Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

past Whitechapel Church, and was – rather inappropriately for an

Uncommercial Traveller – in the Commercial Road. Pleasantly

wallowing in the abundant mud of that thoroughfare, and greatly

enjoying the huge piles of building belonging to the sugar

refiners, the little masts and vanes in small back gardens in back

streets, the neighbouring canals and docks, the India vans

lumbering along their stone tramway, and the pawnbrokers’ shops

where hard-up Mates had pawned so many sextants and quadrants, that

I should have bought a few cheap if I had the least notion how to

use them, I at last began to file off to the right, towards

Wapping.

Not that I intended to take boat at Wapping Old Stairs, or that I

was going to look at the locality, because I believe (for I don’t)

in the constancy of the young woman who told her sea-going lover,

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

to such a beautiful old tune, that she had ever continued the same,

since she gave him the ‘baccer-box marked with his name; I am

afraid he usually got the worst of those transactions, and was

frightfully taken in. No, I was going to Wapping, because an

Eastern police magistrate had said, through the morning papers,

that there was no classification at the Wapping workhouse for

women, and that it was a disgrace and a shame, and divers other

hard names, and because I wished to see how the fact really stood.

For, that Eastern police magistrates are not always the wisest men

of the East, may be inferred from their course of procedure

respecting the fancy-dressing and pantomime-posturing at St.

George’s in that quarter: which is usually, to discuss the matter

at issue, in a state of mind betokening the weakest perplexity,

with all parties concerned and unconcerned, and, for a final

expedient, to consult the complainant as to what he thinks ought to

be done with the defendant, and take the defendant’s opinion as to

what he would recommend to be done with himself.

Long before I reached Wapping, I gave myself up as having lost my

way, and, abandoning myself to the narrow streets in a Turkish

frame of mind, relied on predestination to bring me somehow or

other to the place I wanted if I were ever to get there. When I

had ceased for an hour or so to take any trouble about the matter,

I found myself on a swing-bridge looking down at some dark locks in

some dirty water. Over against me, stood a creature remotely in

the likeness of a young man, with a puffed sallow face, and a

figure all dirty and shiny and slimy, who may have been the

youngest son of his filthy old father, Thames, or the drowned man

about whom there was a placard on the granite post like a large

thimble, that stood between us.

I asked this apparition what it called the place? Unto which, it

replied, with a ghastly grin and a sound like gurgling water in its

throat:

‘Mr. Baker’s trap.’

As it is a point of great sensitiveness with me on such occasions

to be equal to the intellectual pressure of the conversation, I

deeply considered the meaning of this speech, while I eyed the

apparition – then engaged in hugging and sucking a horizontal iron

bar at the top of the locks. Inspiration suggested to me that Mr.

Baker was the acting coroner of that neighbourhood.

‘A common place for suicide,’ said I, looking down at the locks.

‘Sue?’ returned the ghost, with a stare. ‘Yes! And Poll.

Likewise Emily. And Nancy. And Jane;’ he sucked the iron between

each name; ‘and all the bileing. Ketches off their bonnets or

shorls, takes a run, and headers down here, they doos. Always a

headerin’ down here, they is. Like one o’clock.’

‘And at about that hour of the morning, I suppose?’

‘Ah!’ said the apparition. ‘THEY an’t partickler. Two ‘ull do for

THEM. Three. All times o’ night. On’y mind you!’ Here the

apparition rested his profile on the bar, and gurgled in a

sarcastic manner. ‘There must be somebody comin’. They don’t go a

headerin’ down here, wen there an’t no Bobby nor gen’ral Cove, fur

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