We must suppose little George Osborne has ridden from Knightsbridge

towards Fulham, and will stop and make inquiries at that village

regarding some friends whom we have left there. How is Mrs. Amelia

after the storm of Waterloo? Is she living and thriving? What has come

of Major Dobbin, whose cab was always hankering about her premises? And

is there any news of the Collector of Boggley Wollah? The facts

concerning the latter are briefly these: Our worthy fat friend Joseph Sedley returned to India not long after

his escape from Brussels. Either his furlough was up, or he dreaded to

meet any witnesses of his Waterloo flight. However it might be, he

went back to his duties in Bengal very soon after Napoleon had taken up

his residence at St. Helena, where Jos saw the ex-Emperor. To hear Mr.

Sedley talk on board ship you would have supposed that it was not the

first time he and the Corsican had met, and that the civilian had

bearded the French General at Mount St. John. He had a thousand

anecdotes about the famous battles; he knew the position of every

regiment and the loss which each had incurred. He did not deny that he

had been concerned in those victories--that he had been with the army

and carried despatches for the Duke of Wellington. And he described

what the Duke did and said on every conceivable moment of the day of

Waterloo, with such an accurate knowledge of his Grace's sentiments and

proceedings that it was clear he must have been by the conqueror's side

throughout the day; though, as a non-combatant, his name was not

mentioned in the public documents relative to the battle. Perhaps he

actually worked himself up to believe that he had been engaged with the

army; certain it is that he made a prodigious sensation for some time

at Calcutta, and was called Waterloo Sedley during the whole of his

subsequent stay in Bengal.

The bills which Jos had given for the purchase of those unlucky horses

were paid without question by him and his agents. He never was heard

to allude to the bargain, and nobody knows for a certainty what became

of the horses, or how he got rid of them, or of Isidor, his Belgian

servant, who sold a grey horse, very like the one which Jos rode, at

Valenciennes sometime during the autumn of 1815.

Jos's London agents had orders to pay one hundred and twenty pounds

yearly to his parents at Fulham. It was the chief support of the old

couple; for Mr. Sedley's speculations in life subsequent to his

bankruptcy did not by any means retrieve the broken old gentleman's

fortune. He tried to be a wine-merchant, a coal-merchant, a commission

lottery agent, &c., &c. He sent round prospectuses to his friends

whenever he took a new trade, and ordered a new brass plate for the

door, and talked pompously about making his fortune still. But Fortune

never came back to the feeble and stricken old man. One by one his

friends dropped off, and were weary of buying dear coals and bad wine

from him; and there was only his wife in all the world who fancied,

when he tottered off to the City of a morning, that he was still doing

any business there. At evening he crawled slowly back; and he used to

go of nights to a little club at a tavern, where he disposed of the

finances of the nation. It was wonderful to hear him talk about

millions, and agios, and discounts, and what Rothschild was doing, and

Baring Brothers. He talked of such vast sums that the gentlemen of the

club (the apothecary, the undertaker, the great carpenter and builder,

the parish clerk, who was allowed to come stealthily, and Mr. Clapp,

our old acquaintance,) respected the old gentleman. "I was better off

once, sir," he did not fail to tell everybody who "used the room." "My

son, sir, is at this minute chief magistrate of Ramgunge in the

Presidency of Bengal, and touching his four thousand rupees per mensem.

My daughter might be a Colonel's lady if she liked. I might draw upon

my son, the first magistrate, sir, for two thousand pounds to-morrow,

and Alexander would cash my bill, down sir, down on the counter, sir.

But the Sedleys were always a proud family." You and I, my dear reader,

may drop into this condition one day: for have not many of our friends

attained it? Our luck may fail: our powers forsake us: our place on

the boards be taken by better and younger mimes--the chance of life

roll away and leave us shattered and stranded. Then men will walk

across the road when they meet you--or, worse still, hold you out a

couple of fingers and patronize you in a pitying way--then you will

know, as soon as your back is turned, that your friend begins with a

"Poor devil, what imprudences he has committed, what chances that chap

has thrown away!" Well, well--a carriage and three thousand a year is

not the summit of the reward nor the end of God's judgment of men. If

quacks prosper as often as they go to the wall--if zanies succeed and

knaves arrive at fortune, and, vice versa, sharing ill luck and

prosperity for all the world like the ablest and most honest amongst

us--I say, brother, the gifts and pleasures of Vanity Fair cannot be

held of any great account, and that it is probable . . . but we are

wandering out of the domain of the story.




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