Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

partly, because it lay on my road round to Westminster; partly,

because I had a night fancy in my head which could be best pursued

within sight of its walls and dome. And the fancy was this: Are

not the sane and the insane equal at night as the sane lie a

dreaming? Are not all of us outside this hospital, who dream, more

or less in the condition of those inside it, every night of our

lives? Are we not nightly persuaded, as they daily are, that we

associate preposterously with kings and queens, emperors and

empresses, and notabilities of all sorts? Do we not nightly jumble

events and personages and times and places, as these do daily? Are

we not sometimes troubled by our own sleeping inconsistencies, and

do we not vexedly try to account for them or excuse them, just as

these do sometimes in respect of their waking delusions? Said an

afflicted man to me, when I was last in a hospital like this, ‘Sir,

I can frequently fly.’ I was half ashamed to reflect that so could

I – by night. Said a woman to me on the same occasion, ‘Queen

Victoria frequently comes to dine with me, and her Majesty and I

dine off peaches and maccaroni in our night-gowns, and his Royal

Highness the Prince Consort does us the honour to make a third on

horseback in a Field-Marshal’s uniform.’ Could I refrain from

reddening with consciousness when I remembered the amazing royal

parties I myself had given (at night), the unaccountable viands I

had put on table, and my extraordinary manner of conducting myself

on those distinguished occasions? I wonder that the great master

who knew everything, when he called Sleep the death of each day’s

life, did not call Dreams the insanity of each day’s sanity.

By this time I had left the Hospital behind me, and was again

setting towards the river; and in a short breathing space I was on

Westminster-bridge, regaling my houseless eyes with the external

walls of the British Parliament – the perfection of a stupendous

institution, I know, and the admiration of all surrounding nations

and succeeding ages, I do not doubt, but perhaps a little the

better now and then for being pricked up to its work. Turning off

into Old Palace-yard, the Courts of Law kept me company for a

quarter of an hour; hinting in low whispers what numbers of people

they were keeping awake, and how intensely wretched and horrible

they were rendering the small hours to unfortunate suitors.

Westminster Abbey was fine gloomy society for another quarter of an

hour; suggesting a wonderful procession of its dead among the dark

arches and pillars, each century more amazed by the century

following it than by all the centuries going before. And indeed in

those houseless night walks – which even included cemeteries where

watchmen went round among the graves at stated times, and moved the

tell-tale handle of an index which recorded that they had touched

it at such an hour – it was a solemn consideration what enormous

hosts of dead belong to one old great city, and how, if they were

raised while the living slept, there would not be the space of a

pin’s point in all the streets and ways for the living to come out

into. Not only that, but the vast armies of dead would overflow

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

the hills and valleys beyond the city, and would stretch away all

round it, God knows how far.

When a church clock strikes, on houseless ears in the dead of the

night, it may be at first mistaken for company and hailed as such.

But, as the spreading circles of vibration, which you may perceive

at such a time with great clearness, go opening out, for ever and

ever afterwards widening perhaps (as the philosopher has suggested)

in eternal space, the mistake is rectified and the sense of

loneliness is profounder. Once – it was after leaving the Abbey

and turning my face north – I came to the great steps of St.

Martin’s church as the clock was striking Three. Suddenly, a thing

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