Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

effect from a dog – a lop-sided mongrel with a foolish tail,

plodding along with his tail up, and his ears pricked, and

displaying an amiable interest in the ways of his fellow-men, – if

I may be allowed the expression. After pausing at a pork-shop, he

is jogging eastward like myself, with a benevolent countenance and

a watery mouth, as though musing on the many excellences of pork,

when he beholds this doubled-up bundle approaching. He is not so

much astonished at the bundle (though amazed by that), as the

circumstance that it has within itself the means of locomotion. He

stops, pricks his ears higher, makes a slight point, stares, utters

a short, low growl, and glistens at the nose, – as I conceive with

terror. The bundle continuing to approach, he barks, turns tail,

and is about to fly, when, arguing with himself that flight is not

becoming in a dog, he turns, and once more faces the advancing heap

of clothes. After much hesitation, it occurs to him that there may

be a face in it somewhere. Desperately resolving to undertake the

adventure, and pursue the inquiry, he goes slowly up to the bundle,

goes slowly round it, and coming at length upon the human

countenance down there where never human countenance should be,

gives a yelp of horror, and flies for the East India Docks.

Being now in the Commercial Road district of my beat, and

bethinking myself that Stepney Station is near, I quicken my pace

that I may turn out of the road at that point, and see how my small

eastern star is shining.

The Children’s Hospital, to which I gave that name, is in full

force. All its beds are occupied. There is a new face on the bed

where my pretty baby lay, and that sweet little child is now at

rest for ever. Much kind sympathy has been here since my former

visit, and it is good to see the walls profusely garnished with

dolls. I wonder what Poodles may think of them, as they stretch

out their arms above the beds, and stare, and display their

splendid dresses. Poodles has a greater interest in the patients.

I find him making the round of the beds, like a house-surgeon,

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

attended by another dog, – a friend, – who appears to trot about

with him in the character of his pupil dresser. Poodles is anxious

to make me known to a pretty little girl looking wonderfully

healthy, who had had a leg taken off for cancer of the knee. A

difficult operation, Poodles intimates, wagging his tail on the

counterpane, but perfectly successful, as you see, dear sir! The

patient, patting Poodles, adds with a smile, ‘The leg was so much

trouble to me, that I am glad it’s gone.’ I never saw anything in

doggery finer than the deportment of Poodles, when another little

girl opens her mouth to show a peculiar enlargement of the tongue.

Poodles (at that time on a table, to be on a level with the

occasion) looks at the tongue (with his own sympathetically out) so

very gravely and knowingly, that I feel inclined to put my hand in

my waistcoat-pocket, and give him a guinea, wrapped in paper.

On my beat again, and close to Limehouse Church, its termination, I

found myself near to certain ‘Lead-Mills.’ Struck by the name,

which was fresh in my memory, and finding, on inquiry, that these

same lead-mills were identified with those same lead-mills of which

I made mention when I first visited the East London Children’s

Hospital and its neighbourhood as Uncommercial Traveller, I

resolved to have a look at them.

Received by two very intelligent gentlemen, brothers, and partners

with their father in the concern, and who testified every desire to

show their works to me freely, I went over the lead-mills. The

purport of such works is the conversion of pig-lead into whitelead.

This conversion is brought about by the slow and gradual

effecting of certain successive chemical changes in the lead

itself. The processes are picturesque and interesting, – the most

so, being the burying of the lead, at a certain stage of

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