London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Statement of Two Poultry Hawkers.
brothers, both good-looking and wellspoken young men— I might characterise as handsome—gave me the following account. I found them unwilling to speak of their youth, and did not press them. I was afterwards informed that their parents died within the same month, and that the family was taken into the workhouse; but the boys left it in a little time, and before they could benefit by any schooling. Neither of them could read or write. They left, I believe, with some little sum in hand, to "start theirselves." An intelligent costermonger, who was with me when I saw the brothers, told me that "a costermonger would rather be thought to have come out of prison than out of a workhouse," for his "mates" would say, if they heard he had been locked up, "O, he's only been quodded for pitching into a crusher." The brothers wore clean smock country frocks over their dress, and made a liberal display of their clean, | |||||||||||||||||||||
126 | but coarse, shirts. It was on a Monday that I saw them. What brother said, the other confirmed: so I use the plural "we." | ||||||||||||||||||||
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From the returns before given, the street-sale of poaltry amounts yearly to
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