London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of the Street-Sellers of account-Books.
THE sale of account-books is in the hands of about the same class of street-sellers as the stationery, but man in the trade thought the regular hands were more trusted, if anything, than street-stationers. "People, you see," he said, "won't buy their 'accounts' of they won't have them of any but respectable people." The books sold are bought at the dozen, or a piece, up to the dozen, or , or a piece. It is rarely, however, that the street account-bookseller gives , and very rarely that he gives as much as for his account-books. His principal sale is of the smaller "waste," or "day-books," kept by the petty traders; the average price of these being The principal purchasers are the chandlers, butchers, &c., in the quieter streets, and more especially "a little way out of town, where there ain't so many cheap shops." A man, now a street-stationer, with a "fixed pitch," had carried on the account-book trade until an asthmatic affliction compelled him to relinquish it, as the walking became impossible to him, and he told me that the street-trade was nothing to what it once was. "People," he said, "aren't so well off, I think, sir; and they'll buy half a quire of outside foolscap, or outside post, for from to , and stitch it together, and rule it, and make a book of it. Rich tradesmen do that, sir. I bought of a stastioner some years back, and he told me that he was a relation of a rich grocer, and had befriended him in his (the grocer's) youth, but he wouldn't buy account-books, for he said, the make-shift books that his shopman stitched together for him opened so much easier. People never want a good excuse for acting shabby." | |
There are now, I am informed, men selling account-books daily, which they carry in a covered basket, or in a waterproof bag, or, in fine weather, under the arm. Some of these street-sellers are not itinerant when there is a congregation of people for business, or indeed for any purpose; at other times they "keep moving." The fixed localities are, on market days, at and : and to Hungerford-market, an old man, unable to "travel," resorts daily. The chief trade, however, is in carrying, or hawking these accountbooks from door to door. A man, "having a connection," does best "on a round;" if he be known, he is not distrusted, and sells as cheap, or rather cheaper, than the shop-keepers. | |
The account-book sellers (with connections) may clear a day each, taking, for the realisation of such profit, per diem. Thus will be taken by these streetsellers in the course of a year. The capital required to start is, stock-money, ; basket, waterproof bag, ; in all. | |