Mary Clapp
Sometimes called Polly, Miss Clapp loves Amelia and "Major Sugar-plums," as she calls Dobbin.
John
John is the Sedleys' groom, who is rude to Becky when he drives her to Sir Pitt's house. Amelia has given Becky some clothes John has wanted for his girl friend.
Mr. Sambo
Mr. Sambo is the good-natured, bandy-legged servant of the Sedleys, who doubles as coachman, butler, or waiter.
Sir Pitt Crawley
Son of Walpole Crawley, first baronet, of the Tape and Sealing Wax office, Sir Pitt has a celebrated genealogy. His first wife, sixth daughter of Lord Binkie, gave birth to two sons, Pitt and Rawdon. His second wife, Rose, daughter of an ironmonger, has two daughters. The reader first meets him when he carries in Rebecca's trunks and does not offer her any food. Becky characterizes him as ". . . old, stumpy, short, vulgar, and very dirty man, in old clothes and shabby old gaiters, who smokes a horrid pipe, cooks his own horrid supper in a saucepan. He speaks with a country accent, and swore a great deal . . ." He talks of himself all the time, sometimes in coarse and vulgar accents, sometimes affecting the tone of a man of the world. He has been on parliamentary lists for years.
Stingy, dirty, disreputable, and vulgar, "whatever Sir Pitt Crawley's qualities might be, good or bad, he did not make the least disguise of them." His affinity for Vanity Fair is evidenced by the fact that though he eats boiled mutton, he has three footmen to serve it.
Sir Pitt becomes very fond of Becky and after Rose dies, he comes to Miss Crawley's, where Rebecca is taking care of her, and asks Becky to marry him. In this humorous scene Rebecca has to refuse. Sir Pitt, in a fury, goes home and tears up Rebecca's belongings. After Becky is lost to him, he takes up with Miss Horrocks, the butler's daughter, and horrifies all his relatives by taking her about the country and drinking with her. He might have married her, but his illness and death prevent marriage.
Tipsy, but still stingy, he is such a sharp landlord that he can't find good tenants; so close, he grudges seed for planting. He dies unmourned.


















