Sketches by Boz, by Charles Dickens (1836) - Scenes -
Chapter 6
CHAPTER VI—MEDITATIONS IN MONMOUTH-STREET
We have always entertained a particular attachment
towards Monmouth-street, as the only true and real emporium for second-hand
wearing apparel. Monmouth-street is venerable from its antiquity, and
respectable from its usefulness. Holywell-street we despise; the
red-headed and red-whiskered Jews who forcibly haul you into their squalid
houses, and thrust you into a suit of clothes, whether you will or not, we
detest.
The inhabitants of Monmouth-street are a distinct class;
a peaceable and retiring race, who immure themselves for the most part in deep
cellars, or small back parlours, and who seldom come forth into the world,
except in the dusk and coolness of the evening, when they may be seen seated, in
chairs on the pavement, smoking their pipes, or watching the gambols of their
engaging children as they revel in the gutter, a happy troop of infantine
scavengers. Their countenances bear a thoughtful and a dirty cast, certain
indications of their love of traffic; and their habitations are distinguished by
that disregard of outward appearance and neglect of personal comfort, so common
among people who are constantly immersed in profound speculations, and deeply
engaged in sedentary pursuits.
We have hinted at the antiquity of our favourite spot.
‘A Monmouth-street laced coat’ was a by-word a century ago; and still we
find Monmouth-street the same. Pilot great-coats with wooden buttons, have
usurped the place of the ponderous laced coats with full skirts; embroidered
waistcoats with large flaps, have yielded to double-breasted checks with
roll-collars; and three-cornered hats of quaint appearance, have given place to
the low crowns and broad brims of the coachman school; but it is the times that
have changed, not Monmouth-street. Through every alteration and every
change, Monmouth-street has still remained the burial-place of the fashions; and
such, to judge from all present appearances, it will remain until there are no
more fashions to bury.
We love to walk among these extensive groves of the
illustrious dead, and to indulge in the speculations to which they give rise;
now fitting a deceased coat, then a dead pair of trousers, and anon the mortal
remains of a gaudy waistcoat, upon some being of our own conjuring up, and
endeavouring, from the shape and fashion of the garment itself, to bring its
former owner before our mind’s eye. We have gone on speculating in this
way, until whole rows of coats have started from their pegs, and buttoned up, of
their own accord, round the waists of imaginary wearers; lines of trousers have
jumped down to meet them; waistcoats have almost burst with anxiety to put
themselves on; and half an acre of shoes have suddenly found feet to fit them,
and gone stumping down the street with a noise which has fairly awakened us from
our pleasant reverie, and driven us slowly away, with a bewildered stare, an
object of astonishment to the good people of Monmouth-street, and of no slight
suspicion to the policemen at the opposite street corner.
We were occupied in this manner the other day,
endeavouring to fit a pair of lace-up half-boots on an ideal personage, for
whom, to say the truth, they were full a couple of sizes too small, when our
eyes happened to alight on a few suits of clothes ranged outside a shop-window,
which it immediately struck us, must at different periods have all belonged to,
and been worn by, the same individual, and had now, by one of those strange
conjunctions of circumstances which will occur sometimes, come to be exposed
together for sale in the same shop. The idea seemed a fantastic one, and
we looked at the clothes again with a firm determination not to be easily led
away. No, we were right; the more we looked, the more we were convinced of
the accuracy of our previous impression. There was the man’s whole life
written as legibly on those clothes, as if we had his autobiography engrossed on
parchment before us.
The first was a patched and much-soiled skeleton suit;
one of those straight blue cloth cases in which small boys used to be confined,
before belts and tunics had come in, and old notions had gone out: an ingenious
contrivance for displaying the full symmetry of a boy’s figure, by fastening
him into a very tight jacket, with an ornamental row of buttons over each
shoulder, and then buttoning his trousers over it, so as to give his legs the
appearance of being hooked on, just under the armpits. This was the
boy’s dress. It had belonged to a town boy, we could see; there was a
shortness about the legs and arms of the suit; and a bagging at the knees,
peculiar to the rising youth of London streets. A small day-school he had
been at, evidently. If it had been a regular boys’ school they
wouldn’t have let him play on the floor so much, and rub his knees so white.
He had an indulgent mother too, and plenty of halfpence, as the numerous smears
of some sticky substance about the pockets, and just below the chin, which even
the salesman’s skill could not succeed in disguising, sufficiently betokened.
They were decent people, but not overburdened with riches, or he would not have
so far outgrown the suit when he passed into those corduroys with the round
jacket; in which he went to a boys’ school, however, and learnt to write—and
in ink of pretty tolerable blackness, too, if the place where he used to wipe
his pen might be taken as evidence.
A black suit and the jacket changed into a diminutive
coat. His father had died, and the mother had got the boy a
message-lad’s place in some office. A long-worn suit that one; rusty and
threadbare before it was laid aside, but clean and free from soil to the last.
Poor woman! We could imagine her assumed cheerfulness over the scanty
meal, and the refusal of her own small portion, that her hungry boy might have
enough. Her constant anxiety for his welfare, her pride in his growth
mingled sometimes with the thought, almost too acute to bear, that as he grew to
be a man his old affection might cool, old kindnesses fade from his mind, and
old promises be forgotten—the sharp pain that even then a careless word or a
cold look would give her—all crowded on our thoughts as vividly as if the very
scene were passing before us.
These things happen every hour, and we all know it; and
yet we felt as much sorrow when we saw, or fancied we saw—it makes no
difference which—the change that began to take place now, as if we had just
conceived the bare possibility of such a thing for the first time. The
next suit, smart but slovenly; meant to be gay, and yet not half so decent as
the threadbare apparel; redolent of the idle lounge, and the blackguard
companions, told us, we thought, that the widow’s comfort had rapidly faded
away. We could imagine that coat—imagine! we could see it; we had
seen it a hundred times—sauntering in company with three or four other coats
of the same cut, about some place of profligate resort at night.
We dressed, from the same shop-window in an instant,
half a dozen boys of from fifteen to twenty; and putting cigars into their
mouths, and their hands into their pockets, watched them as they sauntered down
the street, and lingered at the corner, with the obscene jest, and the
oft-repeated oath. We never lost sight of them, till they had cocked their
hats a little more on one side, and swaggered into the public-house; and then we
entered the desolate home, where the mother sat late in the night, alone; we
watched her, as she paced the room in feverish anxiety, and every now and then
opened the door, looked wistfully into the dark and empty street, and again
returned, to be again and again disappointed. We beheld the look of
patience with which she bore the brutish threat, nay, even the drunken blow; and
we heard the agony of tears that gushed from her very heart, as she sank upon
her knees in her solitary and wretched apartment.
A long period had elapsed, and a greater change had
taken place, by the time of casting off the suit that hung above. It was
that of a stout, broad-shouldered, sturdy-chested man; and we knew at once, as
anybody would, who glanced at that broad-skirted green coat, with the large
metal buttons, that its wearer seldom walked forth without a dog at his heels,
and some idle ruffian, the very counterpart of himself, at his side. The
vices of the boy had grown with the man, and we fancied his home then—if such
a place deserve the name.
We saw the bare and miserable room, destitute of
furniture, crowded with his wife and children, pale, hungry, and emaciated; the
man cursing their lamentations, staggering to the tap-room, from whence he had
just returned, followed by his wife and a sickly infant, clamouring for bread;
and heard the street-wrangle and noisy recrimination that his striking her
occasioned. And then imagination led us to some metropolitan workhouse,
situated in the midst of crowded streets and alleys, filled with noxious vapours,
and ringing with boisterous cries, where an old and feeble woman, imploring
pardon for her son, lay dying in a close dark room, with no child to clasp her
hand, and no pure air from heaven to fan her brow. A stranger closed the
eyes that settled into a cold unmeaning glare, and strange ears received the
words that murmured from the white and half-closed lips.
A coarse round frock, with a worn cotton neckerchief,
and other articles of clothing of the commonest description, completed the
history. A prison, and the sentence—banishment or the gallows.
What would the man have given then, to be once again the contented humble drudge
of his boyish years; to have been restored to life, but for a week, a day, an
hour, a minute, only for so long a time as would enable him to say one word of
passionate regret to, and hear one sound of heartfelt forgiveness from, the cold
and ghastly form that lay rotting in the pauper’s grave! The children
wild in the streets, the mother a destitute widow; both deeply tainted with the
deep disgrace of the husband and father’s name, and impelled by sheer
necessity, down the precipice that had led him to a lingering death, possibly of
many years’ duration, thousands of miles away. We had no clue to the end
of the tale; but it was easy to guess its termination.
We took a step or two further on, and by way of
restoring the naturally cheerful tone of our thoughts, began fitting visionary
feet and legs into a cellar-board full of boots and shoes, with a speed and
accuracy that would have astonished the most expert artist in leather, living.
There was one pair of boots in particular—a jolly, good-tempered,
hearty-looking pair of tops, that excited our warmest regard; and we had got a
fine, red-faced, jovial fellow of a market-gardener into them, before we had
made their acquaintance half a minute. They were just the very thing for
him. There was his huge fat legs bulging over the tops, and fitting them
too tight to admit of his tucking in the loops he had pulled them on by; and his
knee-cords with an interval of stocking; and his blue apron tucked up round his
waist; and his red neckerchief and blue coat, and a white hat stuck on one side
of his head; and there he stood with a broad grin on his great red face,
whistling away, as if any other idea but that of being happy and comfortable had
never entered his brain.
This was the very man after our own heart; we knew all
about him; we had seen him coming up to Covent-garden in his green chaise-cart,
with the fat, tubby little horse, half a thousand times; and even while we cast
an affectionate look upon his boots, at that instant, the form of a coquettish
servant-maid suddenly sprung into a pair of Denmark satin shoes that stood
beside them, and we at once recognised the very girl who accepted his offer of a
ride, just on this side the Hammersmith suspension-bridge, the very last Tuesday
morning we rode into town from Richmond.
A very smart female, in a showy bonnet, stepped into a
pair of grey cloth boots, with black fringe and binding, that were studiously
pointing out their toes on the other side of the top-boots, and seemed very
anxious to engage his attention, but we didn’t observe that our friend the
market-gardener appeared at all captivated with these blandishments; for beyond
giving a knowing wink when they first began, as if to imply that he quite
understood their end and object, he took no further notice of them. His
indifference, however, was amply recompensed by the excessive gallantry of a
very old gentleman with a silver-headed stick, who tottered into a pair of large
list shoes, that were standing in one corner of the board, and indulged in a
variety of gestures expressive of his admiration of the lady in the cloth boots,
to the immeasurable amusement of a young fellow we put into a pair of
long-quartered pumps, who we thought would have split the coat that slid down to
meet him, with laughing.
We had been looking on at this little pantomime with
great satisfaction for some time, when, to our unspeakable astonishment, we
perceived that the whole of the characters, including a numerous corps de
ballet of boots and shoes in the background, into which we had been hastily
thrusting as many feet as we could press into the service, were arranging
themselves in order for dancing; and some music striking up at the moment, to it
they went without delay. It was perfectly delightful to witness the
agility of the market-gardener. Out went the boots, first on one side,
then on the other, then cutting, then shuffling, then setting to the Denmark
satins, then advancing, then retreating, then going round, and then repeating
the whole of the evolutions again, without appearing to suffer in the least from
the violence of the exercise.
Nor were the Denmark satins a bit behindhand, for they
jumped and bounded about, in all directions; and though they were neither so
regular, nor so true to the time as the cloth boots, still, as they seemed to do
it from the heart, and to enjoy it more, we candidly confess that we preferred
their style of dancing to the other. But the old gentleman in the list
shoes was the most amusing object in the whole party; for, besides his grotesque
attempts to appear youthful, and amorous, which were sufficiently entertaining
in themselves, the young fellow in the pumps managed so artfully that every time
the old gentleman advanced to salute the lady in the cloth boots, he trod with
his whole weight on the old fellow’s toes, which made him roar with anguish,
and rendered all the others like to die of laughing.
We were in the full enjoyment of these festivities when
we heard a shrill, and by no means musical voice, exclaim, ‘Hope you’ll know
me agin, imperence!’ and on looking intently forward to see from whence the
sound came, we found that it proceeded, not from the young lady in the cloth
boots, as we had at first been inclined to suppose, but from a bulky lady of
elderly appearance who was seated in a chair at the head of the cellar-steps,
apparently for the purpose of superintending the sale of the articles arranged
there.
A barrel-organ, which had been in full force close
behind us, ceased playing; the people we had been fitting into the shoes and
boots took to flight at the interruption; and as we were conscious that in the
depth of our meditations we might have been rudely staring at the old lady for
half an hour without knowing it, we took to flight too, and were soon immersed
in the deepest obscurity of the adjacent ‘Dials.’