Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

Reviving a little, she embraced me, said, ‘You knew him well, dear

Master Uncommercial, and he knew you!’ and fainted again: which,

as the rest of the Coat of Arms soothingly said, ‘done her credit.’

Now, I knew that she needn’t have fainted unless she liked, and

that she wouldn’t have fainted unless it had been expected of her,

quite as well as I know it at this day. It made me feel

uncomfortable and hypocritical besides. I was not sure but that it

might be manners in ME to faint next, and I resolved to keep my eye

on Flanders’s uncle, and if I saw any signs of his going in that

direction, to go too, politely. But Flanders’s uncle (who was a

weak little old retail grocer) had only one idea, which was that we

all wanted tea; and he handed us cups of tea all round,

incessantly, whether we refused or not. There was a young nephew

of Flanders’s present, to whom Flanders, it was rumoured, had left

nineteen guineas. He drank all the tea that was offered him, this

nephew – amounting, I should say, to several quarts – and ate as

much plum-cake as he could possibly come by; but he felt it to be

decent mourning that he should now and then stop in the midst of a

lump of cake, and appear to forget that his mouth was full, in the

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

contemplation of his uncle’s memory. I felt all this to be the

fault of the undertaker, who was handing us gloves on a tea-tray as

if they were muffins, and tying us into cloaks (mine had to be

pinned up all round, it was so long for me), because I knew that he

was making game. So, when we got out into the streets, and I

constantly disarranged the procession by tumbling on the people

before me because my handkerchief blinded my eyes, and tripping up

the people behind me because my cloak was so long, I felt that we

were all making game. I was truly sorry for Flanders, but I knew

that it was no reason why we should be trying (the women with their

heads in hoods like coal-scuttles with the black side outward) to

keep step with a man in a scarf, carrying a thing like a mourning

spy-glass, which he was going to open presently and sweep the

horizon with. I knew that we should not all have been speaking in

one particular key-note struck by the undertaker, if we had not

been making game. Even in our faces we were every one of us as

like the undertaker as if we had been his own family, and I

perceived that this could not have happened unless we had been

making game. When we returned to Sally’s, it was all of a piece.

The continued impossibility of getting on without plum-cake; the

ceremonious apparition of a pair of decanters containing port and

sherry and cork; Sally’s sister at the tea-table, clinking the best

crockery and shaking her head mournfully every time she looked down

into the teapot, as if it were the tomb; the Coat of Arms again,

and Sally as before; lastly, the words of consolation administered

to Sally when it was considered right that she should ‘come round

nicely:’ which were, that the deceased had had ‘as com-for-ta-ble a

fu-ne-ral as comfortable could be!’

Other funerals have I seen with grown-up eyes, since that day, of

which the burden has been the same childish burden. Making game.

Real affliction, real grief and solemnity, have been outraged, and

the funeral has been ‘performed.’ The waste for which the funeral

customs of many tribes of savages are conspicuous, has attended

these civilised obsequies; and once, and twice, have I wished in my

soul that if the waste must be, they would let the undertaker bury

the money, and let me bury the friend.

In France, upon the whole, these ceremonies are more sensibly

regulated, because they are upon the whole less expensively

regulated. I cannot say that I have ever been much edified by the

custom of tying a bib and apron on the front of the house of

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