Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

Page 37

Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

vessel staggering on two feet instead of three, is a cutaneous kind

of sauce of brown pimples and pickled cucumber. You order the

bill, but your waiter cannot bring your bill yet, because he is

bringing, instead, three flinty-hearted potatoes and two grim head

of broccoli, like the occasional ornaments on area railings, badly

boiled. You know that you will never come to this pass, any more

than to the cheese and celery, and you imperatively demand your

bill; but, it takes time to get, even when gone for, because your

waiter has to communicate with a lady who lives behind a sashwindow

in a corner, and who appears to have to refer to several

Ledgers before she can make it out – as if you had been staying

there a year. You become distracted to get away, and the other

waiter, once more changing his leg, still looks at you – but

suspiciously, now, as if you had begun to remind him of the party

who took the great-coats last winter. Your bill at last brought

and paid, at the rate of sixpence a mouthful, your waiter

reproachfully reminds you that ‘attendance is not charged for a

single meal,’ and you have to search in all your pockets for

sixpence more. He has a worse opinion of you than ever, when you

have given it to him, and lets you out into the street with the air

of one saying to himself, as you cannot again doubt he is, ‘I hope

we shall never see YOU here again!’

Or, take any other of the numerous travelling instances in which,

with more time at your disposal, you are, have been, or may be,

equally ill served. Take the old-established Bull’s Head with its

old-established knife-boxes on its old-established sideboards, its

old-established flue under its old-established four-post bedsteads

in its old-established airless rooms, its old-established

frouziness up-stairs and down-stairs, its old-established cookery,

and its old-established principles of plunder. Count up your

injuries, in its side-dishes of ailing sweetbreads in white

poultices, of apothecaries’ powders in rice for curry, of pale

stewed bits of calf ineffectually relying for an adventitious

interest on forcemeat balls. You have had experience of the oldestablished

Bull’s Head stringy fowls, with lower extremities like

wooden legs, sticking up out of the dish; of its cannibalic boiled

mutton, gushing horribly among its capers, when carved; of its

little dishes of pastry – roofs of spermaceti ointment, erected

over half an apple or four gooseberries. Well for you if you have

yet forgotten the old-established Bull’s Head fruity port: whose

reputation was gained solely by the old-established price the

Bull’s Head put upon it, and by the old-established air with which

the Bull’s Head set the glasses and D’Oyleys on, and held that

Liquid Gout to the three-and-sixpenny wax-candle, as if its oldestablished

colour hadn’t come from the dyer’s.

Or lastly, take to finish with, two cases that we all know, every

day.

We all know the new hotel near the station, where it is always

gusty, going up the lane which is always muddy, where we are sure

to arrive at night, and where we make the gas start awfully when we

open the front door. We all know the flooring of the passages and

staircases that is too new, and the walls that are too new, and the

house that is haunted by the ghost of mortar. We all know the

doors that have cracked, and the cracked shutters through which we

get a glimpse of the disconsolate moon. We all know the new

people, who have come to keep the new hotel, and who wish they had

never come, and who (inevitable result) wish WE had never come. We

all know how much too scant and smooth and bright the new furniture

is, and how it has never settled down, and cannot fit itself into

right places, and will get into wrong places. We all know how the

gas, being lighted, shows maps of Damp upon the walls. We all know

Page 38

Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

how the ghost of mortar passes into our sandwich, stirs our negus,

Leave a Reply