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the uncommercial traveller-第48部分

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long ago with a strong sense of the loneliness of chambers。  There

was a fantastic illustration to much the same purpose implicitly

believed by a strange sort of man now dead; whom I knew when I had

not quite arrived at legal years of discretion; though I was

already in the uncommercial line。



This was a man who; though not more than thirty; had seen the world

in divers irreconcilable capacities … had been an officer in a

South American regiment among other odd things … but had not

achieved much in any way of life; and was in debt; and in hiding。

He occupied chambers of the dreariest nature in Lyons Inn; his

name; however; was not up on the door; or door…post; but in lieu of

it stood the name of a friend who had died in the chambers; and had

given him the furniture。  The story arose out of the furniture; and

was to this effect:… Let the former holder of the chambers; whose

name was still upon the door and door…post; be Mr。 Testator。



Mr。 Testator took a set of chambers in Lyons Inn when he had but

very scanty furniture for his bedroom; and none for his sitting…

room。  He had lived some wintry months in this condition; and had

found it very bare and cold。  One night; past midnight; when he sat

writing and still had writing to do that must be done before he

went to bed; he found himself out of coals。  He had coals down…

stairs; but had never been to his cellar; however the cellar…key

was on his mantelshelf; and if he went down and opened the cellar

it fitted; he might fairly assume the coals in that cellar to be

his。  As to his laundress; she lived among the coal…waggons and

Thames watermen … for there were Thames watermen at that time … in

some unknown rat…hole by the river; down lanes and alleys on the

other side of the Strand。  As to any other person to meet him or

obstruct him; Lyons Inn was dreaming; drunk; maudlin; moody;

betting; brooding over bill…discounting or renewing … asleep or

awake; minding its own affairs。  Mr。 Testator took his coal…scuttle

in one hand; his candle and key in the other; and descended to the

dismallest underground dens of Lyons Inn; where the late vehicles

in the streets became thunderous; and all the water…pipes in the

neighbourhood seemed to have Macbeth's Amen sticking in their

throats; and to be trying to get it out。  After groping here and

there among low doors to no purpose; Mr。 Testator at length came to

a door with a rusty padlock which his key fitted。  Getting the door

open with much trouble; and looking in; he found; no coals; but a

confused pile of furniture。  Alarmed by this intrusion on another

man's property; he locked the door again; found his own cellar;

filled his scuttle; and returned up…stairs。



But the furniture he had seen; ran on castors across and across Mr。

Testator's mind incessantly; when; in the chill hour of five in the

morning; he got to bed。  He particularly wanted a table to write

at; and a table expressly made to be written at; had been the piece

of furniture in the foreground of the heap。  When his laundress

emerged from her burrow in the morning to make his kettle boil; he

artfully led up to the subject of cellars and furniture; but the

two ideas had evidently no connexion in her mind。  When she left

him; and he sat at his breakfast; thinking about the furniture; he

recalled the rusty state of the padlock; and inferred that the

furniture must have been stored in the cellars for a long time …

was perhaps forgotten … owner dead; perhaps?  After thinking it

over; a few days; in the course of which he could pump nothing out

of Lyons Inn about the furniture; he became desperate; and resolved

to borrow that table。  He did so; that night。  He had not had the

table long; when he determined to borrow an easy…chair; he had not

had that long; when he made up his mind to borrow a bookcase; then;

a couch; then; a carpet and rug。  By that time; he felt he was 'in

furniture stepped in so far;' as that it could be no worse to

borrow it all。  Consequently; he borrowed it all; and locked up the

cellar for good。  He had always locked it; after every visit。  He

had carried up every separate article in the dead of the night;

and; at the best; had felt as wicked as a Resurrection Man。  Every

article was blue and furry when brought into his rooms; and he had

had; in a murderous and guilty sort of way; to polish it up while

London slept。



Mr。 Testator lived in his furnished chambers two or three years; or

more; and gradually lulled himself into the opinion that the

furniture was his own。  This was his convenient state of mind when;

late one night; a step came up the stairs; and a hand passed over

his door feeling for his knocker; and then one deep and solemn rap

was rapped that might have been a spring in Mr。 Testator's easy…

chair to shoot him out of it; so promptly was it attended with that

effect。



With a candle in his hand; Mr。 Testator went to the door; and found

there; a very pale and very tall man; a man who stooped; a man with

very high shoulders; a very narrow chest; and a very red nose; a

shabby…genteel man。  He was wrapped in a long thread…bare black

coat; fastened up the front with more pins than buttons; and under

his arm he squeezed an umbrella without a handle; as if he were

playing bagpipes。  He said; 'I ask your pardon; but can you tell me

… ' and stopped; his eyes resting on some object within the

chambers。



'Can I tell you what?' asked Mr。 Testator; noting his stoppage with

quick alarm。



'I ask your pardon;' said the stranger; 'but … this is not the

inquiry I was going to make … DO I see in there; any small article

of property belonging to ME?'



Mr。 Testator was beginning to stammer that he was not aware … when

the visitor slipped past him; into the chambers。  There; in a

goblin way which froze Mr。 Testator to the marrow; he examined;

first; the writing…table; and said; 'Mine;' then; the easy…chair;

and said; 'Mine;' then; the bookcase; and said; 'Mine;' then;

turned up a corner of the carpet; and said; 'Mine!' in a word;

inspected every item of furniture from the cellar; in succession;

and said; 'Mine!'  Towards the end of this investigation; Mr。

Testator perceived that he was sodden with liquor; and that the

liquor was gin。  He was not unsteady with gin; either in his speech

or carriage; but he was stiff with gin in both particulars。



Mr。 Testator was in a dreadful state; for (according to his making

out of the story) the possible consequences of what he had done in

recklessness and hardihood; flashed upon him in their fulness for

the first time。  When they had stood gazing at one another for a

little while; he tremulously began:



'Sir; I am conscious that the fullest explanation; compensation;

and restitution; are your due。  They shall be yours。  Allow me to

entreat that; without temper; without even natural irritation on

your part; we may have a little … '



'Drop of something to drink;' interposed the stranger。
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