George orwell novel the road to6/3/2023 ![]() ![]() My bed was in the right-hand corner on the side nearest the door. The room had been turned into a bedroom by thrusting four squalid beds in among this other wreckage. And covering most of one wall there was a huge hideous piece of junk, something between a sideboard and a hall-stand, with lots of carving and little drawers and strips of looking-glass, and there was a once-gaudy carpet ringed by the slop-pails of years, and two gilt chairs with burst seats, and one of those old-fashioned horsehair armchairs which you slide off when you try to sit on them. Hanging from the ceiling there was a heavy glass chandelier on which the dust was so thick that it was like fur. ![]() ![]() We were therefore sleeping in what was still recognizably a drawing-room. Years earlier the house had been an ordinary dwelling-house, and when the Brookers had taken it and fitted it out as a tripe-shop and lodging-house, they had inherited some of the more useless pieces of furniture and had never had the energy to remove them. There were generally four of us in the bedroom, and a beastly place it was, with that denied impermanent look of rooms that are not serving their rightful purpose. Earlier than that, I suppose, there were factory whistles which I was never awake to hear. The first sound in the mornings was the clumping of the mill-girls' clogs down the cobbled street. ![]()
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