Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

exchange in their pockets, or in belts. Some of these documents,

carefully unwrinkled and dried, were little less fresh in

appearance that day, than the present page will be under ordinary

circumstances, after having been opened three or four times.

In that lonely place, it had not been easy to obtain even such

common commodities in towns, as ordinary disinfectants. Pitch had

been burnt in the church, as the readiest thing at hand, and the

frying-pan in which it had bubbled over a brazier of coals was

still there, with its ashes. Hard by the Communion-Table, were

some boots that had been taken off the drowned and preserved – a

gold-digger’s boot, cut down the leg for its removal – a troddendown

man’s ankle-boot with a buff cloth top – and others – soaked

and sandy, weedy and salt.

From the church, we passed out into the churchyard. Here, there

lay, at that time, one hundred and forty-five bodies, that had come

ashore from the wreck. He had buried them, when not identified, in

graves containing four each. He had numbered each body in a

register describing it, and had placed a corresponding number on

each coffin, and over each grave. Identified bodies he had buried

singly, in private graves, in another part of the church-yard.

Several bodies had been exhumed from the graves of four, as

relatives had come from a distance and seen his register; and, when

recognised, these have been reburied in private graves, so that the

mourners might erect separate headstones over the remains. In all

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

such cases he had performed the funeral service a second time, and

the ladies of his house had attended. There had been no offence in

the poor ashes when they were brought again to the light of day;

the beneficent Earth had already absorbed it. The drowned were

buried in their clothes. To supply the great sudden demand for

coffins, he had got all the neighbouring people handy at tools, to

work the livelong day, and Sunday likewise. The coffins were

neatly formed; – I had seen two, waiting for occupants, under the

lee of the ruined walls of a stone hut on the beach, within call of

the tent where the Christmas Feast was held. Similarly, one of the

graves for four was lying open and ready, here, in the churchyard.

So much of the scanty space was already devoted to the wrecked

people, that the villagers had begun to express uneasy doubts

whether they themselves could lie in their own ground, with their

forefathers and descendants, by-and-by. The churchyard being but a

step from the clergyman’s dwelling-house, we crossed to the latter;

the white surplice was hanging up near the door ready to be put on

at any time, for a funeral service.

The cheerful earnestness of this good Christian minister was as

consolatory, as the circumstances out of which it shone were sad.

I never have seen anything more delightfully genuine than the calm

dismissal by himself and his household of all they had undergone,

as a simple duty that was quietly done and ended. In speaking of

it, they spoke of it with great compassion for the bereaved; but

laid no stress upon their own hard share in those weary weeks,

except as it had attached many people to them as friends, and

elicited many touching expressions of gratitude. This clergyman’s

brother – himself the clergyman of two adjoining parishes, who had

buried thirty-four of the bodies in his own churchyard, and who had

done to them all that his brother had done as to the larger number

– must be understood as included in the family. He was there, with

his neatly arranged papers, and made no more account of his trouble

than anybody else did. Down to yesterday’s post outward, my

clergyman alone had written one thousand and seventy-five letters

to relatives and friends of the lost people. In the absence of

self-assertion, it was only through my now and then delicately

putting a question as the occasion arose, that I became informed of

these things. It was only when I had remarked again and again, in

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