Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

Many of us went the length of drinking beer at the bar of the

neighbouring public-house, some of us drank spirits, crowds of us

had sandwiches and ginger-beer at the refreshment-bars established

for us in the Theatre. The sandwich – as substantial as was

consistent with portability, and as cheap as possible – we hailed

as one of our greatest institutions. It forced its way among us at

all stages of the entertainment, and we were always delighted to

see it; its adaptability to the varying moods of our nature was

surprising; we could never weep so comfortably as when our tears

fell on our sandwich; we could never laugh so heartily as when we

choked with sandwich; Virtue never looked so beautiful or Vice so

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

deformed as when we paused, sandwich in hand, to consider what

would come of that resolution of Wickedness in boots, to sever

Innocence in flowered chintz from Honest Industry in striped

stockings. When the curtain fell for the night, we still fell back

upon sandwich, to help us through the rain and mire, and home to

bed.

This, as I have mentioned, was Saturday night. Being Saturday

night, I had accomplished but the half of my uncommercial journey;

for, its object was to compare the play on Saturday evening with

the preaching in the same Theatre on Sunday evening.

Therefore, at the same hour of half-past six on the similarly damp

and muddy Sunday evening, I returned to this Theatre. I drove up

to the entrance (fearful of being late, or I should have come on

foot), and found myself in a large crowd of people who, I am happy

to state, were put into excellent spirits by my arrival. Having

nothing to look at but the mud and the closed doors, they looked at

me, and highly enjoyed the comic spectacle. My modesty inducing me

to draw off, some hundreds of yards, into a dark corner, they at

once forgot me, and applied themselves to their former occupation

of looking at the mud and looking in at the closed doors: which,

being of grated ironwork, allowed the lighted passage within to be

seen. They were chiefly people of respectable appearance, odd and

impulsive as most crowds are, and making a joke of being there as

most crowds do.

In the dark corner I might have sat a long while, but that a very

obliging passer-by informed me that the Theatre was already full,

and that the people whom I saw in the street were all shut out for

want of room. After that, I lost no time in worming myself into

the building, and creeping to a place in a Proscenium box that had

been kept for me.

There must have been full four thousand people present. Carefully

estimating the pit alone, I could bring it out as holding little

less than fourteen hundred. Every part of the house was well

filled, and I had not found it easy to make my way along the back

of the boxes to where I sat. The chandeliers in the ceiling were

lighted; there was no light on the stage; the orchestra was empty.

The green curtain was down, and, packed pretty closely on chairs on

the small space of stage before it, were some thirty gentlemen, and

two or three ladies. In the centre of these, in a desk or pulpit

covered with red baize, was the presiding minister. The kind of

rostrum he occupied will be very well understood, if I liken it to

a boarded-up fireplace turned towards the audience, with a

gentleman in a black surtout standing in the stove and leaning

forward over the mantelpiece.

A portion of Scripture was being read when I went in. It was

followed by a discourse, to which the congregation listened with

most exemplary attention and uninterrupted silence and decorum. My

own attention comprehended both the auditory and the speaker, and

shall turn to both in this recalling of the scene, exactly as it

did at the time.

‘A very difficult thing,’ I thought, when the discourse began, ‘to

speak appropriately to so large an audience, and to speak with

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