WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Vignettes: A Miniature Journal of Whim and Sentiment cover

Vignettes: A Miniature Journal of Whim and Sentiment

Chapter 37: NEW YEAR’S EVE
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A series of brief, impressionistic sketches that record travel and everyday moments across towns and countryside. The pieces combine vivid sensory description—light, colour, smells, and sounds—with small character studies and snapshots of local life, from markets and festivals to quiet hours in churches and fields. The writing alternates playful whim and reflective sentiment, moving between urban bustle and pastoral stillness while attending to seasonal change and transient moods. Together the vignettes form a mosaic of place and moment, valuing mood, detail, and human gesture over narrative development.

NEW YEAR’S EVE


December 31

It was New Year’s eve. The old, old scene. A London night; a heavy-brown atmosphere splashed with liquid, golden lights; the bustling market-place of sin; a silent crowd of black figures drifting over a wet, flickering pavement.

The slow, grave notes from a church tower took command of the night. The last one faded: the old year had slipped by. And then a woman laughed—a strident, level laugh; and there swept through all the crowd a mad, feverish tremor. The women ran one to the other, kissing, wildly welcoming the New Year in; and the men, shouting thickly, snatched at them as they ran. And the cabmen touted eagerly for fares.

Across the road, by a corner, a street missionary stood on a chair—an undersized, poorly clad man, with a wizened, bearded face.

... “Repent ... repent ... and save your souls to-night from the eternal torments of hell-fire.”

The women jostled him, pelted him with foul gibes; and one—a young girl—broke into a peal of hysterical laughter.

And I mused wonderingly on the ugliness of sin.