NOTES ON ISSUE 7: ALLUSIONS
Mr. Cruncher sat watching the two streams, like the heathen
rustic who has for several centuries been on duty watching one stream –
saving that Jerry had no expectation of their ever running dry.
It has been suggested that the “heathen rustic” Mr. Cruncher resembles
is Charon, the boatman who ferries souls across the river Styx (Sanders 104).
Charon, however, is a god, and though he is heathen from a Christian point of
view, and rustic to the extent that he labors in obscurity, he does not so much
“watch” the Styx as carry the dead across it; also, boating for
all eternity, he probably does not harbor any expectation of the Styx running
dry. Sanders, in his Companion to A Tale of Two Cities, suggests instead
that the “heathen rustic” is a statue of a river god, perhaps the
Marforio in Rome, which Dickens could have seen in the Palazzo dei Conservatori
on his trip to Italy in 1844 (105). Marforio, probably either a personification
of a river or a representation of Neptune, is mounted above a small fountain,
and dates from the 1st or 2nd century A.D. The statue has lodged in the Palazzo
dei Conservatori since 1644; a picture of it can be viewed at the Capitoline
Museum website, www.museicapitolini.org/en/museo/sezioni.asp?l1=4&l2=3
Time was, when a poet sat upon a stool in a public place, and mused
in the sight of men.
The poet alluded to here is Dante (1265-1321). Dickens refers to Dante’s
habit of setting up a stool in public in both Pictures from Italy –
“And here … is ‘the Stone of DANTE,’ where (so the story
runs) he was used to bring his stool, and sit in contemplation” –
and Little Dorrit, where Dante is known to the ill-educated Sparkler
as “an eccentric man in the nature of an Old File, who used to put leaves
round his head, and sit upon a stool for some unaccountable purpose, outside
the Cathedral at Florence” (qtd. in Sanders 104). The “unaccountable
purpose” may have been that of viewing the construction of the cathedral,
which was begun in 1296 (The Florence of Dante).