horsed under the old system of coaches and
 waggons, that the animal should consume the
 yearly value in food of one hundred and
 seventy thousand pounds? Yet that is the
 value of the coke yearly devoured upon a
 single railway line. The company's coachmen,
grooms, and stablemen, cost the annual
 sum of one hundred and eight thousand
 pounds; their infirmary, one hundred and
 fifty thousand; their carriages and waggons
 one hundred and forty thousand.
But, however large we may think these
 establishments to be, the depôts at Liverpool
are yet more extensive, while the constant
complaint in them is, that they want
 room. While looking through one of the
 five great establishments which the North-
Western Company maintains in Liverpool, it
 edified me to compare the modern depôt and
 its suite of noble offices with the old single
 station, that for some years sufficed for the
 first wants of the line constructed between
Liverpool and Manchester. That wry-faced
 little pile of buildings is yet standing, or
 rather leaning against more substantial
 works—a miserable little place that still
 shelters a clerk or two. The smallest
hermitage of a railway-station, down in the
 remotest part of Cornwall, would consider
itself now the superior of so trumpery an
 office. Twenty years make a great change in
 England. May the present New Year's Day
 be held to justify that new and most acute
 remark!
The Company's operations in Liverpool are
 now on a very large scale. There is a new
 passengers' station in Lime Street, with a
 great arched roof of glass and iron; an
extensive and bustling coal depôt; a cattle
 station; lastly, there are two depôts
connected with the carrying trade—namely, the
Napping and Great Howard Street goods
 stations. Through them is passed one-third
 of the entire traffic of the port. There twenty
 lines of rail diverge from great piles of
capacious storehouses; cranes are at work;
 engines come and go, tugging at long trains
 of heavy waggons and trucks covered up in
 black. Whence they all come, and whither
 they will go, and how it can be possible to
 have them all in order for a fair start by
 six P.M., every morning, puzzled me, the
 uninitiated, much. Each waggon, truck, or
 covered van, when loaded, has a coloured
 ticket fixed upon it, the colour of the ticket
 telling at once whether the truck to which it
is attached has to go north, south, east, or
 west. As the afternoon closes men begin to
sort these scores of loaded waggons, first
 grouping them into long lines, according to
 their colours, and then sub-arranging the
 carriages of each line, according to the
addresses printed on their cards. Those going
 the shortest distance are put last, and merely
 have to be unhooked as they reach their
destination. Ready and covered up by the
appointed time, the trains glide away swiftly
 through the tunnel, as worms run into their
 holes.
What sort of goods pass through these
 warehouses? A good deal of everything: bales
 of silks and packages of sacking; musical
 instruments and agricultural tools;
ponderous machinery and children's toys;
potatoes, pigs, perfumery; glass, grindstones,
 guano —all are to be seen here daily, hourly,
 wholesale, retail, and for exportation. We
were assured that the average number of
 pianofortes passing through these depôts is
 not less than a thousand a month, nearly all
 designed for shipment to the New World
 and the Colonies, The brewers of pale ale
 transmit about eight thousand tuns of their
beer annually through the hands of the
 Company's manager.
Little need be said of London goods
stations; but in coming back to town I took a peep
 at the depôt for stores in Euston Square.
 There are lanthorns enough there for a Chinese
 feast; casks of nails and screws and hinges,
 full to the bung; tallow and oil enough to
 keep some tribes of Esquimaux throughout
 the winter; brushes, brooms and shovels in
 such multitude that one might imagine a
 design on the part of the North-Western
directors to make one magnificent, clean sweep
of it from Euston Square to Lime Street,
 Liverpool.
The East and West India Dock Junction,
 now North London Railway, connects the
 above named docks and the Eastern Counties
 and Tilbury railways with the London and
 North Western and Great Northern lines.
 It also passes on, as Londoners all know,
 from Camden Town, and intersecting the
 South Western railway, runs to Kew Gardens.
This line is little and important. By
 means of its newly fitted depôt at Haydon
 Square, goods of all kinds which were formerly
 carted from Camden Town to the City, are
 now conveyed by rail during the night; and
 thus there is removed from our too crowded
 thoroughfares a traffic of about four thousand
 tons a week. This depôt has been formed
 out of one of the East India Company's old
warehouses. Sluggish monopoly has given
place to bustling competition. The amount
 of work done at this one station day and
 night, so quietly and unobtrusively, would
 very much astonish Leadenhall Street men.
 Indian corahs and bandannas, China taptahs,
preserved ginger, and nankeens have given
 up their rooms to Manchester cottons, Bradford
alpacas, hardwood, crockery, and other
 English manufactured goods. The work
 at the great lifting cranes is performed here
 by means of a beautiful hydraulic machine.
 Huge railway waggons, heavily laden, are,
 by means of this power, lowered from the
upper storey, which is on a level with the railway,
to the basement floor. There they are
 unloaded into carriers' waggons, and then,
 being empty, lifted again to the level of the
 line, ready to run and fetch another load.
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