Read Down and Out in Paris and London Online
Authors: George Orwell
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shake at the door, we made off. ‘Well,’ said somebody as
soon as we were out of hearing, ‘the trouble’s over. I thought
them—prayers was never goin’ to end.’
‘You ‘ad your bun,’ said another; ‘you got to pay for it.’
‘Pray for it, you mean. Ah, you don’t get much for noth-
ing. They can’t even give you a twopenny cup of tea without
you go down on you—knees for it.’
There were murmurs of agreement. Evidently the tramps
were not grateful for their tea. And yet it was excellent tea,
as different from coffee-shop tea as good Bordeaux is from
the muck called colonial claret, and we were all glad of it. I
am sure too that it was given in a good spirit, without any
intention of humiliating us; so in fairness we ought to have
been grateful—still, we were not.
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XXVII
At about a quarter to six the Irishman led me to the
spike. It was a grim, smoky yellow cube of brick, stand-
ing in a corner of the workhouse grounds. With its rows
of tiny, barred windows, and a high wall and iron gates
separating it from the road, it looked much like a prison.
Already a long queue of ragged men had formed up, waiting
for the gates to open. They were of all kinds and ages, the
youngest a fresh-faced boy of sixteen, the oldest a doubled-
up, toothless mummy of seventy-five. Some were hardened
tramps, recognizable by their sticks and billies and dust-
darkened faces; some were factory hands out of work, some
agricultural labourers, one a clerk in collar and tie, two
certainly imbeciles. Seen in the mass, lounging there, they
were a disgusting sight; nothing villainous or dangerous,
but a graceless, mangy crew, nearly all ragged and palpably
underfed. They were friendly, however, and asked no ques-
tions. Many offered me tobacco—cigarette ends, that is.
We leaned against the wall, smoking, and the tramps be-
gan to talk about the spikes they had been in recently. It
appeared from what they said that all spikes are different,
each with its peculiar merits and demerits, and it is im-
portant to know these when you are on the road. An old
hand will tell you the peculiarities of every spike in Eng-
land, as: at A you are allowed to smoke but there are bugs
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Down and Out in Paris and London
in the cells; at B the beds are comfortable but the porter is
a bully; at C they let you out early in the morning but the
tea is undrinkable; at D the officials steal your money if you
have any—and so on interminably. There are regular beat-
en tracks where the spikes are within a day’s march of one
another. I was told that the Barnet-St Albans route is the
best, and they warned me to steer clear of Billericay and
Chelmsford, also Ide Hill in Kent. Chelsea was said to be
the most luxurious spike in England; someone, praising it,
said that the blankets there were more like prison than the
spike. Tramps go far afield in summer, and in winter they
circle as much as possible round the large towns, where it
is warmer and there is more charity. But they have to keep
moving, for you may not enter any one spike, or any two
London spikes, more than once in a month, on pain of be-
ing confined for a week.
Some time after six the gates opened and we began to file
in one at a time. In the yard was an office where an official
entered in a ledger our names and trades and ages, also the
places we were coming from and going to —this last is in-
tended to keep a check on the movements of tramps. I gave
my trade as ‘painter’; I had painted water-colours—who has
not? The official also asked us whether we had any mon-
ey, and every man said no. It is against the law to enter the
spike with more than eightpence, and any sum less than
this one is supposed to hand over at the gate. But as a rule
the tramps prefer to smuggle their money in, tying it tight
in a piece of cloth so that it will not chink. Generally they
put it in the bag of tea and sugar that every tramp carries,
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or among their ‘papers’. The ‘papers’ are considered sacred
and are never searched.
After registering at the office we were led into the spike
by an official known as the Tramp Major (his job is to su-
pervise casuals, and he is generally a workhouse pauper)
and a great bawling ruffian of a porter in a blue uniform,
who treated us like cattle. The spike consisted simply of a
bathroom and lavatory, and, for the rest, long double rows
of stone cells, perhaps a hundred cells in all. It was a bare,
gloomy place of stone and whitewash, unwillingly clean,
with a smell which, somehow, I had foreseen from its ap-
pearance; a smell of soft soap, Jeyes’ fluid and latrines—a
cold, discouraging, prisonish smell.
The porter herded us all into the passage, and then told
us to come into the bathroom six at a time, to be searched
before bathing. The search was for money and tobacco,
Romton being one of those spikes where you can smoke
once you have smuggled your tobacco in, but it will be con-
fiscated if it is found on you. The old hands had told us that
the porter never searched below the knee, so before going
in we had all hidden our tobacco in the ankles of our boots.
Afterwards, while undressing, we slipped it into our coats,
which we were allowed to keep, to serve as pillows.
The scene in the bathroom was extraordinarily repulsive.
Fifty dirty, stark-naked men elbowing each other in a room
twenty feet square, with only two bathtubs and two slimy
roller towels between them all. I shall never forget the reek
of dirty feet. Less than half the tramps actually bathed (I
heard them saying that hot water is ‘weakening’ to the sys-
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Down and Out in Paris and London
tem), but they all washed their faces and feet, and the horrid
greasy little clouts known as toe-rags which they bind round
their toes. Fresh water was only allowed for men who were
having a complete bath, so many men had to bathe in water
where others had washed their feet. The porter shoved us to
and fro, giving the rough side of his tongue when anyone
wasted time. When my turn came for the bath, I asked if I
might swill out the tub, which was streaked with dirt, be-
fore using it. He answered simply, ‘Shut yer—mouth and get
on with yer bath!’ That set the social tone of the place, and I
did not speak again.
When we had finished bathing, the porter tied our clothes
in bundles and gave us workhouse shirts—grey cotton
things of doubtful cleanliness, like abbreviated nightgowns.
We were sent along to the cells at once, and presently the
porter and the Tramp Major brought our supper across
from the workhouse. Each man’s ration was a half-pound
wedge of bread smeared with margarine, and a pint of bitter
sugarless cocoa in a tin billy. Sitting on the floor we wolfed
this in five minutes, and at about seven o’clock the cell doors
were locked on the outside, to remain locked till eight in the
morning.
Each man was allowed to sleep with his mate, the cells
being intended to hold two men apiece. I had no mate, and
was put in with another solitary man, a thin scrubby-faced
fellow with a slight squint. The cell measured eight feet by
five by eight high, was made of stone, and had a tiny barred
window high up in the wall and a spyhole in the door, just
like a cell in a prison. In it were six blankets, a chamber-pot,
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a hot water pipe, and nothing else whatever. I looked round
the cell with a vague feeling that there was something miss-
ing. Then, with a shock of surprise, I realized what it was,
and exclaimed:
‘But I say, damn it, where are the beds?’
‘BEDS?’ said the other man, surprised. ‘There aren’t no
beds! What yer expect? This is one of them spikes where you
sleeps on the floor. Christ! Ain’t you got used to that yet?’
It appeared that no beds was quite a normal condition in
the spike. We rolled up our coats and put them against the
hot-water pipe, and made ourselves as comfortable as we
could. It grew foully stufiy, but it was not warm enough to
allow of our putting all the blankets underneath, so that we
could only use one to soften the floor. We lay a foot apart,
breathing into one another’s face, with our naked limbs
constantly touching, and rolling against one another when-
ever we fell asleep. One fidgeted from side to side, but it did
not do much good; whichever way one turned there would
be first a dull numb feeling, then a sharp ache as the hard-
ness of the floor wore through the blanket. One could sleep,
but not for more than ten minutes on end.
About midnight the other man began making homo-
sexual attempts upon me —a nasty experience in a locked,
pitch-dark cell. He was a feeble creature and I could man-
age him easily, but of course it was impossible to go to sleep
again. For the rest of the night we stayed awake, smoking
and talking. The man told me the story of his life—he was
a fitter, out of work for three years. He said that his wife
had promptly deserted him when he lost his job, and he had
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Down and Out in Paris and London
been so long away from women that he had almost forgot-
ten what they were like. Homosexuality is general among
tramps of long standing, he said.
At eight the porter came along the passage unlocking the
doors and shouting ‘All out!’ The doors opened, letting out
a stale, fetid stink. At once the passage was full of squallid,
grey-shirted figures, each chamber-pot in hand, scrambling
for the bathroom. It appeared that in the morning only one
tub of water was allowed for the lot of us, and when I arrived
twenty tramps had already washed their faces; I took one
glance at the black scum floating on the water, and went un-
washed. After this we were given a breakfast identical with
the previous night’s supper, our clothes were returned to us,
and we were ordered out into the yard to work. The work
was peeling potatoes for the pauper’s dinner, but it was a
mere formality, to keep us occupied until the doctor came
to inspect us. Most of the tramps frankly idled. The doctor
turned up at about ten o’clock and we were told to go back to
our cells, strip and wait in the passage for the inspection.
Naked, and shivering, we lined up in the passage. You
cannot conceive what ruinous, degenerate curs we looked,
standing there in the merciless morning light. A tramp’s
clothes are bad, but they conceal far worse things; to see
him as he really is, unmitigated, you must see him naked.
Flat feet, pot bellies, hollow chests, sagging muscles—every
kind of physical rottenness was there. Nearly everyone was
under-nourished, and some clearly diseased; two men were
wearing trusses, and as for the old mummy-like creature of
seventy-five, one wondered how he could possibly make his
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daily march. Looking at our faces, unshaven and creased
from the sleepless night, you would have thought that all of
us were recovering from a week on the drink.
The inspection was designed merely to detect smallpox,
and took no notice of our general condition. A young medi-
cal student, smoking a cigarette, walked rapidly along the
line glancing us up and down, and not inquiring whether
any man was well or ill. When my cell companion stripped
I saw that his chest was covered with a red rash, and, having
spent the night a few inches away from him, I fell into a pan-
ic about smallpox. The doctor, however, examined the rash
and said that it was due merely to under-nourishment.
After the inspection we dressed and were sent into the
yard, where the porter called our names over, gave us back
any possessions we had left at the office, and distributed
meal tickets. These were worth sixpence each, and were di-
rected to coffee-shops on the route we had named the night
before. It was interesting to see that quite a number of the
tramps could not read, and had to apply to myself and other
‘scholards’ to decipher their tickets.
The gates were opened, and we dispersed immediately.
How sweet the air does smell—even the air of a back street
in the suburbs—after the shut-in, subfaecal stench of the
spike! I had a mate now, for while we were peeling potatoes I
had made friends with an Irish tramp named Paddy Jaques,
a melancholy pale man who seemed clean and decent. He
was going to Edbury spike, and suggested that we should go
together. We set out, getting there at three in the afternoon.
It was a twelve-mile walk, but we made it fourteen by get-