Originally posted by Jon Guy
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"Dress - Pepper and salt coloured loose jacket. Grey cloth cap with peak of same material. Reddish neckerchief tied in knot. Appearance of a sailor".
Note that the "appearance of a sailor" comes immediately after the mention of the neckerchief. I don't know about sailors wearing pepper-n-salt jackets or grey cloth caps, but I do know that the age-old image of a sailor has him wearing a knotted kerchief around his neck. For example, two different sailors' outfits from circa 1890s:Did Lawende's alleged comparison refer to the ensemble, or merely to the tied neckerchief traditionally associated with sailors? Equally, whilst Marshall certainly states that his man's headgear was what a sailor would wear, sailors don't (and as far as I know never did) wear grey cloth caps, as Lawende's man was wearing.
Finally, despite courageous protestations to the contrary, Marshall's description of a man of "clerkly" appearance and decently dressed, can in no way be compared with Lawende's "rather rough and shabby" character seen outside Church Passage. Lawende may have moved in slightly different circles to Marshall, but both men would have been capable of knowing a clerk when they saw one.
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