VANITY FAIR
Chapter XXXIII
In Which Miss Crawley’s Relations
Are Very Anxious About
Her
The kind reader must please to remember--while the army is marching from
Flanders, and, after its heroic actions there, is advancing to take the
fortifications on the frontiers of France, previous to an occupation of that
country--that there are a number of persons living peaceably in England who have
to do with the history at present in hand, and must come in for their share of
the chronicle. During the time of these battles and dangers, old Miss Crawley
was living at Brighton, very moderately moved by the great events that were
going on. The great events rendered the newspapers rather interesting, to be
sure, and Briggs read out the Gazette, in which Rawdon Crawley’s gallantry was
mentioned with honour, and his promotion was presently recorded.
“What a pity that young man has taken such an irretrievable step in the
world!” his aunt said; “with his rank and distinction he might have married a
brewer’s daughter with a quarter of a million--like Miss Grains; or have looked
to ally himself with the best families in England. He would have had my money
some day or other; or his children would--for I’m not in a hurry to go, Miss
Briggs, although you may be in a hurry to be rid of me; and instead of that, he
is a doomed pauper, with a dancing-girl for a wife.”
“Will my dear Miss Crawley not cast an eye of compassion upon the heroic
soldier, whose name is inscribed in the annals of his country’s glory?” said
Miss Briggs, who was greatly excited by the Waterloo proceedings, and loved
speaking romantically when there was an occasion. “Has not the Captain--or the
Colonel as I may now style him--done deeds which make the name of Crawley
illustrious?”
“Briggs, you are a fool,” said Miss Crawley: “Colonel Crawley has dragged the
name of Crawley through the mud, Miss Briggs. Marry a drawing-master’s daughter,
indeed!--marry a dame de compagnie--for she was no better, Briggs; no, she was
just what you are--only younger, and a great deal prettier and cleverer. Were
you an accomplice of that abandoned wretch, I wonder, of whose vile arts he
became a victim, and of whom you used to be such an admirer? Yes, I daresay you
were an accomplice. But you will find yourself disappointed in my will, I can
tell you: and you will have the goodness to write to Mr. Waxy, and say that I
desire to see him immediately.” Miss Crawley was now in the habit of writing to
Mr. Waxy her solicitor almost every day in the week, for her arrangements
respecting her property were all revoked, and her perplexity was great as to the
future disposition of her money.
The spinster had, however, rallied considerably; as was proved by the
increased vigour and frequency of her sarcasms upon Miss Briggs, all which
attacks the poor companion bore with meekness, with cowardice, with a
resignation that was half generous and half hypocritical--with the slavish
submission, in a word, that women of her disposition and station are compelled
to show. Who has not seen how women bully women? What tortures have men to
endure, comparable to those daily repeated shafts of scorn and cruelty with
which poor women are riddled by the tyrants of their sex? Poor victims! But we
are starting from our proposition, which is, that Miss Crawley was always
particularly annoying and savage when she was rallying from illness--as they say
wounds tingle most when they are about to heal.
While thus approaching, as all hoped, to convalescence, Miss Briggs was the
only victim admitted into the presence of the invalid; yet Miss Crawley’s
relatives afar off did not forget their beloved kinswoman, and by a number of
tokens, presents, and kind affectionate messages, strove to keep themselves
alive in her recollection.
In the first place, let us mention her nephew, Rawdon Crawley. A few weeks
after the famous fight of Waterloo, and after the Gazette had made known to her
the promotion and gallantry of that distinguished officer, the Dieppe packet
brought over to Miss Crawley at Brighton, a box containing presents, and a
dutiful letter, from the Colonel her nephew. In the box were a pair of French
epaulets, a Cross of the Legion of Honour, and the hilt of a sword--relics from
the field of battle: and the letter described with a good deal of humour how the
latter belonged to a commanding officer of the Guard, who having sworn that “the
Guard died, but never surrendered,” was taken prisoner the next minute by a
private soldier, who broke the Frenchman’s sword with the butt of his musket,
when Rawdon made himself master of the shattered weapon. As for the cross and
epaulets, they came from a Colonel of French cavalry, who had fallen under the
aide-de-camp’s arm in the battle: and Rawdon Crawley did not know what better to
do with the spoils than to send them to his kindest and most affectionate old
friend. Should he continue to write to her from Paris, whither the army was
marching? He might be able to give her interesting news from that capital, and
of some of Miss Crawley’s old friends of the emigration, to whom she had shown
so much kindness during their distress.
The spinster caused Briggs to write back to the Colonel a gracious and
complimentary letter, encouraging him to continue his correspondence. His first
letter was so excessively lively and amusing that she should look with pleasure
for its successors.--"Of course, I know,” she explained to Miss Briggs, “that
Rawdon could not write such a good letter any more than you could, my poor
Briggs, and that it is that clever little wretch of a Rebecca, who dictates
every word to him; but that is no reason why my nephew should not amuse me; and
so I wish to let him understand that I am in high good humour.”
I wonder whether she knew that it was not only Becky who wrote the letters,
but that Mrs. Rawdon actually took and sent home the trophies which she bought
for a few francs, from one of the innumerable pedlars who immediately began to
deal in relics of the war. The novelist, who knows everything, knows this also.
Be this, however, as it may, Miss Crawley’s gracious reply greatly encouraged
our young friends, Rawdon and his lady, who hoped for the best from their aunt’s
evidently pacified humour: and they took care to entertain her with many
delightful letters from Paris, whither, as Rawdon said, they had the good luck
to go in the track of the conquering army.
To the rector’s lady, who went off to tend her husband’s broken collar-bone
at the Rectory at Queen’s Crawley, the spinster’s communications were by no
means so gracious. Mrs. Bute, that brisk, managing, lively, imperious woman, had
committed the most fatal of all errors with regard to her sister-in-law. She had
not merely oppressed her and her household--she had bored Miss Crawley; and if
poor Miss Briggs had been a woman of any spirit, she might have been made happy
by the commission which her principal gave her to write a letter to Mrs. Bute
Crawley, saying that Miss Crawley’s health was greatly improved since Mrs. Bute
had left her, and begging the latter on no account to put herself to trouble, or
quit her family for Miss Crawley’s sake. This triumph over a lady who had been
very haughty and cruel in her behaviour to Miss Briggs, would have rejoiced most
women; but the truth is, Briggs was a woman of no spirit at all, and the moment
her enemy was discomfited, she began to feel compassion in her favour.
“How silly I was,” Mrs. Bute thought, and with reason, “ever to hint that I
was coming, as I did, in that foolish letter when we sent Miss Crawley the
guinea-fowls. I ought to have gone without a word to the poor dear doting old
creature, and taken her out of the hands of that ninny Briggs, and that harpy of
a femme de chambre. Oh! Bute, Bute, why did you break your collar-bone?”
Why, indeed? We have seen how Mrs. Bute, having the game in her hands, had
really played her cards too well. She had ruled over Miss Crawley’s household
utterly and completely, to be utterly and completely routed when a favourable
opportunity for rebellion came. She and her household, however, considered that
she had been the victim of horrible selfishness and treason, and that her
sacrifices in Miss Crawley’s behalf had met with the most savage ingratitude.
Rawdon’s promotion, and the honourable mention made of his name in the Gazette,
filled this good Christian lady also with alarm. Would his aunt relent towards
him now that he was a Lieutenant-Colonel and a C.B.? and would that odious
Rebecca once more get into favour? The Rector’s wife wrote a sermon for her
husband about the vanity of military glory and the prosperity of the wicked,
which the worthy parson read in his best voice and without understanding one
syllable of it. He had Pitt Crawley for one of his auditors--Pitt, who had come
with his two half-sisters to church, which the old Baronet could now by no means
be brought to frequent.
Since the departure of Becky Sharp, that old wretch had given himself up
entirely to his bad courses, to the great scandal of the county and the mute
horror of his son. The ribbons in Miss Horrocks’s cap became more splendid than
ever. The polite families fled the hall and its owner in terror. Sir Pitt went
about tippling at his tenants’ houses; and drank rum-and-water with the farmers
at Mudbury and the neighbouring places on market-days. He drove the family
coach-and-four to Southampton with Miss Horrocks inside: and the county people
expected, every week, as his son did in speechless agony, that his marriage with
her would be announced in the provincial paper. It was indeed a rude burthen for
Mr. Crawley to bear. His eloquence was palsied at the missionary meetings, and
other religious assemblies in the neighbourhood, where he had been in the habit
of presiding, and of speaking for hours; for he felt, when he rose, that the
audience said, “That is the son of the old reprobate Sir Pitt, who is very
likely drinking at the public house at this very moment.” And once when he was
speaking of the benighted condition of the king of Timbuctoo, and the number of
his wives who were likewise in darkness, some gipsy miscreant from the crowd
asked, “How many is there at Queen’s Crawley, Young Squaretoes?” to the surprise
of the platform, and the ruin of Mr. Pitt’s speech. And the two daughters of the
house of Queen’s Crawley would have been allowed to run utterly wild (for Sir
Pitt swore that no governess should ever enter into his doors again), had not
Mr. Crawley, by threatening the old gentleman, forced the latter to send them to
school.
Meanwhile, as we have said, whatever individual differences there might be
between them all, Miss Crawley’s dear nephews and nieces were unanimous in
loving her and sending her tokens of affection. Thus Mrs. Bute sent
guinea-fowls, and some remarkably fine cauliflowers, and a pretty purse or
pincushion worked by her darling girls, who begged to keep a little place
in the recollection of their dear aunt, while Mr. Pitt sent peaches and grapes
and venison from the Hall. The Southampton coach used to carry these tokens of
affection to Miss Crawley at Brighton: it used sometimes to convey Mr. Pitt
thither too: for his differences with Sir Pitt caused Mr. Crawley to absent
himself a good deal from home now: and besides, he had an attraction at Brighton
in the person of the Lady Jane Sheepshanks, whose engagement to Mr. Crawley has
been formerly mentioned in this history. Her Ladyship and her sisters lived at
Brighton with their mamma, the Countess Southdown, that strong-minded woman so
favourably known in the serious world.
A few words ought to be said regarding her Ladyship and her noble family, who
are bound by ties of present and future relationship to the house of Crawley.
Respecting the chief of the Southdown family, Clement William, fourth Earl of
Southdown, little need be told, except that his Lordship came into Parliament
(as Lord Wolsey) under the auspices of Mr. Wilberforce, and for a time was a
credit to his political sponsor, and decidedly a serious young man. But words
cannot describe the feelings of his admirable mother, when she learned, very
shortly after her noble husband’s demise, that her son was a member of several
worldly clubs, had lost largely at play at Wattier’s and the Cocoa Tree; that he
had raised money on post-obits, and encumbered the family estate; that he drove
four-in-hand, and patronised the ring; and that he actually had an opera-box,
where he entertained the most dangerous bachelor company. His name was only
mentioned with groans in the dowager’s circle.
The Lady Emily was her brother’s senior by many years; and took considerable
rank in the serious world as author of some of the delightful tracts before
mentioned, and of many hymns and spiritual pieces. A mature spinster, and having
but faint ideas of marriage, her love for the blacks occupied almost all her
feelings. It is to her, I believe, we owe that beautiful poem.
Lead us to some sunny
isle,
Yonder in the western
deep;
Where the skies for ever
smile,
And the blacks for ever weep.
She had correspondences with clerical gentlemen in most of our East and West
India possessions; and was secretly attached to the Reverend Silas Hornblower,
who was tattooed in the South Sea Islands.
As for the Lady Jane, on whom, as it has been said, Mr. Pitt Crawley’s
affection had been placed, she was gentle, blushing, silent, and timid. In spite
of his falling away, she wept for her brother, and was quite ashamed of loving
him still. Even yet she used to send him little hurried smuggled notes, and pop
them into the post in private. The one dreadful secret which weighed upon her
life was, that she and the old housekeeper had been to pay Southdown a furtive
visit at his chambers in the Albany; and found him--O the naughty dear abandoned
wretch!--smoking a cigar with a bottle of Curacao before him. She admired her
sister, she adored her mother, she thought Mr. Crawley the most delightful and
accomplished of men, after Southdown, that fallen angel: and her mamma and
sister, who were ladies of the most superior sort, managed everything for her,
and regarded her with that amiable pity, of which your really superior woman
always has such a share to give away. Her mamma ordered her dresses, her books,
her bonnets, and her ideas for her. She was made to take pony-riding, or
piano-exercise, or any other sort of bodily medicament, according as my Lady
Southdown saw meet; and her ladyship would have kept her daughter in pinafores
up to her present age of six-and-twenty, but that they were thrown off when Lady
Jane was presented to Queen Charlotte.
When these ladies first came to their house at Brighton, it was to them alone
that Mr. Crawley paid his personal visits, contenting himself by leaving a card
at his aunt’s house, and making a modest inquiry of Mr. Bowls or his assistant
footman, with respect to the health of the invalid. When he met Miss Briggs
coming home from the library with a cargo of novels under her arm, Mr. Crawley
blushed in a manner quite unusual to him, as he stepped forward and shook Miss
Crawley’s companion by the hand. He introduced Miss Briggs to the lady with whom
he happened to be walking, the Lady Jane Sheepshanks, saying, “Lady Jane, permit
me to introduce to you my aunt’s kindest friend and most affectionate companion,
Miss Briggs, whom you know under another title, as authoress of the delightful
’Lyrics of the Heart,’ of which you are so fond.” Lady Jane blushed too as she
held out a kind little hand to Miss Briggs, and said something very civil and
incoherent about mamma, and proposing to call on Miss Crawley, and being glad to
be made known to the friends and relatives of Mr. Crawley; and with soft
dove-like eyes saluted Miss Briggs as they separated, while Pitt Crawley treated
her to a profound courtly bow, such as he had used to H.H. the Duchess of
Pumpernickel, when he was attache at that court.
The artful diplomatist and disciple of the Machiavellian Binkie! It was he
who had given Lady Jane that copy of poor Briggs’s early poems, which he
remembered to have seen at Queen’s Crawley, with a dedication from the poetess
to his father’s late wife; and he brought the volume with him to Brighton,
reading it in the Southampton coach and marking it with his own pencil, before
he presented it to the gentle Lady Jane.
It was he, too, who laid before Lady Southdown the great advantages which
might occur from an intimacy between her family and Miss Crawley--advantages
both worldly and spiritual, he said: for Miss Crawley was now quite alone; the
monstrous dissipation and alliance of his brother Rawdon had estranged her
affections from that reprobate young man; the greedy tyranny and avarice of Mrs.
Bute Crawley had caused the old lady to revolt against the exorbitant
pretensions of that part of the family; and though he himself had held off all
his life from cultivating Miss Crawley’s friendship, with perhaps an improper
pride, he thought now that every becoming means should be taken, both to save
her soul from perdition, and to secure her fortune to himself as the head of the
house of Crawley.
The strong-minded Lady Southdown quite agreed in both proposals of her
son-in-law, and was for converting Miss Crawley off-hand. At her own home, both
at Southdown and at Trottermore Castle, this tall and awful missionary of the
truth rode about the country in her barouche with outriders, launched packets of
tracts among the cottagers and tenants, and would order Gaffer Jones to be
converted, as she would order Goody Hicks to take a James’s powder, without
appeal, resistance, or benefit of clergy. My Lord Southdown, her late husband,
an epileptic and simple-minded nobleman, was in the habit of approving of
everything which his Matilda did and thought. So that whatever changes her own
belief might undergo (and it accommodated itself to a prodigious variety of
opinion, taken from all sorts of doctors among the Dissenters) she had not the
least scruple in ordering all her tenants and inferiors to follow and believe
after her. Thus whether she received the Reverend Saunders McNitre, the Scotch
divine; or the Reverend Luke Waters, the mild Wesleyan; or the Reverend Giles
Jowls, the illuminated Cobbler, who dubbed himself Reverend as Napoleon crowned
himself Emperor--the household, children, tenantry of my Lady Southdown were
expected to go down on their knees with her Ladyship, and say Amen to the
prayers of either Doctor. During these exercises old Southdown, on account of
his invalid condition, was allowed to sit in his own room, and have negus and
the paper read to him. Lady Jane was the old Earl’s favourite daughter, and
tended him and loved him sincerely: as for Lady Emily, the authoress of the
“Washerwoman of Finchley Common,” her denunciations of future punishment (at
this period, for her opinions modified afterwards) were so awful that they used
to frighten the timid old gentleman her father, and the physicians declared his
fits always occurred after one of her Ladyship’s sermons.
“I will certainly call,” said Lady Southdown then, in reply to the
exhortation of her daughter’s pretendu, Mr. Pitt Crawley--"Who is Miss Crawley’s
medical man?”
Mr. Crawley mentioned the name of Mr. Creamer.
“A most dangerous and ignorant practitioner, my dear Pitt. I have
providentially been the means of removing him from several houses: though in one
or two instances I did not arrive in time. I could not save poor dear General
Glanders, who was dying under the hands of that ignorant man--dying. He rallied
a little under the Podgers’ pills which I administered to him; but alas! it was
too late. His death was delightful, however; and his change was only for the
better; Creamer, my dear Pitt, must leave your aunt.”
Pitt expressed his perfect acquiescence. He, too, had been carried along by
the energy of his noble kinswoman, and future mother-in-law. He had been made to
accept Saunders McNitre, Luke Waters, Giles Jowls, Podgers’ Pills, Rodgers’
Pills, Pokey’s Elixir, every one of her Ladyship’s remedies spiritual or
temporal. He never left her house without carrying respectfully away with him
piles of her quack theology and medicine. O, my dear brethren and
fellow-sojourners in Vanity Fair, which among you does not know and suffer under
such benevolent despots? It is in vain you say to them, “Dear Madam, I took
Podgers’ specific at your orders last year, and believe in it. Why, why am I to
recant and accept the Rodgers’ articles now?” There is no help for it; the
faithful proselytizer, if she cannot convince by argument, bursts into tears,
and the refusant finds himself, at the end of the contest, taking down the
bolus, and saying, “Well, well, Rodgers’ be it.”
“And as for her spiritual state,” continued the Lady, “that of course must be
looked to immediately: with Creamer about her, she may go off any day: and in
what a condition, my dear Pitt, in what a dreadful condition! I will send the
Reverend Mr. Irons to her instantly. Jane, write a line to the Reverend
Bartholomew Irons, in the third person, and say that I desire the pleasure of
his company this evening at tea at half-past six. He is an awakening man; he
ought to see Miss Crawley before she rests this night. And Emily, my love, get
ready a packet of books for Miss Crawley. Put up ’A Voice from the Flames,’ ‘A
Trumpet-warning to Jericho,’ and the ‘Fleshpots Broken; or, the Converted
Cannibal.’”
“And the ‘Washerwoman of Finchley Common,’ Mamma,” said Lady Emily. “It is as
well to begin soothingly at first.”
“Stop, my dear ladies,” said Pitt, the diplomatist. “With every deference to
the opinion of my beloved and respected Lady Southdown, I think it would be
quite unadvisable to commence so early upon serious topics with Miss Crawley.
Remember her delicate condition, and how little, how very little accustomed she
has hitherto been to considerations connected with her immortal welfare.”
“Can we then begin too early, Pitt?” said Lady Emily, rising with six little
books already in her hand.
“If you begin abruptly, you will frighten her altogether. I know my aunt’s
worldly nature so well as to be sure that any abrupt attempt at conversion will
be the very worst means that can be employed for the welfare of that unfortunate
lady. You will only frighten and annoy her. She will very likely fling the books
away, and refuse all acquaintance with the givers.”
“You are as worldly as Miss Crawley, Pitt,” said Lady Emily, tossing out of
the room, her books in her hand.
“And I need not tell you, my dear Lady Southdown,” Pitt continued, in a low
voice, and without heeding the interruption, “how fatal a little want of
gentleness and caution may be to any hopes which we may entertain with regard to
the worldly possessions of my aunt. Remember she has seventy thousand pounds;
think of her age, and her highly nervous and delicate condition; I know that she
has destroyed the will which was made in my brother’s (Colonel Crawley’s)
favour: it is by soothing that wounded spirit that we must lead it into the
right path, and not by frightening it; and so I think you will agree with me
that--that--’
“Of course, of course,” Lady Southdown remarked. “Jane, my love, you need not
send that note to Mr. Irons. If her health is such that discussions fatigue her,
we will wait her amendment. I will call upon Miss Crawley tomorrow.”
“And if I might suggest, my sweet lady,” Pitt said in a bland tone, “it would
be as well not to take our precious Emily, who is too enthusiastic; but rather
that you should be accompanied by our sweet and dear Lady Jane.”
“Most certainly, Emily would ruin everything,” Lady Southdown said; and this
time agreed to forego her usual practice, which was, as we have said, before she
bore down personally upon any individual whom she proposed to subjugate, to fire
in a quantity of tracts upon the menaced party (as a charge of the French was
always preceded by a furious cannonade). Lady Southdown, we say, for the sake of
the invalid’s health, or for the sake of her soul’s ultimate welfare, or for the
sake of her money, agreed to temporise.
The next day, the great Southdown female family carriage, with the Earl’s
coronet and the lozenge (upon which the three lambs trottant argent upon the
field vert of the Southdowns, were quartered with sable on a bend or, three
snuff-mulls gules, the cognizance of the house of Binkie), drove up in state to
Miss Crawley’s door, and the tall serious footman handed in to Mr. Bowls her
Ladyship’s cards for Miss Crawley, and one likewise for Miss Briggs. By way of
compromise, Lady Emily sent in a packet in the evening for the latter lady,
containing copies of the “Washerwoman,” and other mild and favourite tracts for
Miss B.’s own perusal; and a few for the servants’ hall, viz.: “Crumbs
from the Pantry,” “The Frying Pan and the Fire,” and “The Livery of Sin,” of a
much stronger kind.