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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens


11

confidential on a short notice, for anybody on the road might be a
robber or in league with robbers. As to the latter, when every
posting-house and ale-house could produce somebody in “the
Captain’s” pay, ranging from the landlord to the lowest stable
nondescript, it was the likeliest thing upon the cards. So the guard
of the Dover mail thought to himself, that Friday night in
November, one thousand seven hundred and seventyfive,
lumbering up Shooter’s Hill, as he stood on his own particular
perch behind the mail, beating his feet, and keeping an eye and a
hand on the arm-chest before him, where a loaded blunderbuss lay
at the top of six or eight loaded horse-pistols, deposited on a
substratum of cutlass.

The Dover mail was in its usual genial position that the guard
suspected the passengers, the passengers suspected one another
and the guard, they all suspected everybody else, and the
coachman was sure of nothing but the horses; as to which cattle he
could with a clear conscience have taken his oath on the two
Testaments that they were not fit for the journey.

“Wo-ho!” said the coachman. “So, then! One more pull and you’re
at the top and be damned to you, for I have had trouble enough to
get you to it!- Joe!” “Halloa!” the guard replied.

“What o’clock do you make it, Joe?” “Ten minutes, good, past
eleven.” “My blood!” ejaculated the vexed coachman, “and not
atop of Shooter’s yet! Tst! Yah! Get on with you!” The emphatic
horse, cut short by the whip in a most decided negative, made a
decided scramble for it, and the three other horses followed suit.
Once more, the Dover mail struggled on, with the jack-boots of its
passengers squashing along by its side. They had stopped when
the coach stopped, and they kept close company with it. If any one
of the three had had the hardihood to propose to another to walk
on a little ahead into the mist and darkness, he would have put
himself in a fair way of getting shot instantly as a highwayman.
The last burst carried the mail to the summit of the hill. The horses
stopped to breathe again, and the guard got down to skid the
wheel for the descent, and open the coach-door to let the
passengers in.

“Tst! Joe!” cried the coachman in a warning voice, looking down
from his box.

“What do you say, Tom?” They both listened.
“I say a horse at a canter coming up, Joe.” “I say a horse at a gallop,
Tom,” returned the guard, leaving his hold of the door, and
mounting nimbly to his place. “Gentlemen! In the king’s name, all
of you!” With this hurried adjuration, he cocked his blunderbuss,
and stood on the offensive.
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