Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

gift of treading on everybody’s tenderest place. They talk in

America of a man’s ‘Platform.’ I should describe the Platform of

the Long-lost as a Platform composed of other people’s corns, on

which he had stumped his way, with all his might and main, to his

present position. It is needless to add that Flipfield’s great

birthday went by the board, and that he was a wreck when I

pretended at parting to wish him many happy returns of it.

There is another class of birthdays at which I have so frequently

assisted, that I may assume such birthdays to be pretty well known

to the human race. My friend Mayday’s birthday is an example. The

guests have no knowledge of one another except on that one day in

the year, and are annually terrified for a week by the prospect of

meeting one another again. There is a fiction among us that we

have uncommon reasons for being particularly lively and spirited on

the occasion, whereas deep despondency is no phrase for the

expression of our feelings. But the wonderful feature of the case

is, that we are in tacit accordance to avoid the subject – to keep

it as far off as possible, as long as possible – and to talk about

anything else, rather than the joyful event. I may even go so far

as to assert that there is a dumb compact among us that we will

pretend that it is NOT Mayday’s birthday. A mysterious and gloomy

Being, who is said to have gone to school with Mayday, and who is

so lank and lean that he seriously impugns the Dietary of the

establishment at which they were jointly educated, always leads us,

as I may say, to the block, by laying his grisly hand on a decanter

and begging us to fill our glasses. The devices and pretences that

I have seen put in practice to defer the fatal moment, and to

interpose between this man and his purpose, are innumerable. I

have known desperate guests, when they saw the grisly hand

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approaching the decanter, wildly to begin, without any antecedent

whatsoever, ‘That reminds me – ‘ and to plunge into long stories.

When at last the hand and the decanter come together, a shudder, a

palpable perceptible shudder, goes round the table. We receive the

reminder that it is Mayday’s birthday, as if it were the

anniversary of some profound disgrace he had undergone, and we

sought to comfort him. And when we have drunk Mayday’s health, and

wished him many happy returns, we are seized for some moments with

a ghastly blitheness, an unnatural levity, as if we were in the

first flushed reaction of having undergone a surgical operation.

Birthdays of this species have a public as well as a private phase.

My ‘boyhood’s home,’ Dullborough, presents a case in point. An

Immortal Somebody was wanted in Dullborough, to dimple for a day

the stagnant face of the waters; he was rather wanted by

Dullborough generally, and much wanted by the principal hotelkeeper.

The County history was looked up for a locally Immortal

Somebody, but the registered Dullborough worthies were all

Nobodies. In this state of things, it is hardly necessary to

record that Dullborough did what every man does when he wants to

write a book or deliver a lecture, and is provided with all the

materials except a subject. It fell back upon Shakespeare.

No sooner was it resolved to celebrate Shakespeare’s birthday in

Dullborough, than the popularity of the immortal bard became

surprising. You might have supposed the first edition of his works

to have been published last week, and enthusiastic Dullborough to

have got half through them. (I doubt, by the way, whether it had

ever done half that, but that is a private opinion.) A young

gentleman with a sonnet, the retention of which for two years had

enfeebled his mind and undermined his knees, got the sonnet into

the Dullborough Warden, and gained flesh. Portraits of Shakespeare

broke out in the bookshop windows, and our principal artist painted

a large original portrait in oils for the decoration of the diningroom.

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