But I did not get it, for there is always something wrong in the spike, and the peculiar shortcoming here, as I discovered immediately,
was the cold. May had begun, and in honour of the season – a little sacrifice to the gods of spring, perhaps – the authorities
had cut off the steam from the hot pipes. The cotton blankets were almost useless. One spent the night in turning from side
to side, falling asleep for ten minutes and waking half frozen, and watching for dawn.
As always happens in the spike, I had at last managed to fall comfortably asleep when it was time to get up. The Tramp Major
came marching down the passage with his heavy tread, unlocking the doors and yelling to us to show a leg. Promptly the passage
was full of squalid shirt-clad figures rushing for the bathroom, for there was only one tub full of water between us all in
the morning, and it was first come first served. When I arrived twenty tramps had already washed their faces. I gave one glance
at the black scum on top of the water, and decided to go dirty for the day.
We hurried into our clothes, and then went to the dining-room to bolt our breakfast. The bread was much worse than usual,
because the military-minded idiot of a Tramp Major had cut it into slices overnight, so that it was as hard as ship’s biscuit.
But we were glad of our tea after the cold, restless night. I do not know what tramps would do without tea, or rather the
stuff they miscall tea. It is their food, their medicine, their panacea for all evils. Without the half gallon or so of it
that they suck down a day, I truly believe they could not face existence.
After breakfast we had to undress again for the medical inspection, which is a precaution against smallpox. It was three quarters
of an hour before the doctor arrived, and one had time now to look about him and see what manner of men we were. It was an instructive sight. We stood shivering naked to the waist
in two long ranks in the passage. The filtered light, bluish and cold, lighted us up with unmerciful clarity. No one can imagine,
unless he has seen such a thing, what pot-bellied, degenerate curs we looked. Shock heads, hairy, crumpled faces, hollow chests,
flat feet, sagging muscles – every kind of malformation and physical rottenness were there. All were flabby and discoloured,
as all tramps are under their deceptive sunburn. Two or three figures seen there stay ineradicably in my mind. Old ‘Daddy’,
aged seventy-four, with his truss, and his red, watering eyes: a herring-gutted starveling, with sparse beard and sunken cheeks,
looking like the corpse of Lazarus in some primitive picture: an imbecile, wandering hither and thither with vague giggles,
coyly pleased because his trousers constantly slipped down and left him nude. But few of us were greatly better than these;
there were not ten decently built men among us, and half, I believe, should have been in hospital.
This being Sunday, we were to be kept in the spike over the week-end. As soon as the doctor had gone we were herded back to
the dining-room, and its door shut upon us. It was a lime-washed, stone-floored room, unspeakably dreary with its furniture
of deal boards and benches, and its prison smell. The windows were so high up that one could not look outside, and the sole
ornament was a set of Rules threatening dire penalties to any casual who misconducted himself. We packed the room so tight
that one could not move an elbow without jostling somebody. Already, at eight o’clock in the morning, we were bored with our
captivity. There was nothing to talk about except the petty gossip of the road, the good and bad spikes, the charitable and
uncharitable counties, the iniquities of the police and the Salvation Army. Tramps hardly ever get away from these subjects; they talk, as it were, nothing but shop.
They have nothing worthy to be called conversation, because emptiness of belly leaves no speculation in their souls. The world
is too much with them.
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