Crawley of Queen’s Crawley
Among the most respected of the names
beginning in C which the Court-Guide contained, in
the year 18 , was that of Crawley, Sir Pitt,
Baronet, Great Gaunt Street, and Queen’s Crawley,
Hants. This honourable name had figured constantly
also in the Parliamentary list for many years, in
conjunction with that of a number of other worthy
gentlemen who sat in turns for the borough.
It is related, with regard to the
borough of Queen’s Crawley, that Queen Elizabeth
in one of her progresses, stopping at Crawley to breakfast,
was so delighted with some remarkably fine Hampshire
beer which was then presented to her by the Crawley
of the day (a handsome gentleman with a trim beard
and a good leg), that she forthwith erected Crawley
into a borough to send two members to Parliament; and
the place, from the day of that illustrious visit,
took the name of Queen’s Crawley, which it holds
up to the present moment. And though, by the
lapse of time, and those mutations which age produces
in empires, cities, and boroughs, Queen’s Crawley
was no longer so populous a place as it had been in
Queen Bess’s time nay, was come down
to that condition of borough which used to be denominated
rotten yet, as Sir Pitt Crawley would say
with perfect justice in his elegant way, “Rotten!
be hanged it produces me a good fifteen
hundred a year.”
Sir Pitt Crawley (named after the
great Commoner) was the son of Walpole Crawley, first
Baronet, of the Tape and Sealing-Wax Office in the
reign of George II., when he was impeached for peculation,
as were a great number of other honest gentlemen of
those days; and Walpole Crawley was, as need scarcely
be said, son of John Churchill Crawley, named after
the celebrated military commander of the reign of Queen
Anne. The family tree (which hangs up at Queen’s
Crawley) furthermore mentions Charles Stuart, afterwards
called Barebones Crawley, son of the Crawley of James
the First’s time; and finally, Queen Elizabeth’s
Crawley, who is represented as the foreground of the
picture in his forked beard and armour. Out
of his waistcoat, as usual, grows a tree, on the main
branches of which the above illustrious names are
inscribed. Close by the name of Sir Pitt Crawley,
Baronet (the subject of the present memoir), are written
that of his brother, the Reverend Bute Crawley (the
great Commoner was in disgrace when the reverend gentleman
was born), rector of Crawley-cum-Snailby, and of various
other male and female members of the Crawley family.
Sir Pitt was first married to Grizzel,
sixth daughter of Mungo Binkie, Lord Binkie, and cousin,
in consequence, of Mr. Dundas. She brought him
two sons: Pitt, named not so much after his father
as after the heaven-born minister; and Rawdon Crawley,
from the Prince of Wales’s friend, whom his
Majesty George IV forgot so completely. Many years
after her ladyship’s demise, Sir Pitt led to
the altar Rosa, daughter of Mr. G. Dawson, of Mudbury,
by whom he had two daughters, for whose benefit Miss
Rebecca Sharp was now engaged as governess. It
will be seen that the young lady was come into a family
of very genteel connexions, and was about to move
in a much more distinguished circle than that humble
one which she had just quitted in Russell Square.
She had received her orders to join
her pupils, in a note which was written upon an old
envelope, and which contained the following words:
Sir Pitt Crawley begs Miss Sharp and
baggidge may be hear on Tuesday, as I leaf for Queen’s
Crawley to-morrow morning Erly.
Great Gaunt Street.
Rebecca had never seen a Baronet,
as far as she knew, and as soon as she had taken leave
of Amelia, and counted the guineas which good-natured
Mr. Sedley had put into a purse for her, and as soon
as she had done wiping her eyes with her handkerchief
(which operation she concluded the very moment the
carriage had turned the corner of the street), she
began to depict in her own mind what a Baronet must
be. “I wonder, does he wear a star?”
thought she, “or is it only lords that wear
stars? But he will be very handsomely dressed
in a court suit, with ruffles, and his hair a little
powdered, like Mr. Wroughton at Covent Garden.
I suppose he will be awfully proud, and that I shall
be treated most contemptuously. Still I must
bear my hard lot as well as I can at least,
I shall be amongst gentlefolks, and not with vulgar
city people”: and she fell to thinking of
her Russell Square friends with that very same philosophical
bitterness with which, in a certain apologue, the
fox is represented as speaking of the grapes.
Having passed through Gaunt Square
into Great Gaunt Street, the carriage at length stopped
at a tall gloomy house between two other tall gloomy
houses, each with a hatchment over the middle drawing-room
window; as is the custom of houses in Great Gaunt Street,
in which gloomy locality death seems to reign perpetual.
The shutters of the first-floor windows of Sir Pitt’s
mansion were closed those of the dining-room
were partially open, and the blinds neatly covered
up in old newspapers.
John, the groom, who had driven the
carriage alone, did not care to descend to ring the
bell; and so prayed a passing milk-boy to perform
that office for him. When the bell was rung,
a head appeared between the interstices of the dining-room
shutters, and the door was opened by a man in drab
breeches and gaiters, with a dirty old coat, a foul
old neckcloth lashed round his bristly neck, a shining
bald head, a leering red face, a pair of twinkling
grey eyes, and a mouth perpetually on the grin.
“This Sir Pitt Crawley’s?” says
John, from the box.
“Ees,” says the man at the door, with
a nod.
“Hand down these ’ere trunks then,”
said John.
“Hand ’n down yourself,” said the
porter.
“Don’t you see I can’t
leave my hosses? Come, bear a hand, my fine feller,
and Miss will give you some beer,” said John,
with a horse-laugh, for he was no longer respectful
to Miss Sharp, as her connexion with the family was
broken off, and as she had given nothing to the servants
on coming away.
The bald-headed man, taking his hands
out of his breeches pockets, advanced on this summons,
and throwing Miss Sharp’s trunk over his shoulder,
carried it into the house.
“Take this basket and shawl,
if you please, and open the door,” said Miss
Sharp, and descended from the carriage in much indignation.
“I shall write to Mr. Sedley and inform him
of your conduct,” said she to the groom.
“Don’t,” replied
that functionary. “I hope you’ve
forgot nothink? Miss ’Melia’s gownds have
you got them as the lady’s maid was
to have ’ad? I hope they’ll fit you.
Shut the door, Jim, you’ll get no good out of
’er,” continued John, pointing with
his thumb towards Miss Sharp: “a bad lot,
I tell you, a bad lot,” and so saying, Mr. Sedley’s
groom drove away. The truth is, he was attached
to the lady’s maid in question, and indignant
that she should have been robbed of her perquisites.
On entering the dining-room, by the
orders of the individual in gaiters, Rebecca found
that apartment not more cheerful than such rooms usually
are, when genteel families are out of town. The
faithful chambers seem, as it were, to mourn the absence
of their masters. The turkey carpet has rolled
itself up, and retired sulkily under the sideboard:
the pictures have hidden their faces behind old sheets
of brown paper: the ceiling lamp is muffled up
in a dismal sack of brown holland: the window-curtains
have disappeared under all sorts of shabby envelopes:
the marble bust of Sir Walpole Crawley is looking from
its black corner at the bare boards and the oiled
fire-irons, and the empty card-racks over the mantelpiece:
the cellaret has lurked away behind the carpet:
the chairs are turned up heads and tails along the
walls: and in the dark corner opposite the statue,
is an old-fashioned crabbed knife-box, locked and
sitting on a dumb waiter.
Two kitchen chairs, and a round table,
and an attenuated old poker and tongs were, however,
gathered round the fire-place, as was a saucepan over
a feeble sputtering fire. There was a bit of
cheese and bread, and a tin candlestick on the table,
and a little black porter in a pint-pot.
“Had your dinner, I suppose?
It is not too warm for you? Like a drop of beer?”
“Where is Sir Pitt Crawley?”
said Miss Sharp majestically.
“He, he! I’m Sir
Pitt Crawley. Reklect you owe me a pint for bringing
down your luggage. He, he! Ask Tinker if
I aynt. Mrs. Tinker, Miss Sharp; Miss Governess,
Mrs. Charwoman. Ho, ho!”
The lady addressed as Mrs. Tinker
at this moment made her appearance with a pipe and
a paper of tobacco, for which she had been despatched
a minute before Miss Sharp’s arrival; and she
handed the articles over to Sir Pitt, who had taken
his seat by the fire.
“Where’s the farden?”
said he. “I gave you three halfpence.
Where’s the change, old Tinker?”
“There!” replied Mrs.
Tinker, flinging down the coin; “it’s only
baronets as cares about farthings.”
“A farthing a day is seven shillings
a year,” answered the M.P.; “seven shillings
a year is the interest of seven guineas. Take
care of your farthings, old Tinker, and your guineas
will come quite nat’ral.”
“You may be sure it’s
Sir Pitt Crawley, young woman,” said Mrs. Tinker,
surlily; “because he looks to his farthings.
You’ll know him better afore long.”
“And like me none the worse,
Miss Sharp,” said the old gentleman, with an
air almost of politeness. “I must be just
before I’m generous.”
“He never gave away a farthing
in his life,” growled Tinker.
“Never, and never will:
it’s against my principle. Go and get another
chair from the kitchen, Tinker, if you want to sit
down; and then we’ll have a bit of supper.”
Presently the baronet plunged a fork
into the saucepan on the fire, and withdrew from the
pot a piece of tripe and an onion, which he divided
into pretty equal portions, and of which he partook
with Mrs. Tinker. “You see, Miss Sharp,
when I’m not here Tinker’s on board wages:
when I’m in town she dines with the family.
Haw! haw! I’m glad Miss Sharp’s not
hungry, ain’t you, Tink?” And they fell
to upon their frugal supper.
After supper Sir Pitt Crawley began
to smoke his pipe; and when it became quite dark,
he lighted the rushlight in the tin candlestick, and
producing from an interminable pocket a huge mass of
papers, began reading them, and putting them in order.
“I’m here on law business,
my dear, and that’s how it happens that I shall
have the pleasure of such a pretty travelling companion
to-morrow.”
“He’s always at law business,”
said Mrs. Tinker, taking up the pot of porter.
“Drink and drink about,”
said the Baronet. “Yes; my dear, Tinker
is quite right: I’ve lost and won more
lawsuits than any man in England. Look here at
Crawley, Bart. v. Snaffle. I’ll throw
him over, or my name’s not Pitt Crawley.
Podder and another versus Crawley, Bart. Overseers
of Snaily parish against Crawley, Bart. They can’t
prove it’s common: I’ll defy ’em;
the land’s mine. It no more belongs to the
parish than it does to you or Tinker here. I’ll
beat ’em, if it cost me a thousand guineas.
Look over the papers; you may if you like, my dear.
Do you write a good hand? I’ll make you
useful when we’re at Queen’s Crawley,
depend on it, Miss Sharp. Now the dowager’s
dead I want some one.”
“She was as bad as he,”
said Tinker. “She took the law of every
one of her tradesmen; and turned away forty-eight
footmen in four year.”
“She was close very
close,” said the Baronet, simply; “but
she was a valyble woman to me, and saved me a steward.” And
in this confidential strain, and much to the amusement
of the new-comer, the conversation continued for a
considerable time. Whatever Sir Pitt Crawley’s
qualities might be, good or bad, he did not make the
least disguise of them. He talked of himself
incessantly, sometimes in the coarsest and vulgarest
Hampshire accent; sometimes adopting the tone of a
man of the world. And so, with injunctions to
Miss Sharp to be ready at five in the morning, he
bade her good night. “You’ll sleep
with Tinker to-night,” he said; “it’s
a big bed, and there’s room for two. Lady
Crawley died in it. Good night.”
Sir Pitt went off after this benediction,
and the solemn Tinker, rushlight in hand, led the
way up the great bleak stone stairs, past the great
dreary drawing-room doors, with the handles muffled
up in paper, into the great front bedroom, where Lady
Crawley had slept her last. The bed and chamber
were so funereal and gloomy, you might have fancied,
not only that Lady Crawley died in the room, but that
her ghost inhabited it. Rebecca sprang about
the apartment, however, with the greatest liveliness,
and had peeped into the huge wardrobes, and the closets,
and the cupboards, and tried the drawers which were
locked, and examined the dreary pictures and toilette
appointments, while the old charwoman was saying her
prayers. “I shouldn’t like to sleep
in this yeer bed without a good conscience, Miss,”
said the old woman. “There’s room
for us and a half-dozen of ghosts in it,” says
Rebecca. “Tell me all about Lady Crawley
and Sir Pitt Crawley, and everybody, my dear
Mrs. Tinker.”
But old Tinker was not to be pumped
by this little cross-questioner; and signifying to
her that bed was a place for sleeping, not conversation,
set up in her corner of the bed such a snore as only
the nose of innocence can produce. Rebecca lay
awake for a long, long time, thinking of the morrow,
and of the new world into which she was going, and
of her chances of success there. The rushlight
flickered in the basin. The mantelpiece cast
up a great black shadow, over half of a mouldy old
sampler, which her defunct ladyship had worked, no
doubt, and over two little family pictures of young
lads, one in a college gown, and the other in a red
jacket like a soldier. When she went to sleep,
Rebecca chose that one to dream about.
At four o’clock, on such a roseate
summer’s morning as even made Great Gaunt Street
look cheerful, the faithful Tinker, having wakened
her bedfellow, and bid her prepare for departure,
unbarred and unbolted the great hall door (the clanging
and clapping whereof startled the sleeping echoes
in the street), and taking her way into Oxford Street,
summoned a coach from a stand there. It is needless
to particularize the number of the vehicle, or to
state that the driver was stationed thus early in
the neighbourhood of Swallow Street, in hopes that
some young buck, reeling homeward from the tavern,
might need the aid of his vehicle, and pay him with
the generosity of intoxication.
It is likewise needless to say that
the driver, if he had any such hopes as those above
stated, was grossly disappointed; and that the worthy
Baronet whom he drove to the City did not give him
one single penny more than his fare. It was
in vain that Jehu appealed and stormed; that he flung
down Miss Sharp’s bandboxes in the gutter at
the ’Necks, and swore he would take the law
of his fare.
“You’d better not,”
said one of the ostlers; “it’s Sir Pitt
Crawley.”
“So it is, Joe,” cried
the Baronet, approvingly; “and I’d like
to see the man can do me.”
“So should oi,” said
Joe, grinning sulkily, and mounting the Baronet’s
baggage on the roof of the coach.
“Keep the box for me, Leader,”
exclaims the Member of Parliament to the coachman;
who replied, “Yes, Sir Pitt,” with a touch
of his hat, and rage in his soul (for he had promised
the box to a young gentleman from Cambridge, who would
have given a crown to a certainty), and Miss Sharp
was accommodated with a back seat inside the carriage,
which might be said to be carrying her into the wide
world.
How the young man from Cambridge sulkily
put his five great-coats in front; but was reconciled
when little Miss Sharp was made to quit the carriage,
and mount up beside him when he covered
her up in one of his Benjamíns, and became perfectly
good-humoured how the asthmatic gentleman,
the prim lady, who declared upon her sacred honour
she had never travelled in a public carriage before
(there is always such a lady in a coach Alas!
was; for the coaches, where are they?), and the fat
widow with the brandy-bottle, took their places inside how
the porter asked them all for money, and got sixpence
from the gentleman and five greasy halfpence from
the fat widow and how the carriage at length
drove away now threading the dark lanes
of Aldersgate, anon clattering by the Blue Cupola
of St. Paul’s, jingling rapidly by the strangers’
entry of Fleet-Market, which, with Exeter ’Change,
has now departed to the world of shadows how
they passed the White Bear in Piccadilly, and saw
the dew rising up from the market-gardens of Knightsbridge how
Turnhamgreen, Brentwood, Bagshot, were passed need
not be told here. But the writer of these pages,
who has pursued in former days, and in the same bright
weather, the same remarkable journey, cannot but think
of it with a sweet and tender regret. Where
is the road now, and its merry incidents of life?
Is there no Chelsea or Greenwich for the old honest
pimple-nosed coachmen? I wonder where are they,
those good fellows? Is old Weller alive or dead?
and the waiters, yea, and the inns at which they waited,
and the cold rounds of beef inside, and the stunted
ostler, with his blue nose and clinking pail, where
is he, and where is his generation? To those
great geniuses now in petticoats, who shall write
novels for the beloved reader’s children, these
men and things will be as much legend and history
as Nineveh, or Coeur de Lion, or Jack Sheppard.
For them stage-coaches will have become romances a
team of four bays as fabulous as Bucephalus or Black
Bess. Ah, how their coats shone, as the stable-men
pulled their clothes off, and away they went ah,
how their tails shook, as with smoking sides at the
stage’s end they demurely walked away into the
inn-yard. Alas! we shall never hear the horn
sing at midnight, or see the pike-gates fly open any
more. Whither, however, is the light four-inside
Trafalgar coach carrying us? Let us be set down
at Queen’s Crawley without further divagation,
and see how Miss Rebecca Sharp speeds there.