Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

doors in Greek caps, sample in hand, and mysteriously salute the

public – the female public with a pressing tenderness – to come in

and be ‘took’? What did they do with their greasy blandishments,

before the era of cheap photography? Of what class were their

previous victims, and how victimised? And how did they get, and

how did they pay for, that large collection of likenesses, all

purporting to have been taken inside, with the taking of none of

which had that establishment any more to do than with the taking of

Delhi?

But, these are small oases, and I am soon back again in

metropolitan Arcadia. It is my impression that much of its serene

and peaceful character is attributable to the absence of customary

Talk. How do I know but there may be subtle influences in Talk, to

vex the souls of men who don’t hear it? How do I know but that

Talk, five, ten, twenty miles off, may get into the air and

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

disagree with me? If I rise from my bed, vaguely troubled and

wearied and sick of my life, in the session of Parliament, who

shall say that my noble friend, my right reverend friend, my right

honourable friend, my honourable friend, my honourable and learned

friend, or my honourable and gallant friend, may not be responsible

for that effect upon my nervous system? Too much Ozone in the air,

I am informed and fully believe (though I have no idea what it is),

would affect me in a marvellously disagreeable way; why may not too

much Talk? I don’t see or hear the Ozone; I don’t see or hear the

Talk. And there is so much Talk; so much too much; such loud cry,

and such scant supply of wool; such a deal of fleecing, and so

little fleece! Hence, in the Arcadian season, I find it a

delicious triumph to walk down to deserted Westminster, and see the

Courts shut up; to walk a little further and see the Two Houses

shut up; to stand in the Abbey Yard, like the New Zealander of the

grand English History (concerning which unfortunate man, a whole

rookery of mares’ nests is generally being discovered), and gloat

upon the ruins of Talk. Returning to my primitive solitude and

lying down to sleep, my grateful heart expands with the

consciousness that there is no adjourned Debate, no ministerial

explanation, nobody to give notice of intention to ask the noble

Lord at the head of her Majesty’s Government five-and-twenty

bootless questions in one, no term time with legal argument, no

Nisi Prius with eloquent appeal to British Jury; that the air will

to-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow, remain untroubled by this

superabundant generating of Talk. In a minor degree it is a

delicious triumph to me to go into the club, and see the carpets

up, and the Bores and the other dust dispersed to the four winds.

Again, New Zealander-like, I stand on the cold hearth, and say in

the solitude, ‘Here I watched Bore A 1, with voice always

mysteriously low and head always mysteriously drooped, whispering

political secrets into the ears of Adam’s confiding children.

Accursed be his memory for ever and a day!’

But, I have all this time been coming to the point, that the happy

nature of my retirement is most sweetly expressed in its being the

abode of Love. It is, as it were, an inexpensive Agapemone:

nobody’s speculation: everybody’s profit. The one great result of

the resumption of primitive habits, and (convertible terms) the not

having much to do, is, the abounding of Love.

The Klem species are incapable of the softer emotions; probably, in

that low nomadic race, the softer emotions have all degenerated

into flue. But, with this exception, all the sharers of my retreat

make love.

I have mentioned Saville-row. We all know the Doctor’s servant.

We all know what a respectable man he is, what a hard dry man, what

a firm man, what a confidential man: how he lets us into the

waiting-room, like a man who knows minutely what is the matter with

us, but from whom the rack should not wring the secret. In the

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