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The London Dustman

The London Dustman.jpg The Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery WareThe Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery WareThe Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery WareThe Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery WareThe Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery WareThe Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery WareThe Old-Clothes ManMiniaturesThe Street Seller of Crockery Ware

The London Dustman

Were the collection of mud and dust carried on by a number of distinct individuals—that is to say, were each individual dustman and scavenger to collect on his own account, there is no doubt that no one man could amass a fortune by such means—while if the collection of bones and rags and even dogs’-dung were carried on “in the large way,” that is to say, by a number of individual collectors working for one “head man,” even the picking up of the most abject refuse of the metropolis might become the source of great riches.