The Mail
It was the Dover road that lay, on a Friday night late
in November, before the first of the persons with whom this history has
business. The Dover road lay, as to him, beyond
the Dover mail,
as it lumbered up Shooter's Hill. He walked uphill in the mire by the side of
the mail, as the rest of the passengers did; not because they had the least
relish for walking exercise, under the circumstances, but because the hill, and
the harness, and the mud, and the mail, were all so heavy that the horses had
three times already come to a stop, beside once drawing the coach across the
road, with the mutinous intent of taking it back to Blackheath. Reins and whip
and coachman and guard, however, in combination, had read that article of war
which forbad a purpose otherwise strongly in favour of the argument, that some
brute animals are endued with Reason; and the team had capitulated and returned
to their duty.
With drooping heads and tremulous tails,
they mashed their way through the thick mud, floundering and stumbling he
between whiles, as if they were falling to pieces at the large joints. As often
as the driver rested them and brought them to a stand, with a wary `Wo-ho!
so-ho then!' the near leader violently shook his head and everything upon it--like
an unusually emphatic horse, denying that the coach could be got up the hill.
Whenever the leader made this rattle, the passenger started, as a nervous
passenger might, and was disturbed in mind.
There was a steaming mist in all the
hollows, and it had roamed in its forlornness up the hill, like an evil spirit,
seeking rest and finding none. A clammy and intensely cold mist, made its slow
way through the air in ripples that visibly followed and overspread one
another, as the waves of an unwholesome sea might do. It was dense enough to
shut out everything from the light of the coach-lamps but these its own
workings and a few yards of road; and the reek of the labouring horse steamed
into it, as if they had made it all.
Two other passengers, besides the one, were
plodding up the hill by the side of the mail. All three were wrapped to the
cheek-bones and over the ears, and wore jack-boots. Not one of the three could
have said, from anything he saw, what either of the other two was like; and
each was hidden under almost as many wrappers from the eyes of the mind, as
from the eyes of the body, of his two companions. In those days, travellers
were very shy of being confidential on short notice, for anybody on the road
might be a robber or in league with robbers. As to the latter, when every
posting-house and ale-house could produce somebody in `the Captain's' pay,
ranging from the landlord to the lowest stable nondescript, it was the
likeliest thing upon the cards. So the guard of the Dover mail thought to himself,
that Friday night in November, one thousand seven hundred and seventy-five,
lumbering up Shooter's Hill, as he stood on his own particular perch behind the
mail, beating his feet, and keeping an eye and a hand on the arm-chest before
him, where a loaded blunderbuss lay at the top of six or eight loaded
horse-pistols, deposited on a substratum of cutlass.
No comments:
Post a Comment