Reprinted Pieces

salt-sea had inflamed them. The grocers’ hot pickles, Harvey’s

Sauce, Doctor Kitchener’s Zest, Anchovy Paste, Dundee Marmalade,

and the whole stock of luxurious helps to appetite, were

hybernating somewhere underground. The china-shop had no trifles

from anywhere. The Bazaar had given in altogether, and presented a

notice on the shutters that this establishment would re-open at

Whitsuntide, and that the proprietor in the meantime might be heard

of at Wild Lodge, East Cliff. At the Sea-bathing Establishment, a

row of neat little wooden houses seven or eight feet high, I SAW

the proprietor in bed in the shower-bath. As to the bathingmachines,

they were (how they got there, is not for me to say) at

the top of a hill at least a mile and a half off. The library,

which I had never seen otherwise than wide open, was tight shut;

and two peevish bald old gentlemen seemed to be hermetically sealed

up inside, eternally reading the paper. That wonderful mystery,

the music-shop, carried it off as usual (except that it had more

cabinet pianos in stock), as if season or no season were all one to

it. It made the same prodigious display of bright brazen windinstruments,

horribly twisted, worth, as I should conceive, some

thousands of pounds, and which it is utterly impossible that

anybody in any season can ever play or want to play. It had five

triangles in the window, six pairs of castanets, and three harps;

likewise every polka with a coloured frontispiece that ever was

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published; from the original one where a smooth male and female

Pole of high rank are coming at the observer with their arms akimbo,

to the Ratcatcher’s Daughter. Astonishing establishment,

amazing enigma! Three other shops were pretty much out of the

season, what they were used to be in it. First, the shop where

they sell the sailors’ watches, which had still the old collection

of enormous timekeepers, apparently designed to break a fall from

the masthead: with places to wind them up, like fire-plugs.

Secondly, the shop where they sell the sailors’ clothing, which

displayed the old sou’-westers, and the old oily suits, and the old

pea-jackets, and the old one sea-chest, with its handles like a

pair of rope ear-rings. Thirdly, the unchangeable shop for the

sale of literature that has been left behind. Here, Dr. Faustus

was still going down to very red and yellow perdition, under the

superintendence of three green personages of a scaly humour, with

excrescential serpents growing out of their blade-bones. Here, the

Golden Dreamer, and the Norwood Fortune Teller, were still on sale

at sixpence each, with instructions for making the dumb cake, and

reading destinies in tea-cups, and with a picture of a young woman

with a high waist lying on a sofa in an attitude so uncomfortable

as almost to account for her dreaming at one and the same time of a

conflagration, a shipwreck, an earthquake, a skeleton, a churchporch,

lightning, funerals performed, and a young man in a bright

blue coat and canary pantaloons. Here, were Little Warblers and

Fairburn’s Comic Songsters. Here, too, were ballads on the old

ballad paper and in the old confusion of types; with an old man in

a cocked hat, and an arm-chair, for the illustration to Will Watch

the bold Smuggler; and the Friar of Orders Grey, represented by a

little girl in a hoop, with a ship in the distance. All these as

of yore, when they were infinite delights to me!

It took me so long fully to relish these many enjoyments, that I

had not more than an hour before bedtime to devote to Madame

Roland. We got on admirably together on the subject of her convent

education, and I rose next morning with the full conviction that

the day for the great chapter was at last arrived.

It had fallen calm, however, in the night, and as I sat at

breakfast I blushed to remember that I had not yet been on the

Downs. I a walker, and not yet on the Downs! Really, on so quiet

and bright a morning this must be set right. As an essential part

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