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The Uncommercial Traveller is a set of essays written
by Charles Dickens between 1860 and 1869 for his serial "All the Year
Round."
Later, they were published in a book, with each one as
a chapter. The 37 chapters (essays) covered his observations of people,
places, and conditions--with Chapter 27 entitled "Bound for the Great Salt
Lake." In this essay, he writes about the Mormon Saints and the "Amazon."
(From the diary of Mary Fretwell Davis, she states:
"When the ship [Amazon] was in the London Docks, Charles Dickens came on
board. His eyes were on everybody, and as he was walking about, he was
writing all the time."
Here is the essay he wrote:
"Bound For the Great Salt Lake"
Behold me on my way to an emigrant ship, on a hot
morning early in June. My road lies through that part of London generally
known to the initiated as "Down by the Docks." Down by the Docks, is home
to a good many people‑‑to too many, if I may judge from the overflow of
local population in the streets‑‑but my nose insinuates that the number to
whom it is Sweet Home might be easily counted. Down by the Docks, is a
region I would choose as my point of embarkation aboard ship if I were an
emigrant.
Down by the Docks, they eat the largest oysters and
scatter the roughest oyster shells, known to the descendants of Saint
George and the Dragon.
Down by the Docks, they consume the slimiest of
shellfish, which seem to have been scraped off the copper bottoms of
ships.
Down by the Docks, the vegetables at green grocers'
doors acquire a saline and a scaly look, as if they had been crossed with
fish and seaweed.
Down by the Docks, they "board seamen" at the eating
houses, the public houses, the slop shops, the coffee shops, the tally
shops, all kinds of shops mentionable and unmentionable‑‑board them, as it
were, in the piratical sense, making them bleed terribly, and giving no
quarter.
Down by the Docks, the seamen roam in mid street and
mid day, their pockets inside out, and their heads no better.
Down by the Docks, the daughters of wave‑ruling
Britannia also rove, clad in silken attire, with uncovered tresses
streaming in the breeze, bandanna kerchiefs floating from their shoulders,
and crinoline not wanting.
Down by the Docks, you may hear the incomparable Joe
Jackson sing the Standard of England, with a hornpipe, any night; or any
day may see at the waxwork, for a penny and no waiting, him as killed the
policeman at Acton and suffered for it.
Down by the Docks, you may buy polonies, saveloys, and
sausage preparations various, if you are not particular what they are made
of besides seasoning.
Down by the Docks, the children of Israel creep into
any gloomy cribs and entries they can hire, and hang slops there‑‑pewter
watches, sou'wester hats, and waterproof overalls.
Down by the Docks, the placards in the shops
apostrophize the customer, knowing him familiarly before hand, as, "Look
here, Jack!" "Here's your sort, my lad!" "Try our sea‑going mixed, at
two and nine!" "The right kit for the British tar!" "Ship ahoy!"
"Splice the main‑brace, brother!" "Come, cheer up, my lads. We've the
best liquors here, and you'll find something new in our wonderful beer!"
Down by the Docks, the pawnbroker lends money on
Union‑Jack pocket-handkerchiefs, on watches with little ships pitching
fore and aft on the dial, on telescopes, nautical instruments in cases,
and such like.
Down by the Docks, the apothecary sets up in business
on the wretchedest scale‑‑chiefly on lint and plaster for the strapping of
wounds‑‑and with no bright bottles, and with no little drawers.
Down by the Docks, the shabby undertaker's shop will
bury you for next to nothing, after the Malay or Chinaman has stabbed you
for nothing at all: so you can hardly hope to make a cheaper end.
Down by the Docks, anybody drunk will quarrel with
anybody drunk or sober, and everybody else will have a hand in it, and on
the shortest notice you may revolve in a whirlpool of red shirts, shaggy
beards, wild heads of hair, bare tattooed arms, Britannia's daughters,
malice, mud, maundering, and madness.
Down by the Docks, scraping fiddles go in the
public‑houses all day long, and, shrill above their din, rises the
screeching of innumerable parrots brought from foreign parts, who appear
to be very much astonished by what they find on these native shores of
ours. Possibly the parrots don't know, possibly they do, that Down by the
Docks is the road to the Pacific Ocean, with its lovely islands, where the
savage girls plait flowers, and the savage boys carve coconut shells, and
the grim blind idols muse in their shady groves to exactly the same
purpose as the priests and chiefs. And possibly the parrots don't know,
possibly they do, that the noble savage is a wearisome impostor wherever
he is, and has five hundred thousand volumes of indifferent rhyme, and no
reason, to answer for.
Gigantic in the basin just beyond Shadwell Church,
looms my Emigrant Ship: her name, the "Amazon." Her figure‑ head is not
disfigured as those beauteous founders of the race of strong‑minded women
are fabled to have been, for the convenience of drawing the bow; but I
sympathize with the carver:
"A flattering carver who made it his care
To carve busts as they ought to be‑‑not as they were."
My Emigrant Ship lies broadside‑on to the wharf. Two
great gangways made of spars and planks connect her with the wharf; and up
and down these gangways, perpetually crowding to and fro and in and out,
like ants, are the Emigrants who are going to sail in my Emigrant ship.
Some with cabbages, some with loaves of bread, some with cheese and
butter, some with milk and beer, some with boxes, beds, and bundles, some
with babies‑‑nearly all with children‑‑nearly all with brand new tin cans
for their daily allowance of water, uncomfortably suggestive of a tin
flavor in the drink. To and fro, up and down, aboard and ashore, swarming
here and there and everywhere, my Emigrants. And still as the Dock‑Gate
swings upon its hinges, cabs appear, and carts appear, and vans appear,
bringing more of my Emigrants, with more cabbages, more loaves, more
cheese and butter, more milk and beer, more boxes, beds, and bundles, more
tin cans, and on those shipping investments accumulated compound interest
of children.
I go aboard my Emigrant Ship. I go first to the great
cabin, and find it in the usual condition of a cabin at that pass.
Perspiring landsmen, with loose papers, and with pens and inkstands,
pervade it; and the general appearance of things is as if the late Mr.
Amazon's funeral had just come home from the cemetery, and the
disconsolate Mrs. Amazon's trustees found the affairs in great disorder,
and were looking high and low for the will. I go out on the poop‑deck and
surveying the emigrants on the deck below, find more pens and inkstands in
action, and more papers, and interminable complication respecting accounts
with individuals for tin cans and what not. But nobody is in an
ill‑temper, nobody is the worse for drink, nobody swears an oath or uses a
coarse word, nobody appears depressed, nobody is weeping, and down upon
the deck in every corner where it is possible to find a few square feet to
kneel, crouch, or lie in, people, in every unsuitable attitude for
writing, are writing letters.
Now, I have seen emigrant ships before this day in
June. And these people are so strikingly different from all other people
in like circumstances whom I have ever seen, that I wonder aloud, "What
would a stranger suppose these emigrants to be!"
The vigilant bright face of the weather‑browned captain
of the "Amazon" is at my shoulder, and he says, "What, indeed! The most
of these came aboard yesterday evening. They came from various parts of
England in small parties that had never seen one another before. Yet they
had not been a couple of hours on board, when they established their own
police, made their own regulations, and set their own watches at all the
hatchways. Before nine o'clock, the ship was as orderly and as quiet as a
man‑of‑war."
I looked about me again and saw the letter‑writing
going on with the most curious composure. Perfectly abstracted in the
midst of the crowd; while great casks were swinging aloft, and being
lowered into the hold; while hot agents were hurrying up and down,
adjusting the interminable account; while two hundred strangers were
searching everywhere for two hundred other strangers, and were asking
questions about them of two hundred more; while the children played up and
down all the steps, and in and out among all the people's legs, and were
beheld, to the general dismay, toppling over all the dangerous places; the
letter‑writers wrote on calmly.
On the starboard side of the ship, a grizzled man
dictated a long letter to another grizzled man in an immense fur cap:
which letter was of so profound a quality, that it became necessary for
the amanuensis (someone employed to write from dictation) at intervals to
take off his fur cap in both his hands, for the ventilation of his brain,
and stare at him who dictated, as a man of many mysteries who was worth
looking at.
On the larboard side, a woman had covered a
belaying‑pin with a white cloth to make a neat desk of it, and was sitting
on a little box, writing with the deliberation of a bookkeeper. Down upon
her breast on the planks of the deck at this woman's feet, with her head
diving in under a beam of the bulwarks on that side, as an eligible place
of refuge for her sheet of paper, a neat and pretty girl wrote for a good
hour (she fainted at last), only rising to the surface occasionally for a
dip of ink.
Alongside the boat, close to me on the poop‑deck,
another girl, a fresh well‑grown country girl, was writing another letter
on the bare deck. Later in the day, when this self‑same boat was filled
with a choir who sang glees and catches for a long time, one of the
singers, a girl, sang her part mechanically all the while, and wrote a
letter in the bottom of the boat while doing so.
"A stranger would be puzzled to guess the right name
for these people, Mr. Uncommercial," says the captain.
"Indeed he would."
"If you hadn't known, could you ever have supposed?"
"How could I! I should have said they were in their
degree, the pick and flower of England."
"So should I," says the captain.
"How many are they?"
"Eight hundred in round numbers."
I went between‑decks, where the families with children
swarmed in the dark, where unavoidable confusion had been caused by the
last arrivals, and where the confusion was increased by the little
preparations for dinner that were going on in each group. A few women
here and there, had got lost, and were laughing at it, and asking their
way to their own people, or out on deck again. A few of the poor children
were crying; but otherwise the universal cheerfulness was amazing. "We
shall shake down by tomorrow." "We shall come all right in a day or so."
"We shall have more light at sea." Such phrases I heard everywhere, as I
groped my way among chests and barrels and beams and unstowed cargo and
ring‑bolts and Emigrants, down to the lower‑deck, and thence up to the
light of day again, and to my former station.
Surely, an extraordinary people in their power of
self‑abstraction! All the former letter‑writers were still writing
calmly, and many more letter‑writers had broken out in my absence. A boy
with a bag of books in his hand and a slate under his arm, emerged from
below, concentrated himself in my neighborhood (espying a convenient
skylight for his purpose), and went to work at a sum as if he were stone
deaf. A father and mother and several young children on the main deck
below me, had formed a family circle close to the foot of the crowded
restless gangway, where the children made a nest for themselves in a coil
of rope, and the father and mother, she suckling the youngest, discussed
family affairs as peaceably as if they were in perfect retirement. I
think the most noticeable characteristic in the eight hundred as a mass,
was their exemption from hurry.
Eight hundred what? "Geese, villain?" EIGHT HUNDRED
MORMONS. I, Uncommercial Traveler for the firm of Human Interest Brothers,
had come aboard this Emigrant Ship to see what Eight hundred Latter‑day
Saints were like, and I found them (to the rout and overthrow of all my
expectations) like what I now describe with scrupulous exactness.
The Mormon Agent who had been active in getting them
together, and in making the contract with my friends, the owners of the
ship, to take them as far as New York on their way to the Great Salt Lake,
was pointed out to me. A compactly‑made, handsome man in black--rather
short, with rich brown hair and beard, and clear bright eyes. From his
speech, I should set him down an American. Probably, a man who had
"knocked about the world" pretty much. A man with a frank open manner and
unshrinking look; withal a man of great quickness. I believe he was wholly
ignorant of my Uncommercial individuality, and consequently of my immense
Uncommercial importance.
UNCOMMERCIAL: These are a very fine set of people you
have brought together here.
MORMON AGENT: Yes, sir, they are a very fine set of
people.
UNCOMMERCIAL: (looking about). Indeed, I think it
would be difficult to find Eight hundred people together anywhere else,
and find so much beauty and so much strength and capacity for work among
them.
MORMON AGENT: (not looking about but looking steadily
at Uncommercial). I think so.‑‑We sent out about a thousand more, yes'day,
from Liverpool.
UNCOMMERCIAL: You are not going with these emigrants?
MORMON AGENT: No, sir. I remain.
UNCOMMERCIAL: But you have been in the Mormon
Territory?
MORMON AGENT: Yes; I left Utah about three years ago.
UNCOMMERCIAL: It is surprising to me that these people
are all so cheery, and make so little of the immense distance before them.
MORMON AGENT: Well, you see, many of `em have friends
out at Utah, and many of `em look forward to meeting friends on the way.
UNCOMMERCIAL: On the way?
MORMON AGENT: This way `tis. This ship lands `em in
New York City. Then they go on by rail right away beyond St. Louis, to
that part of the Banks of the Missouri where they strike the Plains.
There, wagons from the settlement meet `em to bear `em company on their
journey `cross‑‑twelve hundred miles about. Industrious people who come
out to the settlement soon get wagons of their own, and so the friends of
some of these will come down in their own wagons to meet `em. They look
forward to that, greatly.
After a noontide pause for dinner, during which my
emigrants were nearly all between‑decks, and the Amazon looked deserted, a
general muster took place. The muster was for the ceremony of passing the
Government Inspector and the Doctor. Those authorities held their
temporary state amid‑ships, by a cask or two; and, knowing that the whole
Eight hundred emigrants must come face to face with them, I took my
station behind the two. They knew nothing whatever of me, I believe, and
my testimony to the unpretending gentleness and good nature with which
they discharged their duty, may be of the greater worth. There was not
the slightest flavour of the Circumlocution Office about their
proceedings.
The emigrants were now all on deck. They were densely
crowded aft, and swarmed upon the poop‑deck like bees. Two or three
Mormon agents stood ready to hand them on to the Inspector, and to hand
them forward when they had passed. By what successful means, a special
aptitude for organization had been infused into these people, I am, of
course, unable to report. But I know that, even now, there was no
disorder, hurry, or difficulty.
All being ready, the first group are handed on. That
member of the party who is entrusted with the passenger‑ticket for the
whole, has been warned by one of the agents to have it ready, and here it
is in his hand. In every instance through the whole eight hundred,
without an exception, this paper is always ready.
INSPECTOR: (reading the ticket) Jessie Jobson,
Sophronia Jobson, Jessie Jobson again, Matilda Jobson, William Jobson,
Jane Jobson, Matilda Jobson again, Brigham Jobson, Leonardo Jobson, and
Orson Jobson. Are you all here? (glancing at the party, over his
spectacles).
JESSIE JOBSON NUMBER TWO: All here, sir.
This group is composed of an old grandfather and
grandmother, their married son and his wife, and their family of
children. Orson Jobson is a little child asleep in his mother's arms.
The Doctor, with a kind word or so, lifts up the corner of the mother's
shawl, looks at the child's face, and touches the little clenched hand.
If we were all as well as Orson Jobson, doctoring would be a poor
profession.
INSPECTOR: Quite right, Jessie Jobson. Take your
ticket, Jessie, and pass on.
And away they go.
INSPECTOR: (reading ticket again) Susannah Cleverly and
William Cleverly. Brother and sister, eh?
SISTER: (young women of business, hustling slow
brother). Yes, sir.
INSPECTOR: Very good, Susannah Cleverly. Take your
ticket, Susannah, and take care of it.
And away they go.
INSPECTOR: (taking ticket again) Sampson Dibble and
Dorothy Dibble (surveying a very old couple over his spectacles, with some
surprise). Your husband quite blind, Mrs. Dibble?
Mrs. DIBBLE: Yes, sir, he be stone‑blind.
Mr. DIBBLE: (Addressing the mast) Yes, sir, I be
stone‑blind.
INSPECTOR: That's a bad job. Take your ticket, Mrs.
Dibble, and don't lose it, and pass on.
Doctor taps Mr. Dibble on the eyebrow with his
forefinger, and away they go.
INSPECTOR: (taking ticket again). Anastatia Weedle.
ANASTATIA: (a pretty girl, in a bright Garibaldi, this
morning elected by universal suffrage the Beauty of the Ship). That is
me, sir.
INSPECTOR: Going alone, Anastatia?
ANASTATIA: (shaking her curls). I am with Mrs. Jobson,
sir, but I've got separated for the moment.
INSPECTOR: Oh! You are with the Jobsons? Quite
right. That'll do, Miss Weedle. Don't lose your ticket.
Away she goes, and joins the Jobsons who are waiting
for her, and stoops and kisses Brigham Jobson‑‑who appears to be
considered too young for the purpose, by several Mormons rising twenty,
who are looking on. Before her extensive skirts have departed from the
casks, a decent widow stands there with four children, and so the roll
goes.
There were many worn faces bearing traces of patient
poverty and hard work, and there was great steadiness of purpose and much
undemonstrative self‑respect among this class. A few young men were going
singly. Several girls were going, two or three together. These latter I
found it very difficult to refer back, in my mind, to their relinquished
homes and pursuits. Perhaps they were more like country milliners, and
pupil teachers rather tawdrily dressed, than any other classes of young
women. I noticed, among many little ornaments worn, more than one
photograph‑brooch of the Princess of Wales, and also of the late Prince
Consort. Some single women of from thirty to forty, whom one might
suppose to be embroiderers, or straw‑bonnet‑makers, were obviously going
out in quest of husbands, as finer ladies go to India. That they had any
distinct notions of a plurality of husbands or wives, I do not believe.
To suppose the family groups of whom the majority of emigrants were
composed, polygamically possessed, would be to suppose an absurdity,
manifest to any one who saw the fathers and mothers.
I should say (I had no means of ascertaining the fact)
that most familiar kinds of handicraft trades were represented here.
Farm‑laborers, shepherds, and the like, had their full share of
representation, but I doubt if they preponderated. It was interesting to
see how the leading spirit in the family circle never failed to show
itself, even in the simple process of answering to the names as they were
called, and checking off the owners of the names. Sometimes it was the
father, much oftener the mother, sometimes a quick little girl second or
third in order of seniority. It seemed to occur for the first time to
some heavy fathers, what large families they had; and their eyes rolled
about, during the calling of the list, as if they half misdoubted some
other family to have been smuggled into their own. Among all the fine
handsome children, I observed but two with marks upon their necks that
were probably scrofulous. (Tuberculosis of the lymph glands of the neck)
Out of the whole number of emigrants, but one old woman was temporarily
set aside by the doctor, on suspicion of fever; but even she afterwards
obtained a clean bill of health.
When all had "passed," and the afternoon began to wear
on, a black box became visible on deck, which box was in charge of certain
personages also in black, of whom only one had the conventional air of an
itinerant preacher. This box contained a supply of hymn‑books, neatly
printed and got up, published at Liverpool, and also in London at the
"Latter‑Day Saints Book Depot, 30 Florence Street." Some copies were
handsomely bound; the plainer were the more in request, and many were
bought.
The title ran: "Sacred Hymns and Spiritual Songs for
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‑day Saints." The Preface, dated
Manchester, 1840, ran thus: "The Saints in this country have been very
desirous for a Hymn Book adapted to their faith and worship, that they
might sing the truth with an understanding heart, and express their
praise, joy, and gratitude in songs adapted to the new and Everlasting
Covenant. In accordance with their wishes, we have selected the following
volume, which we hope will prove acceptable until a greater variety can be
added. With sentiments of high consideration and esteem, we subscribe
ourselves your brethren in the New and Everlasting Covenant. Brigham
Young, Parley P. Pratt, John Taylor."
From this book‑‑by no means explanatory to myself of
the New and Everlasting Covenant, and not at all making my heart an
understanding one on the subject of that mystery‑‑a hymn was sung, which
did not attract any great amount of attention and was supported by a
rather select circle. But the choir on the boat was very popular and
pleasant; and there was to have been a Band, only the Cornet was late in
coming on board.
In the course of the afternoon, a mother appeared from
shore, in search of her daughter, "who had run away with the Mormons."
She received every assistance from the Inspector, but her daughter was not
found to be on board. The Saints did not seem to me, particularly
interested in finding her.
Towards five o'clock, the galley became full of
tea‑kettles, and an agreeable fragrance of tea pervaded the ship. There
was no scrambling or jostling for the hot water, no ill humor, no
quarreling. As the Amazon was to sail with the next tide, and as it would
not be high water before two o'clock in the morning, I left her with her
tea in full action and her idle steam tug lying by, deputing steam and
smoke for the time being to the Tea‑kettles.
I afterwards learned that the captain sent a dispatch
home before he struck out into the wide Atlantic, highly extolling the
behavior of these Emigrants, and the perfect order and propriety of all
their social arrangements. What is in store for the poor people on the
shores of the Great Salt Lake? What happy delusions are they laboring
under now? On what miserable blindness their eyes may be opened then, I
do not pretend to say. But I went on board their ship to bear testimony
against them, if they deserved it, as I fully believed they would. To my
great astonishment they did not deserve it; and my predispositions and
tendencies must not affect me as an honest witness. I went over the
"Amazon's" side, feeling it impossible to deny that, so far, some
remarkable influence had produced a remarkable result, which better known
influences have often missed.
After this Uncommercial Journey was printed, I happened
to mention the experience it describes to Lord Houghton. That gentleman
then showed me an article of his writing, in The Edinburg Review for
January, 1862, which is highly remarkable for its philosophical and
literary research concerning these Latter‑Day Saints. I find in it the
following sentences:‑‑ "The select Committee of the House of Commons on
emigrant ships for 1854 summoned the Mormon agent and passenger‑broker
before it, and came to the conclusion that no ships under the provisions
of the `Passengers Act' could be depended upon for comfort and security in
the same degree as those under his administration. The Mormon ship is a
family under strong and accepted discipline, with every provision for
comfort, decorum, and internal peace." |