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police will take care to ensure that your death is silent so as not to shock the bourgeoisie” (Engels, 2008, p.
69).
In these large cities, there were “neighborhoods of ill repute” where workers were concentrated. In
general, workers were assigned “a separate area, where, far from the gaze of the more fortunate classes, they
must get by, for better or worse, on their own” (Engels, 2008, p. 70). These neighborhoods had “the worst
houses in the ugliest part of the city; almost always, a long row of brick buildings, one or two stories high,
sometimes with inhabited basements and generally arranged in an irregular manner” (Engels, 2008, p. 70).
In these neighborhoods, “the streets are neither flat nor paved, they are dirty, littered with vegetable and
animal debris, without sewers or drainage channels, full of stagnant and fetid puddles” (Engels, 2008, p. 70).
The book describes in vivid detail the situation experienced by workers.
Engels points out in his work some cases reported by the press that describe very dramatic situations
experienced by people living in these areas. One such case concerns two boys who, "hungry, had stolen a
piece of half-cooked beef from a store, which they devoured immediately" (Engels, 2008, p. 74). The judge,
gathering more information about the case, discovered that "the boys' mother, the widow of a former soldier
who had later served in the police, lived in poverty with her two children after her husband's death" (Engels,
2008, p. 74). The situation of a family is then described, consisting of six children, living “literally piled up”
in a tiny room, without furniture, and with little to eat. As Engels (2008, p. 74) describes, “the poor mother
said that, in the previous year, she had sold her bed to buy food; she had pawned the sheets at the grocery
store—in short, she had given everything away in exchange for bread.”
These are merely illustrative situations, with some workers in slightly better situations and others in
even worse situations. In London, for example, there were around 50,000 people who had nowhere to live.
According to Engels (2008, p. 75), paid accommodation was “filled with beds from top to bottom: in one
room, four, five, and six people, as many as could fit, and in each bed, four, five, or six people were piled up,
also as many as could fit—healthy or sick, old and young, men and women, sober and drunk, all mixed
together." Those who cannot afford this type of accommodation "sleep anywhere, on street corners, under an
archway, in any corner where the police or landlords let them rest in peace" (Engels, 2008, p. 75). Faced with
this situation, Engels (2008, p. 115) pointed out that
[...] large cities are inhabited mainly by workers, since, at best, there is one bourgeois
for every two, often three, and in some places four workers; these workers have
nothing and live on their wages, which, in most cases, only guarantee their daily
survival.