VANITY FAIR
Chapter II
In Which Miss Sharp and Miss Sedley
Prepare to Open the
Campaign
When Miss Sharp had performed the heroical act mentioned in the last chapter,
and had seen the Dixonary, flying over the pavement of the little garden, fall
at length at the feet of the astonished Miss Jemima, the young lady’s
countenance, which had before worn an almost livid look of hatred, assumed a
smile that perhaps was scarcely more agreeable, and she sank back in the
carriage in an easy frame of mind, saying--"So much for the Dixonary; and, thank
God, I’m out of Chiswick.”
Miss Sedley was almost as flurried at the act of defiance as Miss Jemima had
been; for, consider, it was but one minute that she had left school, and the
impressions of six years are not got over in that space of time. Nay, with some
persons those awes and terrors of youth last for ever and ever. I know, for
instance, an old gentleman of sixty-eight, who said to me one morning at
breakfast, with a very agitated countenance, “I dreamed last night that I was
flogged by Dr. Raine.” Fancy had carried him back five-and-fifty years in the
course of that evening. Dr. Raine and his rod were just as awful to him in his
heart, then, at sixty-eight, as they had been at thirteen. If the Doctor, with a
large birch, had appeared bodily to him, even at the age of threescore and
eight, and had said in awful voice, “Boy, take down your pant--”? Well, well,
Miss Sedley was exceedingly alarmed at this act of insubordination.
“How could you do so, Rebecca?” at last she said, after a pause.
“Why, do you think Miss Pinkerton will come out and order me back to the
black-hole?” said Rebecca, laughing.
“No: but--”
“I hate the whole house,” continued Miss Sharp in a fury. “I hope I may never
set eyes on it again. I wish it were in the bottom of the Thames, I do; and if
Miss Pinkerton were there, I wouldn’t pick her out, that I wouldn’t. O how I
should like to see her floating in the water yonder, turban and all, with her
train streaming after her, and her nose like the beak of a wherry.”
“Hush!” cried Miss Sedley.
“Why, will the black footman tell tales?” cried Miss Rebecca, laughing. “He
may go back and tell Miss Pinkerton that I hate her with all my soul; and I wish
he would; and I wish I had a means of proving it, too. For two years I have only
had insults and outrage from her. I have been treated worse than any servant in
the kitchen. I have never had a friend or a kind word, except from you. I have
been made to tend the little girls in the lower schoolroom, and to talk French
to the Misses, until I grew sick of my mother tongue. But that talking French to
Miss Pinkerton was capital fun, wasn’t it? She doesn’t know a word of French,
and was too proud to confess it. I believe it was that which made her part with
me; and so thank Heaven for French. Vive la France! Vive l’Empereur! Vive
Bonaparte!”
“O Rebecca, Rebecca, for shame!” cried Miss Sedley; for this was the greatest
blasphemy Rebecca had as yet uttered; and in those days, in England, to say,
“Long live Bonaparte!” was as much as to say, “Long live Lucifer!” “How can
you--how dare you have such wicked, revengeful thoughts?”
“Revenge may be wicked, but it’s natural,” answered Miss Rebecca. “I’m no
angel.” And, to say the truth, she certainly was not.
For it may be remarked in the course of this little conversation (which took
place as the coach rolled along lazily by the river side) that though Miss
Rebecca Sharp has twice had occasion to thank Heaven, it has been, in the first
place, for ridding her of some person whom she hated, and secondly, for enabling
her to bring her enemies to some sort of perplexity or confusion; neither of
which are very amiable motives for religious gratitude, or such as would be put
forward by persons of a kind and placable disposition. Miss Rebecca was not,
then, in the least kind or placable. All the world used her ill, said this young
misanthropist, and we may be pretty certain that persons whom all the world
treats ill, deserve entirely the treatment they get. The world is a
looking-glass, and gives back to every man the reflection of his own face. Frown
at it, and it will in turn look sourly upon you; laugh at it and with it, and it
is a jolly kind companion; and so let all young persons take their choice. This
is certain, that if the world neglected Miss Sharp, she never was known to have
done a good action in behalf of anybody; nor can it be expected that twenty-four
young ladies should all be as amiable as the heroine of this work, Miss Sedley
(whom we have selected for the very reason that she was the best-natured of all,
otherwise what on earth was to have prevented us from putting up Miss Swartz, or
Miss Crump, or Miss Hopkins, as heroine in her place!) it could not be expected
that every one should be of the humble and gentle temper of Miss Amelia Sedley;
should take every opportunity to vanquish Rebecca’s hard-heartedness and
ill-humour; and, by a thousand kind words and offices, overcome, for once at
least, her hostility to her kind.
Miss Sharp’s father was an artist, and in that quality had given lessons of
drawing at Miss Pinkerton’s school. He was a clever man; a pleasant companion; a
careless student; with a great propensity for running into debt, and a
partiality for the tavern. When he was drunk, he used to beat his wife and
daughter; and the next morning, with a headache, he would rail at the world for
its neglect of his genius, and abuse, with a good deal of cleverness, and
sometimes with perfect reason, the fools, his brother painters. As it was with
the utmost difficulty that he could keep himself, and as he owed money for a
mile round Soho, where he lived, he thought to better his circumstances by
marrying a young woman of the French nation, who was by profession an
opera-girl. The humble calling of her female parent Miss Sharp never alluded to,
but used to state subsequently that the Entrechats were a noble family of
Gascony, and took great pride in her descent from them. And curious it is that
as she advanced in life this young lady’s ancestors increased in rank and
splendour.
Rebecca’s mother had had some education somewhere, and her daughter spoke
French with purity and a Parisian accent. It was in those days rather a rare
accomplishment, and led to her engagement with the orthodox Miss Pinkerton. For
her mother being dead, her father, finding himself not likely to recover, after
his third attack of delirium tremens, wrote a manly and pathetic letter to Miss
Pinkerton, recommending the orphan child to her protection, and so descended to
the grave, after two bailiffs had quarrelled over his corpse. Rebecca was
seventeen when she came to Chiswick, and was bound over as an articled pupil;
her duties being to talk French, as we have seen; and her privileges to live
cost free, and, with a few guineas a year, to gather scraps of knowledge from
the professors who attended the school.
She was small and slight in person; pale, sandy-haired, and with eyes
habitually cast down: when they looked up they were very large, odd, and
attractive; so attractive that the Reverend Mr. Crisp, fresh from Oxford, and
curate to the Vicar of Chiswick, the Reverend Mr. Flowerdew, fell in love with
Miss Sharp; being shot dead by a glance of her eyes which was fired all the way
across Chiswick Church from the school-pew to the reading-desk. This infatuated
young man used sometimes to take tea with Miss Pinkerton, to whom he had been
presented by his mamma, and actually proposed something like marriage in an
intercepted note, which the one-eyed apple-woman was charged to deliver. Mrs.
Crisp was summoned from Buxton, and abruptly carried off her darling boy; but
the idea, even, of such an eagle in the Chiswick dovecot caused a great flutter
in the breast of Miss Pinkerton, who would have sent away Miss Sharp but that
she was bound to her under a forfeit, and who never could thoroughly believe the
young lady’s protestations that she had never exchanged a single word with Mr.
Crisp, except under her own eyes on the two occasions when she had met him at
tea.
By the side of many tall and bouncing young ladies in the establishment,
Rebecca Sharp looked like a child. But she had the dismal precocity of poverty.
Many a dun had she talked to, and turned away from her father’s door; many a
tradesman had she coaxed and wheedled into good-humour, and into the granting of
one meal more. She sate commonly with her father, who was very proud of her wit,
and heard the talk of many of his wild companions--often but ill-suited for a
girl to hear. But she never had been a girl, she said; she had been a woman
since she was eight years old. Oh, why did Miss Pinkerton let such a dangerous
bird into her cage?
The fact is, the old lady believed Rebecca to be the meekest creature in the
world, so admirably, on the occasions when her father brought her to Chiswick,
used Rebecca to perform the part of the ingenue; and only a year before the
arrangement by which Rebecca had been admitted into her house, and when Rebecca
was sixteen years old, Miss Pinkerton majestically, and with a little speech,
made her a present of a doll--which was, by the way, the confiscated property of
Miss Swindle, discovered surreptitiously nursing it in school-hours. How the
father and daughter laughed as they trudged home together after the evening
party (it was on the occasion of the speeches, when all the professors were
invited) and how Miss Pinkerton would have raged had she seen the caricature of
herself which the little mimic, Rebecca, managed to make out of her doll. Becky
used to go through dialogues with it; it formed the delight of Newman Street,
Gerrard Street, and the Artists’ quarter: and the young painters, when they came
to take their gin-and-water with their lazy, dissolute, clever, jovial senior,
used regularly to ask Rebecca if Miss Pinkerton was at home: she was as well
known to them, poor soul! as Mr. Lawrence or President West. Once Rebecca had
the honour to pass a few days at Chiswick; after which she brought back Jemima,
and erected another doll as Miss Jemmy: for though that honest creature had made
and given her jelly and cake enough for three children, and a seven-shilling
piece at parting, the girl’s sense of ridicule was far stronger than her
gratitude, and she sacrificed Miss Jemmy quite as pitilessly as her sister.
The catastrophe came, and she was brought to the Mall as to her home. The
rigid formality of the place suffocated her: the prayers and the meals, the
lessons and the walks, which were arranged with a conventual regularity,
oppressed her almost beyond endurance; and she looked back to the freedom and
the beggary of the old studio in Soho with so much regret, that everybody,
herself included, fancied she was consumed with grief for her father. She had a
little room in the garret, where the maids heard her walking and sobbing at
night; but it was with rage, and not with grief. She had not been much of a
dissembler, until now her loneliness taught her to feign. She had never mingled
in the society of women: her father, reprobate as he was, was a man of talent;
his conversation was a thousand times more agreeable to her than the talk of
such of her own sex as she now encountered. The pompous vanity of the old
schoolmistress, the foolish good-humour of her sister, the silly chat and
scandal of the elder girls, and the frigid correctness of the governesses
equally annoyed her; and she had no soft maternal heart, this unlucky girl,
otherwise the prattle and talk of the younger children, with whose care she was
chiefly intrusted, might have soothed and interested her; but she lived among
them two years, and not one was sorry that she went away. The gentle
tender-hearted Amelia Sedley was the only person to whom she could attach
herself in the least; and who could help attaching herself to Amelia?
The happiness the superior advantages of the young women round about her,
gave Rebecca inexpressible pangs of envy. “What airs that girl gives herself,
because she is an Earl’s grand-daughter,” she said of one. “How they cringe and
bow to that Creole, because of her hundred thousand pounds! I am a thousand
times cleverer and more charming than that creature, for all her wealth. I am as
well bred as the Earl’s grand-daughter, for all her fine pedigree; and yet every
one passes me by here. And yet, when I was at my father’s, did not the men give
up their gayest balls and parties in order to pass the evening with me?” She
determined at any rate to get free from the prison in which she found herself,
and now began to act for herself, and for the first time to make connected plans
for the future.
She took advantage, therefore, of the means of study the place offered her;
and as she was already a musician and a good linguist, she speedily went through
the little course of study which was considered necessary for ladies in those
days. Her music she practised incessantly, and one day, when the girls were out,
and she had remained at home, she was overheard to play a piece so well that
Minerva thought, wisely, she could spare herself the expense of a master for the
juniors, and intimated to Miss Sharp that she was to instruct them in music for
the future.
The girl refused; and for the first time, and to the astonishment of the
majestic mistress of the school. “I am here to speak French with the children,”
Rebecca said abruptly, “not to teach them music, and save money for you. Give me
money, and I will teach them.”
Minerva was obliged to yield, and, of course, disliked her from that day.
“For five-and-thirty years,” she said, and with great justice, “I never have
seen the individual who has dared in my own house to question my authority. I
have nourished a viper in my bosom.”
“A viper--a fiddlestick,” said Miss Sharp to the old lady, almost fainting
with astonishment. “You took me because I was useful. There is no question of
gratitude between us. I hate this place, and want to leave it. I will do nothing
here but what I am obliged to do.”
It was in vain that the old lady asked her if she was aware she was speaking
to Miss Pinkerton? Rebecca laughed in her face, with a horrid sarcastic
demoniacal laughter, that almost sent the schoolmistress into fits. “Give me a
sum of money,” said the girl, “and get rid of me--or, if you like better, get me
a good place as governess in a nobleman’s family--you can do so if you please.”
And in their further disputes she always returned to this point, “Get me a
situation--we hate each other, and I am ready to go.”
Worthy Miss Pinkerton, although she had a Roman nose and a turban, and was as
tall as a grenadier, and had been up to this time an irresistible princess, had
no will or strength like that of her little apprentice, and in vain did battle
against her, and tried to overawe her. Attempting once to scold her in public,
Rebecca hit upon the before-mentioned plan of answering her in French, which
quite routed the old woman. In order to maintain authority in her school, it
became necessary to remove this rebel, this monster, this serpent, this
firebrand; and hearing about this time that Sir Pitt Crawley’s family was in
want of a governess, she actually recommended Miss Sharp for the situation,
firebrand and serpent as she was. “I cannot, certainly,” she said, “find fault
with Miss Sharp’s conduct, except to myself; and must allow that her talents and
accomplishments are of a high order. As far as the head goes, at least, she does
credit to the educational system pursued at my establishment.”
And so the schoolmistress reconciled the recommendation to her conscience,
and the indentures were cancelled, and the apprentice was free. The battle here
described in a few lines, of course, lasted for some months. And as Miss Sedley,
being now in her seventeenth year, was about to leave school, and had a
friendship for Miss Sharp ("’tis the only point in Amelia’s behaviour,” said
Minerva, “which has not been satisfactory to her mistress"), Miss Sharp was
invited by her friend to pass a week with her at home, before she entered upon
her duties as governess in a private family.
Thus the world began for these two young ladies. For Amelia it was quite a
new, fresh, brilliant world, with all the bloom upon it. It was not quite a new
one for Rebecca--(indeed, if the truth must be told with respect to the Crisp
affair, the tart-woman hinted to somebody, who took an affidavit of the fact to
somebody else, that there was a great deal more than was made public regarding
Mr. Crisp and Miss Sharp, and that his letter was in answer to another letter).
But who can tell you the real truth of the matter? At all events, if Rebecca was
not beginning the world, she was beginning it over again.
By the time the young ladies reached Kensington turnpike, Amelia had not
forgotten her companions, but had dried her tears, and had blushed very much and
been delighted at a young officer of the Life Guards, who spied her as he was
riding by, and said, “A dem fine gal, egad!” and before the carriage arrived in
Russell Square, a great deal of conversation had taken place about the
Drawing-room, and whether or not young ladies wore powder as well as hoops when
presented, and whether she was to have that honour: to the Lord Mayor’s ball she
knew she was to go. And when at length home was reached, Miss Amelia Sedley
skipped out on Sambo’s arm, as happy and as handsome a girl as any in the whole
big city of London. Both he and coachman agreed on this point, and so did her
father and mother, and so did every one of the servants in the house, as they
stood bobbing, and curtseying, and smiling, in the hall to welcome their young
mistress.
You may be sure that she showed Rebecca over every room of the house, and
everything in every one of her drawers; and her books, and her piano, and her
dresses, and all her necklaces, brooches, laces, and gimcracks. She insisted
upon Rebecca accepting the white cornelian and the turquoise rings, and a sweet
sprigged muslin, which was too small for her now, though it would fit her friend
to a nicety; and she determined in her heart to ask her mother’s permission to
present her white Cashmere shawl to her friend. Could she not spare it? and had
not her brother Joseph just brought her two from India?
When Rebecca saw the two magnificent Cashmere shawls which Joseph Sedley had
brought home to his sister, she said, with perfect truth, “that it must be
delightful to have a brother,” and easily got the pity of the tender-hearted
Amelia for being alone in the world, an orphan without friends or kindred.
“Not alone,” said Amelia; “you know, Rebecca, I shall always be your friend,
and love you as a sister--indeed I will.”
“Ah, but to have parents, as you have--kind, rich, affectionate parents, who
give you everything you ask for; and their love, which is more precious than
all! My poor papa could give me nothing, and I had but two frocks in all the
world! And then, to have a brother, a dear brother! Oh, how you must love
him!”
Amelia laughed.
“What! don’t you love him? you, who say you love everybody?”
“Yes, of course, I do--only--”
“Only what?”
“Only Joseph doesn’t seem to care much whether I love him or not. He gave me
two fingers to shake when he arrived after ten years’ absence! He is very kind
and good, but he scarcely ever speaks to me; I think he loves his pipe a great
deal better than his"--but here Amelia checked herself, for why should she speak
ill of her brother? “He was very kind to me as a child,” she added; “I was but
five years old when he went away.”
“Isn’t he very rich?” said Rebecca. “They say all Indian nabobs are
enormously rich.”
“I believe he has a very large income.”
“And is your sister-in-law a nice pretty woman?”
“La! Joseph is not married,” said Amelia, laughing again.
Perhaps she had mentioned the fact already to Rebecca, but that young lady
did not appear to have remembered it; indeed, vowed and protested that she
expected to see a number of Amelia’s nephews and nieces. She was quite
disappointed that Mr. Sedley was not married; she was sure Amelia had said he
was, and she doted so on little children.
“I think you must have had enough of them at Chiswick,” said Amelia, rather
wondering at the sudden tenderness on her friend’s part; and indeed in later
days Miss Sharp would never have committed herself so far as to advance
opinions, the untruth of which would have been so easily detected. But we must
remember that she is but nineteen as yet, unused to the art of deceiving, poor
innocent creature! and making her own experience in her own person. The meaning
of the above series of queries, as translated in the heart of this ingenious
young woman, was simply this: “If Mr. Joseph Sedley is rich and unmarried, why
should I not marry him? I have only a fortnight, to be sure, but there is no
harm in trying.” And she determined within herself to make this laudable
attempt. She redoubled her caresses to Amelia; she kissed the white cornelian
necklace as she put it on; and vowed she would never, never part with it. When
the dinner-bell rang she went downstairs with her arm round her friend’s waist,
as is the habit of young ladies. She was so agitated at the drawing-room door,
that she could hardly find courage to enter. “Feel my heart, how it beats,
dear!” said she to her friend.
“No, it doesn’t,” said Amelia. “Come in, don’t be frightened. Papa won’t do
you any harm.”