The Way of All Flesh Samuel Butler (book club recommendations .TXT) đ
- Author: Samuel Butler
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He said he proposed at once taking an unfurnished top back attic in as quiet a house as he could find, say at three or four shillings a week, and looking out for work as a tailor. I did not think it much mattered what he began with, for I felt pretty sure he would ere long find his way to something that suited him, if he could get a start with anything at all. The difficulty was how to get him started. It was not enough that he should be able to cut out and make clothesâ âthat he should have the organs, so to speak, of a tailor; he must be put into a tailorâs shop and guided for a little while by someone who knew how and where to help him.
The rest of the day he spent in looking for a room, which he soon found, and in familiarising himself with liberty. In the evening I took him to the Olympic, where Robson was then acting in a burlesque on Macbeth, Mrs. Keeley, if I remember rightly, taking the part of Lady Macbeth. In the scene before the murder, Macbeth had said he could not kill Duncan when he saw his boots upon the landing. Lady Macbeth put a stop to her husbandâs hesitation by whipping him up under her arm, and carrying him off the stage, kicking and screaming. Ernest laughed till he cried. âWhat rot Shakespeare is after this,â he exclaimed, involuntarily. I remembered his essay on the Greek tragedians, and was more I Ă©pris with him than ever.
Next day he set about looking for employment, and I did not see him till about five oâclock, when he came and said that he had had no success. The same thing happened the next day and the day after that. Wherever he went he was invariably refused and often ordered point blank out of the shop; I could see by the expression of his face, though he said nothing, that he was getting frightened, and began to think I should have to come to the rescue. He said he had made a great many enquiries and had always been told the same story. He found that it was easy to keep on in an old line, but very hard to strike out into a new one.
He talked to the fishmonger in Leather Lane, where he went to buy a bloater for his tea, casually as though from curiosity and without any interested motive. âSell,â said the master of the shop, âWhy nobody wouldnât believe what can be sold by pennâorths and twopennâorths if you go the right way to work. Look at whelks, for instance. Last Saturday night me and my little Emma here, we sold ÂŁ7 worth of whelks between eight and half past eleven oâclockâ âand almost all in pennâorths and twopennâorthsâ âa few, hapâorths, but not many. It was the steam that did it. We kept a-boiling of âem hot and hot, and whenever the steam came strong up from the cellar on to the pavement, the people bought, but whenever the steam went down they left off buying; so we boiled them over and over again till they was all sold. Thatâs just where it is; if you know your business you can sell, if you donât youâll soon make a mess of it. Why, but for the steam, I should not have sold 10s. worth of whelks all the night through.â
This, and many another yarn of kindred substance which he heard from other people determined Ernest more than ever to stake on tailoring as the one trade about which he knew anything at all, nevertheless, here were three or four days gone by and employment seemed as far off as ever.
I now did what I ought to have done before, that is to say, I called on my own tailor whom I had dealt with for over a quarter of a century and asked his advice. He declared Ernestâs plan to be hopeless. âIf,â said Mr. Larkins, for this was my tailorâs name, âhe had begun at fourteen, it might have done, but no man of twenty-four could stand being turned to work into a workshop full of tailors; he would not get on with the men, nor the men with him; you could not expect him to be âhail fellow, well metâ with them, and you could not expect his fellow-workmen to like him if he was not. A man must have sunk low through drink or natural taste for low company, before he could get on with those who have had such a different training from his own.â
Mr. Larkins said a great deal more and wound up by taking me to see the place where his own men worked. âThis is a paradise,â he said, âcompared to most workshops. What gentleman could stand this air, think you, for a fortnight?â
I was glad enough to get out of the hot, fetid atmosphere in five minutes, and saw that there was no brick of Ernestâs prison to be loosened by going and working among tailors in a workshop.
Mr. Larkins wound up by saying that even if my protégé were a much better workman than he probably was, no master would give him employment, for fear of creating a bother among the men.
I left, feeling that I ought to have thought of all this myself, and was more than
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