The String of Pearls (1850), p. 60

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to the emaciated, care-worn stranger, who had solicited employment of her, "and so, Jarvis Williams, you have kept your word, and come for employment?"
"I have, madam, and hope that you can give it to me: I frankly tell you that I would seek for something better, and more congenial to my disposition, if I could; but who would employ one presenting such a wretched appearance as I do? You see that I am all in rags, and I have told you that I am half starved, and therefore it is only some common and ordinary employment that I can hope to get, and that has made me come to you."
"Well, I don't see why we should not make a trial of you, at all events, so if you would like to go down into the bakehouse, I will follow you and show you what you have to do. You remember that you have to live entirely upon the pies, unless you like to purchase for yourself anything else, which you may do if you can get the money. We give none; and you must likewise agree never to leave the bakehouse."
"Neverto leave it?"
"Never, unless you leave it for good, and for all; if upon those conditions you choose to accept the situation, you may, and if not, you can go about your business at once, and leave it alone."
"Alas, madam, I have no resource; but you spoke of having a man already."
"Yes: but he has gone to his friends; he has gone to some of his very oldest friends, who will be quite glad to see him, so now say the word are you willing or are you not, to take the situation?"
"My poverty and my destitution consent, if my will be averse, Mrs. Lovett , but, of course, I quite understand that I leave when I please."
"Oh, of course, we never think of keeping anybody many hours after they begin to feel uncomfortable. If you be ready, follow me."
"I am quite ready, and thankful for a shelter. All the brightest visions of my early life have long since faded away, and it matters little or indeed not long what now becomes of me; I will follow you, madam, freely, upon the conditions you have mentioned."
Mrs. Lovett lifted up a portion of the counter which permitted him to pass behind it, and then he followed her into a small room, which was at the back of the shop. She then took a key from her pocket, and opened an old door which was in the wainscoting, and immediately behind which was a flight of stairs. These she descended, and Jarvis Williams followed her, to a considerable depth, after which she took an iron bar from behind another door, and flung it open, showing her new assistant the interior of that vault which we have already very briefly described.
"These," she said, "are the ovens, and I will proceed to show you how you can manufacture the pies, feed the furnaces, and make yourself generally useful. Flour will be always let down through a trap- door from the upper shop, as well as everything required for making the pies but the meat, and that you will always find ranged upon shelves either in lumps or steaks, in a small room through this door, but it is only at particular limes you will find the door open; and whenever you do so, you had better always take out what meat you think you will require for the next batch."
"I understand all that, madam," said Williams, "but how does it get there?"
"That's no business of yours; so long as you are supplied with it, that is sufficient for you; and now I will go through the process of making one pie, so that you may know how to proceed, and you will find with what amazing quickness they can be manufactured if you set about them in the proper manner."
She then showed him how a piece of meat thrown into a machine became finely minced up, by merely turning a handle ; and then how flour and water and lard
were mixed up together, to make the crust of the pies, by another machine, which threw out the paste thus manufactured in small pieces, each just large enough for a pie. Lastly, she showed him how a tray, which just held a hundred, could be filled, and, by turning a windlass, sent up to the shop, through a square trap-door, which went right up to the very counter.

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