Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

some disorder simulating apoplexy, and occasioned by the surcharge

of nose and brain with lukewarm dish-water holding in solution sour

flour, poisonous condiments, and (say) seventy-five per cent. of

miscellaneous kitchen stuff rolled into balls, we were inclined to

trace his disorder to that source. On the other hand, there was a

silent anguish upon him too strongly resembling the results

established within ourselves by the sherry, to be discarded from

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alarmed consideration. Again, we observed him, with terror, to be

much overcome by our sole’s being aired in a temporary retreat

close to him, while the waiter went out (as we conceived) to see

his friends. And when the curry made its appearance he suddenly

retired in great disorder.

In fine, for the uneatable part of this little dinner (as

contradistinguished from the undrinkable) we paid only seven

shillings and sixpence each. And Bullfinch and I agreed

unanimously, that no such ill-served, ill-appointed, ill-cooked,

nasty little dinner could be got for the money anywhere else under

the sun. With that comfort to our backs, we turned them on the

dear old Temeraire, the charging Temeraire, and resolved (in the

Scotch dialect) to gang nae mair to the flabby Temeraire.

CHAPTER XXXIV – MR. BARLOW

A great reader of good fiction at an unusually early age, it seems

to me as though I had been born under the superintendence of the

estimable but terrific gentleman whose name stands at the head of

my present reflections. The instructive monomaniac, Mr. Barlow,

will be remembered as the tutor of Master Harry Sandford and Master

Tommy Merton. He knew everything, and didactically improved all

sorts of occasions, from the consumption of a plate of cherries to

the contemplation of a starlight night. What youth came to without

Mr. Barlow was displayed in the history of Sandford and Merton, by

the example of a certain awful Master Mash. This young wretch wore

buckles and powder, conducted himself with insupportable levity at

the theatre, had no idea of facing a mad bull single-handed (in

which I think him less reprehensible, as remotely reflecting my own

character), and was a frightful instance of the enervating effects

of luxury upon the human race.

Strange destiny on the part of Mr. Barlow, to go down to posterity

as childhood’s experience of a bore! Immortal Mr. Barlow, boring

his way through the verdant freshness of ages!

My personal indictment against Mr. Barlow is one of many counts. I

will proceed to set forth a few of the injuries he has done me.

In the first place, he never made or took a joke. This

insensibility on Mr. Barlow’s part not only cast its own gloom over

my boyhood, but blighted even the sixpenny jest-books of the time;

for, groaning under a moral spell constraining me to refer all

things to Mr. Barlow, I could not choose but ask myself in a

whisper when tickled by a printed jest, ‘What would HE think of it?

What would HE see in it?’ The point of the jest immediately became

a sting, and stung my conscience. For my mind’s eye saw him

stolid, frigid, perchance taking from its shelf some dreary Greek

book, and translating at full length what some dismal sage said

(and touched up afterwards, perhaps, for publication), when he

banished some unlucky joker from Athens.

The incompatibility of Mr. Barlow with all other portions of my

young life but himself, the adamantine inadaptability of the man to

my favourite fancies and amusements, is the thing for which I hate

him most. What right had he to bore his way into my Arabian

Nights? Yet he did. He was always hinting doubts of the veracity

of Sindbad the Sailor. If he could have got hold of the Wonderful

Lamp, I knew he would have trimmed it and lighted it, and delivered

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a lecture over it on the qualities of sperm-oil, with a glance at

the whale fisheries. He would so soon have found out – on

mechanical principles – the peg in the neck of the Enchanted Horse,

and would have turned it the right way in so workmanlike a manner,

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