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M. Poiret was a sort of automaton. He might be seen any day sailing like  a gray shadow along the walks of the Jardin des Plantes, on his head a  shabby cap, a cane with an old yellow ivory handle in the tips of his  thin fingers; the outspread skirts of his threadbare overcoat failed to  conceal his meagre figure; his breeches hung loosely on his shrunken  limbs; the thin, blue-stockinged legs trembled like those of a drunken  man; there was a notable breach of continuity between the dingy white  waistcoat and crumpled shirt frills and the cravat twisted about a  throat like a turkey gobbler's; altogether, his appearance set people  wondering whether this outlandish ghost belonged to the audacious race  of the sons of Japhet who flutter about on the Boulevard Italien. What  devouring kind of toil could have so shriveled him? What devouring  passions had darkened that bulbous countenance, which would have seemed  outrageous as a caricature? What had he been? Well, perhaps he had been  part of the machinery of justice, a clerk in the office to which the  executioner sends in his accounts,—so much for providing black veils for  parricides, so much for sawdust, so much for pulleys and cord for the  knife. Or he might have been a receiver at the door of a public  slaughter-house, or a sub-inspector of nuisances. Indeed, the man  appeared to have been one of the beasts of burden in our great social  mill; one of those Parisian Ratons whom their Bertrands do not even know  by sight; a pivot in the obscure machinery that disposes of misery and  things unclean; one of those men, in short, at sight of whom we are  prompted to remark that, "After all, we cannot do without them." 
From Farther Goriot by Honore de Balzac
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