Part 2 of my short story

JeanneDArcAlter

JeanneDArcAlter

الله أكبر
Joined
Nov 6, 2024
Posts
4,810
Reputation
5,730
"Just so, why, back in Bishop, it might take half the night to find an excuse to clash someone the Face, whilst in London, Eeh! 'tis the Paradise of the Quarrelsome, for fair."

"You'd appreciate Wapping High Street, then, and, and Tyburn, of course! put that on your list"

"Alluring out there, is it?"

Mason explains, though without his precise reason for it, that, for the past Year or more, it has been his practice to attend the Friday Hangings at that melancholy place, where he is soon chatting up Hangmen and their 'Prentices, whilst standing them pints at their Local. The Bridport Dagger, acquiring thus a certain grisly intimacy with the Art. Mason has been shov'd about and borne along in riots of sailors attempting to wrest from bands of Medical Students the bodies of Shipmates come to grief ashore, too far from the safety of the Sea, and he's had his Purse, as his Person, assaulted by Agents public and private, yet, "There's nothing like it, it's London at its purest," he cries. "You must come out there with me, soon as we may

Taking it for the joke it must surely be, Dixon laughs, "Ha, ha, ha! Oh, thah's a bonny one, all

right. I

Mason shrugging, palms up. "I'm serious. Worse than that, I'm sober. A man's first time in town, he simply can't miss a hanging Come, Sr, what's the first thing they'll ask when you get back to County Durham? Eh? 'Did ye see them rahde the Eeahr at Taahburn?"

Is it too many nights alone on top of that fam'd Hill in Greenwich? can this man, living in one of the great Cities of Christendom, not know how to behave around people? Dixon decides to register only annoyance "Nooah, the first thing they'll ask is, Did thoo understand 'em the weeay

theey talk, down theere...?"

"Oh, damme, I say, I didn't mean,

So Dixon for the second time in two minutes finds himself laughing without the Motrix of honest Mirth, this time, a Mr. Mason-how-you-do-go-on laugh, sidewise and forbearing, the laugh of a hired Foil. Feeling it his Duty to set them at Ease, Dixon begins, "Well. There's this Jesuit, this Corsican, and this Chinaman, and they're all riding in a greeat Cooach, going up to Bath..." and the fourth Passenger is very proper Englishwoman, who keeps giving them these scandaliz'd Glances. Finally, able to bear it no longer, the Corsican, being the most hot-headed of the three, bursts out, and here I hope You will excuse my Corsican Accent, he says, "Eyt Lady! Whatta Ye lookin' ah?" And she says.

Mason has been edging away. "Are you crazy?" he whispers, People are staring Sailors

are staring

"Eeh!" Dexon's nose throbbing redly. "You have heard it, then. Apologies," reaching to clasp Mason's arm, a gesture Mason retreats from in a Flinch as free of deliberation as a Sneeze Dixon withdrawing, broken into a Sweat, "Why aye, it took me weeks of study to fathom that one, but I see You've a brisk Brain in Your gourd there, and I'm pleas'd to be working with such as it be" Resolutely a-beam, pronouncing the forms of You consciously, as if bortowing them from another Tongue.

The two sit staring, one at the other, each with a greatly mistaken impression-likewise in some Uncertainty to how the power may come to be sorted out betwixt 'em. Dixon is a couple of inches taller, sloping more than towering, wearing a red coat of military cut, with brocade and silver buttons, and a matching red three-corner'd Hat with some gaudy North-Road Cockade stuck in it. He will be first to catch the average Eye, often causing future strangers to remember them as Dixon and Mason. But the Uniform accords with neither his Quaker Profession, nor his present Bearing a civilian Slouch grown lop-sided, too often observ'd, alas, in Devotees of the Taproom.

For Dixon's part, he seems disappointed in Mason, or so the Astronomer, ever inclined to suspicion, fears. "What is it? What are you looking at? It's my Wig, isn't it." "You're not wearing a Wig...?"

"Just sol you noted that, you have been observing me in a strange yet, I must conclude,

meaningful way"

"Don't know..." Happen I was expecting someone a bit more odd

Mason a-squint. "I'm not odd enough for you?"

"Well it is a peculiar station in Life, isn't it? How many Royal Astronomers are there? How many Royal Astronomers' Assistants are there likely to be? Takes an odd bird to stay up peering at Stars all night

in the first place, doesn't it ? On the other hand, Surveyors are runnin' about numerous as Bed-bugs, and twice as cheap, with work enough for all certainly in Durham at present, Enclosures all over the County, and North Yorkshire, eeh Fences, Hedges, Ditches ordinary and Ha-Ha Style, all to be laid out I could have stay'd home and had m'self a fine Living?"

"They did mention a Background in Land-Surveying, Mason in some Surprize, "but, but that's it? Hedges? Ha-Has?"

"Well, actually the Durham Ha-Ha boom subsided a bit after Lord Lambton fell into h curs'd it, had it fill'd in with coal-spoil. Why, did You think I was another Lens-fellow? 0 Lo no, I mean I've been taught the lot, Celestial Mechanics, all the weighty lads, Laplace an Kepler, Aristarchus, the other fellow what's his name, but that's all Trigonometry, isn't it "Yet you, how shall he put this tactfully? "you have look'd ehm through

um

Dixon smiles at him encouragingly. "Why aye, my old Teacher, Mr. Emerson, has a fine Telescope Ah believe the word is, encas'd in Barrel-Staves tho' it be, and many's the Evening I've admir'd the Phases of Venus, aye those and the Moons of Jupiter too, the Mountains and Craters of our own Moon, and did You see thah' latest Eclipse" canny, eeh Mr. Bird, as well, has shar'd his Instruments, being kind enough, in fact, just in this last fortnight, to help me practice my observing and computing skills tho so mercilessly that I was in some doubt for days, whether we'd parted friends...?"

Mason, having expected some shambling wild Country Fool, remains amiably puzzl'd before the tidied Dixon here presented, who, for his own part, having despite talk of Oddity expected but another overdress'd London climber, is amus'd at Mason's nearly invisible Turn-out, all in Snuffs and Buffs and Grays.

Mason is nodding glumly. "I must seem an Ass"

"If this is as bad as it gets, why I can abide thah. As long as the Spirits don't run out."

"Nor the Wine

"Wine." Dixon is now the one squinting. Mason wonders what he's done this time. " 'Grape or Grain, but ne'er the Twain,' as me Great Uncle George observ'd to me more than once, "Vine with Corn, beware the Morn Of the two sorts of drinking Folk this implies, than' is, Grape People and Grain People, You will now inform me of Your membership in the Brotherhood of the, eeh, Grape. and that You seldom, if ever, touch Ale or Spirits, am 1 correct?"

"Happily so, I should imagine, as, given a finite Supply, there'd be more for each of us, it's like Jack Sprat, isn't it"

"Oh, I'll drink Wine if I must and now we're enter'd upon the Topick,- and are in Portsmouth, after all, there cannot lie too distant some Room

where each of us may consult what former Vegetation pleases him?"

Dixon looks outside at the ebbing wintry sunlight. "Nor too early, I guess

"We're sailing to the Indies, Heaven knows what's available on Board, or out there. It

may be our last chance for civiliz'd Drink"

"Sooner we start, the better, in thah' case?"

As the day darkens, and the first Flames appear, sometimes reflected as well in Panes of Glass, the sounds of the Stables and the Alleys grow louder, and chimney-smoke perambulates into the Christmastide air. The Room puts on its Evening-Cloak of shifting amber Light, and sinuous Folds of Shadow. Mason and Dixon become aware of a jostling Mur mur of Expectancy.

All at once, out of the Murk, a dozen mirror'd Lanthorns have leapt alight together, as into their Glare now strolls a somewhat disheveld Norfolk Terrier, with a raffish Gleam in its eye, whilst from somewhere less illuminate comes sprightly Overture upon Horn, Clarinet, and Cello, in time to which the Dog steps back and forth in his bright Ambit.

Ask me anything you please, The Learned English Dog am I. well-Up on ev'rything from Fleas Unto the King's Mon-og-am-eye,

Persian Princes, Polish Blintzes, Chinamen's Geo-mancy.- Jump-ing Beans or Flying Machines, Just as it suits your Fan-cy

I quote enough of the Classickal Stuff To set your Ears a-throb, Work logarith-mick Versed Sines Withal, within me Nob, Only nothing

:

Mimsterial, please, Or I'm apt to lose m' Job, As, the Learned English Dog to-ni-ight!

There are the usual Requests. Does the Dog know "Where the Bee Sucks"? What is the Integral of One over (Book) d (Book)? Is he married? Dixon notes how his co-Adjutor-to-be seems fallen into a sort of Magnetickal Stupor, as Mesmerites might term it. More than once, Mason looks ready to leap to his feet and blurt something hetter kept till later in the Evening At last the Dog recognizes him, thơ now he is too key'd up to speak with any Coherence. After allowing him to rattle for a full minute, the Dog sighs deeply. "See me later, out in back."

"It shouldn't take but a moment, Mason tells Dixon. "I'll be all right by myself, if there's something you'd rather be doing...."

With no appetite for the giant Mutton Chop cooling in front of him, Mason mopishly now wraps it and stows it in his Coat. Looking up, he notes Dixon, mouth cheerfully stuff'd, beaming too tolerantly for his Comfort

"No, not for me. did you think I was taking it for myself 'tis for the Learned Dog. rather, like, I don't know, perhaps a Bouquet sent to an Actress one admires, a nice Chop can never go too far off the Mark."

Starting a beat late, "Why aye, 'tis a a great World, for fait and Practices vary, and one Man certainly may not comment upon- "What are you saying?"

Dixon ingenuously waving his Joint, eyes round as Pistoles. "No Offense, Sir" Rolling his Eyes the Moment Mason switches his Stare away, then back a bit late to catch them so
as off-center

"Dison. Why mavn't thete be Oracles, for us, in our time? Gate-ways to Futurity? That can't all have died with the ancient Peoples. Isn't it worth looking ridiculous, at least to investigate this English Dog, for its obvious bearing upon Metempsychosis if nought else-

There is something else in progress, something Mason connot quite confide. Happen he's lost someone close" and recently enough to matter, aye, for he's a way of pitching ever into the Hour, heedless, as Dixon remembers himself, after his father passed on "T'll come along, if I may

"Suture Self, as the Medical Students like to say"

They go out a back door, ime the innyard. A leafless tree arches in the light of a single Lanthorn set above a laut gathering of card-players, their secret breathing visible for all to uy to read, and Wigs, white as the snow on the Roofslates, nodding in and out of the Shadows.

Sailors, mouths ajar, lope by in the lanes. Sailors in Slouch-Hats, Sailors with Queues, pulling on Pipes, eating Potatoes, some who'll be going back to the Ship, and some who won't from old sea-wretches with too many Explosions in their Lives, to Child-Midshipmen who have yet to hear their first, passing in and out the Doors of Ale-Drapers, Naval Tailors, Sweet- shops, Gaming-Lairs, upstart Chapels, calling, singing Catches, whistling as if Wind had never paid a Visit, vomiting as the Sea has never caus'd them to

"Happen his. Dressing-Room's close by, Dixon suggests, maybe with the Horses

"No one would keep a talking Dog in with Horses, it'd drive them mad inside of a Minute"

"Decurs often, does it, where you come from?"

"Gentlemen, in a whisper out of a dark corner "If you'll keep your voices down, I'll be with you in a trice." Slowly into theit shifting spill of lantern-light, tongue a-loll, comes the Dog who pauses to yawn, nods, "Good evening to ye," and leads them at a trot out of the stables,

out of the courtyard, and down the street, pausing now and then for nasal inquiries. "Where are we going?" Mason anka.

"This seems to be all right. The Learned English Dog stops and pisses.

"This dog. Mason singing satte voce, "is causing me ap-pre-hen-sion surely creatures of miracle ought not to, I mean, Flying horses? None of them ever

"The Sphins adds Dexon.

"My Thought precisely

"Now, Gents!" Tis a sadden, large Son of Neptune, backed by an uncertain number of

comparably drunken Shipmates. "You've an interest in this Dog here?"

"Wish'd a word with him only," Mason's quick to assure them.

"Hey! I know you two, ye're the ones with all the strange Machinery, sailing in the Seahorse Well ye're in lock, for we're all Seahorses here, I'm Fender-Belly Bodine, Captain of the Foretop, and these are my Mates, Cheering But you can call me Fender. Now, our plan, is to snatch this Critter, and for you Gents to then keep it in with your own highly guarded Cargo, out of sight of the Master-at-Arms, until we reach a likely Island,- "Island "Snatch "both Surveyors a hit in a daze.

"I've been out more than once to the Indies, there's a million islands out there, each more likely than the last, and I tell you a handful of Sailors with their wits about them, and that talking Dog to keep the Savages annned, why, we could be kings"

"Long life to Kings!" cry several sailors

"Ave and to Cooch Girls!"

and Coconut Ale!"

"Hold, cautions Mason "I've heard they eat dogs out there."

"First time you turn your back, Mason warns, "that Dog's going to be some Savage's

"Wrap 'em in palm leaves, Dixon solemnly, "and hake 'em on the beach

Luncheon "Rrrrrraahff! Excuse me?" says the Learned D. as I seem to be the Topick here, I do

feel impelled, to make an Observation"

"That's all right, then, Fido, Bodine making vague petting motions,

trust us, there's a good bow-wow.

A small, noisy party of Fops, Macaronis, or Lunarians, it is difficult quite to distinguish which, has been working its way up the street and into Ear-shot Thro' several window-panes, moving candlelight appears Hostlers roll about disgruntled upon feed-sack Pillows and beds Unengaged Glim-jacks look in, to see if they can cast any light on matters

The Dog pushes Mason's Leg with his Head "We may not have another chance to chat, even upon the Fly

"There is something I must know, Mason hoarsely whispers, in the tone of a lover tormented by Doubts Have you a sood that is, are you a human Spirit, re-incarnate as a Dog?

The L.ED blinks, shivers, nods in a resign'd way "You are hardly the first to ask. Travelers return'd from the Japanese lalands tell of certain religious Puzzles known as Koan perhaps the most fam'd of which concerns your very Question whether a Dog hath the nature of the divine Buddha. A reply given by a certain very wise Master is, 'Mu!"

Mu repeats Mason, thoughtfully,

"It is necessary for the Seeker to meditate upon the Koon until driven to a state of holy Insanity, and I would recommend this to you in particular. But please do not come to the Learned English Dog if it's religious Comfort you're after. 1 may be preternatural, but I not supernatural Tis the Age of Reason, rrrf? There is ever an Explanation at hand, and no such thing as a Talking Dog Talking Dogs belong with Dragons and Unicorns, What there are, however, are Provisions for Survival in a World less fantastick.

"Viz Once, the only reason Men kept Dogs was for food. Noting that among Men no crime was quite so abhorr'd as eating the flesh of another human, Dog quickly learn'd to act as human as possible and to pass this Ability on from Parents to Pups. So we know how to evoke from you, Man, one day at a time, at least enough Mercy for one day more of Life. Nonetheless, however accomplish'd, our Lives are never settled we go on as tail-wagging Scheherazades, ever a step away from the dread Palm Leaf, nightly delaying the Blades of our Mainters by telling hack to them tales of their humanity I am but an extreme Expression of this Process,

"Oh I say, Dog in Palm Leaf, what nonseme, comments one of the Lunarians,really, far too sensitive, I mean really, Dog? In Palm Leaf Civilir'd Humans have better things to do than go about drooling after Dog in Palm Leaf or whatever, don't we Algernon?"

"Could you possibly, inquired the Terrier, head cocked in some Annoyance, "not keep saying that? / do not say things like, "Macaroni Italian Style, do 1, nor 'Fop Fricasee

"Why, you beastly little-

"Cirrrr! and your deliberate use of 'drooling, Sir, is vile

The Lunarian reaches for his Hanger. "Perhaps we may settle this upon the spot, Sir

"Derek? You're talking to a D-O-G?"

"The your weapon put me under some Handicap," pomts out the Dog, "in fairness, I should mention my late feelings of Aversion to water? Which may, as you know, signal the onset of the Hydrophobia. Yes! The Great H. And should I get in past your Blade for a few playful nips, and manage to, well, break the old Sam why, then you should soon have caught the same, el?" Immediately 'round the Dog develops a circle of Absence, of about a fathom's radius, later recall'd by both Astronomers as remarkably regular in shape "Nice doggie Fire me Inst iced Cake, that me Mum sent me all e way from Bahf You take "What think yese? I'll give two to one the Fop's Bloodil be first to show"

"Sounds fair," says Fender Bodine "I fancy the Dog anyone else?"

"Oughin't we to summon the Owners. suggests Mr. Dixon

The Dog has begun to pace back and forth. "I am a British Dog, Sir. No one owns me "Whe're the Gentleman and Lady who were with you in the Assembly Room? inquires Mason

"You mean the Fabulous Jellows? Here they come now

"Protect you from sadors?" wails Mrs. Jellow, approaching dead run over the treacherous Cobbles of the Lane, "Oh, no, thank you, that was not in our Agreement." Her husband, pulling on his Breeches, Wig a-lop, follows at a sleepy Amble "Now you apologize for whatever it was you did, and get back in that Stable in your lovely straw Bed."

"We were wondering, Ma'am," Bodine with his hat off, quavering angelically, "would the

l'on Doggie be for sale

"Not at any price, Topman, and be off wf you, and your rowdy-dowing Flock as well. At her Voice, a number of Sailors in whose Flexibility lies their Preservation from the Hazards of Drink,

are seen to freeze.

"Do not oppose her, Jellow advines, "for she is a first-rate of an hundred Guns, and her

Broadside is Annihilation"

"Thankee, Jellow slow again, I see

"Oh dear, Bodine putting his hat hack on and sighing "Apologien. Sir and Madam, and

mach Happiness of your Dog."

"You are the owners of this Marvel?" inquires Mason

"We prefer Exhibitors, says Mr. Jellow

"Damme, they'd better, grumphs the Dog, as if to himself

"Why, here in The Peart of Sumatra!" calls Dixon, who for some while has been growing

increasingly desperate for a Drink, "And a jolly place it seems."

"Fender-Belly is buying!" shouts some mischievous Sailor, forever unidentified amid the eager Rush for the Entry of this fifth or sixth-most-notorious sailors' Haunt upon the Point, even in whose Climate of general Iniquity The Pearl distinguishes itself, mach as might one of its Eponyms, shining midst the decadent Flesh of some Oyster taken from the Southern Sea

"How about a slug into y't Breadroom, there, Fido?" "Pray you, call me Fang Well, and yes I do like a drop of Roll-me-in-the-Kennel now and then."

Inside, seamen of all ranks and ratings mill slowly in a murk of pipe-amols and soot from cheap candles, whilst counter-swirling go a choice assortment of Portsmouth Polls in strip'd and floral Gowns whose bold reds, oranges, and purples are taken down in this light, bruised, made oily and worn, with black mix'd in everywhere, colors turning ever toward Night. Both Surveyors note, after a while, that the net Motion of the Company is away from the Street Doors and toward the back of the Establishment, where, upon a length of turf fertilir'd with the blood and the droppings of generations of male Poultry, beneath a bright inverted Cone of Lanthom Light striking blue a great ever-stirring Knot of Smoke, and a Defaulter merry heyond the limits of cock-fight etiquette sus pended in a basket above the Pit, a Welsh Main is in progress. Beyond this, a Visto of gaming tables may be made out, and further back a rickety Labyrinth of Rooms for sleeping or debauchery. all receding like headlands into a mist.
 
  • JFL
Reactions: 2025cel
@2025cel
 
  • JFL
Reactions: 2025cel
Tales
 
  • JFL
Reactions: JeanneDArcAlter
Untitled73 20250122162324
 
  • JFL
Reactions: 2025cel

Similar threads

JeanneDArcAlter
Replies
15
Views
101
Charm
Charm
marshadow
Replies
30
Views
104
endlessummer
endlessummer
optimisticzoomer
Replies
4
Views
49
2025cel
2025cel
I
Replies
10
Views
54
RecessedBoss
RecessedBoss

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top