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<h2> CHAPTER XXIX </h2>
<h3> AT THE PUMP </h3>
<p>This blow was so sharp and heavy that I lost for the moment all power to
go on. The sense of ill fortune fell upon me, as it falls upon stronger
people, when a sudden gleam of hope, breaking through long troubles,
mysteriously fades away.</p>
<p>Even the pleasure of indulging in the gloom of evil luck was a thing to be
ashamed of now, when I thought of that good man's family thus, without a
moment's warning, robbed of love and hope and happiness. But Mrs. Strouss,
who often brooded on predestination, imbittered all my thoughts by saying,
or rather conveying without words, that my poor fathers taint of some
Divine ill-will had re-appeared, and even killed his banker.</p>
<p>Betsy held most Low-Church views, by nature being a Dissenter. She called
herself a Baptist, and in some strange way had stopped me thus from ever
having been baptized. I do not understand these things, and the battles
fought about them; but knowing that my father was a member of the English
Church, I resolved to be the same, and told Betsy that she ought not to
set up against her master's doctrine. Then she herself became ashamed of
trying to convert me, not only because of my ignorance (which made
argument like shooting into the sea), but chiefly because she could
mention no one of title with such theology.</p>
<p>This settled the question at once; and remembering (to my shame) what
opinions I had held even of Suan Isco, while being in the very same
predicament myself, reflecting also what Uncle Sam and Firm would have
thought of me, had they known it, I anticipated the Major and his dinner
party by going to a quiet ancient clergyman, who examined me, and being
satisfied with little, took me to an old City church of deep and damp
retirement. And here, with a great din of traffic outside, and a mildewy
depth of repose within, I was presented by certain sponsors (the clerk and
his wife and his wife's sister), and heard good words, and hope to keep
the impression, both outward and inward, gently made upon me.</p>
<p>I need not say that I kept, and now received with authority, my old name;
though the clerk prefixed an aspirate to it, and indulged in two syllables
only. But the ancient parson knew its meaning, and looked at me with
curiosity; yet, being a gentleman of the old school, put never a question
about it.</p>
<p>Now this being done, and full tidings thereof sent off to Mrs. Hockin, to
save trouble to the butcher, or other disappointment, I scarcely knew how
to be moving next, though move I must before very long. For it cost me a
great deal of money to stay in European Square like this, albeit Herr
Strouss was of all men the most generous, by his own avowal, and his wife
(by the same test) noble-hearted among women. Yet each of them spoke of
the other's pecuniary views in such a desponding tone (when the other was
out of the way), and so lamented to have any thing at all to say about
cash—by compulsion of the other—also both, when met together,
were so large and reckless, and not to be insulted by a thought of
payment, that it came to pass that my money did nothing but run away
between them.</p>
<p>This was not their fault at all, but all my own, for being unable to keep
my secret about the great nugget. The Major had told me not to speak of
this, according to wise experience; and I had not the smallest intention
of doing an atom of mischief in that way; but somehow or other it came out
one night when I was being pitied for my desolation. And all the charges
against me began to be doubled from that moment.</p>
<p>If this had been all, I should not have cared so much, being quite content
that my money should go as fast as it came in to me. But there was another
thing here which cost me as much as my board and lodgings and all the rest
of my expenses. And that was the iron pump in European Square. For this
pump stood in the very centre of a huddled district of famine, filth, and
fever. When once I had seen from the leads of our house the quag of
reeking life around, the stubs and snags of chimney-pots, the gashes among
them entitled streets, and the broken blains called houses, I was quite
ashamed of paying any thing to become a Christian.</p>
<p>Betsy, who stood by me, said that it was better than it used to be, and
that all these people lived in comfort of their own ideas, fiercely
resented all interference, and were good to one another in their own rough
way. It was more than three years since there had been a single murder
among them, and even then the man who was killed confessed that he
deserved it. She told me, also, that in some mining district of Wales,
well known to her, things were a great deal worse than here, although the
people were not half so poor. And finally, looking at a ruby ring which I
had begged her to wear always, for the sake of her truth to me, she begged
me to be wiser than to fret about things that I could not change. "All
these people, whose hovels I saw, had the means of grace before them, and
if they would not stretch forth their hands, it was only because they were
vessels of wrath. Her pity was rather for our poor black brethren who had
never enjoyed no opportunities, and therefore must be castaways."</p>
<p>Being a stranger, and so young, and accustomed to receive my doctrine
(since first I went to America), I dropped all intention of attempting any
good in places where I might be murdered. But I could not help looking at
the pump which was in front, and the poor things who came there for water,
and, most of all, the children. With these it was almost the joy of the
day, and perhaps the only joy, to come into this little open space and
stand, and put their backs up stiffly, and stare about, ready for some
good luck to turn up—such as a horse to hold, or a man coming out of
the docks with a half-penny to spare—and then, in failure of such
golden hope, to dash about, in and out, after one another, splashing, and
kicking over their own cans, kettles, jars, or buckets, and stretching
their dirty little naked legs, and showing very often fine white chests,
and bright teeth wet with laughter. And then, when this chivy was done,
and their quick little hearts beat aloud with glory, it was pretty to see
them all rally round the pump, as crafty as their betters, and watching
with sly humor each other's readiness to begin again.</p>
<p>Then suddenly a sense of neglected duty would seize some little body with
a hand to its side, nine times out of ten a girl, whose mother, perhaps,
lay sick at home, and a stern idea of responsibility began to make the
buckets clank. Then might you see, if you cared to do so, orderly
management have its turn—a demand for pins and a tucking up of
skirts (which scarcely seemed worthy of the great young fuss), large
children scolding little ones not a bit more muddy than themselves, the
while the very least child of all, too young as yet for chivying, and only
come for company, would smooth her comparatively clean frock down, and
look up at her sisters with condemnatory eyes.</p>
<p>Trivial as they were, these things amused me much, and made a little
checker of reflected light upon the cloud of selfish gloom, especially
when the real work began, and the children, vying with one another, set to
at the iron handle. This was too large for their little hands to grasp,
and by means of some grievance inside, or perhaps through a cruel trick of
the plumber, up went the long handle every time small fingers were too
confiding, and there it stood up like the tail of a rampant cow, or a
branch inaccessible, until an old shawl or the cord of a peg-top could be
cast up on high to reduce it. But some engineering boy, "highly gifted,"
like Uncle Sam's self, "with machinery," had discovered an ingenious cure
for this. With the help of the girls he used to fasten a fat little thing,
about twelve months old, in the bend at the middle of the handle, and
there (like a ham on the steelyard) hung this baby and enjoyed seesaw, and
laughed at its own utility.</p>
<p>I never saw this, and the splashing and dribbling and play and bright
revelry of water, without forgetting all sad counsel and discretion, and
rushing out as if the dingy pump were my own delicious Blue River. People
used to look at me from the windows with pity and astonishment, supposing
me to be crazed or frantic, especially the Germans. For to run out like
this, without a pocket full of money, would have been insanity; and to run
out with it, to their minds, was even clearer proof of that condition. For
the money went as quickly as the water of the pump; on this side and on
that it flew, each child in succession making deeper drain upon it, in
virtue of still deeper woes. They were dreadful little story-tellers, I am
very much afraid; and the long faces pulled, as soon as I came out, in
contrast with all the recent glee and frolic, suggested to even the
youngest charity suspicions of some inconsistency. However, they were so
ingenious and clever that they worked my pockets like the pump itself,
only with this unhappy difference, that the former had no inexhaustible
spring of silver, or even of copper.</p>
<p>And thus, by a reason (as cogent as any of more exalted nature), was I
driven back to my head-quarters, there to abide till a fresh supply should
come. For Uncle Sam, generous and noble as he was, did not mean to let me
melt all away at once my share of the great Blue River nugget, any more
than to make ducks and drakes of his own. Indeed, that rock of gold was
still untouched, and healthily reposing in a banker's cellar in the good
town of Sacramento. People were allowed to go in and see it upon payment
of a dollar, and they came out so thirsty from feasting upon it that a bar
was set up, and a pile of money made—all the gentlemen, and ladies
even worse than they, taking a reckless turn about small money after
seeing that. But dear Uncle Sam refused every cent of the profit of all
this excitable work. It was wholly against his wish that any thing so
artificial should be done at all, and his sense of religion condemned it.
He said, in his very first letter to me, that even a heathen must
acknowledge this champion nugget as the grandest work of the Lord yet
discovered in America—a country more full of all works of the Lord
than the rest of the world put together. And to keep it in a cellar,
without any air or sun, grated harshly upon his ideas of right.</p>
<p>However, he did not expect every body to think exactly as he did, and if
they could turn a few dollars upon it, they were welcome, as having large
families. And the balance might go to his credit against the interest on
any cash advanced to him. Not that he meant to be very fast with this,
never having run into debt in all his life.</p>
<p>This, put shortly, was the reason why I could not run to the pump any
longer. I had come into England with money enough to last me (according to
the Sawyer's calculations) for a year and a half of every needful work;
whereas, in less than half that time, I was arriving at my last penny.
This reminded me of my dear father, who was nearly always in trouble about
money (although so strictly upright); and at first I was proud to be like
him about this, till I came to find the disadvantages.</p>
<p>It must not even for a moment be imagined that this made any difference in
the behavior of any one toward me. Mrs. Strouss, Herr Strouss, the lady on
the stairs, and a very clever woman who had got no rooms, but was kindly
accommodated every where, as well as the baron on the first floor front,
and the gentleman from a hotel at Hanover, who looked out the other way,
and even the children at the pump—not one made any difference toward
me (as an enemy might, perhaps, suppose) because my last half crown was
gone. It was admitted upon every side that I ought to be forgiven for my
random cast of money, because I knew no better, and was sure to have more
in a very little time. And the children of the pump came to see me go
away, through streets of a mile and a half, I should think; and they
carried my things, looking after one another, so that none could run away.
And being forbidden at the platform gate, for want of respectability, they
set up a cheer, and I waved my hat, and promised, amidst great applause,
to come back with it full of sixpences.</p>
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