Vanity Fair - Page 400/573

We are authorized to state that Mrs. Rawdon Crawley's costume de cour

on the occasion of her presentation to the Sovereign was of the most

elegant and brilliant description. Some ladies we may have seen--we

who wear stars and cordons and attend the St. James's assemblies, or

we, who, in muddy boots, dawdle up and down Pall Mall and peep into the

coaches as they drive up with the great folks in their feathers--some

ladies of fashion, I say, we may have seen, about two o'clock of the

forenoon of a levee day, as the laced-jacketed band of the Life Guards

are blowing triumphal marches seated on those prancing music-stools,

their cream-coloured chargers--who are by no means lovely and enticing

objects at that early period of noon. A stout countess of sixty,

decolletee, painted, wrinkled with rouge up to her drooping eyelids,

and diamonds twinkling in her wig, is a wholesome and edifying, but not

a pleasant sight. She has the faded look of a St. James's Street

illumination, as it may be seen of an early morning, when half the

lamps are out, and the others are blinking wanly, as if they were about

to vanish like ghosts before the dawn. Such charms as those of which

we catch glimpses while her ladyship's carriage passes should appear

abroad at night alone. If even Cynthia looks haggard of an afternoon,

as we may see her sometimes in the present winter season, with Phoebus

staring her out of countenance from the opposite side of the heavens,

how much more can old Lady Castlemouldy keep her head up when the sun

is shining full upon it through the chariot windows, and showing all

the chinks and crannies with which time has marked her face! No.

Drawing-rooms should be announced for November, or the first foggy day,

or the elderly sultanas of our Vanity Fair should drive up in closed

litters, descend in a covered way, and make their curtsey to the

Sovereign under the protection of lamplight.

Our beloved Rebecca had no need, however, of any such a friendly halo

to set off her beauty. Her complexion could bear any sunshine as yet,

and her dress, though if you were to see it now, any present lady of

Vanity Fair would pronounce it to be the most foolish and preposterous

attire ever worn, was as handsome in her eyes and those of the public,

some five-and-twenty years since, as the most brilliant costume of the

most famous beauty of the present season. A score of years hence that

too, that milliner's wonder, will have passed into the domain of the

absurd, along with all previous vanities. But we are wandering too

much. Mrs. Rawdon's dress was pronounced to be charmante on the

eventful day of her presentation. Even good little Lady Jane was forced

to acknowledge this effect, as she looked at her kinswoman, and owned

sorrowfully to herself that she was quite inferior in taste to Mrs.

Becky.