Vanity Fair - Page 29/573

"Did you ever hear anything like your brother's eloquence?" whispered

Mr. Osborne to Amelia. "Why, your friend has worked miracles."

"The more the better," said Miss Amelia; who, like almost all women who

are worth a pin, was a match-maker in her heart, and would have been

delighted that Joseph should carry back a wife to India. She had, too,

in the course of this few days' constant intercourse, warmed into a

most tender friendship for Rebecca, and discovered a million of virtues

and amiable qualities in her which she had not perceived when they were

at Chiswick together. For the affection of young ladies is of as rapid

growth as Jack's bean-stalk, and reaches up to the sky in a night. It

is no blame to them that after marriage this Sehnsucht nach der Liebe

subsides. It is what sentimentalists, who deal in very big words, call

a yearning after the Ideal, and simply means that women are commonly

not satisfied until they have husbands and children on whom they may

centre affections, which are spent elsewhere, as it were, in small

change.

Having expended her little store of songs, or having stayed long enough

in the back drawing-room, it now appeared proper to Miss Amelia to ask

her friend to sing. "You would not have listened to me," she said to

Mr. Osborne (though she knew she was telling a fib), "had you heard

Rebecca first."

"I give Miss Sharp warning, though," said Osborne, "that, right or

wrong, I consider Miss Amelia Sedley the first singer in the world."

"You shall hear," said Amelia; and Joseph Sedley was actually polite

enough to carry the candles to the piano. Osborne hinted that he should

like quite as well to sit in the dark; but Miss Sedley, laughing,

declined to bear him company any farther, and the two accordingly

followed Mr. Joseph. Rebecca sang far better than her friend (though

of course Osborne was free to keep his opinion), and exerted herself to

the utmost, and, indeed, to the wonder of Amelia, who had never known

her perform so well. She sang a French song, which Joseph did not

understand in the least, and which George confessed he did not

understand, and then a number of those simple ballads which were the

fashion forty years ago, and in which British tars, our King, poor

Susan, blue-eyed Mary, and the like, were the principal themes. They

are not, it is said, very brilliant, in a musical point of view, but

contain numberless good-natured, simple appeals to the affections,

which people understood better than the milk-and-water lagrime,

sospiri, and felicita of the eternal Donizettian music with which we

are favoured now-a-days.

Conversation of a sentimental sort, befitting the subject, was carried

on between the songs, to which Sambo, after he had brought the tea, the

delighted cook, and even Mrs. Blenkinsop, the housekeeper, condescended

to listen on the landing-place.