Read Down and Out in Paris and London Online
Authors: George Orwell
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meals— meals are the worst difficulty of all. Every day at
meal-times you go out, ostensibly to a restaurant, and loaf
an hour in the Luxembourg Gardens, watching the pigeons.
Afterwards you smuggle your food home in your pockets.
Your food is bread and margarine, or bread and wine, and
even the nature of the food is governed by lies. You have to
buy rye bread instead of household bread, because the rye
loaves, though dearer, are round and can be smuggled in
your pockets. This wastes you a franc a day. Sometimes, to
keep up appearances, you have to spend sixty centimes on
a drink, and go correspondingly short of food. Your linen
gets filthy, and you run out of soap and razor-blades. Your
hair wants cutting, and you try to cut it yourself, with such
fearful results that you have to go to the barber after all, and
spend the equivalent of a day’s food. All day you arc telling
lies, and expensive lies.
You discover the extreme precariousness of your six
francs a day. Mean disasters happen and rob you of food.
You have spent your last eighty centimes on half a litre of
milk, and are boiling it over the spirit lamp. While it boils a
bug runs down your forearm; you give the bug a flick with
your nail, and it falls, plop! straight into the milk. There is
nothing for it but to throw the milk away and go foodless.
You go to the baker’s to buy a pound of bread, and you
wait while the girl cuts a pound for another customer. She
is clumsy, and cuts more than a pound. ‘PARDON, MON-
SIEUR,’ she says, ‘I suppose you don’t mind paying two
sous extra?’ Bread is a franc a pound, and you have exactly
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Down and Out in Paris and London
a franc. When you think that you too might be asked to pay
two sous extra, and would have to confess that you could
not, you bolt in panic. It is hours before you dare venture
into a baker’s shop again.
You go to the greengrocer’s to spend a franc on a kilo-
gram of potatoes. But one of the pieces that make up the
franc is a Belgian piece, and the shopman refuses it. You
slink out of the shop, and can never go there again.
You have strayed into a respectable quarter, and you see a
prosperous friend coming. To avoid him you dodge into the
nearest cafe. Once in the cafe you must buy something, so
you spend your last fifty centimes on a glass of black coffee
with a dead fly in it. Once could multiply these disasters by
the hundred. They are part of the process of being hard up.
You discover what it is like to be hungry. With bread and
margarine in your belly, you go out and look into the shop
windows. Everywhere there is food insulting you in huge,
wasteful piles; whole dead pigs, baskets of hot loaves, great
yellow blocks of butter, strings of sausages, mountains of
potatoes, vast Gruyere cheeses like grindstones. A snivel-
ling self-pity comes over you at the sight of so much food.
You plan to grab a loaf and run, swallowing it before they
catch you; and you refrain, from pure funk.
You discover the boredom which is inseparable from
poverty; the times when you have nothing to do and, be-
ing underfed, can interest yourself in nothing. For half a
day at a time you lie on your bed, feeling like the JEUNE
SQUELETTE in Baudelaire’s poem. Only food could rouse
you. You discover that a man who has gone even a week on
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bread and margarine is not a man any longer, only a belly
with a few accessory organs.
This—one could describe it further, but it is all in the
same style —is life on six francs a day. Thousands of people
in Paris live it— struggling artists and students, prostitutes
when their luck is out, out-of-work people of all kinds. It is
the suburbs, as it were, of poverty.
I continued in this style for about three weeks. The forty-
seven francs were soon gone, and I had to do what I could
on thirty-six francs a week from the English lessons. Being
inexperienced, I handled the money badly, and sometimes
I was a day without food. When this happened I used to
sell a few of my clothes, smuggling them out of the hotel in
small packets and taking them to a secondhand shop in the
rue de la Montagne St Genevieve. The shopman was a red-
haired Jew, an extraordinary disagreeable man, who used
to fall into furious rages at the sight of a client. From his
manner one would have supposed that we had done him
some injury by coming to him. ‘MERDE!’ he used to shout,
‘YOU here again? What do you think this is? A soup kitch-
en?’ And he paid incredibly low prices. For a hat which I had
bought for twenty-five shillings and scarcely worn he gave
five francs; for a good pair of shoes, five francs; for shirts,
a franc each. He always preferred to exchange rather than
buy, and he had a trick of thrusting some useless article into
one’s hand and then pretending that one had accepted it.
Once I saw him take a good overcoat from an old woman,
put two white billiard-balls into her hand, and then push
her rapidly out of the shop before she could protest. It would
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Down and Out in Paris and London
have been a pleasure to flatten the Jew’s nose, if only one
could have afforded it.
These three weeks were squalid and uncomfortable, and
evidently there was worse coming, for my rent would be due
before long. Nevertheless, things were not a quarter as bad
as I had expected. For, when you are approaching poverty,
you make one discovery which outweighs some of the oth-
ers. You discover boredom and mean complications and the
beginnings of hunger, but you also discover the great re-
deeming feature of poverty: the fact that it annihilates the
future. Within certain limits, it is actually true that the less
money you have, the less you worry. When you have a hun-
dred francs in the world you are liable to the most craven
panics. When you have only three francs you are quite in-
different; for three francs will feed you till tomorrow, and
you cannot think further than that. You are bored, but you
are not afraid. You think vaguely, ‘I shall be starving in a
day or two—shocking, isn’t it?’ And then the mind wanders
to other topics. A bread and margarine diet does, to some
extent, provide its own anodyne.
And there is another feeling that is a great consolation
in poverty. I believe everyone who has been hard up has ex-
perienced it. It is a feeling of relief, almost of pleasure, at
knowing yourself at last genuinely down and out. You have
talked so often of going to the dogs—and well, here are the
dogs, and you have reached them, and you can stand it. It
takes off a lot of anxiety,
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IV
One day my English lessons ceased abruptly. The weath-
er was getting hot and one of my pupils, feeling too
lazy to go on with his lessons, dismissed me. The other
disappeared from his lodgings without notice, owing me
twelve francs. I was left with only thirty centimes and no
tobacco. For a day and a half I had nothing to cat or smoke,
and then, too hungry to put it off any longer, I packed my
remaining clothes into my suitcase and took them to the
pawnshop. This put an end to all pretence of being in funds,
for I could not take my clothes out of the hotel without ask-
ing Madame F.’s leave. I remember, however, how surprised
she was at my asking her instead of removing the clothes
on the sly, shooting the moon being a common trick in our
quarter.
It was the first time that I had been in a French pawn-
shop. One went through grandiose stone portals (marked,
of course, ‘LIBERTE, EGATITE, FRATERNITE’ they write
that even over the police stations in France) into a large,
bare room like a school classroom, with a counter and rows
of benches. Forty or fifty people were waiting. One handed
one’s pledge over the counter and sat down. Presently, when
the clerk had assessed its value he would call out, ‘NUME-
RO such and such, will you take fifty francs?’ Sometimes it
was only fifteen francs, or ten, or five—whatever it was, the
Down and Out in Paris and London
whole room knew it. As I Came in the clerk called with an
air of offence, ‘NUMERO 83—here!’ and gave a little whis-
tle and a beckon, as though calling a dog. NUMERO 83
stepped to the counter; he was an old bearded man, with an
overcoat buttoned up at the neck and frayed trouser-ends.
Without a word the clerk shot the bundle across the counter
—evidently it was worth nothing. It fell to the ground and
came open, displaying four pairs of men’s woollen pants.
No one could help laughing. Poor NUMERO 83 gathered
up his pants and shambled out, muttering to himself.
The clothes I was pawning, together with the suitcase,
had cost over twenty pounds, and were in good condition.
I thought they must be worth ten pounds, and a quarter
of this (one expects quarter value at a pawnshop) was two
hundred and fifty or three hundred francs. I waited without
anxiety, expecting two hundred francs at the worst.
At last the clerk called my number: ‘NUMERO 97!’
‘Yes,’ I said, standing up.
‘Seventy francs?’
Seventy francs for ten pounds’ worth of clothes! But it
was no use arguing; I had seen someone else attempt to ar-
gue, and the clerk had instantly refused the pledge. I took
the money and the pawnticket and walked out. I had now
no clothes except what I stood up in—the coat badly out
at the elbow—an overcoat, moderately pawnable, and one
spare shirt. Afterwards, when it was too late, I learned that
it was wiser to go to a pawnshop in the afternoon. The clerks
are French, and, like most French people, are in a bad tem-
per till they have eaten their lunch.
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When I got home, Madame F. was sweeping the BISTRO
floor. She came up the steps to meet me. I could see in her
eye that she was uneasy about my rent.
‘Well,’ she said, ‘what did you get for your clothes? Not
much, eh?’
‘Two hundred francs,’ I said promptly.
‘TIENS!’ she said, surprised; ‘well, THAT’S not bad.
How expensive those English clothes must be!’
The lie saved a lot of trouble, and, strangely enough, it
came true. A few days later I did receive exactly two hun-
dred francs due to me for a newspaper article, and, though
it hurt to do it, I at once paid every penny of it in rent. So,
though I came near to starving in the following weeks, I
was hardly ever without a roof.
It was now absolutely necessary to find work, and I re-
membered a friend of mine, a Russian waiter named Boris,
who might be able to help me. I had first met him in the
public ward of a hospital, where he was being treated for ar-
thritis in the left leg. He had told me to come to him if I were
ever in difficulties.
I must say something about Boris, for he was a curi-
ous character and my close friend for a long time. He was
a big, soldierly man of about thirty-five, and had been good
looking, but since his illness he had grown immensely fat
from lying in bed. Like most Russian refugees, he had had
an adventurous life. His parents, killed in the Revolution,
had been rich people, and he had served through the war
in the Second Siberian Rifles, which, according to him,
was the best regiment in the Russian Army. After the war
Down and Out in Paris and London
he had first worked in a brush factory, then as a porter at
Les Halles, then had become a dishwasher, and had finally
worked his way up to be a waiter. When he fell ill he was at
the Hotel Scribe, and taking a hundred francs a day in tips.
His ambition was to become a MAITRE D’HOTEL, save
fifty thousand francs, and set up a small, select restaurant
on the Right Bank.
Boris always talked of the war as the happiest time of
his life. War and soldiering were his passion; he had read
innumerable books of strategy and military history, and
could tell you all about the theories of Napoleon, Kutuzof,
Clausewitz, Moltke and Foch. Anything to do with soldiers
pleased him. His favourite cafe was the Gloserie des Lilas in
Montparnasse, simply because the statue of Marshal Ney
stands outside it. Later on, Boris and I sometimes went to
the rue du Commerce together. If we went by Metro, Boris
always got out at Cambronne station instead of Commerce,
though Commerce was nearer; he liked the association with
General Cambronne, who was called on to surrender at Wa-
terloo, and answered simply, ‘MERDE!’
The only things left to Boris by the Revolution were his
medals and some photographs of his old regiment; he had
kept these when everything else went to the pawnshop. Al-