Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

flavour in them) cheese. I know their name, through the chance of

having called the wife’s attention, at half-past nine on the second

evening of our acquaintance, to the circumstance of there being

some one at the house door; when she apologetically explained,

‘It’s only Mr. Klem.’ What becomes of Mr. Klem all day, or when he

goes out, or why, is a mystery I cannot penetrate; but at half-past

nine he never fails to turn up on the door-step with the flat pint

of beer. And the pint of beer, flat as it is, is so much more

important than himself, that it always seems to my fancy as if it

had found him drivelling in the street and had humanely brought him

home. In making his way below, Mr. Klem never goes down the middle

of the passage, like another Christian, but shuffles against the

wall as if entreating me to take notice that he is occupying as

little space as possible in the house; and whenever I come upon him

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

face to face, he backs from me in fascinated confusion. The most

extraordinary circumstance I have traced in connexion with this

aged couple, is, that there is a Miss Klem, their daughter,

apparently ten years older than either of them, who has also a bed

and smells of it, and carries it about the earth at dusk and hides

it in deserted houses. I came into this piece of knowledge through

Mrs. Klem’s beseeching me to sanction the sheltering of Miss Klem

under that roof for a single night, ‘between her takin’ care of the

upper part in Pall Mall which the family of his back, and a ‘ouse

in Serjameses-street, which the family of leaves towng ter-morrer.’

I gave my gracious consent (having nothing that I know of to do

with it), and in the shadowy hours Miss Klem became perceptible on

the door-step, wrestling with a bed in a bundle. Where she made it

up for the night I cannot positively state, but, I think, in a

sink. I know that with the instinct of a reptile or an insect, she

stowed it and herself away in deep obscurity. In the Klem family,

I have noticed another remarkable gift of nature, and that is a

power they possess of converting everything into flue. Such broken

victuals as they take by stealth, appear (whatever the nature of

the viands) invariably to generate flue; and even the nightly pint

of beer, instead of assimilating naturally, strikes me as breaking

out in that form, equally on the shabby gown of Mrs. Klem, and the

threadbare coat of her husband.

Mrs. Klem has no idea of my name – as to Mr. Klem he has no idea of

anything – and only knows me as her good gentleman. Thus, if

doubtful whether I am in my room or no, Mrs. Klem taps at the door

and says, ‘Is my good gentleman here?’ Or, if a messenger desiring

to see me were consistent with my solitude, she would show him in

with ‘Here is my good gentleman.’ I find this to be a generic

custom. For, I meant to have observed before now, that in its

Arcadian time all my part of London is indistinctly pervaded by the

Klem species. They creep about with beds, and go to bed in miles

of deserted houses. They hold no companionship except that

sometimes, after dark, two of them will emerge from opposite

houses, and meet in the middle of the road as on neutral ground, or

will peep from adjoining houses over an interposing barrier of area

railings, and compare a few reserved mistrustful notes respecting

their good ladies or good gentlemen. This I have discovered in the

course of various solitary rambles I have taken Northward from my

retirement, along the awful perspectives of Wimpole-street, Harleystreet,

and similar frowning regions. Their effect would be

scarcely distinguishable from that of the primeval forests, but for

the Klem stragglers; these may be dimly observed, when the heavy

shadows fall, flitting to and fro, putting up the door-chain,

taking in the pint of beer, lowering like phantoms at the dark

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