his duty to give
victuals and shelter, paid her and the rich little boy, his nephew,
the greatest respect—was anxious that she should have change and
amusement after her troubles and trials, "poor dear girl"—and
began to appear at the breakfast-table, and most particularly to ask
how she would like to dispose of the day.
In her capacity of guardian to Georgy,
she, with the consent of the Major, her fellow-trustee, begged Miss
Osborne to live in the Russell Square house as long as ever she chose
to dwell there; but that lady, with thanks, declared that she never
could think of remaining alone in that melancholy mansion, and
departed in deep mourning to Cheltenham, with a couple of her old
domestics. The rest were liberally paid and dismissed, the faithful
old butler, whom Mrs. Osborne proposed to retain, resigning and
preferring to invest his savings in a public-house, where, let us
hope, he was not unprosperous. Miss Osborne not choosing to live in
Russell Square, Mrs. Osborne also, after consultation, declined to
occupy the gloomy old mansion there. The house was dismantled; the
rich furniture and effects, the awful chandeliers and dreary blank
mirrors packed away and hidden, the rich rosewood drawing-room suite
was muffled in straw, the carpets were rolled up and corded, the
small select library of well-bound books was stowed into two
wine-chests, and the whole paraphernalia rolled away in several
enormous vans to the Pantechnicon, where they were to lie until
Georgy's majority. And the great heavy dark plate-chests went off to
Messrs. Stumpy and Rowdy, to lie in the cellars of those eminent
bankers until the same period should arrive.
One day Emmy, with George in her hand
and clad in deep sables, went to visit the deserted mansion which she
had not entered since she was a girl. The place in front was littered
with straw where the vans had been laden and rolled off. They went
into the great blank rooms, the walls of which bore the marks where
the pictures and mirrors had hung. Then they went up the great blank
stone staircases into the upper rooms, into that where grandpapa
died, as George said in a whisper, and then higher still into
George's own room. The boy was still clinging by her side, but she
thought of another besides him. She knew that it had been his
father's room as well as his own.
She went up to one of the open windows
(one of those at which she used to gaze with a sick heart when the
child was first taken from her), and thence as she looked out she
could see, over the trees of Russell Square, the old house in which
she herself was born, and where she had passed so many happy days of
sacred youth. They all came back to her, the pleasant holidays, the
kind faces, the careless, joyful past times, and the long pains and
trials that had since cast her down. She thought of these and of the
man who had been her constant protector, her good genius, her sole
benefactor, her tender and generous friend.
"Look here, Mother," said
Georgy, "here's a G.O. scratched on the glass with a diamond, I
never saw it before, I never did it."
"It was your father's room long
before you were born, George," she said, and she blushed as she
kissed the boy.
She was very silent as they drove back
to Richmond, where they had taken a temporary house: where the
smiling lawyers used to come bustling over to see her (and we may be
sure noted the visit in the bill): and where of course there was a
room for Major Dobbin too, who rode over frequently, having much
business to transact on behalf of his little ward.
Georgy at this time was removed from
Mr. Veal's on an unlimited holiday, and that gentleman was engaged to
prepare an inscription for a fine marble slab, to be placed up in the
Foundling under the monument of Captain George Osborne.
The female Bullock, aunt of Georgy,
although despoiled by that little monster of one-half of the sum
which she expected from her father, nevertheless showed her
charitableness of spirit by being reconciled to the mother and the
boy. Roehampton is not far from Richmond, and one day the chariot,
with the golden bullocks emblazoned on the panels, and the flaccid
children within, drove to Amelia's house at Richmond; and the Bullock
family made an irruption into the garden, where Amelia was reading a
book, Jos was in an arbour placidly dipping strawberries into wine,
and the Major in one of his Indian jackets was giving a back to
Georgy, who chose to jump over him. He went over his head and bounded
into the little advance of Bullocks, with immense black bows in their
hats, and huge black sashes, accompanying their mourning mamma.
"He is just of the age for Rosa,"
the fond parent thought, and glanced towards that dear child, an
unwholesome little miss of seven years of age.
"Rosa, go and kiss your dear
cousin," Mrs. Frederick said. "Don't you know me, George? I
am your aunt."
"I know you well enough,"
George said; "but I don't like kissing, please"; and he
retreated from the obedient caresses of his cousin.
"Take me to your dear mamma, you
droll child," Mrs. Frederick said, and those ladies accordingly
met, after an absence of more than fifteen years. During Emmy's cares
and poverty the other had never once thought about coming to see her,
but now that she was decently prosperous in the world, her
sister-in-law came to her as a matter of course.
So did numbers more. Our old friend,
Miss Swartz, and her husband came thundering over from Hampton Court,
with flaming yellow liveries, and was as impetuously fond of Amelia
as ever. Miss Swartz would have liked her always if she could have
seen her. One must do her that justice. But, que voulez vous?—in
this vast town one has not the time to go and seek one's friends; if
they drop out of the rank they disappear, and we march on without
them. Who is ever missed in Vanity Fair?
But so, in a word, and before the
period of grief for Mr. Osborne's death had subsided, Emmy found
herself in the centre of a very genteel circle indeed, the members of
which could not conceive that anybody belonging to it was not very
lucky. There was scarce one of the ladies that hadn't a relation a
Peer, though the husband might be a drysalter in the City. Some of
the ladies were very blue and well informed, reading Mrs. Somerville
and frequenting the Royal Institution; others were severe and
Evangelical, and held by Exeter Hall. Emmy, it must be owned, found
herself entirely at a loss in the midst of their clavers, and
suffered woefully on the one or two occasions on which she was
compelled to accept Mrs. Frederick Bullock's hospitalities. That lady
persisted in patronizing her and determined most graciously to form
her. She found Amelia's milliners for her and regulated her household
and her manners. She drove over constantly from Roehampton and
entertained her friend with faint fashionable fiddle-faddle and
feeble Court slip-slop. Jos liked to hear it, but the Major used to
go off growling at the appearance of this woman, with her twopenny
gentility. He went to sleep under Frederick Bullock's bald head,
after dinner, at one of the banker's best parties (Fred was still
anxious that the balance of the Osborne property should be
transferred from Stumpy and Rowdy's to them), and whilst Amelia, who
did not know Latin, or who wrote the last crack article in the
Edinburgh, and did not in the least deplore, or otherwise, Mr. Peel's
late extraordinary tergiversation on the fatal Catholic Relief Bill,
sat dumb amongst the ladies in the grand drawing-room, looking out
upon velvet lawns, trim gravel walks, and glistening hot-houses.
"She seems good-natured but
insipid," said Mrs. Rowdy; "that Major seems to be
particularly epris."
"She wants ton sadly," said
Mrs. Hollyock. "My dear creature, you never will be able to form
her."
"She is dreadfully ignorant or
indifferent," said Mrs. Glowry with a voice as if from the
grave, and a sad shake of the head and turban. "I asked her if
she thought that it was in 1836, according to Mr. Jowls, or in 1839,
according to Mr. Wapshot, that the Pope was to fall: and she
said—'Poor Pope! I hope not—What has he done?'"
"She is my brother's widow, my
dear friends," Mrs. Frederick replied, "and as such I think
we're all bound to give her every attention and instruction on
entering into the world. You may fancy there can be no MERCENARY
motives in those whose DISAPPOINTMENTS are well known."
"That poor dear Mrs. Bullock,"
said Rowdy to Hollyock, as they drove away together—"she is
always scheming and managing. She wants Mrs. Osborne's account to be
taken from our house to hers—and the way in which she coaxes that
boy and makes him sit by that blear-eyed little Rosa is perfectly
ridiculous."
"I wish Glowry was choked with her
Man of Sin and her Battle of Armageddon," cried the other, and
the carriage rolled away over Putney Bridge.
But this sort of society was too
cruelly genteel for Emmy, and all jumped for joy when a foreign tour
was proposed.
Chapter LXII
*
Am Rhein
The above everyday events had occurred,
and a few weeks had passed, when on one fine morning, Parliament
being over, the summer advanced, and all the good company in London
about to quit that city for their annual tour in search of pleasure
or health, the Batavier steamboat left the Tower-stairs laden with a
goodly company of English fugitives. The quarter-deck awnings were
up, and the benches and gangways crowded with scores of rosy
children, bustling nursemaids; ladies in the prettiest pink bonnets
and summer dresses; gentlemen in travelling caps and linen-jackets,
whose mustachios had just begun to sprout for the ensuing tour; and
stout trim old veterans with starched neckcloths and neat-brushed
hats, such as have invaded Europe any time since the conclusion of
the war, and carry the national Goddem into every city of the
Continent. The congregation of hat-boxes, and Bramah desks, and
dressing-cases was prodigious. There were jaunty young Cambridge-men
travelling with their tutor, and going for a reading excursion to
Nonnenwerth or Konigswinter; there were Irish gentlemen, with the
most dashing whiskers and jewellery, talking about horses
incessantly, and prodigiously polite to the young ladies on board,
whom, on the contrary, the Cambridge lads and their pale-faced tutor
avoided with maiden coyness; there were old Pall Mall loungers bound
for Ems and Wiesbaden and a course of waters to clear off the dinners
of the season, and a little roulette and trente-et-quarante to keep
the excitement going; there was old Methuselah, who had married his
young wife, with Captain Papillon of the Guards holding her parasol
and guide-books; there was young May who was carrying off his bride
on a pleasure tour (Mrs. Winter that was, and who had been at school
with May's grandmother); there was Sir John and my Lady with a dozen
children, and corresponding nursemaids; and the great grandee
Bareacres family that sat by themselves near the wheel, stared at
everybody, and spoke to no one. Their carriages, emblazoned with
coronets and heaped with shining imperials, were on the foredeck,
locked in with a dozen more such vehicles: it was difficult to pass
in and out amongst them; and the poor inmates of the fore-cabin had
scarcely any space for locomotion. These consisted of a few
magnificently attired gentlemen from Houndsditch, who brought their
own provisions, and could have bought half the gay people in the
grand saloon; a few honest fellows with mustachios and portfolios,
who set to sketching before they had been half an hour on board; one
or two French femmes de chambre who began to be dreadfully ill by the
time the boat had passed Greenwich; a groom or two who lounged in the
neighbourhood of the horse-boxes under their charge, or leaned over
the side by the paddle-wheels, and talked about who was good for the
Leger, and what they stood to win or lose for the Goodwood cup.
All the couriers, when they had done
plunging about the ship and had settled their various masters in the
cabins or on the deck, congregated together and began to chatter and
smoke; the Hebrew gentlemen joining them and looking at the
carriages. There was Sir John's great carriage that would hold
thirteen people; my Lord Methuselah's carriage, my Lord Bareacres'
chariot, britzska, and fourgon, that anybody might pay for who liked.
It was a wonder how my Lord got the ready money to pay for the
expenses of the journey. The Hebrew gentlemen knew how he got it.
They knew what money his Lordship had in his pocket at that instant,
and what interest he paid for it, and who gave it him. Finally there
was a very neat, handsome travelling carriage, about which the
gentlemen speculated.
"A qui cette voiture la?"
said one gentleman-courier with a large morocco money-bag and
ear-rings to another with ear-rings and a large morocco money-bag.
"C'est a Kirsch je bense—je l'ai
vu toute a l'heure—qui brenoit des sangviches dans la voiture,"
said the courier in a fine German French.
Kirsch emerging presently from the
neighbourhood of the hold, where he had been bellowing instructions
intermingled with polyglot oaths to the ship's men engaged in
secreting the passengers' luggage, came to give an account of himself
to his brother interpreters. He informed them that the carriage
belonged to a Nabob from Calcutta and Jamaica enormously rich, and
with whom he was engaged to travel; and at this moment a young
gentleman who had been warned off the bridge between the
paddle-boxes, and who had dropped thence on to the roof of Lord
Methuselah's carriage, from which he made his way over other
carriages and imperials until he had clambered on to his own,
descended thence and through the window into the body of the
carriage, to the applause of the couriers looking on.
"Nous allons avoir une belle
traversee, Monsieur George," said the courier with a grin, as he
lifted his gold-laced cap.
"D— your French," said the
young gentleman, "where's the biscuits, ay?" Whereupon
Kirsch answered him in the English language or in such an imitation
of it as he could command—for though he was familiar with all
languages, Mr. Kirsch was not acquainted with a single one, and spoke
all with indifferent volubility and incorrectness.
The imperious young gentleman who
gobbled the biscuits (and indeed it was time to refresh himself, for
he had breakfasted at Richmond full three hours before) was our young
friend George Osborne. Uncle Jos and his mamma were on the
quarter-deck with a gentleman of whom they used to see a good deal,
and the four were about to make a summer tour.
Jos was seated at that moment on deck
under the awning, and pretty nearly opposite to the Earl of Bareacres
and his family, whose proceedings absorbed the Bengalee almost
entirely. Both the noble couple looked rather younger than in the
eventful year '15, when Jos remembered to have seen them at Brussels
(indeed, he always gave out in India that he was intimately
acquainted with them). Lady Bareacres' hair, which was then dark, was
now a beautiful golden auburn, whereas Lord Bareacres' whiskers,
formerly red, were at present of a rich black with purple and green
reflections in the light. But changed as they were, the movements of
the noble pair occupied Jos's mind entirely. The presence of a Lord
fascinated him, and he could look at nothing else.
"Those people seem to interest you
a good deal," said Dobbin, laughing and watching him. Amelia too
laughed. She was in a straw bonnet with black ribbons, and otherwise
dressed in mourning, but the little bustle and holiday of the journey
pleased and excited her, and she looked particularly happy.
"What a heavenly day!" Emmy
said and added, with great originality, "I hope we shall have a
calm passage."
Jos waved his hand, scornfully glancing
at the same time under his eyelids at the great folks opposite. "If
you had made the voyages we have," he said, "you wouldn't
much care about the weather." But nevertheless, traveller as he
was, he passed the night direfully sick in his carriage, where his
courier tended him with brandy-and- water and every luxury.
In due time this happy party landed at
the quays of Rotterdam, whence they were transported by another
steamer to the city of Cologne. Here the carriage and the family took
to the shore, and Jos was not a little gratified to see his arrival
announced in the Cologne newspapers as "Herr Graf Lord von
Sedley nebst Begleitung aus London." He had his court dress with
him; he had insisted that Dobbin should bring his regimental
paraphernalia; he announced that it was his intention to be presented
at some foreign courts, and pay his respects to the Sovereigns of the
countries which he honoured with a visit.
Wherever the party stopped, and an
opportunity was offered, Mr. Jos left his own card and the Major's
upon "Our Minister." It was with great difficulty that he
could be restrained from putting on his cocked hat and tights to wait
upon the English consul at the Free City of Judenstadt, when that
hospitable functionary asked our travellers to dinner. He kept a
journal of his voyage and noted elaborately the defects or
excellences of the various inns at which he put up, and of the wines
and dishes of which he partook.
As for Emmy, she was very happy and
pleased. Dobbin used to carry about for her her stool and
sketch-book, and admired the drawings of the good-natured little
artist as they never had been admired before. She sat upon steamers'
decks and drew crags and castles, or she mounted upon donkeys and
ascended to ancient robber-towers, attended by her two aides-de-camp,
Georgy and Dobbin. She laughed, and the Major did too, at his droll
figure on donkey-back, with his long legs touching the ground. He was
the interpreter for the party; having a good military knowledge of
the German language, and he and the delighted George fought the
campaigns of the Rhine and the Palatinate. In the course of a few
weeks, and by assiduously conversing with Herr Kirsch on the box of
the carriage, Georgy made prodigious advance in the knowledge of High
Dutch, and could talk to hotel waiters and postilions in a way that
charmed his mother and amused his guardian.
Mr. Jos did not much engage in the
afternoon excursions of his fellow-travellers. He slept a good deal
after dinner, or basked in the arbours of the pleasant inn-gardens.
Pleasant Rhine gardens! Fair scenes of peace and sunshine—noble
purple mountains, whose crests are reflected in the magnificent
stream—who has ever seen you that has not a grateful memory of
those scenes of friendly repose and beauty? To lay down the pen and
even to think of that beautiful Rhineland makes one happy. At this
time of summer evening, the cows are trooping down from the hills,
lowing and with their bells tinkling, to the old town, with its old
moats, and gates, and spires, and chestnut-trees, with long blue
shadows stretching over the grass; the sky and the river below flame
in- crimson and gold; and the moon is already out, looking pale
towards the sunset. The sun sinks behind the great castle-crested
mountains, the night falls suddenly, the river grows darker and
darker, lights quiver in it from the windows in the old ramparts, and
twinkle peacefully in the villages under the hills on the opposite
shore.
So Jos used to go to sleep a good deal
with his bandanna over his face and be very comfortable, and read all
the English news, and every word of Galignani's admirable newspaper
(may the blessings of all Englishmen who have ever been abroad rest
on the founders and proprietors of that piratical print! ) and
whether he woke or slept, his friends did not very much miss him.
Yes, they were very happy. They went to the opera often of
evenings—to those snug, unassuming, dear old operas in the German
towns, where the noblesse sits and cries, and knits stockings on the
one side, over against the bourgeoisie on the other; and His
Transparency the Duke and his Transparent family, all very fat and
good-natured, come and occupy the great box in the middle; and the
pit is full of the most elegant slim-waisted officers with
straw-coloured mustachios, and twopence a day on full pay. Here it
was that Emmy found her delight, and was introduced for the first
time to the wonders of Mozart and Cimarosa. The Major's musical taste
has been before alluded to, and his performances on the flute
commended. But perhaps the chief pleasure he had in these operas was
in watching Emmy's rapture while listening to them. A new world of
love and beauty broke upon her when she was introduced to those
divine compositions; this lady had the keenest and finest
sensibility, and how could she be indifferent when she heard Mozart?
The tender parts of "Don Juan" awakened in her raptures so
exquisite that she would ask herself when she went to say her prayers
of a night whether it was not wicked to feel so much delight as that
with which "Vedrai Carino" and "Batti Batti"
filled her gentle little bosom? But the Major, whom she consulted
upon this head, as her theological adviser (and who himself had a
pious and reverent soul), said that for his part, every beauty of art
or nature made him thankful as well as happy, and that the pleasure
to be had in listening to fine music, as in looking at the stars in
the sky, or at a beautiful landscape or picture, was a benefit for
which we might thank Heaven as sincerely as for any other worldly
blessing. And in reply to some faint objections of Mrs. Amelia's
(taken from certain theological works like the Washerwoman of
Finchley Common and others of that school, with which Mrs. Osborne
had been furnished during her life at Brompton) he told her an
Eastern fable of the Owl who thought that the sunshine was unbearable
for the eyes and that the Nightingale was a most overrated bird. "It
is one's nature to sing and the other's to hoot," he said,
laughing, "and with such a sweet voice as you have yourself, you
must belong to the Bulbul faction."
I like to dwell upon this period of her
life and to think that she was cheerful and happy. You see, she has
not had too much of that sort of existence as yet, and has not fallen
in the way of means to educate her tastes or her intelligence. She
has been domineered over hitherto by vulgar intellects. It is the lot
of many a woman. And as every one of the dear sex is the rival of the
rest of her kind, timidity passes for folly in their charitable
judgments; and gentleness for dulness; and silence—which is but
timid denial of the unwelcome assertion of ruling folks, and tacit
protestantism— above all, finds no mercy at the hands of the female
Inquisition. Thus, my dear and civilized reader, if you and I were to
find ourselves this evening in a society of greengrocers, let us say,
it is probable that our conversation would not be brilliant; if, on
the other hand, a greengrocer should find himself at your refined and
polite tea-table, where everybody was saying witty things, and
everybody of fashion and repute tearing her friends to pieces in the
most delightful manner, it is possible that the stranger would not be
very talkative and by no means interesting or interested.
And it must be remembered that this
poor lady had never met a gentleman in her life until this present
moment. Perhaps these are rarer personages than some of us think for.
Which of us can point out many such in his circle—men whose aims
are generous, whose truth is constant, and not only constant in its
kind but elevated in its degree; whose want of meanness makes them
simple; who can look the world honestly in the face with an equal
manly sympathy for the great and the small? We all know a hundred
whose coats are very well made, and a score who have excellent
manners, and one or two happy beings who are what they call in the
inner circles, and have shot into the very centre and bull's-eye of
the fashion; but of gentlemen how many? Let us take a little scrap of
paper and each make out his list.
My friend the Major I write, without
any doubt, in mine. He had very long legs, a yellow face, and a
slight lisp, which at first was rather ridiculous. But his thoughts
were just, his brains were fairly good, his life was honest and pure,
and his heart warm and humble. He certainly had very large hands and
feet, which the two George Osbornes used to caricature and laugh at;
and their jeers and laughter perhaps led poor little Emmy astray as
to his worth. But have we not all been misled about our heroes and
changed our opinions a hundred times? Emmy, in this happy time, found
that hers underwent a very great change in respect of the merits of
the Major.
Perhaps it was the happiest time of
both their lives, indeed, if they did but know it—and who does?
Which of us can point out and say that was the culmination—that was
the summit of human joy? But at all events, this couple were very
decently contented, and enjoyed as pleasant a summer tour as any pair
that left England that year. Georgy was always present at the play,
but it was the Major who put Emmy's shawl on after the entertainment;
and in the walks and excursions the young lad would be on ahead, and
up a tower-stair or a tree, whilst the soberer couple were below, the
Major smoking his cigar with great placidity and constancy, whilst
Emmy sketched the site or the ruin. It was on this very tour that I,
the present writer of a history of which every word is true, had the
pleasure to see them first and to make their acquaintance.
It was at the little comfortable Ducal
town of Pumpernickel (that very place where Sir Pitt Crawley had been
so distinguished as an attache; but that was in early early days, and
before the news of the Battle of Austerlitz sent all the English
diplomatists in Germany to the right about) that I first saw Colonel
Dobbin and his party. They had arrived with the carriage and courier
at the Erbprinz Hotel, the best of the town, and the whole party
dined at the table d'hote. Everybody remarked the majesty of Jos and
the knowing way in which he sipped, or rather sucked, the
Johannisberger, which he ordered for dinner. The little boy, too, we
observed, had a famous appetite, and consumed schinken, and braten,
and kartoffeln, and cranberry jam, and salad, and pudding, and roast
fowls, and sweetmeats, with a gallantry that did honour to his
nation. After about fifteen dishes, he concluded the repast with
dessert, some of which he even carried out of doors, for some young
gentlemen at table, amused with his coolness and gallant free-
and-easy manner, induced him to pocket a handful of macaroons, which
he discussed on his way to the theatre, whither everybody went in the
cheery social little German place. The lady in black, the boy's
mamma, laughed and blushed, and looked exceedingly pleased and shy as
the dinner went on, and at the various feats and instances of
espieglerie on the part of her son. The Colonel—for so he became
very soon afterwards—I remember joked the boy with a great deal of
grave fun, pointing out dishes which he hadn't tried, and entreating
him not to baulk his appetite, but to have a second supply of this or
that.
It was what they call a gast-rolle
night at the Royal Grand Ducal Pumpernickelisch Hof—or Court
theatre—and Madame Schroeder Devrient, then in the bloom of her
beauty and genius, performed the part of the heroine in the wonderful
opera of Fidelio. From our places in the stalls we could see our four
friends of the table d'hote in the loge which Schwendler of the
Erbprinz kept for his best guests, and I could not help remarking the
effect which the magnificent actress and music produced upon Mrs.
Osborne, for so we heard the stout gentleman in the mustachios call
her. During the astonishing Chorus of the Prisoners, over which the
delightful voice of the actress rose and soared in the most ravishing
harmony, the English lady's face wore such an expression of wonder
and delight that it struck even little Fipps, the blase attache, who
drawled out, as he fixed his glass upon her, "Gayd, it really
does one good to see a woman caypable of that stayt of excaytement."
And in the Prison Scene, where Fidelio, rushing to her husband,
cries, "Nichts, nichts, mein Florestan," she fairly lost
herself and covered her face with her handkerchief. Every woman in
the house was snivelling at the time, but I suppose it was because it
was predestined that I was to write this particular lady's memoirs
that I remarked her.
The next day they gave another piece of
Beethoven, Die Schlacht bei Vittoria. Malbrook is introduced at the
beginning of the performance, as indicative of the brisk advance of
the French army. Then come drums, trumpets, thunders of artillery,
and groans of the dying, and at last, in a grand triumphal swell,
"God Save the King" is performed.
There may have been a score of
Englishmen in the house, but at the burst of that beloved and
well-known music, every one of them, we young fellows in the stalls,
Sir John and Lady Bullminster (who had taken a house at Pumpernickel
for the education of their nine children), the fat gentleman with the
mustachios, the long Major in white duck trousers, and the lady with
the little boy upon whom he was so sweet, even Kirsch, the courier in
the gallery, stood bolt upright in their places and proclaimed
themselves to be members of the dear old British nation. As for
Tapeworm, the Charge d'Affaires, he rose up in his box and bowed and
simpered, as if he would represent the whole empire. Tapeworm was
nephew and heir of old Marshal Tiptoff, who has been introduced in
this story as General Tiptoff, just before Waterloo, who was Colonel
of the —th regiment in which Major Dobbin served, and who died in
this year full of honours, and of an aspic of plovers' eggs; when the
regiment was graciously given by his Majesty to Colonel Sir Michael
O'Dowd, K.C.B. who had commanded it in many glorious fields.
Tapeworm must have met with Colonel
Dobbin at the house of the Colonel's Colonel, the Marshal, for he
recognized him on this night at the theatre, and with the utmost
condescension, his Majesty's minister came over from his own box and
publicly shook hands with his new-found friend.
"Look at that infernal sly-boots
of a Tapeworm," Fipps whispered, examining his chief from the
stalls. "Wherever there's a pretty woman he always twists
himself in." And I wonder what were diplomatists made for but
for that?
"Have I the honour of addressing
myself to Mrs. Dobbin?" asked the Secretary with a most
insinuating grin.
Georgy burst out laughing and said, "By
Jove, that was a good 'un." Emmy and the Major blushed: we saw
them from the stalls.
"This lady is Mrs. George
Osborne," said the Major, "and this is her brother, Mr.
Sedley, a distinguished officer of the Bengal Civil Service: permit
me to introduce him to your lordship."
My lord nearly sent Jos off his legs
with the most fascinating smile. "Are you going to stop in
Pumpernickel?" he said. "It is a dull place, but we want
some nice people, and we would try and make it SO agreeable to you.
Mr.—Ahum—Mrs.—Oho. I shall do myself the honour of calling upon
you to-morrow at your inn." And he went away with a Parthian
grin and glance which he thought must finish Mrs. Osborne completely.
The performance over, the young fellows
lounged about the lobbies, and we saw the society take its departure.
The Duchess Dowager went off in her jingling old coach, attended by
two faithful and withered old maids of honour, and a little snuffy
spindle-shanked gentleman in waiting, in a brown jasey and a green
coat covered with orders— of which the star and the grand yellow
cordon of the order of St. Michael of Pumpernickel were most
conspicuous. The drums rolled, the guards saluted, and the old
carriage drove away.
Then came his Transparency the Duke and
Transparent family, with his great officers of state and household.
He bowed serenely to everybody. And amid the saluting of the guards
and the flaring of the torches of the running footmen, clad in
scarlet, the Transparent carriages drove away to the old Ducal
schloss, with its towers and pinacles standing on the schlossberg.
Everybody in Pumpernickel knew everybody. No sooner was a foreigner
seen there than the Minister of Foreign Affairs, or some other great
or small officer of state, went round to the Erbprinz and found out
the name of the new arrival.
We watched them, too, out of the
theatre. Tapeworm had just walked off, enveloped in his cloak, with
which his gigantic chasseur was always in attendance, and looking as
much as possible like Don Juan. The Prime Minister's lady had just
squeezed herself into her sedan, and her daughter, the charming Ida,
had put on her calash and clogs; when the English party came out, the
boy yawning drearily, the Major taking great pains in keeping the
shawl over Mrs. Osborne's head, and Mr. Sedley looking grand, with a
crush opera-hat on one side of his head and his hand in the stomach
of a voluminous white waistcoat. We took off our hats to our
acquaintances of the table d'hote, and the lady, in return, presented
us with a little smile and a curtsey, for which everybody might be
thankful.
The carriage from the inn, under the
superintendence of the bustling Mr. Kirsch, was in waiting to convey
the party; but the fat man said he would walk and smoke his cigar on
his way homewards, so the other three, with nods and smiles to us,
went without Mr. Sedley, Kirsch, with the cigar case, following in
his master's wake.
We all walked together and talked to
the stout gentleman about the agremens of the place. It was very
agreeable for the English. There were shooting-parties and battues;
there was a plenty of balls and entertainments at the hospitable
Court; the society was generally good; the theatre excellent; and the
living cheap.
"And our Minister seems a most
delightful and affable person," our new friend said. "With
such a representative, and—and a good medical man, I can fancy the
place to be most eligible. Good-night, gentlemen." And Jos
creaked up the stairs to bedward, followed by Kirsch with a flambeau.
We rather hoped that nice-looking woman would be induced to stay some
time in the town.
Chapter LXIII
*
In Which We Meet an Old Acquaintance
Such polite behaviour as that of Lord
Tapeworm did not fail to have the most favourable effect upon Mr.
Sedley's mind, and the very next morning, at breakfast, he pronounced
his opinion that Pumpernickel was the pleasantest little place of any
which he had visited on their tour. Jos's motives and artifices were
not very difficult of comprehension, and Dobbin laughed in his
sleeve, like a hypocrite as he was, when he found, by the knowing air
of the civilian and the offhand manner in which the latter talked
about Tapeworm Castle and the other members of the family, that Jos
had been up already in the morning, consulting his travelling
Peerage. Yes, he had seen the Right Honourable the Earl of Bagwig,
his lordship's father; he was sure he had, he had met him at—at the
Levee—didn't Dob remember? and when the Diplomatist called on the
party, faithful to his promise, Jos received him with such a salute
and honours as were seldom accorded to the little Envoy. He winked at
Kirsch on his Excellency's arrival, and that emissary, instructed
before-hand, went out and superintended an entertainment of cold
meats, jellies, and other delicacies, brought in upon trays, and of
which Mr. Jos absolutely insisted that his noble guest should
partake.
Tapeworm, so long as he could have an
opportunity of admiring the bright eyes of Mrs. Osborne (whose
freshness of complexion bore daylight remarkably well) was not ill
pleased to accept any invitation to stay in Mr. Sedley's lodgings; he
put one or two dexterous questions to him about India and the
dancing-girls there; asked Amelia about that beautiful boy who had
been with her; and complimented the astonished little woman upon the
prodigious sensation which she had made in the house; and tried to
fascinate Dobbin by talking of the late war and the exploits of the
Pumpernickel contingent under the command of the Hereditary Prince,
now Duke of Pumpernickel.
Lord Tapeworm inherited no little
portion of the family gallantry, and it was his happy belief that
almost every woman upon whom he himself cast friendly eyes was in
love with him. He left Emmy under the persuasion that she was slain
by his wit and attractions and went home to his lodgings to write a
pretty little note to her. She was not fascinated, only puzzled, by
his grinning, his simpering, his scented cambric handkerchief, and
his high-heeled lacquered boots. She did not understand one-half the
compliments which he paid; she had never, in her small experience of
mankind, met a professional ladies' man as yet, and looked upon my
lord as something curious rather than pleasant; and if she did not
admire, certainly wondered at him. Jos, on the contrary, was
delighted. "How very affable his Lordship is," he said;
"How very kind of his Lordship to say he would send his medical
man! Kirsch, you will carry our cards to the Count de Schlusselback
directly; the Major and I will have the greatest pleasure in paying
our respects at Court as soon as possible. Put out my uniform,
Kirsch—both our uniforms. It is a mark of politeness which every
English gentleman ought to show to the countries which he visits to
pay his respects to the sovereigns of those countries as to the
representatives of his own."
When Tapeworm's doctor came, Doctor von
Glauber, Body Physician to H.S.H. the Duke, he speedily convinced Jos
that the Pumpernickel mineral springs and the Doctor's particular
treatment would infallibly restore the Bengalee to youth and
slimness. "Dere came here last year," he said, "Sheneral
Bulkeley, an English Sheneral, tvice so pic as you, sir. I sent him
back qvite tin after tree months, and he danced vid Baroness Glauber
at the end of two."
Jos's mind was made up; the springs,
the Doctor, the Court, and the Charge d'Affaires convinced him, and
he proposed to spend the autumn in these delightful quarters. And
punctual to his word, on the next day the Charge d'Affaires presented
Jos and the Major to Victor Aurelius XVII, being conducted to their
audience with that sovereign by the Count de Schlusselback, Marshal
of the Court.
They were straightway invited to dinner
at Court, and their intention of staying in the town being announced,
the politest ladies of the whole town instantly called upon Mrs.
Osborne; and as not one of these, however poor they might be, was
under the rank of a Baroness, Jos's delight was beyond expression. He
wrote off to Chutney at the Club to say that the Service was highly
appreciated in Germany, that he was going to show his friend, the
Count de Schlusselback, how to stick a pig in the Indian fashion, and
that his august friends, the Duke and Duchess, were everything that
was kind and civil.
Emmy, too, was presented to the august
family, and as mourning is not admitted in Court on certain days, she
appeared in a pink crape dress with a diamond ornament in the
corsage, presented to her by her brother, and she looked so pretty in
this costume that the Duke and Court (putting out of the question the
Major, who had scarcely ever seen her before in an evening dress, and
vowed that she did not look five-and-twenty) all admired her
excessively.
In this dress she walked a Polonaise
with Major Dobbin at a Court ball, in which easy dance Mr. Jos had
the honour of leading out the Countess of Schlusselback, an old lady
with a hump back, but with sixteen good quarters of nobility and
related to half the royal houses of Germany.
Pumpernickel stands in the midst of a
happy valley through which sparkles—to mingle with the Rhine
somewhere, but I have not the map at hand to say exactly at what
point—the fertilizing stream of the Pump. In some places the river
is big enough to support a ferry- boat, in others to turn a mill; in
Pumpernickel itself, the last Transparency but three, the great and
renowned Victor Aurelius XIV built a magnificent bridge, on which his
own statue rises, surrounded by water-nymphs and emblems of victory,
peace, and plenty; he has his foot on the neck of a prostrate
Turk—history says he engaged and ran a Janissary through the body
at the relief of Vienna by Sobieski—but, quite undisturbed by the
agonies of that prostrate Mahometan, who writhes at his feet in the
most ghastly manner, the Prince smiles blandly and points with his
truncheon in the direction of the Aurelius Platz, where he began to
erect a new palace that would have been the wonder of his age had the
great- souled Prince but had funds to complete it. But the completion
of Monplaisir (Monblaisir the honest German folks call it) was
stopped for lack of ready money, and it and its park and garden are
now in rather a faded condition, and not more than ten times big
enough to accommodate the Court of the reigning Sovereign.
The gardens were arranged to emulate
those of Versailles, and amidst the terraces and groves there are
some huge allegorical waterworks still, which spout and froth
stupendously upon fete-days, and frighten one with their enormous
aquatic insurrections. There is the Trophonius' cave in which, by
some artifice, the leaden Tritons are made not only to spout water,
but to play the most dreadful groans out of their lead conchs—there
is the nymphbath and the Niagara cataract, which the people of the
neighbourhood admire beyond expression, when they come to the yearly
fair at the opening of the Chamber, or to the fetes with which the
happy little nation still celebrates the birthdays and marriage-days
of its princely governors.
Then from all the towns of the Duchy,
which stretches for nearly ten mile—from Bolkum, which lies on its
western frontier bidding defiance to Prussia, from Grogwitz, where
the Prince has a hunting- lodge, and where his dominions are
separated by the Pump River from those of the neighbouring Prince of
Potzenthal; from all the little villages, which besides these three
great cities, dot over the happy principality—from the farms and
the mills along the Pump come troops of people in red petticoats and
velvet head-dresses, or with three-cornered hats and pipes in their
mouths, who flock to the Residenz and share in the pleasures of the
fair and the festivities there. Then the theatre is open for nothing,
then the waters of Monblaisir begin to play (it is lucky that there
is company to behold them, for one would be afraid to see them
alone)—then there come mountebanks and riding troops (the way in
which his Transparency was fascinated by one of the horse-riders is
well known, and it is believed that La Petite Vivandiere, as she was
called, was a spy in the French interest), and the delighted people
are permitted to march through room after room of the Grand Ducal
palace and admire the slippery floor, the rich hangings, and the
spittoons at the doors of all the innumerable chambers. There is one
Pavilion at Monblaisir which Aurelius Victor XV had arranged—a
great Prince but too fond of pleasure—and which I am told is a
perfect wonder of licentious elegance. It is painted with the story
of Bacchus and Ariadne, and the table works in and out of the room by
means of a windlass, so that the company was served without any
intervention of domestics. But the place was shut up by Barbara,
Aurelius XV's widow, a severe and devout Princess of the House of
Bolkum and Regent of the Duchy during her son's glorious minority,
and after the death of her husband, cut off in the pride of his
pleasures.
The theatre of Pumpernickel is known
and famous in that quarter of Germany. It languished a little when
the present Duke in his youth insisted upon having his own operas
played there, and it is said one day, in a fury, from his place in
the orchestra, when he attended a rehearsal, broke a bassoon on the
head of the Chapel Master, who was conducting, and led too slow; and
during which time the Duchess Sophia wrote domestic comedies, which
must have been very dreary to witness. But the Prince executes his
music in private now, and the Duchess only gives away her plays to
the foreigners of distinction who visit her kind little Court.
It is conducted with no small comfort
and splendour. When there are balls, though there may be four hundred
people at supper, there is a servant in scarlet and lace to attend
upon every four, and every one is served on silver. There are
festivals and entertainments going continually on, and the Duke has
his chamberlains and equerries, and the Duchess her mistress of the
wardrobe and ladies of honour, just like any other and more potent
potentates.
The Constitution is or was a moderate
despotism, tempered by a Chamber that might or might not be elected.
I never certainly could hear of its sitting in my time at
Pumpernickel. The Prime Minister had lodgings in a second floor, and
the Foreign Secretary occupied the comfortable lodgings over
Zwieback's Conditorey. The army consisted of a magnificent band that
also did duty on the stage, where it was quite pleasant to see the
worthy fellows marching in Turkish dresses with rouge on and wooden
scimitars, or as Roman warriors with ophicleides and trombones—to
see them again, I say, at night, after one had listened to them all
the morning in the Aurelius Platz, where they performed opposite the
cafe where we breakfasted. Besides the band, there was a rich and
numerous staff of officers, and, I believe, a few men. Besides the
regular sentries, three or four men, habited as hussars, used to do
duty at the Palace, but I never saw them on horseback, and au fait,
what was the use of cavalry in a time of profound peace?—and
whither the deuce should the hussars ride?
Everybody—everybody that was noble of
course, for as for the bourgeois we could not quite be expected to
take notice of THEM— visited his neighbour. H. E. Madame de Burst
received once a week, H. E. Madame de Schnurrbart had her night—the
theatre was open twice a week, the Court graciously received once, so
that a man's life might in fact be a perfect round of pleasure in the
unpretending Pumpernickel way.
That there were feuds in the place, no
one can deny. Politics ran very high at Pumpernickel, and parties
were very bitter. There was the Strumpff faction and the Lederlung
party, the one supported by our envoy and the other by the French
Charge d'Affaires, M. de Macabau. Indeed it sufficed for our Minister
to stand up for Madame Strumpff, who was clearly the greater singer
of the two, and had three more notes in her voice than Madame
Lederlung her rival—it sufficed, I say, for our Minister to advance
any opinion to have it instantly contradicted by the French
diplomatist.
Everybody in the town was ranged in one
or other of these factions. The Lederlung was a prettyish little
creature certainly, and her voice (what there was of it) was very
sweet, and there is no doubt that the Strumpff was not in her first
youth and beauty, and certainly too stout; when she came on in the
last scene of the Sonnambula, for instance, in her night-chemise with
a lamp in her hand, and had to go out of the window, and pass over
the plank of the mill, it was all she could do to squeeze out of the
window, and the plank used to bend and creak again under her
weight—but how she poured out the finale of the opera! and with
what a burst of feeling she rushed into Elvino's arms—almost fit to
smother him! Whereas the little Lederlung—but a truce to this
gossip—the fact is that these two women were the two flags of the
French and the English party at Pumpernickel, and the society was
divided in its allegiance to those two great nations.
We had on our side the Home Minister,
the Master of the Horse, the Duke's Private Secretary, and the
Prince's Tutor; whereas of the French party were the Foreign
Minister, the Commander-in-Chief's Lady, who had served under
Napoleon, and the Hof-Marschall and his wife, who was glad enough to
get the fashions from Pans, and always had them and her caps by M. de
Macabau's courier. The Secretary of his Chancery was little Grignac,
a young fellow, as malicious as Satan, and who made caricatures of
Tapeworm in all the-albums of the place.
Their headquarters and table d'hote
were established at the Pariser Hof, the other inn of the town; and
though, of course, these gentlemen were obliged to be civil in
public, yet they cut at each other with epigrams that were as sharp
as razors, as I have seen a couple of wrestlers in Devonshire,
lashing at each other's shins and never showing their agony upon a
muscle of their faces. Neither Tapeworm nor Macabau ever sent home a
dispatch to his government without a most savage series of attacks
upon his rival. For instance, on our side we would write, "The
interests of Great Britain in this place, and throughout the whole of
Germany, are perilled by the continuance in office of the present
French envoy; this man is of a character so infamous that he will
stick at no falsehood, or hesitate at no crime, to attain his ends.
He poisons the mind of the Court against the English minister,
represents the conduct of Great Britain in the most odious and
atrocious light, and is unhappily backed by a minister whose
ignorance and necessities are as notorious as his influence is
fatal." On their side they would say, "M. de Tapeworm
continues his system of stupid insular arrogance and vulgar falsehood
against the greatest nation in the world. Yesterday he was heard to
speak lightly of Her Royal Highness Madame the Duchess of Berri; on a
former occasion he insulted the heroic Duke of Angouleme and dared to
insinuate that H.R.H. the Duke of Orleans was conspiring against the
august throne of the lilies. His gold is prodigated in every
direction which his stupid menaces fail to frighten. By one and the
other, he has won over creatures of the Court here—and, in fine,
Pumpernickel will not be quiet, Germany tranquil, France respected,
or Europe content until this poisonous viper be crushed under heel":
and so on. When one side or the other had written any particularly
spicy dispatch, news of it was sure to slip out.
Before the winter was far advanced, it
is actually on record that Emmy took a night and received company
with great propriety and modesty. She had a French master, who
complimented her upon the purity of her accent and her facility of
learning; the fact is she had learned long ago and grounded herself
subsequently in the grammar so as to be able to teach it to George;
and Madam Strumpff came to give her lessons in singing, which she
performed so well and with such a true voice that the Major's
windows, who had lodgings opposite under the Prime Minister, were
always open to hear the lesson. Some of the German ladies, who are
very sentimental and simple in their tastes, fell in love with her
and began to call her du at once. These are trivial details, but they
relate to happy times. The Major made himself George's tutor and read
Caesar and mathematics with him, and they had a German master and
rode out of evenings by the side of Emmy's carriage—she was always
too timid, and made a dreadful outcry at the slightest disturbance on
horse- back. So she drove about with one of her dear German friends,
and Jos asleep on the back-seat of the barouche.
He was becoming very sweet upon the
Grafinn Fanny de Butterbrod, a very gentle tender-hearted and
unassuming young creature, a Canoness and Countess in her own right,
but with scarcely ten pounds per year to her fortune, and Fanny for
her part declared that to be Amelia's sister was the greatest delight
that Heaven could bestow on her, and Jos might have put a Countess's
shield and coronet by the side of his own arms on his carriage and
forks; when—when events occurred, and those grand fetes given upon
the marriage of the Hereditary Prince of Pumpernickel with the lovely
Princess Amelia of Humbourg- Schlippenschloppen took place.
At this festival the magnificence
displayed was such as had not been known in the little German place
since the days of the prodigal Victor XIV. All the neighbouring
Princes, Princesses, and Grandees were invited to the feast. Beds
rose to half a crown per night in Pumpernickel, and the Army was
exhausted in providing guards of honour for the Highnesses,
Serenities, and Excellencies who arrived from all quarters. The
Princess was married by proxy, at her father's residence, by the
Count de Schlusselback. Snuff-boxes were given away in profusion (as
we learned from the Court jeweller, who sold and afterwards bought
them again), and bushels of the Order of Saint Michael of
Pumpernickel were sent to the nobles of the Court, while hampers of
the cordons and decorations of the Wheel of St. Catherine of
Schlippenschloppen were brought to ours. The French envoy got both.
"He is covered with ribbons like a prize cart- horse,"
Tapeworm said, who was not allowed by the rules of his service to
take any decorations: "Let him have the cordons; but with whom
is the victory?" The fact is, it was a triumph of British
diplomacy, the French party having proposed and tried their utmost to
carry a marriage with a Princess of the House of Potztausend-
Donnerwetter, whom, as a matter of course, we opposed.
Everybody was asked to the fetes of the
marriage. Garlands and triumphal arches were hung across the road to
welcome the young bride. The great Saint Michael's Fountain ran with
uncommonly sour wine, while that in the Artillery Place frothed with
beer. The great waters played; and poles were put up in the park and
gardens for the happy peasantry, which they might climb at their
leisure, carrying off watches, silver forks, prize sausages hung with
pink ribbon, &c., at the top. Georgy got one, wrenching it off,
having swarmed up the pole to the delight of the spectators, and
sliding down with the rapidity of a fall of water. But it was for the
glory's sake merely. The boy gave the sausage to a peasant, who had
very nearly seized it, and stood at the foot of the mast, blubbering,
because he was unsuccessful.
At the French Chancellerie they had six
more lampions in their illumination than ours had; but our
transparency, which represented the young Couple advancing and
Discord flying away, with the most ludicrous likeness to the French
Ambassador, beat the French picture hollow; and I have no doubt got
Tapeworm the advancement and the Cross of the Bath which he
subsequently attained.
Crowds of foreigners arrived for the
fetes, and of English, of course. Besides the Court balls, public
balls were given at the Town Hall and the Redoute, and in the former
place there was a room for trente-et-quarante and roulette
established, for the week of the festivities only, and by one of the
great German companies from Ems or Aix-la-Chapelle. The officers or
inhabitants of the town were not allowed to play at these games, but
strangers, peasants, ladies were admitted, and any one who chose to
lose or win money.
That little scapegrace Georgy Osborne
amongst others, whose pockets were always full of dollars and whose
relations were away at the grand festival of the Court, came to the
Stadthaus Ball in company of his uncle's courier, Mr. Kirsch, and
having only peeped into a play-room at Baden-Baden when he hung on
Dobbin's arm, and where, of course, he was not permitted to gamble,
came eagerly to this part of the entertainment and hankered round the
tables where the croupiers and the punters were at work. Women were
playing; they were masked, some of them; this license was allowed in
these wild times of carnival.
A woman with light hair, in a low dress
by no means so fresh as it had been, and with a black mask on,
through the eyelets of which her eyes twinkled strangely, was seated
at one of the roulette-tables with a card and a pin and a couple of
florins before her. As the croupier called out the colour and number,
she pricked on the card with great care and regularity, and only
ventured her money on the colours after the red or black had come up
a certain number of times. It was strange to look at her.
But in spite of her care and assiduity
she guessed wrong and the last two florins followed each other under
the croupier's rake, as he cried out with his inexorable voice the
winning colour and number. She gave a sigh, a shrug with her
shoulders, which were already too much out of her gown, and dashing
the pin through the card on to the table, sat thrumming it for a
while. Then she looked round her and saw Georgy's honest face staring
at the scene. The little scamp! What business had he to be there?
When she saw the boy, at whose face she
looked hard through her shining eyes and mask, she said, "Monsieur
n'est pas joueur?"
"Non, Madame," said the boy;
but she must have known, from his accent, of what country he was, for
she answered him with a slight foreign tone. "You have nevare
played—will you do me a littl' favor?"
"What is it?" said Georgy,
blushing again. Mr. Kirsch was at work for his part at the rouge et
noir and did not see his young master.
"Play this for me, if you please;
put it on any number, any number." And she took from her bosom a
purse, and out of it a gold piece, the only coin there, and she put
it into George's hand. The boy laughed and did as he was bid.
The number came up sure enough. There
is a power that arranges that, they say, for beginners.
"Thank you," said she,
pulling the money towards her, "thank you. What is your name?"
"My name's Osborne," said
Georgy, and was fingering in his own pockets for dollars, and just
about to make a trial, when the Major, in his uniform, and Jos, en
Marquis, from the Court ball, made their appearance. Other people,
finding the entertainment stupid and preferring the fun at the
Stadthaus, had quitted the Palace ball earlier; but it is probable
the Major and Jos had gone home and found the boy's absence, for the
former instantly went up to him and, taking him by the shoulder,
pulled him briskly back from the place of temptation. Then, looking
round the room, he saw Kirsch employed as we have said, and going up
to him, asked how he dared to bring Mr. George to such a place.
"Laissez-moi tranquille,"
said Mr. Kirsch, very much excited by play and wine. "ll faut
s'amuser, parbleu. Je ne suis pas au service de Monsieur."
Seeing his condition the Major did not
choose to argue with the man, but contented himself with drawing away
George and asking Jos if he would come away. He was standing close by
the lady in the mask, who was playing with pretty good luck now, and
looking on much interested at the game.
"Hadn't you better come, Jos,"
the Major said, "with George and me?"
"I'll stop and go home with that
rascal, Kirsch," Jos said; and for the same reason of modesty,
which he thought ought to be preserved before the boy, Dobbin did not
care to remonstrate with Jos, but left him and walked home with
Georgy.
"Did you play?" asked the
Major when they were out and on their way home.
The boy said "No."
"Give me your word of honour as a
gentleman that you never will."
"Why?" said the boy; "it
seems very good fun." And, in a very eloquent and impressive
manner, the Major showed him why he shouldn't, and would have
enforced his precepts by the example of Georgy's own father, had he
liked to say anything that should reflect on the other's memory. When
he had housed him, he went to bed and saw his light, in the little
room outside of Amelia's, presently disappear. Amelia's followed half
an hour afterwards. I don't know what made the Major note it so
accurately.
Jos, however, remained behind over the
play-table; he was no gambler, but not averse to the little
excitement of the sport now and then, and he had some Napoleons
chinking in the embroidered pockets of his court waistcoat. He put
down one over the fair shoulder of the little gambler before him, and
they won. She made a little movement to make room for him by her
side, and just took the skirt of her gown from a vacant chair there.
"Come and give me good luck,"
she said, still in a foreign accent, quite different from that frank
and perfectly English "Thank you," with which she had
saluted Georgy's coup in her favour. The portly gentleman, looking
round to see that nobody of rank observed him, sat down; he
muttered—"Ah, really, well now, God bless my soul. I'm very
fortunate; I'm sure to give you good fortune," and other words
of compliment and confusion. "Do you play much?" the
foreign mask said.
"I put a Nap or two down,"
said Jos with a superb air, flinging down a gold piece.
"Yes; ay nap after dinner,"
said the mask archly. But Jos looking frightened, she continued, in
her pretty French accent, "You do not play to win. No more do I.
I play to forget, but I cannot. I cannot forget old times, monsieur.
Your little nephew is the image of his father; and you—you are not
changed—but yes, you are. Everybody changes, everybody forgets;
nobody has any heart."
"Good God, who is it?" asked
Jos in a flutter.
"Can't you guess, Joseph Sedley?"
said the little woman in a sad voice, and undoing her mask, she
looked at him. "You have forgotten me."
"Good heavens! Mrs. Crawley!"
gasped out Jos.
"Rebecca," said the other,
putting her hand on his; but she followed the game still, all the
time she was looking at him.
"I am stopping at the Elephant,"
she continued. "Ask for Madame de Raudon. I saw my dear Amelia
to-day; how pretty she looked, and how happy! So do you! Everybody
but me, who am wretched, Joseph Sedley." And she put her money
over from the red to the black, as if by a chance movement of her
hand, and while she was wiping her eyes with a pocket-handkerchief
fringed with torn lace.
The red came up again, and she lost the
whole of that stake. "Come away," she said. "Come with
me a little—we are old friends, are we not, dear Mr. Sedley?"
And Mr. Kirsch having lost all his
money by this time, followed his master out into the moonlight, where
the illuminations were winking out and the transparency over our
mission was scarcely visible.
Chapter LXIV
*
A Vagabond Chapter
We must pass over a part of Mrs.
Rebecca Crawley's biography with that lightness and delicacy which
the world demands—the moral world, that has, perhaps, no particular
objection to vice, but an insuperable repugnance to hearing vice
called by its proper name. There are things we do and know perfectly
well in Vanity Fair, though we never speak of them: as the
Ahrimanians worship the devil, but don't mention him: and a polite
public will no more bear to read an authentic description of vice
than a truly refined English or American female will permit the word
breeches to be pronounced in her chaste hearing. And yet, madam, both
are walking the world before our faces every day, without much
shocking us. If you were to blush every time they went by, what
complexions you would have! It is only when their naughty names are
called out that your modesty has any occasion to show alarm or sense
of outrage, and it has been the wish of the present writer, all
through this story, deferentially to submit to the fashion at present
prevailing, and only to hint at the existence of wickedness in a
light, easy, and agreeable manner, so that nobody's fine feelings may
be offended. I defy any one to say that our Becky, who has certainly
some vices, has not been presented to the public in a perfectly
genteel and inoffensive manner. In describing this Siren, singing and
smiling, coaxing and cajoling, the author, with modest pride, asks
his readers all round, has he once forgotten the laws of politeness,
and showed the monster's hideous tail above water? No! Those who like
may peep down under waves that are pretty transparent and see it
writhing and twirling, diabolically hideous and slimy, flapping
amongst bones, or curling round corpses; but above the waterline, I
ask, has not everything been proper, agreeable, and decorous, and has
any the most squeamish immoralist in Vanity Fair a right to cry fie?
When, however, the Siren disappears and dives below, down among the
dead men, the water of course grows turbid over her, and it is labour
lost to look into it ever so curiously. They look pretty enough when
they sit upon a rock, twanging their harps and combing their hair,
and sing, and beckon to you to come and hold the looking-glass; but
when they sink into their native element, depend on it, those
mermaids are about no good, and we had best not examine the fiendish
marine cannibals, revelling and feasting on their wretched pickled
victims. And so, when Becky is out of the way, be sure that she is
not particularly well employed, and that the less that is said about
her doings is in fact the better.
If we were to give a full account of
her proceedings during a couple of years that followed after the
Curzon Street catastrophe, there might be some reason for people to
say this book was improper. The actions of very vain, heartless,
pleasure-seeking people are very often improper (as are many of
yours, my friend with the grave face and spotless reputation—but
that is merely by the way); and what are those of a woman without
faith—or love—or character? And I am inclined to think that there
was a period in Mrs Becky's life when she was seized, not by remorse,
but by a kind of despair, and absolutely neglected her person and did
not even care for her reputation.
This abattement and degradation did not
take place all at once; it was brought about by degrees, after her
calamity, and after many struggles to keep up—as a man who goes
overboard hangs on to a spar whilst any hope is left, and then flings
it away and goes down, when he finds that struggling is in vain.
She lingered about London whilst her
husband was making preparations for his departure to his seat of
government, and it is believed made more than one attempt to see her
brother-in-law, Sir Pitt Crawley, and to work upon his feelings,
which she had almost enlisted in her favour. As Sir Pitt and Mr.
Wenham were walking down to the House of Commons, the latter spied
Mrs. Rawdon in a black veil, and lurking near the palace of the
legislature. She sneaked away when her eyes met those of Wenham, and
indeed never succeeded in her designs upon the Baronet.
Probably Lady Jane interposed. I have
heard that she quite astonished her husband by the spirit which she
exhibited in this quarrel, and her determination to disown Mrs.
Becky. Of her own movement, she invited Rawdon to come and stop in
Gaunt Street until his departure for Coventry Island, knowing that
with him for a guard Mrs. Becky would not try to force her door; and
she looked curiously at the superscriptions of all the letters which
arrived for Sir Pitt, lest he and his sister-in-law should be
corresponding. Not but that Rebecca could have written had she a
mind, but she did not try to see or to write to Pitt at his own
house, and after one or two attempts consented to his demand that the
correspondence regarding her conjugal differences should be carried
on by lawyers only.
The fact was that Pitt's mind had been
poisoned against her. A short time after Lord Steyne's accident
Wenham had been with the Baronet and given him such a biography of
Mrs. Becky as had astonished the member for Queen's Crawley. He knew
everything regarding her: who her father was; in what year her mother
danced at the opera; what had been her previous history; and what her
conduct during her married life—as I have no doubt that the greater
part of the story was false and dictated by interested malevolence,
it shall not be repeated here. But Becky was left with a sad sad
reputation in the esteem of a country gentleman and relative who had
been once rather partial to her.
The revenues of the Governor of
Coventry Island are not large. A part of them were set aside by his
Excellency for the payment of certain outstanding debts and
liabilities, the charges incident on his high situation required
considerable expense; finally, it was found that he could not spare
to his wife more than three hundred pounds a year, which he proposed
to pay to her on an undertaking that she would never trouble him.
Otherwise, scandal, separation, Doctors' Commons would ensue. But it
was Mr. Wenham's business, Lord Steyne's business, Rawdon's,
everybody's—to get her out of the country, and hush up a most
disagreeable affair.
She was probably so much occupied in
arranging these affairs of business with her husband's lawyers that
she forgot to take any step whatever about her son, the little
Rawdon, and did not even once propose to go and see him. That young
gentleman was consigned to the entire guardianship of his aunt and
uncle, the former of whom had always possessed a great share of the
child's affection. His mamma wrote him a neat letter from Boulogne,
when she quitted England, in which she requested him to mind his
book, and said she was going to take a Continental tour, during which
she would have the pleasure of writing to him again. But she never
did for a year afterwards, and not, indeed, until Sir Pitt's only
boy, always sickly, died of hooping-cough and measles—then Rawdon's
mamma wrote the most affectionate composition to her darling son, who
was made heir of Queen's Crawley by this accident, and drawn more
closely than ever to the kind lady, whose tender heart had already
adopted him. Rawdon Crawley, then grown a tall, fine lad, blushed
when he got the letter. "Oh, Aunt Jane, you are my mother!"
he said; "and not—and not that one." But he wrote back a
kind and respectful letter to Mrs. Rebecca, then living at a
boarding-house at Florence. But we are advancing matters.
Our darling Becky's first flight was
not very far. She perched upon the French coast at Boulogne, that
refuge of so much exiled English innocence, and there lived in rather
a genteel, widowed manner, with a femme de chambre and a couple of
rooms, at an hotel. She dined at the table d'hote, where people
thought her very pleasant, and where she entertained her neighbours
by stories of her brother, Sir Pitt, and her great London
acquaintance, talking that easy, fashionable slip-slop which has so
much effect upon certain folks of small breeding. She passed with
many of them for a person of importance; she gave little tea-parties
in her private room and shared in the innocent amusements of the
place in sea-bathing, and in jaunts in open carriages, in strolls on
the sands, and in visits to the play. Mrs. Burjoice, the printer's
lady, who was boarding with her family at the hotel for the summer,
and to whom her Burjoice came of a Saturday and Sunday, voted her
charming, until that little rogue of a Burjoice began to pay her too
much attention. But there was nothing in the story, only that Becky
was always affable, easy, and good-natured—and with men especially.
Numbers of people were going abroad as
usual at the end of the season, and Becky had plenty of opportunities
of finding out by the behaviour of her acquaintances of the great
London world the opinion of "society" as regarded her
conduct. One day it was Lady Partlet and her daughters whom Becky
confronted as she was walking modestly on Boulogne pier, the cliffs
of Albion shining in the distance across the deep blue sea. Lady
Partlet marshalled all her daughters round her with a sweep of her
parasol and retreated from the pier, darting savage glances at poor
little Becky who stood alone there.
On another day the packet came in. It
had been blowing fresh, and it always suited Becky's humour to see
the droll woe-begone faces of the people as they emerged from the
boat. Lady Slingstone happened to be on board this day. Her ladyship
had been exceedingly ill in her carriage, and was greatly exhausted
and scarcely fit to walk up the plank from the ship to the pier. But
all her energies rallied the instant she saw Becky smiling roguishly
under a pink bonnet, and giving her a glance of scorn such as would
have shrivelled up most women, she walked into the Custom House quite
unsupported. Becky only laughed: but I don't think she liked it. She
felt she was alone, quite alone, and the far-off shining cliffs of
England were impassable to her.
The behaviour of the men had undergone
too I don't know what change. Grinstone showed his teeth and laughed
in her face with a familiarity that was not pleasant. Little Bob
Suckling, who was cap in hand to her three months before, and would
walk a mile in the rain to see for her carriage in the line at Gaunt
House, was talking to Fitzoof of the Guards (Lord Heehaw's son) one
day upon the jetty, as Becky took her walk there. Little Bobby nodded
to her over his shoulder, without moving his hat, and continued his
conversation with the heir of Heehaw. Tom Raikes tried to walk into
her sitting- room at the inn with a cigar in his mouth, but she
closed the door upon him, and would have locked it, only that his
fingers were inside. She began to feel that she was very lonely
indeed. "If HE'D been here," she said, "those cowards
would never have dared to insult me." She thought about "him"
with great sadness and perhaps longing—about his honest, stupid,
constant kindness and fidelity; his never-ceasing obedience; his good
humour; his bravery and courage. Very likely she cried, for she was
particularly lively, and had put on a little extra rouge, when she
came down to dinner.
She rouged regularly now; and—and her
maid got Cognac for her besides that which was charged in the hotel
bill.
Perhaps the insults of the men were
not, however, so intolerable to her as the sympathy of certain women.
Mrs. Crackenbury and Mrs. Washington White passed through Boulogne on
their way to Switzerland. The party were protected by Colonel Horner,
young Beaumoris, and of course old Crackenbury, and Mrs. White's
little girl. THEY did not avoid her. They giggled, cackled, tattled,
condoled, consoled, and patronized her until they drove her almost
wild with rage. To be patronized by THEM! she thought, as they went
away simpering after kissing her. And she heard Beaumoris's laugh
ringing on the stair and knew quite well how to interpret his
hilarity.
It was after this visit that Becky, who
had paid her weekly bills, Becky who had made herself agreeable to
everybody in the house, who smiled at the landlady, called the
waiters "monsieur," and paid the chambermaids in politeness
and apologies, what far more than compensated for a little
niggardliness in point of money (of which Becky never was free), that
Becky, we say, received a notice to quit from the landlord, who had
been told by some one that she was quite an unfit person to have at
his hotel, where English ladies would not sit down with her. And she
was forced to fly into lodgings of which the dulness and solitude
were most wearisome to her.
Still she held up, in spite of these
rebuffs, and tried to make a character for herself and conquer
scandal. She went to church very regularly and sang louder than
anybody there. She took up the cause of the widows of the shipwrecked
fishermen, and gave work and drawings for the Quashyboo Mission; she
subscribed to the Assembly and WOULDN'T waltz. In a word, she did
everything that was respectable, and that is why we dwell upon this
part of her career with more fondness than upon subsequent parts of
her history, which are not so pleasant. She saw people avoiding her,
and still laboriously smiled upon them; you never could suppose from
her countenance what pangs of humiliation she might be enduring
inwardly.
Her history was after all a mystery.
Parties were divided about her. Some people who took the trouble to
busy themselves in the matter said that she was the criminal, whilst
others vowed that she was as innocent as a lamb and that her odious
husband was in fault. She won over a good many by bursting into tears
about her boy and exhibiting the most frantic grief when his name was
mentioned, or she saw anybody like him. She gained good Mrs.
Alderney's heart in that way, who was rather the Queen of British
Boulogne and gave the most dinners and balls of all the residents
there, by weeping when Master Alderney came from Dr. Swishtail's
academy to pass his holidays with his mother. "He and her Rawdon
were of the same age, and so like," Becky said in a voice
choking with agony; whereas there was five years' difference between
the boys' ages, and no more likeness between them than between my
respected reader and his humble servant. Wenham, when he was going
abroad, on his way to Kissingen to join Lord Steyne, enlightened Mrs.
Alderney on this point and told her how he was much more able to
describe little Rawdon than his mamma, who notoriously hated him and
never saw him; how he was thirteen years old, while little Alderney
was but nine, fair, while the other darling was dark—in a word,
caused the lady in question to repent of her good humour.
Whenever Becky made a little circle for
herself with incredible toils and labour, somebody came and swept it
down rudely, and she had all her work to begin over again. It was
very hard; very hard; lonely and disheartening.
There was Mrs. Newbright, who took her
up for some time, attracted by the sweetness of her singing at church
and by her proper views upon serious subjects, concerning which in
former days, at Queen's Crawley, Mrs. Becky had had a good deal of
instruction. Well, she not only took tracts, but she read them. She
worked flannel petticoats for the Quashyboos—cotton night-caps for
the Cocoanut Indians—painted handscreens for the conversion of the
Pope and the Jews—sat under Mr. Rowls on Wednesdays, Mr. Huggleton
on Thursdays, attended two Sunday services at church, besides Mr.
Bawler, the Darbyite, in the evening, and all in vain. Mrs. Newbright
had occasion to correspond with the Countess of Southdown about the
Warmingpan Fund for the Fiji Islanders (for the management of which
admirable charity both these ladies formed part of a female
committee), and having mentioned her "sweet friend," Mrs.
Rawdon Crawley, the Dowager Countess wrote back such a letter
regarding Becky, with such particulars, hints, facts, falsehoods, and
general comminations, that intimacy between Mrs. Newbright and Mrs.
Crawley ceased forthwith, and all the serious world of Tours, where
this misfortune took place, immediately parted company with the
reprobate. Those who know the English Colonies abroad know that we
carry with us us our pride, pills, prejudices, Harvey-sauces,
cayenne-peppers, and other Lares, making a little Britain wherever we
settle down.
From one colony to another Becky fled
uneasily. From Boulogne to Dieppe, from Dieppe to Caen, from Caen to
Tours—trying with all her might to be respectable, and alas! always
found out some day or other and pecked out of the cage by the real
daws.
Mrs. Hook Eagles took her up at one of
these places—a woman without a blemish in her character and a house
in Portman Square. She was staying at the hotel at Dieppe, whither
Becky fled, and they made each other's acquaintance first at sea,
where they were swimming together, and subsequently at the table
d'hote of the hotel. Mrs Eagles had heard—who indeed had not?—some
of the scandal of the Steyne affair; but after a conversation with
Becky, she pronounced that Mrs. Crawley was an angel, her husband a
ruffian, Lord Steyne an unprincipled wretch, as everybody knew, and
the whole case against Mrs. Crawley an infamous and wicked conspiracy
of that rascal Wenham. "If you were a man of any spirit, Mr.
Eagles, you would box the wretch's ears the next time you see him at
the Club," she said to her husband. But Eagles was only a quiet
old gentleman, husband to Mrs. Eagles, with a taste for geology, and
not tall enough to reach anybody's ears.
The Eagles then patronized Mrs. Rawdon,
took her to live with her at her own house at Paris, quarrelled with
the ambassador's wife because she would not receive her protegee, and
did all that lay in woman's power to keep Becky straight in the paths
of virtue and good repute.
Becky was very respectable and orderly
at first, but the life of humdrum virtue grew utterly tedious to her
before long. It was the same routine every day, the same dulness and
comfort, the same drive over the same stupid Bois de Boulogne, the
same company of an evening, the same Blair's Sermon of a Sunday
night—the same opera always being acted over and over again; Becky
was dying of weariness, when, luckily for her, young Mr. Eagles came
from Cambridge, and his mother, seeing the impression which her
little friend made upon him, straightway gave Becky warning.
Then she tried keeping house with a
female friend; then the double menage began to quarrel and get into
debt. Then she determined upon a boarding-house existence and lived
for some time at that famous mansion kept by Madame de Saint Amour,
in the Rue Royale, at Paris, where she began exercising her graces
and fascinations upon the shabby dandies and fly-blown beauties who
frequented her landlady's salons. Becky loved society and, indeed,
could no more exist without it than an opium-eater without his dram,
and she was happy enough at the period of her boarding-house life.
"The women here are as amusing as those in May Fair," she
told an old London friend who met her, "only, their dresses are
not quite so fresh. The men wear cleaned gloves, and are sad rogues,
certainly, but they are not worse than Jack This and Tom That. The
mistress of the house is a little vulgar, but I don't think she is so
vulgar as Lady ——" and here she named the name of a great
leader of fashion that I would die rather than reveal. In fact, when
you saw Madame de Saint Amour's rooms lighted up of a night, men with
plaques and cordons at the ecarte tables, and the women at a little
distance, you might fancy yourself for a while in good society, and
that Madame was a real Countess. Many people did so fancy, and Becky
was for a while one of the most dashing ladies of the Countess's
salons.
But it is probable that her old
creditors of 1815 found her out and caused her to leave Paris, for
the poor little woman was forced to fly from the city rather
suddenly, and went thence to Brussels.
How well she remembered the place! She
grinned as she looked up at the little entresol which she had
occupied, and thought of the Bareacres family, bawling for horses and
flight, as their carriage stood in the porte-cochere of the hotel.
She went to Waterloo and to Laeken, where George Osborne's monument
much struck her. She made a little sketch of it. "That poor
Cupid!" she said; "how dreadfully he was in love with me,
and what a fool he was! I wonder whether little Emmy is alive. It was
a good little creature; and that fat brother of hers. I have his
funny fat picture still among my papers. They were kind simple
people."
At Brussels Becky arrived, recommended
by Madame de Saint Amour to her friend, Madame la Comtesse de
Borodino, widow of Napoleon's General, the famous Count de Borodino,
who was left with no resource by the deceased hero but that of a
table d'hote and an ecarte table. Second-rate dandies and roues,
widow-ladies who always have a lawsuit, and very simple English
folks, who fancy they see "Continental society" at these
houses, put down their money, or ate their meals, at Madame de
Borodino's tables. The gallant young fellows treated the company
round to champagne at the table d'hote, rode out with the women, or
hired horses on country excursions, clubbed money to take boxes at
the play or the opera, betted over the fair shoulders of the ladies
at the ecarte tables, and wrote home to their parents in Devonshire
about their felicitous introduction to foreign society.
Here, as at Paris, Becky was a
boarding-house queen, and ruled in select pensions. She never refused
the champagne, or the bouquets, or the drives into the country, or
the private boxes; but what she preferred was the ecarte at
night,—and she played audaciously. First she played only for a
little, then for five-franc pieces, then for Napoleons, then for
notes: then she would not be able to pay her month's pension: then
she borrowed from the young gentlemen: then she got into cash again
and bullied Madame de Borodino, whom she had coaxed and wheedled
before: then she was playing for ten sous at a time, and in a dire
state of poverty: then her quarter's allowance would come in, and she
would pay off Madame de Borodino's score and would once more take the
cards against Monsieur de Rossignol, or the Chevalier de Raff.
When Becky left Brussels, the sad truth
is that she owed three months' pension to Madame de Borodino, of
which fact, and of the gambling, and of the drinking, and of the
going down on her knees to the Reverend Mr. Muff, Ministre Anglican,
and borrowing money of him, and of her coaxing and flirting with
Milor Noodle, son of Sir Noodle, pupil of the Rev. Mr. Muff, whom she
used to take into her private room, and of whom she won large sums at
ecarte—of which fact, I say, and of a hundred of her other
knaveries, the Countess de Borodino informs every English person who
stops at her establishment, and announces that Madame Rawdon was no
better than a vipere.
So our little wanderer went about
setting up her tent in various cities of Europe, as restless as
Ulysses or Bampfylde Moore Carew. Her taste for disrespectability
grew more and more remarkable. She became a perfect Bohemian ere
long, herding with people whom it would make your hair stand on end
to meet.
There is no town of any mark in Europe
but it has its little colony of English raffs—men whose names Mr.
Hemp the officer reads out periodically at the Sheriffs' Court—young
gentlemen of very good family often, only that the latter disowns
them; frequenters of billiard-rooms and estaminets, patrons of
foreign races and gaming- tables. They people the debtors'
prisons—they drink and swagger— they fight and brawl—they run
away without paying—they have duels with French and German
officers—they cheat Mr. Spooney at ecarte— they get the money and
drive off to Baden in magnificent britzkas— they try their
infallible martingale and lurk about the tables with empty pockets,
shabby bullies, penniless bucks, until they can swindle a Jew banker
with a sham bill of exchange, or find another Mr. Spooney to rob. The
alternations of splendour and misery which these people undergo are
very queer to view. Their life must be one of great excitement.
Becky—must it be owned?—took to this life, and took to it not
unkindly. She went about from town to town among these Bohemians. The
lucky Mrs. Rawdon was known at every play- table in Germany. She and
Madame de Cruchecassee kept house at Florence together. It is said
she was ordered out of Munich, and my friend Mr. Frederick Pigeon
avers that it was at her house at Lausanne that he was hocussed at
supper and lost eight hundred pounds to Major Loder and the
Honourable Mr. Deuceace. We are bound, you see, to give some account
of Becky's biography, but of this part, the less, perhaps, that is
said the better.
They say that, when Mrs. Crawley was
particularly down on her luck, she gave concerts and lessons in music
here and there. There was a Madame de Raudon, who certainly had a
matinee musicale at Wildbad, accompanied by Herr Spoff, premier
pianist to the Hospodar of Wallachia, and my little friend Mr. Eaves,
who knew everybody and had travelled everywhere, always used to
declare that he was at Strasburg in the year 1830, when a certain
Madame Rebecque made her appearance in the opera of the Dame Blanche,
giving occasion to a furious row in the theatre there. She was hissed
off the stage by the audience, partly from her own incompetency, but
chiefly from the ill-advised sympathy of some persons in the parquet,
(where the officers of the garrison had their admissions); and Eaves
was certain that the unfortunate debutante in question was no other
than Mrs. Rawdon Crawley.
She was, in fact, no better than a
vagabond upon this earth. When she got her money she gambled; when
she had gambled it she was put to shifts to live; who knows how or by
what means she succeeded? It is said that she was once seen at St.
Petersburg, but was summarily dismissed from that capital by the
police, so that there cannot be any possibility of truth in the
report that she was a Russian spy at Toplitz and Vienna afterwards. I
have even been informed that at Paris she discovered a relation of
her own, no less a person than her maternal grandmother, who was not
by any means a Montmorenci, but a hideous old box-opener at a theatre
on the Boulevards. The meeting between them, of which other persons,
as it is hinted elsewhere, seem to have been acquainted, must have
been a very affecting interview. The present historian can give no
certain details regarding the event.
It happened at Rome once that Mrs. de
Rawdon's half-year's salary had just been paid into the principal
banker's there, and, as everybody who had a balance of above five
hundred scudi was invited to the balls which this prince of merchants
gave during the winter, Becky had the honour of a card, and appeared
at one of the Prince and Princess Polonia's splendid evening
entertainments. The Princess was of the family of Pompili, lineally
descended from the second king of Rome, and Egeria of the house of
Olympus, while the Prince's grandfather, Alessandro Polonia, sold
wash-balls, essences, tobacco, and pocket-handkerchiefs, ran errands
for gentlemen, and lent money in a small way. All the great company
in Rome thronged to his saloons—Princes, Dukes, Ambassadors,
artists, fiddlers, monsignori, young bears with their leaders—every
rank and condition of man. His halls blazed with light and
magnificence; were resplendent with gilt frames (containing
pictures), and dubious antiques; and the enormous gilt crown and arms
of the princely owner, a gold mushroom on a crimson field (the colour
of the pocket-handkerchiefs which he sold), and the silver fountain
of the Pompili family shone all over the roof, doors, and panels of
the house, and over the grand velvet baldaquins prepared to receive
Popes and Emperors.
So Becky, who had arrived in the
diligence from Florence, and was lodged at an inn in a very modest
way, got a card for Prince Polonia's entertainment, and her maid
dressed her with unusual care, and she went to this fine ball leaning
on the arm of Major Loder, with whom she happened to be travelling at
the time—(the same man who shot Prince Ravoli at Naples the next
year, and was caned by Sir John Buckskin for carrying four kings in
his hat besides those which he used in playing at ecarte )—and this
pair went into the rooms together, and Becky saw a number of old
faces which she remembered in happier days, when she was not
innocent, but not found out. Major Loder knew a great number of
foreigners, keen-looking whiskered men with dirty striped ribbons in
their buttonholes, and a very small display of linen; but his own
countrymen, it might be remarked, eschewed the Major. Becky, too,
knew some ladies here and there—French widows, dubious Italian
countesses, whose husbands had treated them ill—faugh—what shall
we say, we who have moved among some of the finest company of Vanity
Fair, of this refuse and sediment of rascals? If we play, let it be
with clean cards, and not with this dirty pack. But every man who has
formed one of the innumerable army of travellers has seen these
marauding irregulars hanging on, like Nym and Pistol, to the main
force, wearing the king's colours and boasting of his commission, but
pillaging for themselves, and occasionally gibbeted by the roadside.
Well, she was hanging on the arm of
Major Loder, and they went through the rooms together, and drank a
great quantity of champagne at the buffet, where the people, and
especially the Major's irregular corps, struggled furiously for
refreshments, of which when the pair had had enough, they pushed on
until they reached the Duchess's own pink velvet saloon, at the end
of the suite of apartments (where the statue of the Venus is, and the
great Venice looking-glasses, framed in silver), and where the
princely family were entertaining their most distinguished guests at
a round table at supper. It was just such a little select banquet as
that of which Becky recollected that she had partaken at Lord
Steyne's—and there he sat at Polonia's table, and she saw him. The
scar cut by the diamond on his white, bald, shining forehead made a
burning red mark; his red whiskers were dyed of a purple hue, which
made his pale face look still paler. He wore his collar and orders,
his blue ribbon and garter. He was a greater Prince than any there,
though there was a reigning Duke and a Royal Highness, with their
princesses, and near his Lordship was seated the beautiful Countess
of Belladonna, nee de Glandier, whose husband (the Count Paolo della
Belladonna), so well known for his brilliant entomological
collections, had been long absent on a mission to the Emperor of
Morocco.
When Becky beheld that familiar and
illustrious face, how vulgar all of a sudden did Major Loder appear
to her, and how that odious Captain Rook did smell of tobacco! In one
instant she reassumed her fine-ladyship and tried to look and feel as
if she were in May Fair once more. "That woman looks stupid and
ill-humoured," she thought; "I am sure she can't amuse him.
No, he must be bored by her—he never was by me." A hundred
such touching hopes, fears, and memories palpitated in her little
heart, as she looked with her brightest eyes (the rouge which she
wore up to her eyelids made them twinkle) towards the great nobleman.
Of a Star and Garter night Lord Steyne used also to put on his
grandest manner and to look and speak like a great prince, as he was.
Becky admired him smiling sumptuously, easy, lofty, and stately. Ah,
bon Dieu, what a pleasant companion he was, what a brilliant wit,
what a rich fund of talk, what a grand manner!—and she had
exchanged this for Major Loder, reeking of cigars and
brandy-and-water, and Captain Rook with his horsejockey jokes and
prize-ring slang, and their like. "I wonder whether he will know
me," she thought. Lord Steyne was talking and laughing with a
great and illustrious lady at his side, when he looked up and saw
Becky.
She was all over in a flutter as their
eyes met, and she put on the very best smile she could muster, and
dropped him a little, timid, imploring curtsey. He stared aghast at
her for a minute, as Macbeth might on beholding Banquo's sudden
appearance at his ball-supper, and remained looking at her with open
mouth, when that horrid Major Loder pulled her away.
"Come away into the supper-room,
Mrs. R.," was that gentleman's remark: "seeing these nobs
grubbing away has made me peckish too. Let's go and try the old
governor's champagne." Becky thought the Major had had a great
deal too much already.
The day after she went to walk on the
Pincian Hill—the Hyde Park of the Roman idlers—possibly in hopes
to have another sight of Lord Steyne. But she met another
acquaintance there: it was Mr. Fiche, his lordship's confidential
man, who came up nodding to her rather familiarly and putting a
finger to his hat. "I knew that Madame was here," he said;
"I followed her from her hotel. I have some advice to give
Madame."
"From the Marquis of Steyne?"
Becky asked, resuming as much of her dignity as she could muster, and
not a little agitated by hope and expectation.
"No," said the valet; "it
is from me. Rome is very unwholesome."
"Not at this season, Monsieur
Fiche—not till after Easter."
"I tell Madame it is unwholesome
now. There is always malaria for some people. That cursed marsh wind
kills many at all seasons. Look, Madame Crawley, you were always bon
enfant, and I have an interest in you, parole d'honneur. Be warned.
Go away from Rome, I tell you—or you will be ill and die."
Becky laughed, though in rage and fury.
"What! assassinate poor little me?" she said. "How
romantic! Does my lord carry bravos for couriers, and stilettos in
the fourgons? Bah! I will stay, if but to plague him. I have those
who will defend me whilst I am here."
It was Monsieur Fiche's turn to laugh
now. "Defend you," he said, "and who? The Major, the
Captain, any one of those gambling men whom Madame sees would take
her life for a hundred louis. We know things about Major Loder (he is
no more a Major than I am my Lord the Marquis) which would send him
to the galleys or worse. We know everything and have friends
everywhere. We know whom you saw at Paris, and what relations you
found there. Yes, Madame may stare, but we do. How was it that no
minister on the Continent would receive Madame? She has offended
somebody: who never forgives— whose rage redoubled when he saw you.
He was like a madman last night when he came home. Madame de
Belladonna made him a scene about you and fired off in one of her
furies."
"Oh, it was Madame de Belladonna,
was it?" Becky said, relieved a little, for the information she
had just got had scared her.
"No—she does not matter—she is
always jealous. I tell you it was Monseigneur. You did wrong to show
yourself to him. And if you stay here you will repent it. Mark my
words. Go. Here is my lord's carriage"—and seizing Becky's
arm, he rushed down an alley of the garden as Lord Steyne's barouche,
blazing with heraldic devices, came whirling along the avenue, borne
by the almost priceless horses, and bearing Madame de Belladonna
lolling on the cushions, dark, sulky, and blooming, a King Charles in
her lap, a white parasol swaying over her head, and old Steyne
stretched at her side with a livid face and ghastly eyes. Hate, or
anger, or desire caused them to brighten now and then still, but
ordinarily, they gave no light, and seemed tired of looking out on a
world of which almost all the pleasure and all the best beauty had
palled upon the worn-out wicked old man.
"Monseigneur has never recovered
the shock of that night, never," Monsieur Fiche whispered to
Mrs. Crawley as the carriage flashed by, and she peeped out at it
from behind the shrubs that hid her. "That was a consolation at
any rate," Becky thought.
Whether my lord really had murderous
intentions towards Mrs. Becky as Monsieur Fiche said (since
Monseigneur's death he has returned to his native country, where he
lives much respected, and has purchased from his Prince the title of
Baron Ficci), and the factotum objected to have to do with
assassination; or whether he simply had a commission to frighten Mrs.
Crawley out of a city where his Lordship proposed to pass the winter,
and the sight of her would be eminently disagreeable to the great
nobleman, is a point which has never been ascertained: but the threat
had its effect upon the little woman, and she sought no more to
intrude herself upon the presence of her old patron.
Everybody knows the melancholy end of
that nobleman, which befell at Naples two months after the French
Revolution of 1830; when the Most Honourable George Gustavus, Marquis
of Steyne, Earl of Gaunt and of Gaunt Castle, in the Peerage of
Ireland, Viscount Hellborough, Baron Pitchley and Grillsby, a Knight
of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, of the Golden Fleece of Spain,
of the Russian Order of Saint Nicholas of the First Class, of the
Turkish Order of the Crescent, First Lord of the Powder Closet and
Groom of the Back Stairs, Colonel of the Gaunt or Regent's Own
Regiment of Militia, a Trustee of the British Museum, an Elder
Brother of the Trinity House, a Governor of the White Friars, and
D.C.L.—died after a series of fits brought on, as the papers said,
by the shock occasioned to his lordship's sensibilities by the
downfall of the ancient French monarchy.
An eloquent catalogue appeared in a
weekly print, describing his virtues, his magnificence, his talents,
and his good actions. His sensibility, his attachment to the
illustrious House of Bourbon, with which he claimed an alliance, were
such that he could not survive the misfortunes of his august kinsmen.
His body was buried at Naples, and his heart—that heart which
always beat with every generous and noble emotion was brought back to
Castle Gaunt in a silver urn. "In him," Mr. Wagg said, "the
poor and the Fine Arts have lost a beneficent patron, society one of
its most brilliant ornaments, and England one of her loftiest
patriots and statesmen," &c., &c.
His will was a good deal disputed, and
an attempt was made to force from Madame de Belladonna the celebrated
jewel called the "Jew's- eye" diamond, which his lordship
always wore on his forefinger, and which it was said that she removed
from it after his lamented demise. But his confidential friend and
attendant, Monsieur Fiche proved that the ring had been presented to
the said Madame de Belladonna two days before the Marquis's death, as
were the bank- notes, jewels, Neapolitan and French bonds, &c.,
found in his lordship's secretaire and claimed by his heirs from that
injured woman.
Chapter LXV
*
Full of Business and Pleasure
The day after the meeting at the
play-table, Jos had himself arrayed with unusual care and splendour,
and without thinking it necessary to say a word to any member of his
family regarding the occurrences of the previous night, or asking for
their company in his walk, he sallied forth at an early hour, and was
presently seen making inquiries at the door of the Elephant Hotel. In
consequence of the fetes the house was full of company, the tables in
the street were already surrounded by persons smoking and drinking
the national small-beer, the public rooms were in a cloud of smoke,
and Mr. Jos having, in his pompous way, and with his clumsy German,
made inquiries for the person of whom he was in search, was directed
to the very top of the house, above the first-floor rooms where some
travelling pedlars had lived, and were exhibiting their jewellery and
brocades; above the second-floor apartments occupied by the etat
major of the gambling firm; above the third-floor rooms, tenanted by
the band of renowned Bohemian vaulters and tumblers; and so on to the
little cabins of the roof, where, among students, bagmen, small
tradesmen, and country-folks come in for the festival, Becky had
found a little nest—as dirty a little refuge as ever beauty lay hid
in.
Becky liked the life. She was at home
with everybody in the place, pedlars, punters, tumblers, students and
all. She was of a wild, roving nature, inherited from father and
mother, who were both Bohemians, by taste and circumstance; if a lord
was not by, she would talk to his courier with the greatest pleasure;
the din, the stir, the drink, the smoke, the tattle of the Hebrew
pedlars, the solemn, braggart ways of the poor tumblers, the sournois
talk of the gambling-table officials, the songs and swagger of the
students, and the general buzz and hum of the place had pleased and
tickled the little woman, even when her luck was down and she had not
wherewithal to pay her bill. How pleasant was all the bustle to her
now that her purse was full of the money which little Georgy had won
for her the night before!
As Jos came creaking and puffing up the
final stairs, and was speechless when he got to the landing, and
began to wipe his face and then to look for No. 92, the room where he
was directed to seek for the person he wanted, the door of the
opposite chamber, No. 90, was open, and a student, in jack-boots and
a dirty schlafrock, was lying on the bed smoking a long pipe; whilst
another student in long yellow hair and a braided coat, exceeding
smart and dirty too, was actually on his knees at No. 92, bawling
through the keyhole supplications to the person within.
"Go away," said a well-known
voice, which made Jos thrill, "I expect somebody; I expect my
grandpapa. He mustn't see you there."
"Angel Englanderinn!"
bellowed the kneeling student with the whity- brown ringlets and the
large finger-ring, "do take compassion upon us. Make an
appointment. Dine with me and Fritz at the inn in the park. We will
have roast pheasants and porter, plum-pudding and French wine. We
shall die if you don't."
"That we will," said the
young nobleman on the bed; and this colloquy Jos overheard, though he
did not comprehend it, for the reason that he had never studied the
language in which it was carried on.
"Newmero kattervang dooze, si vous
plait," Jos said in his grandest manner, when he was able to
speak.
"Quater fang tooce!" said the
student, starting up, and he bounced into his own room, where he
locked the door, and where Jos heard him laughing with his comrade on
the bed.
The gentleman from Bengal was standing,
disconcerted by this incident, when the door of the 92 opened of
itself and Becky's little head peeped out full of archness and
mischief. She lighted on Jos. "It's you," she said, coming
out. "How I have been waiting for you! Stop! not yet—in one
minute you shall come in." In that instant she put a rouge-pot,
a brandy bottle, and a plate of broken meat into the bed, gave one
smooth to her hair, and finally let in her visitor.
She had, by way of morning robe, a pink
domino, a trifle faded and soiled, and marked here and there with
pomaturn; but her arms shone out from the loose sleeves of the dress
very white and fair, and it was tied round her little waist so as not
ill to set off the trim little figure of the wearer. She led Jos by
the hand into her garret. "Come in," she said. "Come
and talk to me. Sit yonder on the chair"; and she gave the
civilian's hand a little squeeze and laughingly placed him upon it.
As for herself, she placed herself on the bed—not on the bottle and
plate, you may be sure—on which Jos might have reposed, had he
chosen that seat; and so there she sat and talked with her old
admirer. "How little years have changed you," she said with
a look of tender interest. "I should have known you anywhere.
What a comfort it is amongst strangers to see once more the frank
honest face of an old friend!"
The frank honest face, to tell the
truth, at this moment bore any expression but one of openness and
honesty: it was, on the contrary, much perturbed and puzzled in look.
Jos was surveying the queer little apartment in which he found his
old flame. One of her gowns hung over the bed, another depending from
a hook of the door; her bonnet obscured half the looking-glass, on
which, too, lay the prettiest little pair of bronze boots; a French
novel was on the table by the bedside, with a candle, not of wax.
Becky thought of popping that into the bed too, but she only put in
the little paper night-cap with which she had put the candle out on
going to sleep.
"I should have known you
anywhere," she continued; "a woman never forgets some
things. And you were the first man I ever—I ever saw."
"Was I really?" said Jos.
"God bless my soul, you—you don't say so."
"When I came with your sister from
Chiswick, I was scarcely more than a child," Becky said. "How
is that, dear love? Oh, her husband was a sad wicked man, and of
course it was of me that the poor dear was jealous. As if I cared
about him, heigho! when there was somebody—but no—don't let us
talk of old times"; and she passed her handkerchief with the
tattered lace across her eyelids.
"Is not this a strange place,"
she continued, "for a woman, who has lived in a very different
world too, to be found in? I have had so many griefs and wrongs,
Joseph Sedley; I have been made to suffer so cruelly that I am almost
made mad sometimes. I can't stay still in any place, but wander about
always restless and unhappy. All my friends have been false to
me—all. There is no such thing as an honest man in the world. I was
the truest wife that ever lived, though I married my husband out of
pique, because somebody else—but never mind that. I was true, and
he trampled upon me and deserted me. I was the fondest mother. I had
but one child, one darling, one hope, one joy, which I held to my
heart with a mother's affection, which was my life, my prayer, my—my
blessing; and they— they tore it from me—tore it from me";
and she put her hand to her heart with a passionate gesture of
despair, burying her face for a moment on the bed.
The brandy-bottle inside clinked up
against the plate which held the cold sausage. Both were moved, no
doubt, by the exhibition of so much grief. Max and Fritz were at the
door, listening with wonder to Mrs. Becky's sobs and cries. Jos, too,
was a good deal frightened and affected at seeing his old flame in
this condition. And she began, forthwith, to tell her story—a tale
so neat, simple, and artless that it was quite evident from hearing
her that if ever there was a white-robed angel escaped from heaven to
be subject to the infernal machinations and villainy of fiends here
below, that spotless being—that miserable unsullied martyr, was
present on the bed before Jos—on the bed, sitting on the
brandy-bottle.
They had a very long, amicable, and
confidential talk there, in the course of which Jos Sedley was
somehow made aware (but in a manner that did not in the least scare
or offend him) that Becky's heart had first learned to beat at his
enchanting presence; that George Osborne had certainly paid an
unjustifiable court to HER, which might account for Amelia's jealousy
and their little rupture; but that Becky never gave the least
encouragement to the unfortunate officer, and that she had never
ceased to think about Jos from the very first day she had seen him,
though, of course, her duties as a married woman were
paramount—duties which she had always preserved, and would, to her
dying day, or until the proverbially bad climate in which Colonel
Crawley was living should release her from a yoke which his cruelty
had rendered odious to her.
Jos went away, convinced that she was
the most virtuous, as she was one of the most fascinating of women,
and revolving in his mind all sorts of benevolent schemes for her
welfare. Her persecutions ought to be ended: she ought to return to
the society of which she was an ornament. He would see what ought to
be done. She must quit that place and take a quiet lodging. Amelia
must come and see her and befriend her. He would go and settle about
it, and consult with the Major. She wept tears of heart-felt
gratitude as she parted from him, and pressed his hand as the gallant
stout gentleman stooped down to kiss hers.
So Becky bowed Jos out of her little
garret with as much grace as if it was a palace of which she did the
honours; and that heavy gentleman having disappeared down the stairs,
Max and Fritz came out of their hole, pipe in mouth, and she amused
herself by mimicking Jos to them as she munched her cold bread and
sausage and took draughts of her favourite brandy-and-water.
Jos walked over to Dobbin's lodgings
with great solemnity and there imparted to him the affecting history
with which he had just been made acquainted, without, however,
mentioning the play business of the night before. And the two
gentlemen were laying their heads together and consulting as to the
best means of being useful to Mrs. Becky, while she was finishing her
interrupted dejeuner a la fourchette.
How was it that she had come to that
little town? How was it that she had no friends and was wandering
about alone? Little boys at school are taught in their earliest Latin
book that the path of Avernus is very easy of descent. Let us skip
over the interval in the history of her downward progress. She was
not worse now than she had been in the days of her prosperity—only
a little down on her luck.
As for Mrs. Amelia, she was a woman of
such a soft and foolish disposition that when she heard of anybody
unhappy, her heart straightway melted towards the sufferer; and as
she had never thought or done anything mortally guilty herself, she
had not that abhorrence for wickedness which distinguishes moralists
much more knowing. If she spoiled everybody who came near her with
kindness and compliments—if she begged pardon of all her servants
for troubling them to answer the bell—if she apologized to a
shopboy who showed her a piece of silk, or made a curtsey to a
street- sweeper with a complimentary remark upon the elegant state of
his crossing—and she was almost capable of every one of these
follies— the notion that an old acquaintance was miserable was sure
to soften her heart; nor would she hear of anybody's being deservedly
unhappy. A world under such legislation as hers would not be a very
orderly place of abode; but there are not many women, at least not of
the rulers, who are of her sort. This lady, I believe, would have
abolished all gaols, punishments, handcuffs, whippings, poverty,
sickness, hunger, in the world, and was such a mean-spirited creature
that—we are obliged to confess it—she could even forget a mortal
injury.
When the Major heard from Jos of the
sentimental adventure which had just befallen the latter, he was not,
it must be owned, nearly as much interested as the gentleman from
Bengal. On the contrary, his excitement was quite the reverse from a
pleasurable one; he made use of a brief but improper expression
regarding a poor woman in distress, saying, in fact, "The little
minx, has she come to light again?" He never had had the
slightest liking for her, but had heartily mistrusted her from the
very first moment when her green eyes had looked at, and turned away
from, his own.
"That little devil brings mischief
wherever she goes," the Major said disrespectfully. "Who
knows what sort of life she has been leading? And what business has
she here abroad and alone? Don't tell me about persecutors and
enemies; an honest woman always has friends and never is separated
from her family. Why has she left her husband? He may have been
disreputable and wicked, as you say. He always was. I remember the
confounded blackleg and the way in which he used to cheat and
hoodwink poor George. Wasn't there a scandal about their separation?
I think I heard something," cried out Major Dobbin, who did not
care much about gossip, and whom Jos tried in vain to convince that
Mrs. Becky was in all respects a most injured and virtuous female.
"Well, well; let's ask Mrs.
George," said that arch-diplomatist of a Major. "Only let
us go and consult her. I suppose you will allow that she is a good
judge at any rate, and knows what is right in such matters."
"Hm! Emmy is very well," said
Jos, who did not happen to be in love with his sister.
"Very well? By Gad, sir, she's the
finest lady I ever met in my life," bounced out the Major. "I
say at once, let us go and ask her if this woman ought to be visited
or not—I will be content with her verdict." Now this odious,
artful rogue of a Major was thinking in his own mind that he was sure
of his case. Emmy, he remembered, was at one time cruelly and
deservedly jealous of Rebecca, never mentioned her name but with a
shrinking and terror—a jealous woman never forgives, thought
Dobbin: and so the pair went across the street to Mrs. George's
house, where she was contentedly warbling at a music lesson with
Madame Strumpff.
When that lady took her leave, Jos
opened the business with his usual pomp of words. "Amelia, my
dear," said he, "I have just had the most
extraordinary—yes—God bless my soul! the most extraordinary
adventure—an old friend—yes, a most interesting old friend of
yours, and I may say in old times, has just arrived here, and I
should like you to see her."
"Her!" said Amelia, "who
is it? Major Dobbin, if you please not to break my scissors."
The Major was twirling them round by the little chain from which they
sometimes hung to their lady's waist, and was thereby endangering his
own eye.
It is a woman whom I dislike very
much," said the Major, doggedly, "and whom you have no
cause to love."
"It is Rebecca, I'm sure it is
Rebecca," Amelia said, blushing and being very much agitated.
"You are right; you always are,"
Dobbin answered. Brussels, Waterloo, old, old times, griefs, pangs,
remembrances, rushed back into Amelia's gentle heart and caused a
cruel agitation there.
"Don't let me see her," Emmy
continued. "I couldn't see her."
"I told you so," Dobbin said
to Jos.
"She is very unhappy, and—and
that sort of thing," Jos urged. "She is very poor and
unprotected, and has been ill—exceedingly ill—and that scoundrel
of a husband has deserted her."
"Ah!" said Amelia
"She hasn't a friend in the
world," Jos went on, not undexterously, "and she said she
thought she might trust in you. She's so miserable, Emmy. She has
been almost mad with grief. Her story quite affected me—'pon my
word and honour, it did—never was such a cruel persecution borne so
angelically, I may say. Her family has been most cruel to her."
"Poor creature!" Amelia said.
"And if she can get no friend, she
says she thinks she'll die," Jos proceeded in a low tremulous
voice. "God bless my soul! do you know that she tried to kill
herself? She carries laudanum with her— I saw the bottle in her
room—such a miserable little room—at a third-rate house, the
Elephant, up in the roof at the top of all. I went there."
This did not seem to affect Emmy. She
even smiled a little. Perhaps she figured Jos to herself panting up
the stair.
"She's beside herself with grief,"
he resumed. "The agonies that woman has endured are quite
frightful to hear of. She had a little boy, of the same age as
Georgy."
"Yes, yes, I think I remember,"
Emmy remarked. "Well?"
"The most beautiful child ever
seen," Jos said, who was very fat, and easily moved, and had
been touched by the story Becky told; "a perfect angel, who
adored his mother. The ruffians tore him shrieking out of her arms,
and have never allowed him to see her."
"Dear Joseph," Emmy cried
out, starting up at once, "let us go and see her this minute."
And she ran into her adjoining bedchamber, tied on her bonnet in a
flutter, came out with her shawl on her arm, and ordered Dobbin to
follow.
He went and put her shawl—it was a
white cashmere, consigned to her by the Major himself from India—over
her shoulders. He saw there was nothing for it but to obey, and she
put her hand into his arm, and they went away.
"It is number 92, up four pair of
stairs," Jos said, perhaps not very willing to ascend the steps
again; but he placed himself in the window of his drawing-room, which
commands the place on which the Elephant stands, and saw the pair
marching through the market.
It was as well that Becky saw them too
from her garret, for she and the two students were chattering and
laughing there; they had been joking about the appearance of Becky's
grandpapa—whose arrival and departure they had witnessed—but she
had time to dismiss them, and have her little room clear before the
landlord of the Elephant, who knew that Mrs. Osborne was a great
favourite at the Serene Court, and respected her accordingly, led the
way up the stairs to the roof story, encouraging Miladi and the Herr
Major as they achieved the ascent.
"Gracious lady, gracious lady!"
said the landlord, knocking at Becky's door; he had called her Madame
the day before, and was by no means courteous to her.
"Who is it?" Becky said,
putting out her head, and she gave a little scream. There stood Emmy
in a tremble, and Dobbin, the tall Major, with his cane.
He stood still watching, and very much
interested at the scene; but Emmy sprang forward with open arms
towards Rebecca, and forgave her at that moment, and embraced her and
kissed her with all her heart. Ah, poor wretch, when was your lip
pressed before by such pure kisses?
Chapter LXVI
*
Amantium Irae
Frankness and kindness like Amelia's
were likely to touch even such a hardened little reprobate as Becky.
She returned Emmy's caresses and kind speeches with something very
like gratitude, and an emotion which, if it was not lasting, for a
moment was almost genuine. That was a lucky stroke of hers about the
child "torn from her arms shrieking." It was by that
harrowing misfortune that Becky had won her friend back, and it was
one of the very first points, we may be certain, upon which our poor
simple little Emmy began to talk to her new-found acquaintance.
"And so they took your darling
child from you?" our simpleton cried out. "Oh, Rebecca, my
poor dear suffering friend, I know what it is to lose a boy, and to
feel for those who have lost one. But please Heaven yours will be
restored to you, as a merciful merciful Providence has brought me
back mine."
"The child, my child? Oh, yes, my
agonies were frightful," Becky owned, not perhaps without a
twinge of conscience. It jarred upon her to be obliged to commence
instantly to tell lies in reply to so much confidence and simplicity.
But that is the misfortune of beginning with this kind of forgery.
When one fib becomes due as it were, you must forge another to take
up the old acceptance; and so the stock of your lies in circulation
inevitably multiplies, and the danger of detection increases every
day.
"My agonies," Becky
continued, "were terrible (I hope she won't sit down on the
bottle) when they took him away from me; I thought I should die; but
I fortunately had a brain fever, during which my doctor gave me up,
and—and I recovered, and—and here I am, poor and friendless."
"How old is he?" Emmy asked.
"Eleven," said Becky.
"Eleven!" cried the other.
"Why, he was born the same year with Georgy, who is—"
"I know, I know," Becky cried
out, who had in fact quite forgotten all about little Rawdon's age.
"Grief has made me forget so many things, dearest Amelia. I am
very much changed: half-wild sometimes. He was eleven when they took
him away from me. Bless his sweet face; I have never seen it again."
"Was he fair or dark?" went
on that absurd little Emmy. "Show me his hair."
Becky almost laughed at her simplicity.
"Not to-day, love—some other time, when my trunks arrive from
Leipzig, whence I came to this place—and a little drawing of him,
which I made in happy days."
"Poor Becky, poor Becky!"
said Emmy. "How thankful, how thankful I ought to be";
(though I doubt whether that practice of piety inculcated upon us by
our womankind in early youth, namely, to be thankful because we are
better off than somebody else, be a very rational religious exercise)
and then she began to think, as usual, how her son was the
handsomest, the best, and the cleverest boy in the whole world.
"You will see my Georgy," was
the best thing Emmy could think of to console Becky. If anything
could make her comfortable that would.
And so the two women continued talking
for an hour or more, during which Becky had the opportunity of giving
her new friend a full and complete version of her private history.
She showed how her marriage with Rawdon Crawley had always been
viewed by the family with feelings of the utmost hostility; how her
sister-in-law (an artful woman) had poisoned her husband's mind
against her; how he had formed odious connections, which had
estranged his affections from her: how she had borne
everything—poverty, neglect, coldness from the being whom she most
loved—and all for the sake of her child; how, finally, and by the
most flagrant outrage, she had been driven into demanding a
separation from her husband, when the wretch did not scruple to ask
that she should sacrifice her own fair fame so that he might procure
advancement through the means of a very great and powerful but
unprincipled man—the Marquis of Steyne, indeed. The atrocious
monster!
This part of her eventful history Becky
gave with the utmost feminine delicacy and the most indignant virtue.
Forced to fly her husband's roof by this insult, the coward had
pursued his revenge by taking her child from her. And thus Becky said
she was a wanderer, poor, unprotected, friendless, and wretched.
Emmy received this story, which was
told at some length, as those persons who are acquainted with her
character may imagine that she would. She quivered with indignation
at the account of the conduct of the miserable Rawdon and the
unprincipled Steyne. Her eyes made notes of admiration for every one
of the sentences in which Becky described the persecutions of her
aristocratic relatives and the falling away of her husband. (Becky
did not abuse him. She spoke rather in sorrow than in anger. She had
loved him only too fondly: and was he not the father of her boy?) And
as for the separation scene from the child, while Becky was reciting
it, Emmy retired altogether behind her pocket-handkerchief, so that
the consummate little tragedian must have been charmed to see the
effect which her performance produced on her audience.
Whilst the ladies were carrying on
their conversation, Amelia's constant escort, the Major (who, of
course, did not wish to interrupt their conference, and found himself
rather tired of creaking about the narrow stair passage of which the
roof brushed the nap from his hat) descended to the ground-floor of
the house and into the great room common to all the frequenters of
the Elephant, out of which the stair led. This apartment is always in
a fume of smoke and liberally sprinkled with beer. On a dirty table
stand scores of corresponding brass candlesticks with tallow candles
for the lodgers, whose keys hang up in rows over the candles. Emmy
had passed blushing through the room anon, where all sorts of people
were collected; Tyrolese glove-sellers and Danubian linen-merchants,
with their packs; students recruiting themselves with butterbrods and
meat; idlers, playing cards or dominoes on the sloppy, beery tables;
tumblers refreshing during the cessation of their performances—in a
word, all the fumum and strepitus of a German inn in fair time. The
waiter brought the Major a mug of beer, as a matter of course, and he
took out a cigar and amused himself with that pernicious vegetable
and a newspaper until his charge should come down to claim him.
Max and Fritz came presently
downstairs, their caps on one side, their spurs jingling, their pipes
splendid with coats of arms and full-blown tassels, and they hung up
the key of No. 90 on the board and called for the ration of
butterbrod and beer. The pair sat down by the Major and fell into a
conversation of which he could not help hearing somewhat. It was
mainly about "Fuchs" and "Philister," and duels
and drinking-bouts at the neighbouring University of Schoppenhausen,
from which renowned seat of learning they had just come in the
Eilwagen, with Becky, as it appeared, by their side, and in order to
be present at the bridal fetes at Pumpernickel.
"The title Englanderinn seems to
be en bays de gonnoisance," said Max, who knew the French
language, to Fritz, his comrade. "After the fat grandfather went
away, there came a pretty little compatriot. I heard them chattering
and whimpering together in the little woman's chamber."
"We must take the tickets for her
concert," Fritz said. "Hast thou any money, Max?"
"Bah," said the other, "the
concert is a concert in nubibus. Hans said that she advertised one at
Leipzig, and the Burschen took many tickets. But she went off without
singing. She said in the coach yesterday that her pianist had fallen
ill at Dresden. She cannot sing, it is my belief: her voice is as
cracked as thine, O thou beer-soaking Renowner!"
"It is cracked; I hear her trying
out of her window a schrecklich. English ballad, called 'De Rose upon
de Balgony.'"
"Saufen and singen go not
together," observed Fritz with the red nose, who evidently
preferred the former amusement. "No, thou shalt take none of her
tickets. She won money at the trente and quarante last night. I saw
her: she made a little English boy play for her. We will spend thy
money there or at the theatre, or we will treat her to French wine or
Cognac in the Aurelius Garden, but the tickets we will not buy. What
sayest thou? Yet, another mug of beer?" and one and another
successively having buried their blond whiskers in the mawkish
draught, curled them and swaggered off into the fair.
The Major, who had seen the key of No.
90 put up on its hook and had heard the conversation of the two young
University bloods, was not at a loss to understand that their talk
related to Becky. "The little devil is at her old tricks,"
he thought, and he smiled as he recalled old days, when he had
witnessed the desperate flirtation with Jos and the ludicrous end of
that adventure. He and George had often laughed over it subsequently,
and until a few weeks after George's marriage, when he also was
caught in the little Circe's toils, and had an understanding with her
which his comrade certainly suspected, but preferred to ignore.
William was too much hurt or ashamed to ask to fathom that
disgraceful mystery, although once, and evidently with remorse on his
mind, George had alluded to it. It was on the morning of Waterloo, as
the young men stood together in front of their line, surveying the
black masses of Frenchmen who crowned the opposite heights, and as
the rain was coming down, "I have been mixing in a foolish
intrigue with a woman," George said. "I am glad we were
marched away. If I drop, I hope Emmy will never know of that
business. I wish to God it had never been begun!" And William
was pleased to think, and had more than once soothed poor George's
widow with the narrative, that Osborne, after quitting his wife, and
after the action of Quatre Bras, on the first day, spoke gravely and
affectionately to his comrade of his father and his wife. On these
facts, too, William had insisted very strongly in his conversations
with the elder Osborne, and had thus been the means of reconciling
the old gentleman to his son's memory, just at the close of the elder
man's life.
"And so this devil is still going
on with her intrigues," thought William. "I wish she were a
hundred miles from here. She brings mischief wherever she goes."
And he was pursuing these forebodings and this uncomfortable train of
thought, with his head between his hands, and the Pumpernickel
Gazette of last week unread under his nose, when somebody tapped his
shoulder with a parasol, and he looked up and saw Mrs. Amelia.
This woman had a way of tyrannizing
over Major Dobbin (for the weakest of all people will domineer over
somebody), and she ordered him about, and patted him, and made him
fetch and carry just as if he was a great Newfoundland dog. He liked,
so to speak, to jump into the water if she said "High, Dobbin!"
and to trot behind her with her reticule in his mouth. This history
has been written to very little purpose if the reader has not
perceived that the Major was a spooney.
"Why did you not wait for me, sir,
to escort me downstairs?" she said, giving a little toss of her
head and a most sarcastic curtsey.
"I couldn't stand up in the
passage," he answered with a comical deprecatory look; and,
delighted to give her his arm and to take her out of the horrid smoky
place, he would have walked off without even so much as remembering
the waiter, had not the young fellow run after him and stopped him on
the threshold of the Elephant to make him pay for the beer which he
had not consumed. Emmy laughed: she called him a naughty man, who
wanted to run away in debt, and, in fact, made some jokes suitable to
the occasion and the small-beer. She was in high spirits and good
humour, and tripped across the market-place very briskly. She wanted
to see Jos that instant. The Major laughed at the impetuous affection
Mrs. Amelia exhibited; for, in truth, it was not very often that she
wanted her brother "that instant." They found the civilian
in his saloon on the first-floor; he had been pacing the room, and
biting his nails, and looking over the market-place towards the
Elephant a hundred times at least during the past hour whilst Emmy
was closeted with her friend in the garret and the Major was beating
the tattoo on the sloppy tables of the public room below, and he was,
on his side too, very anxious to see Mrs. Osborne.
"Well?" said he.
"The poor dear creature, how she
has suffered!" Emmy said.
"God bless my soul, yes," Jos
said, wagging his head, so that his cheeks quivered like jellies.
"She may have Payne's room, who
can go upstairs," Emmy continued. Payne was a staid English maid
and personal attendant upon Mrs. Osborne, to whom the courier, as in
duty bound, paid court, and whom Georgy used to "lark"
dreadfully with accounts of German robbers and ghosts. She passed her
time chiefly in grumbling, in ordering about her mistress, and in
stating her intention to return the next morning to her native
village of Clapham. "She may have Payne's room," Emmy said.
"Why, you don't mean to say you
are going to have that woman into the house?" bounced out the
Major, jumping up.
"Of course we are," said
Amelia in the most innocent way in the world. "Don't be angry
and break the furniture, Major Dobbin. Of course we are going to have
her here."
"Of course, my dear," Jos
said.
"The poor creature, after all her
sufferings," Emmy continued; "her horrid banker broken and
run away; her husband—wicked wretch— having deserted her and
taken her child away from her" (here she doubled her two little
fists and held them in a most menacing attitude before her, so that
the Major was charmed to see such a dauntless virago) "the poor
dear thing! quite alone and absolutely forced to give lessons in
singing to get her bread—and not have her here!"
"Take lessons, my dear Mrs.
George," cried the Major, "but don't have her in the house.
I implore you don't."
"Pooh," said Jos.
"You who are always good and
kind—always used to be at any rate— I'm astonished at you, Major
William," Amelia cried. "Why, what is the moment to help
her but when she is so miserable? Now is the time to be of service to
her. The oldest friend I ever had, and not—"
"She was not always your friend,
Amelia," the Major said, for he was quite angry. This allusion
was too much for Emmy, who, looking the Major almost fiercely in the
face, said, "For shame, Major Dobbin!" and after having
fired this shot, she walked out of the room with a most majestic air
and shut her own door briskly on herself and her outraged dignity.
"To allude to THAT!" she
said, when the door was closed. "Oh, it was cruel of him to
remind me of it," and she looked up at George's picture, which
hung there as usual, with the portrait of the boy underneath. "It
was cruel of him. If I had forgiven it, ought he to have spoken? No.
And it is from his own lips that I know how wicked and groundless my
jealousy was; and that you were pure—oh, yes, you were pure, my
saint in heaven!"
She paced the room, trembling and
indignant. She went and leaned on the chest of drawers over which the
picture hung, and gazed and gazed at it. Its eyes seemed to look down
on her with a reproach that deepened as she looked. The early dear,
dear memories of that brief prime of love rushed back upon her. The
wound which years had scarcely cicatrized bled afresh, and oh, how
bitterly! She could not bear the reproaches of the husband there
before her. It couldn't be. Never, never.
Poor Dobbin; poor old William! That
unlucky word had undone the work of many a year—the long laborious
edifice of a life of love and constancy—raised too upon what secret
and hidden foundations, wherein lay buried passions, uncounted
struggles, unknown sacrifices—a little word was spoken, and down
fell the fair palace of hope—one word, and away flew the bird which
he had been trying all his life to lure!
William, though he saw by Amelia's
looks that a great crisis had come, nevertheless continued to implore
Sedley, in the most energetic terms, to beware of Rebecca; and he
eagerly, almost frantically, adjured Jos not to receive her. He
besought Mr. Sedley to inquire at least regarding her; told him how
he had heard that she was in the company of gamblers and people of
ill repute; pointed out what evil she had done in former days, how
she and Crawley had misled poor George into ruin, how she was now
parted from her husband, by her own confession, and, perhaps, for
good reason. What a dangerous companion she would be for his sister,
who knew nothing of the affairs of the world! William implored Jos,
with all the eloquence which he could bring to bear, and a great deal
more energy than this quiet gentleman was ordinarily in the habit of
showing, to keep Rebecca out of his household.
Had he been less violent, or more
dexterous, he might have succeeded in his supplications to Jos; but
the civilian was not a little jealous of the airs of superiority
which the Major constantly exhibited towards him, as he fancied
(indeed, he had imparted his opinions to Mr. Kirsch, the courier,
whose bills Major Dobbin checked on this journey, and who sided with
his master), and he began a blustering speech about his competency to
defend his own honour, his desire not to have his affairs meddled
with, his intention, in fine, to rebel against the Major, when the
colloquy— rather a long and stormy one—was put an end to in the
simplest way possible, namely, by the arrival of Mrs. Becky, with a
porter from the Elephant Hotel in charge of her very meagre baggage.
She greeted her host with affectionate
respect and made a shrinking, but amicable salutation to Major
Dobbin, who, as her instinct assured her at once, was her enemy, and
had been speaking against her; and the bustle and clatter consequent
upon her arrival brought Amelia out of her room. Emmy went up and
embraced her guest with the greatest warmth, and took no notice of
the Major, except to fling him an angry look—the most unjust and
scornful glance that had perhaps ever appeared in that poor little
woman's face since she was born. But she had private reasons of her
own, and was bent upon being angry with him. And Dobbin, indignant at
the injustice, not at the defeat, went off, making her a bow quite as
haughty as the killing curtsey with which the little woman chose to
bid him farewell.
He being gone, Emmy was particularly
lively and affectionate to Rebecca, and bustled about the apartments
and installed her guest in her room with an eagerness and activity
seldom exhibited by our placid little friend. But when an act of
injustice is to be done, especially by weak people, it is best that
it should be done quickly, and Emmy thought she was displaying a
great deal of firmness and proper feeling and veneration for the late
Captain Osborne in her present behaviour.
Georgy came in from the fetes for
dinner-time and found four covers laid as usual; but one of the
places was occupied by a lady, instead of by Major Dobbin. "Hullo!
where's Dob?" the young gentleman asked with his usual
simplicity of language. "Major Dobbin is dining out, I suppose,"
his mother said, and, drawing the boy to her, kissed him a great
deal, and put his hair off his forehead, and introduced him to Mrs.
Crawley. "This is my boy, Rebecca," Mrs. Osborne said—as
much as to say—can the world produce anything like that? Becky
looked at him with rapture and pressed his hand fondly. "Dear
boy!" she said—"he is just like my—" Emotion
choked her further utterance, but Amelia understood, as well as if
she had spoken, that Becky was thinking of her own blessed child.
However, the company of her friend consoled Mrs. Crawley, and she ate
a very good dinner.
During the repast, she had occasion to
speak several times, when Georgy eyed her and listened to her. At the
desert Emmy was gone out to superintend further domestic
arrangements; Jos was in his great chair dozing over Galignani;
Georgy and the new arrival sat close to each other—he had continued
to look at her knowingly more than once, and at last he laid down the
nutcrackers.
"I say," said Georgy.
"What do you say?" Becky
said, laughing.
"You're the lady I saw in the mask
at the Rouge et Noir."
"Hush! you little sly creature,"
Becky said, taking up his hand and kissing it. "Your uncle was
there too, and Mamma mustn't know."
"Oh, no—not by no means,"
answered the little fellow.
"You see we are quite good friends
already," Becky said to Emmy, who now re-entered; and it must be
owned that Mrs. Osborne had introduced a most judicious and amiable
companion into her house.
William, in a state of great
indignation, though still unaware of all the treason that was in
store for him, walked about the town wildly until he fell upon the
Secretary of Legation, Tapeworm, who invited him to dinner. As they
were discussing that meal, he took occasion to ask the Secretary
whether he knew anything about a certain Mrs. Rawdon Crawley, who
had, he believed, made some noise in London; and then Tapeworm, who
of course knew all the London gossip, and was besides a relative of
Lady Gaunt, poured out into the astonished Major's ears such a
history about Becky and her husband as astonished the querist, and
supplied all the points of this narrative, for it was at that very
table years ago that the present writer had the pleasure of hearing
the tale. Tufto, Steyne, the Crawleys, and their history—everything
connected with Becky and her previous life passed under the record of
the bitter diplomatist. He knew everything and a great deal besides,
about all the world—in a word, he made the most astounding
revelations to the simple- hearted Major. When Dobbin said that Mrs.
Osborne and Mr. Sedley had taken her into their house, Tapeworm burst
into a peal of laughter which shocked the Major, and asked if they
had not better send into the prison and take in one or two of the
gentlemen in shaved heads and yellow jackets who swept the streets of
Pumpernickel, chained in pairs, to board and lodge, and act as tutor
to that little scapegrace Georgy.
This information astonished and
horrified the Major not a little. It had been agreed in the morning
(before meeting with Rebecca) that Amelia should go to the Court ball
that night. There would be the place where he should tell her. The
Major went home, and dressed himself in his uniform, and repaired to
Court, in hopes to see Mrs. Osborne. She never came. When he returned
to his lodgings all the lights in the Sedley tenement were put out.
He could not see her till the morning. I don't know what sort of a
night's rest he had with this frightful secret in bed with him.
At the earliest convenient hour in the
morning he sent his servant across the way with a note, saying that
he wished very particularly to speak with her. A message came back to
say that Mrs. Osborne was exceedingly unwell and was keeping her
room.
She, too, had been awake all that
night. She had been thinking of a thing which had agitated her mind a
hundred times before. A hundred times on the point of yielding, she
had shrunk back from a sacrifice which she felt was too much for her.
She couldn't, in spite of his love and constancy and her own
acknowledged regard, respect, and gratitude. What are benefits, what
is constancy, or merit? One curl of a girl's ringlet, one hair of a
whisker, will turn the scale against them all in a minute. They did
not weigh with Emmy more than with other women. She had tried them;
wanted to make them pass; could not; and the pitiless little woman
had found a pretext, and determined to be free.
When at length, in the afternoon, the
Major gained admission to Amelia, instead of the cordial and
affectionate greeting, to which he had been accustomed now for many a
long day, he received the salutation of a curtsey, and of a little
gloved hand, retracted the moment after it was accorded to him.
Rebecca, too, was in the room, and
advanced to meet him with a smile and an extended hand. Dobbin drew
back rather confusedly, "I—I beg your pardon, m'am," he
said; "but I am bound to tell you that it is not as your friend
that I am come here now."
"Pooh! damn; don't let us have
this sort of thing!" Jos cried out, alarmed, and anxious to get
rid of a scene.
"I wonder what Major Dobbin has to
say against Rebecca?" Amelia said in a low, clear voice with a
slight quiver in it, and a very determined look about the eyes.
"I will not have this sort of
thing in my house," Jos again interposed. "I say I will not
have it; and Dobbin, I beg, sir, you'll stop it." And he looked
round, trembling and turning very red, and gave a great puff, and
made for his door.
"Dear friend!" Rebecca said
with angelic sweetness, "do hear what Major Dobbin has to say
against me."
"I will not hear it, I say,"
squeaked out Jos at the top of his voice, and, gathering up his
dressing-gown, he was gone.
"We are only two women,"
Amelia said. "You can speak now, sir."
"This manner towards me is one
which scarcely becomes you, Amelia," the Major answered
haughtily; "nor I believe am I guilty of habitual harshness to
women. It is not a pleasure to me to do the duty which I am come to
do."
"Pray proceed with it quickly, if
you please, Major Dobbin," said Amelia, who was more and more in
a pet. The expression of Dobbin's face, as she spoke in this
imperious manner, was not pleasant.
"I came to say—and as you stay,
Mrs. Crawley, I must say it in your presence—that I think you—you
ought not to form a member of the family of my friends. A lady who is
separated from her husband, who travels not under her own name, who
frequents public gaming-tables—"
"It was to the ball I went,"
cried out Becky.
"—is not a fit companion for
Mrs. Osborne and her son," Dobbin went on: "and I may add
that there are people here who know you, and who profess to know that
regarding your conduct about which I don't even wish to speak
before—before Mrs. Osborne."
"Yours is a very modest and
convenient sort of calumny, Major Dobbin," Rebecca said. "You
leave me under the weight of an accusation which, after all, is
unsaid. What is it? Is it unfaithfulness to my husband? I scorn it
and defy anybody to prove it—I defy you, I say. My honour is as
untouched as that of the bitterest enemy who ever maligned me. Is it
of being poor, forsaken, wretched, that you accuse me? Yes, I am
guilty of those faults, and punished for them every day. Let me go,
Emmy. It is only to suppose that I have not met you, and I am no
worse to-day than I was yesterday. It is only to suppose that the
night is over and the poor wanderer is on her way. Don't you remember
the song we used to sing in old, dear old days? I have been wandering
ever since then—a poor castaway, scorned for being miserable, and
insulted because I am alone. Let me go: my stay here interferes with
the plans of this gentleman."
"Indeed it does, madam," said
the Major. "If I have any authority in this house—"
"Authority, none!" broke out
Amelia "Rebecca, you stay with me. I won't desert you because
you have been persecuted, or insult you because—because Major
Dobbin chooses to do so. Come away, dear." And the two women
made towards the door.
William opened it. As they were going
out, however, he took Amelia's hand and said—"Will you stay a
moment and speak to me?"
"He wishes to speak to you away
from me," said Becky, looking like a martyr. Amelia gripped her
hand in reply.
"Upon my honour it is not about
you that I am going to speak," Dobbin said. "Come back,
Amelia," and she came. Dobbin bowed to Mrs. Crawley, as he shut
the door upon her. Amelia looked at him, leaning against the glass:
her face and her lips were quite white.
"I was confused when I spoke just
now," the Major said after a pause, "and I misused the word
authority."
"You did," said Amelia with
her teeth chattering.
"At least I have claims to be
heard," Dobbin continued.
"It is generous to remind me of
our obligations to you," the woman answered.
"The claims I mean are those left
me by George's father," William said.
"Yes, and you insulted his memory.
You did yesterday. You know you did. And I will never forgive you.
Never!" said Amelia. She shot out each little sentence in a
tremor of anger and emotion.
"You don't mean that, Amelia?"
William said sadly. "You don't mean that these words, uttered in
a hurried moment, are to weigh against a whole life's devotion? I
think that George's memory has not been injured by the way in which I
have dealt with it, and if we are come to bandying reproaches, I at
least merit none from his widow and the mother of his son. Reflect,
afterwards when—when you are at leisure, and your conscience will
withdraw this accusation. It does even now." Amelia held down
her head.
"It is not that speech of
yesterday," he continued, "which moves you. That is but the
pretext, Amelia, or I have loved you and watched you for fifteen
years in vain. Have I not learned in that time to read all your
feelings and look into your thoughts? I know what your heart is
capable of: it can cling faithfully to a recollection and cherish a
fancy, but it can't feel such an attachment as mine deserves to mate
with, and such as I would have won from a woman more generous than
you. No, you are not worthy of the love which I have devoted to you.
I knew all along that the prize I had set my life on was not worth
the winning; that I was a fool, with fond fancies, too, bartering
away my all of truth and ardour against your little feeble remnant of
love. I will bargain no more: I withdraw. I find no fault with you.
You are very good- natured, and have done your best, but you
couldn't—you couldn't reach up to the height of the attachment
which I bore you, and which a loftier soul than yours might have been
proud to share. Good-bye, Amelia! I have watched your struggle. Let
it end. We are both weary of it."
Amelia stood scared and silent as
William thus suddenly broke the chain by which she held him and
declared his independence and superiority. He had placed himself at
her feet so long that the poor little woman had been accustomed to
trample upon him. She didn't wish to marry him, but she wished to
keep him. She wished to give him nothing, but that he should give her
all. It is a bargain not unfrequently levied in love.
William's sally had quite broken and
cast her down. HER assault was long since over and beaten back.
"Am I to understand then, that you
are going—away, William?" she said.
He gave a sad laugh. "I went once
before," he said, "and came back after twelve years. We
were young then, Amelia. Good-bye. I have spent enough of my life at
this play."
Whilst they had been talking, the door
into Mrs. Osborne's room had opened ever so little; indeed, Becky had
kept a hold of the handle and had turned it on the instant when
Dobbin quitted it, and she heard every word of the conversation that
had passed between these two. "What a noble heart that man has,"
she thought, "and how shamefully that woman plays with it!"
She admired Dobbin; she bore him no rancour for the part he had taken
against her. It was an open move in the game, and played fairly.
"Ah!" she thought, "if I could have had such a husband
as that—a man with a heart and brains too! I would not have minded
his large feet"; and running into her room, she absolutely
bethought herself of something, and wrote him a note, beseeching him
to stop for a few days—not to think of going— and that she could
serve him with A.
The parting was over. Once more poor
William walked to the door and was gone; and the little widow, the
author of all this work, had her will, and had won her victory, and
was left to enjoy it as she best might. Let the ladies envy her
triumph.
At the romantic hour of dinner, Mr.
Georgy made his appearance and again remarked the absence of "Old
Dob." The meal was eaten in silence by the party. Jos's appetite
not being diminished, but Emmy taking nothing at all.
After the meal, Georgy was lolling in
the cushions of the old window, a large window, with three sides of
glass abutting from the gable, and commanding on one side the
market-place, where the Elephant is, his mother being busy hard by,
when he remarked symptoms of movement at the Major's house on the
other side of the street.
"Hullo!" said he, "there's
Dob's trap—they are bringing it out of the court-yard." The
"trap" in question was a carriage which the Major had
bought for six pounds sterling, and about which they used to rally
him a good deal.
Emmy gave a little start, but said
nothing.
"Hullo!" Georgy continued,
"there's Francis coming out with the portmanteaus, and Kunz, the
one-eyed postilion, coming down the market with three schimmels. Look
at his boots and yellow jacket— ain't he a rum one? Why—they're
putting the horses to Dob's carriage. Is he going anywhere?"
"Yes," said Emmy, "he is
going on a journey."
"Going on a journey; and when is
he coming back?"
"He is—not coming back,"
answered Emmy.
"Not coming back!" cried out
Georgy, jumping up. "Stay here, sir," roared out Jos.
"Stay, Georgy," said his mother with a very sad face. The
boy stopped, kicked about the room, jumped up and down from the
window-seat with his knees, and showed every symptom of uneasiness
and curiosity.
The horses were put to. The baggage was
strapped on. Francis came out with his master's sword, cane, and
umbrella tied up together, and laid them in the well, and his desk
and old tin cocked-hat case, which he placed under the seat. Francis
brought out the stained old blue cloak lined with red camlet, which
had wrapped the owner up any time these fifteen years, and had
manchen Sturm erlebt, as a favourite song of those days said. It had
been new for the campaign of Waterloo and had covered George and
William after the night of Quatre Bras.
Old Burcke, the landlord of the
lodgings, came out, then Francis, with more packages—final
packages—then Major William—Burcke wanted to kiss him. The Major
was adored by all people with whom he had to do. It was with
difficulty he could escape from this demonstration of attachment.
"By Jove, I will go!"
screamed out George. "Give him this," said Becky, quite
interested, and put a paper into the boy's hand. He had rushed down
the stairs and flung across the street in a minute— the yellow
postilion was cracking his whip gently.
William had got into the carriage,
released from the embraces of his landlord. George bounded in
afterwards, and flung his arms round the Major's neck (as they saw
from the window), and began asking him multiplied questions. Then he
felt in his waistcoat pocket and gave him a note. William seized at
it rather eagerly, he opened it trembling, but instantly his
countenance changed, and he tore the paper in two and dropped it out
of the carriage. He kissed Georgy on the head, and the boy got out,
doubling his fists into his eyes, and with the aid of Francis. He
lingered with his hand on the panel. Fort, Schwager! The yellow
postilion cracked his whip prodigiously, up sprang Francis to the
box, away went the schimmels, and Dobbin with his head on his breast.
He never looked up as they passed under Amelia's window, and Georgy,
left alone in the street, burst out crying in the face of all the
crowd.
Emmy's maid heard him howling again
during the night and brought him some preserved apricots to console
him. She mingled her lamentations with his. All the poor, all the
humble, all honest folks, all good men who knew him, loved that
kind-hearted and simple gentleman.
As for Emmy, had she not done her duty?
She had her picture of George for a consolation.
Chapter LXVII
*
Which Contains Births, Marriages, and
Deaths
Whatever Becky's private plan might be
by which Dobbin's true love was to be crowned with success, the
little woman thought that the secret might keep, and indeed, being by
no means so much interested about anybody's welfare as about her own,
she had a great number of things pertaining to herself to consider,
and which concerned her a great deal more than Major Dobbin's
happiness in this life.
She found herself suddenly and
unexpectedly in snug comfortable quarters, surrounded by friends,
kindness, and good-natured simple people such as she had not met with
for many a long day; and, wanderer as she was by force and
inclination, there were moments when rest was pleasant to her. As the
most hardened Arab that ever careered across the desert over the hump
of a dromedary likes to repose sometimes under the date-trees by the
water, or to come into the cities, walk into the bazaars, refresh
himself in the baths, and say his prayers in the mosques, before he
goes out again marauding, so Jos's tents and pilau were pleasant to
this little Ishmaelite. She picketed her steed, hung up her weapons,
and warmed herself comfortably by his fire. The halt in that roving,
restless life was inexpressibly soothing and pleasant to her.
So, pleased herself, she tried with all
her might to please everybody; and we know that she was eminent and
successful as a practitioner in the art of giving pleasure. As for
Jos, even in that little interview in the garret at the Elephant Inn,
she had found means to win back a great deal of his good-will. In the
course of a week, the civilian was her sworn slave and frantic
admirer. He didn't go to sleep after dinner, as his custom was in the
much less lively society of Amelia. He drove out with Becky in his
open carriage. He asked little parties and invented festivities to do
her honour.
Tapeworm, the Charge d'Affaires, who
had abused her so cruelly, came to dine with Jos, and then came every
day to pay his respects to Becky. Poor Emmy, who was never very
talkative, and more glum and silent than ever after Dobbin's
departure, was quite forgotten when this superior genius made her
appearance. The French Minister was as much charmed with her as his
English rival. The German ladies, never particularly squeamish as
regards morals, especially in English people, were delighted with the
cleverness and wit of Mrs. Osborne's charming friend, and though she
did not ask to go to Court, yet the most august and Transparent
Personages there heard of her fascinations and were quite curious to
know her. When it became known that she was noble, of an ancient
English family, that her husband was a Colonel of the Guard,
Excellenz and Governor of an island, only separated from his lady by
one of those trifling differences which are of little account in a
country where Werther is still read and the Wahlverwandtschaften of
Goethe is considered an edifying moral book, nobody thought of
refusing to receive her in the very highest society of the little
Duchy; and the ladies were even more ready to call her du and to
swear eternal friendship for her than they had been to bestow the
same inestimable benefits upon Amelia. Love and Liberty are
interpreted by those simple Germans in a way which honest folks in
Yorkshire and Somersetshire little understand, and a lady might, in
some philosophic and civilized towns, be divorced ever so many times
from her respective husbands and keep her character in society. Jos's
house never was so pleasant since he had a house of his own as
Rebecca caused it to be. She sang, she played, she laughed, she
talked in two or three languages, she brought everybody to the house,
and she made Jos believe that it was his own great social talents and
wit which gathered the society of the place round about him.
As for Emmy, who found herself not in
the least mistress of her own house, except when the bills were to be
paid, Becky soon discovered the way to soothe and please her. She
talked to her perpetually about Major Dobbin sent about his business,
and made no scruple of declaring her admiration for that excellent,
high-minded gentleman, and of telling Emmy that she had behaved most
cruelly regarding him. Emmy defended her conduct and showed that it
was dictated only by the purest religious principles; that a woman
once, &c., and to such an angel as him whom she had had the good
fortune to marry, was married forever; but she had no objection to
hear the Major praised as much as ever Becky chose to praise him, and
indeed, brought the conversation round to the Dobbin subject a score
of times every day.
Means were easily found to win the
favour of Georgy and the servants. Amelia's maid, it has been said,
was heart and soul in favour of the generous Major. Having at first
disliked Becky for being the means of dismissing him from the
presence of her mistress, she was reconciled to Mrs. Crawley
subsequently, because the latter became William's most ardent admirer
and champion. And in those nightly conclaves in which the two ladies
indulged after their parties, and while Miss Payne was "brushing
their 'airs," as she called the yellow locks of the one and the
soft brown tresses of the other, this girl always put in her word for
that dear good gentleman Major Dobbin. Her advocacy did not make
Amelia angry any more than Rebecca's admiration of him. She made
George write to him constantly and persisted in sending Mamma's kind
love in a postscript. And as she looked at her husband's portrait of
nights, it no longer reproached her—perhaps she reproached it, now
William was gone.
Emmy was not very happy after her
heroic sacrifice. She was very distraite, nervous, silent, and ill to
please. The family had never known her so peevish. She grew pale and
ill. She used to try to sing certain songs ("Einsam bin ich
nicht alleine," was one of them, that tender love-song of
Weber's which in old-fashioned days, young ladies, and when you were
scarcely born, showed that those who lived before you knew too how to
love and to sing) certain songs, I say, to which the Major was
partial; and as she warbled them in the twilight in the drawing-room,
she would break off in the midst of the song, and walk into her
neighbouring apartment, and there, no doubt, take refuge in the
miniature of her husband.
Some books still subsisted, after
Dobbin's departure, with his name written in them; a German
dictionary, for instance, with "William Dobbin, —th Reg.,"
in the fly-leaf; a guide-book with his initials; and one or two other
volumes which belonged to the Major. Emmy cleared these away and put
them on the drawers, where she placed her work-box, her desk, her
Bible, and prayer-book, under the pictures of the two Georges. And
the Major, on going away, having left his gloves behind him, it is a
fact that Georgy, rummaging his mother's desk some time afterwards,
found the gloves neatly folded up and put away in what they call the
secret-drawers of the desk.
Not caring for society, and moping
there a great deal, Emmy's chief pleasure in the summer evenings was
to take long walks with Georgy (during which Rebecca was left to the
society of Mr. Joseph), and then the mother and son used to talk
about the Major in a way which even made the boy smile. She told him
that she thought Major William was the best man in all the world—the
gentlest and the kindest, the bravest and the humblest. Over and over
again she told him how they owed everything which they possessed in
the world to that kind friend's benevolent care of them; how he had
befriended them all through their poverty and misfortunes; watched
over them when nobody cared for them; how all his comrades admired
him though he never spoke of his own gallant actions; how Georgy's
father trusted him beyond all other men, and had been constantly
befriended by the good William. "Why, when your papa was a
little boy," she said, "he often told me that it was
William who defended him against a tyrant at the school where they
were; and their friendship never ceased from that day until the last,
when your dear father fell."
"Did Dobbin kill the man who
killed Papa?" Georgy said. "I'm sure he did, or he would if
he could have caught him, wouldn't he, Mother? When I'm in the Army,
won't I hate the French?—that's all."
In such colloquies the mother and the
child passed a great deal of their time together. The artless woman
had made a confidant of the boy. He was as much William's friend as
everybody else who knew him well.
By the way, Mrs. Becky, not to be
behind hand in sentiment, had got a miniature too hanging up in her
room, to the surprise and amusement of most people, and the delight
of the original, who was no other than our friend Jos. On her first
coming to favour the Sedleys with a visit, the little woman, who had
arrived with a remarkably small shabby kit, was perhaps ashamed of
the meanness of her trunks and bandboxes, and often spoke with great
respect about her baggage left behind at Leipzig, which she must have
from that city. When a traveller talks to you perpetually about the
splendour of his luggage, which he does not happen to have with him,
my son, beware of that traveller! He is, ten to one, an impostor.
Neither Jos nor Emmy knew this
important maxim. It seemed to them of no consequence whether Becky
had a quantity of very fine clothes in invisible trunks; but as her
present supply was exceedingly shabby, Emmy supplied her out of her
own stores, or took her to the best milliner in the town and there
fitted her out. It was no more torn collars now, I promise you, and
faded silks trailing off at the shoulder. Becky changed her habits
with her situation in life—the rouge-pot was suspended—another
excitement to which she had accustomed herself was also put aside, or
at least only indulged in in privacy, as when she was prevailed on by
Jos of a summer evening, Emmy and the boy being absent on their
walks, to take a little spirit-and-water. But if she did not
indulge—the courier did: that rascal Kirsch could not be kept from
the bottle, nor could he tell how much he took when he applied to it.
He was sometimes surprised himself at the way in which Mr. Sedley's
Cognac diminished. Well, well, this is a painful subject. Becky did
not very likely indulge so much as she used before she entered a
decorous family.
At last the much-bragged-about boxes
arrived from Leipzig; three of them not by any means large or
splendid; nor did Becky appear to take out any sort of dresses or
ornaments from the boxes when they did arrive. But out of one, which
contained a mass of her papers (it was that very box which Rawdon
Crawley had ransacked in his furious hunt for Becky's concealed
money), she took a picture with great glee, which she pinned up in
her room, and to which she introduced Jos. It was the portrait of a
gentleman in pencil, his face having the advantage of being painted
up in pink. He was riding on an elephant away from some cocoa-nut
trees and a pagoda: it was an Eastern scene.
"God bless my soul, it is my
portrait," Jos cried out. It was he indeed, blooming in youth
and beauty, in a nankeen jacket of the cut of 1804. It was the old
picture that used to hang up in Russell Square.
"I bought it," said Becky in
a voice trembling with emotion; "I went to see if I could be of
any use to my kind friends. I have never parted with that picture—I
never will."
"Won't you?" Jos cried with a
look of unutterable rapture and satisfaction. "Did you really
now value it for my sake?"
"You know I did, well enough,"
said Becky; "but why speak—why think—why look back! It is
too late now!"
That evening's conversation was
delicious for Jos. Emmy only came in to go to bed very tired and
unwell. Jos and his fair guest had a charming tete-a-tete, and his
sister could hear, as she lay awake in her adjoining chamber, Rebecca
singing over to Jos the old songs of 1815. He did not sleep, for a
wonder, that night, any more than Amelia.
It was June, and, by consequence, high
season in London; Jos, who read the incomparable Galignani (the
exile's best friend) through every day, used to favour the ladies
with extracts from his paper during their breakfast. Every week in
this paper there is a full account of military movements, in which
Jos, as a man who had seen service, was especially interested. On one
occasion he read out— "Arrival of the —th regiment.
Gravesend, June 20.—The Ramchunder, East Indiaman, came into the
river this morning, having on board 14 officers, and 132 rank and
file of this gallant corps. They have been absent from England
fourteen years, having been embarked the year after Waterloo, in
which glorious conflict they took an active part, and having
subsequently distinguished themselves in the Burmese war. The veteran
colonel, Sir Michael O'Dowd, K.C.B., with his lady and sister, landed
here yesterday, with Captains Posky, Stubble, Macraw, Malony;
Lieutenants Smith, Jones, Thompson, F. Thomson; Ensigns Hicks and
Grady; the band on the pier playing the national anthem, and the
crowd loudly cheering the gallant veterans as they went into Wayte's
hotel, where a sumptuous banquet was provided for the defenders of
Old England. During the repast, which we need not say was served up
in Wayte's best style, the cheering continued so enthusiastically
that Lady O'Dowd and the Colonel came forward to the balcony and
drank the healths of their fellow- countrymen in a bumper of Wayte's
best claret."
On a second occasion Jos read a brief
announcement—Major Dobbin had joined the —th regiment at Chatham;
and subsequently he promulgated accounts of the presentations at the
Drawing-room of Colonel Sir Michael O'Dowd, K.C.B., Lady O'Dowd (by
Mrs. Malloy Malony of Ballymalony), and Miss Glorvina O'Dowd (by Lady
O'Dowd). Almost directly after this, Dobbin's name appeared among the
Lieutenant- Colonels: for old Marshal Tiptoff had died during the
passage of the —th from Madras, and the Sovereign was pleased to
advance Colonel Sir Michael O'Dowd to the rank of Major-General on
his return to England, with an intimation that he should be Colonel
of the distinguished regiment which he had so long commanded.
Amelia had been made aware of some of
these movements. The correspondence between George and his guardian
had not ceased by any means: William had even written once or twice
to her since his departure, but in a manner so unconstrainedly cold
that the poor woman felt now in her turn that she had lost her power
over him and that, as he had said, he was free. He had left her, and
she was wretched. The memory of his almost countless services, and
lofty and affectionate regard, now presented itself to her and
rebuked her day and night. She brooded over those recollections
according to her wont, saw the purity and beauty of the affection
with which she had trifled, and reproached herself for having flung
away such a treasure.
It was gone indeed. William had spent
it all out. He loved her no more, he thought, as he had loved her. He
never could again. That sort of regard, which he had proffered to her
for so many faithful years, can't be flung down and shattered and
mended so as to show no scars. The little heedless tyrant had so
destroyed it. No, William thought again and again, "It was
myself I deluded and persisted in cajoling; had she been worthy of
the love I gave her, she would have returned it long ago. It was a
fond mistake. Isn't the whole course of life made up of such? And
suppose I had won her, should I not have been disenchanted the day
after my victory? Why pine, or be ashamed of my defeat?" The
more he thought of this long passage of his life, the more clearly he
saw his deception. "I'll go into harness again," he said,
"and do my duty in that state of life in which it has pleased
Heaven to place me. I will see that the buttons of the recruits are
properly bright and that the sergeants make no mistakes in their
accounts. I will dine at mess and listen to the Scotch surgeon
telling his stories. When I am old and broken, I will go on half-pay,
and my old sisters shall scold me. I have geliebt und gelebet, as the
girl in 'Wallenstein' says. I am done. Pay the bills and get me a
cigar: find out what there is at the play to-night, Francis;
to-morrow we cross by the Batavier." He made the above speech,
whereof Francis only heard the last two lines, pacing up and down the
Boompjes at Rotterdam. The Batavier was lying in the basin. He could
see the place on the quarter-deck where he and Emmy had sat on the
happy voyage out. What had that little Mrs. Crawley to say to him?
Psha; to-morrow we will put to sea, and return to England, home, and
duty!
After June all the little Court Society
of Pumpernickel used to separate, according to the German plan, and
make for a hundred watering-places, where they drank at the wells,
rode upon donkeys, gambled at the redoutes if they had money and a
mind, rushed with hundreds of their kind to gourmandise at the tables
d'hote, and idled away the summer. The English diplomatists went off
to Teoplitz and Kissingen, their French rivals shut up their
chancellerie and whisked away to their darling Boulevard de Gand. The
Transparent reigning family took too to the waters, or retired to
their hunting lodges. Everybody went away having any pretensions to
politeness, and of course, with them, Doctor von Glauber, the Court
Doctor, and his Baroness. The seasons for the baths were the most
productive periods of the Doctor's practice—he united business with
pleasure, and his chief place of resort was Ostend, which is much
frequented by Germans, and where the Doctor treated himself and his
spouse to what he called a "dib" in the sea.
His interesting patient, Jos, was a
regular milch-cow to the Doctor, and he easily persuaded the
civilian, both for his own health's sake and that of his charming
sister, which was really very much shattered, to pass the summer at
that hideous seaport town. Emmy did not care where she went much.
Georgy jumped at the idea of a move. As for Becky, she came as a
matter of course in the fourth place inside of the fine barouche Mr.
Jos had bought, the two domestics being on the box in front. She
might have some misgivings about the friends whom she should meet at
Ostend, and who might be likely to tell ugly stories—but bah! she
was strong enough to hold her own. She had cast such an anchor in Jos
now as would require a strong storm to shake. That incident of the
picture had finished him. Becky took down her elephant and put it
into the little box which she had had from Amelia ever so many years
ago. Emmy also came off with her Lares—her two pictures—and the
party, finally, were, lodged in an exceedingly dear and uncomfortable
house at Ostend.
There Amelia began to take baths and
get what good she could from them, and though scores of people of
Becky's acquaintance passed her and cut her, yet Mrs. Osborne, who
walked about with her, and who knew nobody, was not aware of the
treatment experienced by the friend whom she had chosen so
judiciously as a companion; indeed, Becky never thought fit to tell
her what was passing under her innocent eyes.
Some of Mrs. Rawdon Crawley's
acquaintances, however, acknowledged her readily enough,—perhaps
more readily than she would have desired. Among those were Major
Loder (unattached), and Captain Rook (late of the Rifles), who might
be seen any day on the Dike, smoking and staring at the women, and
who speedily got an introduction to the hospitable board and select
circle of Mr. Joseph Sedley. In fact they would take no denial; they
burst into the house whether Becky was at home or not, walked into
Mrs. Osborne's drawing-room, which they perfumed with their coats and
mustachios, called Jos "Old buck," and invaded his
dinner-table, and laughed and drank for long hours there.
"What can they mean?" asked
Georgy, who did not like these gentlemen. "I heard the Major say
to Mrs. Crawley yesterday, 'No, no, Becky, you shan't keep the old
buck to yourself. We must have the bones in, or, dammy, I'll split.'
What could the Major mean, Mamma?"
"Major! don't call him Major!"
Emmy said. "I'm sure I can't tell what he meant." His
presence and that of his friend inspired the little lady with
intolerable terror and aversion. They paid her tipsy compliments;
they leered at her over the dinner-table. And the Captain made her
advances that filled her with sickening dismay, nor would she ever
see him unless she had George by her side.
Rebecca, to do her justice, never would
let either of these men remain alone with Amelia; the Major was
disengaged too, and swore he would be the winner of her. A couple of
ruffians were fighting for this innocent creature, gambling for her
at her own table, and though she was not aware of the rascals'
designs upon her, yet she felt a horror and uneasiness in their
presence and longed to fly.
She besought, she entreated Jos to go.
Not he. He was slow of movement, tied to his Doctor, and perhaps to
some other leading- strings. At least Becky was not anxious to go to
England.
At last she took a great
resolution—made the great plunge. She wrote off a letter to a
friend whom she had on the other side of the water, a letter about
which she did not speak a word to anybody, which she carried herself
to the post under her shawl; nor was any remark made about it, only
that she looked very much flushed and agitated when Georgy met her,
and she kissed him, and hung over him a great deal that night. She
did not come out of her room after her return from her walk. Becky
thought it was Major Loder and the Captain who frightened her.
"She mustn't stop here,"
Becky reasoned with herself. "She must go away, the silly little
fool. She is still whimpering after that gaby of a husband—dead
(and served right!) these fifteen years. She shan't marry either of
these men. It's too bad of Loder. No; she shall marry the bamboo
cane, I'll settle it this very night."
So Becky took a cup of tea to Amelia in
her private apartment and found that lady in the company of her
miniatures, and in a most melancholy and nervous condition. She laid
down the cup of tea.
"Thank you," said Amelia.
"Listen to me, Amelia," said
Becky, marching up and down the room before the other and surveying
her with a sort of contemptuous kindness. "I want to talk to
you. You must go away from here and from the impertinences of these
men. I won't have you harassed by them: and they will insult you if
you stay. I tell you they are rascals: men fit to send to the hulks.
Never mind how I know them. I know everybody. Jos can't protect you;
he is too weak and wants a protector himself. You are no more fit to
live in the world than a baby in arms. You must marry, or you and
your precious boy will go to ruin. You must have a husband, you fool;
and one of the best gentlemen I ever saw has offered you a hundred
times, and you have rejected him, you silly, heartless, ungrateful
little creature!"
"I tried—I tried my best, indeed
I did, Rebecca," said Amelia deprecatingly, "but I couldn't
forget—"; and she finished the sentence by looking up at the
portrait.
"Couldn't forget HIM!" cried
out Becky, "that selfish humbug, that low-bred cockney dandy,
that padded booby, who had neither wit, nor manners, nor heart, and
was no more to be compared to your friend with the bamboo cane than
you are to Queen Elizabeth. Why, the man was weary of you, and would
have jilted you, but that Dobbin forced him to keep his word. He
owned it to me. He never cared for you. He used to sneer about you to
me, time after time, and made love to me the week after he married
you."
"It's false! It's false! Rebecca,"
cried out Amelia, starting up.
"Look there, you fool," Becky
said, still with provoking good humour, and taking a little paper out
of her belt, she opened it and flung it into Emmy's lap. "You
know his handwriting. He wrote that to me—wanted me to run away
with him—gave it me under your nose, the day before he was shot—and
served him right!" Becky repeated.
Emmy did not hear her; she was looking
at the letter. It was that which George had put into the bouquet and
given to Becky on the night of the Duchess of Richmond's ball. It was
as she said: the foolish young man had asked her to fly.
Emmy's head sank down, and for almost
the last time in which she shall be called upon to weep in this
history, she commenced that work. Her head fell to her bosom, and her
hands went up to her eyes; and there for a while, she gave way to her
emotions, as Becky stood on and regarded her. Who shall analyse those
tears and say whether they were sweet or bitter? Was she most grieved
because the idol of her life was tumbled down and shivered at her
feet, or indignant that her love had been so despised, or glad
because the barrier was removed which modesty had placed between her
and a new, a real affection? "There is nothing to forbid me
now," she thought. "I may love him with all my heart now.
Oh, I will, I will, if he will but let me and forgive me." I
believe it was this feeling rushed over all the others which agitated
that gentle little bosom.
Indeed, she did not cry so much as
Becky expected—the other soothed and kissed her—a rare mark of
sympathy with Mrs. Becky. She treated Emmy like a child and patted
her head. "And now let us get pen and ink and write to him to
come this minute," she said.
"I—I wrote to him this morning,"
Emmy said, blushing exceedingly. Becky screamed with laughter—"Un
biglietto," she sang out with Rosina, "eccolo qua!"—the
whole house echoed with her shrill singing.
Two mornings after this little scene,
although the day was rainy and gusty, and Amelia had had an
exceedingly wakeful night, listening to the wind roaring, and pitying
all travellers by land and by water, yet she got up early and
insisted upon taking a walk on the Dike with Georgy; and there she
paced as the rain beat into her face, and she looked out westward
across the dark sea line and over the swollen billows which came
tumbling and frothing to the shore. Neither spoke much, except now
and then, when the boy said a few words to his timid companion,
indicative of sympathy and protection.
"I hope he won't cross in such
weather," Emmy said.
"I bet ten to one he does,"
the boy answered. "Look, Mother, there's the smoke of the
steamer." It was that signal, sure enough.
But though the steamer was under way,
he might not be on board; he might not have got the letter; he might
not choose to come. A hundred fears poured one over the other into
the little heart, as fast as the waves on to the Dike.
The boat followed the smoke into sight.
Georgy had a dandy telescope and got the vessel under view in the
most skilful manner. And he made appropriate nautical comments upon
the manner of the approach of the steamer as she came nearer and
nearer, dipping and rising in the water. The signal of an English
steamer in sight went fluttering up to the mast on the pier. I
daresay Mrs. Amelia's heart was in a similar flutter.
Emmy tried to look through the
telescope over George's shoulder, but she could make nothing of it.
She only saw a black eclipse bobbing up and down before her eyes.
George took the glass again and raked
the vessel. "How she does pitch!" he said. "There goes
a wave slap over her bows. There's only two people on deck besides
the steersman. There's a man lying down, and a—chap in a—cloak
with a—Hooray!—it's Dob, by Jingo!" He clapped to the
telescope and flung his arms round his mother. As for that lady, let
us say what she did in the words of a favourite poet—"Dakruoen
gelasasa." She was sure it was William. It could be no other.
What she had said about hoping that he would not come was all
hypocrisy. Of course he would come; what could he do else but come?
She knew he would come.
The ship came swiftly nearer and
nearer. As they went in to meet her at the landing-place at the quay,
Emmy's knees trembled so that she scarcely could run. She would have
liked to kneel down and say her prayers of thanks there. Oh, she
thought, she would be all her life saying them!
It was such a bad day that as the
vessel came alongside of the quay there were no idlers abroad,
scarcely even a commissioner on the look out for the few passengers
in the steamer. That young scapegrace George had fled too, and as the
gentleman in the old cloak lined with red stuff stepped on to the
shore, there was scarcely any one present to see what took place,
which was briefly this:
A lady in a dripping white bonnet and
shawl, with her two little hands out before her, went up to him, and
in the next minute she had altogether disappeared under the folds of
the old cloak, and was kissing one of his hands with all her might;
whilst the other, I suppose, was engaged in holding her to his heart
(which her head just about reached) and in preventing her from
tumbling down. She was murmuring something about—forgive—dear
William—dear, dear, dearest friend—kiss, kiss, kiss, and so
forth—and in fact went on under the cloak in an absurd manner.
When Emmy emerged from it, she still
kept tight hold of one of William's hands, and looked up in his face.
It was full of sadness and tender love and pity. She understood its
reproach and hung down her head.
"It was time you sent for me, dear
Amelia," he said.
"You will never go again,
William?"
"No, never," he answered, and
pressed the dear little soul once more to his heart.
As they issued out of the custom-house
precincts, Georgy broke out on them, with his telescope up to his
eye, and a loud laugh of welcome; he danced round the couple and
performed many facetious antics as he led them up to the house. Jos
wasn't up yet; Becky not visible (though she looked at them through
the blinds). Georgy ran off to see about breakfast. Emmy, whose shawl
and bonnet were off in the passage in the hands of Mrs. Payne, now
went to undo the clasp of William's cloak, and—we will, if you
please, go with George, and look after breakfast for the Colonel. The
vessel is in port. He has got the prize he has been trying for all
his life. The bird has come in at last. There it is with its head on
his shoulder, billing and cooing close up to his heart, with soft
outstretched fluttering wings. This is what he has asked for every
day and hour for eighteen years. This is what he pined after. Here it
is—the summit, the end—the last page of the third volume.
Good-bye, Colonel—God bless you, honest William!—Farewell, dear
Amelia—Grow green again, tender little parasite, round the rugged
old oak to which you cling!
Perhaps it was compunction towards the
kind and simple creature, who had been the first in life to defend
her, perhaps it was a dislike to all such sentimental scenes—but
Rebecca, satisfied with her part in the transaction, never presented
herself before Colonel Dobbin and the lady whom he married.
"Particular business," she said, took her to Bruges,
whither she went, and only Georgy and his uncle were present at the
marriage ceremony. When it was over, and Georgy had rejoined his
parents, Mrs. Becky returned (just for a few days) to comfort the
solitary bachelor, Joseph Sedley. He preferred a continental life, he
said, and declined to join in housekeeping with his sister and her
husband.
Emmy was very glad in her heart to
think that she had written to her husband before she read or knew of
that letter of George's. "I knew it all along," William
said; "but could I use that weapon against the poor fellow's
memory? It was that which made me suffer so when you—"
"Never speak of that day again,"
Emmy cried out, so contrite and humble that William turned off the
conversation by his account of Glorvina and dear old Peggy O'Dowd,
with whom he was sitting when the letter of recall reached him. "If
you hadn't sent for me," he added with a laugh, "who knows
what Glorvina's name might be now?"
At present it is Glorvina Posky (now
Mrs. Major Posky); she took him on the death of his first wife,
having resolved never to marry out of the regiment. Lady O'Dowd is
also so attached to it that, she says, if anything were to happen to
Mick, bedad she'd come back and marry some of 'em. But the
Major-General is quite well and lives in great splendour at
O'Dowdstown, with a pack of beagles, and (with the exception of
perhaps their neighbour, Hoggarty of Castle Hoggarty) he is the first
man of his county. Her Ladyship still dances jigs, and insisted on
standing up with the Master of the Horse at the Lord Lieutenant's
last ball. Both she and Glorvina declared that Dobbin had used the
latter SHEAMFULLY, but Posky falling in, Glorvina was consoled, and a
beautiful turban from Paris appeased the wrath of Lady O'Dowd.
When Colonel Dobbin quitted the
service, which he did immediately after his marriage, he rented a
pretty little country place in Hampshire, not far from Queen's
Crawley, where, after the passing of the Reform Bill, Sir Pitt and
his family constantly resided now. All idea of a Peerage was out of
the question, the Baronet's two seats in Parliament being lost. He
was both out of pocket and out of spirits by that catastrophe, failed
in his health, and prophesied the speedy ruin of the Empire.
Lady Jane and Mrs. Dobbin became great
friends—there was a perpetual crossing of pony-chaises between the
Hall and the Evergreens, the Colonel's place (rented of his friend
Major Ponto, who was abroad with his family). Her Ladyship was
godmother to Mrs. Dobbin's child, which bore her name, and was
christened by the Rev. James Crawley, who succeeded his father in the
living: and a pretty close friendship subsisted between the two lads,
George and Rawdon, who hunted and shot together in the vacations,
were both entered of the same college at Cambridge, and quarrelled
with each other about Lady Jane's daughter, with whom they were both,
of course, in love. A match between George and that young lady was
long a favourite scheme of both the matrons, though I have heard that
Miss Crawley herself inclined towards her cousin.
Mrs. Rawdon Crawley's name was never
mentioned by either family. There were reasons why all should be
silent regarding her. For wherever Mr. Joseph Sedley went, she
travelled likewise, and that infatuated man seemed to be entirely her
slave. The Colonel's lawyers informed him that his brother-in-law had
effected a heavy insurance upon his life, whence it was probable that
he had been raising money to discharge debts. He procured prolonged
leave of absence from the East India House, and indeed, his
infirmities were daily increasing.
On hearing the news about the
insurance, Amelia, in a good deal of alarm, entreated her husband to
go to Brussels, where Jos then was, and inquire into the state of his
affairs. The Colonel quitted home with reluctance (for he was deeply
immersed in his History of the Punjaub which still occupies him, and
much alarmed about his little daughter, whom he idolizes, and who was
just recovering from the chicken-pox) and went to Brussels and found
Jos living at one of the enormous hotels in that city. Mrs. Crawley,
who had her carriage, gave entertainments, and lived in a very
genteel manner, occupied another suite of apartments in the same
hotel.
The Colonel, of course, did not desire
to see that lady, or even think proper to notify his arrival at
Brussels, except privately to Jos by a message through his valet. Jos
begged the Colonel to come and see him that night, when Mrs. Crawley
would be at a soiree, and when they could meet alone. He found his
brother-in-law in a condition of pitiable infirmity—and dreadfully
afraid of Rebecca, though eager in his praises of her. She tended him
through a series of unheard-of illnesses with a fidelity most
admirable. She had been a daughter to him. "But—but—oh, for
God's sake, do come and live near me, and—and—see me sometimes,"
whimpered out the unfortunate man.
The Colonel's brow darkened at this.
"We can't, Jos," he said. "Considering the
circumstances, Amelia can't visit you."
"I swear to you—I swear to you
on the Bible," gasped out Joseph, wanting to kiss the book,
"that she is as innocent as a child, as spotless as your own
wife."
"It may be so," said the
Colonel gloomily, "but Emmy can't come to you. Be a man, Jos:
break off this disreputable connection. Come home to your family. We
hear your affairs are involved."
"Involved!" cried Jos. "Who
has told such calumnies? All my money is placed out most
advantageously. Mrs. Crawley—that is—I mean— it is laid out to
the best interest."
"You are not in debt, then? Why
did you insure your life?"
"I thought—a little present to
her—in case anything happened; and you know my health is so
delicate—common gratitude you know—and I intend to leave all my
money to you—and I can spare it out of my income, indeed I can,"
cried out William's weak brother-in-law.
The Colonel besought Jos to fly at
once—to go back to India, whither Mrs. Crawley could not follow
him; to do anything to break off a connection which might have the
most fatal consequences to him.
Jos clasped his hands and cried, "He
would go back to India. He would do anything, only he must have time:
they mustn't say anything to Mrs. Crawley—she'd—she'd kill me if
she knew it. You don't know what a terrible woman she is," the
poor wretch said.
"Then, why not come away with me?"
said Dobbin in reply; but Jos had not the courage. "He would see
Dobbin again in the morning; he must on no account say that he had
been there. He must go now. Becky might come in." And Dobbin
quitted him, full of forebodings.
He never saw Jos more. Three months
afterwards Joseph Sedley died at Aix-la-Chapelle. It was found that
all his property had been muddled away in speculations, and was
represented by valueless shares in different bubble companies. All
his available assets were the two thousand pounds for which his life
was insured, and which were left equally between his beloved "sister
Amelia, wife of, &c., and his friend and invaluable attendant
during sickness, Rebecca, wife of Lieutenant-Colonel Rawdon Crawley,
C.B.," who was appointed administratrix.
The solicitor of the insurance company
swore it was the blackest case that ever had come before him, talked
of sending a commission to Aix to examine into the death, and the
Company refused payment of the policy. But Mrs., or Lady Crawley, as
she styled herself, came to town at once (attended with her
solicitors, Messrs. Burke, Thurtell, and Hayes, of Thavies Inn) and
dared the Company to refuse the payment. They invited examination,
they declared that she was the object of an infamous conspiracy,
which had been pursuing her all through life, and triumphed finally.
The money was paid, and her character established, but Colonel Dobbin
sent back his share of the legacy to the insurance office and rigidly
declined to hold any communication with Rebecca.
She never was Lady Crawley, though she
continued so to call herself. His Excellency Colonel Rawdon Crawley
died of yellow fever at Coventry Island, most deeply beloved and
deplored, and six weeks before the demise of his brother, Sir Pitt.
The estate consequently devolved upon the present Sir Rawdon Crawley,
Bart.
He, too, has declined to see his
mother, to whom he makes a liberal allowance, and who, besides,
appears to be very wealthy. The Baronet lives entirely at Queen's
Crawley, with Lady Jane and her daughter, whilst Rebecca, Lady
Crawley, chiefly hangs about Bath and Cheltenham, where a very strong
party of excellent people consider her to be a most injured woman.
She has her enemies. Who has not? Her life is her answer to them. She
busies herself in works of piety. She goes to church, and never
without a footman. Her name is in all the Charity Lists. The
destitute orange-girl, the neglected washerwoman, the distressed
muffin-man find in her a fast and generous friend. She is always
having stalls at Fancy Fairs for the benefit of these hapless beings.
Emmy, her children, and the Colonel, coming to London some time back,
found themselves suddenly before her at one of these fairs. She cast
down her eyes demurely and smiled as they started away from her; Emmy
scurrying off on the arm of George (now grown a dashing young
gentleman) and the Colonel seizing up his little Janey, of whom he is
fonder than of anything in the world—fonder even than of his
History of the Punjaub.
"Fonder than he is of me,"
Emmy thinks with a sigh But he never said a word to Amelia that was
not kind and gentle, or thought of a want of hers that he did not try
to gratify.
Ah! Vanitas Vanitatum! which of us is
happy in this world? Which of us has his desire? or, having it, is
satisfied?—come, children, let us shut up the box and the puppets,
for our play is played out.
* * *
Duke Classics