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A cabby in London is worth…

A cab driver in London works all hours for low pay, but he gets the prestige of working in a big city…surely?

It’s not so clear.

The average rate of a taxi driver is determined by his work, and passenger numbers, so it’s not a job that’s going to go anywhere.

Unlike his passengers, perhaps, a taxi driver enjoys a steady income, and that’s it.

He doesn’t get the fluctuating wage, perhaps, or the pay rise that makes headlines, as often as he wants.

It’s a steady job, but it’s slow moving.

It goes as slow as he does – around his head, around the bend, and into a dead end, just to drop someone off.

“It’s in the doldrums”, so he might say, longingly, over his steering wheel.

It’s not a princely life, either.

It doesn’t pay the bills they want, perhaps – a posh haircut here, a fancy holiday there, and a new car to share – at some point.

“It’s a soldier’s life…”, he might also bemoan, a typical tale of being seen to do something, but not a lot.

There’s a fairytale about it, but it doesn’t elicit much from the imagination. There isn’t much to go on, except a seat.

What is there in a taxi, or a ‘cab’, but someone else with a story, and not the driver?

His is a simple job, with a simple end, and so is ours, perhaps.

“We’re all simple, in the end”, he proverbially opines, fictionally, over a dissimilar steering wheel.

There’s truth in a cab driver, but not much in his job, so I think.