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POSTHUMOUS PAPERS OF THE PICKWICK CLUB
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THE PICKWICK CLUB.

9,15

THE OLD man's TALE ABOUT THE QUEER CLIENT.

" It matters little," said the old man, " where, or how, I picked up this brief history. If I were to relate it in the order in which it reached me, I should commence in the middle, and when I had arrived at the conclusion, go back for a beginning. It is enough for me to say that some of its circumstances passed before my own eyes ; for the remain- der I know them to have happened, and there are some persons yet living, who will remember them but too well.

" In the Borough High Street, near Saint George's Church, and on the same side of the way, stands, as most people know, the smallest of our debtors' prisons — the Marshalsea, Although in later times it has been a very different place from the sink of filth and dirt it once was, even its improved condition holds out but little temptation to the extravagant or consolation to the improvident. The condemned felon has as good a yard for air and exercise in Newgate, as the insolvent debtor in the Marshalsea Prison.

" It may be my fancy, or it may be that I cannot separate the place firom the old recollections associated with it, but this part of London I cannot bear. The street is broad, the shops are spacious, the noise of passing vehicles, the footsteps of a perpetual stream of people — all the busy sounds of traffic, resound in it from morn to midnight, but the streets around, are mean and close ; poverty and debauchery lie fester- ing in the crowded alleys, want and misfortune are pent up in the narrow prison ; an air of gloom and dreariness seems, in my eyes at least, to hang about the scene, and to impart to it, a squalid and sickly hue.

" Many eyes, that have long since been closed in the grave, have looked round upon that scene lightly enough, when entering the gate of the old Marshalsea Prison for the first time : for despair seldom comes with the first severe shock of misfortune. A man has confidence in un- tried friends, he remembers the many offers of service so freely made by his boon companions when he wanted them not ; he has hope — the hope of happy inexperience — and however he may bend beneath the first fihock, it springs up in his bosom, and flourishes there for a brief space, until it droops beneath the blight of disappointment and neglect. How soon have those same eyes, deeply sunken in the head, glared from faces wasted with famine, and sallow from confinement, in days when it was no figure of speech to say that debtors rotted in prison, with no hope of release, and no prospect of liberty ! The atrocity in its fiill extent no longer exists, but there is enough of it left, to give rise to occurrences that make the heart bleed.

" Twenty years ago, that pavement was worn with the footsteps of a mother and child, who, day by day, so surely as the morning came, presented themselves at the prison gate ; often after a night of restless misery and anxious thoughts, were they there, a full hour too soon, and then the young mother turning meekly away, would lead the child to the old bridge, and raising him in her arms to shew him the glisten- ing water, tinted with the light of the morning's sun, and stirring with