The Inns and Taverns of "Pickwick"; with Some Observations on Their Other Associations, eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 115 pages of information about The Inns and Taverns of "Pickwick"; with Some Observations on Their Other Associations,.

The Inns and Taverns of "Pickwick"; with Some Observations on Their Other Associations, eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 115 pages of information about The Inns and Taverns of "Pickwick"; with Some Observations on Their Other Associations,.

Whether Mr. Pickwick had some idea of finding other quarters when he said he was “at present suspended” we do not know; at all events he made the tavern his London residence until, at the end of his adventures, he retired to Dulwich.  Before, however, he settled down there, many incidents connected with his career took place within the walls of his favourite tavern.  It was in his sitting-room here that the subpoenas re Bardell v.  Pickwick were served on his three friends and Sam Weller on behalf of the plaintiff.  The Pickwickians were seated round the fire after a comfortable dinner when Mr. Jackson, the plaintiff’s man, by his unexpected appearance, disturbed their happy gathering.  It was from the “George and Vulture” they all drove to the Guildhall on the day of the trial, and it was in Mr. Pickwick’s room in the tavern that he vowed to Mr. Perker he would never pay even a halfpenny of the damages.

The next morning the Pickwickians again continued their travels, Bath being their choice of place.  Returning after a week’s absence, we are told that Mr. Pickwick with Sam “straightway returned to his old quarters at the ‘George and Vulture.’” Before another week elapsed the fateful and inevitable day came when Mr. Pickwick was arrested and eventually conveyed to the Fleet Prison.  He was in bed at the time, and so annoyed was Sam that he threatened to pitch the officer of the law out of the window into the yard below.  Mr. Pickwick’s deliverance from prison took him once again to the “George and Vulture,” and to him came Arabella Allan and Winkle to announce to him that they were man and wife and made it their place of residence whilst Mr. Pickwick went off to Birmingham to make peace with Nathaniel’s father.  Mr. Winkle, senior, eventually visited the old hostel and formally approved of his daughter-in-law.

It was whilst in the inn also that Sam Weller received the news of the death of his “mother-in-law,” conveyed in the extraordinary letter from his father, which he read to Mary in one of the window seats.

Here, also, came Tony Weller to make his offer of the L530 “reduced counsels” which he had inherited, to Mr. Pickwick, adding—­“P’raps it’ll go a little way towards the expenses o’ that ’ere conwiction.  All I say is, just you keep it till I ask you for it again,” and bolted out of the room.

The last specific reference to the “George and Vulture” is on the occasion when the party left it to join Mr. Wardle and other friends at dinner at Osborne’s Adelphi Hotel.  So, it will be seen, from the first mention of the tavern about midway through the book, until its closing pages, the “George and Vulture” may be said to have been Mr. Pickwick’s headquarters in London.

Is it, therefore, to be wondered at, considering all the incidents and events these few references recall, that the whole atmosphere of the “George and Vulture” positively reeks with Pickwick?

Is it surprising that the various proprietors of the inn have from time to time cherished these associations, and none more so than the present genial proprietor and his efficient manager, Mr. Woods, and have reminded their customers each time they dine there of Mr. Pickwick’s connection with it by placing before them plates with that immortal man’s portrait in the act of addressing his club, printed thereon?

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The Inns and Taverns of "Pickwick"; with Some Observations on Their Other Associations, from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.