London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of the Street-Sellers of Roulette Boxes.
IN my account of the street-trade in "China ornaments" I had occasion to mention a use to which a roulette box, or portable roulette table, was put. I need only repeat in this place that the box (usually of mahogany) contains a board, with numbered partitions, which is set spinning, by means of a central knob, on a pivot; the lid is then placed on the box, a pea is slipped through a hole in the lid, and on the number of the partition in which the pea is found deposited, when the motion has ceased, depends the result. The table, or board, is thus adapted for the determination of that mode of raising money, popular among costermongers and other street-folk, who in their very charities crave some excitement; I mean a "raffle;" or it may be used for play, by or more persons, the highest number "spun" determining the winner. These street-sold tables may still be put to another use: In the smaller sort, "going no higher than ," division is blank. Thus any may play against another, or several others spinning in turns, the "blank" being a chance in the "banker's" favour. Some of the tables, however, are numbered as high as , or as a seller of them described it, "single and double zero, bang; a French game." | |
This curious street-trade has been carried on for years, but with frequent interruptions, by man, who, until within these few weeks, was the sole trader in the article. There are now but selling roulette-boxes at all regularly. The long-established salesman wears mustachios, and has a good deal the look of a foreigner. During his years' experience he has sold, he calculates, roulette-boxes, at a profit of from to The prices (retail) are from to , at which high amount my informant once disposed of "a roulette" in the street. He has sold, however, more at than at all other rates together. The "shilling roulette" is about inches in diameter; the others proportionately larger. These wares are German made, bought at a swag-shop, and retailed at a profit of from to per cent. They are carried in a basket, being held for public examination in the vendor's hand. | |
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