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the uncommercial traveller-第79部分

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making love … tremendous proof of the vigour of that immortal

article; for they were in the graceful uniform under which English

Charity delights to hide herself … and they were overgrown; and

their legs (his legs at least; for I am modestly incompetent to

speak of hers) were as much in the wrong as mere passive weakness

of character can render legs。  O it was a leaden churchyard; but no

doubt a golden ground to those young persons!  I first saw them on

a Saturday evening; and; perceiving from their occupation that

Saturday evening was their trysting…time; I returned that evening

se'nnight; and renewed the contemplation of them。  They came there

to shake the bits of matting which were spread in the church

aisles; and they afterwards rolled them up; he rolling his end; she

rolling hers; until they met; and over the two once divided now

united rolls … sweet emblem! … gave and received a chaste salute。

It was so refreshing to find one of my faded churchyards blooming

into flower thus; that I returned a second time; and a third; and

ultimately this befell:… They had left the church door open; in

their dusting and arranging。  Walking in to look at the church; I

became aware; by the dim light; of him in the pulpit; of her in the

reading…desk; of him looking down; of her looking up; exchanging

tender discourse。  Immediately both dived; and became as it were

non…existent on this sphere。  With an assumption of innocence I

turned to leave the sacred edifice; when an obese form stood in the

portal; puffily demanding Joseph; or in default of Joseph; Celia。

Taking this monster by the sleeve; and luring him forth on pretence

of showing him whom he sought; I gave time for the emergence of

Joseph and Celia; who presently came towards us in the churchyard;

bending under dusty matting; a picture of thriving and unconscious

industry。  It would be superfluous to hint that I have ever since

deemed this the proudest passage in my life。



But such instances; or any tokens of vitality; are rare indeed in

my City churchyards。  A few sparrows occasionally try to raise a

lively chirrup in their solitary tree … perhaps; as taking a

different view of worms from that entertained by humanity … but

they are flat and hoarse of voice; like the clerk; the organ; the

bell; the clergyman; and all the rest of the Church…works when they

are wound up for Sunday。  Caged larks; thrushes; or blackbirds;

hanging in neighbouring courts; pour forth their strains

passionately; as scenting the tree; trying to break out; and see

leaves again before they die; but their song is Willow; Willow … of

a churchyard cast。  So little light lives inside the churches of my

churchyards; when the two are co…existent; that it is often only by

an accident and after long acquaintance that I discover their

having stained glass in some odd window。  The westering sun slants

into the churchyard by some unwonted entry; a few prismatic tears

drop on an old tombstone; and a window that I thought was only

dirty; is for the moment all bejewelled。  Then the light passes and

the colours die。  Though even then; if there be room enough for me

to fall back so far as that I can gaze up to the top of the Church

Tower; I see the rusty vane new burnished; and seeming to look out

with a joyful flash over the sea of smoke at the distant shore of

country。



Blinking old men who are let out of workhouses by the hour; have a

tendency to sit on bits of coping stone in these churchyards;

leaning with both hands on their sticks and asthmatically gasping。

The more depressed class of beggars too; bring hither broken meats;

and munch。  I am on nodding terms with a meditative turncock who

lingers in one of them; and whom I suspect of a turn for poetry;

the rather; as he looks out of temper when he gives the fire…plug a

disparaging wrench with that large tuning…fork of his which would

wear out the shoulder of his coat; but for a precautionary piece of

inlaid leather。  Fire…ladders; which I am satisfied nobody knows

anything about; and the keys of which were lost in ancient times;

moulder away in the larger churchyards; under eaves like wooden

eyebrows; and so removed are those corners from the haunts of men

and boys; that once on a fifth of November I found a 'Guy' trusted

to take care of himself there; while his proprietors had gone to

dinner。  Of the expression of his face I cannot report; because it

was turned to the wall; but his shrugged shoulders and his ten

extended fingers; appeared to denote that he had moralised in his

little straw chair on the mystery of mortality until he gave it up

as a bad job。



You do not come upon these churchyards violently; there are shapes

of transition in the neighbourhood。  An antiquated news shop; or

barber's shop; apparently bereft of customers in the earlier days

of George the Third; would warn me to look out for one; if any

discoveries in this respect were left for me to make。  A very quiet

court; in combination with an unaccountable dyer's and scourer's;

would prepare me for a churchyard。  An exceedingly retiring public…

house; with a bagatelle…board shadily visible in a sawdusty parlour

shaped like an omnibus; and with a shelf of punch…bowls in the bar;

would apprise me that I stood near consecrated ground。  A 'Dairy;'

exhibiting in its modest window one very little milk…can and three

eggs; would suggest to me the certainty of finding the poultry hard

by; pecking at my forefathers。  I first inferred the vicinity of

Saint Ghastly Grim; from a certain air of extra repose and gloom

pervading a vast stack of warehouses。



From the hush of these places; it is congenial to pass into the

hushed resorts of business。  Down the lanes I like to see the carts

and waggons huddled together in repose; the cranes idle; and the

warehouses shut。  Pausing in the alleys behind the closed Banks of

mighty Lombard…street; it gives one as good as a rich feeling to

think of the broad counters with a rim along the edge; made for

telling money out on; the scales for weighing precious metals; the

ponderous ledgers; and; above all; the bright copper shovels for

shovelling gold。  When I draw money; it never seems so much money

as when it is shovelled at me out of a bright copper shovel。  I

like to say; 'In gold;' and to see seven pounds musically pouring

out of the shovel; like seventy; the Bank appearing to remark to me

… I italicise APPEARING … 'if you want more of this yellow earth;

we keep it in barrows at your service。'  To think of the banker's

clerk with his deft finger turning the crisp edges of the Hundred…

Pound Notes he has taken in a fat roll out of a drawer; is again to

hear the rustling of that delicious south…cash wind。  'How will you

have it?'  I once heard this usual question asked at a Bank Counter

of an elderly female; habited in mourning and steeped in

simplicity; who answered; open…eyed; crook…fingered; laughing with

expectation; 'Anyhow!'  Calling these things to mi
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