Anarchy 84/Notes on poverty 1: The castaways
1: The castaways
Outside, there was a downpour. Through the sudden burst of noise, I could hear the sound of rain hissing on the pavement; and I could smell its rich, wet smell oozing from those struggling to get in. They had been queueing now for almost an hour.
Impressions tumbled so thick and fast after that instant, it is difficult to piece them together. But I remember vividly the way these men and women clutched onto their grubby, sodden coats as if they were stark naked underneath. I would say most of them were drunk. The first ones half tottered, half stumbled to various positions round the walls of the room, lying down on the floor or flopping into huge, dilapidated armchairs. Others followed, singly or in groups, as if to previously agreed positions, sitting down round tables and gradually filling the entire room until the smell and the noise and the crush became unbearable. I think what struck me most was the apparent joviality with which this molten lava of humanity accepted its fate. There was a great uproar of shouting, singing and laughter, and a small, grey-“Ah’m no like the ithers,” she exclaimed loudly, “Ah wis brought up proper. Ah’m elegant. Do ye no think ah’m elegant?” She lifted up her coat with a grand, imperial gesture, revealing a pair of horribly deformed legs. She came closer.
“Son, you’re a guid lookin’ fella. Can ye gie us a fag?”
I lied, terribly.
“Can ye no even gie me a sixpence?”
I lied even worse.
“Then ye’re a cunt,” she belched, and pirouetted on behind me.
For a while I did not move, but let my eyes flit over the chaotic morass of bodies. I could see faces blurred with drink, faces loose, faces marble with sobriety. Behind me, a man from the Highlands, with great bushy eyebrows, put a chanter to his lips and piped a half-
Philip O’Connor, in his Penguin book on Vagrancy, quoted a striking remark made once by a social worker. “Archaeologists,” she wrote, “interpret past civilizations by what they threw away. What contemporary society rejects can be equally revealing to the sociologist.”
About destitution and vagrancy, very little sociologically, is known. It is a terrain into which few social scientists have ventured, and out of which even fewer truths have come. Even quantitatively, the problem has eluded accurate estimation. The numbers of people sleeping rough in Britain each night has been put at 30,000 by a National Assistance Board survey conducted on two nights in November and December 1965; and as high as 90,000 by Anton Wallich Clifford, a Probation Officer who has been setting up shelters for the destitute up and down the country. Twenty thousand, he argues, probably sleep rough in the Home Counties alone. In addition to this figure, hundreds of thousands of men and women are accommodated in lodging houses, church hostels and rehabilitation centres. The problem of destitution may not be as formidable as it once was, but it is still eyebrow-
As the terrain of the destitute and the dispossessed, the Grassmarket has been notorious for over a hundred years, but even in the face of this, the area has attracted more historical than sociological interest. History, here, however, provides the crucial determining factor. The influence of psychiatry on social work is not always a clarifying one, since it has an inherent tendency to treat men as individuals with the minimal reference to history. No man can claim such independence, least of all one who is destitute. In studying the meths drinker or the vagrant in depth, we find in the majority of cases that general social disruption—
About the destitute, it is difficult to generalize, but the problem, if it is anything, is a class one. Of the fifty or so hostel occupants I talked to, all were from working class or poor farming backgrounds. For the middle class alcoholic or mentally disturbed, the situation is much different, and he remains insulated to a surprising degree from falling down the class ladder. Societies like Alcoholics and Neurotics Anonymous act as a buffer, and often friends and relatives, too, can break the fall. In short, it is possible for many professional people to come to pieces without having to stoop to a doss house in a vain attempt to pick them up again.
Around the square, and in the streets leading into it, can be found no less than seven lodging houses, some of them church and Salvation Army hostels some Corporation aided, others private companies, run on a profit and loss basis. They tend, in fact, to be as varied as those who make use of them. The largest men’s hostel, providing accomodation for an average of 280 men per night, brings in a net profit averaging between £500 and £1,000 per year. I checked its shareholders and accounts at the City Companies Office. In their annual statement for 1963, for example, its Directors had “pleasure in reporting that the average number—