Family Portraits
Sir Pitt Crawley was a philosopher
with a taste for what is called low life. His
first marriage with the daughter of the noble Binkie
had been made under the auspices of his parents; and
as he often told Lady Crawley in her lifetime she
was such a confounded quarrelsome high-bred jade that
when she died he was hanged if he would ever take another
of her sort, at her ladyship’s demise he kept
his promise, and selected for a second wife Miss Rose
Dawson, daughter of Mr. John Thomas Dawson, ironmonger,
of Mudbury. What a happy woman was Rose to be
my Lady Crawley!
Let us set down the items of her happiness.
In the first place, she gave up Peter Butt, a young
man who kept company with her, and in consequence
of his disappointment in love, took to smuggling, poaching,
and a thousand other bad courses. Then she quarrelled,
as in duty bound, with all the friends and intimates
of her youth, who, of course, could not be received
by my Lady at Queen’s Crawley nor
did she find in her new rank and abode any persons
who were willing to welcome her. Who ever did?
Sir Huddleston Fuddleston had three daughters who all
hoped to be Lady Crawley. Sir Giles Wapshot’s
family were insulted that one of the Wapshot girls
had not the preference in the marriage, and the remaining
baronets of the county were indignant at their comrade’s
misalliance. Never mind the commoners, whom we
will leave to grumble anonymously.
Sir Pitt did not care, as he said,
a brass farden for any one of them. He had his
pretty Rose, and what more need a man require than
to please himself? So he used to get drunk every
night: to beat his pretty Rose sometimes:
to leave her in Hampshire when he went to London for
the parliamentary session, without a single friend
in the wide world. Even Mrs. Bute Crawley, the
Rector’s wife, refused to visit her, as she said
she would never give the pas to a tradesman’s
daughter.
As the only endowments with which
Nature had gifted Lady Crawley were those of pink
cheeks and a white skin, and as she had no sort of
character, nor talents, nor opinions, nor occupations,
nor amusements, nor that vigour of soul and ferocity
of temper which often falls to the lot of entirely
foolish women, her hold upon Sir Pitt’s affections
was not very great. Her roses faded out of her
cheeks, and the pretty freshness left her figure after
the birth of a couple of children, and she became
a mere machine in her husband’s house of no more
use than the late Lady Crawley’s grand piano.
Being a light-complexioned woman, she wore light clothes,
as most blondes will, and appeared, in preference,
in draggled sea-green, or slatternly sky-blue.
She worked that worsted day and night, or other pieces
like it. She had counterpanes in the course
of a few years to all the beds in Crawley. She
had a small flower-garden, for which she had rather
an affection; but beyond this no other like or disliking.
When her husband was rude to her she was apathetic:
whenever he struck her she cried. She had not
character enough to take to drinking, and moaned about,
slipshod and in curl-papers all day. O Vanity
Fair Vanity Fair! This might have
been, but for you, a cheery lass Peter Butt
and Rose a happy man and wife, in a snug farm, with
a hearty family; and an honest portion of pleasures,
cares, hopes and struggles but a title and
a coach and four are toys more precious than happiness
in Vanity Fair: and if Harry the Eighth or Bluebeard
were alive now, and wanted a tenth wife, do you suppose
he could not get the prettiest girl that shall be presented
this season?
The languid dulness of their mamma
did not, as it may be supposed, awaken much affection
in her little daughters, but they were very happy
in the servants’ hall and in the stables; and
the Scotch gardener having luckily a good wife and
some good children, they got a little wholesome society
and instruction in his lodge, which was the only education
bestowed upon them until Miss Sharp came.
Her engagement was owing to the remonstrances
of Mr. Pitt Crawley, the only friend or protector
Lady Crawley ever had, and the only person, besides
her children, for whom she entertained a little feeble
attachment. Mr. Pitt took after the noble Binkies,
from whom he was descended, and was a very polite
and proper gentleman. When he grew to man’s
estate, and came back from Christchurch, he began to
reform the slackened discipline of the hall, in spite
of his father, who stood in awe of him. He was
a man of such rigid refinement, that he would have
starved rather than have dined without a white neckcloth.
Once, when just from college, and when Horrocks the
butler brought him a letter without placing it previously
on a tray, he gave that domestic a look, and administered
to him a speech so cutting, that Horrocks ever after
trembled before him; the whole household bowed to him:
Lady Crawley’s curl-papers came off earlier
when he was at home: Sir Pitt’s muddy gaiters
disappeared; and if that incorrigible old man still
adhered to other old habits, he never fuddled himself
with rum-and-water in his son’s presence, and
only talked to his servants in a very reserved and
polite manner; and those persons remarked that Sir
Pitt never swore at Lady Crawley while his son was
in the room.
It was he who taught the butler to
say, “My lady is served,” and who insisted
on handing her ladyship in to dinner. He seldom
spoke to her, but when he did it was with the most
powerful respect; and he never let her quit the apartment
without rising in the most stately manner to open
the door, and making an elegant bow at her egress.
At Eton he was called Miss Crawley;
and there, I am sorry to say, his younger brother
Rawdon used to lick him violently. But though
his parts were not brilliant, he made up for his lack
of talent by meritorious industry, and was never known,
during eight years at school, to be subject to that
punishment which it is generally thought none but
a cherub can escape.
At college his career was of course
highly creditable. And here he prepared himself
for public life, into which he was to be introduced
by the patronage of his grandfather, Lord Binkie,
by studying the ancient and modern orators with great
assiduity, and by speaking unceasingly at the debating
societies. But though he had a fine flux of words,
and delivered his little voice with great pomposity
and pleasure to himself, and never advanced any sentiment
or opinion which was not perfectly trite and stale,
and supported by a Latin quotation; yet he failed
somehow, in spite of a mediocrity which ought to have
insured any man a success. He did not even get
the prize poem, which all his friends said he was
sure of.
After leaving college he became Private
Secretary to Lord Binkie, and was then appointed Attache
to the Legation at Pumpernickel, which post he filled
with perfect honour, and brought home despatches, consisting
of Strasburg pie, to the Foreign Minister of the day.
After remaining ten years Attache (several years
after the lamented Lord Binkie’s demise), and
finding the advancement slow, he at length gave up
the diplomatic service in some disgust, and began
to turn country gentleman.
He wrote a pamphlet on Malt on returning
to England (for he was an ambitious man, and always
liked to be before the public), and took a strong
part in the Negro Emancipation question. Then
he became a friend of Mr. Wilberforce’s, whose
politics he admired, and had that famous correspondence
with the Reverend Silas Hornblower, on the Ashantee
Mission. He was in London, if not for the Parliament
session, at least in May, for the religious meetings.
In the country he was a magistrate, and an active
visitor and speaker among those destitute of religious
instruction. He was said to be paying his addresses
to Lady Jane Sheepshanks, Lord Southdown’s third
daughter, and whose sister, Lady Emily, wrote those
sweet tracts, “The Sailor’s True Binnacle,”
and “The Applewoman of Finchley Common.”
Miss Sharp’s accounts of his
employment at Queen’s Crawley were not caricatures.
He subjected the servants there to the devotional
exercises before mentioned, in which (and so much the
better) he brought his father to join. He patronised
an Independent meeting-house in Crawley parish, much
to the indignation of his uncle the Rector, and to
the consequent delight of Sir Pitt, who was induced
to go himself once or twice, which occasioned some
violent sermons at Crawley parish church, directed
point-blank at the Baronet’s old Gothic pew there.
Honest Sir Pitt, however, did not feel the force of
these discourses, as he always took his nap during
sermon-time.
Mr. Crawley was very earnest, for
the good of the nation and of the Christian world,
that the old gentleman should yield him up his place
in Parliament; but this the elder constantly refused
to do. Both were of course too prudent to give
up the fifteen hundred a year which was brought in
by the second seat (at this period filled by Mr. Quadroon,
with carte blanche on the Slave question);
indeed the family estate was much embarrassed, and
the income drawn from the borough was of great use
to the house of Queen’s Crawley.
It had never recovered the heavy fine
imposed upon Walpole Crawley, first baronet, for peculation
in the Tape and Sealing Wax Office. Sir Walpole
was a jolly fellow, eager to seize and to spend money
(alieni appetens, sui profusus,
as Mr. Crawley would remark with a sigh), and in his
day beloved by all the county for the constant drunkenness
and hospitality which was maintained at Queen’s
Crawley. The cellars were filled with burgundy
then, the kennels with hounds, and the stables with
gallant hunters; now, such horses as Queen’s
Crawley possessed went to plough, or ran in the Trafalgar
Coach; and it was with a team of these very horses,
on an off-day, that Miss Sharp was brought to the
Hall; for boor as he was, Sir Pitt was a stickler for
his dignity while at home, and seldom drove out but
with four horses, and though he dined off boiled mutton,
had always three footmen to serve it.
If mere parsimony could have made
a man rich, Sir Pitt Crawley might have become very
wealthy if he had been an attorney in a
country town, with no capital but his brains, it is
very possible that he would have turned them to good
account, and might have achieved for himself a very
considerable influence and competency. But he
was unluckily endowed with a good name and a large
though encumbered estate, both of which went rather
to injure than to advance him. He had a taste
for law, which cost him many thousands yearly; and
being a great deal too clever to be robbed, as he
said, by any single agent, allowed his affairs to
be mismanaged by a dozen, whom he all equally mistrusted.
He was such a sharp landlord, that he could hardly
find any but bankrupt tenants; and such a close farmer,
as to grudge almost the seed to the ground, whereupon
revengeful Nature grudged him the crops which she granted
to more liberal husbandmen. He speculated in
every possible way; he worked mines; bought canal-shares;
horsed coaches; took government contracts, and was
the busiest man and magistrate of his county.
As he would not pay honest agents at his granite
quarry, he had the satisfaction of finding that four
overseers ran away, and took fortunes with them to
America. For want of proper precautions, his
coal-mines filled with water: the government
flung his contract of damaged beef upon his hands:
and for his coach-horses, every mail proprietor in
the kingdom knew that he lost more horses than any
man in the country, from underfeeding and buying cheap.
In disposition he was sociable, and far from being
proud; nay, he rather preferred the society of a farmer
or a horse-dealer to that of a gentleman, like my
lord, his son: he was fond of drink, of swearing,
of joking with the farmers’ daughters: he
was never known to give away a shilling or to do a
good action, but was of a pleasant, sly, laughing
mood, and would cut his joke and drink his glass with
a tenant and sell him up the next day; or have his
laugh with the poacher he was transporting with equal
good humour. His politeness for the fair sex
has already been hinted at by Miss Rebecca Sharp in
a word, the whole baronetage, peerage, commonage of
England, did not contain a more cunning, mean, selfish,
foolish, disreputable old man. That blood-red
hand of Sir Pitt Crawley’s would be in anybody’s
pocket except his own; and it is with grief and pain,
that, as admirers of the British aristocracy, we find
ourselves obliged to admit the existence of so many
ill qualities in a person whose name is in Debrett.
One great cause why Mr. Crawley had
such a hold over the affections of his father, resulted
from money arrangements. The Baronet owed his
son a sum of money out of the jointure of his mother,
which he did not find it convenient to pay; indeed
he had an almost invincible repugnance to paying anybody,
and could only be brought by force to discharge his
debts. Miss Sharp calculated (for she became,
as we shall hear speedily, inducted into most of the
secrets of the family) that the mere payment of his
creditors cost the honourable Baronet several hundreds
yearly; but this was a delight he could not forego;
he had a savage pleasure in making the poor wretches
wait, and in shifting from court to court and from
term to term the period of satisfaction. What’s
the good of being in Parliament, he said, if you must
pay your debts? Hence, indeed, his position as
a senator was not a little useful to him.
Vanity Fair Vanity Fair!
Here was a man, who could not spell, and did not
care to read who had the habits and the
cunning of a boor: whose aim in life was pettifogging:
who never had a taste, or emotion, or enjoyment, but
what was sordid and foul; and yet he had rank, and
honours, and power, somehow: and was a dignitary
of the land, and a pillar of the state. He was
high sheriff, and rode in a golden coach. Great
ministers and statesmen courted him; and in Vanity
Fair he had a higher place than the most brilliant
genius or spotless virtue.
Sir Pitt had an unmarried half-sister
who inherited her mother’s large fortune, and
though the Baronet proposed to borrow this money of
her on mortgage, Miss Crawley declined the offer,
and preferred the security of the funds. She
had signified, however, her intention of leaving her
inheritance between Sir Pitt’s second son and
the family at the Rectory, and had once or twice paid
the debts of Rawdon Crawley in his career at college
and in the army. Miss Crawley was, in consequence,
an object of great respect when she came to Queen’s
Crawley, for she had a balance at her banker’s
which would have made her beloved anywhere.
What a dignity it gives an old lady,
that balance at the banker’s! How tenderly
we look at her faults if she is a relative (and may
every reader have a score of such), what a kind good-natured
old creature we find her! How the junior partner
of Hobbs and Dobbs leads her smiling to the carriage
with the lozenge upon it, and the fat wheezy coachman!
How, when she comes to pay us a visit, we generally
find an opportunity to let our friends know her station
in the world! We say (and with perfect truth)
I wish I had Miss MacWhirter’s signature to a
cheque for five thousand pounds. She wouldn’t
miss it, says your wife. She is my aunt, say
you, in an easy careless way, when your friend asks
if Miss MacWhirter is any relative. Your wife
is perpetually sending her little testimonies of affection,
your little girls work endless worsted baskets, cushions,
and footstools for her. What a good fire there
is in her room when she comes to pay you a visit,
although your wife laces her stays without one!
The house during her stay assumes a festive, neat,
warm, jovial, snug appearance not visible at other
seasons. You yourself, dear sir, forget to go
to sleep after dinner, and find yourself all of a
sudden (though you invariably lose) very fond of a
rubber. What good dinners you have game
every day, Malmsey-Madeira, and no end of fish from
London. Even the servants in the kitchen share
in the general prosperity; and, somehow, during the
stay of Miss MacWhirter’s fat coachman, the
beer is grown much stronger, and the consumption of
tea and sugar in the nursery (where her maid takes
her meals) is not regarded in the least. Is
it so, or is it not so? I appeal to the middle
classes. Ah, gracious powers! I wish you
would send me an old aunt a maiden aunt an
aunt with a lozenge on her carriage, and a front of
light coffee-coloured hair how my children
should work workbags for her, and my Julia and I would
make her comfortable! Sweet sweet
vision! Foolish foolish dream!