to study from. The only care should be not to
follow fact too closely, for I ’ll swear
I have met with characters and figures that would
be condemned as extravagant, if faithfully delineated
by pen or pencil. At a watering-place like Buxton,
where people really resort for health, you see
the great tendency of the English to run into
excrescences and bloat out into grotesque deformities.
As to noses, I say nothing of them, though we had
every variety: some snubbed and turned up,
with distended nostrils, like a dormer window
on the roof of a house; others convex and twisted
like a buck-handled knife; and others magnificently
eforescent, like a full-blown cauliflower.
But as to the persons that were attached to these
noses, fancy any distortion, protuberance, and
fungous embellishment that can be produced in the
human form by high and gross feeding, by the bloating
operations of malt liquors, and by the rheumy
influence of a damp, foggy, vaporous climate.
One old fellow was an exception to this, for instead
of acquiring that expansion and sponginess to
which old people are prone in this country, from
the long course of internal and external soakage
they experience, he had grown dry and stiff in the
process of years. The skin of his face had
so shrunk away that he could not close eyes or
mouth—the latter, therefore, stood on a
perpetual ghastly grin, and the former on an
incessant stare. He had but one serviceable
joint in his body, which was at the bottom of the
backbone, and that creaked and grated whenever
he bent. He could not raise his feet from
the ground, but skated along the drawing-room
carpet whenever he wished to ring the bell. The
only sign of moisture in his whole body was a
pellucid drop that I occasionally noticed on
the end of along, dry nose. He used generally
to shuffle about in company with a little fellow that
was fat on one side and lean on the other.
That is to say, he was warped on one side as
if he had been scorched before the fire; he had
a wry neck, which made his head lean on one shoulder;
his hair was smugly powdered, and he had a round,
smirking, smiling, apple face, with a bloom on
it like that of a frostbitten leaf in autumn.
We had an old, fat general by the name of Trotter,
who had, I suspect, been promoted to his high
rank to get him out of the way of more able and
active officers, being an instance that a man may
occasionally rise in the world through absolute
lack of merit. I could not help watching
the movements of this redoubtable old Hero, who,
I’ll warrant, has been the champion and safeguard
of half the garrison towns in England, and fancying
to myself how Bonaparte would have delighted
in having such toast-and-butter generals to deal
with. This old cad is doubtless a sample of those
generals that flourished in the old military
school, when armies would manoeuvre and watch
each other for months; now and then have a desperate
skirmish, and, after marching and countermarching about
the ‘Low Countries’ through a glorious