hilst this lordling--a time will come when he will be out of
fashion and forgotten. And yet I don't know; didn't he write Childe
Harold and that ode? Yes, he wrote Childe Harold and that ode. Then a
time will scarcely come when he will be forgotten. Lords, squires, and
cockneys may pass away, but a time will scarcely come when Childe Harold
and that ode will be forgotten. He was a poet, after all, and he must
have known it; a real poet, equal to --- to --- what a destiny! Rank,
beauty, fashion, immortality,--he could not be unhappy; what a difference
in the fate of men--I wish I could think he was unhappy . . .
I turned away.
'Great poet, sir,' said the dapper man, turning away too, 'but
unhappy--fate of genius, sir, I, too, am frequently unhappy.'
Hurrying down a street to the right, I encountered Francis Ardry.
'What means the multitude yonder?' he demanded.
'They are looking after the hearse which is carrying the remains of Byron
up Tottenham Road.'
'I have seen the man,' said my friend, as he turned back the way he had
come, 'so I can dispense with seeing the hearse--I saw the living man at
Venice--ah, a great poet.'
'Yes,' said I, 'a great poet, it must be so, everybody says so--what a
destiny! What a difference in the fate of men; but 'tis said he was
unhappy; you have seen him, how did he look?'
'Oh, beautiful!'
'But did he look happy?'
'Why, I can't say he looked very unhappy; I saw him with two . . . very
fair ladies; but what is it to you whether the man was unhappy or not?
Come, where shall we go--to Joey's? His hugest bear--'
'Oh, I have had enough of bears, I have just been worried by one.'
'The publisher?'
'Yes.'
'Then come to Joey's, three dogs are to be launched at his bear: as they
pin him, imagine him to be the publisher.'
'No,' said I, 'I am good for nothing; I think I shall stroll to London
Bridge.'
'That's too far for me--farewell.'
CHAPTER FORTY
LONDON BRIDGE--WHY NOT?--EVERY HEART HAS ITS BITTERS--WICKED BOYS--GIVE
ME MY BOOK--A FRIGHT
So I went to London Bridge, and again took my station on the spot by the
booth where I had stood on the former occasion. The booth, however, was
empty; neither the apple-woman nor her stall was to be seen. I looked
over the balustrade upon the river; the tide was now, as before, rolling
beneath the arch with frightful impetuosity. As I gazed upon the eddies
of the whirlpool, I thought within myself how s
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