Vicky Holmes
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On a Sunday in October 1882, labourer John Bury returned to his lodgings for breakfast following an early morning walk, before settling before the fire to smoke his pipe in the company of another lodger. Crossing the threshold into England’s Victorian working-class homes, Chapter 4 examines how the lodger wove into the domestic scene, revealing that many lodgers – male lodgers, in particular – were incorporated into the household’s daily rhythms and rituals. Many ate around the family table, sat by the fireside smoking a pipe and discussing the day’s news, or shared a drink both at home and in the Public House. Therefore, Chapter 4 argues that sociability though somewhat enforced by the close quarters of the domestic dwelling lodging, was crucial to maintaining cordial relations. Yet, while it might be assumed that such mingling between family and lodgers continued as they headed to bed, Chapter 4 reveals that – alongside the boundaries created between the outside world and the home through the securing of the front door – a clear nocturnal line was drawn between the householders and their lodgers. Nonetheless, the drive for separations – as well as leading to some rather usual sleeping arrangements in smaller homes – generally brought neither householders nor lodgers a private or peaceful night’s sleep.

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Living with lodgers

Everyday life, household economy, and social relations in working-class Victorian England

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