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    Chapter 24

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    CONTINUED.

    All night long, men sat before the mouth of the kilns, feeding them with
    fuel. A dull smoke--a smoke of their torments--went up from their tops.
    It was curious to see the kilns under the action of the fire, gradually
    changing color, like boiling lobsters. When, at last, the fires would be
    extinguished, the bricks being duly baked, Israel often took a peep into
    the low vaulted ways at the base, where the flaming fagots had crackled.
    The bricks immediately lining the vaults would be all burnt to useless
    scrolls, black as charcoal, and twisted into shapes the most grotesque;
    the next tier would be a little less withered, but hardly fit for
    service; and gradually, as you went higher and higher along the
    successive layers of the kiln, you came to the midmost ones, sound,
    square, and perfect bricks, bringing the highest prices; from these the
    contents of the kiln gradually deteriorated in the opposite direction,
    upward. But the topmost layers, though inferior to the best, by no means
    presented the distorted look of the furnace-bricks. The furnace-bricks
    were haggard, with the immediate blistering of the fire--the midmost
    ones were ruddy with a genial and tempered glow--the summit ones were
    pale with the languor of too exclusive an exemption from the burden of
    the blaze.

    These kilns were a sort of temporary temples constructed in the yard,
    each brick being set against its neighbor almost with the care taken by
    the mason. But as soon as the fire was extinguished, down came the kiln
    in a tumbled ruin, carted off to London, once more to be set up in
    ambitious edifices, to a true brickyard philosopher, little less
    transient than the kilns.

    Sometimes, lading out his dough, Israel could not but bethink him of
    what seemed enigmatic in his fate. He whom love of country made a hater
    of her foes--the foreigners among whom he now was thrown--he who, as
    soldier and sailor, had joined to kill, burn and destroy both them and
    theirs--here he was at last, serving that very people as a slave, better
    succeeding in making their bricks than firing their ships. To think that
    he should be thus helping, with all his strength, to extend the walls of
    the Thebes of the oppressor, made him half mad. Poor Israel!
    well-named--bondsman in the English Egypt. But he drowned the thought by
    still more recklessly spattering with his ladle: "What signifies who we
    be, or where we are, or what we do?" Slap-dash! "Kings as clowns are
    codgers--who ain't a nobody?" Splash! "All is vanity and clay."
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