Reprinted Pieces

dress, the deficiencies and improprieties of which have caused her

great uneasiness. I, in my degree, have suffered unspeakable

agitation of mind from taking the chair at a public dinner at the

London Tavern in my night-clothes, which not all the courtesy of my

kind friend and host MR. BATHE could persuade me were quite adapted

to the occasion. Winking Charley has been repeatedly tried in a

worse condition. Her Majesty is no stranger to a vault or

firmament, of a sort of floorcloth, with an indistinct pattern

distantly resembling eyes, which occasionally obtrudes itself on

her repose. Neither am I. Neither is Winking Charley. It is

quite common to all three of us to skim along with airy strides a

little above the ground; also to hold, with the deepest interest,

dialogues with various people, all represented by ourselves; and to

be at our wit’s end to know what they are going to tell us; and to

be indescribably astonished by the secrets they disclose. It is

probable that we have all three committed murders and hidden

bodies. It is pretty certain that we have all desperately wanted

to cry out, and have had no voice; that we have all gone to the

play and not been able to get in; that we have all dreamed much

more of our youth than of our later lives; that – I have lost it!

The thread’s broken.

And up I go. I, lying here with the night-light before me, up I

go, for no reason on earth that I can find out, and drawn by no

links that are visible to me, up the Great Saint Bernard! I have

lived in Switzerland, and rambled among the mountains; but, why I

should go there now, and why up the Great Saint Bernard in

preference to any other mountain, I have no idea. As I lie here

broad awake, and with every sense so sharpened that I can

distinctly hear distant noises inaudible to me at another time, I

make that journey, as I really did, on the same summer day, with

the same happy party – ah! two since dead, I grieve to think – and

there is the same track, with the same black wooden arms to point

the way, and there are the same storm-refuges here and there; and

there is the same snow falling at the top, and there are the same

frosty mists, and there is the same intensely cold convent with its

menagerie smell, and the same breed of dogs fast dying out, and the

same breed of jolly young monks whom I mourn to know as humbugs,

and the same convent parlour with its piano and the sitting round

the fire, and the same supper, and the same lone night in a cell,

and the same bright fresh morning when going out into the highly

rarefied air was like a plunge into an icy bath. Now, see here

what comes along; and why does this thing stalk into my mind on the

top of a Swiss mountain!

It is a figure that I once saw, just after dark, chalked upon a

door in a little back lane near a country church – my first church.

How young a child I may have been at the time I don’t know, but it

horrified me so intensely – in connexion with the churchyard, I

suppose, for it smokes a pipe, and has a big hat with each of its

ears sticking out in a horizontal line under the brim, and is not

in itself more oppressive than a mouth from ear to ear, a pair of

goggle eyes, and hands like two bunches of carrots, five in each,

can make it – that it is still vaguely alarming to me to recall (as

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Dickens, Charles – Reprinted Pieces

I have often done before, lying awake) the running home, the

looking behind, the horror, of its following me; though whether

disconnected from the door, or door and all, I can’t say, and

perhaps never could. It lays a disagreeable train. I must resolve

to think of something on the voluntary principle.

The balloon ascents of this last season. They will do to think

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