Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

Volunteer; most happily for himself, or I think he would become the

prey of a settled melancholy. For, to live surrounded by human

hats, and alienated from human heads to fit them on, is surely a

great endurance. But, the young man, sustained by practising his

exercise, and by constantly furbishing up his regulation plume (it

is unnecessary to observe that, as a hatter, he is in a cock’sfeather

corps), is resigned, and uncomplaining. On a Saturday,

when he closes early and gets his Knickerbockers on, he is even

cheerful. I am gratefully particular in this reference to him,

because he is my companion through many peaceful hours.

My hatter has a desk up certain steps behind his counter, enclosed

like the clerk’s desk at Church. I shut myself into this place of

seclusion, after breakfast, and meditate. At such times, I observe

the young man loading an imaginary rifle with the greatest

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

precision, and maintaining a most galling and destructive fire upon

the national enemy. I thank him publicly for his companionship and

his patriotism.

The simple character of my life, and the calm nature of the scenes

by which I am surrounded, occasion me to rise early. I go forth in

my slippers, and promenade the pavement. It is pastoral to feel

the freshness of the air in the uninhabited town, and to appreciate

the shepherdess character of the few milkwomen who purvey so little

milk that it would be worth nobody’s while to adulterate it, if

anybody were left to undertake the task. On the crowded sea-shore,

the great demand for milk, combined with the strong local

temptation of chalk, would betray itself in the lowered quality of

the article. In Arcadian London I derive it from the cow.

The Arcadian simplicity of the metropolis altogether, and the

primitive ways into which it has fallen in this autumnal Golden

Age, make it entirely new to me. Within a few hundred yards of my

retreat, is the house of a friend who maintains a most sumptuous

butler. I never, until yesterday, saw that butler out of superfine

black broadcloth. Until yesterday, I never saw him off duty, never

saw him (he is the best of butlers) with the appearance of having

any mind for anything but the glory of his master and his master’s

friends. Yesterday morning, walking in my slippers near the house

of which he is the prop and ornament – a house now a waste of

shutters – I encountered that butler, also in his slippers, and in

a shooting suit of one colour, and in a low-crowned straw-hat,

smoking an early cigar. He felt that we had formerly met in

another state of existence, and that we were translated into a new

sphere. Wisely and well, he passed me without recognition. Under

his arm he carried the morning paper, and shortly afterwards I saw

him sitting on a rail in the pleasant open landscape of Regentstreet,

perusing it at his ease under the ripening sun.

My landlord having taken his whole establishment to be salted down,

I am waited on by an elderly woman labouring under a chronic sniff,

who, at the shadowy hour of half-past nine o’clock of every

evening, gives admittance at the street door to a meagre and mouldy

old man whom I have never yet seen detached from a flat pint of

beer in a pewter pot. The meagre and mouldy old man is her

husband, and the pair have a dejected consciousness that they are

not justified in appearing on the surface of the earth. They come

out of some hole when London empties itself, and go in again when

it fills. I saw them arrive on the evening when I myself took

possession, and they arrived with the flat pint of beer, and their

bed in a bundle. The old man is a weak old man, and appeared to me

to get the bed down the kitchen stairs by tumbling down with and

upon it. They make their bed in the lowest and remotest corner of

the basement, and they smell of bed, and have no possession but

bed: unless it be (which I rather infer from an under-current of

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