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Authors: George Orwell
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except perhaps a penny in the hat. People won’t give you
anything if they see you got a bob or two already.’
Bozo had the deepest contempt for the other screevers
on the Embankment. He called them ‘the salmon platers’.
At that time there was a screever almost every twenty-five
yards along the Embankment—twenty-five yards being the
recognized minimum between pitches. Bozo contemptu-
ously pointed out an old white-bearded screever fifty yards
away.
‘You see that silly old fool? He’s bin doing the same pic-
ture every day for ten years. ‘A faithful friend’ he calls it. It’s
of a dog pulling a child out of the water. The silly old bas-
tard can’t draw any better than a child of ten. He’s learned
just that one picture by rule of thumb, like you leam to put
a puzzle together. There’s a lot of that sort about here. They
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Down and Out in Paris and London
come pinching my ideas sometimes; but I don’t care; the
silly—s can’t think of anything for themselves, so I’m al-
ways ahead of them. The whole thing with cartoons is being
up to date. Once a child got its head stuck in the railings of
Chelsea Bridge. Well, I heard about it, and my cartoon was
on the pavement before they’d got the child’s head out of the
railings. Prompt, I am.’
Bozo seemed an interesting man, and I was anxious to
see more of him. That evening I went down to the Embank-
ment to meet him, as he had arranged to take Paddy and
myself to a lodging-house south of the river. Bozo washed
his pictures off the pavement and counted his takings—it
was about sixteen shillings, of which he said twelve or thir-
teen would be profit. We walked down into Lambeth. Bozo
limped slowly, with a queer crablike gait, half sideways,
dragging his smashed foot behind him. He carried a stick
in each hand and slung his box of colours over his shoulder.
As we were crossing the bridge he stopped in one of the al-
coves to rest. He fell silent for a minute or two, and to my
surprise I saw that he was looking at the stars. He touched
my arm and pointed to the sky with his stick.
‘Say, will you look at Aldebaran! Look at the colour. Like
a—great blood orange!’
From the way he spoke he might have been an art critic
in a picture gallery. I was astonished. I confessed that I did
not know which Aldebaran was—indeed, I had never even
noticed that the stars were of different colours. Bozo began
to give me some elementary hints on astronomy, pointing
out-the chief constellations. He seemed concerned at my ig-
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norance. I said to him, surprised:
‘You seem to know a lot about stars.’
‘Not a great lot. I know a bit, though. I got two letters
from the Astronomer Royal thanking me for writing about
meteors. Now and again I go out at night and watch for me-
teors. The stars are a free show; it don’t cost anything to use
your eyes.’
‘What a good idea! I should never have thought of it.’
‘Well, you got to take an interest in something. It don’t
follow that because a man’s on the road he can’t think of
anything but tea-and-two-slices.’
‘But isn’t it very hard to take an interest in things—things
like stars—living this life?’
‘Screeving, you mean? Not necessarily. It don’t need turn
you into a bloody rabbit—that is, not if you set your mind
to it.’
‘It seems to have that effect on most people.’
‘Of course. Look at Paddy—a tea-swilling old mooch-
er, only fit to scrounge for fag-ends. That’s the way most of
them go. I despise them. But you don’t NEED to get like
that. If you’ve got any education, it don’t matter to you if
you’re on the road for the rest of your life.’
‘Well, I’ve found just the contrary,’ I said. ‘It seems to me
that when you take a man’s money away he’s fit for nothing
from that moment.’
‘No, not necessarily. If you set yourself to it, you can live
the same life, rich or poor. You can still keep on with your
books and your ideas. You just got to say to yourself, ‘I’m a
free man in HERE‘ —he tapped his forehead—‘and you’re
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Down and Out in Paris and London
all right.’
Bozo talked further in the same strain, and I listened
with attention. He seemed a very unusual screever, and he
was, moreover, the first person I had heard maintain that
poverty did not matter. I saw a good deal of him during the
next few days, for several times it rained and he could not
work. He told me the history of his life, and it was a curi-
ous one.
The son of a bankrupt bookseller, he had gone to work
as a house-painter at eighteen, and then served three years
in France and India during the war. After the war he had
found a house-painting job in Paris, and had stayed there
several years. France suited him better than England (he
despised the English), and he had been doing well in Paris,
saving money, and engaged to a French girl. One day the
girl was crushed to death under the wheels of an omnibus.
Bozo went on the drink for a week, and then returned to
work, rather shaky; the same morning he fell from a stage
on which he was working, forty feet on to the pavement, and
smashed his right foot to pulp. For some reason he received
only sixty pounds compensation. He returned to England,
spent his money in looking for jobs, tried hawking books in
Middlesex Street market, then tried selling toys from a tray,
and finally settled down as a screever. He had lived hand to
mouth ever since, half starved throughout the winter, and
often sleeping in the spike or on the Embankment.
When I knew him he owned nothing but the clothes he
stood up in, and his drawing materials and a few books. The
clothes were the usual beggar’s rags, but he wore a collar
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and tie, of which he was rather proud. The collar, a year or
more old, was constantly ‘going’ round the neck, and Bozo
used to patch it with bits cut from the tail of his shirt so that
the shirt had scarcely any tail left. His damaged leg was get-
ting worse and would probably have to be amputated, and
his knees, from kneeling on the stones, had pads of skin on
them as thick as boot-soles. There was, clearly, no future for
him but beggary and a death in the workhouse.
With all this, he had neither fear, nor regret, nor shame,
nor self-pity. He had faced his position, and made a phi-
losophy for himself. Being a beggar, he said, was not his
fault, and he refused either to have any compunction about
it or to let it trouble him. He was the enemy of society, and
quite ready to take to crime if he saw a good opportuni-
ty. He refused on principle to be thrifty. In the summer he
saved nothing, spending his surplus earnings on drink, as
he did not care about women. If he was penniless when win-
ter came on, then society must look after him. He was ready
to extract every penny he could from charity, provided that
he was not expected to say thank you for it. He avoided reli-
gious charities, however, for he said it stuck in his throat to
sing hymns for buns. He had various other points of hon-
our; for instance, it was his boast that never in his life, even
when starving, had he picked up a cigarette end. He consid-
ered himself in a class above the ordinary run of beggars,
who, he said, were an abject lot, without even the decency
to be ungrateful.
He spoke French passably, and had read some of Zola’s
novels, all Shakespeare’s plays, GULLIVER’S TRAVELS,
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Down and Out in Paris and London
and a number of essays. He could describe his adventures
in words that one remembered. For instance, speaking of
funerals, he said to me:
‘Have you-ever seen a corpse burned? I have, in India.
They put the old chap on the fire, and the next moment I
almost jumped out of my skin, because he’d started kick-
ing. It was only his muscles contracting in the heat—still, it
give me a turn. Well, he wriggled about for a bit like a kipper
on hot coals, and then his belly blew up and went off with
a bang you could have heard fifty yards away. It fair put me
against cremation.’
Or, again, apropos of his accident:
‘The doctor says to me, ‘You fell on one foot, my man.
And bloody lucky for you you didn’t fall on both feet,’ he
says. ‘Because if you had of fallen on both feet you’d have
shut up like a bloody concertina, and your thigh bones’d be
sticking out of your ears!‘
Clearly the phrase was not the doctor’s but Bozo’s own.
He had a gift for phrases. He had managed to keep his brain
intact and alert, and so nothing could make him succumb
to poverty. He might be ragged and cold, or even starving,
but so long as he could read, think, and watch for meteors,
he was, as he said, free in his own mind.
He was an embittered atheist (the sort of atheist who does
not so much disbelieve in God as personally dislike Him),
and took a sort of pleasure in thinking that human affairs
would never improve. Sometimes, he said, when sleeping on
the Embankment, it had consoled him to look up at Mars
or Jupiter and think that there were probably Embankment
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sleepers there. He had a curious theory about this. Life on
earth, he said, is harsh because the planet is poor in the ne-
cessities of existence. Mars, with its cold climate and scanty
water, must be far poorer, and life correspondingly harsher.
Whereas on earth you are merely imprisoned for steal-
ing sixpence, on Mars you are probably boiled alive. This
thought cheered Bozo, I do not know why. He was a very
exceptional man.
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Down and Out in Paris and London
XXXI
The charge at Bozo’s lodging-house was ninepence a
night. It was a large, crowded place, with accommoda-
tion for five hundred men, and a well-known rendezvous of
tramps, beggars, and petty criminals. All races, even black
and white, mixed in it on terms of equality. There were In-
dians there, and when I spoke to one of them in bad Urdu
he addressed me as ‘turn’—a thing to make one shudder, if
it had been in India. We had got below the range of colour
prejudice. One had glimpses of curious lives. Old ‘Grandpa’,
a tramp of seventy who made his living, or a great part of it,
by collecting cigarette ends and selling the tobacco at three-
pence an ounce. ‘The Doctor’—he was a real doctor, who
had been struck off the register for some offence, and be-
sides selling newspapers gave medical advice at a few pence
a time. A little Chittagonian lascar, barefoot and starving,
who had deserted his ship and wandered for days through
London, so vague and helpless that he did not even know
the name of the city he was in—he thought it was Liverpool,
until I told him. A begging-letter writer, a friend of Bozo’s,
who wrote pathetic appeals for aid to pay for his wife’s fu-
neral, and, when a letter had taken effect, blew himself out
with huge solitary gorges of bread and margarine. He was a
nasty, hyena-like creature. I talked to him and found that,
like most swindlers, he believed a great part of his own lies.
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The lodging-house was an Alsatia for types like these.
While I was with Bozo he taught me something about the
technique of London begging. There is more in it than one
might suppose. Beggars vary greatly, and there is a sharp
social line between those who merely cadge and those who
attempt to give some value for money. The amounts that one
can earn by the different ‘gags’ also vary. The stories in the
Sunday papers about beggars who die with two thousand
pounds sewn into their trousers are, of course, lies; but the
better-class beggars do have runs of luck, when they earn a
living wage for weeks at a time. The most prosperous beg-
gars are street acrobats and street photographers. On a good
pitch—a theatre queue, for instance—a street acrobat will
often earn five pounds a week. Street photographers can
earn about the same, but they are dependent on fine weath-
er. They have a cunning dodge to stimulate trade. When
they see a likely victim approaching one of them runs be-
hind the camera and pretends to take a photograph. Then as
the victim reaches them, they exclaim:
‘There y’are, sir, took yer photo lovely. That’ll be a bob.’
‘But I never asked you to take it,’ protests the victim.
‘What, you didn’t want it took? Why, we thought you sig-
nalled with your ‘and. Well, there’s a plate wasted! That’s
cost us sixpence, that ‘as.’
At this the victim usually takes pity and says he will have
the photo after all. The photographers examine the plate
and say that it is spoiled, and that they will take a fresh one