Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

the newspaper with which I had been occupied, and surveyed the

fellow-man in question with astonishment. Whether he had been

sitting to any painter as a frontispiece for a new edition of

‘Sartor Resartus;’ whether ‘the husk or shell of him,’ as the

esteemed Herr Teufelsdroch might put it, were founded on a jockey,

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

on a circus, on General Garibaldi, on cheap porcelain, on a toy

shop, on Guy Fawkes, on waxwork, on gold-digging, on Bedlam, or on

all, – were doubts that greatly exercised my mind. Meanwhile, my

fellow-man stumbled and slided, excessively against his will, on

the slippery stones of my Covent-garden street, and elicited

shrieks from several sympathetic females, by convulsively

restraining himself from pitching over his horse’s head. In the

very crisis of these evolutions, and indeed at the trying moment

when his charger’s tail was in a tobacconist’s shop, and his head

anywhere about town, this cavalier was joined by two similar

portents, who, likewise stumbling and sliding, caused him to

stumble and slide the more distressingly. At length this Gilpinian

triumvirate effected a halt, and, looking northward, waved their

three right hands as commanding unseen troops, to ‘Up, guards! and

at ’em.’ Hereupon a brazen band burst forth, which caused them to

be instantly bolted with to some remote spot of earth in the

direction of the Surrey Hills.

Judging from these appearances that a procession was under way, I

threw up my window, and, craning out, had the satisfaction of

beholding it advancing along the streets. It was a Teetotal

procession, as I learnt from its banners, and was long enough to

consume twenty minutes in passing. There were a great number of

children in it, some of them so very young in their mothers’ arms

as to be in the act of practically exemplifying their abstinence

from fermented liquors, and attachment to an unintoxicating drink,

while the procession defiled. The display was, on the whole,

pleasant to see, as any good-humoured holiday assemblage of clean,

cheerful, and well-conducted people should be. It was bright with

ribbons, tinsel, and shoulder-belts, and abounded in flowers, as if

those latter trophies had come up in profusion under much watering.

The day being breezy, the insubordination of the large banners was

very reprehensible. Each of these being borne aloft on two poles

and stayed with some half-dozen lines, was carried, as polite books

in the last century used to be written, by ‘various hands,’ and the

anxiety expressed in the upturned faces of those officers, –

something between the anxiety attendant on the balancing art, and

that inseparable from the pastime of kite-flying, with a touch of

the angler’s quality in landing his scaly prey, – much impressed

me. Suddenly, too, a banner would shiver in the wind, and go about

in the most inconvenient manner. This always happened oftenest

with such gorgeous standards as those representing a gentleman in

black, corpulent with tea and water, in the laudable act of

summarily reforming a family, feeble and pinched with beer. The

gentleman in black distended by wind would then conduct himself

with the most unbecoming levity, while the beery family, growing

beerier, would frantically try to tear themselves away from his

ministration. Some of the inscriptions accompanying the banners

were of a highly determined character, as ‘We never, never will

give up the temperance cause,’ with similar sound resolutions

rather suggestive to the profane mind of Mrs. Micawber’s ‘I never

will desert Mr. Micawber,’ and of Mr. Micawber’s retort, ‘Really,

my dear, I am not aware that you were ever required by any human

being to do anything of the sort.’

At intervals, a gloom would fall on the passing members of the

procession, for which I was at first unable to account. But this I

discovered, after a little observation, to be occasioned by the

coming on of the executioners, – the terrible official beings who

were to make the speeches by-and-by, – who were distributed in open

carriages at various points of the cavalcade. A dark cloud and a

sensation of dampness, as from many wet blankets, invariably

preceded the rolling on of the dreadful cars containing these

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