 6. Last words spoken in public, a railroad accident in 1865, at home after his American visit, improvements at Gads Hill, at Gads Hill once more, the closing days of his life, burial at Westminster. My father gave his last reading in St. James's Hall, London, on the 15th of March. The program included the Christmas Carol and the trial from Pickwick. The hall was packed by an enormous audience, and he was greeted with all the warmth which the personal affection felt for the reader inspired. We all felt very anxious for him, fearing that the excitement and emotion which must attend upon his public farewell would have a bad effect upon him. But it had no immediate result at any rate much to our relief. I do not think that my father ever, and this is saying a great deal, looked handsomer nor read with more ability than on this his last appearance. Mr. Forster writes, quote, The charm of his reading was at its height when he shut the volume of Pickwick and spoke in his own person. He said that for fifteen years he had been reading his own books to audiences whose sensitive and kindly recognition of them had given him instruction and enjoyment in his art such as few men could have had. But that he nevertheless thought it well now to retire upon older associations, and in future to devote himself exclusively to the calling which first made him known. In but two short weeks from this time I hope that you may enter in your own homes on a new series of readings at which my assistance will be indispensable. But from these garish lights I vanish now for ever more with a heartfelt, grateful, respectful, affectionate farewell." There was a dead silence as my father turned away much moved, and then came from the audience such a burst and tumult of cheers and applause as were almost too much to bear, mixed as they were with personal love and affection for the man before them. He returned with us all to Gads Hill, very happy and hopeful under the temporary improvement which the rest and peace of his home brought him, and he settled down to his new book, Edwin Drude, with increased pleasure and interest. His last public appearances were in April. On the fifth he took the chair at the news vendor's dinner. On the thirtieth he returned thanks for literature at the Royal Academy Banquet. In this speech he alluded to the death of his old friend, Mr. Daniel McCleese, winding up thus, quote, No artist of whatsoever denomination, I make bold to say, ever went to his rest leaving a golden memory more pure from dross, or having devoted himself with a truer chivalry to the art goddess whom he worshipped, end quote. These words with the old, true affectionate ring in them were the last spoken by my father in public. About eighteen sixty-five my dear father's health began to give way, a peculiar affection of the foot which frequently caused him the greatest agony and suffering appearing about this time. Its real cause, overwork, was not suspected either by his positions or himself, his vitality seeming something which could not wear out. But, although he was so active and full of energy, he was never really strong, and found soon that he must take more in the way of genuine recreation. He wrote me from France about this time, quote, Before I went away I had certainly worked myself into a damaged state. But the moment I got away I began, thank God, to get well. I hoped to profit from this experience and to make future dashes from my desk before I need them, end quote. It was while on his way home after this trip that he was in the terrible railroad accident to which he afterwards referred in a letter to a friend saying that his heart had never been in good condition after that accident. It occurred on the ninth of June a date which five years later was the day of his death. He wrote describing his experiences, quote, I was in the only carriage which did not go over into the stream. It was caught upon the turn by some of the ruin of the bridge and became suspended and balanced in an apparently impossible manner. Two ladies were my fellow passengers, an old one and a young one. This is exactly what passed. You may judge from it the length of our suspense. Suddenly we were off the rail and beating the ground as the car of a half-emptied balloon might. The old lady cried out, my God, and the young one screamed. I caught hold of them both, the old lady sat opposite and the young one on my left and said, we can't help ourselves but we can be quiet and composed, pray don't cry out. The old lady immediately answered, thank you, rely upon me, upon my soul I will be quiet. We were then all tilted down together in a corner of the carriage which then stopped. I said to them thereupon, you may be sure nothing worse can happen, our danger must be over. Will you remain here without stirring while I get out of the window? They both answered quite collectively, yes, and I got out without the least notion of what had happened. Fortunately I got out with great caution and stood upon the step. Looking down I saw the bridge gone and nothing below me but the line of rail. Some people in the other two compartments were madly trying to plunge out at a window and had no idea that there was an open, swampy field fifteen feet down below them and nothing else. The two guards, one with his face cut, were running up and down on the down track of the bridge, which was not torn up, quite wildly. I called out to them, look at me, do stop an instant and look at me and tell me whether you don't know me. One of them answered, we know you very well, Mr. Dickens. Then I said, my good fellow, for God's sake give me your key and send one of those laborers here and I'll empty this carriage. We did it quite safely by means of a plank or two, and when it was done I saw all the rest of the train except the two baggage vans down the stream. I got into the carriage again for my brandy flask, took off my traveling hat for a basin, climbed down the brickwork and filled my hat with water. Suddenly I came upon a staggering man covered with blood. I think he must have been flung clean out of his carriage, with such a frightful cut across the skull that I couldn't bear to look at him. I poured some water over his face and gave him some to drink, then gave him some brandy, and laid him down on the grass. He said, I am gone and died afterwards. Then I stumbled over a lady lying on her back against a little pollard tree, with the blood streaming over her face, which was lead color, in a number of distinct little streams from the head. I asked her if she could swallow a little brandy and she just nodded, and I gave her some and left her for somebody else. The next time I passed her she was dead. Then a man examined at the inquest yesterday, who evidently had not the least remembrance of what really passed, came running up to me and implored me to help find his wife, who was afterward found dead. No imagination can conceive of the ruin of the carriages, or the extraordinary weights under which the people were lying, or the complications into which they were twisted up among iron and wood and mud and water. I am keeping very quiet here." This letter was written from Gads Hill four days after the accident. We were spared any anxiety about our father, as we did not hear of the accident until after we were with him in London. With his usual care and thoughtfulness he had telegraphed to his friend Mr. Wills to summon us to town to meet him. The letter continues, quote, I have, I don't know what to call it, constitutional, I suppose, presence of mind, and was not the least fluttered at the time. I instantly remembered that I had the manuscript of a number with me and clambered back into the carriage for it. But in writing these scanty words of recollection I feel the shake and am obliged to stop, end, quote. We heard afterwards how helpful he had been at the time ministering to the dying, how calmly and tenderly he cared for the suffering ones about him. But he never recovered entirely from the shock. More than a year later he writes, quote, It is remarkable that my watch, a special chronometer, has never gone quite correctly since, and to this day there sometimes comes over me on a railway and in a handsome cab, or any sort of conveyance, for a few seconds, a vague sense of dread that I have no power to check. It comes and passes, but I cannot prevent its coming, end, quote. I have often seen this dread come upon him, and on one occasion which I especially recall, while we were on our way from London to our little country station Higgum, where the carriage was to meet us, my father suddenly clutched the arms of the railway carriage seat, while his face grew ashy pale, and great drops of perspiration stood upon his forehead, and though he tried hard to master the dread, it was so strong that he had to leave the train at the next station. The accident had left its impression upon the memory, and it was destined never to be effaced. The hours spent upon railroads were thereafter often hours of pain to him. I realized this often while traveling with him, and no amount of assurance could dispel the feeling. Early in May of 1868 we had him safely back with us, greatly strengthened and invigorated by his ocean journey home, and I think he was never happier at Gads Hill than during his last two years there. During that time he had a succession of guests, and none more more honored nor more heartily welcomed than his American friends. The first of these to come, if I remember rightly, was Mr. Longfellow with his daughters. My father writes, describing a picnic which he gave them, quote, I turned out a couple of postillions in the old red jacket of the old royal red for our ride, and it was like a holiday ride in England fifty years ago. Of course we went to look at the old houses in Rochester, and the old cathedral, and the old castle, and the house for the six poor travelers. Nothing can surpass the respect paid to Longfellow here from the Queen downward. He is everywhere received and courted, and finds the working men, at least as well acquainted with his books, as the classes socially above them, end quote. Between the comings and goings of visitors there were delightfully quiet evenings at home, spent during the summer in our lovely porch, or walking about the garden until trade time ten o'clock. When the cooler nights came we had music in the drying room, and it is my happiness now to remember on how many evenings I played and sang all his favorite songs and tunes to my father during these last winters while he would listen while he smoked or read, or in his more usual fashion, paced up and down the room. I never saw him more peacefully contented than at these times. There were always improvements, as my father used to call his alterations, being made at Gads Hill, and each improvement was supposed to be the last. As each was completed, my sister, who was always a constant visitor, and an exceptionally dear one to my father, would have to come down and inspect, and as each was displayed my father would say to her most solemnly, Now, Katie, you behold your parents' latest and last achievement. These last improvements became quite a joke between them. I remember so well on one such occasion, after the walls and doors of the drying room had been lined with mirrors, my sister's laughing speech to the master. I believe, Papa, that when you become an angel, your wings will be made of looking glass and your crown of scarlet geraniums. And here I would like to correct an error concerning myself. I have been spoken of as my father's favorite daughter. If he had a favorite daughter, and I hope and believe that the one was as dear to him as the other, my dear sister must claim that honor. I say this ungrudgingly, for during those last two years, my father and I seemed to become more closely united, and I know how deep was the affectionate intimacy at the time of his death. The last improvement, in truth, the very last, was the building of a conservatory between the drying and dining rooms. My father was more delighted with this than with any previous alteration, and it was certainly a pretty addition to the quaint old villa. The chalet, too, which he used in summer as his study, was another favorite spot at his favorite Gads Hill. In the early months of 1870 we moved up to London as my father had decided to give twelve farewell readings there. He had the sanction of the late Sir Thomas Watson to this undertaking on condition that there should be no railway journeys in connection with them. While we were in London, he made many private engagements, principally I know on my account, as I was to be presented that spring. During this last visit to London, my father was not, however, in his usual health, and was so quickly and easily tired that a great number of our engagements had to be cancelled. He dined out very seldom, and I remember that on the last occasion he attended a very large dinner party, the effort was too much for him, and before the gentlemen returned to the drying room, he sent me a message begging me to come to him at once, saying that he was in too great pain to mount the stairs. No one who had watched him throughout the dinner, seeing his bright animated face and listening to his cheery conversation, could have imagined him to be suffering acute pain. He was at Gads Hill again by the thirtieth of May, and soon hard at work upon Edwin Druid. Although happy and contented, there was an appearance of fatigue and weariness about him very unlike his usual era of fresh activity. He was out with the dogs for the last time on the afternoon of the sixth of June, when he walked into Rochester for the daily mail. My sister, who had come to see the latest improvement, was visiting us, and was to take me with her to London on her return for a short visit. The conservatory, the improvement which Katie had been summoned to inspect, had been stocked, and by this time many of the plants were in full blossom. Everything was at its brightest, and I remember distinctly my father's pleasure in showing my sister the beauties of his improvement. We had been having most lovely weather, and in consequence, the outdoor plants were wonderfully forward in their bloom, my father's favorite red geraniums making a blaze of color in the front garden. The syringa shrubs filled the evening air with sweetest fragrance as we sat in the porch and walked about the garden on this last Sunday of our dear father's life. My aunt and I retired early, and my sister sat for a long while with my father, while he spoke to her most earnestly of his affairs. As I have already said, my father had such an intense dislike for leave-taking that he always, when it was possible, shirked a farewell, and we children, knowing this dislike, used only to wave our hands or give him a silent kiss when parting. But on this Monday morning, the seventh, just as we were about to start for London, my sister suddenly said, I must say good-bye to Papa, and hurried over to the chalet where he was busily riding. As a rule when he was so occupied, my father would hold up his cheek to be kissed, but this day he took my sister in his arms, saying, God bless you, Katie, and there, among the branches of the trees, among the birds and butterflies and the scent of flowers, she left him never to look into his eyes again. In the afternoon, feeling fatigued and not inclined to much walking, he drove with my aunt to Cobham. There he left the carriage and walked home through the park. After dinner he remained seated in the dining-room through the evening, as from that room he could see the effect of some lighted Chinese lanterns, which he had hung in the conservatory during the day, and talked to my aunt about his great love for Gad's Hill, his wish that his name might become more associated with the place, and his desire to be buried near it. On the morning of the eighth he was in excellent spirits, speaking of his book, at which he intended working through the day, and in which he was most intensely interested. He spent a busy morning in the chalet, and it must have been then that he wrote that description of Rochester, which touched our hearts when we read it for the first time after its writer lay dead. Brilliant morning shines on the old city. Its antiquities and ruins are surpassingly beautiful, with the lusty ivy gleaming in the sun, and the rich trees waving in the balmy air. Changes of glorious light from moving boughs, songs of birds, sense from gardens, woods, and fields, or rather from the one great garden of the whole cultivated island in its yielding time, penetrate into the cathedral, subdue its earthly odor, and preach the resurrection and the life. He returned to the house for luncheon, seemingly perfectly well and exceedingly cheerful and hopeful. He smoked a cigar in his beloved conservatory, and went back to the chalet. When he came again to the house, about an hour before the time fixed for an early dinner, he was tired, silent, and abstracted. But as this was a mood very usual to him, after a day of engrossing work, it caused no alarm nor surprise to my aunt, who happened to be the only member of the family at home. While awaiting dinner, he wrote some letters in the library, and arranged some trifling business matters, with a view to his departure for London the following morning. It was not until they were seated at the dinner table that a striking change in the color and expression of his face startled my aunt. Upon her asking him if he were ill, he answered, Yes, very ill, I have been very ill for the last hour. But when she said that she would send for a physician, he stopped her, saying that he would go on with dinner and afterward to London. He made an earnest effort to struggle against the seizure, which was fast coming over him, and continued to talk, but incoherently and very indistinctly. It being now evident that he was in a serious condition, my aunt begged him to go to his room before she sent for medical aid. Come and lie down, she entreated. Yes, on the ground, he answered indistinctly. These were the last words that he uttered. As he spoke, he fell to the floor. A couch was brought into the dining room, on which he was laid, a messenger was dispatched for the local physician, telegrams were sent to all of us and to Mr. Beard. This was at a few minutes after six o'clock. I was dining at a house some little distance from my sister's home. Dinner was half over when I received a message that she wished to speak to me. I found her in the hall with a change of dress for me and a cab in waiting. Quickly I changed my gown, and we began the short journey which brought us to our so sadly altered home. Our dear aunt was waiting for us at the open door, and when I saw her face I think the last faint hope died within me. All through the night we watched him, my sister on one side of the couch, my aunt on the other, and I keeping hot bricks to the feet which nothing could warm. Hoping and praying that he might open his eyes and look at us and know us once again. But he never moved, never opened his eyes, never showed a sign of consciousness through all the long night. On the afternoon of the ninth, the celebrated London physician, Dr. Russell Reynolds, recently deceased, was summoned to a consultation by the two medical men in attendance, but he could only confirm their hopeless verdict. Later in the evening of this day, at ten minutes past six, we saw a shutter pass over our dear father. He heaved a deep sigh, a large tear rolled down his face, and at that instant his spirit left us. As we saw the dark shadow pass from his face, leaving it so calm and beautiful in the peace and majesty of death, I think there was not one of us who would have wished, could we have had the power, to recall his spirit to earth. I made it my duty to guard the beloved body as long as it was left to us. The room in which my dear father reposed for the last time was bright with the beautiful fresh flowers which were so abundant at this time of the year, and which our good neighbors sent to us so frequently. The birds were singing all about, and the summer sun shone brilliantly. And there may be no sadness of farewell when I embark, for though when from out our born of time in place the flood may bear me far, I hope to see my pilot face to face when I have crossed the bar. Those exquisite lines of Lord Tennyson's seem so appropriate to my father, to his dread of goodbyes, to his great and simple faith, that I have ventured to quote them here. On the morning after he died we received a very kind visit from Sir John Malay, then Mr. Malay R.A. and Mr. Wollner R.A. Sir John made a beautiful pencil drawing of my father, and Mr. Wollner took a cast of his head, from which he afterwards modelled a bust. The drawing belongs to my sister and is one of her greatest treasures. It is, like all Sir John's drawings, most delicate and refined, and the likeness absolutely faithful to what my father looked in death. You remember that when he was describing the illustrations of Little Nell's deathbed he wrote, I wanted to express the most beautiful repose and tranquility, and to have something of a happy look if death can. Surely this was what his deathbed expressed, infinite happiness and rest. As my father had expressed a wish to be buried in the quiet little churchyard at Shorn, arrangements were made for the interment to take place there. This intention was, however, abandoned, in consequence of a request from the dean and chapter of Rochester Cathedral that his bones might repose there. A grave was prepared and everything arranged when it was made known to us, through Dean Stanley, that there was a general and very earnest desire that he should find his last resting place in Westminster Abbey. To such a tribute to our dear father's memory we could make no possible objection, although it was with great regret that we relinquished the plan to lay him in a spot so closely identified with his life and works. The only stipulation which was made in connection with a burial at Westminster Abbey was that the clause in his will which read, I am fatally direct that I be buried in an inexpensive, unostentatious and strictly private manner, should be strictly adhered to as it was. At midday on the 14th of June a few friends and ourselves saw our dear one laid to rest in the grand old cathedral. Our small group in that vast edifice seemed to make the beautiful words of our beautiful burial service even more than usually solemn in touching. Later in the day and for many following days hundreds of mourners flocked to the open grave and filled the deep vault with flowers. And even after it was closed Dean Stanley wrote, there was a constant pressure to the spot and many flowers were strewn upon it by unknown hands, many tears shed from unknown eyes. And every year on the 9th of June and on Christmas Day we find other flowers strewn by other unknown hands on that spot so sacred to us as to all who knew and loved him. And every year beautiful bright colored leaves are sent to us from across the Atlantic to be placed with our own flowers on that dear grave, and it is 26 years now since my father died. And for his epitaph what better than my father's own words? Of the loved, revered, and honored head thou canst not turn one hair to thy dread purposes nor make one feature odious. It is not that the hand is heavy and will fall down when released. It is not that the heart and pulse are still, but that the hand was open, generous and true, the heart brave, warm and tender, and the pulse a man's. Strike, shadow, strike, and see his good deeds springing from the wound to sow the world with life immortal.