VANITY FAIR
Chapter XX
In Which Captain Dobbin Acts
as the Messenger of Hymen
Without knowing how, Captain William Dobbin found himself the great promoter,
arranger, and manager of the match between George Osborne and Amelia. But for
him it never would have taken place: he could not but confess as much to
himself, and smiled rather bitterly as he thought that he of all men in the
world should be the person upon whom the care of this marriage had fallen. But
though indeed the conducting of this negotiation was about as painful a task as
could be set to him, yet when he had a duty to perform, Captain Dobbin was
accustomed to go through it without many words or much hesitation: and, having
made up his mind completely, that if Miss Sedley was balked of her husband she
would die of the disappointment, he was determined to use all his best
endeavours to keep her alive.
I forbear to enter into minute particulars of the interview between George
and Amelia, when the former was brought back to the feet (or should we venture
to say the arms?) of his young mistress by the intervention of his friend honest
William. A much harder heart than George’s would have melted at the sight of
that sweet face so sadly ravaged by grief and despair, and at the simple tender
accents in which she told her little broken-hearted story: but as she did not
faint when her mother, trembling, brought Osborne to her; and as she only gave
relief to her overcharged grief, by laying her head on her lover’s shoulder and
there weeping for a while the most tender, copious, and refreshing tears--old
Mrs. Sedley, too greatly relieved, thought it was best to leave the young
persons to themselves; and so quitted Emmy crying over George’s hand, and
kissing it humbly, as if he were her supreme chief and master, and as if she
were quite a guilty and unworthy person needing every favour and grace from
him.
This prostration and sweet unrepining obedience exquisitely touched and
flattered George Osborne. He saw a slave before him in that simple yielding
faithful creature, and his soul within him thrilled secretly somehow at the
knowledge of his power. He would be generous-minded, Sultan as he was, and raise
up this kneeling Esther and make a queen of her: besides, her sadness and beauty
touched him as much as her submission, and so he cheered her, and raised her up
and forgave her, so to speak. All her hopes and feelings, which were dying and
withering, this her sun having been removed from her, bloomed again and at once,
its light being restored. You would scarcely have recognised the beaming little
face upon Amelia’s pillow that night as the one that was laid there the night
before, so wan, so lifeless, so careless of all round about. The honest Irish
maid-servant, delighted with the change, asked leave to kiss the face that had
grown all of a sudden so rosy. Amelia put her arms round the girl’s neck and
kissed her with all her heart, like a child. She was little more. She had that
night a sweet refreshing sleep, like one--and what a spring of inexpressible
happiness as she woke in the morning sunshine!
“He will be here again to-day,” Amelia thought. “He is the greatest and best
of men.” And the fact is, that George thought he was one of the generousest
creatures alive: and that he was making a tremendous sacrifice in marrying this
young creature.
While she and Osborne were having their delightful tete-a-tete above stairs,
old Mrs. Sedley and Captain Dobbin were conversing below upon the state of the
affairs, and the chances and future arrangements of the young people. Mrs.
Sedley having brought the two lovers together and left them embracing each other
with all their might, like a true woman, was of opinion that no power on earth
would induce Mr. Sedley to consent to the match between his daughter and the son
of a man who had so shamefully, wickedly, and monstrously treated him. And she
told a long story about happier days and their earlier splendours, when Osborne
lived in a very humble way in the New Road, and his wife was too glad to receive
some of Jos’s little baby things, with which Mrs. Sedley accommodated her at the
birth of one of Osborne’s own children. The fiendish ingratitude of that man,
she was sure, had broken Mr. S.’s heart: and as for a marriage, he would never,
never, never, never consent.
“They must run away together, Ma’am,” Dobbin said, laughing, “and follow the
example of Captain Rawdon Crawley, and Miss Emmy’s friend the little governess.”
Was it possible? Well she never! Mrs. Sedley was all excitement about this news.
She wished that Blenkinsop were here to hear it: Blenkinsop always mistrusted
that Miss Sharp.-- What an escape Jos had had! and she described the already
well-known love-passages between Rebecca and the Collector of Boggley
Wollah.
It was not, however, Mr. Sedley’s wrath which Dobbin feared, so much as that
of the other parent concerned, and he owned that he had a very considerable
doubt and anxiety respecting the behaviour of the black-browed old tyrant of a
Russia merchant in Russell Square. He has forbidden the match peremptorily,
Dobbin thought. He knew what a savage determined man Osborne was, and how he
stuck by his word. “The only chance George has of reconcilement,” argued his
friend, “is by distinguishing himself in the coming campaign. If he dies they
both go together. If he fails in distinction--what then? He has some money from
his mother, I have heard enough to purchase his majority--or he must sell out
and go and dig in Canada, or rough it in a cottage in the country.” With such a
partner Dobbin thought he would not mind Siberia--and, strange to say, this
absurd and utterly imprudent young fellow never for a moment considered that the
want of means to keep a nice carriage and horses, and of an income which should
enable its possessors to entertain their friends genteelly, ought to operate as
bars to the union of George and Miss Sedley.
It was these weighty considerations which made him think too that the
marriage should take place as quickly as possible. Was he anxious himself, I
wonder, to have it over?--as people, when death has occurred, like to press
forward the funeral, or when a parting is resolved upon, hasten it. It is
certain that Mr. Dobbin, having taken the matter in hand, was most
extraordinarily eager in the conduct of it. He urged on George the necessity of
immediate action: he showed the chances of reconciliation with his father, which
a favourable mention of his name in the Gazette must bring about. If need were
he would go himself and brave both the fathers in the business. At all events,
he besought George to go through with it before the orders came, which everybody
expected, for the departure of the regiment from England on foreign service.
Bent upon these hymeneal projects, and with the applause and consent of Mrs.
Sedley, who did not care to break the matter personally to her husband, Mr.
Dobbin went to seek John Sedley at his house of call in the City, the Tapioca
Coffee-house, where, since his own offices were shut up, and fate had overtaken
him, the poor broken-down old gentleman used to betake himself daily, and write
letters and receive them, and tie them up into mysterious bundles, several of
which he carried in the flaps of his coat. I don’t know anything more dismal
than that business and bustle and mystery of a ruined man: those letters from
the wealthy which he shows you: those worn greasy documents promising support
and offering condolence which he places wistfully before you, and on which he
builds his hopes of restoration and future fortune. My beloved reader has no
doubt in the course of his experience been waylaid by many such a luckless
companion. He takes you into the corner; he has his bundle of papers out of his
gaping coat pocket; and the tape off, and the string in his mouth, and the
favourite letters selected and laid before you; and who does not know the sad
eager half-crazy look which he fixes on you with his hopeless eyes?
Changed into a man of this sort, Dobbin found the once florid, jovial, and
prosperous John Sedley. His coat, that used to be so glossy and trim, was white
at the seams, and the buttons showed the copper. His face had fallen in, and was
unshorn; his frill and neckcloth hung limp under his bagging waistcoat. When he
used to treat the boys in old days at a coffee-house, he would shout and laugh
louder than anybody there, and have all the waiters skipping round him; it was
quite painful to see how humble and civil he was to John of the Tapioca, a
blear-eyed old attendant in dingy stockings and cracked pumps, whose business it
was to serve glasses of wafers, and bumpers of ink in pewter, and slices of
paper to the frequenters of this dreary house of entertainment, where nothing
else seemed to be consumed. As for William Dobbin, whom he had tipped repeatedly
in his youth, and who had been the old gentleman’s butt on a thousand occasions,
old Sedley gave his hand to him in a very hesitating humble manner now, and
called him “Sir.” A feeling of shame and remorse took possession of William
Dobbin as the broken old man so received and addressed him, as if he himself had
been somehow guilty of the misfortunes which had brought Sedley so low.
“I am very glad to see you, Captain Dobbin, sir,” says he, after a skulking
look or two at his visitor (whose lanky figure and military appearance caused
some excitement likewise to twinkle in the blear eyes of the waiter in the
cracked dancing pumps, and awakened the old lady in black, who dozed among the
mouldy old coffee-cups in the bar). “How is the worthy alderman, and my lady,
your excellent mother, sir?” He looked round at the waiter as he said, “My
lady,” as much as to say, “Hark ye, John, I have friends still, and persons of
rank and reputation, too.” “Are you come to do anything in my way, sir? My young
friends Dale and Spiggot do all my business for me now, until my new offices are
ready; for I’m only here temporarily, you know, Captain. What can we do for you.
sir? Will you like to take anything?”
Dobbin, with a great deal of hesitation and stuttering, protested that he was
not in the least hungry or thirsty; that he had no business to transact; that he
only came to ask if Mr. Sedley was well, and to shake hands with an old friend;
and, he added, with a desperate perversion of truth, “My mother is very
well--that is, she’s been very unwell, and is only waiting for the first fine
day to go out and call upon Mrs. Sedley. How is Mrs. Sedley, sir? I hope she’s
quite well.” And here he paused, reflecting on his own consummate hypocrisy; for
the day was as fine, and the sunshine as bright as it ever is in Coffin Court,
where the Tapioca Coffee-house is situated: and Mr. Dobbin remembered that he
had seen Mrs. Sedley himself only an hour before, having driven Osborne down to
Fulham in his gig, and left him there tete-a-tete with Miss Amelia.
“My wife will be very happy to see her ladyship,” Sedley replied, pulling out
his papers. “I’ve a very kind letter here from your father, sir, and beg my
respectful compliments to him. Lady D. will find us in rather a smaller house
than we were accustomed to receive our friends in; but it’s snug, and the change
of air does good to my daughter, who was suffering in town rather--you remember
little Emmy, sir?--yes, suffering a good deal.” The old gentleman’s eyes were
wandering as he spoke, and he was thinking of something else, as he sate
thrumming on his papers and fumbling at the worn red tape.
“You’re a military man,” he went on; “I ask you, Bill Dobbin, could any man
ever have speculated upon the return of that Corsican scoundrel from Elba? When
the allied sovereigns were here last year, and we gave ’em that dinner in the
City, sir, and we saw the Temple of Concord, and the fireworks, and the Chinese
bridge in St. James’s Park, could any sensible man suppose that peace wasn’t
really concluded, after we’d actually sung Te Deum for it, sir? I ask you,
William, could I suppose that the Emperor of Austria was a damned traitor--a
traitor, and nothing more? I don’t mince words--a double-faced infernal traitor
and schemer, who meant to have his son-in-law back all along. And I say that the
escape of Boney from Elba was a damned imposition and plot, sir, in which half
the powers of Europe were concerned, to bring the funds down, and to ruin this
country. That’s why I’m here, William. That’s why my name’s in the Gazette. Why,
sir?--because I trusted the Emperor of Russia and the Prince Regent. Look here.
Look at my papers. Look what the funds were on the 1st of March--what the French
fives were when I bought for the count. And what they’re at now. There was
collusion, sir, or that villain never would have escaped. Where was the English
Commissioner who allowed him to get away? He ought to be shot, sir--brought to a
court-martial, and shot, by Jove.”
“We’re going to hunt Boney out, sir,” Dobbin said, rather alarmed at the fury
of the old man, the veins of whose forehead began to swell, and who sate
drumming his papers with his clenched fist. “We are going to hunt him out,
sir--the Duke’s in Belgium already, and we expect marching orders every
day.”
“Give him no quarter. Bring back the villain’s head, sir. Shoot the coward
down, sir,” Sedley roared. “I’d enlist myself, by--; but I’m a broken old
man--ruined by that damned scoundrel--and by a parcel of swindling thieves in
this country whom I made, sir, and who are rolling in their carriages now,” he
added, with a break in his voice.
Dobbin was not a little affected by the sight of this once kind old friend,
crazed almost with misfortune and raving with senile anger. Pity the fallen
gentleman: you to whom money and fair repute are the chiefest good; and so,
surely, are they in Vanity Fair.
“Yes,” he continued, “there are some vipers that you warm, and they sting you
afterwards. There are some beggars that you put on horseback, and they’re the
first to ride you down. You know whom I mean, William Dobbin, my boy. I mean a
purse-proud villain in Russell Square, whom I knew without a shilling, and whom
I pray and hope to see a beggar as he was when I befriended him.”
“I have heard something of this, sir, from my friend George,” Dobbin said,
anxious to come to his point. “The quarrel between you and his father has cut
him up a great deal, sir. Indeed, I’m the bearer of a message from him.”
“O, that’s your errand, is it?” cried the old man, jumping up. “What!
perhaps he condoles with me, does he? Very kind of him, the stiff-backed prig,
with his dandified airs and West End swagger. He’s hankering about my house, is
he still? If my son had the courage of a man, he’d shoot him. He’s as big a
villain as his father. I won’t have his name mentioned in my house. I curse the
day that ever I let him into it; and I’d rather see my daughter dead at my feet
than married to him.”
“His father’s harshness is not George’s fault, sir. Your daughter’s love for
him is as much your doing as his. Who are you, that you are to play with two
young people’s affections and break their hearts at your will?”
“Recollect it’s not his father that breaks the match off,” old Sedley cried
out. “It’s I that forbid it. That family and mine are separated for ever. I’m
fallen low, but not so low as that: no, no. And so you may tell the whole
race--son, and father and sisters, and all.”
“It’s my belief, sir, that you have not the power or the right to separate
those two,” Dobbin answered in a low voice; “and that if you don’t give your
daughter your consent it will be her duty to marry without it. There’s no reason
she should die or live miserably because you are wrong-headed. To my thinking,
she’s just as much married as if the banns had been read in all the churches in
London. And what better answer can there be to Osborne’s charges against you, as
charges there are, than that his son claims to enter your family and marry your
daughter?”
A light of something like satisfaction seemed to break over old Sedley as
this point was put to him: but he still persisted that with his consent the
marriage between Amelia and George should never take place.
“We must do it without,” Dobbin said, smiling, and told Mr. Sedley, as he had
told Mrs. Sedley in the day, before, the story of Rebecca’s elopement with
Captain Crawley. It evidently amused the old gentleman. “You’re terrible
fellows, you Captains,” said he, tying up his papers; and his face wore
something like a smile upon it, to the astonishment of the blear-eyed waiter who
now entered, and had never seen such an expression upon Sedley’s countenance
since he had used the dismal coffee-house.
The idea of hitting his enemy Osborne such a blow soothed, perhaps, the old
gentleman: and, their colloquy presently ending, he and Dobbin parted pretty
good friends.
“My sisters say she has diamonds as big as pigeons’ eggs,” George said,
laughing. “How they must set off her complexion! A perfect illumination it must
be when her jewels are on her neck. Her jet-black hair is as curly as Sambo’s. I
dare say she wore a nose ring when she went to court; and with a plume of
feathers in her top-knot she would look a perfect Belle Sauvage.”
George, in conversation with Amelia, was rallying the appearance of a young
lady of whom his father and sisters had lately made the acquaintance, and who
was an object of vast respect to the Russell Square family. She was reported to
have I don’t know how many plantations in the West Indies; a deal of money in
the funds; and three stars to her name in the East India stockholders’ list. She
had a mansion in Surrey, and a house in Portland Place. The name of the rich
West India heiress had been mentioned with applause in the Morning Post. Mrs.
Haggistoun, Colonel Haggistoun’s widow, her relative, “chaperoned” her, and kept
her house. She was just from school, where she had completed her education, and
George and his sisters had met her at an evening party at old Hulker’s house,
Devonshire Place (Hulker, Bullock, and Co. were long the correspondents of her
house in the West Indies), and the girls had made the most cordial advances to
her, which the heiress had received with great good humour. An orphan in her
position--with her money--so interesting! the Misses Osborne said. They were
full of their new friend when they returned from the Hulker ball to Miss Wirt,
their companion; they had made arrangements for continually meeting, and had the
carriage and drove to see her the very next day. Mrs. Haggistoun, Colonel
Haggistoun’s widow, a relation of Lord Binkie, and always talking of him, struck
the dear unsophisticated girls as rather haughty, and too much inclined to talk
about her great relations: but Rhoda was everything they could wish--the
frankest, kindest, most agreeable creature--wanting a little polish, but so
good-natured. The girls Christian-named each other at once.
“You should have seen her dress for court, Emmy,” Osborne cried, laughing.
“She came to my sisters to show it off, before she was presented in state by my
Lady Binkie, the Haggistoun’s kinswoman. She’s related to every one, that
Haggistoun. Her diamonds blazed out like Vauxhall on the night we were there.
(Do you remember Vauxhall, Emmy, and Jos singing to his dearest diddle diddle
darling?) Diamonds and mahogany, my dear! think what an advantageous
contrast--and the white feathers in her hair--I mean in her wool. She had
earrings like chandeliers; you might have lighted ’em up, by Jove--and a yellow
satin train that streeled after her like the tail of a cornet.”
“How old is she?” asked Emmy, to whom George was rattling away regarding this
dark paragon, on the morning of their reunion-- rattling away as no other man in
the world surely could.
“Why the Black Princess, though she has only just left school, must be two or
three and twenty. And you should see the hand she writes! Mrs. Colonel
Haggistoun usually writes her letters, but in a moment of confidence, she put
pen to paper for my sisters; she spelt satin satting, and Saint James’s, Saint
Jams.”
“Why, surely it must be Miss Swartz, the parlour boarder,” Emmy said,
remembering that good-natured young mulatto girl, who had been so hysterically
affected when Amelia left Miss Pinkerton’s academy.
“The very name,” George said. “Her father was a German Jew--a slave-owner
they say--connected with the Cannibal Islands in some way or other. He died last
year, and Miss Pinkerton has finished her education. She can play two pieces on
the piano; she knows three songs; she can write when Mrs. Haggistoun is by to
spell for her; and Jane and Maria already have got to love her as a sister.”
“I wish they would have loved me,” said Emmy, wistfully. “They were always
very cold to me.”
“My dear child, they would have loved you if you had had two hundred thousand
pounds,” George replied. “That is the way in which they have been brought up.
Ours is a ready-money society. We live among bankers and City big-wigs, and be
hanged to them, and every man, as he talks to you, is jingling his guineas in
his pocket. There is that jackass Fred Bullock is going to marry Maria--there’s
Goldmore, the East India Director, there’s Dipley, in the tallow
trade--our trade,” George said, with an uneasy laugh and a blush. “Curse
the whole pack of money-grubbing vulgarians! I fall asleep at their great heavy
dinners. I feel ashamed in my father’s great stupid parties. I’ve been
accustomed to live with gentlemen, and men of the world and fashion, Emmy, not
with a parcel of turtle-fed tradesmen. Dear little woman, you are the only
person of our set who ever looked, or thought, or spoke like a lady: and you do
it because you’re an angel and can’t help it. Don’t remonstrate. You are the
only lady. Didn’t Miss Crawley remark it, who has lived in the best company in
Europe? And as for Crawley, of the Life Guards, hang it, he’s a fine fellow: and
I like him for marrying the girl he had chosen.”
Amelia admired Mr. Crawley very much, too, for this; and trusted Rebecca
would be happy with him, and hoped (with a laugh) Jos would be consoled. And so
the pair went on prattling, as in quite early days. Amelia’s confidence being
perfectly restored to her, though she expressed a great deal of pretty jealousy
about Miss Swartz, and professed to be dreadfully frightened--like a hypocrite
as she was-- lest George should forget her for the heiress and her money and her
estates in Saint Kitt’s. But the fact is, she was a great deal too happy to have
fears or doubts or misgivings of any sort: and having George at her side again,
was not afraid of any heiress or beauty, or indeed of any sort of danger.
When Captain Dobbin came back in the afternoon to these people-- which he did
with a great deal of sympathy for them--it did his heart good to see how Amelia
had grown young again--how she laughed, and chirped, and sang familiar old songs
at the piano, which were only interrupted by the bell from without proclaiming
Mr. Sedley’s return from the City, before whom George received a signal to
retreat.
Beyond the first smile of recognition--and even that was an hypocrisy, for
she thought his arrival rather provoking--Miss Sedley did not once notice Dobbin
during his visit. But he was content, so that he saw her happy; and thankful to
have been the means of making her so.