[Edinburgh by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link bookEdinburgh CHAPTER II 12/13
And thus, as I fancied, the dense life within made itself faintly audible in my ears, family after family contributing its quota to the general hum, and the whole pile beating in tune to its timepieces, like a great disordered heart.
Perhaps it was little more than a fancy altogether, but it was strangely impressive at the time, and gave me an imaginative measure of the disproportion between the quantity of living flesh and the trifling walls that separated and contained it. There was nothing fanciful, at least, but every circumstance of terror and reality, in the fall of the _land_ in the High Street.
The building had grown rotten to the core; the entry underneath had suddenly closed up so that the scavenger's barrow could not pass; cracks and reverberations sounded through the house at night; the inhabitants of the huge old human bee-hive discussed their peril when they encountered on the stair; some had even left their dwellings in a panic of fear, and returned to them again in a fit of economy or self-respect; when, in the black hours of a Sunday morning, the whole structure ran together with a hideous uproar and tumbled story upon story to the ground.
The physical shock was felt far and near; and the moral shock travelled with the morning milkmaid into all the suburbs.
The church-bells never sounded more dismally over Edinburgh than that grey forenoon.
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