[The Nether World by George Gissing]@TWC D-Link book
The Nether World

CHAPTER VI
19/27

His business was a failure, partly because he dealt with a too rigid honesty, partly because of his unstable nature, which left him at the mercy of whims and obstinacies and airy projects.
He did not risk the ordinary kind of bankruptcy, but came down and down, until at length he was the only workman in his own shop; then the shop itself had to be abandoned; then he was searching for someone who would employ him.
Bob had been put to the die-sinker's craft; Clara was still going to school, and had no thought of earning a livelihood--ominous state of things, When it shortly became clear even to John Hewett that he would wrong the girl if he did not provide her with some means of supporting herself, she was sent to learn 'stamping' with the same employer for whom her brother worked.

The work was light; it would soon bring in a little money.

John declared with fierceness that his daughter should never be set to the usual needle-slavery, and indeed it seemed very unlikely that Clara would ever be fit for that employment, as she could not do the simplest kind of sewing.

In the meantime the family kept changing their abode, till at length they settled in Mrs.Peckover's house.

All the best of their furniture was by this time sold; but for the two eldest children, there would probably have been no home at all.
Bob, aged nineteen, earned at this present time a pound weekly; his sister, an average of thirteen shillings.


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