Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

remember how many it was (as if half-a-dozen babes either way made

no difference) – had happened to a Mrs. What’s-her-name, as once

lodged there – but he didn’t call it to mind, particular. Nettled

by this phlegmatic conduct, I informed him that I had left the town

when I was a child. He slowly returned, quite unsoftened, and not

without a sarcastic kind of complacency, HAD I? Ah! And did I

find it had got on tolerably well without me? Such is the

difference (I thought, when I had left him a few hundred yards

behind, and was by so much in a better temper) between going away

from a place and remaining in it. I had no right, I reflected, to

be angry with the greengrocer for his want of interest, I was

nothing to him: whereas he was the town, the cathedral, the

bridge, the river, my childhood, and a large slice of my life, to

me.

Of course the town had shrunk fearfully, since I was a child there.

I had entertained the impression that the High-street was at least

as wide as Regent-street, London, or the Italian Boulevard at

Paris. I found it little better than a lane. There was a public

clock in it, which I had supposed to be the finest clock in the

world: whereas it now turned out to be as inexpressive, moonfaced,

and weak a clock as ever I saw. It belonged to a Town Hall,

where I had seen an Indian (who I now suppose wasn’t an Indian)

swallow a sword (which I now suppose he didn’t). The edifice had

appeared to me in those days so glorious a structure, that I had

set it up in my mind as the model on which the Genie of the Lamp

built the palace for Aladdin. A mean little brick heap, like a

demented chapel, with a few yawning persons in leather gaiters, and

in the last extremity for something to do, lounging at the door

with their hands in their pockets, and calling themselves a Corn

Exchange!

The Theatre was in existence, I found, on asking the fishmonger,

who had a compact show of stock in his window, consisting of a sole

and a quart of shrimps – and I resolved to comfort my mind by going

to look at it. Richard the Third, in a very uncomfortable cloak,

had first appeared to me there, and had made my heart leap with

terror by backing up against the stage-box in which I was posted,

while struggling for life against the virtuous Richmond. It was

within those walls that I had learnt as from a page of English

history, how that wicked King slept in war-time on a sofa much too

short for him, and how fearfully his conscience troubled his boots.

There, too, had I first seen the funny countryman, but countryman

of noble principles, in a flowered waistcoat, crunch up his little

hat and throw it on the ground, and pull off his coat, saying, ‘Dom

thee, squire, coom on with thy fistes then!’ At which the lovely

young woman who kept company with him (and who went out gleaning,

in a narrow white muslin apron with five beautiful bars of five

different-coloured ribbons across it) was so frightened for his

sake, that she fainted away. Many wondrous secrets of Nature had I

come to the knowledge of in that sanctuary: of which not the least

terrific were, that the witches in Macbeth bore an awful

resemblance to the Thanes and other proper inhabitants of Scotland;

and that the good King Duncan couldn’t rest in his grave, but was

constantly coming out of it and calling himself somebody else. To

the Theatre, therefore, I repaired for consolation. But I found

very little, for it was in a bad and declining way. A dealer in

wine and bottled beer had already squeezed his trade into the boxoffice,

and the theatrical money was taken – when it came – in a

kind of meat-safe in the passage. The dealer in wine and bottled

beer must have insinuated himself under the stage too; for he

announced that he had various descriptions of alcoholic drinks ‘in

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