Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

I carry to his benefactor the first of its wine? Ay, that I would

(I told him with enthusiasm), and not a drop of it should be

spilled or lost!

He had cautiously closed the door before speaking of himself, and

had talked with such excess of emotion, and in a provincial Italian

so difficult to understand, that I had more than once been obliged

to stop him, and beg him to have compassion on me and be slower and

calmer. By degrees he became so, and tranquilly walked back with

me to the hotel. There, I sat down before I went to bed and wrote

a faithful account of him to the Englishman: which I concluded by

saying that I would bring the wine home, against any difficulties,

every drop.

Early next morning, when I came out at the hotel door to pursue my

journey, I found my friend waiting with one of those immense

bottles in which the Italian peasants store their wine – a bottle

holding some half-dozen gallons – bound round with basket-work for

greater safety on the journey. I see him now, in the bright

sunshine, tears of gratitude in his eyes, proudly inviting my

attention to this corpulent bottle. (At the street-comer hard by,

two high-flavoured, able-bodied monks – pretending to talk

together, but keeping their four evil eyes upon us.)

How the bottle had been got there, did not appear; but the

difficulty of getting it into the ramshackle vetturino carriage in

which I was departing, was so great, and it took up so much room

when it was got in, that I elected to sit outside. The last I saw

of Giovanni Carlavero was his running through the town by the side

of the jingling wheels, clasping my hand as I stretched it down

from the box, charging me with a thousand last loving and dutiful

messages to his dear patron, and finally looking in at the bottle

as it reposed inside, with an admiration of its honourable way of

travelling that was beyond measure delightful.

And now, what disquiet of mind this dearly-beloved and highlytreasured

Bottle began to cost me, no man knows. It was my

precious charge through a long tour, and, for hundreds of miles, I

never had it off my mind by day or by night. Over bad roads – and

they were many – I clung to it with affectionate desperation. Up

mountains, I looked in at it and saw it helplessly tilting over on

its back, with terror. At innumerable inn doors when the weather

was bad, I was obliged to be put into my vehicle before the Bottle

could be got in, and was obliged to have the Bottle lifted out

before human aid could come near me. The Imp of the same name,

except that his associations were all evil and these associations

were all good, would have been a less troublesome travelling

companion. I might have served Mr. Cruikshank as a subject for a

new illustration of the miseries of the Bottle. The National

Temperance Society might have made a powerful Tract of me.

The suspicions that attached to this innocent Bottle, greatly

aggravated my difficulties. It was like the apple-pie in the

child’s book. Parma pouted at it, Modena mocked it, Tuscany

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

tackled it, Naples nibbled it, Rome refused it, Austria accused it,

Soldiers suspected it, Jesuits jobbed it. I composed a neat

Oration, developing my inoffensive intentions in connexion with

this Bottle, and delivered it in an infinity of guard-houses, at a

multitude of town gates, and on every drawbridge, angle, and

rampart, of a complete system of fortifications. Fifty times a

day, I got down to harangue an infuriated soldiery about the

Bottle. Through the filthy degradation of the abject and vile

Roman States, I had as much difficulty in working my way with the

Bottle, as if it had bottled up a complete system of heretical

theology. In the Neapolitan country, where everybody was a spy, a

soldier, a priest, or a lazzarone, the shameless beggars of all

four denominations incessantly pounced on the Bottle and made it a

pretext for extorting money from me. Quires – quires do I say?

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