unsophisticated man
Newports Cigarettes, a man of the people (he
straightened himself) very badly dressed, glaring, with not an air or a
grace about him, a man who was an ill hand at concealing his feelings, a
plain man, an ordinary human being, pitted against the evil, the
corruption, the heartlessness of society. But he would not go on
staring. Now he put on his spectacles and examined the pictures. He read
the titles on a line of books; for the most part poetry. He would have
liked well enough to read some of his old favourites again--Shakespeare
Newport Cigarettes,
Dickens--he wished he ever had time to turn into the National ##############,
but he couldn't--no, one could not.