Dickens, Chapter on Mrs. Gamp from Martin Chuzzelwitt
IN PART PROFESSIONAL, AND FURNISHES THE READER WITH SOME
VALUABLE HINTS IN RELATION TO THE MANAGEMENT OF A SICK CHAMBER
Mr Mould was surrounded by his household gods. He was enjoying the
sweets of domestic repose, and gazing on them with a calm delight. The day
being sultry, and the window open, the legs of Mr Mould were on the
window-seat, and his back reclined against the shutter. Over his shining head a
handkerchief was drawn, to guard his baldness from the flies. The room was
fragrant with the smell of punch, a tumbler of which grateful compound stood
upon a small round table, convenient to the hand of Mr Mould; so deftly mixed
that as his eye looked down into the cool transparent drink, another eye,
peering brightly from behind the crisp lemon-peel, looked up at him, and
twinkled like a star.
Deep in the City, and within the ward of Cheap, stood Mr Mould’s
establishment. His Harem, or, in other words, the common sitting room of Mrs
Mould and family, was at the back, over the little counting-house behind the
shop; abutting on a churchyard small and shady. In this domestic chamber Mr
Mould now sat; gazing, a placid man, upon his punch and home. If, for a moment
at a time, he sought a wider prospect, whence he might return with freshened
zest to these enjoyments, his moist glance wandered like a sunbeam through a
rural screen of scarlet runners, trained on strings before the window, and he
looked down, with an artist’s eye, upon the graves.
The partner of his life, and daughters twain, were Mr Mould’s
companions. Plump as any partridge was each Miss Mould, and Mrs M. was plumper
than the two together. So round and chubby were their fair proportions, that
they might have been the bodies once belonging to the angels’ faces in the shop
below, grown up, with other heads attached to make them mortal. Even their
peachy cheeks were puffed out and distended, as though they ought of right to
be performing on celestial trumpets. The bodiless cherubs in the shop, who were
depicted as constantly blowing those instruments for ever and ever without any
lungs, played, it is to be presumed, entirely by ear.
Mr Mould looked lovingly at Mrs Mould, who sat hard by, and was a
helpmate to him in his punch as in all other things. Each seraph daughter, too,
enjoyed her share of his regards, and smiled upon him in return. So bountiful
were Mr Mould’s possessions, and so large his stock in trade, that even there,
within his household sanctuary, stood a cumbrous press, whose mahogany maw was
filled with shrouds, and winding-sheets, and other furniture of funerals. But,
though the Misses Mould had been brought up, as one may say, beneath his eye,
it had cast no shadow on their timid infancy or blooming youth. Sporting behind
the scenes of death and burial from cradlehood, the Misses Mould knew better.
Hat-bands, to them, were but so many yards of silk or crape; the final robe but
such a quantity of linen. The Misses Mould could idealise a player’s habit, or
a court-lady’s petticoat, or even an act of parliament. But they were not to be
taken in by palls. They made them sometimes.
The premises of Mr Mould were hard of hearing to the boisterous
noises in the great main streets, and nestled in a quiet corner, where the City
strife became a drowsy hum, that sometimes rose and sometimes fell and
sometimes altogether ceased; suggesting to a thoughtful mind a stoppage in
Cheapside. The light came sparkling in among the scarlet runners, as if the
churchyard winked at Mr Mould, and said, ‘We understand each other;’ and from
the distant shop a pleasant sound arose of coffin-making with a low melodious
hammer, rat, tat, tat, tat, alike promoting slumber and digestion.
‘Quite the buzz of insects,’ said Mr Mould, closing his eyes in a
perfect luxury. ‘It puts one in mind of the sound of animated nature in the
agricultural districts. It’s exactly like the woodpecker tapping.’
‘The woodpecker tapping the hollow Elm tree,’
observed Mrs Mould, adapting the words of the popular melody to the description
of wood commonly used in the trade.
‘Ha, ha!’ laughed Mr Mould. ‘Not at all bad, my dear. We shall be
glad to hear from you again, Mrs M. Hollow elm tree, eh! Ha, ha! Very good
indeed. I’ve seen worse than that in the Sunday papers, my love.’
Mrs Mould, thus encouraged, took a little more of the punch, and
handed it to her daughters, who dutifully followed the example of their mother.
‘Hollow Elm tree, eh?’ said Mr Mould, making a
slight motion with his legs in his enjoyment of the joke. ‘It’s beech in the
song. Elm, eh? Yes, to be sure. Ha, ha, ha! Upon my soul, that’s one of the
best things I know?’ He was so excessively tickled by the jest that he couldn’t
forget it, but repeated twenty times, ‘Elm, eh? Yes, to be sure. Elm, of
course. Ha, ha, ha! Upon my life, you know, that ought to be sent to somebody
who could make use of it. It’s one of the smartest things that ever was said.
Hollow Elm ree, eh? of course. Very hollow. Ha, ha, ha!’
Here a knock was heard at the room door.
‘That’s Tacker, I know,’ said Mrs Mould, ‘by the wheezing he
makes. Who that hears him now, would suppose he’d ever had wind enough to carry
the feathers on his head! Come in, Tacker.’
‘Beg your pardon, ma’am,’ said Tacker, looking in a little way. ‘I
thought our Governor was here.’
‘Well! so he is,’ cried Mould.
‘Oh! I didn’t see you, I’m sure,’ said Tacker, looking in a little
farther. ‘You wouldn’t be inclined to take a walking one of two, with the plain
wood and a tin plate, I suppose?’
‘Certainly not,’ replied Mr Mould, ‘much too common. Nothing to
say to it.’
‘I told ‘em it was precious low,’ observed Mr Tacker.
‘Tell ‘em to go somewhere else. We don’t do that style of business
here,’ said Mr Mould. ‘Like their impudence to propose it. Who is it?’
‘Why,’ returned Tacker, pausing, ‘that’s where it is, you see.
It’s the beadle’s son-in-law.’
‘The beadle’s son-in-law, eh?’ said Mould. ‘Well! I’ll do it if
the beadle follows in his cocked hat; not else. We carry it off that way, by
looking official, but it’ll be low enough, then. His cocked hat, mind!’
‘I’ll take care, sir,’ rejoined Tacker. ‘Oh! Mrs Gamp’s below, and
wants to speak to you.’
‘Tell Mrs Gamp to come upstairs,’ said Mould. ‘Now Mrs Gamp,
what’s your news?’
The lady in question was by this time in the doorway, curtseying
to Mrs Mould. At the same moment a peculiar fragrance was borne upon the
breeze, as if a passing fairy had hiccoughed, and had previously been to a
wine-vaults.
Mrs Gamp made no response to Mr Mould, but curtseyed to Mrs Mould
again, and held up her hands and eyes, as in a devout thanksgiving that she
looked so well. She was neatly, but not gaudily attired, in the weeds she had
worn when Mr Pecksniff had the pleasure of making her acquaintance; and was
perhaps the turning of a scale more snuffy.
‘There are some happy creeturs,’ Mrs Gamp observed, ‘as time runs
back’ards with, and you are one, Mrs Mould; not that he need do nothing except
use you in his most owldacious way for years to come, I’m sure; for young you
are and will be. I says to Mrs Harris,’ Mrs Gamp continued, ‘only t’other day;
the last Monday evening fortnight as ever dawned upon this Piljian’s Projiss of
a mortal wale; I says to Mrs Harris when she says to me, “Years and our trials,
Mrs Gamp, sets marks upon us all.”—“Say not the words, Mrs Harris, if you and
me is to be continual friends, for sech is not the case. Mrs Mould,” I says,
making so free, I will confess, as use the name,’ (she curtseyed here), ‘“is
one of them that goes agen the obserwation straight; and never, Mrs Harris,
whilst I’ve a drop of breath to draw, will I set by, and not stand up, don’t
think it.”—“I ast your pardon, ma’am,” says Mrs Harris, “and I humbly grant
your grace; for if ever a woman lived as would see her feller creeturs into
fits to serve her friends, well do I know that woman’s name is Sairey Gamp.”’
At this point she was fain to stop for breath; and advantage may
be taken of the circumstance, to state that a fearful mystery surrounded this
lady of the name of Harris, whom no one in the circle of Mrs Gamp’s
acquaintance had ever seen; neither did any human being know her place of
residence, though Mrs Gamp appeared on her own showing to be in constant
communication with her. There were conflicting rumours on the subject; but the
prevalent opinion was that she was a phantom of Mrs Gamp’s brain—as Messrs. Doe
and Roe are fictions of the law—created for the express purpose of holding
visionary dialogues with her on all manner of subjects, and invariably winding
up with a compliment to the excellence of her nature.
‘And likeways what a pleasure,’ said Mrs Gamp, turning with a
tearful smile towards the daughters, ‘to see them two young ladies as I know’d
afore a tooth in their pretty heads was cut, and have many a day seen—ah, the
sweet creeturs!—playing at berryins down in the shop, and follerin’ the
order-book to its long home in the iron safe! But that’s all past and over, Mr
Mould;’ as she thus got in a carefully regulated routine to that gentleman, she
shook her head waggishly; ‘That’s all past and over now, sir, an’t it?’
‘Changes, Mrs Gamp, changes!’ returned the undertaker.
‘More changes too, to come, afore we’ve done with changes, sir,’
said Mrs Gamp, nodding yet more waggishly than before. ‘Young ladies with such
faces thinks of something else besides berryins, don’t they, sir?’
‘I am sure I don’t know, Mrs Gamp,’ said Mould, with a
chuckle—‘Not bad in Mrs Gamp, my dear?’
‘Oh yes, you do know, sir!’ said Mrs Gamp, ‘and so does Mrs Mould,
your ‘ansome pardner too, sir; and so do I, although the blessing of a daughter
was deniged me; which, if we had had one, Gamp would certainly have drunk its
little shoes right off its feet, as with our precious boy he did, and arterward
send the child a errand to sell his wooden leg for any money it would fetch as
matches in the rough, and bring it home in liquor; which was truly done beyond
his years, for ev’ry individgle penny that child lost at toss or buy for kidney
ones; and come home arterwards quite bold, to break the news, and offering to
drown himself if sech would be a satisfaction to his parents.—Oh yes, you do
know, sir,’ said Mrs Gamp, wiping her eye with her shawl, and resuming the
thread of her discourse. ‘There’s something besides births and berryins in the
newspapers, an’t there, Mr Mould?’
Mr Mould winked at Mrs Mould, whom he had by this time taken on
his knee, and said: ‘No doubt. A good deal more, Mrs Gamp. Upon my life, Mrs
Gamp is very far from bad, my dear!’
‘There’s marryings, an’t there, sir?’ said Mrs Gamp, while both
the daughters blushed and tittered. ‘Bless their precious hearts, and well they
knows it! Well you know’d it too, and well did Mrs Mould, when you was at their
time of life! But my opinion is, you’re all of one age now. For as to you and
Mrs Mould, sir, ever having grandchildren—’
‘Oh! Fie, fie! Nonsense, Mrs Gamp,’ replied the undertaker.
‘Devilish smart, though. Ca-pi-tal!’—this was in a whisper. ‘My dear’—aloud
again—‘Mrs Gamp can drink a glass of rum, I dare say. Sit down, Mrs Gamp, sit
down.’
Mrs Gamp took the chair that was nearest the door, and casting up
her eyes towards the ceiling, feigned to be wholly insensible to the fact of a
glass of rum being in preparation, until it was placed in her hand by one of
the young ladies, when she exhibited the greatest surprise.
‘A thing,’ she said, ‘as hardly ever, Mrs Mould, occurs with me
unless it is when I am indispoged, and find my half a pint of porter settling
heavy on the chest. Mrs Harris often and often says to me, “Sairey Gamp,” she
says, “you raly do amaze me!” “Mrs Harris,” I says to her, “why so? Give it a
name, I beg.” “Telling the truth then, ma’am,” says Mrs Harris, “and shaming
him as shall be nameless betwixt you and me, never did I think till I know’d
you, as any woman could sick-nurse and monthly likeways, on the little that you
takes to drink.” “Mrs Harris,” I says to her, “none on us knows what we can do
till we tries; and wunst, when me and Gamp kept ‘ouse, I thought so too. But
now,” I says, “my half a pint of porter fully satisfies; perwisin’, Mrs Harris,
that it is brought reg’lar, and draw’d mild. Whether I sicks or monthlies,
ma’am, I hope I does my duty, but I am but a poor woman, and I earns my living
hard; therefore I do require it, which I makes confession, to
be brought reg’lar and draw’d mild.”’
The precise connection between these observations and the glass of
rum, did not appear; for Mrs Gamp proposing as a toast ‘The best of lucks to
all!’ took off the dram in quite a scientific manner, without any further
remarks.
‘And what’s your news, Mrs Gamp?’ asked Mould again, as that lady
wiped her lips upon her shawl, and nibbled a corner off a soft biscuit, which
she appeared to carry in her pocket as a provision against contingent drams.
‘How’s Mr Chuffey?’
‘Mr Chuffey, sir,’ she replied, ‘is jest as usual; he an’t no
better and he an’t no worse. I take it very kind in the gentleman to have wrote
up to you and said, “let Mrs Gamp take care of him till I come home;” but
ev’rythink he does is kind. There an’t a many like him. If there was, we
shouldn’t want no churches.’
‘What do you want to speak to me about, Mrs Gamp?’ said Mould,
coming to the point.
‘Jest this, sir,’ Mrs Gamp returned, ‘with thanks to you for
asking. There is a gent, sir, at the Bull in Holborn, as has
been took ill there, and is bad abed. They have a day nurse as was recommended
from Bartholomew’s; and well I knows her, Mr Mould, her name bein’ Mrs Prig,
the best of creeturs. But she is otherways engaged at night, and they are in
wants of night-watching; consequent she says to them, having reposed the
greatest friendliness in me for twenty year, “The soberest person going, and
the best of blessings in a sick room, is Mrs Gamp. Send a boy to Kingsgate
Street,” she says, “and snap her up at any price, for Mrs Gamp is worth her
weight and more in goldian guineas.” My landlord brings the message down to me,
and says, “bein’ in a light place where you are, and this job promising so
well, why not unite the two?” “No, sir,” I says, “not unbeknown to Mr Mould,
and therefore do not think it. But I will go to Mr Mould,” I says, “and ast
him, if you like.”’ Here she looked sideways at the undertaker, and came to a
stop.
‘Night-watching, eh?’ said Mould, rubbing his chin.
‘From eight o’clock till eight, sir. I will not deceive you,’ Mrs
Gamp rejoined.
‘And then go back, eh?’ said would.
‘Quite free, then, sir, to attend to Mr Chuffey. His ways bein’
quiet, and his hours early, he’d be abed, sir, nearly all the time. I will not
deny,’ said Mrs Gamp with meekness, ‘that I am but a poor woman, and that the
money is a object; but do not let that act upon you, Mr Mould. Rich folks may
ride on camels, but it an’t so easy for ‘em to see out of a needle’s eye. That
is my comfort, and I hope I knows it.’
‘Well, Mrs Gamp,’ observed Mould, ‘I don’t see any particular
objection to your earning an honest penny under such circumstances. I should
keep it quiet, I think, Mrs Gamp. I wouldn’t mention it to Mr Chuzzlewit on his
return, for instance, unless it were necessary, or he asked you pointblank.’
‘The very words was on my lips, sir,’ Mrs Gamp rejoined.
‘Suppoging that the gent should die, I hope I might take the liberty of saying
as I know’d some one in the undertaking line, and yet give no offence to you,
sir?’
‘Certainly, Mrs Gamp,’ said Mould, with much condescension. ‘You
may casually remark, in such a case, that we do the thing pleasantly and in a
great variety of styles, and are generally considered to make it as agreeable
as possible to the feelings of the survivors. But don’t obtrude it, don’t
obtrude it. Easy, easy! My dear, you may as well give Mrs Gamp a card or two,
if you please.’
Mrs Gamp received them, and scenting no more rum in the wind (for
the bottle was locked up again) rose to take her departure.
‘Wishing ev’ry happiness to this happy family,’ said Mrs Gamp
‘with all my heart. Good arternoon, Mrs Mould! If I was Mr would I should be
jealous of you, ma’am; and I’m sure, if I was you, I should be jealous of Mr
Mould.’
‘Tut, tut! Bah, bah! Go along, Mrs Gamp!’ cried the delighted
undertaker.
‘As to the young ladies,’ said Mrs Gamp, dropping a curtsey,
‘bless their sweet looks—how they can ever reconsize it with their duties to be
so grown up with such young parents, it an’t for sech as me to give a guess
at.’
‘Nonsense, nonsense. Be off, Mrs Gamp!’ cried Mould. But in the
height of his gratification he actually pinched Mrs Mould as he said it.
‘I’ll tell you what, my dear,’ he observed, when Mrs Gamp had at
last withdrawn and shut the door, ‘that’s a ve-ry shrewd woman. That’s a woman
whose intellect is immensely superior to her station in life. That’s a woman
who observes and reflects in an uncommon manner. She’s the sort of woman now,’
said Mould, drawing his silk handkerchief over his head again, and composing
himself for a nap ‘one would almost feel disposed to bury for nothing; and do
it neatly, too!’
Mrs Mould and her daughters fully concurred in these remarks; the
subject of which had by this time reached the street, where she experienced so
much inconvenience from the air, that she was obliged to stand under an archway
for a short time, to recover herself. Even after this precaution, she walked so
unsteadily as to attract the compassionate regards of divers kind-hearted boys,
who took the liveliest interest in her disorder; and in their simple language
bade her be of good cheer, for she was ‘only a little screwed.’
Whatever she was, or whatever name the vocabulary of medical
science would have bestowed upon her malady, Mrs Gamp was perfectly acquainted
with the way home again; and arriving at the house of Anthony Chuzzlewit &
Son, lay down to rest. Remaining there until seven o’clock in the evening, and
then persuading poor old Chuffey to betake himself to bed, she sallied forth
upon her new engagement. First, she went to her private lodgings in Kingsgate
Street, for a bundle of robes and wrappings comfortable in the night season;
and then repaired to the Bull in Holborn, which she reached as the clocks were
striking eight.
As she turned into the yard, she stopped; for the landlord,
landlady, and head chambermaid, were all on the threshold together talking
earnestly with a young gentleman who seemed to have just come or to be just
going away.
***
She groaned her admiration so audibly, that they all turned round.
Mrs Gamp felt the necessity of advancing, bundle in hand, and introducing
herself.
‘The night-nurse,’ she observed, ‘from Kingsgate Street, well
beknown to Mrs Prig the day-nurse, and the best of creeturs. How is the poor
dear gentleman to-night? If he an’t no better yet, still that is what must be
expected and prepared for. It an’t the fust time by a many score, ma’am,’
dropping a curtsey to the landlady, ‘that Mrs Prig and me has nussed together,
turn and turn about, one off, one on. We knows each other’s ways, and often
gives relief when others fail. Our charges is but low, sir’—Mrs Gamp addressed
herself to John on this head—‘considerin’ the nater of our painful dooty. If
they wos made accordin’ to our wishes, they would be easy paid.’
Regarding herself as having now delivered her inauguration
address, Mrs Gamp curtseyed all round, and signified her wish to be conducted
to the scene of her official duties. The chambermaid led her, through a variety
of intricate passages, to the top of the house; and pointing at length to a
solitary door at the end of a gallery, informed her that yonder was the chamber
where the patient lay. That done, she hurried off with all the speed she could
make.
Mrs Gamp traversed the gallery in a great heat from having carried
her large bundle up so many stairs, and tapped at the door which was
immediately opened by Mrs Prig, bonneted and shawled and all impatience to be
gone. Mrs Prig was of the Gamp build, but not so fat; and her voice was deeper
and more like a man’s. She had also a beard.
‘I began to think you warn’t a-coming!’ Mrs Prig observed, in some
displeasure.
‘It shall be made good to-morrow night,’ said Mrs Gamp ‘Honorable.
I had to go and fetch my things.’ She had begun to make signs of inquiry in
reference to the position of the patient and his overhearing them—for there was
a screen before the door—when Mrs Prig settled that point easily.
‘Oh!’ she said aloud, ‘he’s quiet, but his wits is gone. It an’t
no matter wot you say.’
‘Anythin’ to tell afore you goes, my dear?’ asked Mrs Gamp,
setting her bundle down inside the door, and looking affectionately at her
partner.
‘The pickled salmon,’ Mrs Prig replied, ‘is quite delicious. I can
partlck’ler recommend it. Don’t have nothink to say to the cold meat, for it
tastes of the stable. The drinks is all good.’
Mrs Gamp expressed herself much gratified.
‘The physic and them things is on the drawers and mankleshelf,’
said Mrs Prig, cursorily. ‘He took his last slime draught at seven. The
easy-chair an’t soft enough. You’ll want his piller.’
Mrs Gamp thanked her for these hints, and giving her a friendly
good night, held the door open until she had disappeared at the other end of
the gallery. Having thus performed the hospitable duty of seeing her safely
off, she shut it, locked it on the inside, took up her bundle, walked round the
screen, and entered on her occupation of the sick chamber.
‘A little dull, but not so bad as might be,’ Mrs Gamp remarked.
‘I’m glad to see a parapidge, in case of fire, and lots of roofs and
chimley-pots to walk upon.’
It will be seen from these remarks that Mrs Gamp was looking out
of window. When she had exhausted the prospect, she tried the easy-chair, which
she indignantly declared was ‘harder than a brickbadge.’ Next she pursued her
researches among the physic-bottles, glasses, jugs, and tea-cups; and when she
had entirely satisfied her curiosity on all these subjects of investigation,
she untied her bonnet-strings and strolled up to the bedside to take a look at
the patient.
A young man—dark and not ill-looking—with long black hair, that
seemed the blacker for the whiteness of the bed-clothes. His eyes were partly
open, and he never ceased to roll his head from side to side upon the pillow,
keeping his body almost quiet. He did not utter words; but every now and then
gave vent to an expression of impatience or fatigue, sometimes of surprise; and
still his restless head—oh, weary, weary hour!—went to and fro without a
moment’s intermission.
Mrs Gamp solaced herself with a pinch of snuff, and stood looking
at him with her head inclined a little sideways, as a connoisseur might gaze
upon a doubtful work of art. By degrees, a horrible remembrance of one branch
of her calling took possession of the woman; and stooping down, she pinned his
wandering arms against his sides, to see how he would look if laid out as a
dead man. Her fingers itched to compose his limbs in that last marble attitude.
‘Ah!’ said Mrs Gamp, walking away from the bed, ‘he’d make a
lovely corpse.’
She now proceeded to unpack her bundle; lighted a candle with the
aid of a fire-box on the drawers; filled a small kettle, as a preliminary to
refreshing herself with a cup of tea in the course of the night; laid what she
called ‘a little bit of fire,’ for the same philanthropic purpose; and also set
forth a small tea-board, that nothing might be wanting for her comfortable
enjoyment. These preparations occupied so long, that when they were brought to
a conclusion it was high time to think about supper; so she rang the bell and
ordered it.
‘I think, young woman,’ said Mrs Gamp to the assistant
chambermaid, in a tone expressive of weakness, ‘that I could pick a little bit
of pickled salmon, with a nice little sprig of fennel, and a sprinkling of
white pepper. I takes new bread, my dear, with just a little pat of fresh
butter, and a mossel of cheese. In case there should be such a thing as a
cowcumber in the ‘ouse, will you be so kind as bring it, for I’m rather partial
to ‘em, and they does a world of good in a sick room. If they draws the Brighton
Old Tipper here, I takes that ale at night, my love, it bein’
considered wakeful by the doctors. And whatever you do, young woman, don’t
bring more than a shilling’s-worth of gin and water-warm when I rings the bell
a second time; for that is always my allowance, and I never takes a drop
beyond!’
Having preferred these moderate requests, Mrs Gamp observed that
she would stand at the door until the order was executed, to the end that the
patient might not be disturbed by her opening it a second time; and therefore
she would thank the young woman to ‘look sharp.’
A tray was brought with everything upon it, even to the cucumber
and Mrs Gamp accordingly sat down to eat and drink in high good humour. The
extent to which she availed herself of the vinegar, and supped up that
refreshing fluid with the blade of her knife, can scarcely be expressed in
narrative.
‘Ah!’ sighed Mrs Gamp, as she meditated over the warm
shilling’s-worth, ‘what a blessed thing it is—living in a wale—to be contented!
What a blessed thing it is to make sick people happy in their beds, and never
mind one’s self as long as one can do a service! I don’t believe a finer
cowcumber was ever grow’d. I’m sure I never see one!’
She moralised in the same vein until her glass was empty, and then
administered the patient’s medicine, by the simple process of clutching his
windpipe to make him gasp, and immediately pouring it down his throat.
‘I a’most forgot the piller, I declare!’ said Mrs Gamp, drawing it
away. ‘There! Now he’s comfortable as he can be, I’m sure! I must try to make
myself as much so as I can.’
With this view, she went about the construction of an
extemporaneous bed in the easy-chair, with the addition of the next easy one
for her feet. Having formed the best couch that the circumstances admitted of,
she took out of her bundle a yellow night-cap, of prodigious size, in shape
resembling a cabbage; which article of dress she fixed and tied on with the
utmost care, previously divesting herself of a row of bald old curls that could
scarcely be called false, they were so very innocent of anything approaching to
deception. From the same repository she brought forth a night-jacket, in which
she also attired herself. Finally, she produced a watchman’s coat which she
tied round her neck by the sleeves, so that she become two people; and looked,
behind, as if she were in the act of being embraced by one of the old patrol.
All these arrangements made, she lighted the rush-light, coiled
herself up on her couch, and went to sleep. Ghostly and dark the room became,
and full of lowering shadows. The distant noises in the streets were gradually
hushed; the house was quiet as a sepulchre; the dead of night was coffined in
the silent city.
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