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Clotelle

a tale of the Southern States
  
  
  

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CHAPTER XXIX. A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND.
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29. CHAPTER XXIX.
A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND.

The rain was falling on the dirty pavements of Liverpool as Jerome
left the vessel after her arrival. Passing the custom-house, he took a
cab, and proceeded to Brown's Hotel, Clayton Square.

Finding no employment in Liverpool, Jerome determined to go into the
interior and seek for work. He, therefore, called for his bill, and made
ready for his departure. Although but four days at the Albion, he found
the hotel charges larger than he expected; but a stranger generally
counts on being “fleeced” in travelling through the Old World, and especially
in Great Britain. After paying his bill, he was about leaving
the room, when one of the servants presented himself with a low bow,
and said,—

“Something for the waiter, sir?”

“I thought I had paid my bill,” replied the man, somewhat surprised
at this polite dun.

“I am the waiter, sir, and gets only what strangers see fit to give
me.”

Taking from his pocket his nearly empty purse, Jerome handed the
man a half-crown; but he had hardly restored it to his pocket, before
his eye fell on another man in the waiting costume.

“What do you want?” he asked.

“Whatever your honor sees fit to give me, sir. I am the tother
waiter.”

The purse was again taken from the pocket, and another half-crown
handed out. Stepping out into the hall, he saw standing there a good-looking
woman, in a white apron, who made a very pretty courtesy.

“What's your business?” he inquired.

“I am the chambermaid, sir, and looks after the gentlemen's beds.”

Out came the purse again, and was relieved of another half-crown;
whereupon another girl, with a fascinating smile, took the place of the
one who had just received her fee.

“What do you want?” demanded the now half-angry Jerome.

“Please, sir, I am the tother chambermaid.”


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Finding it easier to give shillings than half-crowns, Jerome handed the
woman a shilling, and again restored his purse to his pocket, glad that
another woman was not to be seen.

Scarcely had he commenced congratulating himself, however, before
three men made their appearance, one after another.

“What have you done for me?” he asked of the first.

“I am the boots, sir.”

The purse came out once more, and a shilling was deposited in the
servant's hand.

“What do I owe you?” he inquired of the second.

“I took your honor's letter to the post, yesterday, sir.”

Another shilling left the purse.

“In the name of the Lord, what am I indebted to you for?” demanded
Jerome, now entirely out of patience, turning to the last of the trio.

“I told yer vership vot time it vas, this morning.”

“Well!” exclaimed the indignant man, “ask here what o'clock it is,
and you have got to pay for it.”

He paid this last demand with a sixpence, regretting that he had not
commenced with sixpences instead of half-crowns.

Having cleared off all demands in the house, he started for the railway
station; but had scarcely reached the street, before he was accosted
by an old man with a broom in his hand, who, with an exceedingly low
bow, said,—

“I is here, yer lordship.”

“I did not send for you; what is your business?” demanded Jerome.

“I is the man what opened your lordship's cab-door, when your lordship
came to the house on Monday last, and I know your honor won't
allow a poor man to starve.”

Putting a sixpence in the old man's hand, Jerome once more started
for the depot. Having obtained letters of introduction to persons in
Manchester, he found no difficulty in getting a situation in a large manufacturing
house there. Although the salary was small, yet the situation
was a much better one than he had hoped to obtain. His compensation
as out-door clerk enabled him to employ a man to teach him at night,
and, by continued study and attention to business, he was soon promoted.

After three years in his new home, Jerome was placed in a still higher
position, where his aalary amounted to fifteen hundred dollars a year.
The drinking, smoking, and other expensive habits, which the clerks
usually indulged in, he carefully avoided.

Being fond of poetry, he turned his attention to literature. Johuson's
“Lives of the Poets,” the writings of Dryden, Addison, Pope, Clarendon,


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and other authors of celebrity, he read with attention. The knowledge
which he thus picked up during his leisure hours gave him a
great advantage over the other clerks, and caused his employers to respect
him far more than any other in their establishment. So eager was
he to improve the time that he determined to see how much he could
read during the unemployed time of night and morning, and his success
was beyond his expectations.