Vanity Fair - Page 511/573

Which of the dead are most tenderly and passionately deplored? Those

who love the survivors the least, I believe. The death of a child

occasions a passion of grief and frantic tears, such as your end,

brother reader, will never inspire. The death of an infant which

scarce knew you, which a week's absence from you would have caused to

forget you, will strike you down more than the loss of your closest

friend, or your first-born son--a man grown like yourself, with

children of his own. We may be harsh and stern with Judah and

Simeon--our love and pity gush out for Benjamin, the little one. And if

you are old, as some reader of this may be or shall be old and rich, or

old and poor--you may one day be thinking for yourself--"These people

are very good round about me, but they won't grieve too much when I am

gone. I am very rich, and they want my inheritance--or very poor, and

they are tired of supporting me."

The period of mourning for Mrs. Sedley's death was only just concluded,

and Jos scarcely had had time to cast off his black and appear in the

splendid waistcoats which he loved, when it became evident to those

about Mr. Sedley that another event was at hand, and that the old man

was about to go seek for his wife in the dark land whither she had

preceded him. "The state of my father's health," Jos Sedley solemnly

remarked at the Club, "prevents me from giving any LARGE parties this

season: but if you will come in quietly at half-past six, Chutney, my

boy, and fake a homely dinner with one or two of the old set--I shall

be always glad to see you." So Jos and his acquaintances dined and

drank their claret among themselves in silence, whilst the sands of

life were running out in the old man's glass upstairs. The

velvet-footed butler brought them their wine, and they composed

themselves to a rubber after dinner, at which Major Dobbin would

sometimes come and take a hand; and Mrs. Osborne would occasionally

descend, when her patient above was settled for the night, and had

commenced one of those lightly troubled slumbers which visit the pillow

of old age.

The old man clung to his daughter during this sickness. He would take

his broths and medicines from scarcely any other hand. To tend him

became almost the sole business of her life. Her bed was placed close

by the door which opened into his chamber, and she was alive at the

slightest noise or disturbance from the couch of the querulous invalid.

Though, to do him justice, he lay awake many an hour, silent and

without stirring, unwilling to awaken his kind and vigilant nurse.

He loved his daughter with more fondness now, perhaps, than ever he had

done since the days of her childhood. In the discharge of gentle

offices and kind filial duties, this simple creature shone most

especially. "She walks into the room as silently as a sunbeam," Mr.

Dobbin thought as he saw her passing in and out from her father's room,

a cheerful sweetness lighting up her face as she moved to and fro,

graceful and noiseless. When women are brooding over their children,

or busied in a sick-room, who has not seen in their faces those sweet

angelic beams of love and pity?