d taken down one shutter from the doorway,
and slanted it carelessly against another on the pavement. A blind man
or a drunkard might have stumbled against it and knocked it over. The
letters had been hastily opened. Edwin could see them lying in disorder
on the desk in the little office. The dust-sheets thought the day was
Sunday. He stood in the narrow aperture and looked forth. Duck Square
was a shimmer of sunshine. The Dragon and the Duck and the other
public-house at the top corner seemed as usual, stolidly confident in
the thirst of populations. But the Borough Dining Rooms, next door but
one to the corner of Duck Square and Wedgwood Street, were not as usual.
The cart of Doy, the butcher, had halted laden in front of the Borough
Dining Rooms, and the anxious proprietor, attended by his two little
daughters (aproned and sleeved for hard work in imitation of their
stout, perspiring mother), was accepting unusual joints from it.
Ticklish weather for meat--you could see that from the man's gestures.
Even on ordinary days those low-ceiled dining-rooms, stretching far back
from the street in a complicated vista of interiors, were apt to be
crowded; for the quality of the eightpenny dinner could be relied upon.
Edwin imagined what a stifling, deafening inferno of culinary odours and
clatter they would be at one o'clock, at two o'clock.
Three hokey-pokey ice-cream hand-carts, one after another, turned the
corner of Trafalgar Road and passed in front of him along Wedgwood
Street. Three! The men pushing them, one an Italian, seemed to wear
nothing but shirt and trousers, with a straw hat above and vague
slippers below. The steam-car lumbered up out of the valley of the road
and climbed Duck Bank, throwing its enormous shadow to the left. It was
half full of bright frocks and suits. An irregular current of finery
was setting in to the gates of the Wesleyan School yard at the top of
the Bank. And ceremoniously bedecked individuals of all ages hurried in
this direction and in that, some with white handkerchiefs over flowered
hats, a few beneath parasols. All the town's store of Sunday clothes
was in use. The humblest was crudely gay. Pawnbrokers had full tills
and empty shops, for twenty-four hours.
Then a procession appeared, out of Moorthorne Road, from behind the
Wesleyan Chapel-keeper's house. And as it appeared it burst into music.
First a purple banner, upheld on crimson poles with gilded
lance-poin
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