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<h2> Chapter 16 </h2>
<p>A series of pictures representing the streets of London in the night, even
at the comparatively recent date of this tale, would present to the eye
something so very different in character from the reality which is
witnessed in these times, that it would be difficult for the beholder to
recognise his most familiar walks in the altered aspect of little more
than half a century ago.</p>
<p>They were, one and all, from the broadest and best to the narrowest and
least frequented, very dark. The oil and cotton lamps, though regularly
trimmed twice or thrice in the long winter nights, burnt feebly at the
best; and at a late hour, when they were unassisted by the lamps and
candles in the shops, cast but a narrow track of doubtful light upon the
footway, leaving the projecting doors and house-fronts in the deepest
gloom. Many of the courts and lanes were left in total darkness; those of
the meaner sort, where one glimmering light twinkled for a score of
houses, being favoured in no slight degree. Even in these places, the
inhabitants had often good reason for extinguishing their lamp as soon as
it was lighted; and the watch being utterly inefficient and powerless to
prevent them, they did so at their pleasure. Thus, in the lightest
thoroughfares, there was at every turn some obscure and dangerous spot
whither a thief might fly or shelter, and few would care to follow; and
the city being belted round by fields, green lanes, waste grounds, and
lonely roads, dividing it at that time from the suburbs that have joined
it since, escape, even where the pursuit was hot, was rendered easy.</p>
<p>It is no wonder that with these favouring circumstances in full and
constant operation, street robberies, often accompanied by cruel wounds,
and not unfrequently by loss of life, should have been of nightly
occurrence in the very heart of London, or that quiet folks should have
had great dread of traversing its streets after the shops were closed. It
was not unusual for those who wended home alone at midnight, to keep the
middle of the road, the better to guard against surprise from lurking
footpads; few would venture to repair at a late hour to Kentish Town or
Hampstead, or even to Kensington or Chelsea, unarmed and unattended; while
he who had been loudest and most valiant at the supper-table or the
tavern, and had but a mile or so to go, was glad to fee a link-boy to
escort him home.</p>
<p>There were many other characteristics—not quite so disagreeable—about
the thoroughfares of London then, with which they had been long familiar.
Some of the shops, especially those to the eastward of Temple Bar, still
adhered to the old practice of hanging out a sign; and the creaking and
swinging of these boards in their iron frames on windy nights, formed a
strange and mournful concert for the ears of those who lay awake in bed or
hurried through the streets. Long stands of hackney-chairs and groups of
chairmen, compared with whom the coachmen of our day are gentle and
polite, obstructed the way and filled the air with clamour; night-cellars,
indicated by a little stream of light crossing the pavement, and
stretching out half-way into the road, and by the stifled roar of voices
from below, yawned for the reception and entertainment of the most
abandoned of both sexes; under every shed and bulk small groups of
link-boys gamed away the earnings of the day; or one more weary than the
rest, gave way to sleep, and let the fragment of his torch fall hissing on
the puddled ground.</p>
<p>Then there was the watch with staff and lantern crying the hour, and the
kind of weather; and those who woke up at his voice and turned them round
in bed, were glad to hear it rained, or snowed, or blew, or froze, for
very comfort's sake. The solitary passenger was startled by the chairmen's
cry of 'By your leave there!' as two came trotting past him with their
empty vehicle—carried backwards to show its being disengaged—and
hurried to the nearest stand. Many a private chair, too, inclosing some
fine lady, monstrously hooped and furbelowed, and preceded by
running-footmen bearing flambeaux—for which extinguishers are yet
suspended before the doors of a few houses of the better sort—made
the way gay and light as it danced along, and darker and more dismal when
it had passed. It was not unusual for these running gentry, who carried it
with a very high hand, to quarrel in the servants' hall while waiting for
their masters and mistresses; and, falling to blows either there or in the
street without, to strew the place of skirmish with hair-powder, fragments
of bag-wigs, and scattered nosegays. Gaming, the vice which ran so high
among all classes (the fashion being of course set by the upper), was
generally the cause of these disputes; for cards and dice were as openly
used, and worked as much mischief, and yielded as much excitement below
stairs, as above. While incidents like these, arising out of drums and
masquerades and parties at quadrille, were passing at the west end of the
town, heavy stagecoaches and scarce heavier waggons were lumbering slowly
towards the city, the coachmen, guard, and passengers, armed to the teeth,
and the coach—a day or so perhaps behind its time, but that was
nothing—despoiled by highwaymen; who made no scruple to attack,
alone and single-handed, a whole caravan of goods and men, and sometimes
shot a passenger or two, and were sometimes shot themselves, as the case
might be. On the morrow, rumours of this new act of daring on the road
yielded matter for a few hours' conversation through the town, and a
Public Progress of some fine gentleman (half-drunk) to Tyburn, dressed in
the newest fashion, and damning the ordinary with unspeakable gallantry
and grace, furnished to the populace, at once a pleasant excitement and a
wholesome and profound example.</p>
<p>Among all the dangerous characters who, in such a state of society,
prowled and skulked in the metropolis at night, there was one man from
whom many as uncouth and fierce as he, shrunk with an involuntary dread.
Who he was, or whence he came, was a question often asked, but which none
could answer. His name was unknown, he had never been seen until within
about eight days or thereabouts, and was equally a stranger to the old
ruffians, upon whose haunts he ventured fearlessly, as to the young. He
could be no spy, for he never removed his slouched hat to look about him,
entered into conversation with no man, heeded nothing that passed,
listened to no discourse, regarded nobody that came or went. But so surely
as the dead of night set in, so surely this man was in the midst of the
loose concourse in the night-cellar where outcasts of every grade
resorted; and there he sat till morning.</p>
<p>He was not only a spectre at their licentious feasts; a something in the
midst of their revelry and riot that chilled and haunted them; but out of
doors he was the same. Directly it was dark, he was abroad—never in
company with any one, but always alone; never lingering or loitering, but
always walking swiftly; and looking (so they said who had seen him) over
his shoulder from time to time, and as he did so quickening his pace. In
the fields, the lanes, the roads, in all quarters of the town—east,
west, north, and south—that man was seen gliding on like a shadow.
He was always hurrying away. Those who encountered him, saw him steal
past, caught sight of the backward glance, and so lost him in the
darkness.</p>
<p>This constant restlessness, and flitting to and fro, gave rise to strange
stories. He was seen in such distant and remote places, at times so nearly
tallying with each other, that some doubted whether there were not two of
them, or more—some, whether he had not unearthly means of travelling
from spot to spot. The footpad hiding in a ditch had marked him passing
like a ghost along its brink; the vagrant had met him on the dark
high-road; the beggar had seen him pause upon the bridge to look down at
the water, and then sweep on again; they who dealt in bodies with the
surgeons could swear he slept in churchyards, and that they had beheld him
glide away among the tombs on their approach. And as they told these
stories to each other, one who had looked about him would pull his
neighbour by the sleeve, and there he would be among them.</p>
<p>At last, one man—he was one of those whose commerce lay among the
graves—resolved to question this strange companion. Next night, when
he had eat his poor meal voraciously (he was accustomed to do that, they
had observed, as though he had no other in the day), this fellow sat down
at his elbow.</p>
<p>'A black night, master!'</p>
<p>'It is a black night.'</p>
<p>'Blacker than last, though that was pitchy too. Didn't I pass you near the
turnpike in the Oxford Road?'</p>
<p>'It's like you may. I don't know.'</p>
<p>'Come, come, master,' cried the fellow, urged on by the looks of his
comrades, and slapping him on the shoulder; 'be more companionable and
communicative. Be more the gentleman in this good company. There are tales
among us that you have sold yourself to the devil, and I know not what.'</p>
<p>'We all have, have we not?' returned the stranger, looking up. 'If we were
fewer in number, perhaps he would give better wages.'</p>
<p>'It goes rather hard with you, indeed,' said the fellow, as the stranger
disclosed his haggard unwashed face, and torn clothes. 'What of that? Be
merry, master. A stave of a roaring song now'—</p>
<p>'Sing you, if you desire to hear one,' replied the other, shaking him
roughly off; 'and don't touch me if you're a prudent man; I carry arms
which go off easily—they have done so, before now—and make it
dangerous for strangers who don't know the trick of them, to lay hands
upon me.'</p>
<p>'Do you threaten?' said the fellow.</p>
<p>'Yes,' returned the other, rising and turning upon him, and looking
fiercely round as if in apprehension of a general attack.</p>
<p>His voice, and look, and bearing—all expressive of the wildest
recklessness and desperation—daunted while they repelled the
bystanders. Although in a very different sphere of action now, they were
not without much of the effect they had wrought at the Maypole Inn.</p>
<p>'I am what you all are, and live as you all do,' said the man sternly,
after a short silence. 'I am in hiding here like the rest, and if we were
surprised would perhaps do my part with the best of ye. If it's my humour
to be left to myself, let me have it. Otherwise,'—and here he swore
a tremendous oath—'there'll be mischief done in this place, though
there ARE odds of a score against me.'</p>
<p>A low murmur, having its origin perhaps in a dread of the man and the
mystery that surrounded him, or perhaps in a sincere opinion on the part
of some of those present, that it would be an inconvenient precedent to
meddle too curiously with a gentleman's private affairs if he saw reason
to conceal them, warned the fellow who had occasioned this discussion that
he had best pursue it no further. After a short time the strange man lay
down upon a bench to sleep, and when they thought of him again, they found
he was gone.</p>
<p>Next night, as soon as it was dark, he was abroad again and traversing the
streets; he was before the locksmith's house more than once, but the
family were out, and it was close shut. This night he crossed London
Bridge and passed into Southwark. As he glided down a bye street, a woman
with a little basket on her arm, turned into it at the other end. Directly
he observed her, he sought the shelter of an archway, and stood aside
until she had passed. Then he emerged cautiously from his hiding-place,
and followed.</p>
<p>She went into several shops to purchase various kinds of household
necessaries, and round every place at which she stopped he hovered like
her evil spirit; following her when she reappeared. It was nigh eleven
o'clock, and the passengers in the streets were thinning fast, when she
turned, doubtless to go home. The phantom still followed her.</p>
<p>She turned into the same bye street in which he had seen her first, which,
being free from shops, and narrow, was extremely dark. She quickened her
pace here, as though distrustful of being stopped, and robbed of such
trifling property as she carried with her. He crept along on the other
side of the road. Had she been gifted with the speed of wind, it seemed as
if his terrible shadow would have tracked her down.</p>
<p>At length the widow—for she it was—reached her own door, and,
panting for breath, paused to take the key from her basket. In a flush and
glow, with the haste she had made, and the pleasure of being safe at home,
she stooped to draw it out, when, raising her head, she saw him standing
silently beside her: the apparition of a dream.</p>
<p>His hand was on her mouth, but that was needless, for her tongue clove to
its roof, and her power of utterance was gone. 'I have been looking for
you many nights. Is the house empty? Answer me. Is any one inside?'</p>
<p>She could only answer by a rattle in her throat.</p>
<p>'Make me a sign.'</p>
<p>She seemed to indicate that there was no one there. He took the key,
unlocked the door, carried her in, and secured it carefully behind them.</p>
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