London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of the Street "Pinners-up," or Wall Song-Sellers.
THESE street-traders, when I gave an account of them in the winter of , were not in number; they are now, I learn, about . informant counted , and thought "that was nearly all." | |
I have, in my account of street song-sellers, described the character of the class of pinnersup. Among the best-accustomed stands are those in Tottenham-court Road, the New-road, the City-road, near the Vinegar-works, the Westminster-road, and in , near the Eastern Counties Station. of the bestknown of the pinners--up was a stout old man, wearing a great-coat in all weathers, who "pinned-up" in an alley leading from Whitefriars-street to the Temple, but now thrown into an open street. He had old books for sale on a stall, in addition to his ballads, and every morning was seen reading the newspaper, borrowed from a neighbouring public-house which he "used," for he was a keen politician. "He would quarrel with any ," said a person who then resided in the neighbourhood—an account confirmed to me at the public-house in question —"mostly about politics, or about the books and songs he sold. Why, sir, I've talked to him many a time, and have stood looking through his books; and if a person came up and said, 'Oh, Burn's Works, ; I can't understand him,'—then the old boy would abuse him for a fool! Suppose another came and said—for I've noticed it myself—'Ah! Burns—he was a poet!' that didn't pass; for the jolly old pinner--up would say, 'Well, now, I don't know about that.' In my opinion, he cared nothing about this side or that—this notion or the opposite—but he liked to " The old man was carried off in the prevalence of the cholera in . | |
At the period I have specified, I received the following statement from a man who at that time pinned--up by Harewood-place, Oxfordstreet: | |
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Generally, these dealers know little of the songs they sell,—taking the printer's word, when they purchase, as to "what was going." The most popular comic songs (among this class I heard the word used far more frequently than ) are not sold so abundantly as others,—because, I was told, boys soon picked up by heart, hearing them so often, and so did not buy them. Neither was there a great demand for nigger songs, nor for "flash ditties," but for such productions as "A Life on the Ocean Wave," "I'm Afloat," "There's a Good Time coming," "Farewell to the Mountain," &c., &c. -fourths of the customers of these traders, man assured me, were boys. | |
Indecent songs are not sold by the pinnersup. man of whom I made inquiries was quite indignant that I should even think it necessary to ask such questions. The "songs" cost the pinners-up, generally, a dozen, sometimes , and sometimes less than , according to the quality of the paper and the demand. | |
On fine summer days the wall song-sellers take on an average. On short wintry days they may not take half so much, and on very foggy or rainy days they take nothing at all. Their ballads are of the same sort as those I proceed to describe under especial heads, and I have shown what are of readiest sale. Reckoning that each pinner-up, in number, now takes weekly ( being the profit), we find that guineas are yearly expended in London streets, in the ballads of the pinners-up. | |