Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

repress the gloomy anticipations with which my soul became fraught

when I heard of this plan. The fatal day arrived, and we assembled

in force. Mrs. Flipfield senior formed an interesting feature in

the group, with a blue-veined miniature of the late Mr. Flipfield

round her neck, in an oval, resembling a tart from the

pastrycook’s: his hair powdered, and the bright buttons on his

coat, evidently very like. She was accompanied by Miss Flipfield,

the eldest of her numerous family, who held her pocket-handkerchief

to her bosom in a majestic manner, and spoke to all of us (none of

us had ever seen her before), in pious and condoning tones, of all

the quarrels that had taken place in the family, from her infancy –

which must have been a long time ago – down to that hour. The

Long-lost did not appear. Dinner, half an hour later than usual,

was announced, and still no Long-lost. We sat down to table. The

knife and fork of the Long-lost made a vacuum in Nature, and when

the champagne came round for the first time, Flipfield gave him up

for the day, and had them removed. It was then that the Long-lost

gained the height of his popularity with the company; for my own

part, I felt convinced that I loved him dearly. Flipfield’s

dinners are perfect, and he is the easiest and best of

entertainers. Dinner went on brilliantly, and the more the Longlost

didn’t come, the more comfortable we grew, and the more highly

we thought of him. Flipfield’s own man (who has a regard for me)

was in the act of struggling with an ignorant stipendiary, to wrest

from him the wooden leg of a Guinea-fowl which he was pressing on

my acceptance, and to substitute a slice of the breast, when a

ringing at the door-bell suspended the strife. I looked round me,

and perceived the sudden pallor which I knew my own visage

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

revealed, reflected in the faces of the company. Flipfield

hurriedly excused himself, went out, was absent for about a minute

or two, and then re-entered with the Long-lost.

I beg to say distinctly that if the stranger had brought Mont Blanc

with him, or had come attended by a retinue of eternal snows, he

could not have chilled the circle to the marrow in a more efficient

manner. Embodied Failure sat enthroned upon the Long-lost’s brow,

and pervaded him to his Long-lost boots. In vain Mrs. Flipfield

senior, opening her arms, exclaimed, ‘My Tom!’ and pressed his nose

against the counterfeit presentment of his other parent. In vain

Miss Flipfield, in the first transports of this re-union, showed

him a dint upon her maidenly cheek, and asked him if he remembered

when he did that with the bellows? We, the bystanders, were

overcome, but overcome by the palpable, undisguisable, utter, and

total break-down of the Long-lost. Nothing he could have done

would have set him right with us but his instant return to the

Ganges. In the very same moments it became established that the

feeling was reciprocal, and that the Long-lost detested us. When a

friend of the family (not myself, upon my honour), wishing to set

things going again, asked him, while he partook of soup – asked him

with an amiability of intention beyond all praise, but with a

weakness of execution open to defeat – what kind of river he

considered the Ganges, the Long-lost, scowling at the friend of the

family over his spoon, as one of an abhorrent race, replied, ‘Why,

a river of water, I suppose,’ and spooned his soup into himself

with a malignancy of hand and eye that blighted the amiable

questioner. Not an opinion could be elicited from the Long-lost,

in unison with the sentiments of any individual present. He

contradicted Flipfield dead, before he had eaten his salmon. He

had no idea – or affected to have no idea – that it was his

brother’s birthday, and on the communication of that interesting

fact to him, merely wanted to make him out four years older than he

was. He was an antipathetical being, with a peculiar power and

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