Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

Page 64

Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

avenues to cat’s meat; not only is there a moral and politicoeconomical

haggardness in them, traceable to these reflections; but

they evince a physical deterioration. Their linen is not clean,

and is wretchedly got up; their black turns rusty, like old

mourning; they wear very indifferent fur; and take to the shabbiest

cotton velvet, instead of silk velvet. I am on terms of

recognition with several small streets of cats, about the Obelisk

in Saint George’s Fields, and also in the vicinity of Clerkenwellgreen,

and also in the back settlements of Drury-lane. In

appearance, they are very like the women among whom they live.

They seem to turn out of their unwholesome beds into the street,

without any preparation. They leave their young families to

stagger about the gutters, unassisted, while they frouzily quarrel

and swear and scratch and spit, at street corners. In particular,

I remark that when they are about to increase their families (an

event of frequent recurrence) the resemblance is strongly expressed

in a certain dusty dowdiness, down-at-heel self-neglect, and

general giving up of things. I cannot honestly report that I have

ever seen a feline matron of this class washing her face when in an

interesting condition.

Not to prolong these notes of uncommercial travel among the lower

animals of shy neighbourhoods, by dwelling at length upon the

exasperated moodiness of the tom-cats, and their resemblance in

many respects to a man and a brother, I will come to a close with a

word on the fowls of the same localities.

That anything born of an egg and invested with wings, should have

got to the pass that it hops contentedly down a ladder into a

cellar, and calls THAT going home, is a circumstance so amazing as

to leave one nothing more in this connexion to wonder at.

Otherwise I might wonder at the completeness with which these fowls

have become separated from all the birds of the air – have taken to

grovelling in bricks and mortar and mud – have forgotten all about

live trees, and make roosting-places of shop-boards, barrows,

oyster-tubs, bulk-heads, and door-scrapers. I wonder at nothing

concerning them, and take them as they are. I accept as products

of Nature and things of course, a reduced Bantam family of my

acquaintance in the Hackney-road, who are incessantly at the

pawnbroker’s. I cannot say that they enjoy themselves, for they

are of a melancholy temperament; but what enjoyment they are

capable of, they derive from crowding together in the pawnbroker’s

side-entry. Here, they are always to be found in a feeble flutter,

as if they were newly come down in the world, and were afraid of

being identified. I know a low fellow, originally of a good family

from Dorking, who takes his whole establishment of wives, in single

file, in at the door of the jug Department of a disorderly tavern

near the Haymarket, manoeuvres them among the company’s legs,

emerges with them at the Bottle Entrance, and so passes his life:

seldom, in the season, going to bed before two in the morning.

Over Waterloo-bridge, there is a shabby old speckled couple (they

belong to the wooden French-bedstead, washing-stand, and towelhorse-

making trade), who are always trying to get in at the door of

a chapel. Whether the old lady, under a delusion reminding one of

Mrs. Southcott, has an idea of entrusting an egg to that particular

denomination, or merely understands that she has no business in the

building and is consequently frantic to enter it, I cannot

determine; but she is constantly endeavouring to undermine the

principal door: while her partner, who is infirm upon his legs,

walks up and down, encouraging her and defying the Universe. But,

the family I have been best acquainted with, since the removal from

this trying sphere of a Chinese circle at Brentford, reside in the

densest part of Bethnal-green. Their abstraction from the objects

among which they live, or rather their conviction that those

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

objects have all come into existence in express subservience to

fowls, has so enchanted me, that I have made them the subject of

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