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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ London's Underworld, by Thomas Holmes
+ </title>
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+ <body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1420 ***</div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ LONDON'S UNDERWORLD
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Thomas Holmes
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ (Secretary of the Howard Association)
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h5>
+ 1912
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I am hopeful that some of the experiences given in the following chapters
+ may throw a little light upon some curious but very serious social
+ problems. Corporate humanity always has had, and always will have, serious
+ problems to consider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more civilised we become the more complex and serious will be our
+ problems&mdash;unless sensible and merciful yet thorough methods are
+ adopted for dealing with the evils. I think that my pages will show that
+ the methods now in use for coping with some of our great evils do not
+ lessen, but considerably increase the evils they seek to cure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With great diffidence I venture to point out what I conceive to be reasons
+ for failure, and also to offer some suggestions that, if adopted, will, I
+ believe, greatly minimise, if not remove, certain evils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I make no claim to prophetic wisdom; I know no royal road to social
+ salvation, nor of any specific to cure all human sorrow and smart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I have had a lengthened and unique experience. I have closely
+ observed, and I have deeply pondered. I have seen, therefore I ask that
+ the experiences narrated, the statements made, and the views expressed in
+ this book may receive earnest consideration, not only from those who have
+ the temerity to read it, but serious consideration also from our Statesmen
+ and local authorities, from our Churches and philanthropists, from our men
+ of business and from men of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For truly we are all deeply concerned in the various matters which are
+ dealt with in "London's Underworld."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THOMAS HOLMES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12, Bedford Road,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tottenham, N.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </h4>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ MY FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ LONDON'S UNDERWORLD
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE NOMADS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ LODGING-HOUSES
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ FURNISHED APARTMENTS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE DISABLED
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ WOMEN IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ MARRIAGE IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ BRAINS IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ PLAY IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ ON THE VERGE OF THE UNDERWORLD
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ IN PRISONS OFT
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ UNEMPLOYED AND UNEMPLOYABLE
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ SUGGESTIONS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ LONDON'S UNDERWORLD
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. MY FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The odds and ends of humanity, so plentiful in London's great city, have
+ for many years largely constituted my circle of friends and acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are strange people, for each of them is, or was, possessed of some
+ dominating vice, passion, whim or weakness which made him incapable of
+ fulfilling the ordinary duties of respectable citizenship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had all descended from the Upper World, to live out strange lives, or
+ die early deaths in the mysterious but all pervading world below the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of them I saw, as it were, for a moment only; suddenly out of the
+ darkness they burst upon me; suddenly the darkness again received them out
+ of my sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But our acquaintance was of sufficient duration to allow me to acquire
+ some knowledge, and to gain some experience of lives more than strange,
+ and of characters far removed from the ordinary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with others I spent many hours, months, or years as circumstances
+ warranted, or as opportunities permitted. Some of them became my
+ intimates; and though seven long years have passed since I gave up
+ police-court duties, our friendship bears the test of time, for they
+ remain my friends and acquaintances still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But some have passed away, and others are passing; one by one my list of
+ friends grows less, and were it not that I, even now, pick up a new friend
+ or two, I should run the risk of being a lonely old man. Let me confess,
+ however, that my friends have brought me many worries, have caused me much
+ disappointment, have often made me very angry. Sometimes, I must own, they
+ have caused me real sorrow and occasionally feelings of utter despair. But
+ I have had my compensations, we have had our happy times, we have even
+ known our merry moments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though pathos has permeated all our intercourse, humour and comedy have
+ never been far away; though sometimes tragedy has been in waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But over one and all of my friends hung a great mystery, a mystery that
+ always puzzled and sometimes paralysed me, a mystery that always set me to
+ thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now many of my friends were decent and good-hearted fellows; yet they were
+ outcasts. Others were intelligent, clever and even industrious, quite
+ capable of holding their own with respectable men, still they were
+ helpless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others were fastidiously honest in some things, yet they were persistent
+ rogues who could not see the wrong or folly of dishonesty; many of them
+ were clear-headed in ninety-nine directions, but in the hundredth they
+ were muddled if not mentally blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others had known and appreciated the comforts of refined life, yet they
+ were happy and content amidst the horror and dirt of a common
+ lodging-house! Why was it that these fellows failed, and were content to
+ fail in life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is that little undiscovered something that determines their lives and
+ drives them from respectable society?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What compensations do they get for all the suffering and privations they
+ undergo? I don't know! I wish that I did! but these things I have never
+ been able to discover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many times I have put the questions to myself; many times I have put the
+ questions to my friends, who appear to know about as much and just as
+ little upon the matter as myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They do not realise that in reality they do differ from ordinary citizens;
+ I realise the difference, but can find no reason for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No! it is not drink, although a few of them were dipsomaniacs, for
+ generally they were sober men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will own my ignorance, and say that I do not know what that little
+ something is that makes a man into a criminal instead of constituting him
+ into a hero. This I do know: that but for the possession of a little
+ something, many of my friends, now homeless save when they are in prison,
+ would be performing life's duties in settled and comfortable homes, and
+ would be quite as estimable citizens as ordinary people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably they would prove better citizens than the majority of people, for
+ while they possess some inherent weakness, they also possess in a great
+ degree many estimable qualities which are of little use in their present
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These friends of mine not only visit my office and invade my home, but
+ they turn up at all sorts of inconvenient times and places.&mdash;There is
+ my friend the dipsomaniac, the pocket Hercules, the man of brain and iron
+ constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Year after year he holds on to his own strange course, neither poverty nor
+ prison, delirium tremens nor physical injuries serve to alter him. He
+ occupies a front seat at a men's meeting on Sunday afternoon when the
+ bills announce my name. But he comes half drunk and in a talkative mood,
+ sometimes in a contradictory mood, but generally good tempered. He
+ punctuates my speech with a loud and emphatic "Hear! hear!" and often
+ informs the audience that "what Mr. Holmes says is quite true!" The
+ attendants cannot keep him silent, he tells them that he is my friend; he
+ makes some claim to being my patron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor fellow! I speak to him kindly, but incontinently give him the slip,
+ for I retire by a back way, leaving him to argue my disappearance in no
+ friendly spirit with the attendants. Yet I have spent many happy hours
+ with him when, as sometimes happened, he was "in his right mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I, would like to dwell on the wonders of this man's strange and fearsome
+ life, but I hasten on to tell of a contrast, for my friends present many
+ contrasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was hurrying down crowded Bishopsgate at lunch time, lost in thought,
+ when I felt my hand grasped and a well-known voice say, "Why! Mr. Holmes,
+ don't you know me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Know him! I should think I do know him; I am proud to know him, for I
+ venerate him. He is only a french polisher and by no means handsome, his
+ face is furrowed and seamed by care and sorrow, his hands and clothing are
+ stained with varnish. Truly he is not much to look at, but if any one
+ wants an embodiment of pluck and devotion, of never-failing patience and
+ magnificent love, in my friend you shall find it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Born in the slums, he sold matches at seven years of age; at eight he was
+ in an industrial school; his father was dead, his mother a drunkard; home
+ he had none!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving school at sixteen he became first a gardener's assistant, then a
+ gentleman's servant; in this occupation he saved some money with which he
+ apprenticed himself to french polishing. From apprentice to journeyman,
+ from journeyman to business on his own account, were successive steps; he
+ married, and that brought him among my many acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had a nice home, and two beautiful children, and then that great
+ destroyer of home life, drink! had to be reckoned with. So he came to
+ consult me. She was a beautiful and cultured woman and full of remorse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stained hands of the french polisher trembled as he signed a document
+ by which he agreed to pay L1 per week for his wife's maintenance in an
+ inebriate home for twelve months where she might have her babe with her.
+ Bravely he did his part, and at the end of the year he brought her back to
+ a new and better home, where the neighbours knew nothing of her past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For twelve months there was joy in the home, and then a new life came into
+ it; but with the babe came a relapse; the varnish-stained man was again at
+ his wits' end. Once more she entered a home, for another year he worked
+ and toiled to pay the charges, and again he provided a new home. And she
+ came back to a house that he had bought for her in a new neighbourhood;
+ they now lived close to me, and my house was open to them. The story of
+ the following years cannot be told, for she almost ruined him. Night after
+ night after putting the children to bed, he searched the streets and
+ public-houses for her; sometimes I went with him. She pawned his clothes,
+ the children's clothing, and even the boy's fiddle. He cleaned the house,
+ he cooked the food, he cared for the children, he even washed and ironed
+ their clothing on Saturday evening for the coming Sunday. He marked all
+ the clothing, he warned all the pawnbrokers. At length he obtained a
+ separation order, but tearing it up he again took her home with him. She
+ went from bad to worse; even down to the deepest depths and thence to a
+ rescue home. He fetched her out, and they disappeared from my
+ neighbourhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I lost them and often wondered what the end had been. To-day he was
+ smiling; he had with him a youth of twenty, a scholarship boy, the
+ violinist. He said, "I am just going to pay for his passage to Canada; he
+ is going to be the pioneer, and perhaps we shall all join him, she will do
+ better in a new country!" On further inquiry I found that she was trying
+ hard, and doing better than when I lost them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thinking she needed greater interest in life, he had bought a small
+ business for her, but "Mr. Holmes, she broke down!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas! I knew what "breaking down" meant to the poor fellow, the heroic
+ fellow I ought to have said. And so for her he will leave his kindred,
+ home and friends; he will forsake the business that he has so slowly and
+ laboriously built up, he will sacrifice anything in the hope that the air
+ of Canada "will do her good." let us hope that it may, for her good is all
+ he lives for, and her good is his religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty years of heartbreaking misery have not killed his love or withered
+ his hope. Surely love like his cannot fail of its reward. And maybe in the
+ new world he will have the happiness that has been denied him in the old
+ world, and in the evening of his life he may have the peaceful calm that
+ has hitherto been denied him. For this he is seeking a place in the new
+ world where the partner of his life and the desire of his eyes may not
+ find it easy to yield to her besetting temptation, where the air and his
+ steadfast love will "do her good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all my acquaintances are not heroes, for I am sorry to say that my old
+ friend Downy has served his term of penal servitude, and is at liberty
+ once more to beg or steal. He is not ashamed to beg, but I know that he
+ prefers stealing, for he richly enjoys anything obtained "on the cross,"
+ and cares little for the fruits of honest labour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Downy therefore never crosses my doorstep, and when I hold communication
+ with him he stands on the doorstep where I bar his entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet I like the vagabond, for he is a humorous rascal, and though I know
+ that I ought to be severe with him, I fail dismally when I try to exhort
+ him. "Now, look here, old man," he will say, "stop preaching; what are you
+ going to do to help a fellow; do you think I live this life for fun" and
+ his eyes twinkle! When I tell him that I am sure of it, he roars. Yes, I
+ am certain of it, Downy is a thief for the fun of it; he is the worst and
+ cleverest sneak I have the privilege of knowing; and yet there is such
+ audacity about him and his actions that even his most reprehensible deeds
+ do not disgust me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is of the spare and lean kind, but were he fatter he might well pose as
+ a modern Jack Falstaff, for his one idea is summed up in Falstaff's words:
+ "Where shall we take a purse to-night?" Downy, of course, obtained full
+ remission of his sentence; he did all that was required of him in prison,
+ and so reduced his five years' sentence by fifteen months. But I feel
+ certain that he did nor spend three years and nine months in a convict
+ establishment without robbing a good many, and the more difficult he found
+ the task, the more he would enjoy it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I expect his education is now complete, so I have to beware of Downy, for
+ he would glory in the very thought of "besting" me, so I laugh and joke
+ with the rascal, but keep him at arm's length. We discuss matters on the
+ doorstep; if he looks ill I have pity on him, and subsidise him. Sometimes
+ his merry look changes to a half-pathetic look, and he goes away to his
+ "doss house," realising that after all his "besting" he might have done
+ better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of my friends have crossed the river, but as I think of them they
+ come back and bid me tell their stories. Here is my old friend the famous
+ chess-player, whose books are the poetry of chess, but whose life was more
+ than a tragedy. I need not say where I met him; his face was bruised and
+ swollen, his jawbone was fractured, he was in trouble, so we became
+ friends. He was a strange fellow, and though he visited my house many
+ times, he would neither eat nor drink with us. He wore no overcoat even in
+ the most bitter weather, he carried no umbrella, neither would he walk
+ under one, though the rains descended and the floods came!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a fatalist pure and simple, and took whatever came to him in a
+ thoroughly fatalist spirit. "My dear Holmes," he would say, "why do you
+ break your heart about me? Let me alone, let us be friends; you are what
+ you are because you can't help it; you can't be anything else even if you
+ tried. I am what I am for the same reason. You get your happiness, I get
+ mine. Do me a good turn when you can, but don't reason with me; let us
+ enjoy each other's company and take things as they are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took him on his own terms; I saw much of him, and when he was in
+ difficulties I helped him out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time I became his keeper, and when he had chess engagements to
+ fulfil I used to deliver him carriage paid to his destination wherever it
+ might be. He always and most punctiliously repaid any monetary obligation
+ I had conferred upon him, for in that respect I found him the soul of
+ honour, poor though he was! As I think of him I see him dancing and
+ yelling in the street, surrounded by a crowd of admiring East Enders, I
+ see him bruised and torn hurried off to the police station, I see him
+ standing before the magistrate awaiting judgment. What compensation
+ dipsomania gave him I know not, but that he did get some kind of wild joy
+ I am quite sure. For I see him feverish from one debauch, but equally
+ feverish with the expectation of another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his wife it was another story, and I can see her now full of anxiety
+ and dread, with no relief and no hope, except, dreadful as it may seem,
+ his death! For then, to use her own expression, "she would know the
+ worst." Poor fellow! the last time I saw him he was nearing the end. In an
+ underground room I sat by his bedside, and a poor bed it was!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he lay propped up by pillows he was working away at his beloved chess,
+ writing chess notes, and solving and explaining problems for very
+ miserable payments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I knew the poverty of that underground room; and was made acquainted with
+ the intense disappointment of both husband and wife when letters were
+ received that did not contain the much-desired postal orders. And so
+ passed a genius; but a dipsomaniac! A man of brilliant parts and a fellow
+ of infinite jest, who never did justice to his great powers, but who
+ crowded a continuous succession of tragedies into a short life. I am glad
+ to think that I did my best for him, even though I failed. He has gone!
+ but he still has a place in my affections and occupies a niche in the hall
+ of my memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I very much doubt whether I am able to forget any one of the pieces of
+ broken humanity that have companied with me. I do not want to forget them,
+ for truth to tell they have been more interesting to me than merely
+ respectable people, and infinitely more interesting than some good people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I am afraid that my tastes are bad, and my ideals low, for I am always
+ happier among the very poor or the outcasts than I am with the decent and
+ well behaved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fellow named Reid has been calling on me repeatedly; an Australian by
+ birth, he outraged the law so often that he got a succession of sentences,
+ some of them being lengthy. He tried South Africa with a like result;
+ South Africa soon had enough of him, and after two sentences he was
+ deported to England, where he looked me up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He carries with him in a nice little case a certified and attested copy of
+ all his convictions, more than twenty in number. He produces this without
+ the least shame, almost with pride, and with the utmost confidence that it
+ would prove a ready passport to my affection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I talk to him; he tells me of his life, of Australia and South Africa; he
+ almost hypnotises me, for he knows so much. We get on well together till
+ he produces the "attested copy," and then the spell is broken, and the
+ humour of it is too much for me, so I laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He declares that he wants work, honest work, and he considers that his
+ "certificate" vouches for his bona fides. This is undoubtedly true, but
+ nevertheless I expect that it will be chiefly responsible for his free
+ passage back to Australia after he has sampled the quality of English
+ prisons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friends and acquaintances meet me or rather I meet them, in undesirable
+ places; I never visit a prison without coming across one or more of them,
+ and they embarrass me greatly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few Sundays ago I was addressing a large congregation of men in a London
+ prison. As I stood before them I was dismayed to see right in the front
+ rank an old and persistent acquaintance whom I thoroughly and absolutely
+ disliked, and he knew it, for on more than one occasion I had good reason
+ for expressing a decided opinion about him. A smile of gleeful but
+ somewhat mischievous satisfaction spread over his face; he folded his arms
+ across his breast, he looked up at me and quite held me with his
+ glittering eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I realised his presence, I felt that his eye was upon me, I saw that he
+ followed every word. He quite unnerved me till I stumbled and tripped.
+ Then he smiled in his evil way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not get rid of his eyes, and sometimes I half appealed to him with
+ a pitiful look to take them off me. But it was no use, he still gazed at
+ me and through me. So thinking of him and looking at him I grew more and
+ more confused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clock fingers would not move fast enough for me. I had elected to
+ speak on sympathy, brotherhood and mutual help. And this fellow to whom I
+ had refused help again and again knew my feelings, and made the most of
+ his opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But my friend will come and see me when he is once more out of prison. He
+ will want to discuss my address of that particular Sunday afternoon. He
+ will quote my words, he will remind me about sympathy and mutual help, he
+ will hope to leave me rejoicing in the possession of a few shillings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that will be the hour of my triumph; for then I will rejoice in the
+ contemplation of his disappointment as my door closes upon him. But if I
+ understand him aright his personal failure will not lead him to despair,
+ for he will appear again and again and sometimes by deputy, and he will
+ put others as cunning as himself on my track.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some time ago I was tormented with a succession of visitors of this
+ description; my door was hardly free of one when another appeared. They
+ all told the same tale: "they had been advised to come to me, for I was
+ kind to men who had been in prison."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They got no practical kindness from me, but rather some wholesome advice.
+ I found afterwards from a lodging-house habitue that this man had been
+ taking his revenge by distributing written copies of my name and address
+ to all the lodging-house inmates, and advising them to call on me. And I
+ have not the slightest doubt that the rascal watched them come to my door,
+ enjoyed their disappointment, and gloried in my irritation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, I have made the acquaintance of many undesirable fellows, and our
+ introduction to each other has sometimes been brought about in a very
+ strange manner. Sometimes they have forced themselves upon me and insisted
+ upon my seeing much of them, and "knowing all about them" they would tell
+ me of their struggles and endeavours to "go straight" and would put their
+ difficulties and hopes before me. Specious clever rascals many of them
+ were, far too clever for me, as I sometimes found out to my cost. One
+ young fellow who has served a well-earned and richly merited sentence of
+ five years' penal servitude, quite overpowered me with his good intentions
+ and professions of rectitude. "No more prison for me," he would say; he
+ brought his wife and children to see me, feeling sure that they would form
+ a passport to my sympathy and pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not far wrong, for I substantially and regularly helped the wife. I
+ had strong misgivings about the fellow, consequently what help I gave I
+ took care went direct to his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes he would call at my office, and with tears would thank me for
+ the help given to his wife and children. I noticed a continual improvement
+ in his clothing and appearance till he became quite a swell. I felt a bit
+ uneasy, for I knew that he was not at work. I soon discovered, or rather
+ the police discovered that he had stolen a lot of my office note-paper of
+ which he had made free use, and when arrested on another charge several
+ blank cheques which had been abstracted from my cheque book were found
+ upon him. He had made himself so well known to and familiar with the
+ caretaker of the chambers, that one night when he appeared with a bag of
+ tools to put "Mr. Holmes' desk right," no questions were asked, and he
+ coolly and quite deliberately, with the office door open, operated in his
+ own sweet way. Fortunately, when trying the dodge in another set of
+ chambers, he was arrested in the act, and my blank cheques among many
+ others were found upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another term of penal servitude has stopped his career and put an end to,
+ I will not say a friendship but an acquaintance, that I am not at any rate
+ anxious to renew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They come a long way to see me do some of my friends, and put themselves
+ to some trouble in the matter, and not a little expense if they are to be
+ believed. Why they do so I cannot imagine, for sometimes after a long and
+ close questioning I fail to find any satisfactory reason for their doing
+ so. I have listened to many strange stories, and have received not a few
+ startling confessions! Some of my friends have gone comforted away when
+ they had made a clean breast and circumstantially given me the details of
+ some great crime or evil that they had committed. I never experienced any
+ difficulty, or felt the least compunction in granting them plenary
+ absolution; I never betrayed them to the police, for I knew that of the
+ crime confessed they were as guiltless as myself. Of course there is a
+ good deal of pathos about their actions, but I always felt a glow of
+ pleasure when I could send poor deluded people away comforted; and I am
+ sure that they really believed me when I told them that under no
+ circumstances would I betray their confidence, or acquaint the police
+ without first consulting them. I never had any difficulty in keeping my
+ promise, though sometimes my friends would, after a long absence, remind
+ me of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But occasionally one of my friends has compelled me to seek the advice of
+ an astute detective, for very clever rogues, real and dangerous criminals,
+ have been my companions and have boasted of my friendship, whilst pursuing
+ a deplorably criminal course. But I never had the slightest compunction
+ with regard to them when I knew beyond doubt what they were at. Friends
+ and associates of criminals have more than once waited on me for the
+ purpose of enlisting my sympathy and help for one of their colleagues who
+ was about to be released from prison, and the vagabonds have actually
+ informed detectives that "Mr. Holmes was going to take him in hand." What
+ they really meant was, that they had taken Mr. Holmes in hand for the
+ purpose of lulling the just suspicions of the police. One day not long ago
+ a woman, expensively dressed and possessed of a whole mass of flaxen hair,
+ burst into my office. She was very excited, spoke good English with an
+ altogether exaggerated French accent, and her action was altogether
+ grotesque and stereotyped. She informed me that she had that morning come
+ from Paris to consult me. When I inquired what she knew about me and how
+ she got my address, she said that a well-known journalist and a member of
+ Parliament whom she had met in Paris had advised her to consult with me
+ about the future of a man shortly to be discharged from prison. As during
+ the whole of my life I had not met or corresponded with the brilliant
+ gentleman she referred to, I felt doubtful, but kept silent. So on she
+ went with her story, first, however, offering me a sum of money for the
+ benefit of as consummate a villain as ever inhabited a prison cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I declined the money and refused to have anything to do with the matter
+ till I had had further information. Briefly her story was as follows: The
+ man in whom she and others were interested was serving a term of three
+ years for burglary. He was an educated man, married, and father of two
+ children. His wife loved him dearly, and his two children were "pretty,
+ oh, so pretty!" They were afraid that his wife would receive him back
+ again with open arms, and that other children might result. They were
+ anxious that this should be prevented, for they felt, she was sorry to
+ say, that he might again revert to crime, that other imprisonments might
+ ensue, and that "the poor, poor little thing," meaning the wife, might be
+ exposed to more and worse suffering than she had already undergone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would I receive a sum of money on his account and arrange for him to leave
+ England? They felt that to be the wisest course, for "he is so clever, and
+ can soon build up a home for her when he is away from his companions." Of
+ his ability I had subsequently plenty of proof, and I have no reason to
+ doubt her statement that he could soon "build up a home." He could very
+ quickly&mdash;and a luxurious home, too!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wife was not to be considered at all in the matter, but money would be
+ sent to me from time to time to help the "poor little thing and her
+ children!" I was interested, but I said to myself, "This is much too
+ good," and the ready journey from Paris rather staggered me. I put a few
+ simple questions, she pledged me to secrecy. I told her that I would ask
+ the prison authorities to send him to me on his discharge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I so please, I now go back to Paris; I come again and I bring you money,"
+ she said, as she shook her furs and took herself and her flaxen hair to
+ somewhere else than Paris, so I felt persuaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days before the prisoner's discharge she burst in again, huffy head,
+ furs and gesticulation as before. "I come from Paris this morning, I bring
+ you money." I was not present, but I had previously warned my assistant
+ not to receive any money. The gay Parisian was informed that no money
+ could be received, but she promptly put two sovereigns on the desk and
+ disappeared&mdash;-but not to Paris!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stood before me at last, a little fellow, smart looking, erect,
+ self-satisfied and self-reliant. I told him of the two sovereigns and the
+ fluffy hair, of the good intentions of his Parisian friend. I spoke
+ hopefully of a new life in a new country and of the future of his wife and
+ children; he never blanched. He was quite sure he knew no French lady with
+ fluffy hair; he had no friends, no accomplices; he wanted work, honest
+ work; he intended to make amends for the past; he "would build up a home"
+ for his wife and children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw much of him; we lunched together and we smoked together, and he
+ talked a good deal. His wife fell ill owing to very hard work, and I
+ befriended her. He accepted the two pounds and asked for more! He was a
+ citizen of the world, and spoke more than one language. Our companionship
+ continued for some months, and then my friend and myself had to sever our
+ connection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was one of a gang of very clever thieves, who operated on a large
+ scale, and who for cool audacity and originality were, I think, almost
+ unequalled!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They engaged expensive suites of rooms or flats, furnished them most
+ expensively on credit or the hire system, insured the goods against
+ burglary, promptly burgled themselves, sold the goods, realised the
+ insurance, and then vanished to repeat their proceedings elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So clever were they at the business that costly but portable goods were
+ freely submitted to their tender mercies. They invariably engaged rooms
+ that possessed a "skylight." It was my friend's business to do the
+ burgling, and this he did by carefully removing the glass from the
+ skylight, being careful not to break it; needless to say, he removed the
+ glass from the inside and carefully deposited it on the roof, the
+ valuables making their exit through the room door and down the staircase
+ in broad daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My friend, who spoke Dutch fluently and accurately, has, I understood,
+ sold to English merchants whose probity was beyond dispute the proceeds of
+ some of his "firm's" operations. This game went on for a time, the
+ Parisian lady with the false hair being one of the confederates. He
+ disappeared, however, and I am glad to think that for some considerable
+ time society will be safeguarded from the woman with the flaxen hair, and
+ the operations of a clever scoundrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am glad to say that the number of my friends and acquaintances who have
+ seriously tried to "best" me form but a small proportion of the whole.
+ Generally they have, I believe, been animated with good intentions, though
+ the failure to carry them out has frequently been manifest and deplorable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am persuaded that weakness is more disastrous to the world than absolute
+ wickedness, for nothing in the whole of my life's experience has taken
+ more out of me, and given me so much heartbreaking disappointment as my
+ continued efforts on behalf of really well-intentioned individuals, who
+ could not stand alone owing to their lack of grit and moral backbone. For
+ redemptive purposes I would rather, a hundred times rather, have to deal
+ with a big sinner than with a human jellyfish, a flabby man who does no
+ great wrong, but on the other hand does not the slightest good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, as I have already said, though all my friends and acquaintances were
+ dwellers in a dark land, not all of them were "known to the police";
+ indeed, many of them ought to be classified as "known to the angels," for
+ their real goodness has again and again rebuked and inspired me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh the patience, fortitude and real heroism I have met with in my
+ acquaintances among the poor. Strength in time of trial, virtue amidst
+ obscenity, suffering long drawn out and perpetual self-denial are
+ characteristics that abound in many of my poorest friends, and in some of
+ the chapters that are to follow I shall tell more fully of them, but just
+ now I am amongst neither sinners nor saints, but with my friends "in
+ motley." I mean the men and women who have occupied so much of my time and
+ endeavours, but whose position I knew was hopeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How they interested me, those demented friends of mine! they were a
+ perpetual wonder to me, and I am glad to remember that I never passed hard
+ judgment upon them, or gave them hard words. And I owe much to them, a
+ hundred times more than the whole of them are indebted to me; for I found
+ that I could not take an interest in any one of them, nor make any
+ fruitless, any perhaps foolish effort to truly help them, without doing
+ myself more good than I could possibly have done to them. Fifteen years I
+ stood by, and stood up for demented Jane Cakebread, and we became
+ inseparably connected. She abused me right royally, and her power of
+ invective was superb. When she was not in prison she haunted my house and
+ annoyed my neighbours. She patronised me most graciously when she accepted
+ a change of clothing from me; she lived in comparative luxury when I
+ provided lodgings for her; she slept out of doors when I did not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She bestowed her affections on me and made me heir to her non-existent
+ fortune; she proposed marriage to me, although she frequently met and
+ admired my good wife. All this and more, year after year!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor old Jane! I owe much to her, and I am quite willing, nay, anxious, to
+ say that in a great measure Jane Cakebread was the making of Thomas
+ Holmes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years have passed since we laid Jane gently to rest, but she comes back to
+ me and dominates me whenever I mentally call my old friends together. Her
+ voice is the loudest, her speech the most voluble, and her manner the most
+ assertive of all my motley friends. They are all gathering around me as I
+ write. My friend who teaches music by colour is here, my friend with his
+ secret invention that will dispense with steam and electricity is here
+ too; "Little Ebbs" the would-be policeman is here too; the prima donna
+ whose life was more than a tragedy, the architect with his wonderful but
+ never accepted designs, the broken artist with his pictures, the educated
+ but non-sober lady who could convert plaster models into marble statuary
+ are all with me. The unspeakably degraded parson smoking cigarettes, his
+ absence of shirt hidden by a rusty cassock, lolls in my easy-chair; my
+ burglar friend who had "done" forty years and was still asking for more,
+ they are all around me! And my dipsomaniac friends have come too! I hear
+ them talking and arguing, when a strident voice calls out, "No arguing! no
+ arguing! argument spoils everything!" and Jane stops the talk of others by
+ occupying the platform herself and recites a chapter from the book of Job.
+ I am living it all over again!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now troop in my suffering friends. Here is the paralysed woman of
+ thirty-five who has for twenty years lain in bed the whiles her sister has
+ worked incessantly to maintain her! Here is my widow friend who after
+ working fifteen hours daily for years was dragged from the Lea. As she
+ sits and listens her hands are making matchboxes and throwing them over
+ her shoulder, one, two, three, four! right, left! they go to the imaginary
+ heaps upon the imaginary beds. While blighted children are crawling upon
+ the floor looking up at me with big eyes. Here is my patient old friend
+ who makes "white flowers" although she is eighty years of age, and still
+ keeps at it, though, thank God, she gets the old-age pension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now come in the young men and maidens, the blighted blossoms of humanity
+ who wither and die before the time of fruition, for that fell disease
+ consumption has laid its deadly hand upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh! the mystery of it all, the sorrow and madness of it all! I open my
+ door and they file out. Some back to the unseen world, some back to the
+ lower depths of this world! Surely they are a motley lot, are my friends
+ and acquaintances; they are as varied as humanity itself. So they
+ represent to me all the moods and tenses of humanity, all its personal,
+ social and industrial problems. I have a pitiful heart; I try to keep a
+ philosophic mind; I am cheery with them; I am doubtful, I am hopeful!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never give help feeling sure that I have done wisely, I never refuse the
+ worst and feel sure that I have done well. I live near the heart of
+ humanity, I count its heart-beats, I hear its throbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I realise some of the difficulties that beset us, I see some of the
+ heights and depths to which humanity can ascend or descend. I have learned
+ that the greatest factors in life are kindly sympathy, brotherly love, a
+ willingness to believe the best of the worst, and to have an infinite
+ faith in the ultimate triumph of good!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. LONDON'S UNDERWORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ London's great underworld to many may be an undiscovered country. To me it
+ is almost as familiar as my own fireside; twenty-five years of my life
+ have been spent amongst its inhabitants, and their lives and circumstances
+ have been my deep concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sad and weary many of those years have been, but always full of absorbing
+ interest. Yet I have found much that gave me pleasure, and it is no
+ exaggeration when I say that some of my happiest hours have been spent
+ among the poorest inhabitants of the great underworld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whether happy or sorrowful, I was always interested, for the strange
+ contrasts and the ever-varying characteristics and lives of the
+ inhabitants always compelled attention, interest and thought. There is
+ much in this underworld to terrorise, but there is also much to inspire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Horrible speech and strange tongues are heard in it, accents of sorrow and
+ bursts of angry sound prevail in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drunkenness, debauchery, crime and ignorance are never absent; and in it
+ men and women grown old in sin and crime spend their last evil days. The
+ whining voice of the professional mendicant is ever heard in its streets,
+ for its poverty-stricken inhabitants readily respond to every appeal for
+ help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it is full of contrasts; for everlasting toil goes on, and the hum of
+ industry ever resounds. Magnificent self-reliance is continually
+ exhibited, and self-denial of no mean order is the rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prattle of little children and the voice of maternal love make sweet
+ music in its doleful streets, and glorious devotion dignifies and
+ illumines the poorest homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But out of the purlieus of this netherworld strange beings issue when the
+ shades of evening fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men whose hands are against every man come forth to deeds of crime, like
+ beasts to seek their prey! Women, fearsome creatures, whose steps lead
+ down to hell, to seek their male companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us stand and watch!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here comes a poor, smitten, wretched old man; see how he hugs the rags of
+ his respectability; his old frayed frock-coat is buttoned tightly around
+ him, and his outstretched hands tell that he is eager for the least boon
+ that pity can bestow. He has found that the way of the transgressor is
+ hard; he has kissed the bloom of pleasure's painted lips, he has found
+ them pale as death!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But others follow, and hurry by. And a motley lot they are; figure and
+ speech, complexion and dress all combine to create dismay; but they have
+ all one common characteristic. They want money! and are not particular
+ about the means of getting it. Now issue forth an innumerable band who
+ during the day have been sleeping off the effects of last night's debauch.
+ With eager steps, droughty throats and keen desire they seek the wine cup
+ yet again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now come fellows, young and middle-aged, who dare not be seen by day, for
+ whom the police hold "warrants," for they have absconded from wives and
+ children, leaving them chargeable to the parish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are men who have robbed their employers, here young people of both
+ sexes who have drained Circe's cup and broken their parents' hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely it is a strange and heterogeneous procession that issues evening by
+ evening from the caves and dens of London's underworld. But notice there
+ is also a returning procession! For as the sun sinks to rest, sad-faced
+ men seek some cover where they may lie down and rest their weary bones;
+ where perchance they may sleep and regain some degree of passive courage
+ that will enable them, at the first streak of morning light, to rise and
+ begin again a disheartening round of tramp, tramp, searching for work that
+ is everlastingly denied them. Hungry and footsore, their souls fainting
+ within them, they seek the homes where wives and children await their
+ return with patient but hopeless resignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take notice if you will of the places they enter, for surely the beautiful
+ word "home" is desecrated if applied to most of their habitations. Horrid
+ places within and without, back to back and face to face they stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At their doorway death stands ready to strike. In the murky light of
+ little rooms filled with thick air child-life has struggled into
+ existence; up and down their narrow stairs patient endurance and passive
+ hopelessness ever pass and repass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Small wonder that the filthy waters of a neighbouring canal woo and
+ receive so many broken hearts and emaciated bodies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the procession now changes its sex, for weary widowed women are
+ returning to children who for many hours have been lacking a mother's
+ care, for mothers in the underworld must work if children must eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the weary widows have been at the wash-tubs all day long, and are
+ coming home with two shillings hardly earned. They call in at the dirty
+ general shop, where margarine, cheese, bread, tinned meat and firewood are
+ closely commingled in the dank air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A loaf, a pennyworth of margarine, a pennyworth of tea, a bundle of
+ firewood, half a pound of sugar, a pint of lamp-oil exhaust their list of
+ purchases, for the major part of their earnings is required for the rent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they climb their stairs, they feed the children, put them unwashed to
+ bed, do some necessary household work, and then settle down themselves in
+ some shape, without change of attire, that they may rest and be ready for
+ the duties of the ensuing day. Perhaps sweet oblivion will come even to
+ them. "Blessings on the man who invented sleep," cried Sancho Panza, and
+ there is a world of truth in his ecstatic exclamation, "it wraps him round
+ like a garment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aye, that it does, for what would the poor weary women and men of London's
+ underworld do without it? What would the sick and suffering be without it?
+ In tiny rooms where darkness is made visible by penny-worths of oil burned
+ in cheap and nasty lamps, there is no lack of pain and suffering, and no
+ lack of patient endurance and passive heroism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As night closes in and semi-darkness reigns around, when the streets are
+ comparatively silent, when children's voices are no longer heard, come
+ with me and explore!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is one o'clock a.m., and we go down six steps into what is facetiously
+ termed a "breakfast parlour"; here we find a man and woman about sixty
+ years of age. The woman is seated at a small table on which stands a
+ small, evil-smelling lamp, and the man is seated at another small table,
+ but gets no assistance from the lamp; he works in comparative gloom, for
+ he is almost blind; he works by touch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For fifty years they have been makers of artificial flowers; both are
+ clever artists, and the shops of the West End have fairly blazed with the
+ glory of their roses. Winsome lassie's and serene ladies have made
+ themselves gay with their flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There they sit, as they have sat together for thirty years. Neither can
+ read or write, but what can be done in flowers they can do. Long hours and
+ dark rooms have made the man almost blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He suffers also from heart disease and dropsy. He cannot do much, but he
+ can sit, and sit, while his wife works and works, for in the underworld
+ married women must work if dying husbands are to be cared for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So for fifteen hours daily and nightly they sit at their roses! Then they
+ lie down on the bed we see in the corner, but sleep does not come, for
+ asthma troubles him, and he must be attended and nursed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we pay another visit to that underworld room? Come, then. Two months
+ have passed away, the evil-smelling lamp is still burning, the woman still
+ sits at the table, but no rose-leaves are before her; she is making black
+ tulips. On the bed lies a still form with limbs decently smoothed and
+ composed; the poor blind eyes are closed for ever. He is awaiting the day
+ of burial, and day after day the partner of his life and death is sitting,
+ and working, for in this underworld bereaved wives must work if husbands
+ are to be decently buried. The black tulips she will wear as mourning for
+ him; she will accompany his poor body to the cemetery, and then return to
+ live alone and to finish her work alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us continue our midnight explorations, heedless of the men and
+ women now returning from their nightly prowl who jostle us as they pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We enter another room where the air is thick and makes us sick and faint.
+ We stand at the entrance and look around; we see again the evil-smelling
+ lamp, and again a woman at work at a small table, and she too is a widow!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She is making cardboard boxes, and pretty things they are. Two beds are in
+ the room, and one contains three, and the other two children. On the beds
+ lie scores of dainty boxes. The outside parts lie on one bed, and the
+ insides on the other. They are drying while the children sleep; by and by
+ they will be put together, tied in dozens, and next morning taken to the
+ factory. But of their future history we dare not inquire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The widow speaks to us, but her hands never rest; we notice the celerity
+ of her movements, the dreadful automatic certainty of her touch is almost
+ maddening; we wait and watch, but all in vain, for some false movement
+ that shall tell us she is a human and not a machine. But no, over her
+ shoulder to the bed on the left side, or over her shoulder to the bed on
+ her right side, the boxes fly, and minute by minute and hour by hour the
+ boxes will continue to grow till her task is completed. Then she will put
+ them together, tie them in dozens, and lay herself down on that bed that
+ contains the two children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Need we continue? I think not, but it may give wings to imagination when I
+ say that in London's underworld there are at least 50,000 women whose
+ earnings do not exceed three halfpence per hour, and who live under
+ conditions similar to those described. Working, working, day and night,
+ when they have work to do, practically starving when work is scarce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of the underworld are not squeamish, they talk freely, and as a
+ matter of course about life and death. Their children are at an early age
+ made acquainted with both mysteries; a dead child and one newly born
+ sometimes occupy a room with other children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ People tell me of the idleness of the underworld and there is plenty of
+ it; but what astonishes me is the wonderful, the persistent, but almost
+ unrewarded toil that is unceasingly going on, in which even infants share.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Come again with me in the day-time, climb with me six dark and greasy
+ flights of stairs, for the underworld folk are sometimes located near the
+ sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this Bastille the passages are very narrow, and our shoulders sometimes
+ rub the slimy moisture from the walls. On every landing in the
+ semi-darkness we perceive galleries running to right and to left. On the
+ little balconies, one on every floor, children born in this Bastille are
+ gasping for air through iron bars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are three hundred suites of box rooms in this Bastille, which means
+ that three hundred families live like ants in it. Let us enter No. 250.
+ Time: 3.30 p.m. Here lives a blind matchbox-maker and his wife with their
+ seven children. The father has gone to take seven gross of boxes to the
+ factory, for the mother cannot easily climb up and down the stone stairs
+ of the Bastille. So she sits everlastingly at the boxes, the beds are
+ covered with them, the floor is covered with them, and the air is thick
+ with unpleasant moisture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One, two, three, four, there they go over her shoulder to the bed or
+ floor; on the other side of the table sits a child of four, who, with all
+ the apathy of an adult if not with equal celerity, gums or pastes the
+ labels for his mother. The work must be "got in," and the child has been
+ kept at home to take his share in the family toil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this Bastille the children of the underworld live and die, for death
+ reaps here his richest harvest. Never mind! the funeral of one child is
+ only a pageant for others. Here women work and starve, and here childhood,
+ glorious childhood, is withered and stricken; but here, too, the wicked,
+ the vile, the outcast and the thief find sanctuary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strange mixture of it all bewilders me, fascinates me, horrifies me,
+ and yet sometimes it encourages me and almost inspires me. For I see that
+ suffering humanity possesses in no mean degree those three great
+ qualities, patience, fortitude and endurance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For perchance these three qualities will feel and grope for a brighter
+ life and bring about a better day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though in all conscience funerals are numerous enough in this bit of the
+ underworld, and though the conditions are bad enough to destroy its
+ inhabitants, yet the people live on and on, for even death itself
+ sometimes seems reluctant to befriend them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely there is nothing in the underworld so extraordinary as the defiance
+ flung in the face of death by its poor, feeble, ill-nourished, suffering
+ humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to every well-known rule they ought to die, and not to linger
+ upon the order of their dying. But linger they do, and in their lingering
+ exhibit qualities which ought to regenerate the whole race. It is
+ wonderful upon what a small amount of nourishment humanity can exist, and
+ still more wonderful under what conditions it can survive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we look in at a house that I know only too well? Come again, then!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here sits an aged widow of sixty-four at work on infants' shoes, a
+ daughter about twenty-six is at work on infants' socks. Another daughter
+ two years older is lying on her back in an invalid's chair, and her deft
+ fingers are busily working, for although paralysis has taken legs, the
+ upper part of her body has been spared. The three live together and pool
+ their earnings; they occupy two very small rooms, for which they pay five
+ shillings weekly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After paying twopence each to avoid parish funerals, they have five
+ shillings left weekly for food, firing, clothing and charity. Question
+ them, and you will learn how they expend those five shillings. "How much
+ butter do you allow yourselves during the week?" The widow answers: "Two
+ ounces of shilling butter once a week." "Yes, mother," says the invalid,
+ "on a Saturday." She knew the day of the week and the hour too, when her
+ eyes brightened at the sight of three-halfpenny worth of butter. Truly
+ they fared sumptuously on the Sabbath, for they tasted "shilling butter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they refuse to die, and I have not yet discovered the point at which
+ life ebbs out for lack of food, for when underworld folk die of starvation
+ we are comforted by the assurance that they died "from natural causes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I suppose that if the four children all over eight years of age, belonging
+ to a widow machinist well known to me, had died, their death would have
+ been attributed to "natural causes." She had dined them upon one
+ pennyworth of stewed tapioca without either sugar or milk. Sometimes the
+ children had returned to school without even that insult to their craving
+ stomachs. But "natural causes" is the euphonious name given by intelligent
+ juries to starvation, when inquests are held in the underworld. Herein is
+ a mystery: in the land of plenty, whose granaries, depots, warehouses are
+ full to repletion, and whose countless ships are traversing every ocean,
+ bringing the food and fruits of the earth to its shores, starvation is
+ held to be a natural cause of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here let me say, and at once, that the two widows referred to are but
+ specimens of a very large company, and that from among my own
+ acquaintances I can with a very short notice assemble one thousand women
+ whose lives are as pitiful, whose food is as limited, whose burdens are as
+ heavy, but whose hearts are as brave as those I have mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more I know of these women and their circumstances, the more and still
+ more I am amazed. How they manage to live at all is a puzzle, but they do
+ live, and hang on to life like grim death itself. I believe I should long
+ for death were I placed under similar conditions to those my underworld
+ friends sustain without much complaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They have, of course, some interests in life, especially when the children
+ are young, but for themselves they are largely content to be, to do, and
+ to suffer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very simple and very limited are their ambitions; they are expressed in
+ the wish that their children may rise somehow or other from the world
+ below to the world above, where food is more plentiful and labour more
+ remunerative. But my admiration and love for the honest workers below the
+ line are leading me to forget the inhabitants that are far removed from
+ honesty, and to whom industry is a meaningless word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many of them, and a mixed lot they are. The deformed, the
+ crippled and the half-witted abound. Rogues and rascals, brutes in human
+ form, and human forms that are harking back to the brute abound also. With
+ some we may sound the lowest depths, with others we may ascend to glorious
+ heights. This is the wonder of underworld. Some of its inhabitants have
+ come down, and are going lower still. Others are struggling with slippery
+ feet to ascend the inclined plane that leads to the world above. Some in
+ their misery are feebly hoping for a hand that will restore them to the
+ world they have for ever lost!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there are others who find their joy in this netherworld! For here
+ every restraint may be abandoned and every decency may be outraged. Here
+ are men and women whose presence casts a blight upon everything fresh and
+ virtuous that comes near them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the children grow old before their time, for like little cubs they
+ lie huddled upon each other when the time for sleep comes. Not for them
+ the pretty cot, the sweet pillow and clean sheets! but the small close
+ room, the bed or nest on the floor, the dirty walls and the thick air.
+ Born into it, breathing it as soon as their little lungs begin to operate,
+ thick, dirty air dominates their existence or terminates their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Glorious childhood" has no place here, to sweet girlhood it is fatal, and
+ brave boyhood stands but little chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though here and there one and another rise superior to environment and
+ conditions, the great mass are robbed of the full stature of their bodies,
+ of their health, their brain power and their moral life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But their loss is not the nation's gain, for the nation loses too! For the
+ nation erects huge buildings falsely called workhouses, tremendous
+ institutions called prisons. Asylums in ever-increasing numbers are
+ required to restrain their feeble bodies, and still feebler minds!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us look at the contrasts! Their houses are so miserably supplied with
+ household goods that even a rash and optimistic man would hesitate before
+ offering a sovereign for an entire home, yet pawnshops flourish
+ exceedingly, although the people possess nothing worth pawning. Children
+ are half fed, for the earnings of parents are too meagre to allow a
+ sufficient quantity of nourishing food; but public-houses do a roaring
+ trade on the ready-money principle, while the chandler supplies scraps of
+ food and half-ounces of tea on very long credit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Money, too, is scarce, very scarce, yet harpies grow rich by lending the
+ inhabitants small sums from a shilling up to a pound at a rate of interest
+ that would stagger and paralyse the commercial world. Doctors must needs
+ to content with a miserable remuneration for their skilled and devoted
+ services, when paid at all! but burial societies accumulate millions from
+ a weekly collection of ill-spared coppers. Strangest of all, undertakers
+ thrive exceedingly, but the butcher and baker find it hard work to live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, the underworld of London is full of strange anomalies and queer
+ contradictions. When I survey it I become a victim to strange and
+ conflicting emotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes I am disgusted with the dirt and helplessness of the people.
+ Sometimes I burn with indignation at their wrongs. But when I enter their
+ houses I feel that I would like to be an incendiary on a wholesale scale.
+ Look again! I found the boot-machinist widow that I have mentioned, in
+ Bethnal Green; she was ill in bed, lying in a small room; ill though she
+ was, and miniature as the room was, two girls aged twelve and fourteen
+ slept with her and shared her bed, while a youth and a boy slept in a
+ coal-hole beneath the stairs. Nourishment and rest somewhat restored the
+ woman, and to give her and the children a chance I took for them a larger
+ house. I sent them bedding and furniture, the house being repaired and
+ repainted, for the previous tenant had allowed it to take fire, but the
+ fire had not been successful enough! I called on the family at midday, and
+ as I stood in the room, bugs dropped from the ceiling upon me. The widow's
+ work was covered with them; night and day the pests worried the family,
+ there was no escaping them; I had to fly, and again remove the family. How
+ can the poor be clean and self-respecting under such conditions!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For be it known this is the normal condition of thousands of human
+ habitations in London's great underworld. How can cleanliness and
+ self-respect survive? Yet sometimes they do survive, but at a terrible
+ cost, for more and still more of the weekly income must go in rent, which
+ means less and still less for food and clothing. Sometimes the grossness
+ and impurity, the ignorance and downright wickedness of the underworld
+ appal and frighten me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But over this I must draw a veil, for I dare not give particulars; I
+ think, and think, and ask myself again and again what is to be the end of
+ it all! Are we to have two distinct races! those below and those above? Is
+ Wells' prophecy to come true; will the one race become uncanny, loathsome
+ abortions with clammy touch and eyes that cannot face the light? Will the
+ other become pretty human butterflies? I hope not, nay, I am sure that
+ Wells is wrong! For there is too much real goodness in the upper world and
+ too much heroism and endurance in the underworld to permit such an
+ evolution to come about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is high time that such a possibility was seriously considered. It
+ is high time, too, that the lives and necessities, the wrongs and the
+ rights of even the gross poor in the underworld were considered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the whole social and industrial system is against them. Though many of
+ them are parasites, preying upon society or upon each other, yet even they
+ become themselves the prey of other parasites, who drain their blood night
+ and day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I ask in all seriousness, is it not high time that the exploitation of
+ the poor, because they are poor, should cease. See how it operates: a
+ decent married woman loses her husband; his death leaves her dependent
+ upon her own labour. She has children who hitherto have been provided with
+ home life, food and clothing; in fact the family had lived a little above
+ the poverty line, though not far removed from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had lived in the upper world, but because her husband dies, she is
+ precipitated into the lower world, to seek a new home and some occupation
+ whereby she and her children may live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Because she is a widow, and poor and helpless, she becomes the prey of the
+ sweater. Henceforth she must work interminable hours for a starvation
+ wage. Because she is a mother, poor and helpless, she becomes the prey of
+ the house farmer. Henceforward half her earnings must go in rent, though
+ her house and its concomitants are detestable beyond words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though she is poor, her children must be fed, and though she is a
+ widowed mother, she, even she, must eat sometimes. Henceforward she must
+ buy food of a poor quality, in minute quantities, of doubtful weight, at
+ the highest price. She is afraid that death may enter her home and find
+ her unprepared for a funeral, so she pays one penny weekly for each of her
+ children and twopence for herself to some collection society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All through this procedure her very extremities provide opportunities to
+ others for spoliation, and so her continued life in the underworld is
+ assured. But her children are ill-nourished, ill-clothed, ill-lodged and
+ ill-bathed, and the gutter is their playground. They do not develop
+ properly in mind or body, when of age they are very poor assets considered
+ financially or industrially. They become permanent residents of the
+ underworld and produce after their kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the underworld is kept populated from many sources. Widows with their
+ children are promptly kicked into it, others descend into it by a slow
+ process of social and industrial gravitation. Some descend by the downward
+ path of moral delinquency, and some leap into it as if to commit moral and
+ social death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And surely 'tis a mad world! How can it be otherwise with all this varied
+ and perplexed humanity seething it, with all these social and industrial
+ wrongs operating upon it. But I see the dawn of a brighter day! when
+ helpless widow mothers will no longer be the spoil of the sweater and the
+ house "farmer." The dawn has broke! before these words are printed
+ thousands of toiling women in London's underworld will rejoice! for the
+ wages of cardboard box-makers will be doubled. The sun is rising! for one
+ by one all the terrible industries in which the women of the underworld
+ are engaged will of a certainty come within the operations of a law that
+ will stay the hand of the oppressors. And there will be less toil for the
+ widows and more food for the children in the days that are to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before that day fully comes, let me implore the women of the upper
+ world to be just if not generous to the women below. Let me ask them not
+ to exact all their labours, nor to allow the extremities of their sisters
+ to be a reason for under-payment when useful service is rendered. Again I
+ say, and I say it with respect and sorrow, that many women are thoughtless
+ if not unjust in their business dealings with other women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am more concerned for the industrial and social rights of women than I
+ am for their political rights; votes they may have if you please. But by
+ all that is merciful let us give them justice! For the oppression of
+ women, whether by women or men, means a perpetuation of the underworld
+ with all its sorrows and horrors; and the under-payment of women has a
+ curse that smites us all the way round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And if a word of mine can reach the toiling sisters in the netherworld, I
+ would say to them: Be hopeful! Patient I know you to be! enduring you
+ certainly are! brave beyond expression I have found you. Now add to your
+ virtues, hope!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For you have need of it, and you have cause for it. I rejoice that so many
+ of you are personally known to me! You and I, my sisters, have had much
+ communion, and many happy times together; for sometimes we have had
+ surcease from toil and a breath of God's fresh air together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be hopeful! endure a little longer; for a new spirit walks this old world
+ to bless it, and to right your long-continued wrongs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh! how you have suffered, sisters mine! and while I have been writing
+ this chapter you have all been around me. But you are the salt of the
+ underworld; you are much better than the ten just men that were not found
+ in Sodom. And when for the underworld the day of redemption arrives, it
+ will be you, my sisters, the simple, the suffering, enduring women that
+ will have hastened it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I dwell upon the good that is in the netherworld, in the sure and
+ certain hope, whether my feeble words and life help forward the time or
+ not, that the day is not far distant when the dead shall rise! When
+ justice, light and sweetness will prevail, and in prevailing will purify
+ the unexplored depths of the sad underworld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I offer no apology for inserting the following selections from London
+ County Council proceedings. Neither do I make any comment, other than to
+ say that the statements made present matters in a much too favourable
+ light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LONDON'S CHILD SLAVES "OVERWORK AND BAD NUTRITION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Disclosures in L.C.C. Report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (From the Daily Press, December 1911)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The comments passed by members of the L.C.C. at the Education Committee
+ meeting upon the annual report of the medical officer of that committee
+ made it clear that many very interesting contents of the report had not
+ been made public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The actual report, which we have now seen, contains much more that
+ deserves the serious attention of all who are interested in the problem of
+ the London school child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is, for example, a moving page on child life in a north-west
+ poverty area, where, among other conditions, it is not uncommon to find
+ girls of ten doing a hard day's work outside their school work; they are
+ the slaves of their mothers and grandmothers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The great amount of anaemia and malnutrition among the children in this
+ area (says the report) is due to poverty, with its resultant evils of
+ dirt, ill-feeding and under-feeding, neglect and female labour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cheap food.&mdash;The necessity for buying cheap food results in the
+ purchasing of foodstuffs which are deficient in nutrient properties. The
+ main articles of diet are indifferent bread and butter, the fag ends of
+ coarse meat, the outside leaves of green vegetables, and tea, and an
+ occasional pennyworth of fried fish and potatoes. Children who are
+ supplied with milk at school, or who are given breakfast and dinner,
+ respond at once to the better feeding, and show distinct improvement in
+ their class work. The unemployment among the men obliges the women to seek
+ for work outside the home, and the under-payment of female labour has its
+ effect upon the nutrition of the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Investigation in the senior departments of one school showed that 144
+ children were being supported by their mothers only, 57 were living on
+ their sisters, 68 upon the joint earnings of elder brothers and sisters,
+ while another 130 had mothers who went out to work in order to supplement
+ the earnings of the father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Approximately one-third of the children in this neighbourhood are
+ supported by female labour. With the mother at work the children rapidly
+ become neglected, the boys get out of control, they play truant, they
+ learn to sleep out, and become known to the police while they are still in
+ the junior mixed department.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Girl Housewife.&mdash;The maintenance of the home, the cooking and
+ catering, is done by an elderly girl who sometimes may not be more than
+ ten years of age. The mother's earnings provide bread and tea for the
+ family and pay the rent, but leave nothing over for clothing or boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many of the boys obtain employment out of school hours, for which they
+ are paid and for which they may receive food; others learn to hang about
+ the gasworks and similar places, and get scraps of food and halfpence from
+ the workmen. In consequence they may appear to be better nourished than
+ the girls 'who work beyond their strength at domestic work, step cleaning,
+ baby minding, or carrying laundry bundles and running errands.' For this
+ labour they receive no remuneration, since it is done for the family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A remarkable paragraph of the report roundly declares&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The provision generally at cost price of school meals for all who choose
+ to pay for them would be a national economy, which would do much to
+ improve the status of the feeding centres and the standard of feeding.
+ This principle is applied most successfully in schools of a higher grade,
+ and might well be considered in connection with the ordinary elementary
+ schools of the Council. Such a provision would probably be of the greatest
+ benefit to the respectable but very poor, who are too proud to apply for
+ charity meals, and whose children are often penalised by want, and the
+ various avoidable defects or ailments that come in its train.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Feeding wanted.&mdash;Of the children of a Bethnal Green school, the
+ school doctor is quoted as reporting that 'it was not hospital treatment
+ but feeding that was wanted.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Among curious oddments of information contained in the report, it is
+ mentioned that the children of widows generally show superior physique.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The teeth are often better in children from the poorer homes, 'perhaps
+ from use on rougher food materials which leaves less DEBRIS to undergo
+ fermentation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Children of poorer homes also often have the advantage of the fresh air
+ of the streets, whilst the better-off child is kept indoors and becomes
+ flabby and less resistant to minor ailments. The statistics of infantile
+ mortality suggest that the children of the poorer schools have also gone
+ through a more severe selection; disease weeding out by natural selection,
+ and the less fit having succumbed before school age, the residue are of
+ sturdier type than in schools or classes where such selection has been
+ less intense.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. THE NOMADS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A considerable portion of the inhabitants of the world below the line are
+ wanderers, without home, property, work or any visible means of existence.
+ For twenty years it has been the fashion to speak of them as the
+ "submerged," and a notable philanthropist taught the public to believe
+ that they formed one-tenth of our population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was currently reported in the Press that the philanthropist I have
+ referred to offered to take over and salve this mass of human wreckage for
+ the sum of one million pounds. His offer was liberally responded to;
+ whether he received the million or not does not matter, for he has at any
+ rate been able to call to his assistance thousands of men and women, and
+ to set them to work in his own peculiar way to save the "submerged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a not unfriendly book just published, written by one who was for more
+ than twenty years intimately associated with him, and one of the chief
+ directors of his salvage work, we learn that the result has largely been a
+ failure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To some of us this failure had been apparent for many years, and though we
+ hoped much from the movement, we could not close our eyes to facts, and
+ reluctantly had to admit that the number of the "submerged" did not
+ appreciably lessen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True, shelters, depots, bridges, homes and labour homes were opened with
+ astonishing celerity. Wood was chopped and paper sorted in immense
+ quantities, but shipwrecked humanity passed over bridges that did not lead
+ to any promised land, and abject humanity ascended with the elevators that
+ promptly lowered them to depths on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stimulated by the apparent success or popularity of the Salvation Army,
+ the Church Army sprang into existence, and disputed with the former the
+ claim to public patronage, and the right to save! It adopted similar
+ means, it is certain with similar results, for the "submerged" are still
+ with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I say that both these organisations pursued the same methods and worked
+ practically on the same lines, for both called into their service a number
+ of enthusiastic young persons, clothed them in uniforms, horribly
+ underpaid them, and set them to work to save humanity and solve social and
+ industrial problems, problems for which wiser and more experienced people
+ fail to find a solution. It would be interesting to discover what has
+ become of the tens of thousands of enthusiastic men and women who have
+ borne the uniform of these organisations for periods longer or shorter,
+ and who have disappeared from the ranks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many of them are "submerged" I cannot say, but I know that some have
+ been perilously near it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am persuaded that this is a dangerous procedure, very dangerous
+ procedure, and the subscribing public has some right to ask what has
+ become of all the "officers" who, drawn from useful work to these
+ organisations, have disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as a continual recruiting keeps up the strength, the subscribing
+ public does not care to ask, for the public is quite willing to part with
+ its vested interests in human wreckage. All this leads me to say once more
+ that the "submerged" are still with us. Do you doubt it? Then come with
+ me; let us take a midnight walk on the Thames Embankment; any night will
+ do, wet or dry, winter or summer!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Big Ben is striking the hour as we commence our walk at Blackfriars; we
+ have with us a sack of food and a number of second-hand overcoats. The
+ night is cold, gusty and wet, and we think of our warm and comfortable
+ beds and almost relinquish our expedition. The lights on Blackfriars
+ Bridge reveal the murky waters beneath, and we see that the tide is
+ running out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We pass in succession huge buildings devoted to commerce, education,
+ religion and law; we pass beautiful gardens, and quickly we arrive at the
+ Temple. The lamps along the roadway give sufficient light for our purpose,
+ for they enable us to see that here and there on the seats and in the
+ recesses of the Embankment are strange beings of both sexes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yonder are two men, unkempt and unshaven, their heads bent forward and
+ their hands thrust deep into their trousers pockets and, to all
+ appearance, asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Standing in a sheltered corner of the Temple Station we see several other
+ men, who are smoking short pipes which they replenish from time to time
+ with bits of cigars and cigarettes that they have gathered during the day
+ from the streets of London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know something of the comedy and tragedy of cigar ends, for times and
+ again I have seen a race and almost a struggle for a "fat end" when some
+ thriving merchant has thrown one into the street or gutter. Suddenly
+ emerging from obscurity and showing unexpected activity, two half-naked
+ fellows have made for it; I have seen the satisfaction of the fellow who
+ secured it, and I have heard the curse of the disappointed; but there! at
+ any time, on any day, near the Bank, or the Mansion House, in Threadneedle
+ Street, or in Cheapside such sights may be seen by those who have eyes to
+ see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two fellows have been successful, for they are assuaging the pangs
+ of hunger by smoking their odds and ends. They look at us as we pass to
+ continue our investigation. Here on a seat we find several men of motley
+ appearance; one is old and bent, his white beard covers his chest, he has
+ a massive head, he is a picturesque figure, and would stand well for a
+ representation of Old Father Thames, for the wet streams from his hair,
+ his beard and his ample moustache. Beside him sits a younger man, weak and
+ ill. His worn clothing tells us of better days, and we instinctively
+ realise that not much longer will he sit out the midnight hours on the
+ cold Embankment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before we distribute our clothes and food, we continue our observation.
+ What strikes us most is the silence, for no one speaks to us, no hand is
+ held out for a gift, no requests are made for help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They look at us unconcernedly as we pass; they appear to bear their
+ privations with indifference or philosophy. Yonder is a woman leaning over
+ the parapet looking into the mud and water below; we speak to her, and she
+ turns about and faces us. Then we realise that Hood's poem comes into our
+ mind; we offer her a ticket for a "shelter," which she declines; we offer
+ her food, but she will have none of it; she asks us to leave her, and we
+ pass on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a family group, father and mother with two children; their attire
+ and appearance tell us that they are tramps; the mother has a babe close
+ to her breast, and round it she has wrapt her old shawl; a boy of five
+ sits next to her, and the father is close up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parents evidently have been bred in vagrancy, and the children, and,
+ unless the law intervenes, their children are destined to continue the
+ species. The whining voice of the woman and the outstretched hands of the
+ boy let us know that they are eager and ready for any gift that pity can
+ bestow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we give nothing, and let me say that after years of experience, I
+ absolutely harden my heart and close my pocket against the tramping beggar
+ that exploits little children. And to those who drag children, droning out
+ hymns through our quiet streets on Sunday, my sympathies extend to a
+ horsewhip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We leave the tramps, and come upon a poor shivering wretch of about
+ thirty-five years; his face presents unmistakable signs of disease more
+ loathsome than leprosy; he is not fit to live, he is not fit to die; he is
+ an outcast from friends, kindred and home. He carries his desolation with
+ him, and the infirmary or the river will be the end of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are two stalwart fellows, big enough and strong enough to do useful
+ work in the world. But they are fresh from prison, and will be back in
+ prison before long; they know us, for it is not the first time we have
+ made their acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are by no means backward in speaking and telling us that they want
+ "just ten shillings to buy stock in Houndsditch which they can sell in
+ Cheapside." As we move away they beg insistently for "just a few
+ shillings; they don't want to get back to prison."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now we come to a youth of eighteen; he seems afraid, and looks at us with
+ suspicious eyes; what is he doing here? We are interested in him, so
+ young, yet alone on the Embankment. We open our bag and offer him food,
+ which he accepts and eats; as we watch him our pity increases: he is
+ thinly clad, and the night air is damp and cold; we select an old coat,
+ which he puts on. Then we question him, and he tells us that his mother is
+ dead, his father remarried; that his stepmother did not like him, and in
+ consequence his father turned him out; that he cannot get work. And so on;
+ a common story, no originality about it, and not much truth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We suddenly put the question, "How long have you lived in lodging-houses?"
+ "About three years, sir." "What did you work at?" "Selling papers in the
+ streets." "Anything else?" "No, sir." "You had not got any lodging money
+ to-night.?" "No." "Ever been in prison?" "Only twice." "What for?"
+ "Gambling in the streets," and we leave him, conscious that he is neither
+ industrious, honest nor truthful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We come at length to Waterloo Bridge, and here in the corners and recesses
+ of the steps we find still more of the submerged, and a pitiful lot they
+ are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We look closely at them, and we see that some are getting back to primeval
+ life, and that some are little more than human vegetables. We know that
+ their chief requirements are food, sleep and open air; and that given
+ these their lives are ideal, to themselves! But we distribute our food
+ amongst them, we part with our last old coat, we give tickets for free
+ shelters, but we get no thanks, and we know well enough that the shelter
+ tickets will not be used, for it is much easier for philosophic
+ vagabondage to remain curled up where it is than to struggle on to a
+ shelter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we leave them, and with a feeling of hopelessness hurry home to our
+ beds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us revisit the Embankment by day at 11 a.m. We take our stand
+ right close to Cleopatra's Needle; we see that numbers of wretched people,
+ male and female, are already there, and are forming themselves into a
+ queue three deep, the males taking the Westminster side of the Needle, the
+ females the City side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While this regiment of a very dolorous army is gathering together, and
+ forming silently and passively into the long queue, we look at the ancient
+ obelisk, and our mind is carried backward to the days of old, when the old
+ stone stood in the pride of its early life, and with its clear-cut
+ hieroglyphics spoke to the wonderful people who comprised the great nation
+ of antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We almost appeal to it, and feel that we would like to question it, as it
+ stands pointing heavenwards beside our great river. Surely the ancient
+ stone has seen some strange sights, and heard strange sounds in days gone
+ by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Involuntarily we ask whether it has seen stranger sights, and heard more
+ doleful sounds than the sights to be seen under its shadow to-day, and the
+ sounds to be heard around it by night. Could it speak, doubtless it would
+ tell of the misery, suffering, slavery endured by the poor in Egypt
+ thousands of years ago. Maybe it would tell us that the great empire of
+ old had the same difficulties to face and the same problems to solve that
+ Great Britain is called upon to face and to solve to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the poor cried for bread in the days of the Pharaohs, and they were
+ crowded into unclean places, but even then great and gorgeous palaces were
+ built.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you tell us, Ancient Stone, has there been an onward march of good
+ since that day? Are we much better, wiser, happier and stronger than the
+ dusky generations that have passed away?" But we get no response from the
+ ancient stone, as grim and silent it stands looking down upon us. So we
+ turn to the assembled crowd. See how it has grown whilst we have been
+ speculating. Silently, ceaselessly over the various bridges, or through
+ the various streets leading from the Strand they have come, and are still
+ coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no firm footstep heard amongst them as they shufflingly take
+ their places. No eager expectation is seen on any face, but quietly,
+ indifferently, without crushing, elbowing, they join the tail-end of the
+ procession and stand silently waiting for the signal that tells them to
+ move.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us walk up and down to count them, for it is nearly twelve o'clock,
+ and at twelve o'clock the slow march begins. So we count them by threes,
+ and find five hundred men to the right and one hundred women to the left,
+ all waiting, silently waiting! Stalwart policemen are there to keep order,
+ but their services are not required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the distance the whirl of London's traffic raises its mighty voice;
+ nearer still, the passing tramcars thunder along, and the silence of the
+ waiting crowd is made more apparent by these contrasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Big Ben booms the hour! it is twelve o'clock! and the slow march begins;
+ three by three they slowly approach the Needle, and each one is promptly
+ served with a small roll of bread and a cup of soup; as each one receives
+ the bread and soup he steps out of the ranks, promptly and silently drinks
+ his soup, and returns the cup. Rank follows rank till every one is served,
+ then silently and mysteriously the crowd melts away and disappears. The
+ police go to other duties, the soup barrows are removed; the grim ancient
+ stone stands once more alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a few hours later, even as Big Ben is booming six, the "Miserables"
+ will be again waiting, silently waiting for the rolls of bread and the
+ cups of soup, and having received them will again mysteriously disappear,
+ to go through the same routine at twelve o'clock on the morrow. Aye! and
+ to return on every morrow when soup and rolls are to be had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It looks very pitiful, this mass of misery. It seems very comforting to
+ know that they are fed twice a day with rolls and soup, but after all the
+ matter wants looking at very carefully, and certain questions must be
+ asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who are these miserables? How comes it that they are so ready to receive
+ as a matter of course the doles of food provided for them? Are they really
+ helped, and is their position really improved by this kind of charity? I
+ venture to say no! I go farther, and I say very decidedly that so long as
+ the bulk of these people can get food twice a day, and secure some kind of
+ shelter at night, they will remain content to be as they are. I will go
+ still farther and say, that if this provision becomes permanent the number
+ of the miserables will increase, and the Old Needle will continue to look
+ down on an ever-growing volume of poverty and wretchedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For after receiving the soup and bread, these nomads disappear into the
+ streets and by-ways of London, there by hook or crook, by begging or other
+ means, to secure a few coppers, to pick up scraps of food, and to return
+ to the Embankment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have walked up and down the Embankment, I have looked searchingly at the
+ people assembled. Some of them I have recognised as old acquaintances;
+ many of them, I know, have no desire to be other than what they are. To
+ eat, to sleep, to have no responsibility, to be free to live an
+ uncontrolled life, are their ambitions; they have no other. Some of them
+ are young men, only twenty years of age, who have seen the inside of
+ prison again and again. Some of them are older, who have tramped the
+ country in the summer time and have been drawn to London by the attraction
+ of an easy feeding in the winter. Search their ranks! and you will find
+ very little genuine, unfortunate, self-respecting poverty. They are what
+ they are, and unless other means are adopted they will, remain what they
+ are!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they will eat the bread and drink the soup; they will come at
+ twelve o'clock noon; they will come at six o'clock in the evening. They
+ will sleep where they can, and to-morrow will be as to-day; and the next
+ day as to-morrow, unless some compulsion is applied to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this is very sad, but I venture to say it is true, and it seems to be
+ one of the evils almost inseparable from our present life. Probably in
+ every clime and every age such women and men have existed. The savage
+ lives in all of us, and the simple life has its attractions. To be free of
+ responsibility is, no doubt, a natural aspiration. But when I see how easy
+ it is for this class of people to obtain food, when I see how easy it is
+ for them to obtain shelter, when I see and know how thousands of the poor
+ are unceasingly at work in order to provide a modicum of food and the
+ semblance of a shelter, then it occurs to me, and I am sure it will to any
+ one who thinks seriously upon the matter, that these men and women, who
+ are harking back to the life of the idle savage, are treated better in
+ Christian England than the industrious, self-respecting but unfortunate
+ poor. But come with me to see another sight! It is again afternoon, and we
+ take our stand at 3.30 p.m. outside a shelter for women which every night
+ receives, for fourpence each, some hundreds of submerged women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doors will not be opened till six o'clock, so we are in time to watch
+ them as they arrive to take their places in the waiting queue. A policeman
+ is present to preserve order and keep the pavement clear; but his service
+ is not required, for the women are very orderly, and allow plenty of room
+ for passers-by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the time for opening approaches, the number of waiting women increases
+ until there is a waiting silent crowd. No photograph could give the
+ slightest idea of their appearance, for dirt and misery are not revealed
+ by photography.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us look at them, for the human eye sees most! What do we see? Squalor,
+ vice, misery, dementia, feeble minds and feeble bodies. Old women on the
+ verge of the grave eating scraps of food gathered from the City dustbins.
+ Dirty and repulsive food, dirty and repulsive women! who have begged
+ during the day enough coppers to pay for their lodging by night. Girls of
+ twenty, whose conduct in their homes has been outrageous, and whose life
+ in London must be left to imagination. Middle-aged women, outcasts, whose
+ day has past, but who have still capabilities for begging and stealing.
+ The whole company presents an altogether terrible picture, and we are
+ conscious that few of the women have either the ability or the desire to
+ render decent service to the community, or to live womanly lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the door opens, and we watch them pass silently in, to sleep
+ during the night in the boxes arranged on the floors, their bodies
+ unwashed, and their clothing unchanged. Happy are such women when some
+ trumpery theft lands them in prison, for there at any rate a change of
+ clothing is provided, and a bath is compulsory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we stand outside a men's shelter, we see a similar state of things, a
+ waiting crowd. A passive, content, strange mixed lot of humans. Some of
+ them who have been well educated, but are now reaping the harvest that
+ follows the sowing of wild oats. The submerged males are, on the whole,
+ less repulsive than the women; dirt is less in evidence, and they exhibit
+ a better standard of health. But many of them are harking back to nature,
+ and remind us of the pictures we have seen of primeval man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I want to say a few words about the submerged that congregate on the
+ Thames Embankment, and the humanity we have seen enter the cheap shelters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My experience has shown me that they constitute the lowest grade and the
+ least hopeful class of the submerged. Amongst them there are very few
+ decent and helpable men and women who are capable of rising to a higher
+ life. Say what we will, be as pitiful as we may, those of us who have much
+ experience of life know perfectly well that there exists a large class of
+ persons who are utterly incapable of fulfilling the duties of decent
+ citizenship. It may be that they are wicked, and it is certain that they
+ are weak, but whether wicked or weak, they have descended by the law of
+ moral gravitation and have found their level in the lowest depths of
+ civilised life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they come from unexpected quarters, for some who have known comfort
+ and refinement are now quite content with their present conditions.
+ Whether born of refined parents, or of rude and ignorant parents, whether
+ coming from a tramping stock, or from settled home life, they have one
+ thing in common. It is this&mdash;the life they live has a powerful
+ attraction for them; they could not if they would, and would not if they
+ could, live lives that demand decency, discipline and industry. Nothing
+ but compulsion will ever induce them to submit themselves to disciplined
+ life. But let it be clearly understood that I am now speaking only of the
+ lowest class of the submerged. While my experience has taught me that
+ they, humanly speaking, are a hopeless lot, I have learned that they have
+ their qualities. They can endure if they cannot work; they can suffer if
+ they cannot strive. After all I am persuaded that they get a fair amount
+ of happiness. Simple pleasures are the greatest, perhaps the only real
+ pleasures. We all like to be free of responsibilities. There is no
+ rent-day coming round with dread certainty and irritating monotony to the
+ nomads. No rate collector irritates them with his imperious "demand note."
+ No school-board officer rouses them to a sense of duty by his everlasting
+ efforts to force their children to school. No butcher, no baker, no
+ milkman duns them for payment of bills long overdue! They escape the
+ danger of furniture on the "hire system." For them no automatic gas meter
+ grudgingly doles out its niggardly pennyworths of gas. They are not
+ implored to burden themselves with the ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are free from the seductions of standard bread; paper-bag cookery
+ causes them no anxious thought. Even "sweet peas" do not enter into their
+ simple calculations. Finally no life assurance agent marks them for his
+ prey, and no income-tax tempts them to lie! From all these things they are
+ free, and I would like to know who would not wish to be free of them and a
+ thousand other worries I would escape them if I could, but alas I cannot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Decidedly there is much to be said for the life of a nomad, but whether or
+ not I should place him among the inhabitants of the underworld I am not
+ sure; for he toils not, neither does he spin, and his bitterest enemies
+ cannot accuse him of taking thought for the morrow. I had almost forgotten
+ one great advantage he possesses: he need not wash; and when this
+ distasteful operation becomes, for sanitary reasons, absolutely necessary,
+ why then he can take a month in one of our great sanatoria, either prison
+ or workhouse will do, and be thoroughly cleansed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea of such free and easy folk being saved by a shelter and
+ wood-chopping is very funny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we are all tramps, more or less; it is only a question of degree! Who
+ would not like to tramp with George Borrow through Spain or Wales I would
+ like the chance! Who does not feel and hear the "call of the wild"? Most
+ certainly all Britons thrill with it. Who does not like to feel the "wind
+ on the heath" beat on his face and fill his nostrils! Who does not love
+ the sweetness of country lanes, or the solitude of mountains, or the
+ whispering mystery of the wood, or the terrors of the sea, or the silence
+ of midnight?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these things are ingrained in us, part and parcel of our very selves;
+ we cannot get away from them if we would, and woe betide us if we did! For
+ this is a grand quality in itself, one that has made our nation and our
+ empire. But couple it with idleness, inertia, feebleness, weak minds, and
+ weaker bodies; why, then you get the complete article, the vegetable
+ human! the guinea-pig man; if you will, the "submerged," or at any rate a
+ portion of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Originally I have no doubt the human family were nomads, and many of our
+ good old instincts still survive, but civilisation has killed others. In
+ every cross-bred species of animals or plants there are "reverts" or
+ "throwbacks," and the human family produces plenty of them. Every
+ civilised country has its "throwbacks," and the more monotonous
+ civilisation becomes, the more cast-iron its rules, and the more
+ scientific and educated its people, the more onerous and difficult become
+ the responsibilities and duties of citizenship; and the greater the
+ likelihood of in increased number of reverts to undisciplined and wild
+ life. In this direction the sea and our colonies are the safeguard of
+ England. But to-day we pay in meal or malt for our civilisation, for many
+ brave lads, with thews and muscles, are chafing, fretting and wearing out
+ their hearts in dull London offices or stores, where they feel choked,
+ hampered, cabined and confined, for civilisation chains them to their
+ desks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I am wandering too! I will hark back. Another cause, and a fruitful
+ cause, of nomadic life is to be found in the ever-increasing number of
+ young incapables that our present-day life produces. Characterless,
+ backboneless, negative kind of fellows with neither wisdom nor stature
+ abound. Up to eighteen years they pass muster, but after that age they are
+ useless; in reality they need caring for all their lives. They possess no
+ initiative, no self-reliance, and little capability for honest work,
+ unless it be simple work done under close supervision. Our industrial life
+ is too strenuous for these young men; they are laggards in life's race,
+ they quickly fall behind, and ultimately become disqualified altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of their parents refuse them shelter, the streets become their home;
+ absolute idleness supervenes; their day is past. Henceforward they are
+ lodging-house habitues, or wanderers on the face of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More pitiable still is the case of those that may be classed as
+ feeble-minded, and who are just responsible enough to be quite
+ irresponsible. Idiots and imbeciles have largely disappeared from country
+ villages and small towns. They are well taken care of, for our large
+ asylums are full of them; they have good quarters, good food, every
+ attention, so they live long in the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the case is very different with the half imbeciles or the half mad.
+ Short terms of imprisonment with short periods of hopeless, useless
+ liberty and an occasional spell in the workhouse constitute the circle of
+ their lives; and a vicious circle it is. Can any life be more pitiable?
+ Sane enough to know that they are not quite sane, insane enough to have no
+ wish to control their animal or vicious instincts. Possessing no
+ education, strength or skill, of no possible use in industrial life, with
+ no taste for decency or social life; sleeping by day in our parks, and by
+ night upon the Embankment. But they mate; and as like meets with like the
+ result may be imagined! Here again we are paying for our neglect of many
+ serious matters. Bad housing, overcrowding, incessant work by the mothers
+ whilst bearing children, drinking habits among the parents, insufficient
+ food for the children, endless anxieties and worries. All these things and
+ more amongst that portion of the nation which produces the largest
+ families; what wonder that many incapable bodies and minds result!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if civilisation allows all this, civilisation must pay the penalty,
+ which is not a light one, and continue to have the miserables upon the
+ Embankment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have we no pity! no thought for the next generation, no concern for
+ ourselves! No! I do not recommend a lethal chamber, but I do strongly
+ advise permanent detention and segregation for these low types of
+ unfortunate humanity. Nothing less will avail, and expensive though it
+ might be for a time, it would pay in the near future, and would be at once
+ an act of mercy and justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, on the Thames Embankment extremes meet, the ages are bridged over,
+ for the products of our up-to-date civilisation stand side by side with
+ the products of primeval habits and nomadic life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. LODGING-HOUSES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The inmates of the underworld lodging-houses are a queer and heterogeneous
+ lot; but they are much to be preferred to the sleepers out; because
+ rascally though many of them are, there is a good deal of self-reliance
+ and not a little enterprise amongst them. By hook and crook, and, it is to
+ be feared, mostly by crook, they obtain sufficient money for food and
+ lodging, and to this extent they are an improvement upon the sleepers out.
+ They have, too, some pluck, perseverance and talents that, rightly
+ applied, might be of considerable benefit to the community. But having got
+ habituated to the liberty of common lodging-houses, and to the excitement
+ of getting day by day just enough for each day's need, though sometimes
+ fasting and sometimes feasting, the desire for settled home life and for
+ the duties of citizenship has vanished. For with the money to pay night by
+ night for their lodgings, responsibility to rent and tax collector ends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must allow some exceptions, for once every year there comes upon
+ thousands of them the burden of finding five shillings to pay for the
+ hawker's licence that provides them with the semblance of a living, or an
+ excuse for begging. After much experience of this class, including many
+ visits to common lodging-houses, and some friendships with the inmates, I
+ am sure that the desire to be untrammelled with social and municipal
+ obligation leads a great percentage of the occupants to prefer the life to
+ any other. They represent to some extent in this modern and industrial age
+ the descendants of Jonadab, the son of Rechab, with this exception, they
+ are by no means averse to the wine-cup. It is to be feared that there is a
+ growth in this portion of our community, for every scheme for providing
+ decent lodgings for casually homeless men is eagerly taken advantage of by
+ men who might and who ought to live in homes of their own, and so fulfil
+ the duties of decent citizenship. In this respect even Lord Rowton's
+ estimable lodging-houses, and those, too, of our municipal authorities
+ prove no exception, for they attract numbers of men who ought not to be
+ there, but who might, with just a little more self-reliance and
+ self-respect, live comfortably outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I pass on to the common lodging-houses that accommodate a lower class
+ than is found in municipal or Rowton houses. Probably none, or at any rate
+ very few, of my readers have had a practical experience of common
+ lodging-houses. I have, so therefore I ask them to accompany me to one of
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a dingy slum stand a number of grimy houses that have been converted
+ into one big house. The various doorways have been blocked and one
+ enlarged entrance serves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we enter, the money-taker in his office demands our business. We tell
+ him that we are anxious to have a look round, and he tells us that he will
+ send for the deputy. The deputy is the autocrat that governs with
+ undisputable sway in this domain of semi-darkness and dirt. We stand aside
+ in the half-lit passage, taking good care that we have no contact with the
+ walls; the air we breathe is thick with unpleasant odours, and we realise
+ at once, and to our complete satisfaction, the smell and flavour of a
+ common lodging-house. We know instinctively that we have made its
+ acquaintance before, it seems familiar to us, but we are puzzled about it
+ until we remember we have had a foretaste of it given to us by some
+ lodging-house habitues that we met. The aroma of a common lodging-house
+ cannot be concealed, it is not to be mistaken. The hour is six o'clock
+ p.m., the days are short, for it is November. The lodgers are arriving, so
+ we stand and watch them as they pass the little office and pay their
+ sixpences. Down goes the money, promptly a numbered ticket takes its
+ place; few words are exchanged, and away go the ticket-holders to the
+ general kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the deputy comes to interview us, and he does not put us at our
+ ease; he is a forbidding fellow, one that evidently will stand no
+ nonsense. Observe, if you please, that he has lost his right hand, and
+ that a formidable iron hook replaces it. Many a time has that hook been
+ serviceable; if it could speak, many tales would it tell of victories won,
+ of rows quelled, and of blood spilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen the fellow previously, and more than once, at the local
+ police-court. Sometimes he came as prosecutor, sometimes as prisoner, and
+ at other times as witness. When the police had been required to supplement
+ the power of his iron hand in quelling the many free fights, he appeared
+ sometimes in the dual capacity of prisoner and prosecutor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that he retains his position because of his strength and the
+ unscrupulous way in which he uses it. He knows us too, but he is not well
+ pleased to see us! Nevertheless, he accedes to our request for "just a
+ look round." So through a large passage we pass, and he ushers us into the
+ lodging-house kitchen. As the door opens a babel of many voices greets us,
+ a rush of warm air comes at us, and the evidence of our noses proclaims
+ that bloaters and bacon, liver and onions, sausages and fresh fish are
+ being cooked. We look and see, we see and taste! Strange eyes are turned
+ upon us just for a moment, but we are not "'tecs," so the eyes are turned
+ back to the different frying-pans or roasting-forks, as the case may be.
+ See how they crowd round the huge and open fire, for there is no cooking
+ range. See how they elbow each other as they want space for this pan or
+ that fork. See how the bloaters curl and twist as if trying to escape from
+ the forks and the fire. See how the sausages burst and splutter in their
+ different pans. See how stolidly the tough steaks brown, refusing either
+ to splutter, yield fat, or find gravy to assist in their own undoing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listen to the sizzling that pervades the place, acting as an orchestral
+ accompaniment to the chorus of human voices. Listen to it all, breathe it
+ all, let your noses and your ears take it all in. Then let your eyes and
+ your imagination have their turn before the pungency of rank tobacco adds
+ to the difficulty of seeing and breathing. And so we look, and we find
+ there are sixty human beings of both sexes and various ages in that
+ kitchen. Some of them we know, for have we not seen them in Cheapside, St.
+ Paul's Churchyard, or elsewhere acting as gutter merchants. Yonder sit an
+ old couple that we have seen selling matches or laces for many years past!
+ It is not a race day, and there being no "test match" or exciting football
+ match, a youth of sixteen who earns a precarious living by selling papers
+ in the streets sits beside them. To-day papers are at a discount, so he
+ has given up business for the day and sought warmth and company in his
+ favourite lodging-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ah! there is our old friend, the street ventriloquist! You see the back of
+ his hand is painted in vivid colours to resemble the face of an old woman.
+ We know that he has a bundle that contains caps and bonnets, dresses and
+ skirts that will convert his hand and arm into a quaint human figure. Many
+ a droll story can he tell, for he has "padded the hoof" from one end of
+ England to the other; he knows every lodging-house from Newcastle-on-Tyne
+ to Plymouth. He is a graceless dog, fond of a joke, a laugh and a story;
+ he is honest enough and intelligent enough for anything. But of regular
+ life, discipline and work he will have none. By and by, after the cooking
+ is all done, he will want to give a performance and take up a collection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are a couple, male and female, who tramp the country lanes; the farm
+ haystacks or outbuildings have been their resting-places during the
+ summer, but approaching winter has sent them back to London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You see that they have got a tattered copy of Moody and Sankey's hymns,
+ which is their stock-in-trade. They have at different lodging-house
+ "services" picked up some slight knowledge of a limited number of tunes,
+ now they are trying to commit the words to memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-morrow they will in quiet streets be whining out "Oh, where is my boy
+ to-night?" or "Will you meet me at the Fountain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Look again&mdash;here is a shabby-genteel man who lives by his wits. He is
+ fairly educated and can write a plausible letter. He is dangerous; his
+ stock-in-trade comprises local directories, WHO'S WHO, annual reports of
+ charitable societies, clergymen's lists, etc. He is a begging-letter
+ writer, and moves from lodging-house to lodging-house; he writes letters
+ for any of the inmates who have some particular tale of woe to unfold, or
+ some urgent appeal to make, and he receives the major part of the
+ resultant charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is drunken and bestial, he is a parasite of the worst description, for
+ he preys alike on the benevolent and upon the poor wretches whose cause he
+ espouses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He assumes many names, he changes his addresses adroitly, and ticks off
+ very carefully the names and addresses of people he has defrauded. In
+ fact, he is so clever and slippery that the police and the Charity
+ Organisation Society cannot locate him. So he thrives, a type of many, for
+ every one of London's common lodging-houses can provide us with one or
+ more such cunning rogues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yonder sits a "wandering boy" about twenty-eight years of age. He is not
+ thriving, and he must needs be content with simple bread and cheese. A
+ roll of cheap "pirated" music lies on his knee and proclaims his method of
+ living. His life has its dangers, for he has great difficulty in providing
+ five shillings for his pedlar's licence, and he runs great risk of having
+ his stock seized by the police, and being committed to prison for a fine
+ he cannot pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has brought sorrow and disgrace upon his parents, no eye brightens at
+ the mention of his name. Alas! he is a specimen of the "homeless boy" of
+ whom his neighbours the minstrels will sing to-morrow. He is silent and
+ moody, for he is not in funds. Are there none among the company whom sheer
+ misfortune has brought down into this underworld? we ask. Aye, there are,
+ for in this kitchen there are representatives of all sorts and conditions.
+ See that man in the corner by himself, speaking to no one, cooking
+ nothing, eating nothing; he is thinking, thinking! This is his first night
+ in a common lodging-house; it is all new to him, he thinks it all so
+ terrible and disgusting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seems inclined to run and spend his night in the streets, and perhaps
+ it will be well for him to do so. He looks decent, bewildered and
+ sorrowful; we know at a glance that some misfortune has tripped him up, we
+ see that self-respect is not dead within him. We know that if he stays the
+ night, breathing the foul air, listening to the horrid talk, seeing much
+ and realising more, feeling himself attacked on every side by the ordinary
+ pests of common lodging-houses, we know that tomorrow morning his
+ self-respect will be lessened, his moral power weakened, and his hope of
+ social recovery almost gone. Let him stay a few weeks, then the
+ lodging-house will become his home and his joy. So we feel inclined to cry
+ out and warn him to escape with his life. This is the great evil and
+ danger of common lodging-houses; needful as they undoubtedly are for the
+ homeless and the outcast, they place the unfortunate on an inclined plane
+ down which they slide to complete demoralisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am told that there are four hundred large common lodging-houses in
+ London, many of them capable of holding several hundred lodgers, and which
+ night after night are filled with a weird collection of humanity. And they
+ cast a fatal spell upon all who get accustomed to them. Few, very few who
+ have become acclimatised ever go back to settled home life. For the
+ decencies, amenities and restraints of citizenship become distasteful. And
+ truly there is much excitement in the life for excitement, at any rate,
+ abounds in common lodging-houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing happens in them but the unexpected, and that brings its joys and
+ terrors, its laughter and its tears. Here a great deal of unrestrained
+ human nature is given free play, and the results are exciting if not
+ edifying. Let us spend an evening, but not a night&mdash;that is too much
+ to ask-with the habitues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sit apart and listen to the babel of voices, but we listen in vain for
+ the lodging-house slang of which we are told so much. They speak very much
+ like other people, and speak on subjects upon which other people speak.
+ They get as excited as ordinary people, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yonder is a lewd fellow shouting obscenities to a female, who, in an
+ equally loud voice and quite as unmistakable language, returns him a
+ Roland for every Oliver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are a couple of wordy excitable fellows who are arguing the pros and
+ cons of Free Trade and Tariff Reform. They will keep at it till the lights
+ are put out, for both are supplied with a plentiful supply of
+ contradictory literature. Both have fluent tongues, equally bitter, and,
+ having their audience, they, like other people, must contend for mastery.
+ Not that they care for the rights or wrongs of either question, for both
+ are prepared, as occasion serves, to take either side. Religion, too, is
+ excitedly discussed, for an animated couple are discussing Christian
+ Evidences, while the ventriloquist gives parsons generally and bishops in
+ particular a very warm time; even the Pope and General Booth do not escape
+ his scurrilous but witty indictments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the street singers are practising songs, sacred and secular, and
+ our friend the street minstrel produces an old flute and plays an
+ obbligato, whilst the quivering voice of his poor old wife again wants to
+ know the whereabouts of her wandering boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There will be a touching scene when they do meet&mdash;may I be there! but
+ I hope they will not meet in a common lodging-house. Another street
+ minstrel is practising new tunes upon a mouth-organ, wherewith to soften
+ the hearts of a too obdurate public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a babel it all makes; now groups of card-players are getting
+ quarrelsome, for luck has been against some, or cheating has been
+ discovered; blows are exchanged, and blood flows! As the night advances,
+ men and women under the influence of drink arrive. Some are merry, others
+ are quarrelsome, some are moody and lachrymose. The latter become the butt
+ of the former, the noise increases, confusion itself becomes confounded,
+ and we leave to avoid the general MELEE, and to breathe the night air,
+ which we find grateful and reviving. Phew! but it was hot and thick, we
+ don't want to breathe it again. It is astonishing that people get used to
+ it, and like it too! But it leaves its taint upon them, for it permeates
+ their clothing; they carry it about with them, and any one who gets a
+ whiff of it gets some idea of the breath of a common lodging-house. And
+ its moral breath has its effect, too! Woe to all that is fresh and fair,
+ young and hopeful, that comes within its withering influence. Farewell! a
+ long farewell to honour, truth and self-respect, for the hot breath of a
+ common lodging-house will blast those and every other good quality in
+ young people of either sex that inhale it. Its breath comes upon them, and
+ lo! they become foul without and vile within, carrying their moral and
+ physical contagion with them wherever they go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moral sepulchre, or rather crematorium, is the common lodging-house, for
+ when its work is done, nothing is left but ashes. For the old habitues I
+ am not much concerned, and though generally I hold a brief for old
+ sinners, criminals and convicts, I hold no brief for the old and
+ middle-aged habitues of a common lodging-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can any one call the dead to life? Can any one convert cold flesh into
+ warm pulsing life? Nay, nay! Talk about being turned into a pillar of
+ salt! the common lodging-house can do more and worse than that! It can
+ turn men and women into pillars of moral death, for even the influence of
+ a long term of penal servitude, withering as it is, cannot for one moment
+ be compared with the corrupting effect of common lodging-house life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the old minstrels may go seeking their wandering boy! and the
+ begging-letter writers may go hang!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The human vultures that prey upon the simple and good-natured may, if
+ middle-aged, continue in their evil ways. But what of the young people of
+ whom there ought to be hope? What of them? how long are these "lazar
+ houses" to stand with open door waiting to receive, swallow, transform and
+ eject young humanity? But there is money in them, of course there is;
+ there always is money to be made out of sin and misery if the community
+ permits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Human wreckage pays, and furnishes a bigger profit than more humdrum
+ investments. I am told by an old habitue with whom I have had endless
+ talks and who has taught me much, although he is a graceless rascal, that
+ one man owns eight of these large establishments, and that he and his
+ family live in respectability and wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no reason to doubt his statement, for these places are mines of
+ wealth, but the owners take precious good care not to live in them. And
+ infinite care that their families do not inhabit them. Some day when we
+ are wise&mdash;but wisdom comes so slowly&mdash;these things will not be
+ left to private enterprise, for municipalities will provide and own them
+ at no loss to the ratepayers either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then decency, though homeless, will have a chance of survival, and moral
+ and physical cleanliness some chance to live, even in a common
+ lodging-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sadly we need a modern St. George who will face and destroy this monstrous
+ dragon with the fiery breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let it not be said that I am unduly hard upon them who from choice or
+ misfortune inhabit these places. From my heart I pity them, but one cannot
+ be blind to the general consequences. And these things must be taken into
+ consideration when efforts are made, as undoubtedly efforts will some day
+ be made, to tackle this question in a reasonable way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is high time, too, that the public understood the difficulties that
+ attend any effort to lift lodging-house habitues to a higher form of
+ existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am bold enough to hazard the statement that the number of these people
+ increases year by year, and that no redemptive effort has had the
+ slightest effect in checking the continual increase. As Secretary of the
+ Howard Association, it is my business year by year to make myself
+ acquainted with the criminal statistics, and all matters connected with
+ our prisons. These statistics more than confirm my statement, for they
+ tell us that while drunkenness, brutality, crimes of violence show a
+ steady decrease, vagabondage, sleeping out, begging, etc., show a
+ continual increase as years roll by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course many of them appear again and again in the prison statistics,
+ nevertheless they form a great and terrible army, whose increase bodes ill
+ for dear and fair old England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like birds they are migratory, but they pour no sweetness on the morning
+ or evening air. Like locusts they leave a blight behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like famished wolves when winter draws near they seek the habitations of
+ men. Food they must have! There is corn in Egypt!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When gentle spring returns, then heigho! for the country lanes, villages
+ and provincial towns, and as they move from place to place they leave
+ their trail behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what a trail it is! ask the governors of our local prisons, ask the
+ guardians of any country districts, ask the farmers, aye, and ask the
+ timid women and pretty children, and, my word for it, they will be able to
+ tell you much of these strange beings that returning summer brings
+ unfailingly before them. Their lodging is sometimes the cold hard ground,
+ or the haystack, or perchance, if in luck, an outbuilding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prisons are their sanatoria, the workhouses their homes of rest, and
+ the casual ward their temporary conveniences. But always before them is
+ one objective, for a common lodging-house is open to them, and its
+ hypnotism draws them on and on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So on they go, procreating as they go. Carrying desolation with them,
+ leaving desolation behind them. The endurance of these people&mdash;I
+ suppose they must be called people&mdash;is marvellous and their rate of
+ progression is sometimes astonishing; weary and footsore, maimed, halt or
+ blind they get over the ground at a good uniform pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Look at that strange being that has just passed us as we sat on the bank
+ of a country lane; he goes along with slouching gait and halting steps; he
+ has no boots worthy of the name, his tattered trousers, much too long,
+ give us glimpses of his flesh. He wears an old frock-coat that hangs
+ almost to his heels, and a cloth cap, greasy and worn, upon his head. His
+ beard is wild and abundant, and his hair falls upon his shoulders in a way
+ worthy of an artist or poet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Follow him, but not too closely, and you will find it hard to keep up with
+ him, he knows what he is making for. Neither George Borrow nor Runciman
+ would hold him for a week, for George would want to stop and talk, but
+ this fellow is silent and grim. A lazar house draws him on, and he needs
+ must reach it, weak and ill-fed though he is! And he will reach others
+ too, for he is on a circular tour. But next winter will find him in a
+ Westminster lodging-house if he has luck, on the Embankment if he has not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He has an easy philosophy: "All the things in the world belong to all the
+ men in the world," is his outspoken creed, so he steals when he can, and
+ begs when he cannot steal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But think of this life when women share it, and children are born into it,
+ and lads and lassies are on the tramp. Dare we think of it? We dare not!
+ If we did, it would not be tolerated for a day. Neither dare I write about
+ it, for there are many things that cannot be written. So I leave
+ imagination to supply what words must not convey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is all so pitiful, it is too much for me, for sometimes I feel that
+ I am living with them, tramping with them, sleeping with them, eating with
+ them; I am become as one of them. I feel the horror, yet I do not realise
+ the charms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am an Englishman! I love liberty! I must be free, or die! I want to
+ order my own life, to control my own actions, to run on my own lines; I
+ would that all men should have similar rights. But, alas! it cannot be&mdash;civilisation
+ claims and enchains us; we have to submit to its discipline, and it is
+ well that it should be so. We do not, cannot live to ourselves, and for
+ ourselves. Those days have long passed, and for ever. Orderly life and
+ regular duties are good for us, and necessary for the well-being of the
+ nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strong robust: nation demands and requires a large amount of freedom,
+ and this it must have, or perish! The individual man, too, requires a fair
+ amount if he is to be a man. But we may, and we do in some things extend
+ freedom beyond the legitimate bounds. For in a country of limited area
+ where the bulk of the people live onerous lives, and manfully perform
+ their duties, we allow a host of parasites to thrive and swarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more this host increases, the weaker the nation becomes, and its
+ existence may ultimately become not a sign of freedom but a proof of
+ national decay. For parasites thrive on weakly life, be it individual or
+ national. So while we have a profound pity for the nomads, let us express
+ it with a strong hand. They cannot care for themselves in any decent way.
+ Let us care for them, and detain them in places that will allow permanent
+ detention and segregation. And the results will be surprising, for prisons
+ will be less numerous, workhouses, casual wards and asylums less
+ necessary, lazar houses with their pestilential breath will pass away, and
+ England will be happier, sweeter and more free!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. FURNISHED APARTMENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ What fell power decreed that certain streets in London should be devoted
+ to the purpose of providing "furnished apartments" for the submerged I do
+ not know. But I do know that some streets are entirely devoted to this
+ purpose, and that a considerable amount of money is made out of such
+ houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ask my readers to accompany me for a visit to one of these streets, and
+ make some acquaintance with the houses, the furniture and the inhabitants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The particular streets we select run at a right-angle from a main
+ thoroughfare, a railway divides them from a beautiful park, and on this
+ railway City merchants pass daily to and from their suburban homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I question whether in the whole of London more misery, vice and poverty
+ can be found located in one limited area than in the streets we are about
+ to visit. I know them, and I have every reason for knowing them. We make
+ our visit in summer time, when poverty is supposed to be less acute. As we
+ enter the street we notice at once that a commodious public-house stands
+ and thrives at the entrance. We also notice that there are in the street
+ several "general" shops, where tea and margarine, firewood, pickles,
+ paraffin oil and cheese, boiled ham and vinegar, corned beef and Spanish
+ onions, bread and matches are to be obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stand in the middle of the roadway, in the midst of dirt and refuse,
+ and look up and down the street. Innumerable children are playing in the
+ gutter or on the pavements, and the whole place teems with life. We
+ observe that the houses are all alike, the shops excepted. They stand
+ three-storey high; there are nine rooms in each house. We look in vain for
+ bright windows and for clean and decent curtains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every room seems occupied, for there is no card in any window announcing
+ "furnished apartments." The street is too well known to require
+ advertisement, consequently the "furnished apartments" are seldom without
+ tenants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The street is a cave of Adullam to which submerged married couples resort
+ when their own homes, happy or otherwise, are broken up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We notice that it is many days since the doors and window-frames of the
+ different houses made acquaintance with the painter. We notice that all
+ doors stand open, for it is nobody's business to answer a knock, friendly
+ or otherwise. We look in the various doorways and see in each case the
+ same sort of staircase and the same unclean desolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who would believe that Adullam Street is a veritable Tom Tiddler's Ground?
+ Would any one believe that a colony of the submerged could prove a source
+ of wealth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us count the houses on both sides of the street. Forty-five houses!
+ Leave out the two "general" shops, the greengrocer's and the "off
+ licence"; leave out also the one where the agent and collector lives, that
+ leaves us forty-one houses of nine rooms let out as furnished apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If let to married couples that means a population of seven hundred and
+ thirty-eight, if all the rooms are occupied, and supposing that no couple
+ occupies more than one room. As for the children&mdash;but we dare not
+ think of them&mdash;we realise the advantage of the open street of which
+ we freely grant them the freehold. But we make the acquaintance of a
+ tenant and ask some questions. We find that she has two children, that
+ they have but one furnished room, for which they pay seven shillings and
+ sixpence weekly in advance! Always in advance!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She further tells us that their room is one of the best and largest; it
+ faces the street, and is on the first floor. She says that some rooms are
+ let at six shillings, others at six shillings and sixpence, and some at
+ seven shillings. We ask her why she lives in Adullam Street, and she tells
+ us that her own furniture was obtained on the "hire system," and when it
+ was seized they came to Adullam Street, and they do not know how they are
+ to get out of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That sets us thinking and calculating; three hundred and sixty-nine rooms,
+ rent always payable in advance&mdash;from the submerged, too!&mdash;average
+ six shillings and sixpence per week per room, why, that is L120 per week,
+ or L6,240 annually from forty-one houses, if they are regularly occupied.
+ Truly furnished apartments specially provided for the submerged are extra
+ specially adapted to the purpose of keeping them submerged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As no deputy disputes our entrance, we enter and proceed to gain some
+ knowledge of the tenants, and take some stock of their rooms and
+ furniture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rooms are simply but by no means sweetly furnished! Here is an
+ inventory and a mental picture of one room. A commodious bed with dirty
+ appointments that makes us shudder! A dirty table on which are some odds
+ and ends of unclean crockery, a couple of cheap Windsor chairs, a
+ forbidding-looking chest of drawers, a rusty frying-pan, a tin kettle, a
+ teapot and a common quart jug. He would be a bold man that bid ten
+ shillings for the lot, unless he bought them as a going concern. A cheap
+ and nasty paper covers the wall, excepting where pieces have been torn
+ away, and the broken walls are made of lath and plaster, to provide
+ splendid cover for innumerable insects which remain in undisputed
+ possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One floor much resembles another, but the basement and the top storey
+ rooms are the worst of all. We look through the window of a second floor
+ back room, and see the out premises, but one look is sufficient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We want to know something of the tenants, so we enter into conversation
+ with them, and find them by no means reserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Room 1. Husband and wife about thirty-five years of age, no children;
+ husband has been ill for some months, during which the rent got behind.
+ When he was taken to the infirmary they lost their home altogether; she
+ did washing and charing for a time, but ultimately got into the "House."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When her husband got better, and was discharged from the infirmary, his
+ old mates collected ten shillings for him, he took the room in which they
+ now lived, and of course she joined him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How did they live? Well, it was hardly living; her husband looked round
+ every day and managed to "pick up something," and she got a day or two
+ days' work every week&mdash;their rent was always paid in advance. What
+ happened when her husband did not "pick up something" she did not say, but
+ semi-starvation seemed the only alternative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No. 2. Husband, wife and a girl of seven engaged in making coarse paper
+ flowers of lurid hue. They had been in that room for six months; they sold
+ the paper flowers in the streets, but being summer time they did not sell
+ many. At Christmas time people bought them for decorations; sometimes
+ people gave the girl coppers, but did not take the flowers from her. The
+ police watched them very closely, as they required a licence for selling,
+ and if they took the girl out in the wet or dark the police charged them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very difficult to live at all, owing to police interference. The
+ girl did not go to school, but they had been warned that she must go; they
+ did not know what they should do when she could not help them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Room 3. A strong man about thirty, his wife and two young children. The
+ remains of a meal upon the table, a jug of beer and a smell of tobacco.
+ The man looks at us, and a flash of recognition is exchanged. He had been
+ released from prison at 8.30 that morning after serving a sentence of nine
+ months for shop robbery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We asked how much gratuity he had earned. Eight shillings, he told us. His
+ wife and children had met him at the prison gate; they had come straight
+ to that room, for which the wife had previously arranged; they had paid a
+ week in advance. "What was he going to do?" "He did not know!" He did not
+ appear to care, but he supposed he "must look round, he would get the rent
+ somehow." We felt that he spoke the truth, and that he would "get the rent
+ somehow" till the police again prevented him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that prison will again welcome him, and that the workhouse gates
+ will open to receive his wife and children, the number of which will
+ increase during his next detention in prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Room 4. Two females under thirty. No signs of occupation; they are not
+ communicative, neither are they rude, so we learn nothing from them except
+ that they were not Londoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Room 5. A family group, father, mother and four children; they had come to
+ Adullam Street because they had been ejected from their own home. Their
+ goods and chattels had been put on the street pavement, whence the parish
+ had removed them to the dust destructor, probably the best thing to do
+ with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The family were all unhealthy and unclean. The parents did not seem to
+ have either strength, grit or intelligence to fit them for any useful
+ life. But they could creep forth and beg, the woman could stand in the
+ gutter with a little bit of mortality wrapped in her old shawl, for
+ tender-hearted passers-by to see its wizened face, and the father could
+ stand not far away from her with a few bootlaces or matches exposed, as if
+ for sale. They managed to live somehow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Room 6. An elderly couple who had possessed no home of their own for years
+ past, but who know London well, for the furnished lodgings of the east,
+ west, north and south are familiar to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sells groundsel, she sells water-cress, at least they tell us so, and
+ point to baskets as evidence. But we know that groundsel business of old.
+ We have seen him standing in a busy thoroughfare with his pennyworth of
+ groundsel, and we know that though he receives many pennies his stock
+ remains intact, and we know also that pennyworths of water-cress in the
+ dirty hands of an old woman serve only the same purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Room 7. Here we find a younger but not more hopeful couple; she is fairly
+ well dressed, and he is rather flashy. They have both food and drink. We
+ know that when the shades of night fall she will be perambulating the
+ streets, and he like a beast of prey will be watching not far away. So we
+ might go through the whole of the colony. There is a strange assortment of
+ humanity in Adullam Street. Vice and misery, suffering and poverty,
+ idleness and dishonesty, feeble-mindedness and idiocy are all blended, but
+ no set-off in virtue and industry is to be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strong rogue lives next to the weak and the unfortunate, the hardened
+ old sinner next door to some who are beginning to qualify for a like old
+ age. The place is coated with dirt and permeated with sickening odours.
+ And to Adullam Street come young couples who have decided to unite their
+ lives and fortunes without any marriage ceremony; for in Adullam Street
+ such unions abound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young fellows of nineteen earning as much as twelve shillings a week
+ couple with girls of less age earning ten shillings weekly. It looks so
+ easy to live on twenty-two shillings a week and no furniture to buy, and
+ no parson to pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So a cheap ring is slipped on, and hand in hand the doomed couple go to
+ Adullam Street, which receives them with open arms, and hugs them so long
+ as six shillings and sixpence weekly is forthcoming in advance. Their
+ progress is very rapid; when the first child arrives, the woman's earnings
+ cease, and Adullam Street knows them no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ticket-of-leave men, ex-convicts, heroes of many convictions, come to
+ Adullam Street and bring their female counterparts with them. They
+ flourish for a time, and then the sudden but not unexpected disappearance
+ of the male leads to the disappearance of the female. She returns to her
+ former life; Adullam Street is but an incident in her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So there is a continual procession through Adullam Street; very little
+ good enters it, and it is certain that less good passes out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where do its temporary inhabitants go? To prisons, to workhouses, to
+ hospitals, to common lodging-houses, to shelters, to the Embankment and to
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although those who seek sanctuary in Adullam Street are already
+ inhabitants of the underworld, a brief sojourn in it dooms them to lower
+ depths. I suppose there must be places of temporary residence for the sort
+ of people that inhabit it, for they must have shelter somewhere. But I
+ commend this kind of property to the searching eyes of the local
+ authorities and the police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But furnished apartments can tell another tale when they are not situated
+ in Adullam Street. For sometimes a struggling widow, or wife with a sick
+ husband, or a young married couple seek to let furnished apartments as a
+ legitimate means of income. When they do so, let them beware of the
+ underworld folk who happen to be better clothed and more specious than
+ their fellows, or they will bitterly rue it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very little payment will they get. Couples apparently married and
+ apparently respectable, but who are neither, are common enough, who are
+ continually on the look-out for fresh places of abode, where they may
+ continue their depredation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are ready enough with a deposit, but that is all the money they mean
+ to part with, and that has probably been raised by robbing their last
+ landlady. They can give references if required, and show receipts, too,
+ from their last lodgings, for they carry rent-books made out by themselves
+ and fully paid up for the purpose. They are adepts at obtaining entrance,
+ and, once in, they remain till they have secured another place and marked
+ another prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile their poor victims suffer in kind and money, and are brought
+ nearer destitution. I have frequently known a week's rent paid with the
+ part proceeds of articles stolen from either the furnished apartments, or
+ some other part of the house just entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could tell some sad stories of suffering and distress brought to
+ struggling and decent people by these pests, of whom a great number are
+ known to the police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the merry game goes on, for while vampires are sucking the impure
+ blood of the wretched dwellers in Adullam Street lodgings, the dwellers in
+ Adullam Street in their turn prey on the community at large.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the honest and unfortunate poor can scarcely find cover, and
+ when they do, why, then their thin blood is drained, for they have to pay
+ exorbitantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is apparently easy to transmute wretched humanity into gold. But who is
+ going to call order out of this horrid chaos? No one, I am thinking, for
+ no one seems to dare attempt in any thorough way to solve the question of
+ housing the very poor, and that question lies at the root of this matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let any one attempt it, and a thousand formidable vested interests rise up
+ and confront him, against which he will dash himself in vain. As to
+ housing the inhabitants of the underworld at a reasonable rental, no one
+ seems to have entertained the idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lease holders and sub-lease holders, landlords and ground landlords,
+ corporations and churches, philanthropists and clergymen have all got
+ vested interests in house property where wretchedness and dirt are
+ conspicuous. "But," said a notable clergyman in regard to some horrid
+ slum, "I cannot help it, I have only a life-interest in it," as if,
+ forsooth, he could have more; did he wish to carry his interests beyond
+ the grave? I would give life-interest in rotten house property short
+ shrift by burning the festering places. But such places are not burned,
+ though sometimes they are closed by the order of the local authorities.
+ But oftener still they are purchased by local authorities at great public
+ cost, or by philanthropic trusts. Then the human rabbits are driven from
+ their warrens to burrow elsewhere and so leave room for respectability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Better-looking and brighter buildings are erected where suites of rooms
+ are to let at very high prices. Then a tax is placed upon children, and a
+ premium is offered to sterility. Glowing accounts appear in the Press, and
+ royalty goes to inspect the new gold mine! We rub our hands with
+ complacent satisfaction and say, "Ah! at last something is being done for
+ housing the very poor!" But what of the rabbits! have they ascended to the
+ seventh heaven of the new paradise? Not a bit; they cannot offer the
+ required credentials, or pay the exorbitant rent! not for them seven
+ flights of stone stairs night and morning; it is so much easier for
+ rabbits to burrow underground, or live in the open. So away they scuttle!
+ Some to dustheaps, some back to Adullam Street, some to nomadic life. But
+ most of them to other warrens, to share quarters with other rabbits till
+ those warrens in their turn are converted into "dwellings," when again
+ they must needs scuttle and burrow elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can it be wondered at that these people are dirty and idle; and that many
+ of them ultimately prefer the settled conditions of prison or workhouse
+ life, or take to vagrancy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot find a royal specific for this evil; humanity will, under any
+ conditions, have its problems and difficulties. Vagrants have always
+ existed, and probably will continue to exist while the human race endures.
+ But we need not manufacture them! Human rookeries and rabbit warrens must
+ go; England, little England, cannot afford them, and ought not to tolerate
+ them. But before we dispossess the rooks and the rabbits, let us see to it
+ that, somewhere and somehow, cleaner nests and sweeter holes are provided
+ for them. The more I think upon this question the more I am convinced that
+ it is the great question of the day, and upon its solution the future of
+ our country depends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See what is happening! Thousands of children born to this kind of humanity
+ become chargeable to the guardians or find entrance to the many children's
+ homes organised by philanthropy. One course is taken the bright and
+ healthy, the sound in body and mind, are emigrated; but the smitten, the
+ afflicted, the feeble and the worthless are kept at home to go through the
+ same life, to endure the same conditions as their parents, and in their
+ turn to produce a progeny that will burrow in warrens or scuttle out of
+ them even as their parents did before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the feebler the life, the greater the progeny; this we cannot escape,
+ for Nature will take care of herself. We, may drive out the rabbits, we
+ may imprison and punish them, we may compel them to live in Adullam Street
+ or in lazar houses, we may harry them and drive them hither and thither,
+ we may give them doles of food on the Embankment or elsewhere. We may give
+ them chopping wood for a day, we may lodge them for a time in labour
+ homes; all this we may do, but we cannot uplift them by these methods. We
+ cannot exterminate them. But by ignoring them we certainly give them an
+ easy chance of multiplying to such a degree that they will constitute a
+ national danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. THE DISABLED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In this chapter I want to speak of those who suffer from physical
+ disabilities, either from birth, the result of accident, or disease. If
+ this great army of homeless afflicted humanity were made to pass in
+ procession before us, it would, I venture to say, so touch our hearts that
+ we should not want the procession repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing gives us more pleasure than the sight of a number of people who,
+ suffering from some one or other physical deprivation, are being taught
+ some handicraft by which they will be able to earn a modest living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably nothing causes us greater sadness than the sight of deformed and
+ crippled men and women who are utterly unable to render any useful service
+ to the community, and who consequently have to depend upon their wits for
+ a miserable living. It is a very remarkable thing that an accident which
+ deprives a man of a leg, of an arm, or of eyesight, not only deprives him
+ of his living, but also frequently produces a psychological change. And
+ unless some counterbalancing conditions serve to influence in an opposite
+ direction he may become dangerous. It was not without reason that our
+ older novelists made dwarfs and hunchbacks to be inhuman fiends. Neither
+ was it without reason that Dickens, our great student of human nature,
+ made of Quilp a twisted dwarf, and Stagg a blind man his most dangerous
+ characters. Some years ago I was well acquainted with a very decent man, a
+ printer; he had lived for years beyond reproach; he was both a good
+ workman, husband and father. But he lost his right arm, the result of an
+ accident at his work, and his character changed from that day. He became
+ morose, violent and cruel, and obsessed with altogether false ideas. He
+ could not reason as other men, and he became dangerous and explosive. Time
+ after time I have seen him committed to prison, until he became a hopeless
+ prison habitue. My experience has also shown me that physical deprivations
+ are equally likely to lead to sharpened wits and perverted moral sense as
+ to explosive and cruel violence. Probably this is natural, for nature
+ provides some compensation to those who suffer loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what makes the army of the physically handicapped so dangerous.
+ The disabled must needs live, and their perverted moral sense and
+ sharpened wits enable them to live at the expense of the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very clever, indeed, many of these men are; they know how to provoke pity,
+ and they know how to tell a plausible tale. Many of them can get money
+ without even asking for it. They know full well the perils that environ
+ the man who begs. I am not ashamed to say that I have been frequently
+ duped by such fellows, and have learned by sad experience that my wits
+ cannot cope with theirs, and that my safety lies in hasty retreat when
+ they call upon me, for I have always found that conversation with them
+ leads to my own undoing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Witness the following. One winter night my eldest son, who lives about a
+ mile away, went out to post a letter at midnight. After dropping his
+ letter in the pillar-box, he was surprised to hear a voice say, "Will you
+ kindly show me the way to Bridlington?" "Bridlington! why, it is more than
+ two hundred miles away." The request made my son gasp, for, as I have
+ said, it was winter and midnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The audacity of the request, however, arrested his attention, and that
+ doubtless was the end to be secured. So a conversation followed. The
+ inquirer was a Scotchman about thirty years of age; he wore dark glasses
+ and was decently clad; he had been discharged from St. Bartholomew's
+ Hospital. He was a seaman, but owing to a boiler explosion on board he had
+ been treated in the hospital. Now he must walk to Bridlington, where an
+ uncle lived who would give him a home. He produced a letter from his
+ uncle, but he had either lost or torn up the envelope. All this and more
+ he told my son with such candour and sincerity, that he was soon the
+ poorer by half-a-crown. Then, to improve the fellow's chance of getting to
+ Bridlington, he brought him to me. I was enjoying my beauty sleep when
+ that ill-fated knock aroused me. Donning a warm dressing-gown and
+ slippers, I went down to the front door, and very soon the three of us
+ were shivering round the remains of a fire in my dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very lucidly and modestly Angus repeated the above story, not once did he
+ falter or trip. He showed me the letter from his uncle, he pointed out the
+ condition of his eyes and the scars on his face; with some demur he
+ accepted my half-crown, saying that he did not ask for anything, and that
+ all he wanted was to get to Bridlington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In my pyjamas and dressing-gown I explored the larder and provided him
+ with food, after which my son escorted him to the last tramcar, saw him
+ safely on his way to the Seamen's Institute with a note to the manager
+ guaranteeing the expense of his bed and board for a few days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day my son visited the Seamen's Institute, but alas! Angus was not
+ there, he had not been there. Nevertheless the manager knew something of
+ him, for three separate gentlemen had sent Angus to the institute. One had
+ found him in the wilds of Finchley looking for Bridlington! Another had
+ found him pursuing the same quest at Highgate, while still another had
+ come on him, with his dark glasses, bundle and stick, looking for
+ Bridlington on the road to Southgate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not know whether the poor fellow ever arrived at Bridlington, but
+ this I do know, that he has found his way northwards, and that he is now
+ groping and inquiring for Dawlish in Devonshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Manchester Guardian tells us that one silent evening hour poor Angus
+ was discovered in several different places in the vicinity of Manchester.
+ The same paper of the next day's date stated that eleven out of the twelve
+ who met poor Angus were so overcome by the poignancy of his narrative and
+ the stupendous character of his task, that they promptly gave him
+ financial assistance. I am strongly of the opinion that the twelfth man
+ was entirely without money at the time he met Angus, or I feel that he
+ would have proved no exception to the rule. In my heart I was glad to find
+ that the hard-headed citizens of Manchester are just as kind-hearted and
+ likely to be imposed upon as we are in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Angus has been playing his fame for six years at least, for one
+ gentleman who gave him explicit directions more than five years ago writes
+ to the Manchester Guardian saying, "I am afraid he took a wrong turning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is evident that Angus has done fairly well at his business, and yet it
+ would appear that he never asked for a single penny since he first started
+ on his endless search. He always accepts money reluctantly, and I much
+ question whether the police have right to arrest him, or the gulled public
+ any ground to complain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if Angus should ever get to his kind uncle at Bridlington, and that
+ respected gentleman should return the five shillings we gave to help his
+ unfortunate nephew, I will promise to be more careful in pressing money
+ upon strangers in future. But whether the money comes to hand or not I
+ have made myself a promise, and it is this: never more to get out of a
+ warm bed on a cold night to open the house and entertain a half-blind man
+ that speaks with a rich Scotch accent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how clever it all is! Why, its very audacity ensures its success, and
+ Angus, for aught I know, has many fellow-craftsmen. Certainly if he is
+ alone he must be almost ubiquitous. But Angus and such-like are not to be
+ wondered at, for Nature herself endows all living things with the powers
+ to adapt themselves to circumstances and obtain the means of defence and
+ offence from their conditions. So Nature deals with the human family, in
+ whom the struggle for existence develops varied, powerful and maybe
+ dangerous characteristics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present it is nobody's business to see that the maimed, the halt, the
+ blind are taught and trained to be of some service, and made able in some
+ way to earn a subsistence. Philanthropy, it is true, does something, and
+ also those blessed institutions, the schools for the blind, and training
+ homes for the crippled. I never see such institutions without experiencing
+ great gladness, for I know how much evil they avert. But the great body of
+ the physically afflicted are without the walls and scope of these
+ institutions, consequently tens of thousands of men and women, because of
+ their afflictions, are enabled to prey upon the community with a cunning
+ that other people cannot emulate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We hear daily of accidents. We learn of men and women losing arms, legs
+ and hands; our hearts are touched for a brief moment, then we remember the
+ particulars no more. The ultimate consequences are unseen, but they are
+ not to be avoided, for every cripple left uncared for may become a
+ criminal of dangerous type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their elemental needs and passions still exist, notwithstanding their
+ physical deprivations. They claim the right to eat and drink, they claim
+ the right of perpetuating their kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some day perhaps the community will realise what the exercise of the
+ latter right means. Some day, and Heaven send that day soon, we shall be
+ horrified at the thought that a vast number of unfortunates exist among us
+ who, demanding our pity and our care, are going down to the grave without
+ that care to which their physical disabilities entitle them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we look at these unfortunates, feelings of pity, disgust or amusement
+ may be aroused, but one moment's reflection would convince us that these
+ afflicted homeless creatures manage to exist and extort an expensive
+ living from the community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have said that every disabled man is a potential criminal, and that
+ unless he receives some compensation giving him the means of earning
+ honestly his living, he is certain to be a danger or a parasite. This is
+ but natural, for in the first place his physical nature has received a
+ shock, has sustained an outrage, Nature strikes back, and some one has to
+ suffer. The loss of a limb means severed muscles, bones and nerves. Nature
+ never forgets that they ought to be there, but as they are not there she
+ does without them; but none the less she feels for them instinctively, and
+ becomes disappointed and bitter because she is refused the use of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Add to this the anxiety, the sufferings the amputated man feels when he is
+ also deprived of his means of livelihood, as well as his limb, and from
+ comfort comes down to penury. Perhaps he has been able hitherto to keep
+ his wife and children with a fair amount of comfort; now he is helpless
+ and has to depend upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He may be of proud spirit, but he has to endure mortification by seeing
+ his wife labour and slave for him. He becomes moody, then passionate, a
+ little drink maddens him, then comes the danger. He does something, then
+ the police are required, and prison awaits him. There he thinks and broods
+ over his wrong, with bitterness and revengeful spirit. Perhaps his wife
+ has been compelled to give evidence against him; he remembers that, he
+ scores it up, and henceforth there is no peace for either of them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frequent convictions follow, ultimately the wife has to claim the
+ protection of the law, and gets a separation order on account of his
+ cruelty. Henceforward he is an outcast, his children and friends cast him
+ off, for they are afraid of him. But he lives on, and many have to suffer
+ because he has lost a limb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We read a great deal about the development of character through suffering,
+ and well I know the purifying effects suffering has upon our race; but it
+ is well sometimes to look at the reverse side, and consider what evil
+ follows in the wake of suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blind men, the deaf and the dumb and the physically disabled need our
+ pitiful consideration. Some of the sweetest, cleverest, bravest men I know
+ suffer from great physical disabilities, but they have pleasures and
+ compensations, they live useful lives, their compensations have produced
+ light and sweetness, they are not useless in a busy world, they are not
+ mere cumberers of the ground. They were trained for usefulness whilst they
+ were young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a far different case is presented with the disabled among the very
+ poor. What chance in life is there for a youth of twenty who loses an arm
+ or leg? He has no friends whose loving care and whose financial means can
+ soften his affliction and keep him in comfort while training for service.
+ Who in this rich, industrial England wants such service as he can render?
+ Very few! and those who do make use of him naturally feel that his service
+ is not worth much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Numbers of my acquaintances like Angus half lose their sight! Who requires
+ their service? No one! But these men live on, and they mean to live on,
+ and Nature furnishes them with the means by giving them extra cunning.
+ Many of these fellows, poor disabled fellows, inhabit the dark places of
+ the underworld. Let us call them out of their dark places and number them,
+ classify them, note their disabilities!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly they came down to the underworld through great afflictions. They
+ form the disabled army of civilisation's industrial world who have been
+ wounded and crippled in the battle. All sorts of accidents have happened
+ to them: explosions have blinded them, steam has scalded them, buffers
+ have crushed them, coal has buried them, trains have run over them,
+ circular saws have torn them asunder. They are bent and they are twisted,
+ they are terrible to look at; as we gaze at them we are fascinated. March!
+ now see them move! Did you ever see anything like this march of disabled
+ men from the gloom of the underworld?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How they shuffle and drag along; what strange, twisted and jerky movements
+ they have; what sufferings they must endure, and what pain they must have
+ had. All these thoughts come to us as we look at the march of the disabled
+ as they twist and writhe past us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The procession is endless, for it is continually augmented by men and
+ women from the upperworld, who as conscripts are sent to the army below,
+ because they have sustained injuries in the service of the world above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they pass! But the upperworld has not done with them; it does not get
+ rid of its natural obligations so easily. It suffers with them, and pays
+ dearly for its neglect of them. The disabled live on, they will not die to
+ please us, and they extract a pretty expensive living from the world
+ above. The worst of it is that these unfortunates prey also upon those who
+ have least to spare, the respectable poor just above the line. They do not
+ always sit at the gates of the rich asking for crumbs, for the eloquence
+ of their afflictions and the pity of their woes strike home to the hearts
+ and pockets of the industrious poor who have so little to spare. But it is
+ always much easier to rob the poor!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is our boast that Englishmen love justice, and it is a true boast! But
+ when we read of accidents and of surgical operations, does our imagination
+ lead us to ask: What about the future of the sufferers? Very rarely, I
+ expect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact is, we have got so used to this sight of maimed manhood that it
+ causes us but little anxious thought, though it may cause some feelings of
+ revulsion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is the Employers' Liability Act! Yes, I admit it, and a blessed
+ Act it is. But the financial consideration given for a lost limb or a
+ ruined body is not a fortune; it soon evaporates, then heigho! for the
+ underworld, for bitterness and craft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all accidents do not come within the scope of that Act, not by any
+ means. If a married woman about to become a mother falls or rolls down the
+ stairs, when climbing to her home in the seventh heaven of Block-land, if
+ she sustains long injuries, who compensates her? If the child is born a
+ monstrosity, though not an idiot, who compensates for that? If the poor
+ must be located near the sky, how is it that "lifts" cannot be provided
+ for them? Who can tell the amount of maimed child, middle-aged and elderly
+ life that has resulted from the greasy stairs and dark landings of London
+ dwellings. Industrial life, commercial life and social life take a rare
+ toll of flesh and blood from the poor. For this civilisation makes no
+ provision excepting temporary sustentation in hospitals, workhouses or
+ prisons. Even our prison commissioners tell us that "our prisons are
+ largely filled with the very poor, the ignorant, the feeble, the incapable
+ and the incapacitated."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would appear that if we can make no other provision for the disabled,
+ we can make them fast in prison for a time. But that time soon passes, and
+ their poor life is again resumed. But the disabled are not the only
+ suffering unfortunates in the netherworld who, needing our pity, receive
+ the tender mercies of prison. For there epileptics abide or roam in all
+ the horror of their lives "oft-times in water and oft-times in the fire,"
+ a burden to themselves, a danger to others. Shut out from industrial life
+ and shut out from social life. Refused lodgings here and refused lodgings
+ there. Sometimes anticipating fits, sometimes recovering from fits;
+ sometimes in a semi-conscious state, sometimes in a state of madness.
+ Never knowing what may happen to them, never knowing what they may do to
+ others. Always suffering, always hopeless! Treated as criminals till their
+ deeds are fatal, then certified to be "criminal lunatics." Such is the
+ life of the underworld epileptic. Life, did I call it?&mdash;let me
+ withdraw that word; it is the awful, protracted agony of a living death,
+ in which sanity struggles with madness, rending and wounding a poor human
+ frame. Happy are they when they die young! but even epileptics live on and
+ on; but while they live we consign them to the underworld, where their
+ pitiful cry of "Woe! woe!" resounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not say this is an exaggeration, for it is less than truth, not beyond
+ it. Poe himself, with all his imagination and power, could not do full
+ justice to this matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mendicity societies in their report tell of cunning rascals who impose on
+ the public by simulating "fits"; they tell of the "king of fits," the
+ "soap fits king," and others. They point with some satisfaction to the
+ convictions of these clever rogues, and claim some credit in detecting
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their statements are true! But why are they true? Because real epileptics
+ are so common in the underworld, and their sufferings so palpable and
+ striking, that parasites, even though afflicted themselves, nay, because
+ of their own disabilities, can and do simulate the weird sufferings of
+ epileptics. Will mendicity societies, when they tell us about, enumerate
+ for us, and convict for us the hoary impostors, also tell us about and
+ enumerate for us the stricken men and women who are not impostors, and
+ whose fits are unfortunately genuine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If some society will do this, they will do a great public service; but at
+ present no one does it, so this world of suffering, mystery and danger
+ remains unexplored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not wonder that the ancients thought that epileptics suffered from
+ demoniacal possessions; perhaps they do, perhaps we believe so still. At
+ any rate we deal with them in pretty much the same way as in days of old.
+ The ancients bound them with chains; we are not greatly different&mdash;we
+ put them in prison. The ancients did allow their epileptics to live in the
+ tombs, but we allow them no place but prison, unless their friends have
+ money!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let me end the subject by stating that the non-provision for
+ epileptics is a national disgrace and a national danger. That
+ incarceration of epileptics in prison and their conviction as criminals is
+ unjust and cruel. That it is utterly impossible for philanthropy to
+ restrain, detain and care for epileptics. That the State itself must see
+ to the matter!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just another word: epileptics marry! Imagine if you can the life of a
+ woman married to an epileptic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Epileptics have children of a sort! Can you imagine what they are likely
+ to be? You cannot! Well, then, I will tell you. Irresponsible beings, with
+ abnormal passions, but with little sense of truth and honour, with no
+ desire for continuous labour, but possessed of great cunning. The girls
+ probably immoral, the boys feckless and drunken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have to pay for our neglect; we have no pity upon epileptics. He and
+ his children have no pity for us!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. WOMEN IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The women of the underworld may be divided into three great classes. Those
+ who by reason of their habits or mental peculiarities prefer to live
+ homeless lives. Secondly, those whom misfortune has deprived of settled
+ home life. Thirdly, those who, having settled homes, live at starvation
+ point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In London there is a great number of each class. With class one I shall
+ deal briefly, for they do not form a pleasant theme. The best place to
+ study these wild homeless women is Holloway Prison, for here you will find
+ them by the hundreds any day you please. In Holloway Prison during one
+ year 933 women who had been in that gaol more than ten times were again
+ received into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am privileged sometimes to address them. As I write I see them sitting
+ before me. After one of my addresses I was speaking to one of the
+ wardresses about their repeated convictions, when the wardress said&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, sir, we are glad to see them come back again, for we know that they
+ are far better off with us than they are at liberty. They go out clean and
+ tidy with very much better health than they came in. It seems cruel to let
+ them out, to live again in dirt and misery, and though we have an
+ unpleasant duty to perform in cleansing them when they return, we feel
+ some comfort in the thought that for a short time they will be cared for.
+ Why, sir, it is prison and prison alone that keeps them alive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this army of women is a dolorous army in all truth, for their faces,
+ their figures are alike strange and repulsive, and many of them seem to be
+ clothed with the cerements of moral and spiritual death. They are
+ frequently charged with drunkenness, stealing, begging, or sleeping out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their names appear on the "Black List," for the law says they are
+ "habitual inebriates," yet drink has little or nothing to do with their
+ actual condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let any one look them in the face as I have looked them in the face, study
+ their photographs as I have studied them, and I venture to affirm that
+ they will say with me, "These women are not responsible beings." For years
+ I have been drumming this fact into the ears of the public, and at length
+ the authorities acknowledged it, for in 1907 the Home Office Inspector
+ issued a report on inebriate reformatories, and gave the following account
+ of those who had been in such institutions: 2,277 had been treated in
+ reformatories; of these he says 51 were insane and sent to lunatic
+ asylums, 315 others were pronounced defectives or imbeciles. Altogether he
+ tells us that 62 out of every hundred were irresponsible women and unfit
+ for social and industrial life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My many years' experience of London's underworld confirms the testimony of
+ the Home Office, for I am persuaded that a very large proportion of
+ homeless women on our streets are homeless because they are quite unfitted
+ for, and have no desire for decent social life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should I be asked about the birth and parentage of these women, I reply
+ that they come from all classes. Born of tramps and of decent citizens,
+ born in the slums and sometimes in villas, almost every rank and station
+ contributes its quota to this class of wild, hopeless women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I pass on to the second class, those who by misfortune have become
+ submerged. This, too, is a large class, and a class more worthy of
+ sympathy and consideration than the others, for amongst them, in spite of
+ misfortune and poverty, there is a great deal of womanliness and
+ self-respect. Misfortune, ill-health, sorrow, loss of money, position or
+ friends, circumstances over which they have had but little or no control
+ have condemned them to live in the underworld. Such women present a
+ pitiful sight and a difficult problem. They cling to the relics of their
+ respectability with a passionate devotion, and they wait, hope, starve and
+ despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often misfortune has come upon them when the days of youth were passed,
+ and they found themselves in middle age faced with the grim necessity of
+ earning a living. I have seen many of them struggle with difficulty, and
+ exhibit rare courage and patience; I have watched them grow older and
+ feebler. Sometimes I have provided glasses that their old eyes might be
+ strengthened for a little needlework, but I have always known that it was
+ only helping to defer the evil day, when they would no longer be able to
+ pay the rent for a little room in a very poor neighbourhood. My mind is
+ charged with the memory of women who have passed through this experience,
+ who from comfortable homes have descended to the underworld to wander with
+ tired feet, weary bodies and hopeless hearts till they lie down somewhere
+ and their wanderings cease for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before we consider these women, let us take a peep at the lower
+ depths. Come, then! Now we are in a charnel house, for we are down among
+ the drunken women, the dissolute women that stew and writhe in the
+ underworld, for whom there is no balm in Gilead and no physician. Now we
+ realise what moral death means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the horde of Comus they lie prone, and wallow in their impurity. Hot
+ as the atmosphere is, feverish though their defiled bodies be, they call
+ for no friendly hand to give them water to cool their parched throats. The
+ very suggestion of water makes them sick and faint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a great cry smites us: "Give us drink! and we will forget our misery;
+ give us drink, and we will sing and dance before you! give us drink, and
+ you may have us body and soul! Drink! drink!" A passionate, yearning,
+ importunate cry everlastingly comes from them for drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now with Dante we are walking in Hell; see, there is a form, half human
+ and half animal, creeping towards us with lewd look and suggestion. Yonder
+ is an old hag fearful to look upon. Here a group of cast-off wives, whom
+ the law has allowed outraged husbands to consign to this perdition; but
+ who, when sober enough, come back to the upperworld and drag others down
+ to share their fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does any one want to know what becomes of the wives who, having developed
+ a love of drink, have been separated from their husbands, and cast
+ homeless into the streets? Here in this circle of Hell you may find them,
+ consigned to a moral death from which there is no resurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the idle, the vicious, the lustful and the criminal are here too. But
+ we leave them, and get back to the everlasting workers, the sober and
+ virtuous women of whom I have told. What a contrast is here presented!
+ Drunkenness, vice, bestiality and crime! Virtue, industry, honesty and
+ self-respect condemned to live together! But let us look and listen; we
+ hear a voice speaking to us&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Mr. Holmes, I am deeply interested in your work, and feel one with
+ you in mind and heart in the different troubles of human life, and of
+ their causes and consequences. I feel that if only my health was better,
+ and I was placed in some other sphere of life, that I would do something
+ to help on your good work. But, alas! I shall never be strong again; the
+ hard grinding for a miserable pittance gives me no chance to get
+ nourishing food and recover my strength. Some people say to me, 'Why don't
+ you go into the workhouse or the infirmary?' This I bear in silence, but
+ it is simply killing me in a slow way. Oh! that it should take so long to
+ kill some of us. It makes me sad to think that so many lives are wrecked
+ in this way, that so many are driven to wrong, that so many others should
+ drift away into lives of hopelessness. I have been stripped of all, and I
+ am waiting for the worst."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can any language beat that for lucidity and pathos? My readers will, I am
+ sure, recognise that those are the words of an educated woman. Yes, her
+ education was begun in England and finished on the Continent. Were I to
+ mention the name of the writer's mother, hearts would leap, for that name
+ lives in story and song.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her parents died and left no competence, her health failed, and
+ teaching became impossible. All she now requires is an out-patient's
+ ticket for a chest hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She is a "trouser finisher," and earns one penny per hour; sometimes she
+ lies on her bed while at work. But by and by she will not be able to earn
+ her penny per hour; then there will be "homelessness," but not the
+ workhouse for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the voice speaks again: "Dear Mr. Holmes, please excuse me not
+ thanking you sooner for offering me a hospital letter. I shall, indeed, be
+ very grateful for one when able to get about, for I shall need something
+ to set me up a bit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At present I am very sadly indeed; my foot seems very much better, yet
+ not right, the sister thinks. To make matters worse, I have a very bad
+ gathered finger, and this week I have not been able to do a stitch of
+ work; indeed, it is very little that I have been able to do this last ten
+ weeks. Oh, the cruel oppression of taking advantage and putting extra work
+ for less pay, because I cannot get out to fetch it myself!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The most I get is a penny per hour; it is generally less. Sister Grace
+ was so vexed by the rude message he sent to-day while she was here,
+ because I could not do the work, that she sent a letter to him telling him
+ the fact of my suffering. She thinks I am in a very bad state through
+ insufficient food, and, Mr. Holmes, it is true! for no one but God and
+ myself really know how I have existed. I rarely know what it is to get a
+ proper meal, for often I do not expend a sixpence on food in a week when I
+ pay my way, and thank God I have been able to do this up to the present
+ somehow or other; but all my treasures are gone, and I look round and
+ wonder what next!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My eyes rest on my dear old violin, which is a memory of the past,
+ although long silent. It has been a great grief to me the parting with one
+ thing after another, but I go on hoping for better days that I may regain
+ them; alas! many are now beyond recall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The parish doctor has been suggested again, but I feel I would rather die
+ than submit, after all this long struggle and holding out, especially, as
+ I have been able to keep things a little near the mark; when they get
+ beyond me, rather than debt I must give in!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still, I hope for better days, and trust things will brighten for me and
+ others, for God knows there are many silent sufferers ebbing their lives
+ away, plodding and struggling with life's battle. My heart bleeds for
+ them, yet I am powerless to help them or myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time and space do not avail, or I could tell story after story of such
+ lives, for in the underworld they are numerous enough. Who can wonder that
+ some of them "are made bitter by misfortune"? Who can wonder that others
+ "are driven to wrong"? Who can be surprised that "many drift into lives of
+ hopeless uselessness"? Surely our friend knew what she was talking about,
+ in the underworld though she be. She sees that there are deeps below the
+ depths, that she herself is in. Though ill, starving and hopeless about
+ her own future, she is troubled for others, for she adds, "since I have
+ known the horror of this life, my heart goes out to others that are
+ enduring it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this class of woman is not much in evidence till the final catastrophe
+ comes, when the doors of a one-roomed home are closed against them. Even
+ then they do not obtrude themselves on our observation, for they hide
+ themselves away till the river or canal gives up its dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is not every woman that maintains such a high tone, for once in the
+ underworld the difficulty of personal cleanliness confronts them, and dirt
+ kills self-respect. Poverty makes them acquainted with both physical and
+ moral dirt, and the effect of one night in a shelter or lodging-house is
+ often sufficient to destroy self-respect and personal cleanliness for
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am quite sure that I am voicing the opinion of all who have knowledge of
+ the underworld in which such women are compelled to live, when I say that
+ the great want in London and in all our large towns is suitable and
+ well-managed lodging-houses under municipal control and inspection, where
+ absolute cleanliness and decency can be assured. Lodging-houses to which
+ women in their hour of sore need may turn with the certainty that their
+ self-respect will not be destroyed. But under the present conditions
+ decent women have no chance of retaining their decency or recovering their
+ standing in social life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listen again! a widowed tooth-brush maker speaks to us: "Dear Mr. Holmes,
+ I feel that I must thank you for still allowing me a pension, and I do
+ thank you so much in increasing it. When I received it my heart was so
+ full of joy that I could not speak. My little boys are growing, and they
+ require more than when my husband died six years ago. I am sure it has
+ been a great struggle, but I have found such a great help in you, I do not
+ know how to thank you for all that you have done for me and many poor
+ workers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do hope that God will still give you health and strength to carry on
+ the good work which you are doing for us. When I last spoke to you I
+ thought my little boys were much better, but I am sorry to say that when I
+ took them to Great Ormond Street Hospital, they said they were both
+ suffering from heart disease, and I was to keep them from school for a
+ time; and they also suffer from rheumatics. They are to get out all they
+ can. I have been taking them to the hospital for over two years, and
+ sometimes I feel downhearted, as I had hoped they would have improved
+ before this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The eldest boy does not have fits now, and this I am thankful for. But I
+ feel that I am wasting a lot of your time reading this letter, so I must
+ thank you very much for all your great goodness to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one of the boys is now dead, to the other "fits" have returned, and
+ the widow still sits, sits and sits at her tooth-brushes in poverty and
+ hunger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listen to an old maid's story; she is a shoe machinist: "Yes, sir, I have
+ kept them for six years, and I hope to keep them till they can keep
+ themselves, and then perhaps they will help to keep me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The speaker was a worn and feeble woman of fifty-five years, at least that
+ was the age she gave me, and most certainly she did not look less. We were
+ talking about her two boys, her nephews, whose respective ages were eleven
+ and thirteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Both their parents died six years ago; their father was my only brother,
+ and their mother had neither brothers nor sisters! Of course I took them;
+ what else could I do? What! Send them to the workhouse? Not while I can
+ work for them. Ah, sir! you were only joking!" In this she was partly
+ right, for I had merely offered the suggestion in order to draw her out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So after the double funeral they came to live with you?" "Yes." "Did
+ their parents leave any money?" "Money, no! How can poor people leave any
+ money? their club money paid for the funeral and the doctor's bill." "So
+ they owed nothing?" "Not a penny; if they had, I should have paid it
+ somehow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And doubtless she would, though how, it passes my wit to conceive. But
+ there, it would have meant only a few more hours' work daily for the brave
+ old spinster, but not for the boys, for they would have been fed while she
+ fasted, they would have slept while she worked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," she continued, "I am a boot machinist, and it is pretty hard work;
+ we had a tough time when I had to pay two shillings weekly for that
+ machine, but we managed, and now you see it is paid for, it is my own; but
+ really, times are harder for us. The boys are growing and want more food
+ and clothing; they go to school, and must have boots; it's the boots that
+ floor me, they cost a lot of money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I called the boys to me and examined their boots; their old aunt looked as
+ if she was going to prevent me, but presently she said, "I had no work
+ last week, or I should have got him a pair." "Him" was the younger boy,
+ whose boots, or the remains of them, presented a deplorable appearance;
+ and, truth to tell, the elder boy's were not much better. So I said to the
+ brave old soul, "Look here, I will give these boys a good new pair of
+ boots each on one condition!" "What is that." "That you allow me to buy
+ you a pair." Again there was a look of resentment, but I continued, "I am
+ quite sure that you require boots as badly as your boys, and I cannot
+ think of them having nice boots and you going without, so I want you to
+ all start equal; kindly put out your foot and let me look." In a
+ shamefaced sort of a way she put her left foot forward; a strange,
+ misshapen, dilapidated apology of a boot covered the left foot. "Now the
+ right," I said. "Never mind looking at the other, it does not matter, does
+ it?" she said. "Yes, it does," so the right foot was presented; one glance
+ was enough! "That will do; come along for three pairs of boots."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They returned home, the boys rejoicing in their new boots, and their
+ feeble old aunt tolerating hers for the sake of her boys. Dear, brave,
+ self-denying, indomitable old maid. She had visited the fatherless in
+ their afflictions, she had toiled unceasingly for six long years, she had
+ taken willingly upon her weak shoulders a heavy burden; a burden that,
+ alas! many strong men are only too willing to cast upon others. She had
+ well earned her pair of boots, and sincerely do I hope that when her poor
+ feet get accustomed to their circumscribed area, and the pressure of
+ well-made boots has become comforting, that she will derive pleasure from
+ them, even though they represent "the first charity that I have ever
+ received."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But is it not wonderful, this marvellous self-denial of the very poor!
+ Other spheres of life doubtless produce many noble lives and heroic
+ characters, but was ever a braver deed done than this feeble and weary old
+ maid did?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was all so natural, so commonplace, so very matter-of-fact, for
+ when I spoke warmly of her deed she said very simply, "Well, what else
+ could I do!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the underworld, amidst the dirt and squalor, the poverty, the high
+ rents, and the poor, poor earnings of poor, poor women, there are plenty
+ like her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God grant that when the lads can work they will lighten her burdens and
+ cheer her heart by working for her who had worked so hard for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Listen also to the story of the blouse-makers disclosed to the upper world
+ by the Press.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A pathetic story of poverty was told to the Hackney coroner, who held an
+ inquiry into the death of Emily Langes, 59, a blouse-maker of Graham Road,
+ Dalston. Death was due to starvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Annie Marie, an aged sister, said they had both been in great poverty for
+ a very long time. They had worked at blouse-making as long as they could,
+ but that work had fallen off so much that really all they had got to live
+ on was by selling off their home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They had not enough to live on, and had to pay four shillings and
+ sixpence rent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The coroner: 'Selling your home will soon come to an end. You had best
+ apply in the proper direction for help; the parish must bury her. Don't go
+ on ruining yourself by selling off things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Ingham, relieving officer for the No. 7 ward at Hackney, said that he
+ knew the old couple. He remembered giving relief to both sisters about two
+ months ago, but had had no application since. He offered the 'House' to
+ the living sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A juror: 'Are questions put which might upset a proud respectable old
+ couple when they ask for relief?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Witness: 'Of course we have to inquire into their means pretty closely.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The coroner: 'It seems pretty clear that the old couple were too proud to
+ ask for help.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The jury returned a verdict that Emily Langes died from exhaustion caused
+ by want of food."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But listen again! as we stand in the land of crushed womanhood and
+ starving childhood. We hear a gentle voice, "Mother, it is nearly one
+ o'clock, the men have gone by from the public-house; you go to bed, dear,
+ and I will finish the work." A feeble woman, with every nerve broken,
+ rises from her machine, shakes her dress and lies down on her bed, but her
+ daughter sits on and on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh the sighs and groans and accents of sorrow that come upon our listening
+ ears! Oh the weariness, the utter weariness of this land below the line!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Midnight! and thousands of women are working! One o'clock, and thousands
+ are still at it! Two o'clock, the widows are still at work! Thank God the
+ children are asleep. Three o'clock a.m., the machines cease to rattle, and
+ in the land of crushed womanhood there is silence if not peace. But who is
+ to pay? Shall we ultimately evolve a people that require no sleep, that
+ cannot sleep if they would? Is crushed womanhood to produce human
+ automatic machines? Or is civilisation generally to pay the penalty for
+ all this grinding of human flesh and blood? Let me tell the story of an
+ old machinist! I have told part of it before, but the sequel must be told.
+ I had made the acquaintance and friendship of three old women in Bethnal
+ Green who lived together, and collaborated in their work. They made
+ trousers for export trade; one machined, one finished, and one pressed,
+ brave old women all! They all worked in the machinist's room, for this
+ saved gas and coal, and prevented loss of time. At night they separated,
+ each going to her own room. The machinist was a widow, and her machine had
+ been bought out of her husband's club and insurance money when he died
+ twenty-one years before. I had often seen it, heard its rattle, and
+ witnessed its whims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She once told me that it required a new shuttle, and I offered to pay for
+ one; but she said, "I cannot part with it; it will last my time, for I
+ want a new shuttle too!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six months after she was found dead in her bed by her partners when they
+ came to resume work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her words had come true! The old machine stood silent under the little
+ window; its old shuttle no longer whirred and rattled with uncertain
+ movements. It was motionless and cold. On a little bed the poor old brave
+ woman lay cold and motionless too! for the shuttle of her life had
+ stopped, never to move again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heroic partnership of the old women was broken, never in this world to
+ be resumed, and so two old hearts sorrowed and two troubled minds wondered
+ how they would be able to live without her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I knew her well; it was my privilege to give her some happiness and some
+ change from grime and gloom, to take her away sometimes from the wayward
+ shuttle and rattling machine. I knew that she would have selected such a
+ death could she have chosen, for she dreaded the parish. I think, too,
+ that she would have wished for her old machine to be buried with her, and
+ for its silent shuttle to be beside her in her coffin. To her it was a
+ companion, and for it her husband died. Twenty-one years the machine and
+ herself had lived with each other and for each other. Sharing with each
+ other's toil, if not each other's hopes and fears! Working! working!
+ unceasingly through life&mdash;in death and rest they were not divided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a blessed thing that her machine partner required no food, or life
+ would have been even more serious than it was. But it had its whims and
+ its moods, sometimes it resented everlasting work at three-half-pence per
+ hour for the pair of them, and it "jibbed." But a little oil and a
+ soothing word, and, it must be feared, sometimes with a threat, and the
+ old thing went again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely it will be sacrilege for any one else to sit upon that old chair
+ and try to renew the life and motion of the old machine!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is strange that this oppression of women which is the cause of my
+ greatest sorrow should also be the cause of my keenest joy. But it is so!
+ And why? Because I number two thousand of these underworld women slaves
+ among my personal friends, and I am proud of it! The letters I have given
+ are a few out of hundreds that I have received. I know these women as few
+ know them. I know their sufferings and their virtues, their great content
+ and their little requirements. I know that they have the same capabilities
+ for happiness as other people, and I know that they get precious little
+ chance of exercising those capabilities. Strange again, I get no begging
+ letters from them, though I do from others who are better placed. I
+ declare it to be wonderful! This endurance and patience of London's
+ miserably paid women. I tell you that I am the happiest man alive! Why?
+ Because during the present year a thousand of my poor friends from the
+ underworld came up for a time and had a fortnight, a whole fortnight's
+ rest each with food and comfort in a beautiful rest home by the sea. For
+ kind friends have enabled me to build one for them and for them alone!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I was there sometimes to see, and it was good for me. So Mrs. Holmes
+ and myself make frequent visits to the rest home, and every time we visit
+ it we become more and more convinced that not only is it a "Palace
+ Beautiful," but that it is also a joy to the slave women who have the good
+ fortune to spend a holiday (all too short) in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gloom cannot enter "Singholm" or, if it does enter, it promptly and
+ absolutely disappears. Ill-temper cannot live there, the very flowers
+ smile it away. The atmosphere itself acts like "laughing gas." So the
+ house fairly rings with merry laughter from elderly staid women equally as
+ from the younger ones, whose contact with serious and saddening life has
+ not been so paralysing to joyous emotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did us good to hear such jolly laughter from throats and organs that,
+ but for Singholm, must have rusted and decayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of our trustees was with us, it being his first visit to the home. I
+ know that he was surprised at the size, the beauty, the comfort and
+ refinement of the whole place. The garden filled him with delight, the
+ skill of the architect in planning the building, together with the style,
+ gave him increased pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great drawing-room and the equally large dining-room rather astonished
+ him. The little bedrooms he declared perfect. But what astonished him most
+ of all was the unaffected happiness of the women; for this I do not think
+ he was prepared. Well, as I have said, gloom cannot live in Singholm, and
+ this I have found out by personal experience, for if I am quite cross and
+ grumpy in London, I cannot resist the exhilaration that prevails at
+ Singholm among London's underworld women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think I may say that our trustee was surprised at something else! But
+ then he is a bachelor, and so of course does not understand the infinite
+ resources of femininity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How nice they look," he said. "How well they dress"; and, once again,
+ "How clean and tidy they are; how well their colours blend!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thank God for this! we hold no truce with dirt at Singholm; we bid
+ dowdyism begone! avaunt! I will tell you a secret! Singholm demands
+ respect for itself and self-respect for its inmates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our trustee's testimony is true; the women belonging to our association do
+ look nice; when they are at Walton they rise to the occasion as if they
+ were to the manner born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, with their cheap white or blue blouses, they sit under the palms in
+ our drawing-room, all, even the oldest and poorest, neat&mdash;nay, smart
+ if you will&mdash;they present a picture that can only be appreciated by
+ those who know their lives. Some people might find fault, but to me the
+ colour and tone of the picture is perfect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As there were seventy of them, there was room for variety, and they gave
+ it! Look at them! There they sit as the shades of night are falling. They
+ have been out all day long, and have come in tired. Are they peevish? Not
+ a bit! Are they downhearted? No!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is my friend who makes no secret about it, and tells us that she is
+ forty-six years of age; this is the first time she has ever seen the sea,
+ and she laughs at the thought. The sun has browned, reddened and roughened
+ her face, and when I say, "How delicate you look," she bursts again into
+ merry laughter, and the whole party join her. Mrs. Holmes and myself join
+ in, and our worthy trustee, bachelor and Quaker though he be, laughs
+ merriest of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aye! but this laughter was sweet music, but somehow it brought tears to my
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now just look at my friend over there beside one of the palms, her feet
+ resting so naturally on the Turkey carpet! You observe she sits
+ majestically in a commodious chair; she needs one! For she is five feet
+ eleven inches in height, and weighs sixteen stone. I call her "The Queen,"
+ for when she stands up she is erect and queenly with a noble head and
+ pleasing countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She makes no secret about her age; "I am sixty, and I have been here four
+ times, and, please God, I'll come forty-four more times," and she looks
+ like it. But what if there had been no Singholm to look forward to year by
+ year? Why, then she would have been heavy in heart as well as in body, and
+ her erect form would have been bent, for she is a hard worker from Bethnal
+ Green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea of coming forty-four more times to Singholm, and she sixty-six,
+ was the signal for more laughter, and again Singholm was tested; but our
+ builder had done his work well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Turn on the electric light, matron!" There is a transformation scene for
+ you! Now you see the delicate art colours in the Turkey carpets, and the
+ subdued colours in the Medici Society's reproduced pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See how they have ranged their chairs all round by the walls, and the
+ centre of the room is unoccupied, saving here and there maidenhair ferns
+ and growing flowers. Now look at the picture in its fulness! and we see
+ poor old bent and feeble bodies bowed with toil, and faces furrowed by
+ unceasing anxiety; but the sun, the east wind, the sea air and Singholm
+ have brightened and browned them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is my poor old friend, long past threescore and ten, to whom
+ Singholm for a time is verily Heaven; but&mdash;"Turn on the gramophone,
+ please, matron." Thanks to a kind friend, we have a really good one, with
+ a plentiful supply of records. The matron, in the wickedness of her heart,
+ turns on an orchestral "cakewalk." The band plays, old bodies begin to
+ move and sway, and seventy pair of feet begin unconsciously to beat the
+ floor. Laughter again resounds; our Quaker himself enters into the spirit
+ of it, so I invite him to lead off with the "Queen" for his partner, at
+ which he was dismayed, although he is a veritable son of Anak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to my dismay the bent and feeble septuagenarian offered to lead off
+ with myself as partner, at which I collapsed, for alas, I cannot dance.
+ Then our trustee led the roars of laughter that testified to my
+ discomfiture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we had no dancing, only a cakewalk. But we had more merriment and
+ music, and then our little evening service. "What hymn shall we have?"
+ Many voices called out, "Sun of my soul," so the matron went to the piano,
+ and I listened while they sang "Watch by the sick, enrich the poor," which
+ for me, whenever the poor, the feeble and aged sing it, has a power and a
+ meaning that I never realise when the organ leads a well-trained choir and
+ a respectable church congregation to blend their voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I read to them a few words from the old, but ever new, Book, and
+ closed with a few simple, well-known prayers, and then&mdash;as old Pepys
+ has it&mdash;"to bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We watch them file up the great staircase one by one, watch them disappear
+ into their sweet little rooms and clean sheets. To me, at any rate, the
+ picture was more comforting and suggestive than Burne Jones's "Golden
+ Stairs." In fifteen minutes the electric light was switched off, and
+ Singholm was in darkness and in peace. But outside the stars were shining,
+ the flowers still blooming, the garden was full of the mystery of sweet
+ odours; close by the sea was singing its soothing lullaby, and God was
+ over all!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us get back to the underworld!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How long have we lived together, did you ask? well, ever since we were
+ born, and she is sixty-seven," pointing to a paralysed woman, who was
+ sitting in front of the window. "I am two years younger," she continued,
+ "and we have never been separated; we have lived together, worked
+ together, and slept together, and if ever we did have a holiday, we spent
+ it together. And now we are getting old, just think of it! I am
+ sixty-five, isn't it terrible? They always used to call us 'the girls'
+ when mother, father and my brothers were alive, but they have all gone&mdash;not
+ one of them left. But we 'girls' are left, and now we are getting old&mdash;sixty-five&mdash;isn't
+ it terrible? We ought to be ashamed of it, I suppose, but we are not, are
+ we, dear? For we are just 'the girls' to each other, and sometimes I feel
+ as strong and as young as a girl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How long have you lived in the top of this four-storey house?" I asked.
+ "Sixteen years," came the reply. "All alone?" "No, sir, we have been
+ together." "And your sister, how long has she been paralysed?" "Before we
+ came to this house." "Does she ever go out?" "Of course she does; don't I
+ take her out in the bath-chair behind you?" "Can she wash and dress
+ herself, do her hair, and make herself as clean and tidy as she is?" "I do
+ it for her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how do you get her down these interminable stairs?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She does that herself, sitting down and going from step to step," she
+ said, and then added, "but it is hard work for her, and it takes her a
+ very long time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now tell me," I said, "have you ever had a holiday?" "Yes, we have had
+ one since my sister became paralysed, and we went to Herne Bay." "Did you
+ take the bath-chair with you?" "Of course we did; how could she go without
+ it?" "And you pushed her about Herne Bay, and took her on the sands in
+ it?" I said. "Of course," she said quite naturally, as if she was
+ surprised at my question. "Now tell me how much rent do you pay for these
+ two rooms?" "Seven shillings and sixpence per week; I know it is too much,
+ but I must have a good window for her, where she can sit and look out."
+ "How do you do your washing?" "I pay the landlady a shilling a week to do
+ it." "How long have you worked at umbrella covering?" "Ever since we left
+ school, both of us; we have never done anything else." "How long have your
+ parents been dead" "More than forty years," was the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To every one of the replies made by the younger sister, the paralytic at
+ the window nodded her head in confirmation as though she would say, "Quite
+ true, quite true!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Forgive me asking so many questions, but I want to understand how you
+ live; you pay seven-and-six rent, and one shilling for washing every week;
+ that comes to eight shillings and sixpence before you buy food, coal, and
+ pay for gas; and you must burn a lot of gas, for I am sure that you work
+ till a very late hour," and the elder sister nodded her head. "Yes, gas is
+ a big item, but I manage it," and then the elder one spoke. "Yes, she is a
+ wonderful manager! a wonderful manager! she is better than I ever was."
+ "Well, dear, you managed well, you know you did, and we saved some money
+ then, didn't we!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! we did, but mine is all gone, and I can't work now; but you are a
+ good manager, better than I ever was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at the aged and brave couple, and took stock of their old but
+ still good furniture that told its own story, and said, "You had two
+ accounts in the Post-Office Savings Bank, and when you both worked you
+ saved all you could?" "Yes, sir, we worked hard, and never wasted
+ anything." Again the sixty-seven old girl broke in: "But mine is all gone,
+ all gone, but she is a wonderful manager." "And mine is nearly all gone,
+ too," said the younger, "but I can work for both of us," and the elder
+ sister nodded her head as if she would say, "And she can, too!" I looked
+ at the dozen umbrellas before me, and said, "What do you get for covering
+ these?" "Ah! that's what's called, vulgarly speaking, a bit of jam! they
+ are gents' best umbrellas, and I shall get three shillings for them. I got
+ them out yesterday from the warehouse, after waiting there for two hours.
+ I shall work till twelve to-night and finish them by midday to-morrow;
+ they are my very best work." Three shillings for a dozen! her very best
+ work! and she finding machine and thread, and waiting two hours at the
+ factory!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come," I said, "tell me what you earned last week, and how many hours you
+ worked?" "I earned ten shillings and sixpence; but don't ask me how many
+ hours I worked, for I don't know; I begin when it is light, because that
+ saves gas, and I work as long as I can, for I am strong and have good
+ health." "But," I said, "you paid eight shillings and sixpence for rent
+ and washing; that left you with two shillings. Does your sister have
+ anything from the parish?" I felt sorry that I had put the question, for I
+ got a proud "No, sir," followed by some tears from the sixty-five-year-old
+ "girl." Presently I said, "However do you spend it?" "Didn't I tell you
+ that I had saved some, and was drawing it? But I manage, and get a bit of
+ meat, too!" Again from the window came the words, "She is a good manager."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What will you do when you have drawn all your savings?" "Oh! I shall
+ manage, and God is good," was all I could get.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A brave, heroic soul, surely, dwells in that aged girl, for in her I found
+ no bitterness, no repining; nay, I found a sense of humour and the
+ capability of a hearty laugh as we talked on and on, for I was in
+ wonderland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I rose to leave, she offered to accompany us&mdash;for a friend was
+ with me&mdash;downstairs to the door; I said, "No, don't come down, we
+ will find our way; stop and earn half-a-crown, and please remember that
+ you are sixty-five." "Hush!" she said, "the landlady will hear you; don't
+ tell anybody, isn't it awful? and we were called the girls," and she burst
+ into a merry laugh. During our conversation the paralysed sister had
+ several times assured me that she "would like to have a ride in a
+ motor-car." This I am afraid I cannot promise her, much as I would like to
+ do so; but the exact object of my visit was to make arrangements for "the
+ girls" to go to our home of rest for a whole fortnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they went, bath-chair as well. For sixteen long years they had not
+ seen the sea or listened to its mighty voice, but for a whole fortnight
+ they enjoyed its never-ending wonder and inhaled its glorious breath. And
+ the younger "girl" pushed the chair, and the older "girl" sat in it the
+ while they prattled, and talked and managed, till almost the days of their
+ real girlhood came back to them. Dull penury and sordid care were banished
+ for a whole fortnight and appetite came by eating. The older "girl" said,
+ "If I stop here much longer, I know I shall walk," and she nearly managed
+ it too, for when helped out of her chair, she first began to stand, and
+ then to progress a little step by step by holding on to any friendly solid
+ till she almost became a child again. But the fortnight ended all too
+ soon, and back to their upper room, the window and the umbrellas they
+ came, to live that fortnight over and over again, and to count the days,
+ weeks and months that are to elapse before once again the two old girls
+ and an old&mdash;so old&mdash;bath-chair will revel and joy, eat and rest,
+ prattle and laugh by the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they have had their "motor ride," too! and the girls sat side by side,
+ and although it was winter time they enjoyed it, and they have a new theme
+ for prattle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have since ascertained that the sum of ten shillings, and ten shillings
+ only, remained in the Post-Office Savings Bank to the credit of the
+ managing sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I have also learned something else quite as pitiful&mdash;it is this:
+ the allowance of coal during the winter months for these heroic souls was
+ one half-hundredweight per week, fifty-six lb., which cost them
+ eightpence-halfpenny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. MARRIAGE IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Young folk marry and are given in marriage at a very early age in the
+ underworld. Their own personal poverty and thousands of warning examples
+ are not sufficient to deter them. Strange to say, their own parents
+ encourage them, and, more strange still, upperworld people of education
+ and experience lend a willing hand in what is at the best a deplorable
+ business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under their conditions it is perhaps difficult to say what other course
+ can or ought to be taken, for their homes are like beehives, and
+ "swarming" time inevitably comes. That oftentimes comes when young people
+ of either sex are midway in their "teens." The cramped little rooms or
+ room that barely sufficed for the parents and small children are
+ altogether out of the question when the children become adolescent. The
+ income of the family is not sufficient to allow the parents, even if they
+ were desirous of doing so, taking larger premises with an extra bedroom.
+ Very few parents brace themselves to this endeavour, for it means not only
+ effort but expense. So the young folks swarm either to lodgings, or to
+ marriage, and the pretence of home life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Private lodgings for girls are dangerous and expensive, while public
+ lodgings for youths are probably a shade worse. So marriage it is, and
+ boys of nineteen unite with girls one or two years younger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have no doubt that the future looks very rosy to the young couple whose
+ united earnings may amount to as much as thirty shillings weekly, for it
+ is an axiom of the poor that two can live cheaper than one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is so easy to pay a deposit on a single room, and so easy, so very
+ easy, to purchase furniture on the hire system. Does not the youth give
+ his mother ten shillings weekly? Why not give it to a wife? Does not the
+ girl contribute to her mother's exchequer? Why may not she become a wife
+ and spend her own earnings? Both are heartily sick of their present home
+ life, any change must be for the better! So marriage it is! But they have
+ saved nothing, they are practically penniless beyond the current week's
+ wages. Never mind, they can get their wedding outfit on the pay weekly
+ rule, the parson will marry them for nothing. "Here's a church, let's go
+ in and get married." Christmas, Easter or Bank Holiday comes to their aid,
+ and they do it! and, heigho! for life's romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The happy bride continues at the factory, and brings her shillings to make
+ up the thirty. They pay three shillings and sixpence weekly for their
+ room, one-and-six weekly for their household goods, two more shillings
+ weekly are required for their wedding clothes, that is all! Have they not
+ twenty-three shillings left!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They knew that they could manage it! All goes merrily as a marriage bell!
+ Hurrah! They can afford a night or two a week at a music-hall; why did
+ they not get married before? how stupid they had been!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But something happens, for the bride becomes a mother. Her wages cease,
+ and thirty shillings weekly for two is a very different matter to twenty
+ shillings for three!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had to engage an old woman for nurse for one week only. But that cost
+ seven shillings and sixpence. A number of other extras are incurred, all
+ to be paid out of his earnings. They have not completed the hire purchase
+ business; they have even added to that expense by the purchase of a
+ bassinet at one shilling weekly for thirty weeks. The bassinet, however,
+ serves one useful purpose, it saves the expense of a cradle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In less than a fortnight the girl mother is again knocking at the factory
+ door. She wishes to become an "out-worker"; the manager, knowing her to be
+ a capable machinist, gives her work, and promises her a constant supply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they are all right again! Are they? Why, she has no sewing-machine!
+ Stranded again! not a bit of it. The hire purchase again comes to her
+ help. Eighteenpence deposit is paid, a like weekly payment promised,
+ signed for and attended to; and lo! a sparkling new sewing-machine is
+ deposited in their one room. Let us take an inventory of their goods: one
+ iron bedstead, flock mattress, two pairs of sheets, two blankets and a
+ common counterpane, a deal chest of drawers, a deal table, two Windsor
+ chairs, a bassinet carriage, a sewing-machine, fire-shovel, fender and
+ poker, some few crocks, a looking-glass, a mouth-organ and a couple of
+ towels, some knives, forks and spoons, a tea-pot, tea-kettle, saucepan and
+ frying-pan. But I have been very liberal! They stand close together, do
+ those household goods; they crowd each other, and if one moves, it jostles
+ the other. The sewing-machine stands in front of the little window, for it
+ demands the light. It took some scheming to arrange this, but husband and
+ wife ultimately managed it. The bassinet stands close to the machine, that
+ the girl mother may push it gently when baby is cross, and that she may
+ reach the "soother" and replace it when it falls from baby's mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now she is settled down! off she goes! She starts on a life of toil,
+ compared to which slavery is light and pleasant. Oh, the romance of it;
+ work from morn till late at night. The babe practically unwashed, the
+ house becomes grimy, and the bed and bassinet nasty. The husband's wages
+ have not risen, though his expenses have; other children come and some go;
+ they get behind with their rent; an "ejectment order" is enforced. The
+ wretched refuse of the home is put on the street pavement, the door is
+ locked against them, and the wretched couple with their children are on
+ the pavement too! The only thing to survive the wreck is the
+ sewing-machine. The only thing that I know among the many things supplied
+ to the poor on the hire system that is the least bit likely to stand the
+ wear and tear is the machine. Doubtless the poor pay highly for it; still
+ it is comforting to know that in this one direction the poor are supplied
+ with good articles. And the poor respect their machines, as the poor
+ always respect things that are not shoddy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have drawn no fancy picture, but one that holds true with regard to
+ thousands. Evils that I cannot enumerate and that imagination cannot
+ exaggerate wait upon and attend these unfortunate, nay, criminal
+ marriages; which very largely are the result of that one great
+ all-pervading cause&mdash;the housing of the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the underworld there are much worse kinds of married life than the
+ one I have pictured, for those young people did start life with some
+ income and some hopes. But what can be said about, and what new
+ condemnation can be passed upon, the marriage of feeble-minded,
+ feeble-bodied, homeless wanderers? United in the bonds of holy matrimony
+ by an eager clergy, and approved in this deplorable step by an all-wise
+ State, thousands of crazy, curious, wretched, penniless individuals, to
+ whom even the hire system is impossible, join their hopeless lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half idiots of both sexes in our workhouses look at each other, and then
+ take their discharge after a mutual understanding. They experience no
+ difficulty in finding clergymen ready to marry them and unite them in the
+ bonds of poverty and the gall of wretchedness. The blessing of the Church
+ is pronounced upon this coupling, and away they go!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over their lives and means of living I will draw a veil, for common
+ decency forbids me to speak, as common decency ought to have forbidden
+ their marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But down in the underworld, and very low down, too, are numberless couples
+ whose plight is perhaps worse, for they have at any rate known the refined
+ comfort of good homes, but remembrance only adds poignancy to suffering
+ and despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Read the following story, and after condemnation upon condemnation has
+ been passed upon the thoughtless or wicked marriages of the poor, tell me,
+ if you will, what condemnation shall be passed upon the educated when
+ they, through marriage, drag down into this inferno innocent, loving and
+ pure women?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Boxing Day in a London police-court. Twenty-five years have passed,
+ but that day is as fresh in my memory as though it were yesterday. The
+ prisoners' rooms were filled, the precincts of the court were full, and a
+ great crowd of witnesses and friends, or of the curious public, were
+ congregated in the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yesterday had been the great Christian festival, the celebration of the
+ birth of the Prince of Peace, when the bells had rang out the old story
+ "Peace on earth, good-will to men." To-day it looked as though Hell had
+ been holding carnival!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly one hundred prisoners had to come before the magistrate. I can see
+ them now! as one by one they passed before him, for time has not dimmed
+ the vivid picture of that procession. I remember their stories, and think
+ still of their cuts and wounds. Outside the court the day was dull, and
+ inside the light was bad and the air heavy with the fumes of stale debauch
+ and chloride of lime. And yesterday had been Christmas Day in the
+ metropolis of Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hours passed, and the kindly magistrate sat on apportioning punishment,
+ fitting the sentence as it were by instinct. At two o'clock he rose for a
+ short recess, a hasty luncheon, and then back to his task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the long procession came a smitten woman. Darkness and fog
+ now enveloped the court as the woman stood in the dock. Her age was given
+ as twenty-eight; her occupation pickle-making. First let me picture that
+ woman and then tell her story, for she represents a number of women into
+ whose forlorn faces I have looked and of whose hopeless hearts I have an
+ intimate knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some men have conquered evil habits, helped by the love of a pure woman,
+ without which they would have vainly struggled or have readily succumbed.
+ But while I know this, I think of the women who have fastened the tendrils
+ of their heart's affection round unworthy men, and have married them,
+ hoping, trusting and believing that their love and influence would be
+ powerful enough to win the men to sobriety and virtue. Alas! how mistaken
+ they have been! What they have endured! Of such was this woman! There she
+ stood, the embodiment of woe. A tall, refined woman, her clothing poor and
+ sparse, her head enveloped in surgical bandages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the darkness of the Christmas night she had leaped from the wall of a
+ canal bridge into the murky gloom, her head had struck the bank, and she
+ rolled into the thick, black water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was near the basin of the Surrey Canal, and a watchman on duty had
+ pulled her out; she had been taken to a hospital and attended to. Late in
+ the afternoon the policeman brought her to the court, where a charge of
+ attempted suicide was brought against her. But little evidence was taken,
+ and the magistrate ordered a week's remand. In the cells I had a few
+ moments' conversation with her, but all I could get from her was the
+ pitiful moan, "Why didn't they let me die? why didn't they let me die?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a week's time I saw her again; surgical bandages were gone, medical
+ attention and a week's food and rest had done something for her, but still
+ she was the personification of misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I offered to take charge of her, and as she quietly promised not to repeat
+ the attempt, the magistrate kindly committed her to my care. So we went to
+ her room: it was a poor place, and many steps we climbed before we entered
+ it. High up as the room was, and small as were its dimensions, she, out of
+ the nine shillings she earned at the pickle factory paid three and
+ sixpence weekly for it. I had gathered from what she had told me that she
+ was in poverty and distress. So on our way I brought a few provisions;
+ leaving these and a little money with her, I left her promising to see her
+ again after a few days. But before leaving she briefly told me her story,
+ a sad, sad story, but a story to be read and pondered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was the only daughter of a City merchant, and had one brother. While
+ she was quite a child her mother died, and at an early age she managed her
+ father's household. She made the acquaintance of a clever and accomplished
+ man who was an accountant. He was older than she, and of dissipated
+ habits. Her father had introduced him to his home and daughter, little
+ thinking of the consequences that ensued. She had no mother to guide her,
+ she was often lonely, for her father was immersed in his business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a very short time she had fixed her heart on to the man, and when too
+ late her father expostulated, and finally forbade the man the house. This
+ only intensified her love and led to quarrels with her father. Ultimately
+ they married, and had a good home and two servants. In a little over three
+ years two children added to her joys and sorrows. Still her husband's
+ faults were not amended, but his dissipation increased. Monetary
+ difficulties followed, and to avoid disgrace her father was called upon to
+ provide a large sum of money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This did not add to his sympathy, but it estranged the father and child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then difficulties followed, and soon her husband stood in the dock charged
+ with embezzlement. Eighteen months' imprisonment was awarded him, but the
+ greater punishment fell upon the suffering wife. Her father refused to see
+ her, so with her two little ones she was left to face the future. Parting
+ with most of her furniture, jewellery, servant, she gave up her house,
+ took two small rooms, and waited wearily for the eighteen months to pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They passed, and her husband came back to her. But his character was gone,
+ the difficulty of finding employment stared him in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He joined the ranks of the shabby-genteel to live somehow by bits of
+ honest work, mixed with a great deal of dishonest work. Four years of this
+ life, two more children for the mother, increasing drunkenness,
+ degenerating into brutality on her husband's part. Her father's death and
+ some little money left to her gave momentary respite. But the money soon
+ went. Her brother had taken the greater portion and had gone into a far
+ country. This was the condition of affairs when her husband was again
+ arrested; this time for forgery. There was no doubt about his guilt, and a
+ sentence of five years' penal servitude followed. Again she parted with
+ most of her home, reducing it to one room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With her four children round her she tried to eke out an existence. She
+ soon became penniless, and ultimately with her children took refuge in a
+ London workhouse. After a time the guardians sent the four children to
+ their country school and nursing home, when she was free to leave the
+ workhouse and get her own living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came out with a letter of introduction to the pickle factory, and
+ obtained employment at nine shillings a week. The weeks and months passed,
+ her daily task and common round being a mile walk to the factory, ten
+ hours' work, and then the return journey. One week-end on her homeward
+ journey she was attracted and excited by a fire; when she resumed her
+ journey she was penniless, her week's wages had been stolen from her. Her
+ only warm jacket and decent pair of boots then had to be pawned, for the
+ rent must be paid. Monday found her again at the monotonous round, but
+ with added hardships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She missed the jacket and the boots, and deprived herself of food that she
+ might save enough money wherewith to take them out of pawn. Christmas Eve
+ came, and she had not recovered them. She sat in her room lonely and with
+ a sad heart, but there was mirth and noise below her, for even among the
+ poor Bacchus must be worshipped at Christmas time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the women thought of the poor lone creature up at the top of the
+ house, and fetched her down. They had their bottles of cheap spirits, for
+ which they had paid into the publican's Christmas club. She drank, and
+ forgot her misery. Next morning, when the bells of a neighbouring church
+ were ringing out, they awoke her as she lay fully dressed on her little
+ bed. She felt ill and dazed, and by and by the consciousness came to her
+ of fast night's drinking. Christmas Day she spent alone, ill, miserable
+ and ashamed. "I must have been drunk!" she kept repeating to herself, and
+ on Christmas night she sought her death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wrote to kind friends, and interested some ladies in her welfare. Plenty
+ of clothing was sent for her; a better room, not quite so near the sky,
+ was procured for her. Her daily walk to the factory was stopped, for more
+ profitable work was given to her. Finally I left her in the hands of kind
+ friends that I knew would care for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years passed, and on Christmas Eve I called with a present and a note
+ sent her by a friend. She was gone&mdash;her husband had been released on
+ ticket-of-leave, had found her and joined her, and for a time she kept him
+ as well as herself. He was more brutal than before, and in his fury,
+ either drunk or sober, he frequently beat her, so that the people of the
+ house had to send them away. Where they had moved to, I failed to find
+ out, but they had vanished!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fourteen months passed, and one bitterly cold day in February at the end
+ of a long row of prisoners, waiting their turn to appear before the
+ magistrate, stood the woman wretched and ill, with a puling bit of
+ mortality in her arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a "day charge," having been arrested for stealing a pot of
+ condensed milk. At length she stood before the magistrate, and the
+ evidence was given that she was seen to take the milk and hurry away. She
+ was arrested with the milk on her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was believed that she had taken milk from the same place at other
+ times. When asked what she had to say in extenuation, she held her child
+ up and said, "I did not take it for myself, I took it for this!" She did
+ not call it her child. The magistrate looked, shuddered, and sentenced her
+ to one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So once again I stood face to face with her, and face to face with a big
+ man who had been waiting for her, who insolently asked me what I wanted
+ with his wife. I turned from him to the woman, and asked if she would
+ leave him, for if so I would provide for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mournfully she shook her head; leave him, no!&mdash;to the bitter end she
+ stood by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they passed from my view, the educated brute and the despairing,
+ battered, faithful drudge of a woman, to migrate from lodging-house to
+ lodging-house, to suffer and to die!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If all the girls of England could see what I have seen, if they could
+ take, as I have taken, some measure of the keen anguish and sorrow that
+ comes from such a step, they would never try the dangerous experiment of
+ marrying a man in the hope of reforming him. Should, perchance, young
+ women read this story, let me tell them it is true in every particular,
+ but not the whole truth, for there are some things that cannot be told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again and again I have heard poor stricken women cry: "How can you! how
+ can you!" More than once my manhood has been roused, and I have struck a
+ blow in their defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there is one piece of advice that, in the light of my experience, I
+ would like to burn into the very consciousness of young women, it is this:
+ if they have fastened their heart's love about a man, and find that
+ thorough respect does not go with that love, then, at whatever cost, let
+ them crush that love as they would crush a serpent's egg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the same holds good with men: I have known men in moments of passion
+ marry young women, trusting that a good home and an assured income would
+ restore them to decency and womanhood&mdash;but in vain! I saw a
+ foul-looking woman far from old sent again to prison, where she had been
+ more than a hundred times. She had also served two years in an inebriate
+ reformatory. Fifteen years ago, when I first met her, she was a
+ fair-looking young woman. Needless to say, I met her in the police-court.
+ A short time afterwards she came to tell me that she was married. She had
+ a good home, her husband was in good circumstances, and knew of her life.
+ A few years of home life, two little children to call her mother; then
+ back to her sensual ways. Prisons, rescue homes, workhouses, inebriate
+ reformatories, all have failed to reclaim her, and she lives to spread
+ moral corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. BRAINS IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I hope that, in some of my chapters, I have made it clear that a large
+ proportion of the underworld people are industrious and persevering. I
+ want in this chapter to show that many of them have also ability and
+ brains, gifts and graces. This is a pleasant theme, and I would revel in
+ it, but for the sorrowful side of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may seem strange that people living under their conditions should
+ possess these qualities, but in reality there is nothing strange about it,
+ for Nature laughs at us, and bestows her gifts upon whom she pleases,
+ though I have no doubt that she works to law and order if we only
+ understood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we do not understand, and therefore she appears whimsical and
+ capricious. I rather expect that even when eugenists get their way and the
+ human race is born to order, that Dame Nature, the mother of us all, will
+ not consent to be left out of the reckoning. Be that as it may, it is
+ certain she bestows her personal gifts among the very poor equally with
+ the rich. She is a true socialist, and, like Santa Claus, she visits the
+ homes of the very poor and bestows gifts upon their children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the most perfect ladies I have ever met have been uneducated women
+ living in poverty and gloom. I do not say the most beautiful, for
+ suffering and poverty are never beautiful. Neither can rings of care
+ beneath the eyes, and countless furrows upon the face be considered
+ beautiful. But, apart from this, I have found many personal graces and the
+ perfection of behaviour among some of the poorest. All this I consider
+ more wonderful than the possession of brains, though of brains they are by
+ no means deficient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Have you ever noticed how pretty the healthy children of the very poor
+ are? I am not speaking of unhealthy and feeble children, who are all too
+ numerous, but of the healthy; for, strange as it may appear, there are
+ many such, even in the underworld. Where do you find such beautiful curly
+ hair as they possess? in very few places! It is perfect in its freedom,
+ texture, colour and curl. Dame Nature has not forgotten them! Where do you
+ find prettier faces, more sparkling eyes and eager expressions? Nowhere!
+ And though their faces become prematurely old, and their eyes become hard,
+ still Dame Nature had not forgotten them at birth; she, at any rate, had
+ done her best for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Search any families, bring out the hundreds of pretty children, and I will
+ bring hundreds of children from below the line that will compare with them
+ in beauty of body, face and hair. But they must be under four years of
+ age! No! no! the children of the upperworld have not a monopoly of Dame
+ Nature's gifts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it is so with mental gifts and graces; the poor get a good share of
+ them, but the pity is they get so little chance of exercising them. For
+ many splendid qualities wither from disuse or perish from lack of
+ development. But some survive, as the following stories will prove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a hot day in June, and, in company with a friend who wished to
+ learn something about the lives of the very poor, I was visiting in the
+ worst quarters of East London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we moved from house to house, the thick air within, and the dirt within
+ and without were almost too much for us. The box-like rooms, the horrible
+ backyards, the grime of the men, women and children, combined with the
+ filth in the streets and gutters, made us sick and faint. We asked
+ ourselves whether it was possible that anything decent, virtuous or
+ intelligent could live under such conditions?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "place" was dignified by the name of a street, although in reality it
+ was a blind alley, for a high wall closed one end of it. It was very
+ narrow, and while infants played in the unclean gutters, frowsy women
+ discussed domestic or more exciting matters with women on the opposite
+ side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They discussed us too as we passed, and audibly commented, though not
+ favourably, on our business. I had visited the street scores of times, and
+ consequently I was well known. Unfortunately my address was also well
+ known, for every little act of kindness that I ventured to do in that
+ street had been followed by a number of letters from jealous
+ non-recipients.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I venture to say that from every house save one I had received begging or
+ unpleasant letters, for jealousy of each other's benefits was a marked
+ characteristic of that unclean street. As we entered the house from which
+ no letter had been received, we heard a woman call to her neighbour, "They
+ are going to see the old shoemaker." She was correct in her surmise, and
+ right glad we were to make the old man's acquaintance; not that he was
+ very old, but then fifty-nine in a London slum may be considered old age.
+ He sat in a Windsor arm-chair in a very small kitchen; a window at his
+ back revealed that abomination of desolation, a Bethnal Green backyard. He
+ sat as he had sat for years, bent and doubled up, for some kind of
+ paralysis had overtaken him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had a fine head and a pointed beard, his thin and weak neck seemed
+ hardly able to bear its heavy burden. He was not overclean, and his
+ clothes were, to say the least, shabby. But there he sat, his wife at work
+ to maintain him. We stood, for there was no sitting room for us. Grime,
+ misery and poverty were in evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told us that his forefathers were Huguenots, who fled from France and
+ settled as silk weavers in Spitalfields. He had been apprenticed to boot-
+ and shoe-making, his particular branch of work having been boots and shoes
+ for actresses and operatic singers. That formerly he had earned good
+ money, but the trade declined as he had grown older, and now for some
+ years he had been crippled and unable to work, and dependent upon his
+ wife, who was a machinist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There did not seem much room for imagination and poetry in his home and
+ life, but the following conversation took place&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a very hard life for you sitting month after month on that chair,
+ unable to do anything!" "It is hard, I do not know what I should do if I
+ could not think." "Oh, you think, do you well, thinking is hard work."
+ "Not to me, it is my pleasure and occupation." "What do you think about?"
+ "All sorts of things, what I have read mostly." "What have you read"
+ "Everything that I could get hold of, novelists, poetry, history and
+ travel." "What novelist do you like best" The answer came prompt and
+ decisive: "Dickens," "Why?" "He loved the poor, he shows a greater belief
+ in humanity than Thackeray." "How do you prove that?" "Well, take
+ Thackeray's VANITY FAIR, it is clever and satirical, but there is only one
+ good character, and he was a fool; but in Dickens you come across
+ character after character that you can't help loving."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which of his books do you like best?" "A TALE OF TWO CITIES." "Why?"
+ "Well, because the French Revolution always appeals to me, and secondly
+ because I think the best bit of writing in all his books is the
+ description of Sydney Carton's ride on the tumbrel to the guillotine."
+ "Have you ever read Carlyle's FRENCH REVOLUTION?" "No" "I will lend it to
+ you." "If you do, I will read it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How about poetry, what poets do you like?" "The minor poets of two
+ hundred years ago, Herrick, Churchill, Shenstone and others." "Why do you
+ like them?" "They are so pretty, so easy to understand, you know what they
+ mean; they speak of beauty, and flowers and love, their language is
+ tuneful and sweet." Thus the grimy old shoemaker spoke, but I continued:
+ "What about the present-day poets?" Swift came the reply, "We have got
+ none." This was a staggerer, but I suggested: "What about Kipling?" "Too
+ slangy and Coarse!" "Austin?" "Don't ask me." "What of Wordsworth,
+ Tennyson and Browning?" "Well, Wordsworth is too prosy, you have to read
+ such a lot to get a little; Tennyson is a bit sickly and too sentimental,
+ I mean with washy sentiment; Browning I cannot understand, he is too hard
+ for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now let us talk: about dramatists; you have read Shakespeare?" "Yes,
+ every play again and again." "Which do you like best?" "I like them all,
+ the historical and the imaginative; I have never seen one acted, but to me
+ King Lear is his masterpiece."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we left him doubled up in his chair, in his grime and poverty, lighting
+ up his poor one room with great creations, bearing his heavy burdens,
+ never repining, thinking great thoughts and re-enacting great events, for
+ his mind to him was a kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day my friend sent a dozen well-selected books, but the old
+ shoemaker never sought or looked for any assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few doors away we happened on a slum tragedy. We stood in a queer
+ little house of one room up and one down stairs. Let me picture the scene!
+ A widow was seated at her machine sewing white buckskin children's boots.
+ Time, five o'clock in the afternoon; she had sat there for many hours, and
+ would continue to sit till night was far advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a girl of twelve burst in and threw herself into her mother's
+ arms, crying, "Oh, mother, mother, I have lost the scholarship! Oh,
+ mother, the French was too hard for me!" To our surprise the mother seemed
+ intensely relieved, and said, "Thank God for that!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the girl wept! After a time we inquired, and found that the girl,
+ having passed the seventh standard at an elementary school, had been
+ attending a higher grade school, where she had been entered for a
+ competitive examination at a good class secondary school. If she obtained
+ it, the widow would have been compelled to sign an agreement for the girl
+ to remain at school for at least three years. But the widow was
+ practically starving, although working fourteen hours daily. Verily, the
+ conflict of duties forms the tragedy of everyday life. The widow was saved
+ by the advanced French; poor mother and poor girl!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by the girl was comforted as we held the prospective of a bright
+ future before her, and got her to talk of her studies; she recited for us
+ a scene from AS YOU LIKE IT, and also Portia's speech, "The quality of
+ mercy is not strained."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Standing near was a boy of not more than ten years, who looked as if he
+ would like to recite for us, and I asked him what standard he was in. "The
+ sixth, sir." "And do you like English Literature?" He did not answer the
+ question exactly, but said, "I know the 'Deserted Village,' by Oliver
+ Goldsmith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where was the 'Deserted Village'?" "Sweet Auburn was supposed to be in
+ Ireland, but it is thought that some of the scenes are taken from English
+ villages."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you give us the 'Village Schoolmaster'?" And he did, with point and
+ emphasis. "Now for the 'Village Parson.'" His memory did not fail or trip,
+ and the widow sat there machining; so we turned to her for more
+ information, and found that she was a Leicester woman, and her parents
+ Scots; she had been a boot machinist from her youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her husband was a "clicker" from Stafford; he had been dead eight years.
+ She was left with four children. She had another daughter of fourteen who
+ had done brilliantly at school, having obtained many distinctions, and at
+ twelve years had passed her "Oxford Local." This girl had picked up
+ typewriting herself, and as she was good at figures and a splendid writer,
+ she obtained a junior clerk's place in the City at seven shillings and
+ sixpence per week. Every day this girl walked to and from her business,
+ and every day the poor widow managed to find her fourpence that the girl
+ might have a lunch in London City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt interested in this girl, so I wrote asking her to come to lunch
+ with me on a certain day. She came with a book in her hand, one of George
+ Eliot's, one of her many prizes. A fourpenny lunch may be conducive to
+ high thinking, may even lead to an appreciation of great novels: it
+ certainly leaves plenty of time for the improvement of the mind, though it
+ does not do much for nourishing the body. I found her exceedingly
+ interesting and intelligent, with some knowledge of "political economy,"
+ well up in advanced arithmetic, and quite capable of discussing the books
+ she had read. Yet the family had been born in an apology of a house, they
+ had graduated in the slums, but not in the gutter. Their widowed mother
+ had worked interminable hours and starved as she worked, but no attendance
+ officer had ever been required to compel her children to school. It would
+ have taken force to keep them away. But what of their future? Who can say?
+ But of one thing I am very sure, and it is this: that, given fair
+ opportunity, the whole family will adorn any station of life that they may
+ be called to fill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But will they have that opportunity? Well, the friend that was with me
+ says they will, and he has commissioned me to act for him, promising me
+ that if I am taken first and he is left, the cultured family of the slums
+ shall not go uncared for. And amidst the sordid life of our mean streets,
+ there are numbers of brilliant children whose God-given talents not only
+ run to waste, but are actually turned into evil for lack of opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here and there one and another rise superior to their environment, and
+ with splendid perseverance fight their way to higher and better life. And
+ some of them rise to eminence, for genius is not rare even in Slumdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of our greatest artists, lately dead, whose work all civilisation
+ delights to honour, played in a slum gutter, and climbed a lamp-post that
+ he might get a furtive look into a school of art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All honour and good wishes to the rising young, but all glory to the
+ half-starved widows who shape their characters and form their tastes. To
+ the old shoemaker good wishes; may the small pension that a friend of mine
+ has settled on him add to his comfort and his health, may his beloved
+ minor poets with Dickens and Shakespeare long be dear to him, and may his
+ poor little home long continue to be peopled with bright creations that
+ defy the almost omnipotent power of the underworld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If any who may read these words would like to do a kind action that will
+ not be void of good results and sure reward, I would say lend a helping
+ hand to some poor family where, in spite of their poverty and
+ surroundings, the children are clean and intelligent, and have made
+ progress at school. For they are just needing a hand, it may be to help
+ with their education, or it may be to give them a suitable start in life.
+ If the mother happens to be a widow, you cannot do wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If one half of the money that is spent trying to help unhelpable people
+ was spent in helping the kind of families I refer to in the manner I
+ describe, the results would be surprising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there is any difficulty in finding such families, I would say apply to
+ the head mistress or master of a big school in a poor neighbourhood, they
+ can find them for you. If they cannot, why then I will from among my
+ self-supporting widow friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But do not, I beseech you, apply to the clergyman of the parish, for he
+ will naturally select some poor family to whom he has charitably acted the
+ part of relieving officer. Remember it is brains and grit that you are in
+ search of, and not poor people only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If in every neighbourhood a few people would band themselves together for
+ this purpose and spend money for this one charitable purpose, it would of
+ itself, and in reasonable time, effect mighty results. Believe me, there
+ is plenty of brain power and grit in the underworld that never gets a
+ chance of developing in a useful direction. Boys and girls possessing such
+ talents are doomed, unless a miracle happens, for they have to start in
+ life anyhow and anywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is of more importance than a correct start in life for any boy or
+ girl; but a false start, a bad beginning for the children of the very poor
+ who happen to possess brain power is fatal. Their talents get no chance,
+ for they are never used, consequently they atrophy, or, worse still, are
+ used in a wrong direction and possibly for evil. Good is changed into
+ evil, bright and useful life is frustrated, and the State loses the useful
+ power and influence that should result from brains and grit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How can my widow friends, who are unceasingly at work, have either the
+ time, opportunity or knowledge to find proper openings for their children?
+ The few shillings that a boy or girl can earn at anything, or anyhow that
+ is honest, are a great temptation. The commencement dominates the future!
+ Prospective advantage must needs give place to present requirements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we all lose! The upperworld loses the children's gifts, character and
+ service. The underworld retains their poor service for life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is better," said Milton, "to kill a man than a book." Which may be
+ true, but probably the truth depends upon the quality of the man and the
+ book. But what about killing mind, soul, heart, aspirations and every
+ quality that goes to make up a man? "Their angels do always behold the
+ face of my Father"; yes, but we compel them to withdraw that gaze, and
+ look contentedly into the face of evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am now pleading for the gifted boys and girls of the underworld, not the
+ weaklings, for of them I speak elsewhere. But I will say, that while the
+ weaklings are the more hopeless, it is the talented that are the most
+ dangerous. Let us see to it that their powers have some chance of
+ developing in a right direction. When by some extraordinary concurrence of
+ circumstances a Council School boy passes on to a university and takes a
+ good degree, it is chronicled all over the world; the school, the teacher,
+ the boy and his parents are all held up for show and admiration. I declare
+ it makes me ill! Why? Because I know that in the underworld thousands of
+ men are grubbing, burrowing and grovelling who, as boys, possessed
+ phenomenal abilities, but whose parents were poor, so poor that their
+ gifted children had no chance of developing the talent that was in them.
+ Let us give them a chance! Sometimes here and there one and another bursts
+ his bonds, and, rejoicing in his freedom, does brilliant things. But in
+ spite of Samuel Smiles and his self-help they are but few, though, if the
+ centuries are searched, the catalogue will be impressive enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course there must be self-help. But there must be opportunity also.
+ There is a great deal of talk about the children of the poor being
+ "over-educated," and the delinquencies of the youthful poor are attributed
+ to this bogy. It is because they are under-educated, not over-educated,
+ that the children of the very poor so often go wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the attempt to cast them all in the same mould is disastrous; there is
+ an over-education going on in this direction. Not all the children of the
+ poor can be great scholars, but some of them can! Let us give them a
+ chance. Not all of them can be scientists and engineers, etc., but some of
+ them have talents for such things! Give them a chance! A good many of them
+ have unmistakably artistic gifts! Why not give them a chance too! And the
+ mechanically inclined should have a chance! Why can we not differentiate
+ according to their tastes and gifts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For even then we shall have enough left to be our hewers of wood and
+ carriers of water; an abundance will remain to do all the work that
+ requires neither brains nor gifts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But let us stop at once and for ever trying to cram thick heads and poor
+ brains with stuff that cannot possibly be appreciated or understood. Let
+ us teach their mechanical fingers to do something useful, and give them,
+ even the degenerates, some chance!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And we must stop our blind alley occupation for growing lads, for at the
+ end of the alley stands an open door to the netherworld, and through it
+ youthful life passes with little prospect of return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. PLAY IN THE UNDERWORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It may seem a strange thing, but children do play in the underworld. They
+ have their own games and their times and seasons too!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet no one can watch them as they play without experiencing feelings more
+ or less pathetic. There is something incongruous about it that may cause a
+ smile, but there is also something that will probably cause a tear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For their playgrounds are the gutters or the pavements. Happy are the
+ children when they can procure a spacious pavement, for in the underworld
+ wide pavements are scarce; still narrow pavements and gutters are always
+ to hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is summer time, the holidays have come! No longer the hum, babble and
+ shouts of children are heard in and around those huge buildings, the
+ County Council schools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun pours its rays into the unclean streets, the thermometer registers
+ eighty in the shade. Down from the top storey and other storeys of the
+ blocks the children come, happy in the consciousness that for one month at
+ least they will be free from school, without dodging the school attendance
+ officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hop-scotch" season has commenced, and as if by magic the pavements of the
+ narrow streets are covered with chalked lines, geometrical figures and
+ numerals, and the mysterious word "tod" confronts you, stares at you, and
+ puzzles you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who can understand the intricacies of "hop-scotch" or the fascination of
+ "tod"? None but the girls of the underworld. Simple pleasures please them&mdash;a
+ level pavement, a piece of chalk, a "pitcher," the sun overhead, dirt
+ around, a few companions and non-troublesome babies, are their chief
+ requirements; for few of these girls come out to play without the eternal
+ baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notice first, if you will, how deftly these foster-mothers handle the
+ babies; their very method tells of long-continued practice. What slaves
+ these girls are! But they have brought the baby's feeding-bottle, and also
+ that other fearsome indispensable of underworld infant life, "the
+ comforter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are going to make a day of it, a mad and merry day, for they have
+ with them some pieces of bread and margarine to sustain them in the toil
+ of nursing and the exhaustion of "hop-scotch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "pitcher" is produced, and we notice how punctiliously each girl takes
+ her proper turn and starts from the correct place; we notice also the
+ dilapidated condition of their boots, that act as golf clubs and propel
+ the "pitcher." We wonder how with such boots, curled and twisted to every
+ conceivable shape, they can strike the "pitcher" at all. There is some
+ skill in "hop-scotch" played as these girls play it, and with their
+ "boots" too!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A one-legged game is "hop-scotch," for the left foot must be held clear of
+ the pavement, and the "pitcher" must be propelled with the right foot as
+ the girl "hops."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If she hops too high and misses it, she is "out"; if she strikes too hard,
+ and it travels beyond one of the boundaries, she is "out" too; if she does
+ not propel it far enough, again "out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why, of course there is skill and fascination in it, for it combines the
+ virtues of golf and baseball, and "tod" is quite as good as a football
+ goal. And there is good fellowship and self-denial going on, too; not
+ quite every girl, thank Heaven, is hampered or blessed with a baby, and we
+ notice how cheerfully they take their turn in nursing while the
+ foster-mother arrives at "tod."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The substitute, too, understands the use of the "comforter," for should it
+ roll in the dirty gutter she promptly returns it to its proper place, the
+ baby's mouth. Untidy, slatternly girls, not over-clean, not over-dressed,
+ and certainly not over-fed, we leave them to their play and their babies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are a lot of half-naked boys, some standing, some sitting on the hot
+ pavement; they are playing "cherry hog"; why "hog" I don't know! Their
+ requisites are a pocketful of cherry stones and a small screw, not an
+ expensive outfit, for they save the "hogs" when they are permitted to eat
+ cherries, as sometimes, by the indulgence of a kindly fruiterer, they are,
+ for he kindly throws all his rotten or unsaleable fruit into the gutter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If these are not to hand, there are plenty of "hogs" to be picked up. As
+ to the little screw, well, it is easy to get one or steal one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advantage of a screw is that it possesses a flat end, on which it will
+ stand erect. In this position it is delicately placed so that when struck
+ by a cherry "hog" it falls. Each boy in turn throws a certain number of
+ "hogs" at the screw, the successful thrower gathers in the spoil and goes
+ home with his pocket bursting with cherry "hogs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It's an exciting game, but it is gambling nevertheless; why do not the
+ police interfere?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are some boys playing "buttons"&mdash;gambling again! This game is
+ good practice, too, and a capital introduction to that famous game of
+ youthful capitalists, "pitch and toss," for it is played in precisely the
+ same way, only that buttons take the place of half-pennies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road, gutter or pavement will do for "buttons"; a small mark or "jack"
+ is agreed upon, a line is drawn at a certain distance; alternately the
+ lads pitch their buttons towards the "jack," three buttons each. When all
+ have "pitched," the boy whose button is nearest the "jack" has first toss,
+ that is, he collects all the pitched buttons in his hand and tosses them;
+ as the buttons lie again on the ground the lads eagerly scan them, for the
+ buttons that lie with their convex side upwards are the spoil of the first
+ "tosser." The remaining buttons are collected by the second, who tosses,
+ and then collects his spoil, and so on till the buttons are all lost and
+ won. The boy whose buttons are farthest from "jack" of course gets the
+ last and least opportunity. When playing for halfpence, "heads or tails"
+ is the deciding factor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why, you say, of course it is a game of skill, just as much as bowls or
+ quoits; but there are also elements of luck about "pitch and toss" which
+ gives it an increased attraction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sunday in the underworld is the great day for "pitch and toss," for many
+ boys have halfpence on that day. They have been at work during the week,
+ and, having commenced work, their Sunday-school days are at an end. And
+ having a few halfpence they can indulge their long-continued and fervent
+ hope of discarding "buttons" and playing the man by using halfpence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how they enjoy it! how intent they are upon it. Sunday morning will
+ turn to midday, and midday to evening before they are tired of it! Meal
+ times, or the substitute for meal times, pass, and they remain at it!
+ always supposing their halfpence last, and the police do not interfere,
+ the latter being the most likely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It takes an interminably long time to dispossess a lad of six halfpence at
+ this game; fortune is not so fickle as may be supposed. The unskilled
+ "pitcher" may have luck in "tossing," while the successful "pitcher" may
+ be an unlucky "tosser." If at the end of a long day they come off pretty
+ equal, they have had an ideal day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they have had their ups and downs, their alternations of joy and
+ despair. Sometimes a boy may win a penny; if so, it is evident that
+ another boy has lost one, and this is sad, though I expect they lose more
+ coppers to the police than they do to their companions, for the police
+ harry them and hunt them. Special constables are put on to detect them,
+ and they know the favourite resorts of the incipient gamblers. They hunt
+ in couples, too, and they enter the little unclean street at each end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for the supreme excitement; they are observed by the watchful eye of a
+ non-player, who is copperless. There is a rush for the halfpence, some of
+ which the non-player secures. There's a scamper, but there is no escape;
+ the police bag them, and innocent boys who join in the scamper are bagged
+ too. The police search the ground for halfpence, find a few which they
+ carefully pack in paper, that they may retain some signs of dirt upon
+ them, for this will be invaluable legal evidence on the morrow. There is a
+ procession of police, prisoners and gleeful lads who are not in custody to
+ the nearest police-station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Monday they stand in the dock, when the police with the halfpence and
+ the dirt still upon them give evidence against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One worthy magistrate will ask them why they were not at home or school.
+ Another will sternly admonish them upon the evils of street gambling. A
+ third will tell them that it would have paid them better in health and
+ pocket to have taken a country walk. But all agree on one point, "that
+ this street gambling must be put down," and they "put it down," or attempt
+ to do so, by fining the young ragamuffins five shillings each.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excitement of the cells then awaits them, to be followed by a free
+ ride in "Black Maria," unless "muvver" can pawn something and raise the
+ money, But many mothers cannot do this, others do not trouble; as to
+ "farver," well, he does not come in at all, unless it is to give a
+ "licking" to the boy when he comes out of prison for losing his job and
+ his wages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly, the play of the underworld children is exciting enough: there is
+ danger attaching to it; perhaps that gives a piquancy to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fascination of "pitch and toss" is felt not only all over England,
+ where it holds undisputed sway, for it has no real rival, but in America
+ too! Whilst in America last summer I explored the mean streets of New
+ York, and not far from the Bowery I found lots of lads at the game. It was
+ Sunday morning, too, and having some "nickels," I played several games
+ with them. I was but a poor pitcher, the coins were too light for me&mdash;perhaps
+ I could do better with solid English pennies&mdash;but what I lost in
+ pitching I gained in tossing, so I was not ruined, neither did the Bowery
+ lads sustain any loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I found the procedure exactly the same as in England, and I felt the
+ fascination of it; and some day when I can afford it, I will have a lot of
+ metal counters made, and I will organise lads into a club; I will give
+ them "caps," and they shall play where the police won't interfere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will give them trophies to contend for, and Bethnal Green shall contend
+ with Holloway; a halfpenny "gate" would bring its thousands, and private
+ gain would give place to club and district "esprit de corps," for the lads
+ want the game, not the money; the excitement, not the halfpence. There is
+ nothing intrinsically wrong about "pitch and toss," only the fact that
+ ragamuffins play it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a great deal of nonsense talked about the game by superior people
+ who pose as authorities upon the delinquencies of ragamuffin youth, and
+ who declaim upon the demoralisation attending this popular game of poor
+ lads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard at a meeting of a rich Christian Church, held in a noble hall in
+ the heart of London's City, one gentleman declare that a smart ragamuffin
+ youth of his acquaintance possessed a penny with a "head" on each side for
+ the purpose of enabling him to cheat at this game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not know what he was talking about, for such pennies would be as
+ useless for this game as the stones in the streets, for "heads and tails"
+ are the essence of the game. The boys of the underworld must play, and
+ ought to play; if those above them do not approve of their games, well, it
+ is "up to them," as the Americans have it, to find them better games than
+ pitch and toss, and better playing grounds than unclean streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of public parks we have enough; they are very well for sedate and elderly
+ people. They are useful to foster-mothers, slave girls hugging babies
+ about, and a boon for nurses with perambulators. But what of Tom, Dick and
+ Harry, who have just commenced work; what of them? "Boy Scouting," even
+ with royal patronage, is not for them, for they have no money to buy
+ uniforms, nor time to scour Epping Forest and Hampstead Heath for a
+ non-existent enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Church Lads' Brigade with bishops for patrons, did I hear some one say?
+ Well, blowing a bugle, no matter how discordantly, is certainly an
+ attraction for a boy; and wearing a military cap set jauntily on one side
+ of the head is attractive, too, while the dragging of a make-believe
+ cannon through the streets may perhaps please others. But Tom, Dick and
+ Harry from below care for none of these things, for they are
+ "make-believes," and Tom, Dick and Harry want something real, even if it
+ is vulgar, something with a strong competitive element in it, even if it
+ is a little bit rough or wicked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides Tom, Dick and Harry are not over-clean in person, nor nice in
+ speech, so they are not wanted. Boy Scouts and Boys' Brigades are preached
+ at, but Tom, Dick and Harry do not want to be preached at by a parson, or
+ coddled by a curate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They want something real, even though it be punching each other's head,
+ for that at any rate is real. Give us play, play, real play! is the cry
+ that is everlastingly rising from the underworld youth. But the overworld
+ gives them parks and gardens, which are closed at a respectable hour. But
+ the lads do not go to bed at respectable hours, for their mothers are
+ still at work and their fathers have not arrived home. So they play in the
+ streets; then we call them "hooligans," and of course they must be "put
+ down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a good deal of "putting down" for the underworld, but it is all
+ of the wrong sort. For there is no putting down of public playgrounds for
+ lads of fifteen and upwards open in the evening, lighted by electricity,
+ and under proper control. Not one in the whole underworld. So they play in
+ the streets, or rather indulge in what is called "horse-play."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there are youths' clubs! Yes, a few mostly in pokey places, yet they
+ are useful. But Tom, Dick and Harry want space, room and air, for they get
+ precious little of these valuable commodities at their work, and still
+ less in their homes. Watch them if you will, as I have watched them scores
+ of times in the streets, how foolish, yet how pitiable their conduct is;
+ you will see that they walk for about two hundred yards and then walk back
+ again, and then repeat the same walk, till the hours have passed; they
+ seem to be as circumscribed as caged animals. They walk within bounds up
+ and down the "monkey's parade."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How inane and silly their conversation is! Sometimes a whim comes upon
+ them, and one runs for a few yards; the whim takes possession of others,
+ and they do exactly the same. One seizes another round the body and
+ wrestles with him. Immediately the others begin to wrestle too; their
+ actions are stereotyped, silly and objectionable, even when they do not
+ quarrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They bump against the people, women included, especially young women. They
+ push respectable people into the gutters, and respectable people complain
+ to the police. An extra force is told off to keep order, and to put Tom,
+ Dick and Harry down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sunday night is the worst night of all! for now these youths are out in
+ their thousands; certain streets are given up to them, and become
+ impassable for others. Respectable folk are shocked, and church-going folk
+ are scandalised! Surely the streets are the property of respectable
+ people! and yet they cannot pass through them without annoyance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the street is cleared and patrolled, for respectability must be
+ protected, not that there has been either violence or robbery. Oh dear,
+ no! There has only been foolish horse-play by the Toms, Dicks and Harrys
+ who, having nowhere else to go, and nothing else to do, having, moreover,
+ been joined by their female counterparts, have been enjoying themselves in
+ their own way, for they have been "at play."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is astonishing how fond of water the unwashed children of the
+ underworld are! It has an attraction for them, often a fatal attraction,
+ even though it be thick with dirt and very malodorous. During the summer
+ time the boys' bathing lakes in Victoria Park are crowded and alive with
+ youngsters, who splash and flounder and choke, splutter and laugh in them.
+ They present a sight worth seeing, and teach a lesson worth remembering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canals of Hoxton, Haggerston and Islington, too, dirty and dangerous
+ as they are, prove seductive to the boys who live close to them. Now the
+ police have an anxious time. Again they must look after Tom, Dick and
+ Harry, for demure respectability must not be outraged by a sight of their
+ naked bodies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the police keep a sharp outlook for them. Some one kindly informs them
+ that a dozen boys are bathing in the canal near a certain bridge, and
+ quickly enough they find them in the very act. There the little savages
+ are! Some can swim, and some cannot; those that cannot are standing in the
+ slime near the side, stirring up its nastiness. They see the policeman
+ advancing, and those that can swim get ashore and run for their little
+ bits of clothing, tied up in a bundle ready for emergencies. Into the
+ water again they go for the other side! But, alas! another policeman is
+ waiting on the other side at the place where they expected to land, so
+ they must needs swim till another landing place offers security. But even
+ here they find that escape is hopeless, for yet another policeman awaits
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who cannot swim seize their bundles, and, without waiting to dress,
+ run naked and unashamed along the canal, side, to the merriment of the
+ bargees, and the joy of the women and girls who happen to have no son or
+ brother amongst them, for the underworld is not so easily shocked as the
+ law and its administrators imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ultimately they, too, find a policeman waiting for them, and a "good bag"
+ results. But the magistrate is very lenient; with a twinkle in his eye he
+ reproves them, and fines them one shilling each, which with great
+ difficulty their "muvvers" pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it has been a good day for the police, for four of them have helped to
+ convey six shillings from the wretchedly poor to the coffers of the
+ police-court receiver. But when the school holidays come round, that is
+ the time for the dirty canal to tell its tale, and to give up its dead,
+ too!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Read this from the Daily Press, July 16th, 1911&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A remarkable record in life-saving was disclosed at a Bethnal Green
+ inquest to-day on a child of six, named Browning, who was drowned in the
+ Regent's Canal on Bank Holiday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Henry H. Terry, an out-of-work carman, said he was called from his home
+ near by, and raced down to the canal. There was a youth on the bank
+ holding a stick over the water, apparently waiting for the child to come
+ up to the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The coroner: 'How old was the youth?' 'Well, he stood five feet six
+ inches, and might have gone in without getting out of his depth. I heard a
+ woman cry, "Why don't you go in!" I dived in five or six times, but did
+ not bring up the body.' The witness added that he and his brother had
+ saved many lives at this spot, the latter having effected as many as
+ twenty-five rescues in a year. Alfred Terry, a silk weaver, described the
+ point at which the child was drowned as a veritable death-trap, and
+ mentioned that he had been instrumental during the past twelve years in
+ saving considerably over one hundred lives at that spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'One hot July afternoon in 1900,' he added,'my mother and I had five of
+ them in the kitchen at one time with a roaring fire to bring them round.
+ That was during the school holidays; they dropped in like flies.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Accidental death was the verdict."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the little ones play in the gutter, danger lurks very near, as
+ witness the extract of the same date&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At an inquest at the Poplar coroner's court to-day, on a three-years'-old
+ girl named Bertiola, it was stated that while playing with other children
+ she was struck on the head with a tin engine. Three weeks later she was
+ playing with the same children, and one of them hit her on the head with
+ the wooden horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The coroner: 'Two similar blows in a few days, that is very strange.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Packer said that death was due to cerebral meningitis, the result of
+ a blow on the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The coroner: 'I suppose you can't tell which blow caused the trouble'
+ 'No, sir, I am afraid not.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The jury returned a verdict of accidental death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But sometimes the boys and girls of the underworld collaborate in their
+ play, for just now (July) "Remember the grotto! please to remember the
+ grotto!" is a popular cry. Who has not seen the London grottos he who
+ knows them not, knows nothing of the London poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was watching some girls play "hop-scotch" when a boy and girl with
+ oyster shells in their hands came up to me preferring the usual request,
+ "Please to remember the grotto!" Holding out their shells as they spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is your grotto?" I said. "There, sir, over there; come and see it."
+ Aye! there is was, sure enough, and a pretty little thing it was in its
+ way, built up to the wall in a quiet corner, glistening with its oyster
+ shells, its bits of coloured china and surmounted with a little flag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But where are the candles?" "Oh, sir, we haven't got any yet; we shall
+ get candles when we get some money, and light them to-night; we have only
+ just finished it." "Where did you get your shells?" "From the fish-shops."
+ "Where did you get the pretty bits of china from?" "We saved them from
+ last year." "Does grotto time come the same time every year, then" "Oh
+ yes, sir." "How is that?" "'Cos it's the time for it." "Why do you build
+ grottos" "To get money." "Yes, but why do people give you money; what do
+ grottos commemorate, don't you know?" "No, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at a poor half-paralysed boy with sharp face and said, "Well, my
+ boy, you ought to know; do you go to Sunday School?" "Yes, sir, both of
+ us; St. James the Less." "Well, I shall not tell you the whole story
+ to-day, but here is sixpence for you to buy candles with; and next Sunday
+ ask your teacher to tell you why boys and girls build grottos; I shall be
+ here this day week, and if you can tell me I will give you a shilling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were at least six grottos in that street when I got there on the
+ appointed day. A large crowd of children with oyster shells were waiting;
+ evidently the given sixpence and the promised shilling had created some
+ excitement in that corner of Bethnal Green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were soon all round me, and a general chorus arose with hands
+ outstretched, "Please to remember the grotto! please to remember the
+ grotto!" I called them to silence, and said, "Can any one tell me why you
+ build grottos?" There was a general chorus, "To get money, sir." That was
+ all they knew, and it seemed to them a sufficient reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning to the little cripple, I said, "Did you ask your teacher?" "Yes,
+ sir, but she said it was only children's play; but I bought some candles,
+ and they are lighted now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said, "Now, children, listen to me, for I am going to tell you about the
+ beginning of grottos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A good many hundred years ago, when Jesus was on earth, He had two
+ disciples named James; in after years one was called 'James the Greater'
+ and the other 'James the Less.' After the death of Jesus, James the
+ Greater was put to death, and the disciples were scattered, and wandered
+ into many far countries. James the Less wandered into Spain, telling the
+ people about Jesus. He lived a good and holy life, helping the poor and
+ the afflicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When he died, the people who loved him and reverenced him made a great
+ funeral, and built him a costly tomb, but instead of putting up a monument
+ to him, they built a large and beautiful grotto over the place where his
+ body lay. They lined it with beautiful and costly shells and other rich
+ things, and lit it with many candles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thousands of people came to see the grotto, and gave money to buy candles
+ that it might always be lighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every year, on the anniversary of St. James's death, the people came by
+ thousands to the grotto. One year it was said that a crippled man had been
+ made quite well while praying at the grotto. This event was told
+ everywhere, and from that day forth on St. James's Day people came from
+ many countries, many of them walking hundreds of miles to the grotto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some of these people were ill and diseased, and others were sick and
+ blind, and some were cripples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is said that a good many of them were cured of their afflictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now all these poor people that walked slowly and painfully to St. James's
+ tomb carried big oyster shells, in which they made holes for cords to pass
+ through, and they placed the cords round their necks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When they came near to people they would hold out their shells and say,
+ 'Please to remember the grotto!' And people gave them money to help them
+ on their way and to buy candles for the grotto, hoping that the poor
+ people would get there safely and come back cured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So it came to pass that whenever people saw a man with an oyster shell,
+ they knew he was going or returning from St. James's tomb in Spain, and
+ they helped him. The custom of building grottos on St. James's Day spread
+ to many countries besides Spain. In Russia they build very fine grottos.
+ At length the custom came to England, and you boys and girls do what other
+ boys and girls have done for many years in other countries, and in reality
+ you celebrate the death of a great and good man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children were very silent for a while; the cripple boy looked at me
+ with tears in his eyes, and I knew what his tears expressed. I gave him a
+ shilling, but he did not speak; to all the other children who had built
+ grottos I gave threepence each, and there was joy in that corner of
+ Bethnal Green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is always something pathetic about play in the underworld. We feel
+ that there is something wanting in it, perhaps that something would come
+ into it, if there were more opportunities of real and competitive play.
+ Keeping shops, or teaching schools may do for girls to play at, but a lad,
+ if he is any good, wants something more robust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I often find cripple boys playing "tip-cat," another game upon which the
+ law has its eye, or hurrying along on crutches after something that serves
+ as a football, and getting there in time, too, for a puny kick. But that
+ kick, little as it is, thrills the poor chap, and he feels that he has
+ been playing. I am sure that football is going to play a great part in the
+ physical salvation of Tom, Dick and Harry, but they must have other places
+ than the streets in which to learn and practise the game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have heard a great deal about the playing-fields of public schools; we
+ are told that we owe our national safety to them; perhaps it is correct,
+ but I really do not know. But this I do know, that the non-provision of
+ playing-fields, or grounds for the male youthful poor, is a national
+ danger and a menace to activity, endurance, health and pluck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing saves them now but the freehold of the streets. Rob them of this
+ without giving them something better, and we shall speedily have a race of
+ flat-footed, flat-chested, round-shouldered poor, with no brains for
+ mental work, and no strength for physical work. A race exactly qualified
+ for the conditions to which we so freely submit it in prison. And above
+ those conditions that race will have no aspirations. So give them play,
+ glorious play, manly strife; let their hearts beat, and their chests
+ expand that they may breathe from their bottom lungs, that their limbs may
+ be supple and strong, for it will pay the nation to give Tom, Dick and
+ Harry healthy play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they long for it, do Tom, Dick and Harry! Did you ever see hundreds of
+ them on a Sunday morning coming up from their lairs in Hoxton, Shoreditch,
+ Spitalfields and Bethnal Green, to find a field or open space in the
+ suburbs where they might kick a football? I have seen it scores of times.
+ A miserable but hopeful sight it is; hopeful because it bears testimony to
+ the ingrained desire that English lads have for active healthy play.
+ Miserable because of their appearance, and because of the fact that no
+ matter what piece of open ground or fields they may select, they are
+ trespassers, and may be ejected, or remain on sufferance only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happy are they if they can find a piece of land marked for sale, where the
+ jerry-builder has not yet commenced a suburban slum. Like a swarm of
+ locusts they are down on it, and quickly every blade of grass disappears,
+ "kicked off" as if by magic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old walking-sticks, pieces of lath or old coats and waistcoats serve as
+ goal-posts. Touch-lines they have none, one playing-ground runs across the
+ other, and a dozen teams are soon hard at it. They have no caps to
+ distinguish them, no jerseys or knickers of bright hues. There are no
+ "flannelled fools" among them, but quickly there are plenty of "muddied
+ oafs." Trousers much too long are rolled up, coats and vests are dispensed
+ with, braces are loosed and serve as belts. There is running to and fro,
+ mud, and poor old footballs are kicked hither and thither. They knock,
+ kick and shoulder each other, their bare arms and faces are coated with
+ mud, they fall over the ball and over each other. If they cannot kick
+ their own ball, they kick one that belongs to another team. There is much
+ shouting, much laughter and some bad language! and so they go at it till
+ presently there is a great cheer, for Hoxton has got a second goal, and
+ Haggerston is defeated. And they keep at it for two long hours, if they
+ are not interfered with, then back to their lairs and food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time good people have been in the churches close by, and the
+ shouting of the Hoxtonians has disturbed them, and the gentle whisper of
+ the Haggerstonians has annoyed them. Some of them are scandalised, and say
+ the police ought to stop such nuisances; perhaps they are right, for there
+ is much to be said against it. But there is something to be said on the
+ other side, too; for the natural instinct of English boys must have an
+ outlet or perish. If it perish they perish too, and then old England would
+ miss them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So let them play, but give them playgrounds! For playgrounds will pay
+ better than nice, respectable parks. The outlay will be returned in due
+ time in a big interest promptly paid from the increased vitality, energy,
+ industry and honesty of our Toms, Dicks and Harrys. So let them play!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With much pleasure I quote from the Daily Press, November 24th, the
+ following&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "LEARNING TO PLAY "ORGANISED GAMES IN HYDE PARK IN SCHOOL HOURS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is good news that arrangements are being made by the Office of Works
+ for the use of a part of Hyde Park for organised games under the direction
+ of the London County Council. Hitherto the only royal parks in which space
+ has been allotted for this purpose are Regent's Park and Greenwich Park.
+ But the King, as is well known, takes a keen interest in all that concerns
+ the welfare of the children, and has gladly sanctioned the innovation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During the year an increasing number of the elementary schools in London
+ have taken advantage of the article in the code of regulations which
+ provides that, under certain conditions, organised games may, if conducted
+ under competent supervision and instruction, be played during school
+ hours. Up to the present the London County Council has authorised the
+ introduction of organised games by 580 departments, 295 boys', 225 girls',
+ and 60 mixed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The games chiefly played by boys are football, cricket and rounders,
+ according to the season. Girls enjoy a greater variety, and in addition to
+ cricket and rounders, are initiated into the mysteries of hockey, basket
+ ball, target ball, and other ball games.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The advantages of the children being taught to get the best exercise out
+ of the games, and to become skilful in them, are obvious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Arrangements have been made with the various local athletic associations
+ and consultative committees whereby in each metropolitan borough there are
+ hon. district representatives (masters and mistresses) in connection with
+ organised games. Pitches are reserved in over thirty of the L.C.C. parks
+ and open spaces for the use of schools. The apparatus required is
+ generally stored at the playing-fields for the common use of all schools
+ attending, but small articles such as balls, bats, sticks are supplied to
+ each school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Council has decided that, so far as practicable, the apparatus for
+ organised games shall be made at the Council's educational institutes,
+ and, as a result of this decision, much of it is fashioned at the
+ handicraft centres."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is all for good. But I am concerned for adolescent youth that has
+ left school&mdash;the lads whose home conditions absolutely prevent the
+ evening hours being spent indoors. Is there to be no provision for them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. ON THE VERGE OF THE UNDERWORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Charles Dickens has somewhere said, "The ties that bind the rich to their
+ homes may be made on earth, but the ties that bind the poor to their homes
+ are made of truer metal and bear the stamp of Heaven." And he adds that
+ the wealthy may love their home because of the gold, silver and costly
+ things therein, or because of the family history. But that when the poor
+ love their homes, it is because their household gods are gods of flesh and
+ blood. Dickens's testimony is surely true, for struggle, cares, sufferings
+ and anxieties make their poor homes, even though they be consecrated with
+ pure affection, "serious and solemn places."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To me it has always been evident that the heaviest part of the burden
+ inseparable from a poor man's home falls upon the wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blessed is that home where the wife is equal to her duties, and doubly
+ blessed is the home where the husband, being a true helpmate, is anxious
+ to carry as much of the burden as possible. For then the home, even though
+ it be small and its floors brick, becomes in all truth "a sweetly solemn
+ place." It becomes a good training ground for men and women that are to
+ be. But I am afraid the working men do not sufficiently realise what
+ heavy, onerous and persistent duties fall upon the wife. With nerves of
+ brass they do not appreciate the fact that wives may be, and are, very
+ differently constituted to themselves. Many wives are lonely; but the
+ husbands do not always understand the gloomy imaginations that pervade the
+ lonely hours. The physical laws that govern women's personal health make
+ periods of depression and excitement not only possible, but certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us consider for a moment the life of a poor man's wife in London,
+ where her difficulties are increased by high rent and a long absence of
+ the husband. She has the four everlasting walls to look at, eternal
+ anxieties as to the future, the repeated weekly difficulties of making
+ ends meet, and too often the same lack of consideration from the husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The week's washing for the family she must do, the mending and darning for
+ the household is her task, the children must be washed and clothed and
+ properly cared for by her. Of her many duties there is no end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sickness in the family converts her into a nurse. She herself must bear
+ the pangs and sufferings of motherhood, and for that time must make
+ preparation. For death in the family she must also provide, so the
+ eternities are her concern. Things present and things to come leave her
+ little time to contemplate the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ask me the person of many duties, and I point to the wife of a poor man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thank God, the law of compensation rules the universe, and she is not
+ exempt from its ruling. She has her compensations doubtless, but I am
+ seriously afraid not to the extent to which she is entitled, though,
+ perhaps, they are greater than we imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her duties are not always pleasant, for when her husband falls out of work
+ the rent must be paid, or she must mollify a disappointed landlord. In
+ many of our London "model" dwellings, if she is likely to have a fourth
+ child, three being the limit, she must seek a new home. And it ought to be
+ known that on this account there is a great exodus every year from some of
+ our London "dwellings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems scarcely credible, but it is nevertheless a fact, that in some
+ dwellings she may not keep a cat, a dog, or even a bird, neither may she
+ have flowers in pots on her window-sills. She is hedged round with
+ prohibitions, but she is expected to be superior and to abide in staid
+ respectability on an income of less than thirty shillings per week. And
+ she does it, though how she does it is a marvel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Come with me to visit Mrs. Jones, who lives at 28, White Elephant
+ Buildings. Mr. Jones is a painter at work for eight months in the year, if
+ he has good luck, but out of work always at that time of the year when
+ housekeeping expenses are highest. For every working man's wife will tell
+ you that coal is always dearer at the time of the year when it is most
+ required. In White Elephant Buildings there is no prohibition as to the
+ number of children, or the Jones family would not be there, for they
+ number eight all told. It is dinner time, and the children are all in from
+ school, and, being winter time, Jones is at home too! He has been his
+ wearying round in search of work earlier in the day, and has just returned
+ to share the midday meal which the mother serves. In all conscience the
+ meal is limited enough, but we notice that Jones gets an undue proportion,
+ and we wonder whether the supply will go round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see that the children are next served in their order, the elder
+ obtaining just a little more food than the younger, and, last of all&mdash;Mrs.
+ Jones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that self-denial brings its own reward, for in her case there
+ is little to reward her in the shape of food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To me it is still astonishing, although I have known it for years, that
+ thousands of poor men's wives go through years of hard work, and frequent
+ times of motherhood on an amount of food that must be altogether
+ inadequate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brave women! Aye, brave indeed! for they not only deny themselves food,
+ but clothing, and all those little personal adornments that are so dear to
+ the heart of women. There is no heroism to equal it. It only ends when the
+ children have all passed out of hand, and then it is too late, for in her
+ case appetite has not been developed with eating, so that when the day
+ comes that food is more plentiful, the desire for it is lacking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is small wonder, then, that Mrs. Jones has a careworn look, and does
+ not look robust. She has been married twelve years, so that every second
+ year she has borne a child. The dark rings beneath her eyes tell of
+ protracted hours of work, and the sewing-machine underneath the window
+ tells us that she supplements the earnings of her husband by making old
+ clothes into new, and selling them to her neighbours, either for their
+ children's wear or their own. This accounts for the fact that her own
+ children are so comfortably clothed. The dinner that we have seen
+ disappear cost ninepence, for late last evening, just before the cheap
+ butchers close by shut up for the night, Mrs. Jones bought one pound and a
+ half of pieces, and, with the aid of two onions and some potatoes,
+ converted them into a nourishing stew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many times near midnight I have stood outside the cheap butchers' and
+ watched careful women make their purchases. It is a pitiful sight, and
+ when one by one the women have made their bargains, we notice that the
+ shopboard is depleted of its heap of scrags and odds and ends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So day by day Mrs. Jones feeds her family, limiting her expenditure to her
+ purse. And, truth to tell, Jones and the little Joneses look well on it.
+ But two things in addition to the rent test her managing powers. Boots for
+ the children! and coal for the winter! The latter difficulty she gets over
+ by paying one shilling per week into a coal club all the year through.
+ When Jones is in work she buys extra coal, but when the winter comes she
+ draws upon her reserves at the coal merchant's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the boots are more difficult. To his credit let it be said that Jones
+ mends the family's boots. That is, he can "sole and heel," though he
+ cannot put on a patch or mend the uppers. But with everlasting thought for
+ the future, Mrs. Jones makes certain of boots for the family. Again a
+ "club" is requisitioned, and by dint of rigid management two shillings
+ weekly pass into a shoemaker's hands, and in their turn the family gets
+ boots; the husband first, the children one by one, herself last&mdash;or
+ never!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Week by week she lives with no respite from anxiety, with no surcease from
+ toil. By and by the eldest boy is ready for work, and Mrs. Jones looks
+ forward to the few shillings he will bring home weekly, and builds great
+ things upon it. Alas! it is not all profit; the boy must have a new suit,
+ he requires more food, and he must have a little spending money, "like
+ other boys"; and though he is a good lad, she finds ultimately that there
+ is not much left of Tom's six shillings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never mind! on she goes, for will he not get a rise soon and again
+ expectation encourages her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the poor woman, hampered as she is with present cares, looks forward to
+ the time when life will be a bit easier, when the united earnings of the
+ children will make a substantial family income. Oh, brave woman! it is
+ well for her to live in hope, and every one who knows her hopes too that
+ disappointment will not await her, and that her many children will "turn
+ out well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Jones is typical of thousands of working men's wives, and such women
+ demand our admiration and respect. What matter though some of them are a
+ bit frowsy and not over-clean? they have precious little time to attend to
+ their personal adornment. I ask, who can fulfil all their duties and
+ remain "spick-and-span"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nagging," did I hear some one say? My friend, put yourself in her place,
+ and imagine whether you would remain all sweetness and courtesy. Again I
+ say, that I cannot for the life of me understand how she can bear it all,
+ suffering as she does, and yet remain so patient and so hopeful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Add to the duties I have enumerated the time when sickness and death enter
+ the home. Mrs. Grundy has declared that even poor people must put on
+ "mourning," and must bury their dead with excessive expenditure, and Mrs.
+ Grundy must be obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what struggles poor wives make to do it! but a "nice" funeral is a
+ fascinating sight to the poor. So thousands of poor men's wives deny
+ themselves many comforts, and often necessaries, that they may for certain
+ have a few pounds, should any of their children die. Religiously they pay
+ a penny or twopence a week for each of their children to some industrial
+ insurance company for this purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few pounds all at once loom so large that they forget all the toil,
+ stress and self-denial they have undergone to keep those pence regularly
+ paid. Decent "mourning" and "nice funerals" are greatly admired, for if a
+ working man's wife accepts parish aid at such time, why then she has
+ fallen low indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And for the time when a new life comes into light, the poor man's wife
+ must make provision. At this time anxiety is piled upon anxiety. There
+ must be no parish doctor, no parish nurse; out of her insufficient income
+ she makes weekly payments to a local dispensary that during sickness the
+ whole household may be kept free of doctor's bills. An increased payment
+ for herself secures her, when her time comes, from similar worry. But the
+ nurse must be paid, so during the time of her "trouble" the poor woman
+ screws, schemes and saves a little money; money that ought in all truth to
+ have been spent upon herself, that a weekly nurse may attend her. But
+ every child is dearer than the last, and the wonderful love she has for
+ every atom of humanity born to her repays all her sufferings and
+ self-denial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I ask for the poor man's wife not only admiration and consideration,
+ but, if you will, some degree of pity also. I would we could make her
+ burdens easier, her sorrows less, and her pleasures more numerous. Most
+ devoutly I hope that the time may soon arrive when "rent day" will be less
+ dreaded, and when the collector will be satisfied with a less proportion
+ of the family's earnings. For this is a great strain upon the poor man's
+ wife, a strain that is never absent! for through times of poverty and
+ sickness, child birth and child death, persistently and inexorably that
+ day comes round. Undergoing constant sufferings and ceaseless anxieties,
+ it stands to the poor man's wife's credit that their children fight our
+ battles, people our colonies, uphold the credit of our nation, and
+ perpetuate the greatness of the greatest empire the world has ever known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mrs. Jones' eldest girl has a hard time too! for she acts as nurse and
+ foster-mother to the younger children. It was well for her that Tom was
+ born before her or she would have nursed him. Perhaps it was well for Tom
+ also that he got the most nourishment. As it is the girl has her hands
+ full, and her time is more than fully occupied. She goes to school
+ regularly both Sunday and week-day. She passes all her standards, although
+ she is not brilliant. She washes the younger children, she nurses the
+ inevitable baby, she clears the "dinner things" away at midday, and the
+ breakfast and tea-cups in their turn. She sits down to the machine
+ sometimes and sews the clothing her mother has cut out and "basted." She
+ is still a child, but a woman before her time, and Mrs. Jones and all the
+ young Joneses will miss her when she goes "out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When that time comes, Mrs. Jones will not be so badly put to it as she was
+ when Tom went "out." For she has been paying regularly into a draper's
+ club, and with the proceeds a quantity of clothing material will be
+ bought. So Sally's clothing will be made at home, and Sally and her mother
+ will sit up late at night to make it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is astonishing how "clubs" of all descriptions enter into the lives of
+ the poor. There is, of course, the "goose club" for Christmas, for the
+ poor make sure of one good meal during the year. Some of them are
+ extravagant enough to join "holiday clubs," but this Mrs. Jones cannot
+ afford, so her clubs are limited to her family's necessities, excepting
+ the money club held at a neighbour's house into which she pays one
+ shilling weekly. This club consists of twenty members, who "draw" for
+ choice. Thus once in twenty weeks, sooner or later, Mrs. Jones is passing
+ rich, for she is in possession of twenty shillings all at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is some discussion between Sally and her mother as to the spending
+ of it; Tom's first suit was bought by this means, and Jones himself is not
+ forgotten; but for Mrs. Jones no thought is given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The planning, scheming and contrivance it takes to run a working man's
+ home, especially when the husband has irregular work, is almost past
+ conception, and the amount of self-denial is extraordinary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is the wife who finds the brains and exercises the self-denial. Her
+ methods may be laughed at by wiser people, for there is some wastage. The
+ friendly club-keeper must have a profit, and the possession of wealth
+ represented by a whole sovereign costs something. But when Mrs. Jones gets
+ an early "draw," she exchanges her "draw" for a later one, and makes some
+ little profit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, the scheming and excitement of it all, for even Mrs. Jones cannot do
+ without her little "deal." But what will Sally settle down to? Now comes
+ the difficulty and deciding point in her life, and a critical time it is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Jones has not attended a mother's meeting, she has been too busy;
+ church has not seen much of her except at the christenings; district
+ visitors and clergymen have not shown much interest in her; Jones himself
+ is almost indifferent, and quite complacent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Sally and her mother discuss the matter. The four shillings weekly to
+ be obtained in a neighbouring factory are tempting, but the girls are
+ noisy and rude; yet Sally will be at home in the evenings and have time to
+ help her mother, and that is tempting too! A neighbouring blouse-maker
+ takes girls to teach them the trade, and Sally can machine already, so she
+ will soon pick up the business; that looks nice too, but she would earn
+ nothing for the first three months, so that is ruled out. Domestic service
+ is thought of, but Sally is small for her age, and only fourteen; she does
+ not want to be a nurse girl; she has had enough nursing&mdash;she has been
+ a drudge long enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So to the factory she goes, though Mrs. Jones has her misgivings, and
+ gives her strong injunctions to come straight home, which of course Sally
+ readily promises, though whether that promise will be strictly kept is
+ uncertain. But her four shillings are useful in the family exchequer; they
+ are the deciding factor in Sally's life!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So on through all the succeeding years of the developing family life comes
+ the recurring anxiety of getting her children "out." These anxieties may
+ be considered very small, but they are as real, as important, and as grave
+ as the anxieties that well-to-do people experience in choosing callings or
+ professions for sons and daughters to whom they cannot leave a competency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all this time the family are near, so very near to the underworld. The
+ death of Jones, half-timer as he is, would plunge them into it; and the
+ breakdown or death of Mrs. Jones would plunge them deeper still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What an exciting and anxious life it really is! Small wonder that many
+ descend to the underworld when accident overtakes them. But for character,
+ grit, patience and self-denial commend me to such women. All honour to
+ them! may their boys do well! may their girls in days to come have less
+ anxieties and duties than fall to the lot of working men's wives of
+ to-day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. IN PRISONS OFT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If every chapter in this book is ignored, I hope that this one will be
+ read thoughtfully. For I want to show that a great national wrong, a
+ stupidly cruel wrong, exists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably all injustice is stupid, but this wrong is so foolish, that any
+ man who thinks for one moment upon it will wonder how it came into
+ existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have written and spoken about it so often that I am almost ashamed of
+ returning to the subject. Yet all our penal authorities, from the Home
+ Secretary downwards, know all there is to be known about it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am going, then, to reiterate a serious charge! It is this: no boy from
+ eight years of age up to sixteen, unless sound in mind and body, can find
+ entrance into any reformatory or industrial school! No matter how often he
+ falls into the hands of the police, or what charges may be brought against
+ him, not even if he is friendless and homeless. Again, no youthful
+ prisoner under twenty-one years of age, no matter how bad his record, is
+ allowed the benefit of Borstal training unless he, too, be sound in mind
+ and body. This is not only an enormity, but it is also a great absurdity;
+ for it ultimately fills our prisons with weaklings, and assures the nation
+ a continuous prison population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems very extraordinary that prison and prison alone should be
+ considered the one and only place suitable for the afflicted children of
+ the poor when they break any law, but so it is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moral hump is tolerated, even patronised in reformative institutions,
+ but the physical hump, never!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cunning, dishonesty and rascality generally may be tolerated, but
+ feebleness of mind or infirmity of body never! All through our penal
+ administration and prison discipline this principle prevails, and is
+ strictly acted upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me put it briefly; prison, and prison only, is the one and only place
+ for afflicted youth when it happens to break one or the other of our laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have numerous institutions, half penal and half educative, that exist
+ absolutely for the purpose of receiving homeless, wayward or criminally
+ inclined youthful delinquents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These institutions, I say, although kept going from public funds, refuse,
+ absolutely refuse, to give training to any youthful delinquent who suffers
+ from physical infirmity or mental weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Think of it again! all youthful delinquents suffering from any infirmity
+ of body or mind, are refused reformative treatment or training in all
+ publicly supported institutions established for delinquent youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He may be a thief, but if he is a hunchback they will have none of him. He
+ may be a danger to other children, if he has fits he will not be received.
+ He may rob the tills of small shopkeepers, but if he is lame, half-blind,
+ has heart disease, or if his brain is not sound and his body strong, if he
+ has lost a hand, got a wooden leg, if he suffers from any disease or
+ deprivation, prison, and prison only, is the place for him. So to prison
+ the afflicted one goes if over fourteen; if under fourteen back to his
+ home, to graduate in due time for prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is no exaggeration, it is a true picture, and this procedure has gone
+ on till our prisons have become filled with broken and hopeless humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could any one ever suggest a more disastrous course than this? Why,
+ decency, pity, or just a grain of common sense ought to teach us, and
+ would teach us if we thought for a moment, that it is not only wrong but
+ supremely foolish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For there is a very close connection between neglected infirmity, mental
+ or physical, and crime, a connection that ought to be considered, and few
+ questions demand more instant attention. Yet no question is more
+ persistently avoided and shelved by responsible authorities, for no means
+ of dealing with the defective in mind or body when they commit offences
+ against the law, other than by short terms of useless imprisonment, have
+ at present been attempted or suggested. It seems strange that in
+ Christianised, scientised England such procedure should continue even for
+ a day, but continue it does, and to-day it seems as little likely to be
+ altered as it was twenty years ago. Let me then charge it upon our
+ authorities that they are responsible for perpetuating this great and
+ cruel wrong. They are not in ignorance, for the highest authorities know
+ perfectly well that every year many hundreds of helpless and hopeless
+ degenerates or defectives are committed to prison and tabulated as
+ habitual criminals. Our authorities even keep a list on which is placed
+ the names of these unfortunates who, after prolonged experience and
+ careful medical examinations, are found to be "unfit for prison
+ discipline."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This list is of portentous length, and to it four hundred more names are
+ added every year. This is of itself an acknowledgment by the State that
+ every year four hundred unfortunate human beings who cannot appreciate the
+ nature and quality of the acts they have committed, are treated, punished
+ and graded as criminals. Now the State knows perfectly well that these
+ unfortunates need pity, not punishment; the doctor, not the warder; and
+ some place where mild, sensible treatment and permanent restraint can take
+ the place of continual rounds of short imprisonment alternated with
+ equally senseless short spells of freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No! not freedom, but a choice between starvation, prison or workhouse. Now
+ this list grows, and will continue to grow just so long as the present
+ disastrous methods are persisted in!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why does this list grow? Because magistrates have no power to order the
+ detention of afflicted youthful offenders in any place other than prison;
+ they cannot commit to reformatory schools only on sufferance and with the
+ approval of the school managers, who demand healthy boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So ultimately to prison the weaklings go, and an interminable round of
+ small sentences begins. But even in prison they are again punished because
+ of their afflictions, for only the sound in mind and body are given the
+ benefit of healthy life and sensible training.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consequently in prison they learn little that can be of service to them;
+ they only graduate in idleness, and prison having comforts but no terrors,
+ they quickly join the ranks of the habitues. When it is too late they are
+ "listed" as not suitable for prison treatment. Year by year in a country
+ of presumably sane people this deplorable condition of things continues,
+ and I am bold enough to say that there will be no reduction in the number
+ of our prison population till proper treatment, training, and, if need be,
+ detention, is provided in places other than prison for our afflicted
+ youthful population when they become offenders against the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But reformatory and industrial schools have not only power to refuse
+ youthful delinquents who are unsound in mind or body; they have also the
+ power to discharge as "unfit for training" any who have managed to pass
+ the doctor's examination, whose defects become apparent when under
+ detention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the last Official Report of Reformatory Schools in England and Wales
+ I take the following figures&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the years 1906-7-8 14 imbeciles (males) were discharged on licence
+ from reformatory schools; and during the same three years no less than 93
+ (males) were discharged by the Home Secretary's permission as "unfit for
+ physical training." The 14 imbeciles in the Official Report are classified
+ as dead, and the 93 physically unfit are included among them "not in
+ regular employment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the same period of years I find that 28 (girls) were discharged from
+ English reformatory schools as being physically unfit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Official Report of Industrial Schools includes England, Wales and
+ Scotland, and for the same three years I find that 13 (males) were
+ discharged from industrial schools as being imbeciles, and 116 (males) as
+ being "unfit for physical training."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, in the Annual Report the physically unfit are included
+ among those "in casual employment," and the imbeciles are included among
+ the "dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the same Official Report we have the statement that in one year,
+ 1909, in England and Scotland 991 (males) and 20 (females) who had been
+ discharged from reformatory schools were re-convicted and committed to
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How many of them were mentally or physically defective we have no means of
+ knowing, for no information is given upon this point; but there is not the
+ slightest doubt that a large number of them were weak-minded, though not
+ sufficiently so to allow them being classified as imbeciles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The terrible consequence of this procedure may also be gathered from the
+ Report of the Prison Commissioners for England and Wales 1910, from which
+ it appears that during the year 157 persons were certified insane among
+ the prisoners in the local and convict prisons, Borstal institutions and
+ of State reformatories, during the year ending March 31, 1910.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to the above there were 290 (213 males and 77 females) cases
+ of insanity in remanded and other unconvicted prisoners dealt with during
+ the year, including 14 males and 2 females found "insane on arraignment,"
+ and 173 males and 65 females found insane on remand from police or petty
+ sessional courts. There were 30 (20 males and 10 females) prisoners found
+ "guilty" but "insane" at their trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most illuminating report comes from the medical officer at
+ Parkhurst Convict Prison; these are his words&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weak-minded convicts and others whose mental state is doubtful continue to
+ be collected here. The special rules for their management are adhered to.
+ The number classified as weak-minded at the end of the year was 117, but
+ in addition there were 34 convicts attached to the parties of weak-minded
+ for further mental observation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The conduct and tractability of these prisoners naturally vary with the
+ individual; a careful consideration of the history of each of the 117
+ classified weak-minded convicts indicates that about 64 are fairly easily
+ managed, the remainder difficult to deal with, and a few are dangerous
+ characters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CLASSIFICATION OF WEAK-MINDED CONVICTS:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (a) Congenital deficiency:-
+ 1. With epilepsy . . . . . . 9
+ 2. Without epilepsy. . . . . . 46
+ (b) Imperfectly developed stage of insanity 18
+ (c) Mental debility after attack of insanity 8
+ (d) Senility . . . . . . 2
+ (e) Alcohol . . . . . . 6
+ (f) Undefined . . . . . . 28
+ &mdash;&mdash;-
+ 117
+ =====
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "The following is a list of the crimes of the classified weak-minded for
+ which they are undergoing their present sentences of penal servitude, and
+ the number convicted for each type of crime&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ False pretences . . . . . . . 3
+ Receiving stolen property . . . . . 3
+ Larceny . . . . . . . 18
+ Burglary . . . . . . . 7
+ Shop-breaking, house-breaking, etc. . . . 19
+ Uttering counterfeit coins . . . . . 1
+ Threatening letters . . . . . . 4
+ Threatening violence to superior officer. . 1
+ Robbery with violence . . . . . . 3
+ Manslaughter . . . . . . . 6
+ Wounding with intent. . . . . . . 8
+ Grievous bodily harm. . . . . . . 2
+ Attempted murder . . . . . . . 1
+ Wilful murder . . . . . . . . 7
+ Rape . . . . . . . . . 5
+ Carnal knowledge of little girls. . . . 8
+ Arson . . . . . . . . . 15
+ Cattle maiming . . . . . . . . 1
+ Placing obstruction on railway . . . . 2
+ Unnatural offences . . . . . . . 3
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "During the year 35 convicts were certified insane; of these 27 were
+ removed to the criminal asylum at Parkhurst, 2 to Broadmoor asylum, 3 to
+ county or borough asylums, and 3 remained in the prison infirmary at the
+ end of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The average length of the last sentences for which these unfortunates
+ were committed was seven years' penal servitude each. That their mental
+ condition was not temporary but permanent may be gathered from their
+ educational attainments, for 12 had no education at all, 18 were only in
+ Standard I, 29 in Standard II, 15 in Standard III, and 12 others were of
+ poor education."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The statement that the average length of the last sentences of these
+ unfortunates was seven years' penal servitude is appalling. It ought to
+ astound us! But no one seems to care. Penal servitude is good enough for
+ them. Perhaps it is! But it ought to be called by another name, and
+ legally signify the inmates to be "patients," not criminals. Let us visit
+ a prison where we shall find a sufficient number of prisoners to enable us
+ to form an idea as to their physical and mental condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Come, then, on Sunday morning into a famous prison that long stood as a
+ model to the world. We are going to morning service, when we shall have an
+ opportunity of seeing face to face eight hundred male prisoners. But
+ before we enter the chapel, let us walk round the hospital and see those
+ who are on the sick list.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One look as we enter the ward convinced us that some are lying there whose
+ only chance of freedom is through the gates of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In yonder corner lies a young man of twenty-one years; the governor tells
+ us that he is friendless, homeless, and a hopeless consumptive. He says,
+ "We would have sent him out, but he has nowhere to go, for he does not
+ know his parish, so he must lie here till he dies, unless his sentence
+ expires first."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We speak to the young man a few kindly words, but he turns his face from
+ us, and of his history we learn nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another bed we find an old man whose days also will be short; of his
+ history we learn much, for he has spent a great deal of his life in
+ prison, and now, aged, feeble and broken, there is nothing before him but
+ death or continued imprisonment. We pass by other beds on which prisoners
+ not so hopeless in health are lying. We see what is the matter with most
+ of them: they are not strong enough for ordinary prison work, or indeed
+ for any kind of vigorous labour. So they remain in prison well tended in
+ the hospital. But some of them pass into freedom without the slightest
+ ability or chance of getting a living otherwise than by begging or
+ stealing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What strikes us most about the inmates of the prison hospital is the
+ certainty that many of the prisoners have not sufficient health and
+ strength to enable them to be useful citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So we pass through the hospital into the chapel, and find eight hundred
+ prisoners before us. The organ plays, the morning service is read by the
+ chaplain; the prisoners sing, and as they sing there is such a volume of
+ sound that we cannot fail to be touched with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We enter the pulpit, and as we stand and look down upon that sea of
+ upturned faces, we see a sight that is not likely to be forgotten. There,
+ in front of us, right underneath the pulpit, are rows of young men under
+ twenty-two years of age; we look at them; they are all clad in khaki, and
+ we take a mental sketch of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One or two among them are finely developed young men, but the great bulk
+ we see are small in stature and weak in body. Some of them have a hopeless
+ expression of countenance that tells us of moral and mental weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We note that most of them can have had but little chance in life, and that
+ their physical or mental infirmities come from no fault of their own. They
+ have all been to school; they have started in life, if it can be called
+ starting, as errand boys, paper sellers in the streets, or as street
+ merchants of some description. They have grown into early manhood, but
+ they have not increased in wisdom or stature. They have learned no
+ occupation, trade or handicraft; they have passed from school age to early
+ manhood without discipline, decent homes or technical training.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at liberty their homes are lodging-houses or even less desirable
+ places. So they pass from the streets to the police, from police-courts to
+ prison, with positive regularity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They behave themselves in prison, they obey orders, they do the bit of
+ work that is required of them, they eat the food, and they sleep
+ interminable hours away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the back of the young men we see row after row of older men, and their
+ khaki clothing and broad arrows produce a strange impression upon us; but
+ what impresses us most is the facial and physical appearance of the
+ prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cripples are there, twisted bodies are there, one-armed men are there, and
+ blind men are there. Here and there we see a healthy man, with vigour and
+ strength written on his face; but the great mass of faces strikes us with
+ dismay, and we feel at once that most of them are handicapped In life, and
+ demand pity rather than vengeance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that they are not as other men, and we realise that their
+ afflictions more than their sins are responsible for their presence in
+ that doleful assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet some of them are clever in crime, and many of them persistent in
+ wrong-doing, but their afflictions were neglected in days when those
+ afflictions should have been a passport to the pity and care of the
+ community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see men who have grown old in different prisons, and we know that
+ position in social and industrial life is impossible for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see a number whom it is evident are not mentally responsible, for whom
+ there is no place but the workhouse or prison; yet we realise that, old as
+ they are, the day of liberty must come once more, and they will be free to
+ starve or steal!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know that there are some epileptics among them, and that their dread
+ complaint has caused them to commit acts of violence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see among them men of education that have made war upon society.
+ Drunkards, too, are there, and we know that their overmastering passion
+ will demand gratification when once again the opportunity of indulging in
+ its presented to them. So we look at this strange mass of humanity, and as
+ we look a mist comes over our eyes, and we feel a choking sensation in our
+ throats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we look again, and see that few throughout this great assembly show
+ any sense of sorrow or shame. As we speak to them of hope, gladness, of
+ manliness, and of the dignity of life, we feel that we are preaching to an
+ east wind. Come round the same prison with me on a week-day; in one part
+ we find a number of men seated about six feet from each other making
+ baskets; warders are placed on pedestals here and there to keep oversight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We walk past them, and notice their slow movements and see hopelessness
+ written all over them. They are working "in association," they are under
+ "observation," which, the governor tells us, means that they are suspected
+ of either madness or mental deficiency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we look at them we are quite satisfied that this suspicion is true, and
+ that, if not absolutely mad, they are mentally deficient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If absolute madness be detected, they will be sent to asylums. If
+ feeble-mindedness be proved, they will again be set at liberty. Their
+ names will be placed on a list, and they will be declared "unfit for
+ prison discipline," but nothing more will be done. They will be discharged
+ to prowl about in the underworld, to commit other criminal acts and to be
+ returned again and again to prison, to live out hopeless lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there is another cause, almost as prolific in producing a prison
+ population. For while the State has been, and still is, ready to thrust
+ afflicted youth into prison, it has been, and still is, equally ready to
+ thrust into prison the half-educated, half-fed, and half-employed young
+ people who break its laws or by-laws. It is true that the State in its
+ irony allows them the option of a fine; but the law might as well ask the
+ youths of the underworld to pay ten pounds as ask them to pay ten
+ shillings; nor can they procure all at once the smaller sum, so to prison
+ hundreds of lads are sent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Does it ever occur to our esteemed authorities that this is a most
+ dangerous procedure! What good can possibly come either to the State or to
+ the youthful offender?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are the offences of these boys? Disorder in the streets, loitering at
+ railway stations, playing a game of chance called "pitch and toss," of
+ which I have something to say in another chapter, gambling with a penny
+ pack of cards, playing tip-cat, kicking a football, made of old newspapers
+ maybe, playing cricket, throwing stones, using a catapult, bathing in a
+ canal, and a hundred similar things are all deemed worthy of imprisonment,
+ if committed by the youngsters of the world below the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thousands of lads have had their first experience of prison for trumpery
+ offences that are natural to the boys of the poor. But a first experience
+ of prison is to them a pleasant surprise. They are astonished to find that
+ prison is not "half a bad place." They do not object to going there again,
+ not they! Why? Because the conditions of prison life are better, as they
+ need to be, than the conditions of their own homes. The food is better,
+ the lodging is better, the bed is decidedly better, and as to the work,
+ why, they have none worthy of the name to do. They lose nothing but their
+ liberty, and they can stand that for a week or two, what matters!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, something does matter, for they lose three other things of great
+ moment to them if they only knew; but they don't know, and our authorities
+ evidently consider these three things of no moment. What do they lose?
+ First, their fear of prison; secondly, their little bit of character;
+ thirdly, their work, if they have any. What eventuates? Idleness,
+ hooliganism and repeated imprisonments for petty crime, until something
+ more serious happens, and then longer sentences. Such is the progress of
+ hundreds whom statisticians love to call "recidivists."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Am I wrong when I say that the State has been too ready, too prompt in
+ sending the youths of the ignorant poor to prison? Am I wrong in saying
+ that the State has been playing its "trump ace" too soon, and that it
+ ought to have kept imprisonment up its sleeve a little longer? These lads,
+ having been in prison, know, and their companions know, too, the worst
+ that can happen to them when they commit real crime. Prison has done its
+ worst, and it cannot hurt them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If prisons there must be, am I wrong in contending that they should be
+ reserved for the perpetrators of real and serious crime; and that the
+ punishment, if there is to be punishment, should be certain, dignified and
+ severe, educational and reformative? At present it includes none of these
+ qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To such a length has the imprisonment of youths for trumpery offences
+ gone, not only in London, but throughout the country, that visiting
+ justices of my acquaintance have spent a great deal of money in part
+ paying the fines of youths imprisoned under such conditions, that they
+ might be released at once. Here we have a curious state of affairs,
+ magistrates generally committing youths to prison in default for trumpery
+ offences, and other magistrates searching prisons for imprisoned youths,
+ paying their fines, setting them free, and sending on full details to the
+ Home Secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be interesting to know how many "cases" of this kind have been
+ reported to the Home Secretary during the last few years. Time after time
+ the governors of our prisons have called attention to this evil in their
+ annual reports. They know perfectly well the disaster that attends the
+ needless imprisonment of boys, and it worries them. They treat the boys
+ very kindly, all honour to them! But even kindness to young prisoners has
+ its dangers, and every governor is able to tell of the constant return of
+ youthful prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not like the "birch" or corporal punishment at all. I do not advocate
+ it, but I am certain that the demoralising effect of a few' days'
+ imprisonment is far in excess of the demoralisation that follows a
+ reasonable application of the birch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the birch cannot be applied to lads over fourteen years of age, so it
+ would be well to abolish it altogether, except in special cases, and for
+ these the age might with advantage be extended. And, after all,
+ imprisonment itself is physical punishment and a continued assault upon
+ the body. But why imprison at all for such cases? We talk about
+ imprisonment for debt; this is imprisonment for debt with a vengeance.
+ Look! two lads are charged with one offence or two similar offences; one
+ boy is from the upperworld, the other from below the line. The same
+ magistrate fines the two boys an equal amount; the one boy pays, or his
+ friends pay; but the other goes of a certainty to prison. Is it not
+ absurd! rather, is it not unjust?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whether it is absurd or unjust the result is certain&mdash;mathematically
+ certain&mdash;in the development of a prison population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During my police-court days I have seen hundreds of youths sitting crying
+ in their cells consumed with fear, waiting their first experience of
+ prison; I have seen their terror when first entering the prison van, and I
+ know that when entering the prison portals their terror increased. But it
+ soon vanished, for I have never seen boys cry, or show any signs of fear
+ when going to prison for the second time. The reason for this I have
+ already given: "fear of the unknown" has been removed. This fear may not
+ be a very noble characteristic, but it is part of us, and it has a useful
+ place, especially where penalties are likely to be incurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many years I have been protesting against this needless imprisonment
+ of youths, and now it has become part of my duty to visit prisons and to
+ talk to youthful prisoners, I see the wholesale evil that attends this
+ method of dealing with youthful offenders. And the same evils attend,
+ though to perhaps a less degree, the prompt imprisonment of adults, who
+ are unable to pay forthwith fines that have been imposed upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is always the poor, the very poor, the people below the line that
+ suffer in this direction. Doubtless they merit some correction, and the
+ magistrates consider that fines of ten shillings are appropriate, but then
+ they thoughtlessly add "or seven days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Think of the folly of it! because a man cannot pay a few shillings down,
+ the State conveys him to prison and puts the community to the very
+ considerable expense of keeping him. The law has fined him, but he cannot
+ pay then, so the law turns round and fines the community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What sense, decency, or profit can there possibly be in committing women
+ to prison, even for drunkenness, for three, five or seven days? How can it
+ profit either the State or the woman? It only serves to familiarise her
+ with prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could laugh at it, were it not so serious. Just look at this absurdity!
+ A woman gets drunk on Thursday, she is charged on Friday. "Five shillings,
+ or three days!" On Friday afternoon she enters prison, for the clerk has
+ made out a "commitment," and the gaoler has handed her into the prison
+ van. Her "commitment" is handed to the prison authorities; it is
+ tabulated, so is she; but at nine o'clock next morning she is discharged
+ from prison, for the law reckons every part of a day to be a complete day;
+ and the law also says that there must be no discharge from prison on a
+ Sunday, and to keep her till Monday would be illegal, for it would be
+ "four days." How small, how disastrous, and how expensive it is!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If offenders, young or old, must be punished, let them be punished
+ decently. If they ought to be sent to prison, to prison send them. But if
+ their petty offences can be expunged by the payment of a few shillings,
+ why not give them a little time to pay those fines? Such a course would
+ stop for ever the miserable, deadly round of short expensive
+ imprisonments. I have approached succeeding Home Secretaries upon this
+ matter till I am tired; succeeding Home Secretaries have sent memorandums
+ and recommendations to courts of summary jurisdiction till, I expect, they
+ are tired, for generally they have had no effect in mitigating the evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Magistrates have the power to grant time for the payment of fines, but it
+ is optional, not imperative. It is high time for a change, and surely it
+ will come, for the absurdity cannot continue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely every English man and woman who possesses a settled home ought to
+ have, and must have, the legal right of a few days' grace in which to pay
+ his or her fine. And every youthful offender ought to have the same right,
+ also, even if he paid by instalments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at present it is so much easier, and therefore so much better, to
+ thrust the underworld, youthful and adult, into prison and have done with
+ them, than it is to pursue a sane but a little bit troublesome method that
+ would keep thousands of the poor from ever entering prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. UNEMPLOYED AND UNEMPLOYABLE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ My life has been one of activity; from an early age I have known what it
+ was to be constantly at work. To have the certainty of regular work, and
+ to have the discipline of constant duty, seem to me an ideal state for
+ mind and body. Labour, we are sometimes told, is one of God's
+ chastisements upon a fallen race; I believe it to be one of our choicest
+ blessings. I can conceive only one greater tragedy than the man who has
+ nothing to do, and that is the man who, earnestly longing for work, seeks
+ it day by day, and fails to find it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagine his position, and imagine also, if you possibly can, the great
+ qualities that are demanded if such a man is to go through a lengthened
+ period of unemployment without losing his dignity, his manhood and his
+ desire for work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can tell at a glance the man who has had this experience. There is
+ something about his face that proclaims his hopelessness, the very poise
+ of his body and his peculiar measured step tell that his heart is utterly
+ unexpectant. To-morrow morning, and every morning, thousands of men will
+ rise early, even before the sun, and set out on their weary tramp and
+ hopeless search for work. To-morrow morning, and every morning, thousands
+ of men will be waiting at various dock-gates for a chance of obtaining a
+ few hours' hard work. And while these wait, others tramp, seeking and
+ asking for work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wives may be ill at home, children may be wanting food and clothing, but
+ every day thousands of husbands set out on the interminable search for
+ work, and every day return disappointed. Small wonder that some of them
+ descend to a lower grade and in addition to being unemployed, become
+ unemployable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Look at those thousands of men clamouring daily at our dock-gates; about
+ one-half of them will obtain a few hours' hard work, but the other half
+ will go hopeless away. They will gather some courage during the night, for
+ the next morning they will find their way to, and be knocking once more
+ at, the same dock-gates. It takes sterling qualities to endure this life,
+ and there can be no greater hero than the man who goes through it and
+ still retains manhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it would be more than a miracle if tens of thousands of men could live
+ this life without many of them becoming wastrels, for it is certain that a
+ life of unemployment is dangerous to manhood, to character and health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact the ranks of the utterly submerged are being
+ constantly recruited from the ranks of those who have but casual work.
+ During winter the existence of the unemployed is more amply demonstrated,
+ for then we are called upon to witness the most depressing of all London's
+ sights, a parade of the unemployed. I never see one without experiencing
+ strange and mixed emotions. Let me picture a parade, for where I live they
+ are numerous, and at least once a week one will pass my window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hear the doleful strains of a tin whistle accompanied with a
+ rub-a-dub-dub of a kettledrum that has known its best days, and whose
+ sound is as doleful as that of the whistle. I know what is coming, and,
+ though I have seen it many times, it has still a fascination for me, so I
+ stand at my window and watch. I see two men carrying a dilapidated banner,
+ on which is inscribed two words, "The Unemployed." The man with the tin
+ whistle and the man with the drum follow the banner, and behind them is a
+ company of men marching four abreast. Two policemen on the pavement keep
+ pace with the head of the procession, and two others perform a similar
+ duty at the end of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the pavement are a number of men with collecting boxes, ready to
+ receive any contribution that charitably inclined people may bestow. They
+ do not knock at any door, but they stand for a moment and rattle their
+ boxes in front of every window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sound of the whistle and the drum, and the rattle of boxes is, in all
+ conscience, depressing enough, but one glimpse at the men is infinitely
+ more so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of them are below the average height and bulk. Their hands are in
+ their trousers pockets, their shoulders are up, but their heads are bent
+ downwards as if they were half ashamed of their job. A peculiar slouching
+ gait is characteristic of the whole company, and I look in vain for a firm
+ step, an upright carriage, and for some signs of alert manhood. As they
+ pass slowly by I see that some are old, but I also see that the majority
+ of them are comparatively young, and that many of them cannot be more than
+ thirty years of age. But whether young or old, I am conscious of the fact
+ that few of them are possessed of strength, ability and grit. There are no
+ artisans or craftsmen among them, and stalwart labourers are not in
+ evidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pitiful as the procession is, I know that it does not represent the
+ genuine and struggling unemployed. They pass slowly by and go from street
+ to street. So they will parade throughout the livelong day. The police
+ will accompany them, and will see them disbanded when the evening closes
+ in. The boxes will be emptied, the contents tabulated, and a pro rata
+ division will be made, after which the processionists will go home and
+ remain unemployed till the next weekly parade comes round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unemployable! yes, but so much the greater pity; and so much more
+ difficult the problem, for they represent a very large class, and it is to
+ be feared a growing class of the manhood of London's underworld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cannot blame them for their physical inferiority, nor for their lack of
+ ability and grit. To expect them to exhibit great qualities would be
+ absurd. They are what they are, and a wise country would ponder the causes
+ that lead to such decadent manhood. During my prison lectures I have been
+ frequently struck with the mean size and appearance of the prisoners under
+ twenty-two years of age, who are so numerous in our London prisons. From
+ many conversations with them I have learned that lack of physical strength
+ means also lack of mental and moral strength, and lack of honest
+ aspiration, too! I am confirmed in this judgment by a statement that
+ appeared in the annual report of the Prison Commissioners, who state that
+ some years ago they adapted the plan in Pentonville prison of weighing and
+ measuring all the prisoners under the age of twenty-two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result I will tell in their own words: "As a class they are
+ two-and-a-half inches below the average height of the general youthful
+ population of the same age, and weigh approximately fourteen pounds less."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, we have an official proof of physical decadence, and of its
+ connection with prison life. For these young men, so continuously in
+ prison, grow into what should be manhood without any desire or
+ qualification for robust industrial life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I never speak to them without feeling a deep pity. But as it is my
+ business to interest them, I try to learn something from them in return,
+ as the following illustration will show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been giving a course of lectures on industrial life to the young
+ prisoners in Wormwood Scrubbs, who numbered over three hundred. On my last
+ visit I interrogated them as follows&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stand up those of you that have had regular or continuous work." None of
+ them stood up! "Stand up those of you who have been apprentices." None of
+ them stood up! "Stand up those of you who sold papers in the street before
+ you left school." Twenty-five responded! "How many sold other things in
+ the streets before leaving school?" Thirty! Seventeen others sold papers
+ after leaving school, and thirty-eight sold various articles. Altogether I
+ found that nearly two hundred had been in street occupations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To my final question: "How many of you have met me in other prisons?"
+ Thirty-five stood up! I give these particulars because I think my readers
+ will realise the bearing they have on unemployment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely it is obvious that if we continue to have a growing number of
+ physically inferior young men, who acquire no technical skill and have not
+ the slightest industrial training, that we shall continue to have an
+ increasing number of unemployed unemployables.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. SUGGESTIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I propose in this last chapter to make some suggestions, which, I venture
+ to hope, will be found worthy of consideration and adoption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The causes of so much misery, suffering and poverty in a rich and
+ self-governing country are numerous; and every cause needs a separate
+ consideration and remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no royal road by which the underworld people can ascend to the
+ upperworld; there can be no specific for healing all the sores from which
+ humanity suffers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our complex civilisation, our industrial methods, our strange social
+ system, combined with the varied characteristics mental and physical of
+ individuals, make social salvation for the mass difficult and quite
+ impossible for many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall have written with very little effect if I have not shown what some
+ of these individual characteristics are. They are strange, powerful and
+ extraordinary. So very mixed, even in one individual, that while sometimes
+ they inspire hope, at others they provoke despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we couple the difficulties of individual character with the social,
+ industrial and economic difficulties, we see at once how great the problem
+ is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must admit, and we ought frankly to admit the truth, and to face it,
+ that there exists a very large army of people that cannot be socially
+ saved. What is more important, they do not want to be saved, and will not
+ be saved if they can avoid it. Their great desire is to be left alone, to
+ be allowed to live where and how they like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For these people there must be, there will be, and at no far distant date,
+ detention, segregation and classification. We must let them quietly die
+ out, for it is not only folly, but suicidal folly to allow them to
+ continue and to perpetuate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we are often told that "Heaven helps those who help themselves"; in
+ fact, we have been told it so often that we have come to believe it, and,
+ what is worse, we religiously or irreligiously act upon it when dealing
+ with those below the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If any serious attempt is ever made to lessen the number of the homeless
+ and destitute, if that attempt is to have any chance of success, it will,
+ I am sure, be necessary to make an alteration in the adage and a reversal
+ of our present methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the adage ran, "Heaven helps those who cannot help themselves," and if
+ we all placed ourselves on the side of Heaven, the present abominable and
+ distressing state of affairs would not endure for a month.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now I charge it upon the State and local authorities that they avoid their
+ responsibilities to those who most sorely need their help, and who, too,
+ have the greatest claim upon their pity and protecting care. Sometimes
+ those claims are dimly recognised, and half-hearted efforts are made to
+ care for the unfortunate for a short space of time, and to protect them
+ for a limited period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these attempts only serve to show the futility of the efforts, for the
+ unfortunates are released from protective care at the very time when care
+ and protection should become more effectual and permanent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is comforting to know that we have in London special schools for
+ afflicted or defective children. Day by day hundreds of children are taken
+ to these schools, where genuine efforts are made to instruct them and to
+ develop their limited powers. But eight hundred children leave these
+ schools every year; in five years four thousand afflicted children leave
+ these schools. Leave the schools to live in the underworld of London, and
+ leave, too, just at the age when protection is urgently needed. For
+ adolescence brings new passions that need either control or prohibition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I want my reader's imagination to dwell for a moment on these four
+ thousand defectives that leave our special schools every five years; I
+ want them to ask themselves what becomes of these children, and to
+ remember that what holds good with London's special schools, holds good
+ with regard to all other special schools our country over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These young people grow into manhood and womanhood without the possibility
+ of growing in wisdom or skill. Few, very few of them, have the slightest
+ chance of becoming self-reliant or self-supporting; ultimately they form a
+ not inconsiderable proportion of the hopeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philanthropic societies receive some of them, workhouses receive others,
+ but these institutions have not, nor do they wish to have, any power of
+ permanent detention, the cost would be too great. Sooner or later the
+ greater part of them become a costly burden upon the community, and an
+ eyesore to humanity. Many of them live nomadic lives, and make occasional
+ use of workhouses and similar institutions when the weather is bad, after
+ which they return to their uncontrolled existence. Feeble-minded and
+ defective women return again and again to the maternity wards to deposit
+ other burdens upon the ratepayers and to add to the number of their kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the nation has begun to realise this costly absurdity of leaving this
+ army of irresponsibles in possession of uncontrolled liberty. The Royal
+ Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble-minded, after sitting for
+ four years, has made its report. This report is a terrible document and an
+ awful indictment of our neglect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commissioners tell us that on January 1st, 1906, there were in England
+ and Wales 149,628 idiots, imbeciles, and feeble-minded; in addition there
+ were on the same date 121,079 persons suffering from some kind of insanity
+ or dementia. So that the total number of those who came within the scope
+ of the inquiry was no less than 271,607, or 1 in every 120 of the whole
+ population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the persons suffering from mental defect, i.e. feeble-minded,
+ imbeciles, etc., one-third were supported entirely at the public cost in
+ workhouses, asylums, prisons, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The report does not tell us much about the remaining two-thirds; but those
+ of us who have experience know only too well what becomes of them, and are
+ painfully acquainted with the hopelessness of their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, is my first suggestion&mdash;a national plan for the permanent
+ detention, segregation and control of all persons who are indisputably
+ feeble-minded. Surely this must be the duty of the State, for it is
+ impossible that philanthropic societies can deal permanently with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must catch them young; we must make them happy, for they have
+ capabilities for childlike happiness, and we must make their lives as
+ useful as possible. But we must no longer allow them the curse of
+ uncontrolled liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, no boy should be discharged from reformatory or industrial schools
+ as "unfit for training" unless passed on to some institution suitable to
+ his age and condition. If we have no such institutions, as of course we
+ have not, then the State must provide them. And the magistrates must have
+ the power to commit boys and girls who are charged before them to suitable
+ industrial schools or reformatories as freely, as certainly, as
+ unquestioned, and as definitely as they now commit them to prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present magistrates have not this power, for though, as a matter of
+ course, these institutions receive numbers of boys and girls from
+ police-courts, the institutions have the power to Refuse, to grant
+ "licences" or to "discharge." So it happens that the meshes of the net are
+ large enough to allow those that ought to be detained to go free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one can possibly doubt that a provision of this character would largely
+ diminish the number of those that become homeless vagrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I proceed to my second suggestion&mdash;the detention and segregation
+ of all professional tramps. If it is intolerable that an army of poor
+ afflicted human beings should live homeless and nomadic lives, it is still
+ more intolerable that an army of men and women who are not deficient in
+ intelligence, and who are possessed of fairly healthy bodies should, in
+ these days, be allowed to live as our professional tramps live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have already spoken of the fascination attached to a life of
+ irresponsible liberty. The wind on the heath, the field and meadow
+ glistening with dew or sparkling with flowers, the singing of the bird,
+ the joy of life, and no rent day coming round, who would not be a tramp!
+ Perhaps our professional tramps think nothing of these things, for to eat,
+ to sleep, to be free of work, to be uncontrolled, to have no anxieties,
+ save the gratification of animal demands and animal passions, is the
+ perfection of life for thousands of our fellow men and women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this kind of life to be permitted? Every sensible person will surely
+ say that it ought not to be permitted. Yet the number of people who attach
+ themselves to this life continually increases, for year by year the prison
+ commissioners tell us that the number of persons imprisoned for vagrancy,
+ sleeping out, indecency, etc., continues to increase, and that short terms
+ of imprisonment only serve as periods of recuperation for them, for in
+ prison they are healed of their sores and cleansed from their vermin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With every decent fellow who tramps in search of work we must have the
+ greatest sympathy, but for professional tramps we must provide very
+ simply. Most of these men, women and children find their way into prison,
+ workhouses and casual wards at some time or other. When the man gets into
+ prison, the woman and children go into the nearest workhouse. When the man
+ is released from prison he finds the woman and children waiting for him,
+ and away they go refreshed and cleansed by prison and workhouse treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must stop for ever this costly and disastrous course of life. How? By
+ establishing in every county and under county authorities, or, if
+ necessary, by a combination of counties, special colonies for vagrants,
+ one for males and another for females. Every vagrant who could not give
+ proof that he had some definite object in tramping must be committed to
+ these colonies and detained, till such time as definite occupation or home
+ be found for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here they should live and work, practically earning their food and
+ clothing; their lives should be made clean and decent, and certainly
+ economical. For these colonies there must be of course State aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children must be adopted by the board of guardians or education
+ authorities and trained in small homes outside the workhouse gates this
+ should be compulsory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two plans would certainly clear away the worst and most hopeless
+ tribes of nomads, and though for a short time they would impose
+ considerable pecuniary obligations upon us, yet we should profit even
+ financially in the near future, and, best of all, should prevent a second
+ generation arising to fill the place of those detained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same methods should be adopted with the wretched mass of humanity that
+ crowds nightly on the Thames Embankment. Philanthropy is worse than
+ useless with the great majority of these people. Hot soup in the small
+ hours of a cold morning is doubtless comforting to them, and if the night
+ is wet, foggy, etc., a cover for a few hours is doubtless a luxury. They
+ drink the soup, they take advantage of the cover, and go away, to return
+ at night for more soup and still another cover. Oh, the folly of it all!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must have shelters for them, but the County Council must provide them.
+ Large, clean and healthy places into which, night by night, the human
+ derelicts from the streets should be taken by special police.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there should be no release with the morning light, but detention while
+ full inquiries are made regarding them. Friends would doubtless come
+ forward to help many, but the remainder should be classified according to
+ age and physical and mental condition, and released only when some
+ satisfactory place or occupation is forthcoming for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nightly condition of the Embankment is not only disgraceful, but it is
+ dangerous to the health and wellbeing of the community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost inconceivable that we should allow those parts of London
+ which are specially adapted for the convenience of the public to be
+ monopolised by a mass of diseased and unclean humanity. If we would but
+ act sensibly with these classes, I am sure we could then deal in an
+ effectual manner with that portion of the nomads for whom there is hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the vast amount of money that is poured out in the vain effort to help
+ those whom it is impossible to help was devoted to those that are
+ helpable, the difficulty would be solved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So I would suggest, and it is no new suggestion, that all philanthropic
+ societies that deal with the submerged should unite and co-ordinate with
+ the authorities. That private individuals who have money, time or ability
+ at their command should unite with them. That one great all-embracing
+ organisation, empowered and aided by the State, should be formed, to which
+ the man, woman or family that is overtaken or overwhelmed by misfortune
+ could turn in time of their need with the assurance that their needs would
+ be sympathetically considered and their requirements wisely attended to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An organisation of this description would prevent tens of thousands from
+ becoming vagrants, and a world of misery and unspeakable squalor would be
+ prevented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recent Report on the Poor Law foreshadows an effort of this
+ description, and in Germany this method is tried with undoubted success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some day we shall try it, but that day will not come till we have realised
+ how futile, how expensive our present methods are. The Poor Law system
+ needs recasting. Charity must be divorced from religion. Philanthropic and
+ semi-religious organisations must be separated from their commercial
+ instincts and commercial greed. The workhouse, the prison, the Church Army
+ and the Salvation Army's shelters and labour homes must no longer form the
+ circle round which so many hopelessly wander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No man or set of men must be considered the saviour of the poor, and
+ though much knowledge will be required, it perhaps will be well not to
+ have too much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Above all, the desire to prevent, rather than the desire to restore, must
+ be the aim of the organisation which should embrace every parish in our
+ land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, and in a few words, my methods would be detention and protective
+ care for the afflicted or defective, detention and segregation for the
+ tramps, and a great charitable State-aided organisation to deal with the
+ unfortunate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tramps we shall continue to have, but there need be nothing degrading
+ about them, if only the professional element can be eliminated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Labour exchanges are doing a splendid work for the genuine working man
+ whose labour must often be migratory. But every labour exchange should
+ have its clean lodging-house, in which the decent fellows who want work,
+ and are fitted for work, may stay for a night, and thus avoid the
+ contamination attending the common lodging-houses or the degradation and
+ detention attending casual wards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There exists, I am sure, great possibilities for good in labour exchanges,
+ if, and if only, their services can be devoted to the genuinely
+ unemployed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already I have said they are doing much, and one of the most useful things
+ they do is the advancement of rail-fares to men when work is obtained at a
+ distance. A development in this direction will do much to end the
+ disasters that attend decent fellows when they go on tramp. Migratory
+ labour is unfortunately an absolute necessity, for our industrial and
+ commercial life demand it, and almost depend upon it. The men who supply
+ that want are quite as useful citizens as the men who have permanent and
+ settled work. But their lives are subject to many dangers, temptations,
+ and privations from which they ought to be delivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more I reflect upon the present methods for dealing with professional
+ tramps, the more I am persuaded that these methods are foolish and
+ extravagant. But the more I reflect on the life of the genuinely
+ unemployed that earnestly desire work and are compelled to tramp in search
+ of it, the more I am persuaded that such life is attended by many dangers.
+ The probability being that if the tramp and search be often repeated or
+ long-continued, the desire for, and the ability to undergo, regular work
+ will disappear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But physical and mental inferiority, together with the absence of moral
+ purpose, have a great deal to say with regard to the number of our
+ unemployed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you ask me the source of this stunted manhood, I point you to the
+ narrow streets of the underworld. Thence they issue, and thence alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do you ask the cause? The causes are many! First and foremost stands that
+ all-pervading cause&mdash;the housing of the poor. Who can enumerate the
+ thousands that have breathed the fetid air of the miserable
+ dwelling-places in our slums? Who dare picture how they live and sleep, as
+ they lie, unripe sex with sex, for mutual taint? I dare not, and if I did
+ no publisher could print it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who dare describe the life of a mother-wife, whose husband and children
+ have become dependent upon her earnings! I dare not! Who dare describe the
+ exact life and doings of four families living in a little house intended
+ for one family? Who can describe the life, speech, actions and atmosphere
+ of such places? I cannot, for the task would be too disgusting!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For tens of thousands of people are allowed, or compelled, to live and die
+ under those conditions. How can vigorous manhood or pure womanhood come
+ out of them? Ought we to expect, have we any right to expect, manhood and
+ womanhood born and bred under such conditions to be other than blighted?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether we expect it or not matters but little, for we have this mass of
+ blighted humanity with us, and, like an old man of the sea, it is a burden
+ upon our back, a burden that is not easily got rid of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are we doing with this burden in the present? How are we going to
+ prevent it in the future? are two serious questions that must be answered,
+ and quickly, too, or something worse will happen to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The authorities must see to it at once that children shall have as much
+ air and breathing space in their homes by night as they have in the
+ schools by day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What sense can there be in demanding and compelling a certain amount of
+ air space in places where children are detained for five and a half hours,
+ and then allow those children to stew in apologies for rooms, where the
+ atmosphere is vile beyond description, and where they are crowded
+ indiscriminately for the remaining hours?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the question of the day and the hour. Drink, foreign invasion, the
+ House of Lords or the House of Commons, Tariff Reform or Free Trade, none
+ of these questions, no, nor the whole lot of them combined, compare for
+ one moment in importance with this one awful question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Give the poor good airy housing at a reasonable rent, and half the
+ difficulties against which our nation runs its thick head would disappear.
+ Hospitals and prisons would disappear too as if by magic, for it is to
+ these places that the smitten manhood finds its way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know it is a big question! But it is a question that has got to be
+ solved, and in solving it some of our famous and cherished notions will
+ have to go. Every house, no matter to whom it belongs, or who holds the
+ lease, who lets or sub-lets, every inhabited house must be licensed by the
+ local authorities for a certain number of inmates, so many and no more; a
+ maximum, but no minimum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Local authorities even now have great powers concerning construction,
+ drains, etc. Let them now be empowered to make stringent rules about
+ habitations other than their municipal houses. The piggeries misnamed
+ lodging-houses, the common shelters, etc., are inspected and licensed for
+ a certain number of inmates; it is high time that this was done with the
+ wretched houses in which the poor live.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, the irony of it! Idle tramps must not be crowded, but the children of
+ the poor may be crowded to suffocation. This must surely stop; if not, it
+ will stop us! Again I say, that local authorities must have the power to
+ decide the number of inhabitants that any house shall accommodate, and
+ license it accordingly, and of course have legal power to enforce their
+ decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time has come for a thorough investigation. I would have every room in
+ every house visited by properly appointed officers. I would have every
+ detail as to size of room, number of persons and children, rent paid,
+ etc., etc.; I would have its conditions and fitness for human habitation
+ inquired into and reported upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would miss no house, I would excuse none. A standard should be set as to
+ the condition and position of every house, and the number it might be
+ allowed to accommodate. This would bring many dark things into the light
+ of day, and I am afraid the reputation of many respectable people would
+ suffer, and their pockets too, although they tell us that they "have but a
+ life-interest" in the pestiferous places. But if we drive people out of
+ these places, where will they go?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well, out they must go! and it is certain that there is at present no
+ place for them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Places must be prepared for them, and local authorities must prepare them.
+ Let them address themselves to this matter and no longer shirk their duty
+ with regard to the housing of the poor. Let them stop for ever the
+ miserable pretence of housing the poor that they at present pursue. For be
+ it known that they house "respectable" people only, those that have
+ limited families and can pay a high rental.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If local authorities cannot do it, then the State must step in and help
+ them, for it must be done. It seems little use waiting for private
+ speculation or philanthropic trusts to show us the way in this matter, for
+ both want and expect too high an interest for their outlay. But a good
+ return will assuredly be forthcoming if the evil be tackled in a sensible
+ way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let no one be downhearted about new schemes for housing the poor not
+ paying! Why, everything connected with the poor from the cradle to the
+ grave is a source of good profit to some one, if not to themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let a housing plan be big enough and simple enough, and I am certain that
+ it will pay even when it provides for the very poor. But old ideals will
+ have to be forsaken and new ones substituted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have for many years considered this question very deeply, and from the
+ side of the very poor. I think that I know how the difficulty can be met,
+ and I am prepared to place my suggestions for housing the poor before any
+ responsible person or authority who would care to consider the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it is due to the public to say here that one of the greatest
+ sorrows of my life was my inability to make good a scheme that a rich
+ friend and myself formulated some years ago. This failure was due to the
+ serious illness of my friend, and I hope that it will yet materialise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, in addition to the housing, there are other matters which affect the
+ vigour and virility of the poor. School days must be extended till the age
+ of sixteen. Municipal playgrounds open in the evening must be established.
+ If boys and girls are kept at school till sixteen, older and weaker people
+ will be able to get work which these boys have, but ought not to have. The
+ nation demands a vigorous manhood, but the nation cannot have it without
+ some sacrifice, which means doing without child labour, for child labour
+ is the destruction of virile manhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emigration is often looked upon as the great specific. But the
+ multiplication of agencies for exporting the young, the healthy, and the
+ strong to the colonies causes me some alarm. For emigration as at present
+ conducted certainly does not lessen the number of the unfit and the
+ helpless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be apparent to any one who thinks seriously upon this matter that
+ a continuance of the present methods is bound to entail disastrous
+ consequences, and to promote racial decay at home. The problem of the
+ degenerates, the physical and mental weaklings is already a pressing
+ national question. But serious as the question is at the present moment,
+ it is but light in its intensity compared with what it must be in the near
+ future, unless we change our methods. One fact ought to be definitely
+ understood and seriously pondered, and it is this: no emigration agency,
+ no board of guardians, no church organisation and no human salvage
+ organisation emigrates or assists to emigrate young people of either sex
+ who cannot pass a severe medical examination and be declared mentally and
+ physically sound. This demands serious thought; for the puny, the weak and
+ the unfit are ineligible; our colonies will have none of them, and perhaps
+ our colonies are wise, so the unfit remain at home to be our despair and
+ affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But our colonies demand not only physical and mental health, but moral
+ health also, for boys and girls from reformatory and industrial schools
+ are not acceptable; though the training given in these institutions ought
+ to make the young people valuable assets in a new country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The serious fact that only the best are exported and that all the
+ afflicted and the weak remain at home is, I say, worthy of profound
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thousands of healthy working men with a little money and abundant grit
+ emigrate of their own choice and endeavour. Fine fellows they generally
+ are, and good fortune attends them! Thousands of others with no money but
+ plenty of strength are assisted "out," and they are equally good, while
+ thousands of healthy young women are assisted "out" also. All through the
+ piece the strong and healthy leave our shores, and the weaklings are left
+ at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is always with mixed feelings that I read of boys and girls being sent
+ to Canada, for while I feel hopeful regarding their future, I know that
+ the matter does not end with them; for I appreciate some of the evils that
+ result to the old country from the method of selection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emigration, then, as at present conducted, is no cure for the evil it is
+ supposed to remedy. Nay, it increases the evil, for it secures to our
+ country an ever-increasing number of those who are absolutely unfitted to
+ fulfil the duties of citizenship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet emigration might be a beneficent thing if it were wisely conducted on
+ a comprehensive basis, which should include a fair proportion of those
+ that are now excluded because of their unfitness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Are we to go on far ever with our present method of dealing with those who
+ have been denied wisdom and stature? Who are what they are, but whose
+ disabilities cannot be charged upon themselves, and for whom there is no
+ place other than prison or workhouse?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet many of them have wits, if not brains, and are clever in little ways
+ of their own. At home we refuse them the advantages that are solicitously
+ pressed upon their bigger and stronger brothers. Abroad every door is
+ locked against them. What are they to do? The Army and Navy will have none
+ of them! and industrial life has no place for them. So prison, workhouse
+ and common lodging-houses are their only homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wise emigration methods would include many of them, and decent fellows
+ they would make if given a chance. Oxygen and new environment, with plenty
+ of food, etc., would make an alteration in their physique, and regular
+ work would prove their salvation. But this matter should, and must be,
+ undertaken by the State, for philanthropy cannot deal with it; and when
+ the State does undertake it, consequences unthought-of will follow, for
+ the State will be able to close one-half of its prisons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the helplessness of weaklings that provides the State with more than
+ half its prisoners. Is it impossible, I would ask, for a Government like
+ ours, with all its resources of wealth, power and influence to devise and
+ carry out some large scheme of emigration? If colonial governments wisely
+ refuse our inferior youths, is it not unwise for our own Government to
+ neglect them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the British Empire is there no idle land that calls for men and
+ culture? Here we in England have thousands of young fellows who, because
+ of their helplessness, are living lives of idleness and wrongdoing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time after time these young men find their way into prison, and every
+ short sentence they undergo sends them back to liberty more hopeless and
+ helpless. Many of them are not bad fellows; they have some qualities that
+ are estimable, but they are undisciplined and helpless. Not all the
+ discharged prisoners' aid societies in the land, even with Government
+ assistance, can procure reasonable and progressive employment for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought of thousands of young men, not criminals, spending their lives
+ in a senseless and purposeless round of short imprisonments, simply
+ because they are not quite as big and as strong as their fellows, fills me
+ with wonder and dismay, for I can estimate some of the consequences that
+ result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it impossible, I would ask, for our Government to take up this matter
+ in a really great way? Can no arrangement be made with our colonies for
+ the reception and training of these young fellows? Probably not so long as
+ the colonies can secure an abundance of better human material. But has a
+ bona-fide effort been made in this direction? I much doubt it since the
+ days of transportation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not possible for our Government to obtain somewhere in the whole of
+ its empire a sufficiency of suitable land, to which the best of them may
+ be transplanted, and on which they may be trained for useful service and
+ continuous work?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it not possible to develop the family system for them, and secure a
+ sufficient number of house fathers and mothers to care for them in a
+ domestic way, leaving their physical and industrial training to others?
+ Very few know these young fellows better than myself, and I am bold enough
+ to say that under such conditions the majority of them would prove useful
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely a plan of this description would be infinitely better than
+ continued imprisonments for miserable offences, and much less expensive,
+ too!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am very anxious to emphasise this point. The extent of our prison
+ population depends upon the treatment these young men receive at the hands
+ of the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the present treatment prevails, so long will the State be
+ assured of a permanent prison population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the evil does not end with the continuance and expense of prison. The
+ army of the unfit is perpetually increased by this procedure. Very few of
+ these young men&mdash;I think I may say with safety, none of them&mdash;after
+ three or four convictions become settled and decent citizens; for they
+ cannot if they would, there is no opportunity. They would not if they
+ could, for the desire is no longer existent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have already preventive detention for older persons, who, having been
+ four times convicted of serious crime, are proved to be "habitual
+ criminals." But hopeless as the older criminals are, the country is quite
+ willing to adopt such measures and bear such expense as may be thought
+ requisite for the purpose of detaining, and perchance reforming them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the young men for whom I now plead are a hundred times more numerous
+ and a hundred times more hopeful than the old habitual criminals, whose
+ position excites so much attention. We must have an oversea colony for
+ these young men, and an Act of Parliament for the "preventive detention"
+ of young offenders who are repeatedly convicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third conviction should ensure every homeless offender the certainty of
+ committal to the colony. This would stop for ever the senseless short
+ imprisonment system, for we could keep them free of prison till their
+ third conviction, when they should only be detained pending arrangement
+ for their emigration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more I think upon this matter the more firmly I am convinced that
+ nothing less will prevail. Though, of course, even with this plan, the
+ young men who are hopelessly afflicted with disease or deformity must be
+ excluded. For them the State must make provision at home, but not in
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A scheme of this character, if once put into active and thorough
+ operation, would naturally work itself out, for year by year the number of
+ young fellows to whom it would apply would grow less and less; but while
+ working itself out, it would also work out the salvation of many young
+ men, and bring lasting benefits upon our country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vagrancy, with its attendant evils, would be greatly diminished, many
+ prisons would be closed, workhouses and casual wards would be less
+ necessary. The cost of the scheme would be more than repaid to the
+ community by the savings effected in other ways. The moral effect also
+ would be equally large, and the physical effects would be almost past
+ computing, for it would do much to arrest the decay of the race that
+ appears inseparable from our present conditions and procedure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the State must do something more than this; for many young habitual
+ offenders are too young for emigration. For them the State reformatories
+ must be established, regardless of their physical condition. To these
+ reformatories magistrates must have the power of committal as certainly as
+ they have the power of committal to prison. There must be no "by your
+ leave," no calling in a doctor to examine the offender. But promptly and
+ certainly when circumstances justify the committal to a State reformatory,
+ the youthful offender should go. With the certainty that, be his physique
+ and intellect what they may, he would be detained, corrected and trained
+ for some useful life. Or, if found "quite unfit" or feeble-minded, sent to
+ an institution suitable to his condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Older criminals, when proved to be mentally unsound, are detained in
+ places other than prisons till their health warrants discharge. But the
+ potential criminals among the young, no matter how often they are brought
+ before the courts, are either sent back to hopeless liberty or thrust into
+ prison for a brief period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I repeat that philanthropy cannot attempt to deal with the habitual
+ offenders, either in the days of their boyhood or in their early manhood.
+ For philanthropy can at the most deal with but a few, and those few must
+ be of the very best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot believe that our colonies would refuse to ratify the arrangement
+ that I have outlined, if they were invited to do so by our own Government,
+ and given proper security. They owe us something; we called them into
+ existence, we guarantee their safety, they receive our grit, blood and
+ money; will they not receive, then, under proper conditions and
+ safeguards, some of our surplus youth, even if it be weak? I believe they
+ will!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the strictures that I have ventured to pass upon the methods of the
+ Salvation Army, I wish it to be distinctly understood that I make no
+ attack upon the character and intentions of the men and women who compose
+ it. I know that they are both earnest and sincere. For many of them I have
+ a great admiration. My strictures refer to the methods and the methods
+ only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For long years I have been watchful of results, and I have been so placed
+ in life that I have had plenty of opportunities for seeing and learning.
+ My disappointment has been great, for I expected great things. Many other
+ men and women whose judgment is entitled to respect believe as I do. But
+ they remain silent, hoping that after all great good may come. But I must
+ speak, for I believe the methods adopted are altogether unsound, and in
+ reality tend to aggravate the evils they set out to cure. In 1900 I
+ ventured to express the following opinion of shelters&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "EXTRACTS FROM 'PICTURES AND PROBLEMS'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I look with something approaching dismay at the multiplication of these
+ institutions throughout the length and breadth of our land. To the loafing
+ vagrant class, a very large class, I know, but a class not worthy of much
+ consideration, they are a boon. These men tramp from one town to another,
+ and a week or two in each suits them admirably, till the warm weather and
+ light nights arrive, and then they are off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This portion of the 'submerged' will always be submerged till some power
+ takes hold of them and compels them to work out their own salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But there is such a procession of them that the labour homes, etc., get
+ continual recruits, and the managers are enabled to contract for a great
+ deal of unskilled work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In all our large towns there are numbers of self-respecting men, men who
+ have committed no crime, save the unpardonable crime of growing old. Time
+ was when such men could get odd clerical work, envelope and circular
+ addressing, and a variety of light but irregular employment, at which, by
+ economy and the help of their wives, they made a sort of living. But these
+ men are now driven to the wall, for their poorly paid and irregular work
+ is taken from them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1911 A. M. Nicholl, in his not unfriendly book on GENERAL BOOTH AND THE
+ SALVATION ARMY, makes the following statement, which I make no apology for
+ reproducing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His judgment, considering the position he held with the Army for so many
+ years, is worthy of consideration. Here are some of his words&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From an economic standpoint the social experiment of the Salvation Army
+ stands condemned almost root and branch. So much the worse for economics,
+ the average Salvation Army officer will reply. But at the end of twenty
+ years the Army cannot point to one single cause of social distress that it
+ has removed, or to one single act which it has promoted that has dealt a
+ death-blow at one social evil....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A more serious question, one which lies at the root of all indiscriminate
+ charity, is the value to the community of these shelters. So far as the
+ men in the shelters are benefited by them, they do not elevate them,
+ either physically or morally. A proportion&mdash;what proportion?&mdash;are
+ weeded out, entirely by the voluntary action of the men themselves, and
+ given temporary work, carrying sandwich-boards, addressing envelopes,
+ sorting paper, etc.; but the cause of their social dilapidation remains
+ unaltered. They enter the shelter, pay their twopence or fourpence as the
+ case may be (and few are allowed to enter unless they do), they listen to
+ some moral advice once a week, with which they are surfeited inside and
+ outside the shelter, they go to bed, and next morning leave the shelter to
+ face the streets as they came in, The shelter gets no nearer to the cause
+ of their depravity than it does to the economic cause of their failure, or
+ to the economic remedy which the State must eventually introduce....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The nomads of our civilisation wander past us in their fringy, dirty
+ attire night by night. If a man stops us in the streets and tells us that
+ he is starving, and we offer him a ticket to a labour home or a night
+ shelter, he will tell you that the chances are one out of ten if he will
+ procure admission. The better class of the submerged, or those who use the
+ provision for the submerged in order to gratify their own selfishness,
+ have taken possession of the vacancies, and so they wander on. If a man
+ applies for temporary work, the choice of industry is disappointingly
+ limited. One is tempted to think that the whole superstructure of cheap
+ and free shelters has tended to the standardisation of a low order of
+ existence in this netherworld that attracted the versatile philanthropist
+ at the head of the Salvation Army twenty years ago....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The general idea about the Salvation Army is, that the nearer it gets to
+ the most abandoned classes, the more wonderful and the more numerous are
+ the converts. It is a sad admission to pass on to the world that the
+ opposite is really the case. The results are fewer. General Booth would
+ almost break his heart if he knew the proportion of men who have been
+ 'saved,' in the sense that he most values, through his social scheme. But
+ he ought to know, and the Church and the world ought to know, and in order
+ that it may I will make bold to say that the officials cannot put their
+ hands on the names of a thousand men in all parts of the world who are
+ to-day members of the Army who were converted at the penitent form of
+ shelters and elevators, who are now earning a living outside the control
+ of the Army's social work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the public appear to have infinite faith in the multiplication and
+ enlargement of these shelters, as the following extract from a daily paper
+ of December 1911 will show&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Since the days of Mahomet, not forgetting St. Francis and Martin Luther,
+ I doubt if there is any man who has started, without help from the
+ Government, such a world-wide movement as this.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This was Sir George Askwith's tribute to General Booth and the Salvation
+ Army at the opening of the new wing of the men's Elevators in Spa Road,
+ Bermondsey, yesterday afternoon. The task of declaring the wing open
+ devolved upon the Duke of Argyll, who had beside him on the platform the
+ Duchess of Marlborough, Lady St. Davids, Lord Armstrong, Sir Daniel and
+ Lady Hamilton, Alderman Sir Charles C. Wakefield, Sir Edward Clarke, K.C.,
+ Sir George Askwith, and the Mayor of Bermondsey and General Booth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The General, who is just back from Denmark, spoke for three-quarters of
+ an hour, notwithstanding his great age and his admission that he was 'far
+ from well.' The Elevator, as its name implies, seeks to raise men who are
+ wholly destitute and give them a fresh start. The new wing has been
+ erected at a cost of L10,000, and the Elevator, which accommodates 590 men
+ and covers two-and-a-half acres, represents an expenditure of L30,000, and
+ is the largest institution of its kind in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'The men,' said the General, 'are admitted on two conditions only, that
+ they are willing to obey orders, and ready to work. Before he has his
+ breakfast a man must earn it, and the same with each meal, the ticket
+ given him entitling him to remuneration in proportion to the work he has
+ done. If the men's conduct is good, they are passed on to another of the
+ Army's institutions, and ultimately some post is secured for them through
+ the employers of labour with whom the Army is in touch.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believe General Booth to be sincere, and that he believes exactly what
+ he stated. But even sincerity must not be allowed to mislead a generous
+ public. Employers of labour do not, cannot, and will not keep positions
+ open for General Booth or any other man. Employers require strong, healthy
+ men who can give value for the wages paid. Thousands of men who have never
+ entered shelters or prison are not only available but eager for positions
+ that show any prospect of permanence, whether the work be heavy or
+ skilled. For work that requires neither brains, skill or much physical
+ strength, thousands of men whose characters are good are also available. I
+ venture to say that General Booth cannot supply the public with a
+ reasonable list of men who, having passed through the shelters, have been
+ put into permanent work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For every man and woman who is seeking to uplift their fellows I have
+ heartfelt sympathy. For every organisation that is earnestly seeking to
+ alleviate or remove social evils I wish abundant success. Against the
+ organisations named I have not the slightest feeling. If they were
+ successful in the work they undertake, no one in England would rejoice
+ more than myself. But they are not successful, and because I believe that
+ their claim to success blinds a well-intentioned and generous public, and
+ prevents real consideration of deep-seated evils, I make these comments
+ and give the above extracts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I question whether any one in London knows better than myself the
+ difficulty of finding employment for a man who is "down," for I have
+ written hundreds of letters, I have visited numerous employers for this
+ one purpose; I have begged and pleaded with employers, sometimes I have
+ offered "security" for the honesty of men for whom I was concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally, but only occasionally, was I successful. I have advertised
+ on men's behalf frequently, but nothing worthy of the name of "work" has
+ resulted. I know the mind of employers, and I know their difficulties; I
+ have been too often in touch with them not to know. I have also been in
+ touch with many men who have been in the shelters, elevators, bridges,
+ labour homes and tents; I know their experience has been one of
+ disappointment. I have written on behalf of such men to the
+ "head-quarters," but nothing has resulted but a few days' work at
+ wood-chopping, envelope addressing, or bill distributing, none of which
+ can be called employment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day after day men who have been led to expect work wait, and wait in vain,
+ in or about the head-quarters for the promised work that so rarely comes.
+ For these men I am concerned, for them I am bold enough to risk the
+ censure of good people, for I hold that it is not only cruel, but wicked
+ to excite in homeless men hopes that cannot possibly be realised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This point has been driven home to my very heart, for I have seen what
+ comes to pass when the spark of hope is extinguished. Better, far better,
+ that a man who is "down" should trust to his own exertions and rely upon
+ himself than entertain illusions and rely upon others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now I close by presenting in catalogue form some of the steps that I
+ believe to be necessary for dealing with the terrible problems of our
+ great underworld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First: the permanent detention and segregation of all who are classified
+ as feeble-minded. Second: the permanent detention and segregation of all
+ professional tramps. Third: proper provision for men and women who are
+ hopelessly crippled or disabled. Fourth: establishment by the educational
+ authorities, or by the State of reformatory schools, for youthful
+ delinquents and juvenile adults regardless of physical weakness,
+ deprivations or disease. Fifth: compulsory education, physical, mental and
+ technical, up to sixteen years of age. Sixth: the establishment of
+ municipal play-grounds and organised play for youths who have left school.
+ Seventh: national and State-aided emigration to include the best of the
+ "unfit." Eighth: the abolition of common lodging-houses, and the
+ establishment of municipal lodging-houses for men and also for women.
+ Ninth: the establishment of trade boards for all industries. Tenth: proper
+ and systematic help for widows who have young children. Eleventh: thorough
+ inspection and certification by local authorities of all houses and
+ "dwellings" inhabited by the poor. Twelfth: housing for the very poor by
+ municipal authorities, with abolition of fire-places, the heating to be
+ provided from one central source. The housing to include a restaurant
+ where nourishing but simple food may be obtained for payment that ensures
+ a small profit. Thirteenth: more abundant and reasonable provision of work
+ by the State, local authorities and for the unemployed. Fourteenth: a
+ co-ordination of all philanthropic and charity agencies to form one great
+ society with branches in every parish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Give us these things, and surely they are not impossible, and half our
+ present expensive difficulties would disappear. Fewer prisons, workhouses
+ and hospitals would be required. The need for shelters and labour homes
+ would not exist. The necessity for the activities of many charitable
+ agencies whose constant appeals are so disturbing and puzzling, but whose
+ work is now required, would pass away too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with all these things given, there would be still great need for the
+ practice of kindness and the development of brotherly love. For without
+ brotherly love and kindly human interest, laws are but cast-iron rules,
+ and life but a living death. What is life worth? What can life be worth if
+ it be only self-centred? To love is to live! to feel and take an interest
+ in others is to be happy indeed, and to feel the pulses thrill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I am sure that love is abundant in our old country, but it is largely
+ paralysed and mystified. For many objects that love would fain accomplish
+ appear stupendous and hopeless. What a different old England we might
+ have, if the various and hopeless classes that I have enumerated were
+ permanently detained. For then love would come to its own, the real
+ misfortunes of life would then form a passport to practical help. Widows
+ would no longer be unceremoniously kicked into the underworld; accidents
+ and disablements would no longer condemn men and women to live lives of
+ beggary. Best of all, charitable and kindly deeds would no longer be done
+ by proxy. It is because I see how professional and contented beggary
+ monopolises so much effort and costs so much money; because I see how it
+ deprives the really unfortunate and the suffering poor of the practical
+ help that would to them be such a blessed boon, that I am anxious for its
+ days to be ended. May that day soon come, for when it comes, there will be
+ some chance of love and justice obtaining deliverance for the oppressed
+ and deserving poor who abound in London's dark underworld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1420 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>