A Cynical Chapter
Our duty now takes us back for a brief
space to some old Hampshire acquaintances of ours,
whose hopes respecting the disposal of their rich
kinswoman’s property were so woefully disappointed.
After counting upon thirty thousand pounds from his
sister, it was a heavy blow to Bute Crawley to receive
but five; out of which sum, when he had paid his own
debts and those of Jim, his son at college, a very
small fragment remained to portion off his four plain
daughters. Mrs. Bute never knew, or at least
never acknowledged, how far her own tyrannous behaviour
had tended to ruin her husband. All that woman
could do, she vowed and protested she had done.
Was it her fault if she did not possess those sycophantic
arts which her hypocritical nephew, Pitt Crawley,
practised? She wished him all the happiness which
he merited out of his ill-gotten gains. “At
least the money will remain in the family,”
she said charitably. “Pitt will never spend
it, my dear, that is quite certain; for a greater
miser does not exist in England, and he is as odious,
though in a different way, as his spendthrift brother,
the abandoned Rawdon.”
So Mrs. Bute, after the first shock
of rage and disappointment, began to accommodate herself
as best she could to her altered fortunes and to save
and retrench with all her might. She instructed
her daughters how to bear poverty cheerfully, and
invented a thousand notable methods to conceal or
evade it. She took them about to balls and public
places in the neighbourhood, with praiseworthy energy;
nay, she entertained her friends in a hospitable comfortable
manner at the Rectory, and much more frequently than
before dear Miss Crawley’s legacy had fallen
in. From her outward bearing nobody would have
supposed that the family had been disappointed in
their expectations, or have guessed from her frequent
appearance in public how she pinched and starved at
home. Her girls had more milliners’ furniture
than they had ever enjoyed before. They appeared
perseveringly at the Winchester and Southampton assemblies;
they penetrated to Cowes for the race-balls and regatta-gaieties
there; and their carriage, with the horses taken from
the plough, was at work perpetually, until it began
almost to be believed that the four sisters had had
fortunes left them by their aunt, whose name the family
never mentioned in public but with the most tender
gratitude and regard. I know no sort of lying
which is more frequent in Vanity Fair than this, and
it may be remarked how people who practise it take
credit to themselves for their hypocrisy, and fancy
that they are exceedingly virtuous and praiseworthy,
because they are able to deceive the world with regard
to the extent of their means.
Mrs. Bute certainly thought herself
one of the most virtuous women in England, and the
sight of her happy family was an edifying one to strangers.
They were so cheerful, so loving, so well-educated,
so simple! Martha painted flowers exquisitely
and furnished half the charity bazaars in the county.
Emma was a regular County Bulbul, and her verses
in the Hampshire Telegraph were the glory of its Poet’s
Corner. Fanny and Matilda sang duets together,
Mamma playing the piano, and the other two sisters
sitting with their arms round each other’s waists
and listening affectionately. Nobody saw the
poor girls drumming at the duets in private.
No one saw Mamma drilling them rigidly hour after
hour. In a word, Mrs. Bute put a good face against
fortune and kept up appearances in the most virtuous
manner.
Everything that a good and respectable
mother could do Mrs. Bute did. She got over yachting
men from Southampton, parsons from the Cathedral Close
at Winchester, and officers from the barracks there.
She tried to inveigle the young barristers at assizes
and encouraged Jim to bring home friends with whom
he went out hunting with the H. H. What will not
a mother do for the benefit of her beloved ones?
Between such a woman and her brother-in-law,
the odious Baronet at the Hall, it is manifest that
there could be very little in common. The rupture
between Bute and his brother Sir Pitt was complete;
indeed, between Sir Pitt and the whole county, to
which the old man was a scandal. His dislike
for respectable society increased with age, and the
lodge-gates had not opened to a gentleman’s carriage-wheels
since Pitt and Lady Jane came to pay their visit of
duty after their marriage.
That was an awful and unfortunate
visit, never to be thought of by the family without
horror. Pitt begged his wife, with a ghastly
countenance, never to speak of it, and it was only
through Mrs. Bute herself, who still knew everything
which took place at the Hall, that the circumstances
of Sir Pitt’s reception of his son and daughter-in-law
were ever known at all.
As they drove up the avenue of the
park in their neat and well-appointed carriage, Pitt
remarked with dismay and wrath great gaps among the
trees his trees which the old
Baronet was felling entirely without license.
The park wore an aspect of utter dreariness and ruin.
The drives were ill kept, and the neat carriage splashed
and floundered in muddy pools along the road.
The great sweep in front of the terrace and entrance
stair was black and covered with mosses; the once trim
flower-beds rank and weedy. Shutters were up along
almost the whole line of the house; the great hall-door
was unbarred after much ringing of the bell; an individual
in ribbons was seen flitting up the black oak stair,
as Horrocks at length admitted the heir of Queen’s
Crawley and his bride into the halls of their fathers.
He led the way into Sir Pitt’s “Library,”
as it was called, the fumes of tobacco growing stronger
as Pitt and Lady Jane approached that apartment, “Sir
Pitt ain’t very well,” Horrocks remarked
apologetically and hinted that his master was afflicted
with lumbago.
The library looked out on the front
walk and park. Sir Pitt had opened one of the
windows, and was bawling out thence to the postilion
and Pitt’s servant, who seemed to be about to
take the baggage down.
“Don’t move none of them
trunks,” he cried, pointing with a pipe which
he held in his hand. “It’s only a
morning visit, Tucker, you fool. Lor, what cracks
that off hoss has in his heels! Ain’t there
no one at the King’s Head to rub ’em a
little? How do, Pitt? How do, my dear?
Come to see the old man, hay? ’Gad you’ve
a pretty face, too. You ain’t like that
old horse-godmother, your mother. Come and give
old Pitt a kiss, like a good little gal.”
The embrace disconcerted the daughter-in-law
somewhat, as the caresses of the old gentleman, unshorn
and perfumed with tobacco, might well do. But
she remembered that her brother Southdown had mustachios,
and smoked cigars, and submitted to the Baronet with
a tolerable grace.
“Pitt has got vat,” said
the Baronet, after this mark of affection. “Does
he read ee very long zermons, my dear? Hundredth
Psalm, Evening Hymn, hay Pitt? Go and get a glass
of Malmsey and a cake for my Lady Jane, Horrocks,
you great big booby, and don’t stand stearing
there like a fat pig. I won’t ask you
to stop, my dear; you’ll find it too stoopid,
and so should I too along a Pitt. I’m an
old man now, and like my own ways, and my pipe and
backgammon of a night.”
“I can play at backgammon, sir,”
said Lady Jane, laughing. “I used to play
with Papa and Miss Crawley, didn’t I, Mr. Crawley?”
“Lady Jane can play, sir, at
the game to which you state that you are so partial,”
Pitt said haughtily.
“But she wawn’t stop for
all that. Naw, naw, goo back to Mudbury and
give Mrs. Rincer a benefit; or drive down to the
Rectory and ask Buty for a dinner. He’ll
be charmed to see you, you know; he’s so much
obliged to you for gettin’ the old woman’s
money. Ha, ha! Some of it will do to patch
up the Hall when I’m gone.”
“I perceive, sir,” said
Pitt with a heightened voice, “that your people
will cut down the timber.”
“Yees, yees, very fine weather,
and seasonable for the time of year,” Sir Pitt
answered, who had suddenly grown deaf. “But
I’m gittin’ old, Pitt, now. Law
bless you, you ain’t far from fifty yourself.
But he wears well, my pretty Lady Jane, don’t
he? It’s all godliness, sobriety, and a
moral life. Look at me, I’m not very fur
from fowr-score he, he”; and he laughed,
and took snuff, and leered at her and pinched her
hand.
Pitt once more brought the conversation
back to the timber, but the Baronet was deaf again
in an instant.
“I’m gittin’ very
old, and have been cruel bad this year with the lumbago.
I shan’t be here now for long; but I’m
glad ee’ve come, daughter-in-law. I like
your face, Lady Jane: it’s got none of
the damned high-boned Binkie look in it; and I’ll
give ee something pretty, my dear, to go to Court
in.” And he shuffled across the room to
a cupboard, from which he took a little old case containing
jewels of some value. “Take that,”
said he, “my dear; it belonged to my mother,
and afterwards to the first Lady Binkie. Pretty
pearls never gave ’em the ironmonger’s
daughter. No, no. Take ’em and put
’em up quick,” said he, thrusting the
case into his daughter’s hand, and clapping the
door of the cabinet to, as Horrocks entered with a
salver and refreshments.
“What have you a been and given
Pitt’s wife?” said the individual in ribbons,
when Pitt and Lady Jane had taken leave of the old
gentleman. It was Miss Horrocks, the butler’s
daughter the cause of the scandal throughout
the county the lady who reigned now almost
supreme at Queen’s Crawley.
The rise and progress of those Ribbons
had been marked with dismay by the county and family.
The Ribbons opened an account at the Mudbury Branch
Savings Bank; the Ribbons drove to church, monopolising
the pony-chaise, which was for the use of the servants
at the Hall. The domestics were dismissed at
her pleasure. The Scotch gardener, who still
lingered on the premises, taking a pride in his walls
and hot-houses, and indeed making a pretty good livelihood
by the garden, which he farmed, and of which he sold
the produce at Southampton, found the Ribbons eating
peaches on a sunshiny morning at the south-wall, and
had his ears boxed when he remonstrated about this
attack on his property. He and his Scotch wife
and his Scotch children, the only respectable inhabitants
of Queen’s Crawley, were forced to migrate,
with their goods and their chattels, and left the stately
comfortable gardens to go to waste, and the flower-beds
to run to seed. Poor Lady Crawley’s rose-garden
became the dreariest wilderness. Only two or
three domestics shuddered in the bleak old servants’
hall. The stables and offices were vacant, and
shut up, and half ruined. Sir Pitt lived in
private, and boozed nightly with Horrocks, his butler
or house-steward (as he now began to be called), and
the abandoned Ribbons. The times were very much
changed since the period when she drove to Mudbury
in the spring-cart and called the small tradesmen “Sir.”
It may have been shame, or it may have been dislike
of his neighbours, but the old Cynic of Queen’s
Crawley hardly issued from his park-gates at all now.
He quarrelled with his agents and screwed his tenants
by letter. His days were passed in conducting
his own correspondence; the lawyers and farm-bailiffs
who had to do business with him could not reach him
but through the Ribbons, who received them at the
door of the housekeeper’s room, which commanded
the back entrance by which they were admitted; and
so the Baronet’s daily perplexities increased,
and his embarrassments multiplied round him.
The horror of Pitt Crawley may be
imagined, as these reports of his father’s dotage
reached the most exemplary and correct of gentlemen.
He trembled daily lest he should hear that the Ribbons
was proclaimed his second legal mother-in-law.
After that first and last visit, his father’s
name was never mentioned in Pitt’s polite and
genteel establishment. It was the skeleton in
his house, and all the family walked by it in terror
and silence. The Countess Southdown kept on
dropping per coach at the lodge-gate the most exciting
tracts, tracts which ought to frighten the hair off
your head. Mrs. Bute at the parsonage nightly
looked out to see if the sky was red over the elms
behind which the Hall stood, and the mansion was on
fire. Sir G. Wapshot and Sir H. Fuddlestone,
old friends of the house, wouldn’t sit on the
bench with Sir Pitt at Quarter Sessions, and cut him
dead in the High Street of Southampton, where the
reprobate stood offering his dirty old hands to them.
Nothing had any effect upon him; he put his hands
into his pockets, and burst out laughing, as he scrambled
into his carriage and four; he used to burst out laughing
at Lady Southdown’s tracts; and he laughed at
his sons, and at the world, and at the Ribbons when
she was angry, which was not seldom.
Miss Horrocks was installed as housekeeper
at Queen’s Crawley, and ruled all the domestics
there with great majesty and rigour. All the
servants were instructed to address her as “Mum,”
or “Madam” and there was one
little maid, on her promotion, who persisted in calling
her “My Lady,” without any rebuke on the
part of the housekeeper. “There has been
better ladies, and there has been worser, Hester,”
was Miss Horrocks’ reply to this compliment
of her inferior; so she ruled, having supreme power
over all except her father, whom, however, she treated
with considerable haughtiness, warning him not to be
too familiar in his behaviour to one “as was
to be a Baronet’s lady.” Indeed,
she rehearsed that exalted part in life with great
satisfaction to herself, and to the amusement of old
Sir Pitt, who chuckled at her airs and graces, and
would laugh by the hour together at her assumptions
of dignity and imitations of genteel life. He
swore it was as good as a play to see her in the character
of a fine dame, and he made her put on one of the
first Lady Crawley’s court-dresses, swearing
(entirely to Miss Horrocks’ own concurrence)
that the dress became her prodigiously, and threatening
to drive her off that very instant to Court in a coach-and-four.
She had the ransacking of the wardrobes of the two
defunct ladies, and cut and hacked their posthumous
finery so as to suit her own tastes and figure.
And she would have liked to take possession of their
jewels and trinkets too; but the old Baronet had locked
them away in his private cabinet; nor could she coax
or wheedle him out of the keys. And it is a
fact, that some time after she left Queen’s
Crawley a copy-book belonging to this lady was discovered,
which showed that she had taken great pains in private
to learn the art of writing in general, and especially
of writing her own name as Lady Crawley, Lady Betsy
Horrocks, Lady Elizabeth Crawley, &c.
Though the good people of the Parsonage
never went to the Hall and shunned the horrid old
dotard its owner, yet they kept a strict knowledge
of all that happened there, and were looking out every
day for the catastrophe for which Miss Horrocks was
also eager. But Fate intervened enviously and
prevented her from receiving the reward due to such
immaculate love and virtue.
One day the Baronet surprised “her
ladyship,” as he jocularly called her, seated
at that old and tuneless piano in the drawing-room,
which had scarcely been touched since Becky Sharp
played quadrilles upon it seated at the
piano with the utmost gravity and squalling to the
best of her power in imitation of the music which she
had sometimes heard. The little kitchen-maid
on her promotion was standing at her mistress’s
side, quite delighted during the operation, and wagging
her head up and down and crying, “Lor, Mum,
’tis bittiful” just like a
genteel sycophant in a real drawing-room.
This incident made the old Baronet
roar with laughter, as usual. He narrated the
circumstance a dozen times to Horrocks in the course
of the evening, and greatly to the discomfiture of
Miss Horrocks. He thrummed on the table as if
it had been a musical instrument, and squalled in
imitation of her manner of singing. He vowed
that such a beautiful voice ought to be cultivated
and declared she ought to have singing-masters, in
which proposals she saw nothing ridiculous. He
was in great spirits that night, and drank with his
friend and butler an extraordinary quantity of rum-and-water at
a very late hour the faithful friend and domestic
conducted his master to his bedroom.
Half an hour afterwards there was
a great hurry and bustle in the house. Lights
went about from window to window in the lonely desolate
old Hall, whereof but two or three rooms were ordinarily
occupied by its owner. Presently, a boy on a
pony went galloping off to Mudbury, to the Doctor’s
house there. And in another hour (by which fact
we ascertain how carefully the excellent Mrs. Bute
Crawley had always kept up an understanding with the
great house), that lady in her clogs and calash, the
Reverend Bute Crawley, and James Crawley, her son,
had walked over from the Rectory through the park,
and had entered the mansion by the open hall-door.
They passed through the hall and the
small oak parlour, on the table of which stood the
three tumblers and the empty rum-bottle which had
served for Sir Pitt’s carouse, and through that
apartment into Sir Pitt’s study, where they
found Miss Horrocks, of the guilty ribbons, with a
wild air, trying at the presses and escritoires with
a bunch of keys. She dropped them with a scream
of terror, as little Mrs. Bute’s eyes flashed
out at her from under her black calash.
“Look at that, James and Mr.
Crawley,” cried Mrs. Bute, pointing at the scared
figure of the black-eyed, guilty wench.
“He gave ’em me; he gave ’em me!”
she cried.
“Gave them you, you abandoned
creature!” screamed Mrs. Bute. “Bear
witness, Mr. Crawley, we found this good-for-nothing
woman in the act of stealing your brother’s
property; and she will be hanged, as I always said
she would.”
Betsy Horrocks, quite daunted, flung
herself down on her knees, bursting into tears.
But those who know a really good woman are aware
that she is not in a hurry to forgive, and that the
humiliation of an enemy is a triumph to her soul.
“Ring the bell, James,”
Mrs. Bute said. “Go on ringing it till
the people come.” The three or four domestics
resident in the deserted old house came presently
at that jangling and continued summons.
“Put that woman in the strong-room,”
she said. “We caught her in the act of
robbing Sir Pitt. Mr. Crawley, you’ll make
out her committal and, Beddoes, you’ll
drive her over in the spring cart, in the morning,
to Southampton Gaol.”
“My dear,” interposed
the Magistrate and Rector “she’s
only ”
“Are there no handcuffs?”
Mrs. Bute continued, stamping in her clogs. “There
used to be handcuffs. Where’s the creature’s
abominable father?”
“He did give ’em
me,” still cried poor Betsy; “didn’t
he, Hester? You saw Sir Pitt you know
you did give ’em me, ever so long
ago the day after Mudbury fair: not
that I want ’em. Take ’em if you
think they ain’t mine.” And here
the unhappy wretch pulled out from her pocket a large
pair of paste shoe-buckles which had excited her admiration,
and which she had just appropriated out of one of
the bookcases in the study, where they had lain.
“Law, Betsy, how could you go
for to tell such a wicked story!” said Hester,
the little kitchen-maid late on her promotion “and
to Madame Crawley, so good and kind, and his Rev’rince
(with a curtsey), and you may search all my boxes,
Mum, I’m sure, and here’s my keys as I’m
an honest girl, though of pore parents and workhouse
bred and if you find so much as a beggarly
bit of lace or a silk stocking out of all the gownds
as you’ve had the picking of, may I never
go to church agin.”
“Give up your keys, you hardened
hussy,” hissed out the virtuous little lady
in the calash.
“And here’s a candle,
Mum, and if you please, Mum, I can show you her room,
Mum, and the press in the housekeeper’s room,
Mum, where she keeps heaps and heaps of things, Mum,”
cried out the eager little Hester with a profusion
of curtseys.
“Hold your tongue, if you please.
I know the room which the creature occupies perfectly
well. Mrs. Brown, have the goodness to come with
me, and Beddoes don’t you lose sight of that
woman,” said Mrs. Bute, seizing the candle.
“Mr. Crawley, you had better go upstairs and
see that they are not murdering your unfortunate brother” and
the calash, escorted by Mrs. Brown, walked away to
the apartment which, as she said truly, she knew perfectly
well.
Bute went upstairs and found the Doctor
from Mudbury, with the frightened Horrocks over his
master in a chair. They were trying to bleed
Sir Pitt Crawley.
With the early morning an express
was sent off to Mr. Pitt Crawley by the Rector’s
lady, who assumed the command of everything, and had
watched the old Baronet through the night. He
had been brought back to a sort of life; he could
not speak, but seemed to recognize people. Mrs.
Bute kept resolutely by his bedside. She never
seemed to want to sleep, that little woman, and did
not close her fiery black eyes once, though the Doctor
snored in the arm-chair. Horrocks made some wild
efforts to assert his authority and assist his master;
but Mrs. Bute called him a tipsy old wretch and bade
him never show his face again in that house, or he
should be transported like his abominable daughter.
Terrified by her manner, he slunk
down to the oak parlour where Mr. James was, who,
having tried the bottle standing there and found no
liquor in it, ordered Mr. Horrocks to get another bottle
of rum, which he fetched, with clean glasses, and
to which the Rector and his son sat down, ordering
Horrocks to put down the keys at that instant and never
to show his face again.
Cowed by this behaviour, Horrocks
gave up the keys, and he and his daughter slunk off
silently through the night and gave up possession of
the house of Queen’s Crawley.