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<h1> BARNABY RUDGE </h1>
<h2> by Charles Dickens </h2>
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<h2> PREFACE </h2>
<p>The late Mr Waterton having, some time ago, expressed his opinion that
ravens are gradually becoming extinct in England, I offered the few
following words about my experience of these birds.</p>
<p>The raven in this story is a compound of two great originals, of whom I
was, at different times, the proud possessor. The first was in the bloom
of his youth, when he was discovered in a modest retirement in London, by
a friend of mine, and given to me. He had from the first, as Sir Hugh
Evans says of Anne Page, ‘good gifts’, which he improved by study and
attention in a most exemplary manner. He slept in a stable—generally
on horseback—and so terrified a Newfoundland dog by his
preternatural sagacity, that he has been known, by the mere superiority of
his genius, to walk off unmolested with the dog’s dinner, from before his
face. He was rapidly rising in acquirements and virtues, when, in an evil
hour, his stable was newly painted. He observed the workmen closely, saw
that they were careful of the paint, and immediately burned to possess it.
On their going to dinner, he ate up all they had left behind, consisting
of a pound or two of white lead; and this youthful indiscretion terminated
in death.</p>
<p>While I was yet inconsolable for his loss, another friend of mine in
Yorkshire discovered an older and more gifted raven at a village
public-house, which he prevailed upon the landlord to part with for a
consideration, and sent up to me. The first act of this Sage, was, to
administer to the effects of his predecessor, by disinterring all the
cheese and halfpence he had buried in the garden—a work of immense
labour and research, to which he devoted all the energies of his mind.
When he had achieved this task, he applied himself to the acquisition of
stable language, in which he soon became such an adept, that he would
perch outside my window and drive imaginary horses with great skill, all
day. Perhaps even I never saw him at his best, for his former master sent
his duty with him, ‘and if I wished the bird to come out very strong,
would I be so good as to show him a drunken man’—which I never did,
having (unfortunately) none but sober people at hand.</p>
<p>But I could hardly have respected him more, whatever the stimulating
influences of this sight might have been. He had not the least respect, I
am sorry to say, for me in return, or for anybody but the cook; to whom he
was attached—but only, I fear, as a Policeman might have been. Once,
I met him unexpectedly, about half-a-mile from my house, walking down the
middle of a public street, attended by a pretty large crowd, and
spontaneously exhibiting the whole of his accomplishments. His gravity
under those trying circumstances, I can never forget, nor the
extraordinary gallantry with which, refusing to be brought home, he
defended himself behind a pump, until overpowered by numbers. It may have
been that he was too bright a genius to live long, or it may have been
that he took some pernicious substance into his bill, and thence into his
maw—which is not improbable, seeing that he new-pointed the greater
part of the garden-wall by digging out the mortar, broke countless squares
of glass by scraping away the putty all round the frames, and tore up and
swallowed, in splinters, the greater part of a wooden staircase of six
steps and a landing—but after some three years he too was taken ill,
and died before the kitchen fire. He kept his eye to the last upon the
meat as it roasted, and suddenly turned over on his back with a sepulchral
cry of ‘Cuckoo!’ Since then I have been ravenless.</p>
<p>No account of the Gordon Riots having been to my knowledge introduced into
any Work of Fiction, and the subject presenting very extraordinary and
remarkable features, I was led to project this Tale.</p>
<p>It is unnecessary to say, that those shameful tumults, while they reflect
indelible disgrace upon the time in which they occurred, and all who had
act or part in them, teach a good lesson. That what we falsely call a
religious cry is easily raised by men who have no religion, and who in
their daily practice set at nought the commonest principles of right and
wrong; that it is begotten of intolerance and persecution; that it is
senseless, besotted, inveterate and unmerciful; all History teaches us.
But perhaps we do not know it in our hearts too well, to profit by even so
humble an example as the ‘No Popery’ riots of Seventeen Hundred and
Eighty.</p>
<p>However imperfectly those disturbances are set forth in the following
pages, they are impartially painted by one who has no sympathy with the
Romish Church, though he acknowledges, as most men do, some esteemed
friends among the followers of its creed.</p>
<p>In the description of the principal outrages, reference has been had to
the best authorities of that time, such as they are; the account given in
this Tale, of all the main features of the Riots, is substantially
correct.</p>
<p>Mr Dennis’s allusions to the flourishing condition of his trade in those
days, have their foundation in Truth, and not in the Author’s fancy. Any
file of old Newspapers, or odd volume of the Annual Register, will prove
this with terrible ease.</p>
<p>Even the case of Mary Jones, dwelt upon with so much pleasure by the same
character, is no effort of invention. The facts were stated, exactly as
they are stated here, in the House of Commons. Whether they afforded as
much entertainment to the merry gentlemen assembled there, as some other
most affecting circumstances of a similar nature mentioned by Sir Samuel
Romilly, is not recorded.</p>
<p>That the case of Mary Jones may speak the more emphatically for itself, I
subjoin it, as related by SIR WILLIAM MEREDITH in a speech in Parliament,
‘on Frequent Executions’, made in 1777.</p>
<p>‘Under this act,’ the Shop-lifting Act, ‘one Mary Jones was executed,
whose case I shall just mention; it was at the time when press warrants
were issued, on the alarm about Falkland Islands. The woman’s husband was
pressed, their goods seized for some debts of his, and she, with two small
children, turned into the streets a-begging. It is a circumstance not to
be forgotten, that she was very young (under nineteen), and most
remarkably handsome. She went to a linen-draper’s shop, took some coarse
linen off the counter, and slipped it under her cloak; the shopman saw
her, and she laid it down: for this she was hanged. Her defence was (I
have the trial in my pocket), “that she had lived in credit, and wanted
for nothing, till a press-gang came and stole her husband from her; but
since then, she had no bed to lie on; nothing to give her children to eat;
and they were almost naked; and perhaps she might have done something
wrong, for she hardly knew what she did.” The parish officers testified
the truth of this story; but it seems, there had been a good deal of
shop-lifting about Ludgate; an example was thought necessary; and this
woman was hanged for the comfort and satisfaction of shopkeepers in
Ludgate Street. When brought to receive sentence, she behaved in such a
frantic manner, as proved her mind to be in a distracted and desponding
state; and the child was sucking at her breast when she set out for
Tyburn.’</p>
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