Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

and dry them and burn them in the fire, they will go off like in

these thirteen words as plain as plain can be:

‘A Lemon has pips,

And a Yard has ships,

And I’ve got Chips!’

The same female bard – descended, possibly, from those terrible old

Scalds who seem to have existed for the express purpose of addling

the brains of mankind when they begin to investigate languages –

made a standing pretence which greatly assisted in forcing me back

to a number of hideous places that I would by all means have

avoided. This pretence was, that all her ghost stories had

occurred to her own relations. Politeness towards a meritorious

family, therefore, forbade my doubting them, and they acquired an

air of authentication that impaired my digestive powers for life.

There was a narrative concerning an unearthly animal foreboding

death, which appeared in the open street to a parlour-maid who

‘went to fetch the beer’ for supper: first (as I now recall it)

assuming the likeness of a black dog, and gradually rising on its

hind-legs and swelling into the semblance of some quadruped greatly

surpassing a hippopotamus: which apparition – not because I deemed

it in the least improbable, but because I felt it to be really too

large to bear – I feebly endeavoured to explain away. But, on

Mercy’s retorting with wounded dignity that the parlour-maid was

her own sister-in-law, I perceived there was no hope, and resigned

myself to this zoological phenomenon as one of my many pursuers.

There was another narrative describing the apparition of a young

woman who came out of a glass-case and haunted another young woman

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

until the other young woman questioned it and elicited that its

bones (Lord! To think of its being so particular about its bones!)

were buried under the glass-case, whereas she required them to be

interred, with every Undertaking solemnity up to twenty-four pound

ten, in another particular place. This narrative I considered – I

had a personal interest in disproving, because we had glass-cases

at home, and how, otherwise, was I to be guaranteed from the

intrusion of young women requiring ME TO bury them up to twentyfour

pound ten, when I had only twopence a week? But my

remorseless nurse cut the ground from under my tender feet, by

informing me that She was the other young woman; and I couldn’t say

‘I don’t believe you;’ it was not possible.

Such are a few of the uncommercial journeys that I was forced to

make, against my will, when I was very young and unreasoning. And

really, as to the latter part of them, it is not so very long ago –

now I come to think of it – that I was asked to undertake them once

again, with a steady countenance.

CHAPTER XVI – ARCADIAN LONDON

Being in a humour for complete solitude and uninterrupted

meditation this autumn, I have taken a lodging for six weeks in the

most unfrequented part of England – in a word, in London.

The retreat into which I have withdrawn myself, is Bond-street.

From this lonely spot I make pilgrimages into the surrounding

wilderness, and traverse extensive tracts of the Great Desert. The

first solemn feeling of isolation overcome, the first oppressive

consciousness of profound retirement conquered, I enjoy that sense

of freedom, and feel reviving within me that latent wildness of the

original savage, which has been (upon the whole somewhat

frequently) noticed by Travellers.

My lodgings are at a hatter’s – my own hatter’s. After exhibiting

no articles in his window for some weeks, but sea-side wide-awakes,

shooting-caps, and a choice of rough waterproof head-gear for the

moors and mountains, he has put upon the heads of his family as

much of this stock as they could carry, and has taken them off to

the Isle of Thanet. His young man alone remains – and remains

alone in the shop. The young man has let out the fire at which the

irons are heated, and, saving his strong sense of duty, I see no

reason why he should take the shutters down.

Happily for himself and for his country the young man is a

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