[The Warden by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookThe Warden CHAPTER XVI 15/20
In a more miserably forlorn place he could not have found himself: the room smelt of fish, and sawdust, and stale tobacco smoke, with a slight taint of escaped gas; everything was rough and dirty, and disreputable; the cloth which they put before him was abominable; the knives and forks were bruised, and hacked, and filthy; and everything was impregnated with fish.
He had one comfort, however: he was quite alone; there was no one there to look on his dismay; nor was it probable that anyone would come to do so.
It was a London supper-house.
About one o'clock at night the place would be lively enough, but at the present time his seclusion was as deep as it had been in the abbey. In about half an hour the untidy girl, not yet dressed for her evening labours, brought him his chop and potatoes, and Mr Harding begged for a pint of sherry.
He was impressed with an idea, which was generally prevalent a few years since, and is not yet wholly removed from the minds of men, that to order a dinner at any kind of inn, without also ordering a pint of wine for the benefit of the landlord, was a kind of fraud,--not punishable, indeed, by law, but not the less abominable on that account.
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