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diff --git a/1688-0.txt b/1688-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6fb5232 --- /dev/null +++ b/1688-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7078 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook of The People of the Abyss, by Jack London + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and +most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions +whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms +of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at +www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you +will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before +using this eBook. + +Title: The People of the Abyss + +Author: Jack London + +Release Date: March, 1999 [eBook #1688] +[Most recently updated: December 1, 2020] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +Produced by: David Price + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PEOPLE OF THE ABYSS *** + +[Illustration] + + + + +The People of the Abyss + +by Jack London + + +Contents + + PREFACE + I. THE DESCENT + II. JOHNNY UPRIGHT + III. MY LODGING AND SOME OTHERS + IV. A MAN AND THE ABYSS + V. THOSE ON THE EDGE + VI. FRYING-PAN ALLEY AND A GLIMPSE OF INFERNO + VII. A WINNER OF THE VICTORIA CROSS + VIII. THE CARTER AND THE CARPENTER + IX. THE SPIKE + X. CARRYING THE BANNER + XI. THE PEG + XII. CORONATION DAY + XIII. DAN CULLEN, DOCKER + XIV. HOPS AND HOPPERS + XV. THE SEA WIFE + XVI. PROPERTY VERSUS PERSON + XVII. INEFFICIENCY + XVIII. WAGES + XIX. THE GHETTO + XX. COFFEE-HOUSES AND DOSS-HOUSES + XXI. THE PRECARIOUSNESS OF LIFE + XXII. SUICIDE + XXIII. THE CHILDREN + XXIV. A VISION OF THE NIGHT + XXV. THE HUNGER WAIL + XXVI. DRINK, TEMPERANCE, AND THRIFT + XXVII. THE MANAGEMENT + + +The chief priests and rulers cry:— + +“O Lord and Master, not ours the guilt, +We build but as our fathers built; +Behold thine images how they stand +Sovereign and sole through all our land. + +“Our task is hard—with sword and flame, +To hold thine earth forever the same, +And with sharp crooks of steel to keep, +Still as thou leftest them, thy sheep.” + +Then Christ sought out an artisan, +A low-browed, stunted, haggard man, +And a motherless girl whose fingers thin +Crushed from her faintly want and sin. + +These set he in the midst of them, +And as they drew back their garment hem +For fear of defilement, “Lo, here,” said he, +“The images ye have made of me.” + +JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. + + + + +PREFACE + + +The experiences related in this volume fell to me in the summer of +1902. I went down into the under-world of London with an attitude of +mind which I may best liken to that of the explorer. I was open to be +convinced by the evidence of my eyes, rather than by the teachings of +those who had not seen, or by the words of those who had seen and gone +before. Further, I took with me certain simple criteria with which to +measure the life of the under-world. That which made for more life, for +physical and spiritual health, was good; that which made for less life, +which hurt, and dwarfed, and distorted life, was bad. + +It will be readily apparent to the reader that I saw much that was bad. +Yet it must not be forgotten that the time of which I write was +considered “good times” in England. The starvation and lack of shelter +I encountered constituted a chronic condition of misery which is never +wiped out, even in the periods of greatest prosperity. + +Following the summer in question came a hard winter. Great numbers of +the unemployed formed into processions, as many as a dozen at a time, +and daily marched through the streets of London crying for bread. Mr. +Justin McCarthy, writing in the month of January 1903, to the New York +_Independent_, briefly epitomises the situation as follows:— + +“The workhouses have no space left in which to pack the starving crowds +who are craving every day and night at their doors for food and +shelter. All the charitable institutions have exhausted their means in +trying to raise supplies of food for the famishing residents of the +garrets and cellars of London lanes and alleys. The quarters of the +Salvation Army in various parts of London are nightly besieged by hosts +of the unemployed and the hungry for whom neither shelter nor the means +of sustenance can be provided.” + +It has been urged that the criticism I have passed on things as they +are in England is too pessimistic. I must say, in extenuation, that of +optimists I am the most optimistic. But I measure manhood less by +political aggregations than by individuals. Society grows, while +political machines rack to pieces and become “scrap.” For the English, +so far as manhood and womanhood and health and happiness go, I see a +broad and smiling future. But for a great deal of the political +machinery, which at present mismanages for them, I see nothing else +than the scrap heap. + +JACK LONDON. + + +PIEDMONT, CALIFORNIA. + + + + +CHAPTER I. +THE DESCENT + + +“But you can’t do it, you know,” friends said, to whom I applied for +assistance in the matter of sinking myself down into the East End of +London. “You had better see the police for a guide,” they added, on +second thought, painfully endeavouring to adjust themselves to the +psychological processes of a madman who had come to them with better +credentials than brains. + +“But I don’t want to see the police,” I protested. “What I wish to do +is to go down into the East End and see things for myself. I wish to +know how those people are living there, and why they are living there, +and what they are living for. In short, I am going to live there +myself.” + +“You don’t want to _live_ down there!” everybody said, with +disapprobation writ large upon their faces. “Why, it is said there are +places where a man’s life isn’t worth tu’pence.” + +“The very places I wish to see,” I broke in. + +“But you can’t, you know,” was the unfailing rejoinder. + +“Which is not what I came to see you about,” I answered brusquely, +somewhat nettled by their incomprehension. “I am a stranger here, and I +want you to tell me what you know of the East End, in order that I may +have something to start on.” + +“But we know nothing of the East End. It is over there, somewhere.” And +they waved their hands vaguely in the direction where the sun on rare +occasions may be seen to rise. + +“Then I shall go to Cook’s,” I announced. + +“Oh yes,” they said, with relief. “Cook’s will be sure to know.” + +But O Cook, O Thomas Cook & Son, path-finders and trail-clearers, +living sign-posts to all the world, and bestowers of first aid to +bewildered travellers—unhesitatingly and instantly, with ease and +celerity, could you send me to Darkest Africa or Innermost Thibet, but +to the East End of London, barely a stone’s throw distant from Ludgate +Circus, you know not the way! + +“You can’t do it, you know,” said the human emporium of routes and +fares at Cook’s Cheapside branch. “It is so—hem—so unusual.” + +“Consult the police,” he concluded authoritatively, when I had +persisted. “We are not accustomed to taking travellers to the East End; +we receive no call to take them there, and we know nothing whatsoever +about the place at all.” + +“Never mind that,” I interposed, to save myself from being swept out of +the office by his flood of negations. “Here’s something you can do for +me. I wish you to understand in advance what I intend doing, so that in +case of trouble you may be able to identify me.” + +“Ah, I see! should you be murdered, we would be in position to identify +the corpse.” + +He said it so cheerfully and cold-bloodedly that on the instant I saw +my stark and mutilated cadaver stretched upon a slab where cool waters +trickle ceaselessly, and him I saw bending over and sadly and patiently +identifying it as the body of the insane American who _would_ see the +East End. + +“No, no,” I answered; “merely to identify me in case I get into a +scrape with the ’bobbies.’” This last I said with a thrill; truly, I +was gripping hold of the vernacular. + +“That,” he said, “is a matter for the consideration of the Chief +Office.” + +“It is so unprecedented, you know,” he added apologetically. + +The man at the Chief Office hemmed and hawed. “We make it a rule,” he +explained, “to give no information concerning our clients.” + +“But in this case,” I urged, “it is the client who requests you to give +the information concerning himself.” + +Again he hemmed and hawed. + +“Of course,” I hastily anticipated, “I know it is unprecedented, but—” + +“As I was about to remark,” he went on steadily, “it is unprecedented, +and I don’t think we can do anything for you.” + +However, I departed with the address of a detective who lived in the +East End, and took my way to the American consul-general. And here, at +last, I found a man with whom I could “do business.” There was no +hemming and hawing, no lifted brows, open incredulity, or blank +amazement. In one minute I explained myself and my project, which he +accepted as a matter of course. In the second minute he asked my age, +height, and weight, and looked me over. And in the third minute, as we +shook hands at parting, he said: “All right, Jack. I’ll remember you +and keep track.” + +I breathed a sigh of relief. Having burnt my ships behind me, I was now +free to plunge into that human wilderness of which nobody seemed to +know anything. But at once I encountered a new difficulty in the shape +of my cabby, a grey-whiskered and eminently decorous personage who had +imperturbably driven me for several hours about the “City.” + +“Drive me down to the East End,” I ordered, taking my seat. + +“Where, sir?” he demanded with frank surprise. + +“To the East End, anywhere. Go on.” + +The hansom pursued an aimless way for several minutes, then came to a +puzzled stop. The aperture above my head was uncovered, and the cabman +peered down perplexedly at me. + +“I say,” he said, “wot plyce yer wanter go?” + +“East End,” I repeated. “Nowhere in particular. Just drive me around +anywhere.” + +“But wot’s the haddress, sir?” + +“See here!” I thundered. “Drive me down to the East End, and at once!” + +It was evident that he did not understand, but he withdrew his head, +and grumblingly started his horse. + +Nowhere in the streets of London may one escape the sight of abject +poverty, while five minutes’ walk from almost any point will bring one +to a slum; but the region my hansom was now penetrating was one +unending slum. The streets were filled with a new and different race of +people, short of stature, and of wretched or beer-sodden appearance. We +rolled along through miles of bricks and squalor, and from each cross +street and alley flashed long vistas of bricks and misery. Here and +there lurched a drunken man or woman, and the air was obscene with +sounds of jangling and squabbling. At a market, tottery old men and +women were searching in the garbage thrown in the mud for rotten +potatoes, beans, and vegetables, while little children clustered like +flies around a festering mass of fruit, thrusting their arms to the +shoulders into the liquid corruption, and drawing forth morsels but +partially decayed, which they devoured on the spot. + +Not a hansom did I meet with in all my drive, while mine was like an +apparition from another and better world, the way the children ran +after it and alongside. And as far as I could see were the solid walls +of brick, the slimy pavements, and the screaming streets; and for the +first time in my life the fear of the crowd smote me. It was like the +fear of the sea; and the miserable multitudes, street upon street, +seemed so many waves of a vast and malodorous sea, lapping about me and +threatening to well up and over me. + +“Stepney, sir; Stepney Station,” the cabby called down. + +I looked about. It was really a railroad station, and he had driven +desperately to it as the one familiar spot he had ever heard of in all +that wilderness. + +“Well,” I said. + +He spluttered unintelligibly, shook his head, and looked very +miserable. “I’m a strynger ’ere,” he managed to articulate. “An’ if yer +don’t want Stepney Station, I’m blessed if I know wotcher do want.” + +“I’ll tell you what I want,” I said. “You drive along and keep your eye +out for a shop where old clothes are sold. Now, when you see such a +shop, drive right on till you turn the corner, then stop and let me +out.” + +I could see that he was growing dubious of his fare, but not long +afterwards he pulled up to the curb and informed me that an old-clothes +shop was to be found a bit of the way back. + +“Won’tcher py me?” he pleaded. “There’s seven an’ six owin’ me.” + +“Yes,” I laughed, “and it would be the last I’d see of you.” + +“Lord lumme, but it’ll be the last I see of you if yer don’t py me,” he +retorted. + +But a crowd of ragged onlookers had already gathered around the cab, +and I laughed again and walked back to the old-clothes shop. + +Here the chief difficulty was in making the shopman understand that I +really and truly wanted old clothes. But after fruitless attempts to +press upon me new and impossible coats and trousers, he began to bring +to light heaps of old ones, looking mysterious the while and hinting +darkly. This he did with the palpable intention of letting me know that +he had “piped my lay,” in order to bulldose me, through fear of +exposure, into paying heavily for my purchases. A man in trouble, or a +high-class criminal from across the water, was what he took my measure +for—in either case, a person anxious to avoid the police. + +But I disputed with him over the outrageous difference between prices +and values, till I quite disabused him of the notion, and he settled +down to drive a hard bargain with a hard customer. In the end I +selected a pair of stout though well-worn trousers, a frayed jacket +with one remaining button, a pair of brogans which had plainly seen +service where coal was shovelled, a thin leather belt, and a very dirty +cloth cap. My underclothing and socks, however, were new and warm, but +of the sort that any American waif, down in his luck, could acquire in +the ordinary course of events. + +“I must sy yer a sharp ’un,” he said, with counterfeit admiration, as I +handed over the ten shillings finally agreed upon for the outfit. +“Blimey, if you ain’t ben up an’ down Petticut Lane afore now. Yer +trouseys is wuth five bob to hany man, an’ a docker ’ud give two an’ +six for the shoes, to sy nothin’ of the coat an’ cap an’ new stoker’s +singlet an’ hother things.” + +“How much will you give me for them?” I demanded suddenly. “I paid you +ten bob for the lot, and I’ll sell them back to you, right now, for +eight! Come, it’s a go!” + +But he grinned and shook his head, and though I had made a good +bargain, I was unpleasantly aware that he had made a better one. + +I found the cabby and a policeman with their heads together, but the +latter, after looking me over sharply, and particularly scrutinizing +the bundle under my arm, turned away and left the cabby to wax mutinous +by himself. And not a step would he budge till I paid him the seven +shillings and sixpence owing him. Whereupon he was willing to drive me +to the ends of the earth, apologising profusely for his insistence, and +explaining that one ran across queer customers in London Town. + +But he drove me only to Highbury Vale, in North London, where my +luggage was waiting for me. Here, next day, I took off my shoes (not +without regret for their lightness and comfort), and my soft, grey +travelling suit, and, in fact, all my clothing; and proceeded to array +myself in the clothes of the other and unimaginable men, who must have +been indeed unfortunate to have had to part with such rags for the +pitiable sums obtainable from a dealer. + +Inside my stoker’s singlet, in the armpit, I sewed a gold sovereign (an +emergency sum certainly of modest proportions); and inside my stoker’s +singlet I put myself. And then I sat down and moralised upon the fair +years and fat, which had made my skin soft and brought the nerves close +to the surface; for the singlet was rough and raspy as a hair shirt, +and I am confident that the most rigorous of ascetics suffer no more +than I did in the ensuing twenty-four hours. + +The remainder of my costume was fairly easy to put on, though the +brogans, or brogues, were quite a problem. As stiff and hard as if made +of wood, it was only after a prolonged pounding of the uppers with my +fists that I was able to get my feet into them at all. Then, with a few +shillings, a knife, a handkerchief, and some brown papers and flake +tobacco stowed away in my pockets, I thumped down the stairs and said +good-bye to my foreboding friends. As I passed out of the door, the +“help,” a comely middle-aged woman, could not conquer a grin that +twisted her lips and separated them till the throat, out of involuntary +sympathy, made the uncouth animal noises we are wont to designate as +“laughter.” + +No sooner was I out on the streets than I was impressed by the +difference in status effected by my clothes. All servility vanished +from the demeanour of the common people with whom I came in contact. +Presto! in the twinkling of an eye, so to say, I had become one of +them. My frayed and out-at-elbows jacket was the badge and +advertisement of my class, which was their class. It made me of like +kind, and in place of the fawning and too respectful attention I had +hitherto received, I now shared with them a comradeship. The man in +corduroy and dirty neckerchief no longer addressed me as “sir” or +“governor.” It was “mate” now—and a fine and hearty word, with a tingle +to it, and a warmth and gladness, which the other term does not +possess. Governor! It smacks of mastery, and power, and high +authority—the tribute of the man who is under to the man on top, +delivered in the hope that he will let up a bit and ease his weight, +which is another way of saying that it is an appeal for alms. + +This brings me to a delight I experienced in my rags and tatters which +is denied the average American abroad. The European traveller from the +States, who is not a Croesus, speedily finds himself reduced to a +chronic state of self-conscious sordidness by the hordes of cringing +robbers who clutter his steps from dawn till dark, and deplete his +pocket-book in a way that puts compound interest to the blush. + +In my rags and tatters I escaped the pestilence of tipping, and +encountered men on a basis of equality. Nay, before the day was out I +turned the tables, and said, most gratefully, “Thank you, sir,” to a +gentleman whose horse I held, and who dropped a penny into my eager +palm. + +Other changes I discovered were wrought in my condition by my new garb. +In crossing crowded thoroughfares I found I had to be, if anything, +more lively in avoiding vehicles, and it was strikingly impressed upon +me that my life had cheapened in direct ratio with my clothes. When +before I inquired the way of a policeman, I was usually asked, “Bus or +’ansom, sir?” But now the query became, “Walk or ride?” Also, at the +railway stations, a third-class ticket was now shoved out to me as a +matter of course. + +But there was compensation for it all. For the first time I met the +English lower classes face to face, and knew them for what they were. +When loungers and workmen, at street corners and in public-houses, +talked with me, they talked as one man to another, and they talked as +natural men should talk, without the least idea of getting anything out +of me for what they talked or the way they talked. + +And when at last I made into the East End, I was gratified to find that +the fear of the crowd no longer haunted me. I had become a part of it. +The vast and malodorous sea had welled up and over me, or I had slipped +gently into it, and there was nothing fearsome about it—with the one +exception of the stoker’s singlet. + + + + +CHAPTER II. +JOHNNY UPRIGHT + + +I shall not give you the address of Johnny Upright. Let it suffice that +he lives in the most respectable street in the East End—a street that +would be considered very mean in America, but a veritable oasis in the +desert of East London. It is surrounded on every side by close-packed +squalor and streets jammed by a young and vile and dirty generation; +but its own pavements are comparatively bare of the children who have +no other place to play, while it has an air of desertion, so few are +the people that come and go. + +Each house in this street, as in all the streets, is shoulder to +shoulder with its neighbours. To each house there is but one entrance, +the front door; and each house is about eighteen feet wide, with a bit +of a brick-walled yard behind, where, when it is not raining, one may +look at a slate-coloured sky. But it must be understood that this is +East End opulence we are now considering. Some of the people in this +street are even so well-to-do as to keep a “slavey.” Johnny Upright +keeps one, as I well know, she being my first acquaintance in this +particular portion of the world. + +To Johnny Upright’s house I came, and to the door came the “slavey.” +Now, mark you, her position in life was pitiable and contemptible, but +it was with pity and contempt that she looked at me. She evinced a +plain desire that our conversation should be short. It was Sunday, and +Johnny Upright was not at home, and that was all there was to it. But I +lingered, discussing whether or not it was all there was to it, till +Mrs. Johnny Upright was attracted to the door, where she scolded the +girl for not having closed it before turning her attention to me. + +No, Mr. Johnny Upright was not at home, and further, he saw nobody on +Sunday. It is too bad, said I. Was I looking for work? No, quite the +contrary; in fact, I had come to see Johnny Upright on business which +might be profitable to him. + +A change came over the face of things at once. The gentleman in +question was at church, but would be home in an hour or thereabouts, +when no doubt he could be seen. + +Would I kindly step in?—no, the lady did not ask me, though I fished +for an invitation by stating that I would go down to the corner and +wait in a public-house. And down to the corner I went, but, it being +church time, the “pub” was closed. A miserable drizzle was falling, +and, in lieu of better, I took a seat on a neighbourly doorstep and +waited. + +And here to the doorstep came the “slavey,” very frowzy and very +perplexed, to tell me that the missus would let me come back and wait +in the kitchen. + +“So many people come ’ere lookin’ for work,” Mrs. Johnny Upright +apologetically explained. “So I ’ope you won’t feel bad the way I +spoke.” + +“Not at all, not at all,” I replied in my grandest manner, for the +nonce investing my rags with dignity. “I quite understand, I assure +you. I suppose people looking for work almost worry you to death?” + +“That they do,” she answered, with an eloquent and expressive glance; +and thereupon ushered me into, not the kitchen, but the dining room—a +favour, I took it, in recompense for my grand manner. + +This dining-room, on the same floor as the kitchen, was about four feet +below the level of the ground, and so dark (it was midday) that I had +to wait a space for my eyes to adjust themselves to the gloom. Dirty +light filtered in through a window, the top of which was on a level +with a sidewalk, and in this light I found that I was able to read +newspaper print. + +And here, while waiting the coming of Johnny Upright, let me explain my +errand. While living, eating, and sleeping with the people of the East +End, it was my intention to have a port of refuge, not too far distant, +into which I could run now and again to assure myself that good clothes +and cleanliness still existed. Also in such port I could receive my +mail, work up my notes, and sally forth occasionally in changed garb to +civilisation. + +But this involved a dilemma. A lodging where my property would be safe +implied a landlady apt to be suspicious of a gentleman leading a double +life; while a landlady who would not bother her head over the double +life of her lodgers would imply lodgings where property was unsafe. To +avoid the dilemma was what had brought me to Johnny Upright. A +detective of thirty-odd years’ continuous service in the East End, +known far and wide by a name given him by a convicted felon in the +dock, he was just the man to find me an honest landlady, and make her +rest easy concerning the strange comings and goings of which I might be +guilty. + +His two daughters beat him home from church—and pretty girls they were +in their Sunday dresses; withal it was the certain weak and delicate +prettiness which characterises the Cockney lasses, a prettiness which +is no more than a promise with no grip on time, and doomed to fade +quickly away like the colour from a sunset sky. + +They looked me over with frank curiosity, as though I were some sort of +a strange animal, and then ignored me utterly for the rest of my wait. +Then Johnny Upright himself arrived, and I was summoned upstairs to +confer with him. + +“Speak loud,” he interrupted my opening words. “I’ve got a bad cold, +and I can’t hear well.” + +Shades of Old Sleuth and Sherlock Holmes! I wondered as to where the +assistant was located whose duty it was to take down whatever +information I might loudly vouchsafe. And to this day, much as I have +seen of Johnny Upright and much as I have puzzled over the incident, I +have never been quite able to make up my mind as to whether or not he +had a cold, or had an assistant planted in the other room. But of one +thing I am sure: though I gave Johnny Upright the facts concerning +myself and project, he withheld judgment till next day, when I dodged +into his street conventionally garbed and in a hansom. Then his +greeting was cordial enough, and I went down into the dining-room to +join the family at tea. + +“We are humble here,” he said, “not given to the flesh, and you must +take us for what we are, in our humble way.” + +The girls were flushed and embarrassed at greeting me, while he did not +make it any the easier for them. + +“Ha! ha!” he roared heartily, slapping the table with his open hand +till the dishes rang. “The girls thought yesterday you had come to ask +for a piece of bread! Ha! ha! ho! ho! ho!” + +This they indignantly denied, with snapping eyes and guilty red cheeks, +as though it were an essential of true refinement to be able to discern +under his rags a man who had no need to go ragged. + +And then, while I ate bread and marmalade, proceeded a play at cross +purposes, the daughters deeming it an insult to me that I should have +been mistaken for a beggar, and the father considering it as the +highest compliment to my cleverness to succeed in being so mistaken. +All of which I enjoyed, and the bread, the marmalade, and the tea, till +the time came for Johnny Upright to find me a lodging, which he did, +not half-a-dozen doors away, in his own respectable and opulent street, +in a house as like to his own as a pea to its mate. + + + + +CHAPTER III. +MY LODGING AND SOME OTHERS + + +From an East London standpoint, the room I rented for six shillings, or +a dollar and a half, per week, was a most comfortable affair. From the +American standpoint, on the other hand, it was rudely furnished, +uncomfortable, and small. By the time I had added an ordinary +typewriter table to its scanty furnishing, I was hard put to turn +around; at the best, I managed to navigate it by a sort of vermicular +progression requiring great dexterity and presence of mind. + +Having settled myself, or my property rather, I put on my knockabout +clothes and went out for a walk. Lodgings being fresh in my mind, I +began to look them up, bearing in mind the hypothesis that I was a poor +young man with a wife and large family. + +My first discovery was that empty houses were few and far between—so +far between, in fact, that though I walked miles in irregular circles +over a large area, I still remained between. Not one empty house could +I find—a conclusive proof that the district was “saturated.” + +It being plain that as a poor young man with a family I could rent no +houses at all in this most undesirable region, I next looked for rooms, +unfurnished rooms, in which I could store my wife and babies and +chattels. There were not many, but I found them, usually in the +singular, for one appears to be considered sufficient for a poor man’s +family in which to cook and eat and sleep. When I asked for two rooms, +the sublettees looked at me very much in the manner, I imagine, that a +certain personage looked at Oliver Twist when he asked for more. + +Not only was one room deemed sufficient for a poor man and his family, +but I learned that many families, occupying single rooms, had so much +space to spare as to be able to take in a lodger or two. When such +rooms can be rented for from three to six shillings per week, it is a +fair conclusion that a lodger with references should obtain floor space +for, say, from eightpence to a shilling. He may even be able to board +with the sublettees for a few shillings more. This, however, I failed +to inquire into—a reprehensible error on my part, considering that I +was working on the basis of a hypothetical family. + +Not only did the houses I investigated have no bath-tubs, but I learned +that there were no bath-tubs in all the thousands of houses I had seen. +Under the circumstances, with my wife and babies and a couple of +lodgers suffering from the too great spaciousness of one room, taking a +bath in a tin wash-basin would be an unfeasible undertaking. But, it +seems, the compensation comes in with the saving of soap, so all’s +well, and God’s still in heaven. + +However, I rented no rooms, but returned to my own Johnny Upright’s +street. What with my wife, and babies, and lodgers, and the various +cubby-holes into which I had fitted them, my mind’s eye had become +narrow-angled, and I could not quite take in all of my own room at +once. The immensity of it was awe-inspiring. Could this be the room I +had rented for six shillings a week? Impossible! But my landlady, +knocking at the door to learn if I were comfortable, dispelled my +doubts. + +“Oh yes, sir,” she said, in reply to a question. “This street is the +very last. All the other streets were like this eight or ten years ago, +and all the people were very respectable. But the others have driven +our kind out. Those in this street are the only ones left. It’s +shocking, sir!” + +And then she explained the process of saturation, by which the rental +value of a neighbourhood went up, while its tone went down. + +“You see, sir, our kind are not used to crowding in the way the others +do. We need more room. The others, the foreigners and lower-class +people, can get five and six families into this house, where we only +get one. So they can pay more rent for the house than we can afford. It +_is_ shocking, sir; and just to think, only a few years ago all this +neighbourhood was just as nice as it could be.” + +I looked at her. Here was a woman, of the finest grade of the English +working-class, with numerous evidences of refinement, being slowly +engulfed by that noisome and rotten tide of humanity which the powers +that be are pouring eastward out of London Town. Bank, factory, hotel, +and office building must go up, and the city poor folk are a nomadic +breed; so they migrate eastward, wave upon wave, saturating and +degrading neighbourhood by neighbourhood, driving the better class of +workers before them to pioneer, on the rim of the city, or dragging +them down, if not in the first generation, surely in the second and +third. + +It is only a question of months when Johnny Upright’s street must go. +He realises it himself. + +“In a couple of years,” he says, “my lease expires. My landlord is one +of our kind. He has not put up the rent on any of his houses here, and +this has enabled us to stay. But any day he may sell, or any day he may +die, which is the same thing so far as we are concerned. The house is +bought by a money breeder, who builds a sweat shop on the patch of +ground at the rear where my grapevine is, adds to the house, and rents +it a room to a family. There you are, and Johnny Upright’s gone!” + +And truly I saw Johnny Upright, and his good wife and fair daughters, +and frowzy slavey, like so many ghosts flitting eastward through the +gloom, the monster city roaring at their heels. + +But Johnny Upright is not alone in his flitting. Far, far out, on the +fringe of the city, live the small business men, little managers, and +successful clerks. They dwell in cottages and semi-detached villas, +with bits of flower garden, and elbow room, and breathing space. They +inflate themselves with pride, and throw out their chests when they +contemplate the Abyss from which they have escaped, and they thank God +that they are not as other men. And lo! down upon them comes Johnny +Upright and the monster city at his heels. Tenements spring up like +magic, gardens are built upon, villas are divided and subdivided into +many dwellings, and the black night of London settles down in a greasy +pall. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. +A MAN AND THE ABYSS + + +“I say, can you let a lodging?” + +These words I discharged carelessly over my shoulder at a stout and +elderly woman, of whose fare I was partaking in a greasy coffee-house +down near the Pool and not very far from Limehouse. + +“Oh yus,” she answered shortly, my appearance possibly not +approximating the standard of affluence required by her house. + +I said no more, consuming my rasher of bacon and pint of sickly tea in +silence. Nor did she take further interest in me till I came to pay my +reckoning (fourpence), when I pulled all of ten shillings out of my +pocket. The expected result was produced. + +“Yus, sir,” she at once volunteered; “I ’ave nice lodgin’s you’d likely +tyke a fancy to. Back from a voyage, sir?” + +“How much for a room?” I inquired, ignoring her curiosity. + +She looked me up and down with frank surprise. “I don’t let rooms, not +to my reg’lar lodgers, much less casuals.” + +“Then I’ll have to look along a bit,” I said, with marked +disappointment. + +But the sight of my ten shillings had made her keen. “I can let you +have a nice bed in with two hother men,” she urged. “Good, respectable +men, an’ steady.” + +“But I don’t want to sleep with two other men,” I objected. + +“You don’t ’ave to. There’s three beds in the room, an’ hit’s not a +very small room.” + +“How much?” I demanded. + +“’Arf a crown a week, two an’ six, to a regular lodger. You’ll fancy +the men, I’m sure. One works in the ware’ouse, an’ ’e’s been with me +two years now. An’ the hother’s bin with me six—six years, sir, an’ two +months comin’ nex’ Saturday. ’E’s a scene-shifter,” she went on. “A +steady, respectable man, never missin’ a night’s work in the time ’e’s +bin with me. An’ ’e likes the ’ouse; ’e says as it’s the best ’e can do +in the w’y of lodgin’s. I board ’im, an’ the hother lodgers too.” + +“I suppose he’s saving money right along,” I insinuated innocently. + +“Bless you, no! Nor can ’e do as well helsewhere with ’is money.” + +And I thought of my own spacious West, with room under its sky and +unlimited air for a thousand Londons; and here was this man, a steady +and reliable man, never missing a night’s work, frugal and honest, +lodging in one room with two other men, paying two dollars and a half +per month for it, and out of his experience adjudging it to be the best +he could do! And here was I, on the strength of the ten shillings in my +pocket, able to enter in with my rags and take up my bed with him. The +human soul is a lonely thing, but it must be very lonely sometimes when +there are three beds to a room, and casuals with ten shillings are +admitted. + +“How long have you been here?” I asked. + +“Thirteen years, sir; an’ don’t you think you’ll fancy the lodgin’?” + +The while she talked she was shuffling ponderously about the small +kitchen in which she cooked the food for her lodgers who were also +boarders. When I first entered, she had been hard at work, nor had she +let up once throughout the conversation. Undoubtedly she was a busy +woman. “Up at half-past five,” “to bed the last thing at night,” +“workin’ fit ter drop,” thirteen years of it, and for reward, grey +hairs, frowzy clothes, stooped shoulders, slatternly figure, unending +toil in a foul and noisome coffee-house that faced on an alley ten feet +between the walls, and a waterside environment that was ugly and +sickening, to say the least. + +“You’ll be hin hagain to ’ave a look?” she questioned wistfully, as I +went out of the door. + +And as I turned and looked at her, I realized to the full the deeper +truth underlying that very wise old maxim: “Virtue is its own reward.” + +I went back to her. “Have you ever taken a vacation?” I asked. + +“Vycytion!” + +“A trip to the country for a couple of days, fresh air, a day off, you +know, a rest.” + +“Lor’ lumme!” she laughed, for the first time stopping from her work. +“A vycytion, eh? for the likes o’ me? Just fancy, now!—Mind yer +feet!”—this last sharply, and to me, as I stumbled over the rotten +threshold. + +Down near the West India Dock I came upon a young fellow staring +disconsolately at the muddy water. A fireman’s cap was pulled down +across his eyes, and the fit and sag of his clothes whispered +unmistakably of the sea. + +“Hello, mate,” I greeted him, sparring for a beginning. “Can you tell +me the way to Wapping?” + +“Worked yer way over on a cattle boat?” he countered, fixing my +nationality on the instant. + +And thereupon we entered upon a talk that extended itself to a +public-house and a couple of pints of “arf an’ arf.” This led to closer +intimacy, so that when I brought to light all of a shilling’s worth of +coppers (ostensibly my all), and put aside sixpence for a bed, and +sixpence for more arf an’ arf, he generously proposed that we drink up +the whole shilling. + +“My mate, ’e cut up rough las’ night,” he explained. “An’ the bobbies +got ’m, so you can bunk in wi’ me. Wotcher say?” + +I said yes, and by the time we had soaked ourselves in a whole +shilling’s worth of beer, and slept the night on a miserable bed in a +miserable den, I knew him pretty fairly for what he was. And that in +one respect he was representative of a large body of the lower-class +London workman, my later experience substantiates. + +He was London-born, his father a fireman and a drinker before him. As a +child, his home was the streets and the docks. He had never learned to +read, and had never felt the need for it—a vain and useless +accomplishment, he held, at least for a man of his station in life. + +He had had a mother and numerous squalling brothers and sisters, all +crammed into a couple of rooms and living on poorer and less regular +food than he could ordinarily rustle for himself. In fact, he never +went home except at periods when he was unfortunate in procuring his +own food. Petty pilfering and begging along the streets and docks, a +trip or two to sea as mess-boy, a few trips more as coal-trimmer, and +then a full-fledged fireman, he had reached the top of his life. + +And in the course of this he had also hammered out a philosophy of +life, an ugly and repulsive philosophy, but withal a very logical and +sensible one from his point of view. When I asked him what he lived +for, he immediately answered, “Booze.” A voyage to sea (for a man must +live and get the wherewithal), and then the paying off and the big +drunk at the end. After that, haphazard little drunks, sponged in the +“pubs” from mates with a few coppers left, like myself, and when +sponging was played out another trip to sea and a repetition of the +beastly cycle. + +“But women,” I suggested, when he had finished proclaiming booze the +sole end of existence. + +“Wimmen!” He thumped his pot upon the bar and orated eloquently. +“Wimmen is a thing my edication ’as learnt me t’ let alone. It don’t +pay, matey; it don’t pay. Wot’s a man like me want o’ wimmen, eh? jest +you tell me. There was my mar, she was enough, a-bangin’ the kids about +an’ makin’ the ole man mis’rable when ’e come ’ome, w’ich was seldom, I +grant. An’ fer w’y? Becos o’ mar! She didn’t make ’is ’ome ’appy, that +was w’y. Then, there’s the other wimmen, ’ow do they treat a pore +stoker with a few shillin’s in ’is trouseys? A good drunk is wot ’e’s +got in ’is pockits, a good long drunk, an’ the wimmen skin ’im out of +his money so quick ’e ain’t ’ad ’ardly a glass. I know. I’ve ’ad my +fling, an’ I know wot’s wot. An’ I tell you, where’s wimmen is +trouble—screechin’ an’ carryin’ on, fightin’, cuttin’, bobbies, +magistrates, an’ a month’s ’ard labour back of it all, an’ no pay-day +when you come out.” + +“But a wife and children,” I insisted. “A home of your own, and all +that. Think of it, back from a voyage, little children climbing on your +knee, and the wife happy and smiling, and a kiss for you when she lays +the table, and a kiss all round from the babies when they go to bed, +and the kettle singing and the long talk afterwards of where you’ve +been and what you’ve seen, and of her and all the little happenings at +home while you’ve been away, and—” + +“Garn!” he cried, with a playful shove of his fist on my shoulder. +“Wot’s yer game, eh? A missus kissin’ an’ kids clim’in’, an’ kettle +singin’, all on four poun’ ten a month w’en you ’ave a ship, an’ four +nothin’ w’en you ’aven’t. I’ll tell you wot I’d get on four poun’ ten—a +missus rowin’, kids squallin’, no coal t’ make the kettle sing, an’ the +kettle up the spout, that’s wot I’d get. Enough t’ make a bloke +bloomin’ well glad to be back t’ sea. A missus! Wot for? T’ make you +mis’rable? Kids? Jest take my counsel, matey, an’ don’t ’ave ’em. Look +at me! I can ’ave my beer w’en I like, an’ no blessed missus an’ kids +a-crying for bread. I’m ’appy, I am, with my beer an’ mates like you, +an’ a good ship comin’, an’ another trip to sea. So I say, let’s ’ave +another pint. Arf an’ arf’s good enough for me.” + +Without going further with the speech of this young fellow of +two-and-twenty, I think I have sufficiently indicated his philosophy of +life and the underlying economic reason for it. Home life he had never +known. The word “home” aroused nothing but unpleasant associations. In +the low wages of his father, and of other men in the same walk in life, +he found sufficient reason for branding wife and children as +encumbrances and causes of masculine misery. An unconscious hedonist, +utterly unmoral and materialistic, he sought the greatest possible +happiness for himself, and found it in drink. + +A young sot; a premature wreck; physical inability to do a stoker’s +work; the gutter or the workhouse; and the end—he saw it all as clearly +as I, but it held no terrors for him. From the moment of his birth, all +the forces of his environment had tended to harden him, and he viewed +his wretched, inevitable future with a callousness and unconcern I +could not shake. + +And yet he was not a bad man. He was not inherently vicious and brutal. +He had normal mentality, and a more than average physique. His eyes +were blue and round, shaded by long lashes, and wide apart. And there +was a laugh in them, and a fund of humour behind. The brow and general +features were good, the mouth and lips sweet, though already developing +a harsh twist. The chin was weak, but not too weak; I have seen men +sitting in the high places with weaker. + +His head was shapely, and so gracefully was it poised upon a perfect +neck that I was not surprised by his body that night when he stripped +for bed. I have seen many men strip, in gymnasium and training +quarters, men of good blood and upbringing, but I have never seen one +who stripped to better advantage than this young sot of two-and-twenty, +this young god doomed to rack and ruin in four or five short years, and +to pass hence without posterity to receive the splendid heritage it was +his to bequeath. + +It seemed sacrilege to waste such life, and yet I was forced to confess +that he was right in not marrying on four pounds ten in London Town. +Just as the scene-shifter was happier in making both ends meet in a +room shared with two other men, than he would have been had he packed a +feeble family along with a couple of men into a cheaper room, and +failed in making both ends meet. + +And day by day I became convinced that not only is it unwise, but it is +criminal for the people of the Abyss to marry. They are the stones by +the builder rejected. There is no place for them, in the social fabric, +while all the forces of society drive them downward till they perish. +At the bottom of the Abyss they are feeble, besotted, and imbecile. If +they reproduce, the life is so cheap that perforce it perishes of +itself. The work of the world goes on above them, and they do not care +to take part in it, nor are they able. Moreover, the work of the world +does not need them. There are plenty, far fitter than they, clinging to +the steep slope above, and struggling frantically to slide no more. + +In short, the London Abyss is a vast shambles. Year by year, and decade +after decade, rural England pours in a flood of vigorous strong life, +that not only does not renew itself, but perishes by the third +generation. Competent authorities aver that the London workman whose +parents and grand-parents were born in London is so remarkable a +specimen that he is rarely found. + +Mr. A. C. Pigou has said that the aged poor, and the residuum which +compose the “submerged tenth,” constitute 71 per cent, of the +population of London. Which is to say that last year, and yesterday, +and to-day, at this very moment, 450,000 of these creatures are dying +miserably at the bottom of the social pit called “London.” As to how +they die, I shall take an instance from this morning’s paper. + +SELF-NEGLECT + + +Yesterday Dr. Wynn Westcott held an inquest at Shoreditch, respecting +the death of Elizabeth Crews, aged 77 years, of 32 East Street, +Holborn, who died on Wednesday last. Alice Mathieson stated that she +was landlady of the house where deceased lived. Witness last saw her +alive on the previous Monday. She lived quite alone. Mr. Francis Birch, +relieving officer for the Holborn district, stated that deceased had +occupied the room in question for thirty-five years. When witness was +called, on the 1st, he found the old woman in a terrible state, and the +ambulance and coachman had to be disinfected after the removal. Dr. +Chase Fennell said death was due to blood-poisoning from bed-sores, due +to self-neglect and filthy surroundings, and the jury returned a +verdict to that effect. + + +The most startling thing about this little incident of a woman’s death +is the smug complacency with which the officials looked upon it and +rendered judgment. That an old woman of seventy-seven years of age +should die of SELF-NEGLECT is the most optimistic way possible of +looking at it. It was the old dead woman’s fault that she died, and +having located the responsibility, society goes contentedly on about +its own affairs. + +Of the “submerged tenth” Mr. Pigou has said: “Either through lack of +bodily strength, or of intelligence, or of fibre, or of all three, they +are inefficient or unwilling workers, and consequently unable to +support themselves . . . They are often so degraded in intellect as to +be incapable of distinguishing their right from their left hand, or of +recognising the numbers of their own houses; their bodies are feeble +and without stamina, their affections are warped, and they scarcely +know what family life means.” + +Four hundred and fifty thousand is a whole lot of people. The young +fireman was only one, and it took him some time to say his little say. +I should not like to hear them all talk at once. I wonder if God hears +them? + + + + +CHAPTER V. +THOSE ON THE EDGE + + +My first impression of East London was naturally a general one. Later +the details began to appear, and here and there in the chaos of misery +I found little spots where a fair measure of happiness +reigned—sometimes whole rows of houses in little out-of-the-way +streets, where artisans dwell and where a rude sort of family life +obtains. In the evenings the men can be seen at the doors, pipes in +their mouths and children on their knees, wives gossiping, and laughter +and fun going on. The content of these people is manifestly great, for, +relative to the wretchedness that encompasses them, they are well off. + +But at the best, it is a dull, animal happiness, the content of the +full belly. The dominant note of their lives is materialistic. They are +stupid and heavy, without imagination. The Abyss seems to exude a +stupefying atmosphere of torpor, which wraps about them and deadens +them. Religion passes them by. The Unseen holds for them neither terror +nor delight. They are unaware of the Unseen; and the full belly and the +evening pipe, with their regular “arf an’ arf,” is all they demand, or +dream of demanding, from existence. + +This would not be so bad if it were all; but it is not all. The +satisfied torpor in which they are sunk is the deadly inertia that +precedes dissolution. There is no progress, and with them not to +progress is to fall back and into the Abyss. In their own lives they +may only start to fall, leaving the fall to be completed by their +children and their children’s children. Man always gets less than he +demands from life; and so little do they demand, that the less than +little they get cannot save them. + +At the best, city life is an unnatural life for the human; but the city +life of London is so utterly unnatural that the average workman or +workwoman cannot stand it. Mind and body are sapped by the undermining +influences ceaselessly at work. Moral and physical stamina are broken, +and the good workman, fresh from the soil, becomes in the first city +generation a poor workman; and by the second city generation, devoid of +push and go and initiative, and actually unable physically to perform +the labour his father did, he is well on the way to the shambles at the +bottom of the Abyss. + +If nothing else, the air he breathes, and from which he never escapes, +is sufficient to weaken him mentally and physically, so that he becomes +unable to compete with the fresh virile life from the country hastening +on to London Town to destroy and be destroyed. + +Leaving out the disease germs that fill the air of the East End, +consider but the one item of smoke. Sir William Thiselton-Dyer, curator +of Kew Gardens, has been studying smoke deposits on vegetation, and, +according to his calculations, no less than six tons of solid matter, +consisting of soot and tarry hydrocarbons, are deposited every week on +every quarter of a square mile in and about London. This is equivalent +to twenty-four tons per week to the square mile, or 1248 tons per year +to the square mile. From the cornice below the dome of St. Paul’s +Cathedral was recently taken a solid deposit of crystallised sulphate +of lime. This deposit had been formed by the action of the sulphuric +acid in the atmosphere upon the carbonate of lime in the stone. And +this sulphuric acid in the atmosphere is constantly being breathed by +the London workmen through all the days and nights of their lives. + +It is incontrovertible that the children grow up into rotten adults, +without virility or stamina, a weak-kneed, narrow-chested, listless +breed, that crumples up and goes down in the brute struggle for life +with the invading hordes from the country. The railway men, carriers, +omnibus drivers, corn and timber porters, and all those who require +physical stamina, are largely drawn from the country; while in the +Metropolitan Police there are, roughly, 12,000 country-born as against +3000 London-born. + +So one is forced to conclude that the Abyss is literally a huge +man-killing machine, and when I pass along the little out-of-the-way +streets with the full-bellied artisans at the doors, I am aware of a +greater sorrow for them than for the 450,000 lost and hopeless wretches +dying at the bottom of the pit. They, at least, are dying, that is the +point; while these have yet to go through the slow and preliminary +pangs extending through two and even three generations. + +And yet the quality of the life is good. All human potentialities are +in it. Given proper conditions, it could live through the centuries, +and great men, heroes and masters, spring from it and make the world +better by having lived. + +I talked with a woman who was representative of that type which has +been jerked out of its little out-of-the-way streets and has started on +the fatal fall to the bottom. Her husband was a fitter and a member of +the Engineers’ Union. That he was a poor engineer was evidenced by his +inability to get regular employment. He did not have the energy and +enterprise necessary to obtain or hold a steady position. + +The pair had two daughters, and the four of them lived in a couple of +holes, called “rooms” by courtesy, for which they paid seven shillings +per week. They possessed no stove, managing their cooking on a single +gas-ring in the fireplace. Not being persons of property, they were +unable to obtain an unlimited supply of gas; but a clever machine had +been installed for their benefit. By dropping a penny in the slot, the +gas was forthcoming, and when a penny’s worth had forthcome the supply +was automatically shut off. “A penny gawn in no time,” she explained, +“an’ the cookin’ not arf done!” + +Incipient starvation had been their portion for years. Month in and +month out, they had arisen from the table able and willing to eat more. +And when once on the downward slope, chronic innutrition is an +important factor in sapping vitality and hastening the descent. + +Yet this woman was a hard worker. From 4.30 in the morning till the +last light at night, she said, she had toiled at making cloth +dress-skirts, lined up and with two flounces, for seven shillings a +dozen. Cloth dress-skirts, mark you, lined up with two flounces, for +seven shillings a dozen! This is equal to $1.75 per dozen, or 14.75 +cents per skirt. + +The husband, in order to obtain employment, had to belong to the union, +which collected one shilling and sixpence from him each week. Also, +when strikes were afoot and he chanced to be working, he had at times +been compelled to pay as high as seventeen shillings into the union’s +coffers for the relief fund. + +One daughter, the elder, had worked as green hand for a dressmaker, for +one shilling and sixpence per week—37.5 cents per week, or a fraction +over 5 cents per day. However, when the slack season came she was +discharged, though she had been taken on at such low pay with the +understanding that she was to learn the trade and work up. After that +she had been employed in a bicycle store for three years, for which she +received five shillings per week, walking two miles to her work, and +two back, and being fined for tardiness. + +As far as the man and woman were concerned, the game was played. They +had lost handhold and foothold, and were falling into the pit. But what +of the daughters? Living like swine, enfeebled by chronic innutrition, +being sapped mentally, morally, and physically, what chance have they +to crawl up and out of the Abyss into which they were born falling? + +As I write this, and for an hour past, the air has been made hideous by +a free-for-all, rough-and-tumble fight going on in the yard that is +back to back with my yard. When the first sounds reached me I took it +for the barking and snarling of dogs, and some minutes were required to +convince me that human beings, and women at that, could produce such a +fearful clamour. + +Drunken women fighting! It is not nice to think of; it is far worse to +listen to. Something like this it runs— + +Incoherent babble, shrieked at the top of the lungs of several women; a +lull, in which is heard a child crying and a young girl’s voice +pleading tearfully; a woman’s voice rises, harsh and grating, “You ’it +me! Jest you ’it me!” then, swat! challenge accepted and fight rages +afresh. + +The back windows of the houses commanding the scene are lined with +enthusiastic spectators, and the sound of blows, and of oaths that make +one’s blood run cold, are borne to my ears. Happily, I cannot see the +combatants. + +A lull; “You let that child alone!” child, evidently of few years, +screaming in downright terror. “Awright,” repeated insistently and at +top pitch twenty times straight running; “you’ll git this rock on the +’ead!” and then rock evidently on the head from the shriek that goes +up. + +A lull; apparently one combatant temporarily disabled and being +resuscitated; child’s voice audible again, but now sunk to a lower note +of terror and growing exhaustion. + +Voices begin to go up the scale, something like this:— + +“Yes?” + +“Yes!” + +“Yes?” + +“Yes!” + +“Yes?” + +“Yes!” + +“Yes?” + +“Yes!” + +Sufficient affirmation on both sides, conflict again precipitated. One +combatant gets overwhelming advantage, and follows it up from the way +the other combatant screams bloody murder. Bloody murder gurgles and +dies out, undoubtedly throttled by a strangle hold. + +Entrance of new voices; a flank attack; strangle hold suddenly broken +from the way bloody murder goes up half an octave higher than before; +general hullaballoo, everybody fighting. + +Lull; new voice, young girl’s, “I’m goin’ ter tyke my mother’s part;” +dialogue, repeated about five times, “I’ll do as I like, blankety, +blank, blank!” “I’d like ter see yer, blankety, blank, blank!” renewed +conflict, mothers, daughters, everybody, during which my landlady calls +her young daughter in from the back steps, while I wonder what will be +the effect of all that she has heard upon her moral fibre. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. +FRYING-PAN ALLEY AND A GLIMPSE OF INFERNO + + +Three of us walked down Mile End Road, and one was a hero. He was a +slender lad of nineteen, so slight and frail, in fact, that, like Fra +Lippo Lippi, a puff of wind might double him up and turn him over. He +was a burning young socialist, in the first throes of enthusiasm and +ripe for martyrdom. As platform speaker or chairman he had taken an +active and dangerous part in the many indoor and outdoor pro-Boer +meetings which have vexed the serenity of Merry England these several +years back. Little items he had been imparting to me as he walked +along; of being mobbed in parks and on tram-cars; of climbing on the +platform to lead the forlorn hope, when brother speaker after brother +speaker had been dragged down by the angry crowd and cruelly beaten; of +a siege in a church, where he and three others had taken sanctuary, and +where, amid flying missiles and the crashing of stained glass, they had +fought off the mob till rescued by platoons of constables; of pitched +and giddy battles on stairways, galleries, and balconies; of smashed +windows, collapsed stairways, wrecked lecture halls, and broken heads +and bones—and then, with a regretful sigh, he looked at me and said: +“How I envy you big, strong men! I’m such a little mite I can’t do much +when it comes to fighting.” + +And I, walking head and shoulders above my two companions, remembered +my own husky West, and the stalwart men it had been my custom, in turn, +to envy there. Also, as I looked at the mite of a youth with the heart +of a lion, I thought, this is the type that on occasion rears +barricades and shows the world that men have not forgotten how to die. + +But up spoke my other companion, a man of twenty-eight, who eked out a +precarious existence in a sweating den. + +“I’m a ’earty man, I am,” he announced. “Not like the other chaps at my +shop, I ain’t. They consider me a fine specimen of manhood. W’y, d’ ye +know, I weigh ten stone!” + +I was ashamed to tell him that I weighed one hundred and seventy +pounds, or over twelve stone, so I contented myself with taking his +measure. Poor, misshapen little man! His skin an unhealthy colour, body +gnarled and twisted out of all decency, contracted chest, shoulders +bent prodigiously from long hours of toil, and head hanging heavily +forward and out of place! A “’earty man,’ ’e was!” + +“How tall are you?” + +“Five foot two,” he answered proudly; “an’ the chaps at the shop . . . +” + +“Let me see that shop,” I said. + +The shop was idle just then, but I still desired to see it. Passing +Leman Street, we cut off to the left into Spitalfields, and dived into +Frying-pan Alley. A spawn of children cluttered the slimy pavement, for +all the world like tadpoles just turned frogs on the bottom of a dry +pond. In a narrow doorway, so narrow that perforce we stepped over her, +sat a woman with a young babe, nursing at breasts grossly naked and +libelling all the sacredness of motherhood. In the black and narrow +hall behind her we waded through a mess of young life, and essayed an +even narrower and fouler stairway. Up we went, three flights, each +landing two feet by three in area, and heaped with filth and refuse. + +There were seven rooms in this abomination called a house. In six of +the rooms, twenty-odd people, of both sexes and all ages, cooked, ate, +slept, and worked. In size the rooms averaged eight feet by eight, or +possibly nine. The seventh room we entered. It was the den in which +five men “sweated.” It was seven feet wide by eight long, and the table +at which the work was performed took up the major portion of the space. +On this table were five lasts, and there was barely room for the men to +stand to their work, for the rest of the space was heaped with +cardboard, leather, bundles of shoe uppers, and a miscellaneous +assortment of materials used in attaching the uppers of shoes to their +soles. + +In the adjoining room lived a woman and six children. In another vile +hole lived a widow, with an only son of sixteen who was dying of +consumption. The woman hawked sweetmeats on the street, I was told, and +more often failed than not to supply her son with the three quarts of +milk he daily required. Further, this son, weak and dying, did not +taste meat oftener than once a week; and the kind and quality of this +meat cannot possibly be imagined by people who have never watched human +swine eat. + +“The w’y ’e coughs is somethin’ terrible,” volunteered my sweated +friend, referring to the dying boy. “We ’ear ’im ’ere, w’ile we’re +workin’, an’ it’s terrible, I say, terrible!” + +And, what of the coughing and the sweetmeats, I found another menace +added to the hostile environment of the children of the slum. + +My sweated friend, when work was to be had, toiled with four other men +in his eight-by-seven room. In the winter a lamp burned nearly all the +day and added its fumes to the over-loaded air, which was breathed, and +breathed, and breathed again. + +In good times, when there was a rush of work, this man told me that he +could earn as high as “thirty bob a week.”—Thirty shillings! Seven +dollars and a half! + +“But it’s only the best of us can do it,” he qualified. “An’ then we +work twelve, thirteen, and fourteen hours a day, just as fast as we +can. An’ you should see us sweat! Just running from us! If you could +see us, it’d dazzle your eyes—tacks flyin’ out of mouth like from a +machine. Look at my mouth.” + +I looked. The teeth were worn down by the constant friction of the +metallic brads, while they were coal-black and rotten. + +“I clean my teeth,” he added, “else they’d be worse.” + +After he had told me that the workers had to furnish their own tools, +brads, “grindery,” cardboard, rent, light, and what not, it was plain +that his thirty bob was a diminishing quantity. + +“But how long does the rush season last, in which you receive this high +wage of thirty bob?” I asked. + +“Four months,” was the answer; and for the rest of the year, he +informed me, they average from “half a quid” to a “quid” a week, which +is equivalent to from two dollars and a half to five dollars. The +present week was half gone, and he had earned four bob, or one dollar. +And yet I was given to understand that this was one of the better +grades of sweating. + +I looked out of the window, which should have commanded the back yards +of the neighbouring buildings. But there were no back yards, or, +rather, they were covered with one-storey hovels, cowsheds, in which +people lived. The roofs of these hovels were covered with deposits of +filth, in some places a couple of feet deep—the contributions from the +back windows of the second and third storeys. I could make out fish and +meat bones, garbage, pestilential rags, old boots, broken earthenware, +and all the general refuse of a human sty. + +“This is the last year of this trade; they’re getting machines to do +away with us,” said the sweated one mournfully, as we stepped over the +woman with the breasts grossly naked and waded anew through the cheap +young life. + +We next visited the municipal dwellings erected by the London County +Council on the site of the slums where lived Arthur Morrison’s “Child +of the Jago.” While the buildings housed more people than before, it +was much healthier. But the dwellings were inhabited by the +better-class workmen and artisans. The slum people had simply drifted +on to crowd other slums or to form new slums. + +“An’ now,” said the sweated one, the ’earty man who worked so fast as +to dazzle one’s eyes, “I’ll show you one of London’s lungs. This is +Spitalfields Garden.” And he mouthed the word “garden” with scorn. + +The shadow of Christ’s Church falls across Spitalfields Garden, and in +the shadow of Christ’s Church, at three o’clock in the afternoon, I saw +a sight I never wish to see again. There are no flowers in this garden, +which is smaller than my own rose garden at home. Grass only grows +here, and it is surrounded by a sharp-spiked iron fencing, as are all +the parks of London Town, so that homeless men and women may not come +in at night and sleep upon it. + +As we entered the garden, an old woman, between fifty and sixty, passed +us, striding with sturdy intention if somewhat rickety action, with two +bulky bundles, covered with sacking, slung fore and aft upon her. She +was a woman tramp, a houseless soul, too independent to drag her +failing carcass through the workhouse door. Like the snail, she carried +her home with her. In the two sacking-covered bundles were her +household goods, her wardrobe, linen, and dear feminine possessions. + +We went up the narrow gravelled walk. On the benches on either side +arrayed a mass of miserable and distorted humanity, the sight of which +would have impelled Doré to more diabolical flights of fancy than he +ever succeeded in achieving. It was a welter of rags and filth, of all +manner of loathsome skin diseases, open sores, bruises, grossness, +indecency, leering monstrosities, and bestial faces. A chill, raw wind +was blowing, and these creatures huddled there in their rags, sleeping +for the most part, or trying to sleep. Here were a dozen women, ranging +in age from twenty years to seventy. Next a babe, possibly of nine +months, lying asleep, flat on the hard bench, with neither pillow nor +covering, nor with any one looking after it. Next half-a-dozen men, +sleeping bolt upright or leaning against one another in their sleep. In +one place a family group, a child asleep in its sleeping mother’s arms, +and the husband (or male mate) clumsily mending a dilapidated shoe. On +another bench a woman trimming the frayed strips of her rags with a +knife, and another woman, with thread and needle, sewing up rents. +Adjoining, a man holding a sleeping woman in his arms. Farther on, a +man, his clothing caked with gutter mud, asleep, with head in the lap +of a woman, not more than twenty-five years old, and also asleep. + +It was this sleeping that puzzled me. Why were nine out of ten of them +asleep or trying to sleep? But it was not till afterwards that I +learned. _It is a law of the powers that be that the homeless shall not +sleep by night_. On the pavement, by the portico of Christ’s Church, +where the stone pillars rise toward the sky in a stately row, were +whole rows of men lying asleep or drowsing, and all too deep sunk in +torpor to rouse or be made curious by our intrusion. + +“A lung of London,” I said; “nay, an abscess, a great putrescent sore.” + +“Oh, why did you bring me here?” demanded the burning young socialist, +his delicate face white with sickness of soul and stomach sickness. + +“Those women there,” said our guide, “will sell themselves for +thru’pence, or tu’pence, or a loaf of stale bread.” + +He said it with a cheerful sneer. + +But what more he might have said I do not know, for the sick man cried, +“For heaven’s sake let us get out of this.” + + + + +CHAPTER VII. +A WINNER OF THE VICTORIA CROSS + + +I have found that it is not easy to get into the casual ward of the +workhouse. I have made two attempts now, and I shall shortly make a +third. The first time I started out at seven o’clock in the evening +with four shillings in my pocket. Herein I committed two errors. In the +first place, the applicant for admission to the casual ward must be +destitute, and as he is subjected to a rigorous search, he must really +be destitute; and fourpence, much less four shillings, is sufficient +affluence to disqualify him. In the second place, I made the mistake of +tardiness. Seven o’clock in the evening is too late in the day for a +pauper to get a pauper’s bed. + +For the benefit of gently nurtured and innocent folk, let me explain +what a ward is. It is a building where the homeless, bedless, penniless +man, if he be lucky, may _casually_ rest his weary bones, and then work +like a navvy next day to pay for it. + +My second attempt to break into the casual ward began more +auspiciously. I started in the middle of the afternoon, accompanied by +the burning young socialist and another friend, and all I had in my +pocket was thru’pence. They piloted me to the Whitechapel Workhouse, at +which I peered from around a friendly corner. It was a few minutes past +five in the afternoon but already a long and melancholy line was +formed, which strung out around the corner of the building and out of +sight. + +It was a most woeful picture, men and women waiting in the cold grey +end of the day for a pauper’s shelter from the night, and I confess it +almost unnerved me. Like the boy before the dentist’s door, I suddenly +discovered a multitude of reasons for being elsewhere. Some hints of +the struggle going on within must have shown in my face, for one of my +companions said, “Don’t funk; you can do it.” + +Of course I could do it, but I became aware that even thru’pence in my +pocket was too lordly a treasure for such a throng; and, in order that +all invidious distinctions might be removed, I emptied out the coppers. +Then I bade good-bye to my friends, and with my heart going pit-a-pat, +slouched down the street and took my place at the end of the line. +Woeful it looked, this line of poor folk tottering on the steep pitch +to death; how woeful it was I did not dream. + +Next to me stood a short, stout man. Hale and hearty, though aged, +strong-featured, with the tough and leathery skin produced by long +years of sunbeat and weatherbeat, his was the unmistakable sea face and +eyes; and at once there came to me a bit of Kipling’s “Galley Slave”:— + +“By the brand upon my shoulder, by the gall of clinging steel; +By the welt the whips have left me, by the scars that never heal; +By eyes grown old with staring through the sun-wash on the brine, +I am paid in full for service . . . ” + + +How correct I was in my surmise, and how peculiarly appropriate the +verse was, you shall learn. + +“I won’t stand it much longer, I won’t,” he was complaining to the man +on the other side of him. “I’ll smash a windy, a big ’un, an’ get run +in for fourteen days. Then I’ll have a good place to sleep, never fear, +an’ better grub than you get here. Though I’d miss my bit of +baccy”—this as an after-thought, and said regretfully and resignedly. + +“I’ve been out two nights now,” he went on; “wet to the skin night +before last, an’ I can’t stand it much longer. I’m gettin’ old, an’ +some mornin’ they’ll pick me up dead.” + +He whirled with fierce passion on me: “Don’t you ever let yourself grow +old, lad. Die when you’re young, or you’ll come to this. I’m tellin’ +you sure. Seven an’ eighty years am I, an’ served my country like a +man. Three good-conduct stripes and the Victoria Cross, an’ this is +what I get for it. I wish I was dead, I wish I was dead. Can’t come any +too quick for me, I tell you.” + +The moisture rushed into his eyes, but, before the other man could +comfort him, he began to hum a lilting sea song as though there was no +such thing as heartbreak in the world. + +Given encouragement, this is the story he told while waiting in line at +the workhouse after two nights of exposure in the streets. + +As a boy he had enlisted in the British navy, and for two score years +and more served faithfully and well. Names, dates, commanders, ports, +ships, engagements, and battles, rolled from his lips in a steady +stream, but it is beyond me to remember them all, for it is not quite +in keeping to take notes at the poorhouse door. He had been through the +“First War in China,” as he termed it; had enlisted with the East India +Company and served ten years in India; was back in India again, in the +English navy, at the time of the Mutiny; had served in the Burmese War +and in the Crimea; and all this in addition to having fought and toiled +for the English flag pretty well over the rest of the globe. + +Then the thing happened. A little thing, it could only be traced back +to first causes: perhaps the lieutenant’s breakfast had not agreed with +him; or he had been up late the night before; or his debts were +pressing; or the commander had spoken brusquely to him. The point is, +that on this particular day the lieutenant was irritable. The sailor, +with others, was “setting up” the fore rigging. + +Now, mark you, the sailor had been over forty years in the navy, had +three good-conduct stripes, and possessed the Victoria Cross for +distinguished service in battle; so he could not have been such an +altogether bad sort of a sailorman. The lieutenant was irritable; the +lieutenant called him a name—well, not a nice sort of name. It referred +to his mother. When I was a boy it was our boys’ code to fight like +little demons should such an insult be given our mothers; and many men +have died in my part of the world for calling other men this name. + +However, the lieutenant called the sailor this name. At that moment it +chanced the sailor had an iron lever or bar in his hands. He promptly +struck the lieutenant over the head with it, knocking him out of the +rigging and overboard. + +And then, in the man’s own words: “I saw what I had done. I knew the +Regulations, and I said to myself, ‘It’s all up with you, Jack, my boy; +so here goes.’ An’ I jumped over after him, my mind made up to drown us +both. An’ I’d ha’ done it, too, only the pinnace from the flagship was +just comin’ alongside. Up we came to the top, me a hold of him an’ +punchin’ him. This was what settled for me. If I hadn’t ben strikin’ +him, I could have claimed that, seein’ what I had done, I jumped over +to save him.” + +Then came the court-martial, or whatever name a sea trial goes by. He +recited his sentence, word for word, as though memorised and gone over +in bitterness many times. And here it is, for the sake of discipline +and respect to officers not always gentlemen, the punishment of a man +who was guilty of manhood. To be reduced to the rank of ordinary +seaman; to be debarred all prize-money due him; to forfeit all rights +to pension; to resign the Victoria Cross; to be discharged from the +navy with a good character (this being his first offence); to receive +fifty lashes; and to serve two years in prison. + +“I wish I had drowned that day, I wish to God I had,” he concluded, as +the line moved up and we passed around the corner. + +At last the door came in sight, through which the paupers were being +admitted in bunches. And here I learned a surprising thing: _this being +Wednesday, none of us would be released till Friday morning_. +Furthermore, and oh, you tobacco users, take heed: _we would not be +permitted to take in any tobacco_. This we would have to surrender as +we entered. Sometimes, I was told, it was returned on leaving and +sometimes it was destroyed. + +The old man-of-war’s man gave me a lesson. Opening his pouch, he +emptied the tobacco (a pitiful quantity) into a piece of paper. This, +snugly and flatly wrapped, went down his sock inside his shoe. Down +went my piece of tobacco inside my sock, for forty hours without +tobacco is a hardship all tobacco users will understand. + +Again and again the line moved up, and we were slowly but surely +approaching the wicket. At the moment we happened to be standing on an +iron grating, and a man appearing underneath, the old sailor called +down to him,— + +“How many more do they want?” + +“Twenty-four,” came the answer. + +We looked ahead anxiously and counted. Thirty-four were ahead of us. +Disappointment and consternation dawned upon the faces about me. It is +not a nice thing, hungry and penniless, to face a sleepless night in +the streets. But we hoped against hope, till, when ten stood outside +the wicket, the porter turned us away. + +“Full up,” was what he said, as he banged the door. + +Like a flash, for all his eighty-seven years, the old sailor was +speeding away on the desperate chance of finding shelter elsewhere. I +stood and debated with two other men, wise in the knowledge of casual +wards, as to where we should go. They decided on the Poplar Workhouse, +three miles away, and we started off. + +As we rounded the corner, one of them said, “I could a’ got in ’ere +to-day. I come by at one o’clock, an’ the line was beginnin’ to form +then—pets, that’s what they are. They let ’m in, the same ones, night +upon night.” + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. +THE CARTER AND THE CARPENTER + + +The Carter, with his clean-cut face, chin beard, and shaved upper lip, +I should have taken in the United States for anything from a master +workman to a well-to-do farmer. The Carpenter—well, I should have taken +him for a carpenter. He looked it, lean and wiry, with shrewd, +observant eyes, and hands that had grown twisted to the handles of +tools through forty-seven years’ work at the trade. The chief +difficulty with these men was that they were old, and that their +children, instead of growing up to take care of them, had died. Their +years had told on them, and they had been forced out of the whirl of +industry by the younger and stronger competitors who had taken their +places. + +These two men, turned away from the casual ward of Whitechapel +Workhouse, were bound with me for Poplar Workhouse. Not much of a show, +they thought, but to chance it was all that remained to us. It was +Poplar, or the streets and night. Both men were anxious for a bed, for +they were “about gone,” as they phrased it. The Carter, fifty-eight +years of age, had spent the last three nights without shelter or sleep, +while the Carpenter, sixty-five years of age, had been out five nights. + +But, O dear, soft people, full of meat and blood, with white beds and +airy rooms waiting you each night, how can I make you know what it is +to suffer as you would suffer if you spent a weary night on London’s +streets! Believe me, you would think a thousand centuries had come and +gone before the east paled into dawn; you would shiver till you were +ready to cry aloud with the pain of each aching muscle; and you would +marvel that you could endure so much and live. Should you rest upon a +bench, and your tired eyes close, depend upon it the policeman would +rouse you and gruffly order you to “move on.” You may rest upon the +bench, and benches are few and far between; but if rest means sleep, on +you must go, dragging your tired body through the endless streets. +Should you, in desperate slyness, seek some forlorn alley or dark +passageway and lie down, the omnipresent policeman will rout you out +just the same. It is his business to rout you out. It is a law of the +powers that be that you shall be routed out. + +But when the dawn came, the nightmare over, you would hale you home to +refresh yourself, and until you died you would tell the story of your +adventure to groups of admiring friends. It would grow into a mighty +story. Your little eight-hour night would become an Odyssey and you a +Homer. + +Not so with these homeless ones who walked to Poplar Workhouse with me. +And there are thirty-five thousand of them, men and women, in London +Town this night. Please don’t remember it as you go to bed; if you are +as soft as you ought to be you may not rest so well as usual. But for +old men of sixty, seventy, and eighty, ill-fed, with neither meat nor +blood, to greet the dawn unrefreshed, and to stagger through the day in +mad search for crusts, with relentless night rushing down upon them +again, and to do this five nights and days—O dear, soft people, full of +meat and blood, how can you ever understand? + +I walked up Mile End Road between the Carter and the Carpenter. Mile +End Road is a wide thoroughfare, cutting the heart of East London, and +there were tens of thousands of people abroad on it. I tell you this so +that you may fully appreciate what I shall describe in the next +paragraph. As I say, we walked along, and when they grew bitter and +cursed the land, I cursed with them, cursed as an American waif would +curse, stranded in a strange and terrible land. And, as I tried to lead +them to believe, and succeeded in making them believe, they took me for +a “seafaring man,” who had spent his money in riotous living, lost his +clothes (no unusual occurrence with seafaring men ashore), and was +temporarily broke while looking for a ship. This accounted for my +ignorance of English ways in general and casual wards in particular, +and my curiosity concerning the same. + +The Carter was hard put to keep the pace at which we walked (he told me +that he had eaten nothing that day), but the Carpenter, lean and +hungry, his grey and ragged overcoat flapping mournfully in the breeze, +swung on in a long and tireless stride which reminded me strongly of +the plains wolf or coyote. Both kept their eyes upon the pavement as +they walked and talked, and every now and then one or the other would +stoop and pick something up, never missing the stride the while. I +thought it was cigar and cigarette stumps they were collecting, and for +some time took no notice. Then I did notice. + +_From the slimy, spittle-drenched, sidewalk, they were picking up bits +of orange peel, apple skin, and grape stems, and, they were eating +them. The pits of greengage plums they cracked between their teeth for +the kernels inside. They picked up stray bits of bread the size of +peas, apple cores so black and dirty one would not take them to be +apple cores, and these things these two men took into their mouths, and +chewed them, and swallowed them; and this, between six and seven +o’clock in the evening of August 20, year of our Lord 1902, in the +heart of the greatest, wealthiest, and most powerful empire the world +has ever seen_. + +These two men talked. They were not fools, they were merely old. And, +naturally, their guts a-reek with pavement offal, they talked of bloody +revolution. They talked as anarchists, fanatics, and madmen would talk. +And who shall blame them? In spite of my three good meals that day, and +the snug bed I could occupy if I wished, and my social philosophy, and +my evolutionary belief in the slow development and metamorphosis of +things—in spite of all this, I say, I felt impelled to talk rot with +them or hold my tongue. Poor fools! Not of their sort are revolutions +bred. And when they are dead and dust, which will be shortly, other +fools will talk bloody revolution as they gather offal from the +spittle-drenched sidewalk along Mile End Road to Poplar Workhouse. + +Being a foreigner, and a young man, the Carter and the Carpenter +explained things to me and advised me. Their advice, by the way, was +brief, and to the point; it was to get out of the country. “As fast as +God’ll let me,” I assured them; “I’ll hit only the high places, till +you won’t be able to see my trail for smoke.” They felt the force of my +figures, rather than understood them, and they nodded their heads +approvingly. + +“Actually make a man a criminal against ’is will,” said the Carpenter. +“’Ere I am, old, younger men takin’ my place, my clothes gettin’ +shabbier an’ shabbier, an’ makin’ it ’arder every day to get a job. I +go to the casual ward for a bed. Must be there by two or three in the +afternoon or I won’t get in. You saw what happened to-day. What chance +does that give me to look for work? S’pose I do get into the casual +ward? Keep me in all day to-morrow, let me out mornin’ o’ next day. +What then? The law sez I can’t get in another casual ward that night +less’n ten miles distant. Have to hurry an’ walk to be there in time +that day. What chance does that give me to look for a job? S’pose I +don’t walk. S’pose I look for a job? In no time there’s night come, an’ +no bed. No sleep all night, nothin’ to eat, what shape am I in in the +mornin’ to look for work? Got to make up my sleep in the park somehow” +(the vision of Christ’s Church, Spitalfield, was strong on me) “an’ get +something to eat. An’ there I am! Old, down, an’ no chance to get up.” + +“Used to be a toll-gate ’ere,” said the Carter. “Many’s the time I’ve +paid my toll ’ere in my cartin’ days.” + +“I’ve ’ad three ’a’penny rolls in two days,” the Carpenter announced, +after a long pause in the conversation. “Two of them I ate yesterday, +an’ the third to-day,” he concluded, after another long pause. + +“I ain’t ’ad anything to-day,” said the Carter. “An’ I’m fagged out. My +legs is hurtin’ me something fearful.” + +“The roll you get in the ‘spike’ is that ’ard you can’t eat it nicely +with less’n a pint of water,” said the Carpenter, for my benefit. And, +on asking him what the “spike” was, he answered, “The casual ward. It’s +a cant word, you know.” + +But what surprised me was that he should have the word “cant” in his +vocabulary, a vocabulary that I found was no mean one before we parted. + +I asked them what I might expect in the way of treatment, if we +succeeded in getting into the Poplar Workhouse, and between them I was +supplied with much information. Having taken a cold bath on entering, I +would be given for supper six ounces of bread and “three parts of +skilly.” “Three parts” means three-quarters of a pint, and “skilly” is +a fluid concoction of three quarts of oatmeal stirred into three +buckets and a half of hot water. + +“Milk and sugar, I suppose, and a silver spoon?” I queried. + +“No fear. Salt’s what you’ll get, an’ I’ve seen some places where you’d +not get any spoon. ’Old ’er up an’ let ’er run down, that’s ’ow they do +it.” + +“You do get good skilly at ’Ackney,” said the Carter. + +“Oh, wonderful skilly, that,” praised the Carpenter, and each looked +eloquently at the other. + +“Flour an’ water at St. George’s in the East,” said the Carter. + +The Carpenter nodded. He had tried them all. + +“Then what?” I demanded + +And I was informed that I was sent directly to bed. “Call you at half +after five in the mornin’, an’ you get up an’ take a ‘sluice’—if +there’s any soap. Then breakfast, same as supper, three parts o’ skilly +an’ a six-ounce loaf.” + +“’Tisn’t always six ounces,” corrected the Carter. + +“’Tisn’t, no; an’ often that sour you can ’ardly eat it. When first I +started I couldn’t eat the skilly nor the bread, but now I can eat my +own an’ another man’s portion.” + +“I could eat three other men’s portions,” said the Carter. “I ’aven’t +’ad a bit this blessed day.” + +“Then what?” + +“Then you’ve got to do your task, pick four pounds of oakum, or clean +an’ scrub, or break ten to eleven hundredweight o’ stones. I don’t ’ave +to break stones; I’m past sixty, you see. They’ll make you do it, +though. You’re young an’ strong.” + +“What I don’t like,” grumbled the Carter, “is to be locked up in a cell +to pick oakum. It’s too much like prison.” + +“But suppose, after you’ve had your night’s sleep, you refuse to pick +oakum, or break stones, or do any work at all?” I asked. + +“No fear you’ll refuse the second time; they’ll run you in,” answered +the Carpenter. “Wouldn’t advise you to try it on, my lad.” + +“Then comes dinner,” he went on. “Eight ounces of bread, one and a arf +ounces of cheese, an’ cold water. Then you finish your task an’ ’ave +supper, same as before, three parts o’ skilly an’ six ounces o’ bread. +Then to bed, six o’clock, an’ next mornin’ you’re turned loose, +provided you’ve finished your task.” + +We had long since left Mile End Road, and after traversing a gloomy +maze of narrow, winding streets, we came to Poplar Workhouse. On a low +stone wall we spread our handkerchiefs, and each in his handkerchief +put all his worldly possessions, with the exception of the “bit o’ +baccy” down his sock. And then, as the last light was fading from the +drab-coloured sky, the wind blowing cheerless and cold, we stood, with +our pitiful little bundles in our hands, a forlorn group at the +workhouse door. + +Three working girls came along, and one looked pityingly at me; as she +passed I followed her with my eyes, and she still looked pityingly back +at me. The old men she did not notice. Dear Christ, she pitied me, +young and vigorous and strong, but she had no pity for the two old men +who stood by my side! She was a young woman, and I was a young man, and +what vague sex promptings impelled her to pity me put her sentiment on +the lowest plane. Pity for old men is an altruistic feeling, and +besides, the workhouse door is the accustomed place for old men. So she +showed no pity for them, only for me, who deserved it least or not at +all. Not in honour do grey hairs go down to the grave in London Town. + +On one side the door was a bell handle, on the other side a press +button. + +“Ring the bell,” said the Carter to me. + +And just as I ordinarily would at anybody’s door, I pulled out the +handle and rang a peal. + +“Oh! Oh!” they cried in one terrified voice. “Not so ’ard!” + +I let go, and they looked reproachfully at me, as though I had +imperilled their chance for a bed and three parts of skilly. Nobody +came. Luckily it was the wrong bell, and I felt better. + +“Press the button,” I said to the Carpenter. + +“No, no, wait a bit,” the Carter hurriedly interposed. + +From all of which I drew the conclusion that a poorhouse porter, who +commonly draws a yearly salary of from seven to nine pounds, is a very +finicky and important personage, and cannot be treated too fastidiously +by—paupers. + +So we waited, ten times a decent interval, when the Carter stealthily +advanced a timid forefinger to the button, and gave it the faintest, +shortest possible push. I have looked at waiting men where life or +death was in the issue; but anxious suspense showed less plainly on +their faces than it showed on the faces of these two men as they waited +on the coming of the porter. + +He came. He barely looked at us. “Full up,” he said and shut the door. + +“Another night of it,” groaned the Carpenter. In the dim light the +Carter looked wan and grey. + +Indiscriminate charity is vicious, say the professional +philanthropists. Well, I resolved to be vicious. + +“Come on; get your knife out and come here,” I said to the Carter, +drawing him into a dark alley. + +He glared at me in a frightened manner, and tried to draw back. +Possibly he took me for a latter-day Jack-the-Ripper, with a penchant +for elderly male paupers. Or he may have thought I was inveigling him +into the commission of some desperate crime. Anyway, he was frightened. + +It will be remembered, at the outset, that I sewed a pound inside my +stoker’s singlet under the armpit. This was my emergency fund, and I +was now called upon to use it for the first time. + +Not until I had gone through the acts of a contortionist, and shown the +round coin sewed in, did I succeed in getting the Carter’s help. Even +then his hand was trembling so that I was afraid he would cut me +instead of the stitches, and I was forced to take the knife away and do +it myself. Out rolled the gold piece, a fortune in their hungry eyes; +and away we stampeded for the nearest coffee-house. + +Of course I had to explain to them that I was merely an investigator, a +social student, seeking to find out how the other half lived. And at +once they shut up like clams. I was not of their kind; my speech had +changed, the tones of my voice were different, in short, I was a +superior, and they were superbly class conscious. + +“What will you have?” I asked, as the waiter came for the order. + +“Two slices an’ a cup of tea,” meekly said the Carter. + +“Two slices an’ a cup of tea,” meekly said the Carpenter. + +Stop a moment, and consider the situation. Here were two men, invited +by me into the coffee-house. They had seen my gold piece, and they +could understand that I was no pauper. One had eaten a ha’penny roll +that day, the other had eaten nothing. And they called for “two slices +an’ a cup of tea!” Each man had given a tu’penny order. “Two slices,” +by the way, means two slices of bread and butter. + +This was the same degraded humility that had characterised their +attitude toward the poorhouse porter. But I wouldn’t have it. Step by +step I increased their order—eggs, rashers of bacon, more eggs, more +bacon, more tea, more slices and so forth—they denying wistfully all +the while that they cared for anything more, and devouring it +ravenously as fast as it arrived. + +“First cup o’ tea I’ve ’ad in a fortnight,” said the Carter. + +“Wonderful tea, that,” said the Carpenter. + +They each drank two pints of it, and I assure you that it was slops. It +resembled tea less than lager beer resembles champagne. Nay, it was +“water-bewitched,” and did not resemble tea at all. + +It was curious, after the first shock, to notice the effect the food +had on them. At first they were melancholy, and talked of the divers +times they had contemplated suicide. The Carter, not a week before, had +stood on the bridge and looked at the water, and pondered the question. +Water, the Carpenter insisted with heat, was a bad route. He, for one, +he knew, would struggle. A bullet was “’andier,” but how under the sun +was he to get hold of a revolver? That was the rub. + +They grew more cheerful as the hot “tea” soaked in, and talked more +about themselves. The Carter had buried his wife and children, with the +exception of one son, who grew to manhood and helped him in his little +business. Then the thing happened. The son, a man of thirty-one, died +of the smallpox. No sooner was this over than the father came down with +fever and went to the hospital for three months. Then he was done for. +He came out weak, debilitated, no strong young son to stand by him, his +little business gone glimmering, and not a farthing. The thing had +happened, and the game was up. No chance for an old man to start again. +Friends all poor and unable to help. He had tried for work when they +were putting up the stands for the first Coronation parade. “An’ I got +fair sick of the answer: ‘No! no! no!’ It rang in my ears at night when +I tried to sleep, always the same, ‘No! no! no!’” Only the past week he +had answered an advertisement in Hackney, and on giving his age was +told, “Oh, too old, too old by far.” + +The Carpenter had been born in the army, where his father had served +twenty-two years. Likewise, his two brothers had gone into the army; +one, troop sergeant-major of the Seventh Hussars, dying in India after +the Mutiny; the other, after nine years under Roberts in the East, had +been lost in Egypt. The Carpenter had not gone into the army, so here +he was, still on the planet. + +“But ’ere, give me your ’and,” he said, ripping open his ragged shirt. +“I’m fit for the anatomist, that’s all. I’m wastin’ away, sir, actually +wastin’ away for want of food. Feel my ribs an’ you’ll see.” + +I put my hand under his shirt and felt. The skin was stretched like +parchment over the bones, and the sensation produced was for all the +world like running one’s hand over a washboard. + +“Seven years o’ bliss I ’ad,” he said. “A good missus and three bonnie +lassies. But they all died. Scarlet fever took the girls inside a +fortnight.” + +“After this, sir,” said the Carter, indicating the spread, and desiring +to turn the conversation into more cheerful channels; “after this, I +wouldn’t be able to eat a workhouse breakfast in the morning.” + +“Nor I,” agreed the Carpenter, and they fell to discussing belly +delights and the fine dishes their respective wives had cooked in the +old days. + +“I’ve gone three days and never broke my fast,” said the Carter. + +“And I, five,” his companion added, turning gloomy with the memory of +it. “Five days once, with nothing on my stomach but a bit of orange +peel, an’ outraged nature wouldn’t stand it, sir, an’ I near died. +Sometimes, walkin’ the streets at night, I’ve ben that desperate I’ve +made up my mind to win the horse or lose the saddle. You know what I +mean, sir—to commit some big robbery. But when mornin’ come, there was +I, too weak from ’unger an’ cold to ’arm a mouse.” + +As their poor vitals warmed to the food, they began to expand and wax +boastful, and to talk politics. I can only say that they talked +politics as well as the average middle-class man, and a great deal +better than some of the middle-class men I have heard. What surprised +me was the hold they had on the world, its geography and peoples, and +on recent and contemporaneous history. As I say, they were not fools, +these two men. They were merely old, and their children had undutifully +failed to grow up and give them a place by the fire. + +One last incident, as I bade them good-bye on the corner, happy with a +couple of shillings in their pockets and the certain prospect of a bed +for the night. Lighting a cigarette, I was about to throw away the +burning match when the Carter reached for it. I proffered him the box, +but he said, “Never mind, won’t waste it, sir.” And while he lighted +the cigarette I had given him, the Carpenter hurried with the filling +of his pipe in order to have a go at the same match. + +“It’s wrong to waste,” said he. + +“Yes,” I said, but I was thinking of the wash-board ribs over which I +had run my hand. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. +THE SPIKE + + +First of all, I must beg forgiveness of my body for the vileness +through which I have dragged it, and forgiveness of my stomach for the +vileness which I have thrust into it. I have been to the spike, and +slept in the spike, and eaten in the spike; also, I have run away from +the spike. + +After my two unsuccessful attempts to penetrate the Whitechapel casual +ward, I started early, and joined the desolate line before three +o’clock in the afternoon. They did not “let in” till six, but at that +early hour I was number twenty, while the news had gone forth that only +twenty-two were to be admitted. By four o’clock there were thirty-four +in line, the last ten hanging on in the slender hope of getting in by +some kind of a miracle. Many more came, looked at the line, and went +away, wise to the bitter fact that the spike would be “full up.” + +Conversation was slack at first, standing there, till the man on one +side of me and the man on the other side of me discovered that they had +been in the smallpox hospital at the same time, though a full house of +sixteen hundred patients had prevented their becoming acquainted. But +they made up for it, discussing and comparing the more loathsome +features of their disease in the most cold-blooded, matter-of-fact way. +I learned that the average mortality was one in six, that one of them +had been in three months and the other three months and a half, and +that they had been “rotten wi’ it.” Whereat my flesh began to creep and +crawl, and I asked them how long they had been out. One had been out +two weeks, and the other three weeks. Their faces were badly pitted +(though each assured the other that this was not so), and further, they +showed me in their hands and under the nails the smallpox “seeds” still +working out. Nay, one of them worked a seed out for my edification, and +pop it went, right out of his flesh into the air. I tried to shrink up +smaller inside my clothes, and I registered a fervent though silent +hope that it had not popped on me. + +In both instances, I found that the smallpox was the cause of their +being “on the doss,” which means on the tramp. Both had been working +when smitten by the disease, and both had emerged from the hospital +“broke,” with the gloomy task before them of hunting for work. So far, +they had not found any, and they had come to the spike for a “rest up” +after three days and nights on the street. + +It seems that not only the man who becomes old is punished for his +involuntary misfortune, but likewise the man who is struck by disease +or accident. Later on, I talked with another man—“Ginger” we called +him—who stood at the head of the line—a sure indication that he had +been waiting since one o’clock. A year before, one day, while in the +employ of a fish dealer, he was carrying a heavy box of fish which was +too much for him. Result: “something broke,” and there was the box on +the ground, and he on the ground beside it. + +At the first hospital, whither he was immediately carried, they said it +was a rupture, reduced the swelling, gave him some vaseline to rub on +it, kept him four hours, and told him to get along. But he was not on +the streets more than two or three hours when he was down on his back +again. This time he went to another hospital and was patched up. But +the point is, the employer did nothing, positively nothing, for the man +injured in his employment, and even refused him “a light job now and +again,” when he came out. As far as Ginger is concerned, he is a broken +man. His only chance to earn a living was by heavy work. He is now +incapable of performing heavy work, and from now until he dies, the +spike, the peg, and the streets are all he can look forward to in the +way of food and shelter. The thing happened—that is all. He put his +back under too great a load of fish, and his chance for happiness in +life was crossed off the books. + +Several men in the line had been to the United States, and they were +wishing that they had remained there, and were cursing themselves for +their folly in ever having left. England had become a prison to them, a +prison from which there was no hope of escape. It was impossible for +them to get away. They could neither scrape together the passage money, +nor get a chance to work their passage. The country was too overrun by +poor devils on that “lay.” + +I was on the seafaring-man-who-had-lost-his-clothes-and-money tack, and +they all condoled with me and gave me much sound advice. To sum it up, +the advice was something like this: To keep out of all places like the +spike. There was nothing good in it for me. To head for the coast and +bend every effort to get away on a ship. To go to work, if possible, +and scrape together a pound or so, with which I might bribe some +steward or underling to give me chance to work my passage. They envied +me my youth and strength, which would sooner or later get me out of the +country. These they no longer possessed. Age and English hardship had +broken them, and for them the game was played and up. + +There was one, however, who was still young, and who, I am sure, will +in the end make it out. He had gone to the United States as a young +fellow, and in fourteen years’ residence the longest period he had been +out of work was twelve hours. He had saved his money, grown too +prosperous, and returned to the mother-country. Now he was standing in +line at the spike. + +For the past two years, he told me, he had been working as a cook. His +hours had been from 7 a.m. to 10.30 p.m., and on Saturday to 12.30 +p.m.—ninety-five hours per week, for which he had received twenty +shillings, or five dollars. + +“But the work and the long hours was killing me,” he said, “and I had +to chuck the job. I had a little money saved, but I spent it living and +looking for another place.” + +This was his first night in the spike, and he had come in only to get +rested. As soon as he emerged, he intended to start for Bristol, a +one-hundred-and-ten-mile walk, where he thought he would eventually get +a ship for the States. + +But the men in the line were not all of this calibre. Some were poor, +wretched beasts, inarticulate and callous, but for all of that, in many +ways very human. I remember a carter, evidently returning home after +the day’s work, stopping his cart before us so that his young hopeful, +who had run to meet him, could climb in. But the cart was big, the +young hopeful little, and he failed in his several attempts to swarm +up. Whereupon one of the most degraded-looking men stepped out of the +line and hoisted him in. Now the virtue and the joy of this act lies in +that it was service of love, not hire. The carter was poor, and the man +knew it; and the man was standing in the spike line, and the carter +knew it; and the man had done the little act, and the carter had +thanked him, even as you and I would have done and thanked. + +Another beautiful touch was that displayed by the “Hopper” and his “ole +woman.” He had been in line about half-an-hour when the “ole woman” +(his mate) came up to him. She was fairly clad, for her class, with a +weather-worn bonnet on her grey head and a sacking-covered bundle in +her arms. As she talked to him, he reached forward, caught the one +stray wisp of the white hair that was flying wild, deftly twirled it +between his fingers, and tucked it back properly behind her ear. From +all of which one may conclude many things. He certainly liked her well +enough to wish her to be neat and tidy. He was proud of her, standing +there in the spike line, and it was his desire that she should look +well in the eyes of the other unfortunates who stood in the spike line. +But last and best, and underlying all these motives, it was a sturdy +affection he bore her; for man is not prone to bother his head over +neatness and tidiness in a woman for whom he does not care, nor is he +likely to be proud of such a woman. + +And I found myself questioning why this man and his mate, hard workers +I knew from their talk, should have to seek a pauper lodging. He had +pride, pride in his old woman and pride in himself. When I asked him +what he thought I, a greenhorn, might expect to earn at “hopping,” he +sized me up, and said that it all depended. Plenty of people were too +slow to pick hops and made a failure of it. A man, to succeed, must use +his head and be quick with his fingers, must be exceeding quick with +his fingers. Now he and his old woman could do very well at it, working +the one bin between them and not going to sleep over it; but then, they +had been at it for years. + +“I ’ad a mate as went down last year,” spoke up a man. “It was ’is fust +time, but ’e come back wi’ two poun’ ten in ’is pockit, an’ ’e was only +gone a month.” + +“There you are,” said the Hopper, a wealth of admiration in his voice. +“’E was quick. ’E was jest nat’rally born to it, ’e was.” + +Two pound ten—twelve dollars and a half—for a month’s work when one is +“jest nat’rally born to it!” And in addition, sleeping out without +blankets and living the Lord knows how. There are moments when I am +thankful that I was not “jest nat’rally born” a genius for anything, +not even hop-picking, + +In the matter of getting an outfit for “the hops,” the Hopper gave me +some sterling advice, to which same give heed, you soft and tender +people, in case you should ever be stranded in London Town. + +“If you ain’t got tins an’ cookin’ things, all as you can get’ll be +bread and cheese. No bloomin’ good that! You must ’ave ’ot tea, an’ +wegetables, an’ a bit o’ meat, now an’ again, if you’re goin’ to do +work as is work. Cawn’t do it on cold wittles. Tell you wot you do, +lad. Run around in the mornin’ an’ look in the dust pans. You’ll find +plenty o’ tins to cook in. Fine tins, wonderful good some o’ them. Me +an’ the ole woman got ours that way.” (He pointed at the bundle she +held, while she nodded proudly, beaming on me with good-nature and +consciousness of success and prosperity.) “This overcoat is as good as +a blanket,” he went on, advancing the skirt of it that I might feel its +thickness. “An’ ’oo knows, I may find a blanket before long.” + +Again the old woman nodded and beamed, this time with the dead +certainty that he _would_ find a blanket before long. + +“I call it a ’oliday, ’oppin’,” he concluded rapturously. “A tidy way +o’ gettin’ two or three pounds together an’ fixin’ up for winter. The +only thing I don’t like”—and here was the rift within the lute—“is +paddin’ the ’oof down there.” + +It was plain the years were telling on this energetic pair, and while +they enjoyed the quick work with the fingers, “paddin’ the ’oof,” which +is walking, was beginning to bear heavily upon them. And I looked at +their grey hairs, and ahead into the future ten years, and wondered how +it would be with them. + +I noticed another man and his old woman join the line, both of them +past fifty. The woman, because she was a woman, was admitted into the +spike; but he was too late, and, separated from his mate, was turned +away to tramp the streets all night. + +The street on which we stood, from wall to wall, was barely twenty feet +wide. The sidewalks were three feet wide. It was a residence street. At +least workmen and their families existed in some sort of fashion in the +houses across from us. And each day and every day, from one in the +afternoon till six, our ragged spike line is the principal feature of +the view commanded by their front doors and windows. One workman sat in +his door directly opposite us, taking his rest and a breath of air +after the toil of the day. His wife came to chat with him. The doorway +was too small for two, so she stood up. Their babes sprawled before +them. And here was the spike line, less than a score of feet +away—neither privacy for the workman, nor privacy for the pauper. About +our feet played the children of the neighbourhood. To them our presence +was nothing unusual. We were not an intrusion. We were as natural and +ordinary as the brick walls and stone curbs of their environment. They +had been born to the sight of the spike line, and all their brief days +they had seen it. + +At six o’clock the line moved up, and we were admitted in groups of +three. Name, age, occupation, place of birth, condition of destitution, +and the previous night’s “doss,” were taken with lightning-like +rapidity by the superintendent; and as I turned I was startled by a +man’s thrusting into my hand something that felt like a brick, and +shouting into my ear, “any knives, matches, or tobacco?” “No, sir,” I +lied, as lied every man who entered. As I passed downstairs to the +cellar, I looked at the brick in my hand, and saw that by doing +violence to the language it might be called “bread.” By its weight and +hardness it certainly must have been unleavened. + +The light was very dim down in the cellar, and before I knew it some +other man had thrust a pannikin into my other hand. Then I stumbled on +to a still darker room, where were benches and tables and men. The +place smelled vilely, and the sombre gloom, and the mumble of voices +from out of the obscurity, made it seem more like some anteroom to the +infernal regions. + +Most of the men were suffering from tired feet, and they prefaced the +meal by removing their shoes and unbinding the filthy rags with which +their feet were wrapped. This added to the general noisomeness, while +it took away from my appetite. + +In fact, I found that I had made a mistake. I had eaten a hearty dinner +five hours before, and to have done justice to the fare before me I +should have fasted for a couple of days. The pannikin contained skilly, +three-quarters of a pint, a mixture of Indian corn and hot water. The +men were dipping their bread into heaps of salt scattered over the +dirty tables. I attempted the same, but the bread seemed to stick in my +mouth, and I remembered the words of the Carpenter, “You need a pint of +water to eat the bread nicely.” + +I went over into a dark corner where I had observed other men going and +found the water. Then I returned and attacked the skilly. It was coarse +of texture, unseasoned, gross, and bitter. This bitterness which +lingered persistently in the mouth after the skilly had passed on, I +found especially repulsive. I struggled manfully, but was mastered by +my qualms, and half-a-dozen mouthfuls of skilly and bread was the +measure of my success. The man beside me ate his own share, and mine to +boot, scraped the pannikins, and looked hungrily for more. + +“I met a ‘towny,’ and he stood me too good a dinner,” I explained. + +“An’ I ’aven’t ’ad a bite since yesterday mornin’,” he replied. + +“How about tobacco?” I asked. “Will the bloke bother with a fellow +now?” + +“Oh no,” he answered me. “No bloomin’ fear. This is the easiest spike +goin’. Y’oughto see some of them. Search you to the skin.” + +The pannikins scraped clean, conversation began to spring up. “This +super’tendent ’ere is always writin’ to the papers ’bout us mugs,” said +the man on the other side of me. + +“What does he say?” I asked. + +“Oh, ’e sez we’re no good, a lot o’ blackguards an’ scoundrels as won’t +work. Tells all the ole tricks I’ve bin ’earin’ for twenty years an’ +w’ich I never seen a mug ever do. Las’ thing of ’is I see, ’e was +tellin’ ’ow a mug gets out o’ the spike, wi’ a crust in ’is pockit. An’ +w’en ’e sees a nice ole gentleman comin’ along the street ’e chucks the +crust into the drain, an’ borrows the old gent’s stick to poke it out. +An’ then the ole gent gi’es ’im a tanner.” + +A roar of applause greeted the time-honoured yarn, and from somewhere +over in the deeper darkness came another voice, orating angrily: + +“Talk o’ the country bein’ good for tommy [food]; I’d like to see it. I +jest came up from Dover, an’ blessed little tommy I got. They won’t gi’ +ye a drink o’ water, they won’t, much less tommy.” + +“There’s mugs never go out of Kent,” spoke a second voice, “they live +bloomin’ fat all along.” + +“I come through Kent,” went on the first voice, still more angrily, +“an’ Gawd blimey if I see any tommy. An’ I always notices as the blokes +as talks about ’ow much they can get, w’en they’re in the spike can eat +my share o’ skilly as well as their bleedin’ own.” + +“There’s chaps in London,” said a man across the table from me, “that +get all the tommy they want, an’ they never think o’ goin’ to the +country. Stay in London the year ’round. Nor do they think of lookin’ +for a kip [place to sleep], till nine or ten o’clock at night.” + +A general chorus verified this statement. + +“But they’re bloomin’ clever, them chaps,” said an admiring voice. + +“Course they are,” said another voice. “But it’s not the likes of me +an’ you can do it. You got to be born to it, I say. Them chaps ’ave ben +openin’ cabs an’ sellin’ papers since the day they was born, an’ their +fathers an’ mothers before ’em. It’s all in the trainin’, I say, an’ +the likes of me an’ you ’ud starve at it.” + +This also was verified by the general chorus, and likewise the +statement that there were “mugs as lives the twelvemonth ’round in the +spike an’ never get a blessed bit o’ tommy other than spike skilly an’ +bread.” + +“I once got arf a crown in the Stratford spike,” said a new voice. +Silence fell on the instant, and all listened to the wonderful tale. +“There was three of us breakin’ stones. Winter-time, an’ the cold was +cruel. T’other two said they’d be blessed if they do it, an’ they +didn’t; but I kept wearin’ into mine to warm up, you know. An’ then the +guardians come, an’ t’other chaps got run in for fourteen days, an’ the +guardians, w’en they see wot I’d been doin’, gives me a tanner each, +five o’ them, an’ turns me up.” + +The majority of these men, nay, all of them, I found, do not like the +spike, and only come to it when driven in. After the “rest up” they are +good for two or three days and nights on the streets, when they are +driven in again for another rest. Of course, this continuous hardship +quickly breaks their constitutions, and they realise it, though only in +a vague way; while it is so much the common run of things that they do +not worry about it. + +“On the doss,” they call vagabondage here, which corresponds to “on the +road” in the United States. The agreement is that kipping, or dossing, +or sleeping, is the hardest problem they have to face, harder even than +that of food. The inclement weather and the harsh laws are mainly +responsible for this, while the men themselves ascribe their +homelessness to foreign immigration, especially of Polish and Russian +Jews, who take their places at lower wages and establish the sweating +system. + +By seven o’clock we were called away to bathe and go to bed. We +stripped our clothes, wrapping them up in our coats and buckling our +belts about them, and deposited them in a heaped rack and on the +floor—a beautiful scheme for the spread of vermin. Then, two by two, we +entered the bathroom. There were two ordinary tubs, and this I know: +the two men preceding had washed in that water, we washed in the same +water, and it was not changed for the two men that followed us. This I +know; but I am also certain that the twenty-two of us washed in the +same water. + +I did no more than make a show of splashing some of this dubious liquid +at myself, while I hastily brushed it off with a towel wet from the +bodies of other men. My equanimity was not restored by seeing the back +of one poor wretch a mass of blood from attacks of vermin and +retaliatory scratching. + +A shirt was handed me—which I could not help but wonder how many other +men had worn; and with a couple of blankets under my arm I trudged off +to the sleeping apartment. This was a long, narrow room, traversed by +two low iron rails. Between these rails were stretched, not hammocks, +but pieces of canvas, six feet long and less than two feet wide. These +were the beds, and they were six inches apart and about eight inches +above the floor. The chief difficulty was that the head was somewhat +higher than the feet, which caused the body constantly to slip down. +Being slung to the same rails, when one man moved, no matter how +slightly, the rest were set rocking; and whenever I dozed somebody was +sure to struggle back to the position from which he had slipped, and +arouse me again. + +Many hours passed before I won to sleep. It was only seven in the +evening, and the voices of children, in shrill outcry, playing in the +street, continued till nearly midnight. The smell was frightful and +sickening, while my imagination broke loose, and my skin crept and +crawled till I was nearly frantic. Grunting, groaning, and snoring +arose like the sounds emitted by some sea monster, and several times, +afflicted by nightmare, one or another, by his shrieks and yells, +aroused the lot of us. Toward morning I was awakened by a rat or some +similar animal on my breast. In the quick transition from sleep to +waking, before I was completely myself, I raised a shout to wake the +dead. At any rate, I woke the living, and they cursed me roundly for my +lack of manners. + +But morning came, with a six o’clock breakfast of bread and skilly, +which I gave away, and we were told off to our various tasks. Some were +set to scrubbing and cleaning, others to picking oakum, and eight of us +were convoyed across the street to the Whitechapel Infirmary where we +were set at scavenger work. This was the method by which we paid for +our skilly and canvas, and I, for one, know that I paid in full many +times over. + +Though we had most revolting tasks to perform, our allotment was +considered the best and the other men deemed themselves lucky in being +chosen to perform it. + +“Don’t touch it, mate, the nurse sez it’s deadly,” warned my working +partner, as I held open a sack into which he was emptying a garbage +can. + +It came from the sick wards, and I told him that I purposed neither to +touch it, nor to allow it to touch me. Nevertheless, I had to carry the +sack, and other sacks, down five flights of stairs and empty them in a +receptacle where the corruption was speedily sprinkled with strong +disinfectant. + +Perhaps there is a wise mercy in all this. These men of the spike, the +peg, and the street, are encumbrances. They are of no good or use to +any one, nor to themselves. They clutter the earth with their presence, +and are better out of the way. Broken by hardship, ill fed, and worse +nourished, they are always the first to be struck down by disease, as +they are likewise the quickest to die. + +They feel, themselves, that the forces of society tend to hurl them out +of existence. We were sprinkling disinfectant by the mortuary, when the +dead waggon drove up and five bodies were packed into it. The +conversation turned to the “white potion” and “black jack,” and I found +they were all agreed that the poor person, man or woman, who in the +Infirmary gave too much trouble or was in a bad way, was “polished +off.” That is to say, the incurables and the obstreperous were given a +dose of “black jack” or the “white potion,” and sent over the divide. +It does not matter in the least whether this be actually so or not. The +point is, they have the feeling that it is so, and they have created +the language with which to express that feeling—“black jack,” “white +potion,” “polishing off.” + +At eight o’clock we went down into a cellar under the infirmary, where +tea was brought to us, and the hospital scraps. These were heaped high +on a huge platter in an indescribable mess—pieces of bread, chunks of +grease and fat pork, the burnt skin from the outside of roasted joints, +bones, in short, all the leavings from the fingers and mouths of the +sick ones suffering from all manner of diseases. Into this mess the men +plunged their hands, digging, pawing, turning over, examining, +rejecting, and scrambling for. It wasn’t pretty. Pigs couldn’t have +done worse. But the poor devils were hungry, and they ate ravenously of +the swill, and when they could eat no more they bundled what was left +into their handkerchiefs and thrust it inside their shirts. + +“Once, w’en I was ’ere before, wot did I find out there but a ’ole lot +of pork-ribs,” said Ginger to me. By “out there” he meant the place +where the corruption was dumped and sprinkled with strong disinfectant. +“They was a prime lot, no end o’ meat on ’em, an’ I ’ad ’em into my +arms an’ was out the gate an’ down the street, a-lookin’ for some ’un +to gi’ ’em to. Couldn’t see a soul, an’ I was runnin’ ’round clean +crazy, the bloke runnin’ after me an’ thinkin’ I was ‘slingin’ my ’ook’ +[running away]. But jest before ’e got me, I got a ole woman an’ poked +’em into ’er apron.” + +O Charity, O Philanthropy, descend to the spike and take a lesson from +Ginger. At the bottom of the Abyss he performed as purely an altruistic +act as was ever performed outside the Abyss. It was fine of Ginger, and +if the old woman caught some contagion from the “no end o’ meat” on the +pork-ribs, it was still fine, though not so fine. But the most salient +thing in this incident, it seems to me, is poor Ginger, “clean crazy” +at sight of so much food going to waste. + +It is the rule of the casual ward that a man who enters must stay two +nights and a day; but I had seen sufficient for my purpose, had paid +for my skilly and canvas, and was preparing to run for it. + +“Come on, let’s sling it,” I said to one of my mates, pointing toward +the open gate through which the dead waggon had come. + +“An’ get fourteen days?” + +“No; get away.” + +“Aw, I come ’ere for a rest,” he said complacently. “An’ another +night’s kip won’t ’urt me none.” + +They were all of this opinion, so I was forced to “sling it” alone. + +“You cawn’t ever come back ’ere again for a doss,” they warned me. + +“No fear,” said I, with an enthusiasm they could not comprehend; and, +dodging out the gate, I sped down the street. + +Straight to my room I hurried, changed my clothes, and less than an +hour from my escape, in a Turkish bath, I was sweating out whatever +germs and other things had penetrated my epidermis, and wishing that I +could stand a temperature of three hundred and twenty rather than two +hundred and twenty. + + + + +CHAPTER X. +CARRYING THE BANNER + + +“To carry the banner” means to walk the streets all night; and I, with +the figurative emblem hoisted, went out to see what I could see. Men +and women walk the streets at night all over this great city, but I +selected the West End, making Leicester Square my base, and scouting +about from the Thames Embankment to Hyde Park. + +The rain was falling heavily when the theatres let out, and the +brilliant throng which poured from the places of amusement was hard put +to find cabs. The streets were so many wild rivers of cabs, most of +which were engaged, however; and here I saw the desperate attempts of +ragged men and boys to get a shelter from the night by procuring cabs +for the cabless ladies and gentlemen. I use the word “desperate” +advisedly, for these wretched, homeless ones were gambling a soaking +against a bed; and most of them, I took notice, got the soaking and +missed the bed. Now, to go through a stormy night with wet clothes, +and, in addition, to be ill nourished and not to have tasted meat for a +week or a month, is about as severe a hardship as a man can undergo. +Well fed and well clad, I have travelled all day with the spirit +thermometer down to seventy-four degrees below zero—one hundred and six +degrees of frost[1]; and though I suffered, it was a mere nothing +compared with carrying the banner for a night, ill fed, ill clad, and +soaking wet. + + [1] This in the Klondike.—J. L. + + +The streets grew very quiet and lonely after the theatre crowd had gone +home. Only were to be seen the ubiquitous policemen, flashing their +dark lanterns into doorways and alleys, and men and women and boys +taking shelter in the lee of buildings from the wind and rain. +Piccadilly, however, was not quite so deserted. Its pavements were +brightened by well-dressed women without escort, and there was more +life and action there than elsewhere, due to the process of finding +escort. But by three o’clock the last of them had vanished, and it was +then indeed lonely. + +At half-past one the steady downpour ceased, and only showers fell +thereafter. The homeless folk came away from the protection of the +buildings, and slouched up and down and everywhere, in order to rush up +the circulation and keep warm. + +One old woman, between fifty and sixty, a sheer wreck, I had noticed +earlier in the night standing in Piccadilly, not far from Leicester +Square. She seemed to have neither the sense nor the strength to get +out of the rain or keep walking, but stood stupidly, whenever she got +the chance, meditating on past days, I imagine, when life was young and +blood was warm. But she did not get the chance often. She was moved on +by every policeman, and it required an average of six moves to send her +doddering off one man’s beat and on to another’s. By three o’clock, she +had progressed as far as St. James Street, and as the clocks were +striking four I saw her sleeping soundly against the iron railings of +Green Park. A brisk shower was falling at the time, and she must have +been drenched to the skin. + +Now, said I, at one o’clock, to myself; consider that you are a poor +young man, penniless, in London Town, and that to-morrow you must look +for work. It is necessary, therefore, that you get some sleep in order +that you may have strength to look for work and to do work in case you +find it. + +So I sat down on the stone steps of a building. Five minutes later a +policeman was looking at me. My eyes were wide open, so he only grunted +and passed on. Ten minutes later my head was on my knees, I was dozing, +and the same policeman was saying gruffly, “’Ere, you, get outa that!” + +I got. And, like the old woman, I continued to get; for every time I +dozed, a policeman was there to rout me along again. Not long after, +when I had given this up, I was walking with a young Londoner (who had +been out to the colonies and wished he were out to them again), when I +noticed an open passage leading under a building and disappearing in +darkness. A low iron gate barred the entrance. + +“Come on,” I said. “Let’s climb over and get a good sleep.” + +“Wot?” he answered, recoiling from me. “An’ get run in fer three +months! Blimey if I do!” + +Later on I was passing Hyde Park with a young boy of fourteen or +fifteen, a most wretched-looking youth, gaunt and hollow-eyed and sick. + +“Let’s go over the fence,” I proposed, “and crawl into the shrubbery +for a sleep. The bobbies couldn’t find us there.” + +“No fear,” he answered. “There’s the park guardians, and they’d run you +in for six months.” + +Times have changed, alas! When I was a youngster I used to read of +homeless boys sleeping in doorways. Already the thing has become a +tradition. As a stock situation it will doubtless linger in literature +for a century to come, but as a cold fact it has ceased to be. Here are +the doorways, and here are the boys, but happy conjunctions are no +longer effected. The doorways remain empty, and the boys keep awake and +carry the banner. + +“I was down under the arches,” grumbled another young fellow. By +“arches” he meant the shore arches where begin the bridges that span +the Thames. “I was down under the arches wen it was ryning its ’ardest, +an’ a bobby comes in an’ chyses me out. But I come back, an’ ’e come +too. ‘’Ere,’ sez ’e, ‘wot you doin’ ’ere?’ An’ out I goes, but I sez, +‘Think I want ter pinch [steal] the bleedin’ bridge?’” + +Among those who carry the banner, Green Park has the reputation of +opening its gates earlier than the other parks, and at quarter-past +four in the morning, I, and many more, entered Green Park. It was +raining again, but they were worn out with the night’s walking, and +they were down on the benches and asleep at once. Many of the men +stretched out full length on the dripping wet grass, and, with the rain +falling steadily upon them, were sleeping the sleep of exhaustion. + +And now I wish to criticise the powers that be. They _are_ the powers, +therefore they may decree whatever they please; so I make bold only to +criticise the ridiculousness of their decrees. All night long they make +the homeless ones walk up and down. They drive them out of doors and +passages, and lock them out of the parks. The evident intention of all +this is to deprive them of sleep. Well and good, the powers have the +power to deprive them of sleep, or of anything else for that matter; +but why under the sun do they open the gates of the parks at five +o’clock in the morning and let the homeless ones go inside and sleep? +If it is their intention to deprive them of sleep, why do they let them +sleep after five in the morning? And if it is not their intention to +deprive them of sleep, why don’t they let them sleep earlier in the +night? + +In this connection, I will say that I came by Green Park that same day, +at one in the afternoon, and that I counted scores of the ragged +wretches asleep in the grass. It was Sunday afternoon, the sun was +fitfully appearing, and the well-dressed West Enders, with their wives +and progeny, were out by thousands, taking the air. It was not a +pleasant sight for them, those horrible, unkempt, sleeping vagabonds; +while the vagabonds themselves, I know, would rather have done their +sleeping the night before. + +And so, dear soft people, should you ever visit London Town, and see +these men asleep on the benches and in the grass, please do not think +they are lazy creatures, preferring sleep to work. Know that the powers +that be have kept them walking all the night long, and that in the day +they have nowhere else to sleep. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. +THE PEG + + +But, after carrying the banner all night, I did not sleep in Green Park +when morning dawned. I was wet to the skin, it is true, and I had had +no sleep for twenty-four hours; but, still adventuring as a penniless +man looking for work, I had to look about me, first for a breakfast, +and next for the work. + +During the night I had heard of a place over on the Surrey side of the +Thames, where the Salvation Army every Sunday morning gave away a +breakfast to the unwashed. (And, by the way, the men who carry the +banner are unwashed in the morning, and unless it is raining they do +not have much show for a wash, either.) This, thought I, is the very +thing—breakfast in the morning, and then the whole day in which to look +for work. + +It was a weary walk. Down St. James Street I dragged my tired legs, +along Pall Mall, past Trafalgar Square, to the Strand. I crossed the +Waterloo Bridge to the Surrey side, cut across to Blackfriars Road, +coming out near the Surrey Theatre, and arrived at the Salvation Army +barracks before seven o’clock. This was “the peg.” And by “the peg,” in +the argot, is meant the place where a free meal may be obtained. + +Here was a motley crowd of woebegone wretches who had spent the night +in the rain. Such prodigious misery! and so much of it! Old men, young +men, all manner of men, and boys to boot, and all manner of boys. Some +were drowsing standing up; half a score of them were stretched out on +the stone steps in most painful postures, all of them sound asleep, the +skin of their bodies showing red through the holes, and rents in their +rags. And up and down the street and across the street for a block +either way, each doorstep had from two to three occupants, all asleep, +their heads bent forward on their knees. And, it must be remembered, +these are not hard times in England. Things are going on very much as +they ordinarily do, and times are neither hard nor easy. + +And then came the policeman. “Get outa that, you bloomin’ swine! Eigh! +eigh! Get out now!” And like swine he drove them from the doorways and +scattered them to the four winds of Surrey. But when he encountered the +crowd asleep on the steps he was astounded. “Shocking!” he exclaimed. +“Shocking! And of a Sunday morning! A pretty sight! Eigh! eigh! Get +outa that, you bleeding nuisances!” + +Of course it was a shocking sight, I was shocked myself. And I should +not care to have my own daughter pollute her eyes with such a sight, or +come within half a mile of it; but—and there we were, and there you +are, and “but” is all that can be said. + +The policeman passed on, and back we clustered, like flies around a +honey jar. For was there not that wonderful thing, a breakfast, +awaiting us? We could not have clustered more persistently and +desperately had they been giving away million-dollar bank-notes. Some +were already off to sleep, when back came the policeman and away we +scattered only to return again as soon as the coast was clear. + +At half-past seven a little door opened, and a Salvation Army soldier +stuck out his head. “Ayn’t no sense blockin’ the wy up that wy,” he +said. “Those as ’as tickets cawn come hin now, an’ those as ’asn’t +cawn’t come hin till nine.” + +Oh, that breakfast! Nine o’clock! An hour and a half longer! The men +who held tickets were greatly envied. They were permitted to go inside, +have a wash, and sit down and rest until breakfast, while we waited for +the same breakfast on the street. The tickets had been distributed the +previous night on the streets and along the Embankment, and the +possession of them was not a matter of merit, but of chance. + +At eight-thirty, more men with tickets were admitted, and by nine the +little gate was opened to us. We crushed through somehow, and found +ourselves packed in a courtyard like sardines. On more occasions than +one, as a Yankee tramp in Yankeeland, I have had to work for my +breakfast; but for no breakfast did I ever work so hard as for this +one. For over two hours I had waited outside, and for over another hour +I waited in this packed courtyard. I had had nothing to eat all night, +and I was weak and faint, while the smell of the soiled clothes and +unwashed bodies, steaming from pent animal heat, and blocked solidly +about me, nearly turned my stomach. So tightly were we packed, that a +number of the men took advantage of the opportunity and went soundly +asleep standing up. + +Now, about the Salvation Army in general I know nothing, and whatever +criticism I shall make here is of that particular portion of the +Salvation Army which does business on Blackfriars Road near the Surrey +Theatre. In the first place, this forcing of men who have been up all +night to stand on their feet for hours longer, is as cruel as it is +needless. We were weak, famished, and exhausted from our night’s +hardship and lack of sleep, and yet there we stood, and stood, and +stood, without rhyme or reason. + +Sailors were very plentiful in this crowd. It seemed to me that one man +in four was looking for a ship, and I found at least a dozen of them to +be American sailors. In accounting for their being “on the beach,” I +received the same story from each and all, and from my knowledge of sea +affairs this story rang true. English ships sign their sailors for the +voyage, which means the round trip, sometimes lasting as long as three +years; and they cannot sign off and receive their discharges until they +reach the home port, which is England. Their wages are low, their food +is bad, and their treatment worse. Very often they are really forced by +their captains to desert in the New World or the colonies, leaving a +handsome sum of wages behind them—a distinct gain, either to the +captain or the owners, or to both. But whether for this reason alone or +not, it is a fact that large numbers of them desert. Then, for the home +voyage, the ship engages whatever sailors it can find on the beach. +These men are engaged at the somewhat higher wages that obtain in other +portions of the world, under the agreement that they shall sign off on +reaching England. The reason for this is obvious; for it would be poor +business policy to sign them for any longer time, since seamen’s wages +are low in England, and England is always crowded with sailormen on the +beach. So this fully accounted for the American seamen at the Salvation +Army barracks. To get off the beach in other outlandish places they had +come to England, and gone on the beach in the most outlandish place of +all. + +There were fully a score of Americans in the crowd, the non-sailors +being “tramps royal,” the men whose “mate is the wind that tramps the +world.” They were all cheerful, facing things with the pluck which is +their chief characteristic and which seems never to desert them, withal +they were cursing the country with lurid metaphors quite refreshing +after a month of unimaginative, monotonous Cockney swearing. The +Cockney has one oath, and one oath only, the most indecent in the +language, which he uses on any and every occasion. Far different is the +luminous and varied Western swearing, which runs to blasphemy rather +than indecency. And after all, since men will swear, I think I prefer +blasphemy to indecency; there is an audacity about it, an +adventurousness and defiance that is better than sheer filthiness. + +There was one American tramp royal whom I found particularly enjoyable. +I first noticed him on the street, asleep in a doorway, his head on his +knees, but a hat on his head that one does not meet this side of the +Western Ocean. When the policeman routed him out, he got up slowly and +deliberately, looked at the policeman, yawned and stretched himself, +looked at the policeman again as much as to say he didn’t know whether +he would or wouldn’t, and then sauntered leisurely down the sidewalk. +At the outset I was sure of the hat, but this made me sure of the +wearer of the hat. + +In the jam inside I found myself alongside of him, and we had quite a +chat. He had been through Spain, Italy, Switzerland, and France, and +had accomplished the practically impossible feat of beating his way +three hundred miles on a French railway without being caught at the +finish. Where was I hanging out? he asked. And how did I manage for +“kipping”?—which means sleeping. Did I know the rounds yet? He was +getting on, though the country was “horstyl” and the cities were “bum.” +Fierce, wasn’t it? Couldn’t “batter” (beg) anywhere without being +“pinched.” But he wasn’t going to quit it. Buffalo Bill’s Show was +coming over soon, and a man who could drive eight horses was sure of a +job any time. These mugs over here didn’t know beans about driving +anything more than a span. What was the matter with me hanging on and +waiting for Buffalo Bill? He was sure I could ring in somehow. + +And so, after all, blood is thicker than water. We were +fellow-countrymen and strangers in a strange land. I had warmed to his +battered old hat at sight of it, and he was as solicitous for my +welfare as if we were blood brothers. We swapped all manner of useful +information concerning the country and the ways of its people, methods +by which to obtain food and shelter and what not, and we parted +genuinely sorry at having to say good-bye. + +One thing particularly conspicuous in this crowd was the shortness of +stature. I, who am but of medium height, looked over the heads of nine +out of ten. The natives were all short, as were the foreign sailors. +There were only five or six in the crowd who could be called fairly +tall, and they were Scandinavians and Americans. The tallest man there, +however, was an exception. He was an Englishman, though not a Londoner. +“Candidate for the Life Guards,” I remarked to him. “You’ve hit it, +mate,” was his reply; “I’ve served my bit in that same, and the way +things are I’ll be back at it before long.” + +For an hour we stood quietly in this packed courtyard. Then the men +began to grow restless. There was pushing and shoving forward, and a +mild hubbub of voices. Nothing rough, however, nor violent; merely the +restlessness of weary and hungry men. At this juncture forth came the +adjutant. I did not like him. His eyes were not good. There was nothing +of the lowly Galilean about him, but a great deal of the centurion who +said: “For I am a man in authority, having soldiers under me; and I say +to this man, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and he cometh; and +to my servant, Do this, and he doeth it.” + +Well, he looked at us in just that way, and those nearest to him +quailed. Then he lifted his voice. + +“Stop this ’ere, now, or I’ll turn you the other wy an’ march you out, +an’ you’ll get no breakfast.” + +I cannot convey by printed speech the insufferable way in which he said +this. He seemed to me to revel in that he was a man in authority, able +to say to half a thousand ragged wretches, “you may eat or go hungry, +as I elect.” + +To deny us our breakfast after standing for hours! It was an awful +threat, and the pitiful, abject silence which instantly fell attested +its awfulness. And it was a cowardly threat. We could not strike back, +for we were starving; and it is the way of the world that when one man +feeds another he is that man’s master. But the centurion—I mean the +adjutant—was not satisfied. In the dead silence he raised his voice +again, and repeated the threat, and amplified it. + +At last we were permitted to enter the feasting hall, where we found +the “ticket men” washed but unfed. All told, there must have been +nearly seven hundred of us who sat down—not to meat or bread, but to +speech, song, and prayer. From all of which I am convinced that +Tantalus suffers in many guises this side of the infernal regions. The +adjutant made the prayer, but I did not take note of it, being too +engrossed with the massed picture of misery before me. But the speech +ran something like this: “You will feast in Paradise. No matter how you +starve and suffer here, you will feast in Paradise, that is, if you +will follow the directions.” And so forth and so forth. A clever bit of +propaganda, I took it, but rendered of no avail for two reasons. First, +the men who received it were unimaginative and materialistic, unaware +of the existence of any Unseen, and too inured to hell on earth to be +frightened by hell to come. And second, weary and exhausted from the +night’s sleeplessness and hardship, suffering from the long wait upon +their feet, and faint from hunger, they were yearning, not for +salvation, but for grub. The “soul-snatchers” (as these men call all +religious propagandists), should study the physiological basis of +psychology a little, if they wish to make their efforts more effective. + +All in good time, about eleven o’clock, breakfast arrived. It arrived, +not on plates, but in paper parcels. I did not have all I wanted, and I +am sure that no man there had all he wanted, or half of what he wanted +or needed. I gave part of my bread to the tramp royal who was waiting +for Buffalo Bill, and he was as ravenous at the end as he was in the +beginning. This is the breakfast: two slices of bread, one small piece +of bread with raisins in it and called “cake,” a wafer of cheese, and a +mug of “water bewitched.” Numbers of the men had been waiting since +five o’clock for it, while all of us had waited at least four hours; +and in addition, we had been herded like swine, packed like sardines, +and treated like curs, and been preached at, and sung to, and prayed +for. Nor was that all. + +No sooner was breakfast over (and it was over almost as quickly as it +takes to tell), than the tired heads began to nod and droop, and in +five minutes half of us were sound asleep. There were no signs of our +being dismissed, while there were unmistakable signs of preparation for +a meeting. I looked at a small clock hanging on the wall. It indicated +twenty-five minutes to twelve. Heigh-ho, thought I, time is flying, and +I have yet to look for work. + +“I want to go,” I said to a couple of waking men near me. + +“Got ter sty fer the service,” was the answer. + +“Do you want to stay?” I asked. + +They shook their heads. + +“Then let us go and tell them we want to get out,” I continued. “Come +on.” + +But the poor creatures were aghast. So I left them to their fate, and +went up to the nearest Salvation Army man. + +“I want to go,” I said. “I came here for breakfast in order that I +might be in shape to look for work. I didn’t think it would take so +long to get breakfast. I think I have a chance for work in Stepney, and +the sooner I start, the better chance I’ll have of getting it.” + +He was really a good fellow, though he was startled by my request. +“Wy,” he said, “we’re goin’ to ’old services, and you’d better sty.” + +“But that will spoil my chances for work,” I urged. “And work is the +most important thing for me just now.” + +As he was only a private, he referred me to the adjutant, and to the +adjutant I repeated my reasons for wishing to go, and politely +requested that he let me go. + +“But it cawn’t be done,” he said, waxing virtuously indignant at such +ingratitude. “The idea!” he snorted. “The idea!” + +“Do you mean to say that I can’t get out of here?” I demanded. “That +you will keep me here against my will?” + +“Yes,” he snorted. + +I do not know what might have happened, for I was waxing indignant +myself; but the “congregation” had “piped” the situation, and he drew +me over to a corner of the room, and then into another room. Here he +again demanded my reasons for wishing to go. + +“I want to go,” I said, “because I wish to look for work over in +Stepney, and every hour lessens my chance of finding work. It is now +twenty-five minutes to twelve. I did not think when I came in that it +would take so long to get a breakfast.” + +“You ’ave business, eh?” he sneered. “A man of business you are, eh? +Then wot did you come ’ere for?” + +“I was out all night, and I needed a breakfast in order to strengthen +me to find work. That is why I came here.” + +“A nice thing to do,” he went on in the same sneering manner. “A man +with business shouldn’t come ’ere. You’ve tyken some poor man’s +breakfast ’ere this morning, that’s wot you’ve done.” + +Which was a lie, for every mother’s son of us had come in. + +Now I submit, was this Christian-like, or even honest?—after I had +plainly stated that I was homeless and hungry, and that I wished to +look for work, for him to call my looking for work “business,” to call +me therefore a business man, and to draw the corollary that a man of +business, and well off, did not require a charity breakfast, and that +by taking a charity breakfast I had robbed some hungry waif who was not +a man of business. + +I kept my temper, but I went over the facts again, and clearly and +concisely demonstrated to him how unjust he was and how he had +perverted the facts. As I manifested no signs of backing down (and I am +sure my eyes were beginning to snap), he led me to the rear of the +building where, in an open court, stood a tent. In the same sneering +tone he informed a couple of privates standing there that “’ere is a +fellow that ’as business an’ ’e wants to go before services.” + +They were duly shocked, of course, and they looked unutterable horror +while he went into the tent and brought out the major. Still in the +same sneering manner, laying particular stress on the “business,” he +brought my case before the commanding officer. The major was of a +different stamp of man. I liked him as soon as I saw him, and to him I +stated my case in the same fashion as before. + +“Didn’t you know you had to stay for services?” he asked. + +“Certainly not,” I answered, “or I should have gone without my +breakfast. You have no placards posted to that effect, nor was I so +informed when I entered the place.” + +He meditated a moment. “You can go,” he said. + +It was twelve o’clock when I gained the street, and I couldn’t quite +make up my mind whether I had been in the army or in prison. The day +was half gone, and it was a far fetch to Stepney. And besides, it was +Sunday, and why should even a starving man look for work on Sunday? +Furthermore, it was my judgment that I had done a hard night’s work +walking the streets, and a hard day’s work getting my breakfast; so I +disconnected myself from my working hypothesis of a starving young man +in search of employment, hailed a bus, and climbed aboard. + +After a shave and a bath, with my clothes all off, I got in between +clean white sheets and went to sleep. It was six in the evening when I +closed my eyes. When they opened again, the clocks were striking nine +next morning. I had slept fifteen straight hours. And as I lay there +drowsily, my mind went back to the seven hundred unfortunates I had +left waiting for services. No bath, no shave for them, no clean white +sheets and all clothes off, and fifteen hours’ straight sleep. Services +over, it was the weary streets again, the problem of a crust of bread +ere night, and the long sleepless night in the streets, and the +pondering of the problem of how to obtain a crust at dawn. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. +CORONATION DAY + + +O thou that sea-walls sever +From lands unwalled by seas! +Wilt thou endure forever, +O Milton’s England, these? +Thou that wast his Republic, +Wilt thou clasp their knees? +These royalties rust-eaten, +These worm-corroded lies +That keep thy head storm-beaten, +And sun-like strength of eyes +From the open air and heaven +Of intercepted skies! + + +SWINBURNE. + + +Vivat Rex Eduardus! They crowned a king this day, and there has been +great rejoicing and elaborate tomfoolery, and I am perplexed and +saddened. I never saw anything to compare with the pageant, except +Yankee circuses and Alhambra ballets; nor did I ever see anything so +hopeless and so tragic. + +To have enjoyed the Coronation procession, I should have come straight +from America to the Hotel Cecil, and straight from the Hotel Cecil to a +five-guinea seat among the washed. My mistake was in coming from the +unwashed of the East End. There were not many who came from that +quarter. The East End, as a whole, remained in the East End and got +drunk. The Socialists, Democrats, and Republicans went off to the +country for a breath of fresh air, quite unaffected by the fact that +four hundred millions of people were taking to themselves a crowned and +anointed ruler. Six thousand five hundred prelates, priests, statesmen, +princes, and warriors beheld the crowning and anointing, and the rest +of us the pageant as it passed. + +I saw it at Trafalgar Square, “the most splendid site in Europe,” and +the very innermost heart of the empire. There were many thousands of +us, all checked and held in order by a superb display of armed power. +The line of march was double-walled with soldiers. The base of the +Nelson Column was triple-fringed with bluejackets. Eastward, at the +entrance to the square, stood the Royal Marine Artillery. In the +triangle of Pall Mall and Cockspur Street, the statue of George III. +was buttressed on either side by the Lancers and Hussars. To the west +were the red-coats of the Royal Marines, and from the Union Club to the +embouchure of Whitehall swept the glittering, massive curve of the 1st +Life Guards—gigantic men mounted on gigantic chargers, +steel-breastplated, steel-helmeted, steel-caparisoned, a great +war-sword of steel ready to the hand of the powers that be. And +further, throughout the crowd, were flung long lines of the +Metropolitan Constabulary, while in the rear were the reserves—tall, +well-fed men, with weapons to wield and muscles to wield them in ease +of need. + +And as it was thus at Trafalgar Square, so was it along the whole line +of march—force, overpowering force; myriads of men, splendid men, the +pick of the people, whose sole function in life is blindly to obey, and +blindly to kill and destroy and stamp out life. And that they should be +well fed, well clothed, and well armed, and have ships to hurl them to +the ends of the earth, the East End of London, and the “East End” of +all England, toils and rots and dies. + +There is a Chinese proverb that if one man lives in laziness another +will die of hunger; and Montesquieu has said, “The fact that many men +are occupied in making clothes for one individual is the cause of there +being many people without clothes.” So one explains the other. We +cannot understand the starved and runty[2] toiler of the East End +(living with his family in a one-room den, and letting out the floor +space for lodgings to other starved and runty toilers) till we look at +the strapping Life Guardsmen of the West End, and come to know that the +one must feed and clothe and groom the other. + + [2] “Runt” in America is the equivalent of the English “crowl,” the + dwarf of a litter. + + +And while in Westminster Abbey the people were taking unto themselves a +king, I, jammed between the Life Guards and Constabulary of Trafalgar +Square, was dwelling upon the time when the people of Israel first took +unto themselves a king. You all know how it runs. The elders came to +the prophet Samuel, and said: “Make us a king to judge us like all the +nations.” + + +And the Lord said unto Samuel: Now therefore hearken unto their voice; +howbeit thou shalt show them the manner of the king that shall reign +over them. + +And Samuel told all the words of the Lord unto the people that asked of +him a king, and he said: + +This will be the manner of the king that shall reign over you; he will +take your sons, and appoint them unto him, for his chariots, and to be +his horsemen, and they shall run before his chariots. + +And he will appoint them unto him for captains of thousands, and +captains of fifties; and he will set some to plough his ground, and to +reap his harvest, and to make his instruments of war, and the +instruments of his chariots. + +And he will take your daughters to be confectionaries, and to be cooks, +and to be bakers. + +And he will take your fields and your vineyards, and your oliveyards, +even the best of them, and give them to his servants. + +And he will take a tenth of your seed, and of your vineyards, and give +to his officers, and to his servants. + +And he will take your menservants, and your maidservants, and your +goodliest young men, and your asses, and put them to his work. + +He will take a tenth of your flocks; and ye shall be his servants. + +And ye shall call out in that day because of your king which ye shall +have chosen you; and the Lord will not answer you in that day. + + +All of which came to pass in that ancient day, and they did cry out to +Samuel, saying: “Pray for thy servants unto the Lord thy God, that we +die not; for we have added unto all our sins this evil, to ask us a +king.” And after Saul, David, and Solomon, came Rehoboam, who “answered +the people roughly, saying: My father made your yoke heavy, but I will +add to your yoke; my father chastised you with whips, but I will +chastise you with scorpions.” + +And in these latter days, five hundred hereditary peers own one-fifth +of England; and they, and the officers and servants under the King, and +those who go to compose the powers that be, yearly spend in wasteful +luxury $1,850,000,000, or £370,000,000, which is thirty-two per cent. +of the total wealth produced by all the toilers of the country. + +At the Abbey, clad in wonderful golden raiment, amid fanfare of +trumpets and throbbing of music, surrounded by a brilliant throng of +masters, lords, and rulers, the King was being invested with the +insignia of his sovereignty. The spurs were placed to his heels by the +Lord Great Chamberlain, and a sword of state, in purple scabbard, was +presented him by the Archbishop of Canterbury, with these words:— + +Receive this kingly sword brought now from the altar of God, and +delivered to you by the hands of the bishops and servants of God, +though unworthy. + + +Whereupon, being girded, he gave heed to the Archbishop’s exhortation:— + +With this sword do justice, stop the growth of iniquity, protect the +Holy Church of God, help and defend widows and orphans, restore the +things that are gone to decay, maintain the things that are restored, +punish and reform what is amiss, and confirm what is in good order. + + +But hark! There is cheering down Whitehall; the crowd sways, the double +walls of soldiers come to attention, and into view swing the King’s +watermen, in fantastic mediaeval garbs of red, for all the world like +the van of a circus parade. Then a royal carriage, filled with ladies +and gentlemen of the household, with powdered footmen and coachmen most +gorgeously arrayed. More carriages, lords, and chamberlains, viscounts, +mistresses of the robes—lackeys all. Then the warriors, a kingly +escort, generals, bronzed and worn, from the ends of the earth come up +to London Town, volunteer officers, officers of the militia and regular +forces; Spens and Plumer, Broadwood and Cooper who relieved Ookiep, +Mathias of Dargai, Dixon of Vlakfontein; General Gaselee and Admiral +Seymour of China; Kitchener of Khartoum; Lord Roberts of India and all +the world—the fighting men of England, masters of destruction, +engineers of death! Another race of men from those of the shops and +slums, a totally different race of men. + +But here they come, in all the pomp and certitude of power, and still +they come, these men of steel, these war lords and world harnessers. +Pell-mell, peers and commoners, princes and maharajahs, Equerries to +the King and Yeomen of the Guard. And here the colonials, lithe and +hardy men; and here all the breeds of all the world-soldiers from +Canada, Australia, New Zealand; from Bermuda, Borneo, Fiji, and the +Gold Coast; from Rhodesia, Cape Colony, Natal, Sierra Leone and Gambia, +Nigeria, and Uganda; from Ceylon, Cyprus, Hong-Kong, Jamaica, and +Wei-Hai-Wei; from Lagos, Malta, St. Lucia, Singapore, Trinidad. And +here the conquered men of Ind, swarthy horsemen and sword wielders, +fiercely barbaric, blazing in crimson and scarlet, Sikhs, Rajputs, +Burmese, province by province, and caste by caste. + +And now the Horse Guards, a glimpse of beautiful cream ponies, and a +golden panoply, a hurricane of cheers, the crashing of bands—“The King! +the King! God save the King!” Everybody has gone mad. The contagion is +sweeping me off my feet—I, too, want to shout, “The King! God save the +King!” Ragged men about me, tears in their eyes, are tossing up their +hats and crying ecstatically, “Bless ’em! Bless ’em! Bless ’em!” See, +there he is, in that wondrous golden coach, the great crown flashing on +his head, the woman in white beside him likewise crowned. + +And I check myself with a rush, striving to convince myself that it is +all real and rational, and not some glimpse of fairyland. This I cannot +succeed in doing, and it is better so. I much prefer to believe that +all this pomp, and vanity, and show, and mumbo-jumbo foolery has come +from fairyland, than to believe it the performance of sane and sensible +people who have mastered matter and solved the secrets of the stars. + +Princes and princelings, dukes, duchesses, and all manner of coroneted +folk of the royal train are flashing past; more warriors, and lackeys, +and conquered peoples, and the pageant is over. I drift with the crowd +out of the square into a tangle of narrow streets, where the +public-houses are a-roar with drunkenness, men, women, and children +mixed together in colossal debauch. And on every side is rising the +favourite song of the Coronation:— + +“Oh! on Coronation Day, on Coronation Day, +We’ll have a spree, a jubilee, and shout, Hip, hip, hooray, +For we’ll all be merry, drinking whisky, wine, and sherry, +We’ll all be merry on Coronation Day.” + + +The rain is pouring down. Up the street come troops of the auxiliaries, +black Africans and yellow Asiatics, beturbaned and befezed, and coolies +swinging along with machine guns and mountain batteries on their heads, +and the bare feet of all, in quick rhythm, going _slish, slish, slish_ +through the pavement mud. The public-houses empty by magic, and the +swarthy allegiants are cheered by their British brothers, who return at +once to the carouse. + +“And how did you like the procession, mate?” I asked an old man on a +bench in Green Park. + +“’Ow did I like it? A bloomin’ good chawnce, sez I to myself, for a +sleep, wi’ all the coppers aw’y, so I turned into the corner there, +along wi’ fifty others. But I couldn’t sleep, a-lyin’ there an’ +thinkin’ ’ow I’d worked all the years o’ my life an’ now ’ad no plyce +to rest my ’ead; an’ the music comin’ to me, an’ the cheers an’ cannon, +till I got almost a hanarchist an’ wanted to blow out the brains o’ the +Lord Chamberlain.” + +Why the Lord Chamberlain I could not precisely see, nor could he, but +that was the way he felt, he said conclusively, and there was no more +discussion. + +As night drew on, the city became a blaze of light. Splashes of colour, +green, amber, and ruby, caught the eye at every point, and “E. R.,” in +great crystal letters and backed by flaming gas, was everywhere. The +crowds in the streets increased by hundreds of thousands, and though +the police sternly put down mafficking, drunkenness and rough play +abounded. The tired workers seemed to have gone mad with the relaxation +and excitement, and they surged and danced down the streets, men and +women, old and young, with linked arms and in long rows, singing, “I +may be crazy, but I love you,” “Dolly Gray,” and “The Honeysuckle and +the Bee”—the last rendered something like this:— + +“Yew aw the enny, ennyseckle, Oi em ther bee, +Oi’d like ter sip ther enny from those red lips, yew see.” + + +I sat on a bench on the Thames Embankment, looking across the +illuminated water. It was approaching midnight, and before me poured +the better class of merrymakers, shunning the more riotous streets and +returning home. On the bench beside me sat two ragged creatures, a man +and a woman, nodding and dozing. The woman sat with her arms clasped +across the breast, holding tightly, her body in constant play—now +dropping forward till it seemed its balance would be overcome and she +would fall to the pavement; now inclining to the left, sideways, till +her head rested on the man’s shoulder; and now to the right, stretched +and strained, till the pain of it awoke her and she sat bolt upright. +Whereupon the dropping forward would begin again and go through its +cycle till she was aroused by the strain and stretch. + +Every little while boys and young men stopped long enough to go behind +the bench and give vent to sudden and fiendish shouts. This always +jerked the man and woman abruptly from their sleep; and at sight of the +startled woe upon their faces the crowd would roar with laughter as it +flooded past. + +This was the most striking thing, the general heartlessness exhibited +on every hand. It is a commonplace, the homeless on the benches, the +poor miserable folk who may be teased and are harmless. Fifty thousand +people must have passed the bench while I sat upon it, and not one, on +such a jubilee occasion as the crowning of the King, felt his +heart-strings touched sufficiently to come up and say to the woman: +“Here’s sixpence; go and get a bed.” But the women, especially the +young women, made witty remarks upon the woman nodding, and invariably +set their companions laughing. + +To use a Briticism, it was “cruel”; the corresponding Americanism was +more appropriate—it was “fierce.” I confess I began to grow incensed at +this happy crowd streaming by, and to extract a sort of satisfaction +from the London statistics which demonstrate that one in every four +adults is destined to die on public charity, either in the workhouse, +the infirmary, or the asylum. + +I talked with the man. He was fifty-four and a broken-down docker. He +could only find odd work when there was a large demand for labour, for +the younger and stronger men were preferred when times were slack. He +had spent a week, now, on the benches of the Embankment; but things +looked brighter for next week, and he might possibly get in a few days’ +work and have a bed in some doss-house. He had lived all his life in +London, save for five years, when, in 1878, he saw foreign service in +India. + +Of course he would eat; so would the girl. Days like this were uncommon +hard on such as they, though the coppers were so busy poor folk could +get in more sleep. I awoke the girl, or woman, rather, for she was +“Eyght an’ twenty, sir,” and we started for a coffee-house. + +“Wot a lot o’ work puttin’ up the lights,” said the man at sight of +some building superbly illuminated. This was the keynote of his being. +All his life he had worked, and the whole objective universe, as well +as his own soul, he could express in terms only of work. “Coronations +is some good,” he went on. “They give work to men.” + +“But your belly is empty,” I said. + +“Yes,” he answered. “I tried, but there wasn’t any chawnce. My age is +against me. Wot do you work at? Seafarin’ chap, eh? I knew it from yer +clothes.” + +“I know wot you are,” said the girl, “an Eyetalian.” + +“No ’e ayn’t,” the man cried heatedly. “’E’s a Yank, that’s wot ’e is. +I know.” + +“Lord lumme, look a’ that,” she exclaimed, as we debouched upon the +Strand, choked with the roaring, reeling Coronation crowd, the men +bellowing and the girls singing in high throaty notes:— + +“Oh! on Coronation D’y, on Coronation D’y, +We’ll ’ave a spree, a jubilee, an’ shout ’Ip, ’ip, ’ooray; +For we’ll all be merry, drinkin’ whisky, wine, and sherry, +We’ll all be merry on Coronation D’y.” + + +“’Ow dirty I am, bein’ around the w’y I ’ave,” the woman said, as she +sat down in a coffee-house, wiping the sleep and grime from the corners +of her eyes. “An’ the sights I ’ave seen this d’y, an’ I enjoyed it, +though it was lonesome by myself. An’ the duchesses an’ the lydies ’ad +sich gran’ w’ite dresses. They was jest bu’ful, bu’ful.” + +“I’m Irish,” she said, in answer to a question. “My nyme’s Eyethorne.” + +“What?” I asked. + +“Eyethorne, sir; Eyethorne.” + +“Spell it.” + +“H-a-y-t-h-o-r-n-e, Eyethorne.’ + +“Oh,” I said, “Irish Cockney.” + +“Yes, sir, London-born.” + +She had lived happily at home till her father died, killed in an +accident, when she had found herself on the world. One brother was in +the army, and the other brother, engaged in keeping a wife and eight +children on twenty shillings a week and unsteady employment, could do +nothing for her. She had been out of London once in her life, to a +place in Essex, twelve miles away, where she had picked fruit for three +weeks: “An’ I was as brown as a berry w’en I come back. You won’t +b’lieve it, but I was.” + +The last place in which she had worked was a coffee-house, hours from +seven in the morning till eleven at night, and for which she had +received five shillings a week and her food. Then she had fallen sick, +and since emerging from the hospital had been unable to find anything +to do. She wasn’t feeling up to much, and the last two nights had been +spent in the street. + +Between them they stowed away a prodigious amount of food, this man and +woman, and it was not till I had duplicated and triplicated their +original orders that they showed signs of easing down. + +Once she reached across and felt the texture of my coat and shirt, and +remarked upon the good clothes the Yanks wore. My rags good clothes! It +put me to the blush; but, on inspecting them more closely and on +examining the clothes worn by the man and woman, I began to feel quite +well dressed and respectable. + +“What do you expect to do in the end?” I asked them. “You know you’re +growing older every day.” + +“Work’ouse,” said he. + +“Gawd blimey if I do,” said she. “There’s no ’ope for me, I know, but +I’ll die on the streets. No work’ouse for me, thank you. No, indeed,” +she sniffed in the silence that fell. + +“After you have been out all night in the streets,” I asked, “what do +you do in the morning for something to eat?” + +“Try to get a penny, if you ’aven’t one saved over,” the man explained. +“Then go to a coffee-’ouse an’ get a mug o’ tea.” + +“But I don’t see how that is to feed you,” I objected. + +The pair smiled knowingly. + +“You drink your tea in little sips,” he went on, “making it last its +longest. An’ you look sharp, an’ there’s some as leaves a bit be’ind +’em.” + +“It’s s’prisin’, the food wot some people leaves,” the woman broke in. + +“The thing,” said the man judicially, as the trick dawned upon me, “is +to get ’old o’ the penny.” + +As we started to leave, Miss Haythorne gathered up a couple of crusts +from the neighbouring tables and thrust them somewhere into her rags. + +“Cawn’t wyste ’em, you know,” said she; to which the docker nodded, +tucking away a couple of crusts himself. + +At three in the morning I strolled up the Embankment. It was a gala +night for the homeless, for the police were elsewhere; and each bench +was jammed with sleeping occupants. There were as many women as men, +and the great majority of them, male and female, were old. Occasionally +a boy was to be seen. On one bench I noticed a family, a man sitting +upright with a sleeping babe in his arms, his wife asleep, her head on +his shoulder, and in her lap the head of a sleeping youngster. The +man’s eyes were wide open. He was staring out over the water and +thinking, which is not a good thing for a shelterless man with a family +to do. It would not be a pleasant thing to speculate upon his thoughts; +but this I know, and all London knows, that the cases of out-of-works +killing their wives and babies is not an uncommon happening. + +One cannot walk along the Thames Embankment, in the small hours of +morning, from the Houses of Parliament, past Cleopatra’s Needle, to +Waterloo Bridge, without being reminded of the sufferings, seven and +twenty centuries old, recited by the author of “Job”:— + + +There are that remove the landmarks; they violently take away flocks +and feed them. + +They drive away the ass of the fatherless, they take the widow’s ox for +a pledge. + +They turn the needy out of the way; the poor of the earth hide +themselves together. + +Behold, as wild asses in the desert they go forth to their work, +seeking diligently for meat; the wilderness yieldeth them food for +their children. + +They cut their provender in the field, and they glean the vintage of +the wicked. + +They lie all night naked without clothing, and have no covering in the +cold. + +They are wet with the showers of the mountains, and embrace the rock +for want of a shelter. + +There are that pluck the fatherless from the breast, and take a pledge +of the poor. + +So that they go about naked without clothing, and being an hungered +they carry the sheaves.—Job xxiv. 2-10. + + +Seven and twenty centuries agone! And it is all as true and apposite +to-day in the innermost centre of this Christian civilisation whereof +Edward VII. is king. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. +DAN CULLEN, DOCKER + + +I stood, yesterday, in a room in one of the “Municipal Dwellings,” not +far from Leman Street. If I looked into a dreary future and saw that I +would have to live in such a room until I died, I should immediately go +down, plump into the Thames, and cut the tenancy short. + +It was not a room. Courtesy to the language will no more permit it to +be called a room than it will permit a hovel to be called a mansion. It +was a den, a lair. Seven feet by eight were its dimensions, and the +ceiling was so low as not to give the cubic air space required by a +British soldier in barracks. A crazy couch, with ragged coverlets, +occupied nearly half the room. A rickety table, a chair, and a couple +of boxes left little space in which to turn around. Five dollars would +have purchased everything in sight. The floor was bare, while the walls +and ceiling were literally covered with blood marks and splotches. Each +mark represented a violent death—of an insect, for the place swarmed +with vermin, a plague with which no person could cope single-handed. + +The man who had occupied this hole, one Dan Cullen, docker, was dying +in hospital. Yet he had impressed his personality on his miserable +surroundings sufficiently to give an inkling as to what sort of man he +was. On the walls were cheap pictures of Garibaldi, Engels, Dan Burns, +and other labour leaders, while on the table lay one of Walter Besant’s +novels. He knew his Shakespeare, I was told, and had read history, +sociology, and economics. And he was self-educated. + +On the table, amidst a wonderful disarray, lay a sheet of paper on +which was scrawled: _Mr. Cullen, please return the large white jug and +corkscrew I lent you_—articles loaned, during the first stages of his +sickness, by a woman neighbour, and demanded back in anticipation of +his death. A large white jug and a corkscrew are far too valuable to a +creature of the Abyss to permit another creature to die in peace. To +the last, Dan Cullen’s soul must be harrowed by the sordidness out of +which it strove vainly to rise. + +It is a brief little story, the story of Dan Cullen, but there is much +to read between the lines. He was born lowly, in a city and land where +the lines of caste are tightly drawn. All his days he toiled hard with +his body; and because he had opened the books, and been caught up by +the fires of the spirit, and could “write a letter like a lawyer,” he +had been selected by his fellows to toil hard for them with his brain. +He became a leader of the fruit-porters, represented the dockers on the +London Trades Council, and wrote trenchant articles for the labour +journals. + +He did not cringe to other men, even though they were his economic +masters, and controlled the means whereby he lived, and he spoke his +mind freely, and fought the good fight. In the “Great Dock Strike” he +was guilty of taking a leading part. And that was the end of Dan +Cullen. From that day he was a marked man, and every day, for ten years +and more, he was “paid off” for what he had done. + +A docker is a casual labourer. Work ebbs and flows, and he works or +does not work according to the amount of goods on hand to be moved. Dan +Cullen was discriminated against. While he was not absolutely turned +away (which would have caused trouble, and which would certainly have +been more merciful), he was called in by the foreman to do not more +than two or three days’ work per week. This is what is called being +“disciplined,” or “drilled.” It means being starved. There is no +politer word. Ten years of it broke his heart, and broken-hearted men +cannot live. + +He took to his bed in his terrible den, which grew more terrible with +his helplessness. He was without kith or kin, a lonely old man, +embittered and pessimistic, fighting vermin the while and looking at +Garibaldi, Engels, and Dan Burns gazing down at him from the +blood-bespattered walls. No one came to see him in that crowded +municipal barracks (he had made friends with none of them), and he was +left to rot. + +But from the far reaches of the East End came a cobbler and his son, +his sole friends. They cleansed his room, brought fresh linen from +home, and took from off his limbs the sheets, greyish-black with dirt. +And they brought to him one of the Queen’s Bounty nurses from Aldgate. + +She washed his face, shook up his couch, and talked with him. It was +interesting to talk with him—until he learned her name. Oh, yes, Blank +was her name, she replied innocently, and Sir George Blank was her +brother. Sir George Blank, eh? thundered old Dan Cullen on his +death-bed; Sir George Blank, solicitor to the docks at Cardiff, who, +more than any other man, had broken up the Dockers’ Union of Cardiff, +and was knighted? And she was his sister? Thereupon Dan Cullen sat up +on his crazy couch and pronounced anathema upon her and all her breed; +and she fled, to return no more, strongly impressed with the +ungratefulness of the poor. + +Dan Cullen’s feet became swollen with dropsy. He sat up all day on the +side of the bed (to keep the water out of his body), no mat on the +floor, a thin blanket on his legs, and an old coat around his +shoulders. A missionary brought him a pair of paper slippers, worth +fourpence (I saw them), and proceeded to offer up fifty prayers or so +for the good of Dan Cullen’s soul. But Dan Cullen was the sort of man +that wanted his soul left alone. He did not care to have Tom, Dick, or +Harry, on the strength of fourpenny slippers, tampering with it. He +asked the missionary kindly to open the window, so that he might toss +the slippers out. And the missionary went away, to return no more, +likewise impressed with the ungratefulness of the poor. + +The cobbler, a brave old hero himself, though unannaled and unsung, +went privily to the head office of the big fruit brokers for whom Dan +Cullen had worked as a casual labourer for thirty years. Their system +was such that the work was almost entirely done by casual hands. The +cobbler told them the man’s desperate plight, old, broken, dying, +without help or money, reminded them that he had worked for them thirty +years, and asked them to do something for him. + +“Oh,” said the manager, remembering Dan Cullen without having to refer +to the books, “you see, we make it a rule never to help casuals, and we +can do nothing.” + +Nor did they do anything, not even sign a letter asking for Dan +Cullen’s admission to a hospital. And it is not so easy to get into a +hospital in London Town. At Hampstead, if he passed the doctors, at +least four months would elapse before he could get in, there were so +many on the books ahead of him. The cobbler finally got him into the +Whitechapel Infirmary, where he visited him frequently. Here he found +that Dan Cullen had succumbed to the prevalent feeling, that, being +hopeless, they were hurrying him out of the way. A fair and logical +conclusion, one must agree, for an old and broken man to arrive at, who +has been resolutely “disciplined” and “drilled” for ten years. When +they sweated him for Bright’s disease to remove the fat from the +kidneys, Dan Cullen contended that the sweating was hastening his +death; while Bright’s disease, being a wasting away of the kidneys, +there was therefore no fat to remove, and the doctor’s excuse was a +palpable lie. Whereupon the doctor became wroth, and did not come near +him for nine days. + +Then his bed was tilted up so that his feet and legs were elevated. At +once dropsy appeared in the body, and Dan Cullen contended that the +thing was done in order to run the water down into his body from his +legs and kill him more quickly. He demanded his discharge, though they +told him he would die on the stairs, and dragged himself, more dead +than alive, to the cobbler’s shop. At the moment of writing this, he is +dying at the Temperance Hospital, into which place his staunch friend, +the cobbler, moved heaven and earth to have him admitted. + +Poor Dan Cullen! A Jude the Obscure, who reached out after knowledge; +who toiled with his body in the day and studied in the watches of the +night; who dreamed his dream and struck valiantly for the Cause; a +patriot, a lover of human freedom, and a fighter unafraid; and in the +end, not gigantic enough to beat down the conditions which baffled and +stifled him, a cynic and a pessimist, gasping his final agony on a +pauper’s couch in a charity ward,—“For a man to die who might have been +wise and was not, this I call a tragedy.” + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. +HOPS AND HOPPERS + + +So far has the divorcement of the worker from the soil proceeded, that +the farming districts, the civilised world over, are dependent upon the +cities for the gathering of the harvests. Then it is, when the land is +spilling its ripe wealth to waste, that the street folk, who have been +driven away from the soil, are called back to it again. But in England +they return, not as prodigals, but as outcasts still, as vagrants and +pariahs, to be doubted and flouted by their country brethren, to sleep +in jails and casual wards, or under the hedges, and to live the Lord +knows how. + +It is estimated that Kent alone requires eighty thousand of the street +people to pick her hops. And out they come, obedient to the call, which +is the call of their bellies and of the lingering dregs of +adventure-lust still in them. Slum, stews, and ghetto pour them forth, +and the festering contents of slum, stews, and ghetto are undiminished. +Yet they overrun the country like an army of ghouls, and the country +does not want them. They are out of place. As they drag their squat, +misshapen bodies along the highways and byways, they resemble some vile +spawn from underground. Their very presence, the fact of their +existence, is an outrage to the fresh, bright sun and the green and +growing things. The clean, upstanding trees cry shame upon them and +their withered crookedness, and their rottenness is a slimy desecration +of the sweetness and purity of nature. + +Is the picture overdrawn? It all depends. For one who sees and thinks +life in terms of shares and coupons, it is certainly overdrawn. But for +one who sees and thinks life in terms of manhood and womanhood, it +cannot be overdrawn. Such hordes of beastly wretchedness and +inarticulate misery are no compensation for a millionaire brewer who +lives in a West End palace, sates himself with the sensuous delights of +London’s golden theatres, hobnobs with lordlings and princelings, and +is knighted by the king. Wins his spurs—God forbid! In old time the +great blonde beasts rode in the battle’s van and won their spurs by +cleaving men from pate to chine. And, after all, it is finer to kill a +strong man with a clean-slicing blow of singing steel than to make a +beast of him, and of his seed through the generations, by the artful +and spidery manipulation of industry and politics. + +But to return to the hops. Here the divorcement from the soil is as +apparent as in every other agricultural line in England. While the +manufacture of beer steadily increases, the growth of hops steadily +decreases. In 1835 the acreage under hops was 71,327. To-day it stands +at 48,024, a decrease of 3103 from the acreage of last year. + +Small as the acreage is this year, a poor summer and terrible storms +reduced the yield. This misfortune is divided between the people who +own hops and the people who pick hops. The owners perforce must put up +with less of the nicer things of life, the pickers with less grub, of +which, in the best of times, they never get enough. For weary weeks +headlines like the following have appeared in the London papers.— + +TRAMPS PLENTIFUL, BUT THE HOPS ARE FEW AND NOT YET READY. + + +Then there have been numberless paragraphs like this:— + +From the neighbourhood of the hop fields comes news of a distressing +nature. The bright outburst of the last two days has sent many hundreds +of hoppers into Kent, who will have to wait till the fields are ready +for them. At Dover the number of vagrants in the workhouse is treble +the number there last year at this time, and in other towns the +lateness of the season is responsible for a large increase in the +number of casuals. + + +To cap their wretchedness, when at last the picking had begun, hops and +hoppers were well-nigh swept away by a frightful storm of wind, rain, +and hail. The hops were stripped clean from the poles and pounded into +the earth, while the hoppers, seeking shelter from the stinging hail, +were close to drowning in their huts and camps on the low-lying ground. +Their condition after the storm was pitiable, their state of vagrancy +more pronounced than ever; for, poor crop that it was, its destruction +had taken away the chance of earning a few pennies, and nothing +remained for thousands of them but to “pad the hoof” back to London. + +“We ayn’t crossin’-sweepers,” they said, turning away from the ground, +carpeted ankle-deep with hops. + +Those that remained grumbled savagely among the half-stripped poles at +the seven bushels for a shilling—a rate paid in good seasons when the +hops are in prime condition, and a rate likewise paid in bad seasons by +the growers because they cannot afford more. + +I passed through Teston and East and West Farleigh shortly after the +storm, and listened to the grumbling of the hoppers and saw the hops +rotting on the ground. At the hothouses of Barham Court, thirty +thousand panes of glass had been broken by the hail, while peaches, +plums, pears, apples, rhubarb, cabbages, mangolds, everything, had been +pounded to pieces and torn to shreds. + +All of which was too bad for the owners, certainly; but at the worst, +not one of them, for one meal, would have to go short of food or drink. +Yet it was to them that the newspapers devoted columns of sympathy, +their pecuniary losses being detailed at harrowing length. “Mr. Herbert +L--- calculates his loss at £8000;” “Mr. F---, of brewery fame, who +rents all the land in this parish, loses £10,000;” and “Mr. L---, the +Wateringbury brewer, brother to Mr. Herbert L---, is another heavy +loser.” As for the hoppers, they did not count. Yet I venture to assert +that the several almost-square meals lost by underfed William Buggles, +and underfed Mrs. Buggles, and the underfed Buggles kiddies, was a +greater tragedy than the £10,000 lost by Mr. F---. And in addition, +underfed William Buggles’ tragedy might be multiplied by thousands +where Mr. F---’s could not be multiplied by five. + +To see how William Buggles and his kind fared, I donned my seafaring +togs and started out to get a job. With me was a young East London +cobbler, Bert, who had yielded to the lure of adventure and joined me +for the trip. Acting on my advice, he had brought his “worst rags,” and +as we hiked up the London road out of Maidstone he was worrying greatly +for fear we had come too ill-dressed for the business. + +Nor was he to be blamed. When we stopped in a tavern the publican eyed +us gingerly, nor did his demeanour brighten till we showed him the +colour of our cash. The natives along the coast were all dubious; and +“bean-feasters” from London, dashing past in coaches, cheered and +jeered and shouted insulting things after us. But before we were done +with the Maidstone district my friend found that we were as well clad, +if not better, than the average hopper. Some of the bunches of rags we +chanced upon were marvellous. + +“The tide is out,” called a gypsy-looking woman to her mates, as we +came up a long row of bins into which the pickers were stripping the +hops. + +“Do you twig?” Bert whispered. “She’s on to you.” + +I twigged. And it must be confessed the figure was an apt one. When the +tide is out boats are left on the beach and do not sail, and a sailor, +when the tide is out, does not sail either. My seafaring togs and my +presence in the hop field proclaimed that I was a seaman without a +ship, a man on the beach, and very like a craft at low water. + +“Can yer give us a job, governor?” Bert asked the bailiff, a kindly +faced and elderly man who was very busy. + +His “No” was decisively uttered; but Bert clung on and followed him +about, and I followed after, pretty well all over the field. Whether +our persistency struck the bailiff as anxiety to work, or whether he +was affected by our hard-luck appearance and tale, neither Bert nor I +succeeded in making out; but in the end he softened his heart and found +us the one unoccupied bin in the place—a bin deserted by two other men, +from what I could learn, because of inability to make living wages. + +“No bad conduct, mind ye,” warned the bailiff, as he left us at work in +the midst of the women. + +It was Saturday afternoon, and we knew quitting time would come early; +so we applied ourselves earnestly to the task, desiring to learn if we +could at least make our salt. It was simple work, woman’s work, in +fact, and not man’s. We sat on the edge of the bin, between the +standing hops, while a pole-puller supplied us with great fragrant +branches. In an hour’s time we became as expert as it is possible to +become. As soon as the fingers became accustomed automatically to +differentiate between hops and leaves and to strip half-a-dozen +blossoms at a time there was no more to learn. + +We worked nimbly, and as fast as the women themselves, though their +bins filled more rapidly because of their swarming children, each of +which picked with two hands almost as fast as we picked. + +“Don’tcher pick too clean, it’s against the rules,” one of the women +informed us; and we took the tip and were grateful. + +As the afternoon wore along, we realised that living wages could not be +made—by men. Women could pick as much as men, and children could do +almost as well as women; so it was impossible for a man to compete with +a woman and half-a-dozen children. For it is the woman and the +half-dozen children who count as a unit, and by their combined capacity +determine the unit’s pay. + +“I say, matey, I’m beastly hungry,” said I to Bert. We had not had any +dinner. + +“Blimey, but I could eat the ’ops,” he replied. + +Whereupon we both lamented our negligence in not rearing up a numerous +progeny to help us in this day of need. And in such fashion we whiled +away the time and talked for the edification of our neighbours. We +quite won the sympathy of the pole-puller, a young country yokel, who +now and again emptied a few picked blossoms into our bin, it being part +of his business to gather up the stray clusters torn off in the process +of pulling. + +With him we discussed how much we could “sub,” and were informed that +while we were being paid a shilling for seven bushels, we could only +“sub,” or have advanced to us, a shilling for every twelve bushels. +Which is to say that the pay for five out of every twelve bushels was +withheld—a method of the grower to hold the hopper to his work whether +the crop runs good or bad, and especially if it runs bad. + +After all, it was pleasant sitting there in the bright sunshine, the +golden pollen showering from our hands, the pungent aromatic odour of +the hops biting our nostrils, and the while remembering dimly the +sounding cities whence these people came. Poor street people! Poor +gutter folk! Even they grow earth-hungry, and yearn vaguely for the +soil from which they have been driven, and for the free life in the +open, and the wind and rain and sun all undefiled by city smirches. As +the sea calls to the sailor, so calls the land to them; and, deep down +in their aborted and decaying carcasses, they are stirred strangely by +the peasant memories of their forbears who lived before cities were. +And in incomprehensible ways they are made glad by the earth smells and +sights and sounds which their blood has not forgotten though +unremembered by them. + +“No more ’ops, matey,” Bert complained. + +It was five o’clock, and the pole-pullers had knocked off, so that +everything could be cleaned up, there being no work on Sunday. For an +hour we were forced idly to wait the coming of the measurers, our feet +tingling with the frost which came on the heels of the setting sun. In +the adjoining bin, two women and half-a-dozen children had picked nine +bushels: so that the five bushels the measurers found in our bin +demonstrated that we had done equally well, for the half-dozen children +had ranged from nine to fourteen years of age. + +Five bushels! We worked it out to eight-pence ha’penny, or seventeen +cents, for two men working three hours and a half. Fourpence farthing +apiece! a little over a penny an hour! But we were allowed only to +“sub” fivepence of the total sum, though the tally-keeper, short of +change, gave us sixpence. Entreaty was in vain. A hard-luck story could +not move him. He proclaimed loudly that we had received a penny more +than our due, and went his way. + +Granting, for the sake of the argument, that we were what we +represented ourselves to be—namely, poor men and broke—then here was +our position: night was coming on; we had had no supper, much less +dinner; and we possessed sixpence between us. I was hungry enough to +eat three sixpenn’orths of food, and so was Bert. One thing was patent. +By doing 16.3 per cent. justice to our stomachs, we would expend the +sixpence, and our stomachs would still be gnawing under 83.3 per cent. +injustice. Being broke again, we could sleep under a hedge, which was +not so bad, though the cold would sap an undue portion of what we had +eaten. But the morrow was Sunday, on which we could do no work, though +our silly stomachs would not knock off on that account. Here, then, was +the problem: how to get three meals on Sunday, and two on Monday (for +we could not make another “sub” till Monday evening). + +We knew that the casual wards were overcrowded; also, that if we begged +from farmer or villager, there was a large likelihood of our going to +jail for fourteen days. What was to be done? We looked at each other in +despair— + +—Not a bit of it. We joyfully thanked God that we were not as other +men, especially hoppers, and went down the road to Maidstone, jingling +in our pockets the half-crowns and florins we had brought from London. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. +THE SEA WIFE + + +You might not expect to find the Sea Wife in the heart of Kent, but +that is where I found her, in a mean street, in the poor quarter of +Maidstone. In her window she had no sign of lodgings to let, and +persuasion was necessary before she could bring herself to let me sleep +in her front room. In the evening I descended to the semi-subterranean +kitchen, and talked with her and her old man, Thomas Mugridge by name. + +And as I talked to them, all the subtleties and complexities of this +tremendous machine civilisation vanished away. It seemed that I went +down through the skin and the flesh to the naked soul of it, and in +Thomas Mugridge and his old woman gripped hold of the essence of this +remarkable English breed. I found there the spirit of the wanderlust +which has lured Albion’s sons across the zones; and I found there the +colossal unreckoning which has tricked the English into foolish +squabblings and preposterous fights, and the doggedness and +stubbornness which have brought them blindly through to empire and +greatness; and likewise I found that vast, incomprehensible patience +which has enabled the home population to endure under the burden of it +all, to toil without complaint through the weary years, and docilely to +yield the best of its sons to fight and colonise to the ends of the +earth. + +Thomas Mugridge was seventy-one years old and a little man. It was +because he was little that he had not gone for a soldier. He had +remained at home and worked. His first recollections were connected +with work. He knew nothing else but work. He had worked all his days, +and at seventy-one he still worked. Each morning saw him up with the +lark and afield, a day labourer, for as such he had been born. Mrs. +Mugridge was seventy-three. From seven years of age she had worked in +the fields, doing a boy’s work at first, and later a man’s. She still +worked, keeping the house shining, washing, boiling, and baking, and, +with my advent, cooking for me and shaming me by making my bed. At the +end of threescore years and more of work they possessed nothing, had +nothing to look forward to save more work. And they were contented. +They expected nothing else, desired nothing else. + +They lived simply. Their wants were few—a pint of beer at the end of +the day, sipped in the semi-subterranean kitchen, a weekly paper to +pore over for seven nights hand-running, and conversation as meditative +and vacant as the chewing of a heifer’s cud. From a wood engraving on +the wall a slender, angelic girl looked down upon them, and underneath +was the legend: “Our Future Queen.” And from a highly coloured +lithograph alongside looked down a stout and elderly lady, with +underneath: “Our Queen—Diamond Jubilee.” + +“What you earn is sweetest,” quoth Mrs. Mugridge, when I suggested that +it was about time they took a rest. + +“No, an’ we don’t want help,” said Thomas Mugridge, in reply to my +question as to whether the children lent them a hand. + +“We’ll work till we dry up and blow away, mother an’ me,” he added; and +Mrs. Mugridge nodded her head in vigorous indorsement. + +Fifteen children she had borne, and all were away and gone, or dead. +The “baby,” however, lived in Maidstone, and she was twenty-seven. When +the children married they had their hands full with their own families +and troubles, like their fathers and mothers before them. + +Where were the children? Ah, where were they not? Lizzie was in +Australia; Mary was in Buenos Ayres; Poll was in New York; Joe had died +in India—and so they called them up, the living and the dead, soldier +and sailor, and colonist’s wife, for the traveller’s sake who sat in +their kitchen. + +They passed me a photograph. A trim young fellow, in soldier’s garb +looked out at me. + +“And which son is this?” I asked. + +They laughed a hearty chorus. Son! Nay, grandson, just back from Indian +service and a soldier-trumpeter to the King. His brother was in the +same regiment with him. And so it ran, sons and daughters, and grand +sons and daughters, world-wanderers and empire-builders, all of them, +while the old folks stayed at home and worked at building empire too. + +“There dwells a wife by the Northern Gate, + And a wealthy wife is she; +She breeds a breed o’ rovin’ men + And casts them over sea. + +“And some are drowned in deep water, + And some in sight of shore; +And word goes back to the weary wife, + And ever she sends more.” + + +But the Sea Wife’s child-bearing is about done. The stock is running +out, and the planet is filling up. The wives of her sons may carry on +the breed, but her work is past. The erstwhile men of England are now +the men of Australia, of Africa, of America. England has sent forth +“the best she breeds” for so long, and has destroyed those that +remained so fiercely, that little remains for her to do but to sit down +through the long nights and gaze at royalty on the wall. + +The true British merchant seaman has passed away. The merchant service +is no longer a recruiting ground for such sea dogs as fought with +Nelson at Trafalgar and the Nile. Foreigners largely man the merchant +ships, though Englishmen still continue to officer them and to prefer +foreigners for’ard. In South Africa the colonial teaches the islander +how to shoot, and the officers muddle and blunder; while at home the +street people play hysterically at mafficking, and the War Office +lowers the stature for enlistment. + +It could not be otherwise. The most complacent Britisher cannot hope to +draw off the life-blood, and underfeed, and keep it up forever. The +average Mrs. Thomas Mugridge has been driven into the city, and she is +not breeding very much of anything save an anæmic and sickly progeny +which cannot find enough to eat. The strength of the English-speaking +race to-day is not in the tight little island, but in the New World +overseas, where are the sons and daughters of Mrs. Thomas Mugridge. The +Sea Wife by the Northern Gate has just about done her work in the +world, though she does not realize it. She must sit down and rest her +tired loins for a space; and if the casual ward and the workhouse do +not await her, it is because of the sons and daughters she has reared +up against the day of her feebleness and decay. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. +PROPERTY VERSUS PERSON + + +In a civilisation frankly materialistic and based upon property, not +soul, it is inevitable that property shall be exalted over soul, that +crimes against property shall be considered far more serious than +crimes against the person. To pound one’s wife to a jelly and break a +few of her ribs is a trivial offence compared with sleeping out under +the naked stars because one has not the price of a doss. The lad who +steals a few pears from a wealthy railway corporation is a greater +menace to society than the young brute who commits an unprovoked +assault upon an old man over seventy years of age. While the young girl +who takes a lodging under the pretence that she has work commits so +dangerous an offence, that, were she not severely punished, she and her +kind might bring the whole fabric of property clattering to the ground. +Had she unholily tramped Piccadilly and the Strand after midnight, the +police would not have interfered with her, and she would have been able +to pay for her lodging. + +The following illustrative cases are culled from the police-court +reports for a single week:— + + +Widnes Police Court. Before Aldermen Gossage and Neil. Thomas Lynch, +charged with being drunk and disorderly and with assaulting a +constable. Defendant rescued a woman from custody, kicked the +constable, and threw stones at him. Fined 3s. 6d. for the first +offence, and 10s. and costs for the assault. + +Glasgow Queen’s Park Police Court. Before Baillie Norman Thompson. John +Kane pleaded guilty to assaulting his wife. There were five previous +convictions. Fined £2, 2s. + +Taunton County Petty Sessions. John Painter, a big, burly fellow, +described as a labourer, charged with assaulting his wife. The woman +received two severe black eyes, and her face was badly swollen. Fined +£1, 8s., including costs, and bound over to keep the peace. + +Widnes Police Court. Richard Bestwick and George Hunt, charged with +trespassing in search of game. Hunt fined £1 and costs, Bestwick £2 and +costs; in default, one month. + +Shaftesbury Police Court. Before the Mayor (Mr. A. T. Carpenter). +Thomas Baker, charged with sleeping out. Fourteen days. + +Glasgow Central Police Court. Before Bailie Dunlop. Edward Morrison, a +lad, convicted of stealing fifteen pears from a lorry at the railroad +station. Seven days. + +Doncaster Borough Police Court. Before Alderman Clark and other +magistrates. James M’Gowan, charged under the Poaching Prevention Act +with being found in possession of poaching implements and a number of +rabbits. Fined £2 and costs, or one month. + +Dunfermline Sheriff Court. Before Sheriff Gillespie. John Young, a +pit-head worker, pleaded guilty to assaulting Alexander Storrar by +beating him about the head and body with his fists, throwing him on the +ground, and also striking him with a pit prop. Fined £1. + +Kirkcaldy Police Court. Before Bailie Dishart. Simon Walker pleaded +guilty to assaulting a man by striking and knocking him down. It was an +unprovoked assault, and the magistrate described the accused as a +perfect danger to the community. Fined 30s. + +Mansfield Police Court. Before the Mayor, Messrs. F. J. Turner, J. +Whitaker, F. Tidsbury, E. Holmes, and Dr. R. Nesbitt. Joseph Jackson, +charged with assaulting Charles Nunn. Without any provocation, +defendant struck the complainant a violent blow in the face, knocking +him down, and then kicked him on the side of the head. He was rendered +unconscious, and he remained under medical treatment for a fortnight. +Fined 21s. + +Perth Sheriff Court. Before Sheriff Sym. David Mitchell, charged with +poaching. There were two previous convictions, the last being three +years ago. The sheriff was asked to deal leniently with Mitchell, who +was sixty-two years of age, and who offered no resistance to the +gamekeeper. Four months. + +Dundee Sheriff Court. Before Hon. Sheriff-Substitute R. C. Walker. John +Murray, Donald Craig, and James Parkes, charged with poaching. Craig +and Parkes fined £1 each or fourteen days; Murray, £5 or one month. + +Reading Borough Police Court. Before Messrs. W. B. Monck, F. B. +Parfitt, H. M. Wallis, and G. Gillagan. Alfred Masters, aged sixteen, +charged with sleeping out on a waste piece of ground and having no +visible means of subsistence. Seven days. + +Salisbury City Petty Sessions. Before the Mayor, Messrs. C. Hoskins, G. +Fullford, E. Alexander, and W. Marlow. James Moore, charged with +stealing a pair of boots from outside a shop. Twenty-one days. + +Horncastle Police Court. Before the Rev. W. F. Massingberd, the Rev. J. +Graham, and Mr. N. Lucas Calcraft. George Brackenbury, a young +labourer, convicted of what the magistrates characterised as an +altogether unprovoked and brutal assault upon James Sargeant Foster, a +man over seventy years of age. Fined £1 and 5s. 6d. costs. + +Worksop Petty Sessions. Before Messrs. F. J. S. Foljambe, R. Eddison, +and S. Smith. John Priestley, charged with assaulting the Rev. Leslie +Graham. Defendant, who was drunk, was wheeling a perambulator and +pushed it in front of a lorry, with the result that the perambulator +was overturned and the baby in it thrown out. The lorry passed over the +perambulator, but the baby was uninjured. Defendant then attacked the +driver of the lorry, and afterwards assaulted the complainant, who +remonstrated with him upon his conduct. In consequence of the injuries +defendant inflicted, complainant had to consult a doctor. Fined 40s. +and costs. + +Rotherham West Riding Police Court. Before Messrs. C. Wright and G. +Pugh and Colonel Stoddart. Benjamin Storey, Thomas Brammer, and Samuel +Wilcock, charged with poaching. One month each. + +Southampton County Police Court. Before Admiral J. C. Rowley, Mr. H. H. +Culme-Seymour, and other magistrates. Henry Thorrington, charged with +sleeping out. Seven days. + +Eckington Police Court. Before Major L. B. Bowden, Messrs. R. Eyre, and +H. A. Fowler, and Dr. Court. Joseph Watts, charged with stealing nine +ferns from a garden. One month. + +Ripley Petty Sessions. Before Messrs. J. B. Wheeler, W. D. Bembridge, +and M. Hooper. Vincent Allen and George Hall, charged under the +Poaching Prevention Act with being found in possession of a number of +rabbits, and John Sparham, charged with aiding and abetting them. Hall +and Sparham fined £1, 17s. 4d., and Allen £2, 17s. 4d., including +costs; the former committed for fourteen days and the latter for one +month in default of payment. + +South-western Police Court, London. Before Mr. Rose. John Probyn, +charged with doing grievous bodily harm to a constable. Prisoner had +been kicking his wife, and also assaulting another woman who protested +against his brutality. The constable tried to persuade him to go inside +his house, but prisoner suddenly turned upon him, knocking him down by +a blow on the face, kicking him as he lay on the ground, and attempting +to strangle him. Finally the prisoner deliberately kicked the officer +in a dangerous part, inflicting an injury which will keep him off duty +for a long time to come. Six weeks. + +Lambeth Police Court, London. Before Mr. Hopkins. “Baby” Stuart, aged +nineteen, described as a chorus girl, charged with obtaining food and +lodging to the value of 5s. by false pretences, and with intent to +defraud Emma Brasier. Emma Brasier, complainant, lodging-house keeper +of Atwell Road. Prisoner took apartments at her house on the +representation that she was employed at the Crown Theatre. After +prisoner had been in her house two or three days, Mrs. Brasier made +inquiries, and, finding the girl’s story untrue, gave her into custody. +Prisoner told the magistrate that she would have worked had she not had +such bad health. Six weeks’ hard labour. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. +INEFFICIENCY + + +I stopped a moment to listen to an argument on the Mile End Waste. It +was night-time, and they were all workmen of the better class. They had +surrounded one of their number, a pleasant-faced man of thirty, and +were giving it to him rather heatedly. + +“But ’ow about this ’ere cheap immigration?” one of them demanded. “The +Jews of Whitechapel, say, a-cutting our throats right along?” + +“You can’t blame them,” was the answer. “They’re just like us, and +they’ve got to live. Don’t blame the man who offers to work cheaper +than you and gets your job.” + +“But ’ow about the wife an’ kiddies?” his interlocutor demanded. + +“There you are,” came the answer. “How about the wife and kiddies of +the man who works cheaper than you and gets your job? Eh? How about his +wife and kiddies? He’s more interested in them than in yours, and he +can’t see them starve. So he cuts the price of labour and out you go. +But you mustn’t blame him, poor devil. He can’t help it. Wages always +come down when two men are after the same job. That’s the fault of +competition, not of the man who cuts the price.” + +“But wyges don’t come down where there’s a union,” the objection was +made. + +“And there you are again, right on the head. The union checks +competition among the labourers, but makes it harder where there are no +unions. There’s where your cheap labour of Whitechapel comes in. +They’re unskilled, and have no unions, and cut each other’s throats, +and ours in the bargain, if we don’t belong to a strong union.” + +Without going further into the argument, this man on the Mile End Waste +pointed the moral that when two men were after the one job wages were +bound to fall. Had he gone deeper into the matter, he would have found +that even the union, say twenty thousand strong, could not hold up +wages if twenty thousand idle men were trying to displace the union +men. This is admirably instanced, just now, by the return and +disbandment of the soldiers from South Africa. They find themselves, by +tens of thousands, in desperate straits in the army of the unemployed. +There is a general decline in wages throughout the land, which, giving +rise to labour disputes and strikes, is taken advantage of by the +unemployed, who gladly pick up the tools thrown down by the strikers. + +Sweating, starvation wages, armies of unemployed, and great numbers of +the homeless and shelterless are inevitable when there are more men to +do work than there is work for men to do. The men and women I have met +upon the streets, and in the spikes and pegs, are not there because as +a mode of life it may be considered a “soft snap.” I have sufficiently +outlined the hardships they undergo to demonstrate that their existence +is anything but “soft.” + +It is a matter of sober calculation, here in England, that it is softer +to work for twenty shillings a week, and have regular food, and a bed +at night, than it is to walk the streets. The man who walks the streets +suffers more, and works harder, for far less return. I have depicted +the nights they spend, and how, driven in by physical exhaustion, they +go to the casual ward for a “rest up.” Nor is the casual ward a soft +snap. To pick four pounds of oakum, break twelve hundredweight of +stones, or perform the most revolting tasks, in return for the +miserable food and shelter they receive, is an unqualified extravagance +on the part of the men who are guilty of it. On the part of the +authorities it is sheer robbery. They give the men far less for their +labour than do the capitalistic employers. The wage for the same amount +of labour, performed for a private employer, would buy them better +beds, better food, more good cheer, and, above all, greater freedom. + +As I say, it is an extravagance for a man to patronise a casual ward. +And that they know it themselves is shown by the way these men shun it +till driven in by physical exhaustion. Then why do they do it? Not +because they are discouraged workers. The very opposite is true; they +are discouraged vagabonds. In the United States the tramp is almost +invariably a discouraged worker. He finds tramping a softer mode of +life than working. But this is not true in England. Here the powers +that be do their utmost to discourage the tramp and vagabond, and he +is, in all truth, a mightily discouraged creature. He knows that two +shillings a day, which is only fifty cents, will buy him three fair +meals, a bed at night, and leave him a couple of pennies for pocket +money. He would rather work for those two shillings than for the +charity of the casual ward; for he knows that he would not have to work +so hard, and that he would not be so abominably treated. He does not do +so, however, because there are more men to do work than there is work +for men to do. + +When there are more men than there is work to be done, a sifting-out +process must obtain. In every branch of industry the less efficient are +crowded out. Being crowded out because of inefficiency, they cannot go +up, but must descend, and continue to descend, until they reach their +proper level, a place in the industrial fabric where they are +efficient. It follows, therefore, and it is inexorable, that the least +efficient must descend to the very bottom, which is the shambles +wherein they perish miserably. + +A glance at the confirmed inefficients at the bottom demonstrates that +they are, as a rule, mental, physical, and moral wrecks. The exceptions +to the rule are the late arrivals, who are merely very inefficient, and +upon whom the wrecking process is just beginning to operate. All the +forces here, it must be remembered, are destructive. The good body +(which is there because its brain is not quick and capable) is speedily +wrenched and twisted out of shape; the clean mind (which is there +because of its weak body) is speedily fouled and contaminated. + +The mortality is excessive, but, even then, they die far too lingering +deaths. + +Here, then, we have the construction of the Abyss and the shambles. +Throughout the whole industrial fabric a constant elimination is going +on. The inefficient are weeded out and flung downward. Various things +constitute inefficiency. The engineer who is irregular or irresponsible +will sink down until he finds his place, say as a casual labourer, an +occupation irregular in its very nature and in which there is little or +no responsibility. Those who are slow and clumsy, who suffer from +weakness of body or mind, or who lack nervous, mental, and physical +stamina, must sink down, sometimes rapidly, sometimes step by step, to +the bottom. Accident, by disabling an efficient worker, will make him +inefficient, and down he must go. And the worker who becomes aged, with +failing energy and numbing brain, must begin the frightful descent +which knows no stopping-place short of the bottom and death. + +In this last instance, the statistics of London tell a terrible tale. +The population of London is one-seventh of the total population of the +United Kingdom, and in London, year in and year out, one adult in every +four dies on public charity, either in the workhouse, the hospital, or +the asylum. When the fact that the well-to-do do not end thus is taken +into consideration, it becomes manifest that it is the fate of at least +one in every three adult workers to die on public charity. + +As an illustration of how a good worker may suddenly become +inefficient, and what then happens to him, I am tempted to give the +case of M’Garry, a man thirty-two years of age, and an inmate of the +workhouse. The extracts are quoted from the annual report of the trade +union. + + +I worked at Sullivan’s place in Widnes, better known as the British +Alkali Chemical Works. I was working in a shed, and I had to cross the +yard. It was ten o’clock at night, and there was no light about. While +crossing the yard I felt something take hold of my leg and screw it +off. I became unconscious; I didn’t know what became of me for a day or +two. On the following Sunday night I came to my senses, and found +myself in the hospital. I asked the nurse what was to do with my legs, +and she told me both legs were off. + +There was a stationary crank in the yard, let into the ground; the hole +was 18 inches long, 15 inches deep, and 15 inches wide. The crank +revolved in the hole three revolutions a minute. There was no fence or +covering over the hole. Since my accident they have stopped it +altogether, and have covered the hole up with a piece of sheet iron. . +. . They gave me £25. They didn’t reckon that as compensation; they +said it was only for charity’s sake. Out of that I paid £9 for a +machine by which to wheel myself about. + +I was labouring at the time I got my legs off. I got twenty-four +shillings a week, rather better pay than the other men, because I used +to take shifts. When there was heavy work to be done I used to be +picked out to do it. Mr. Manton, the manager, visited me at the +hospital several times. When I was getting better, I asked him if he +would be able to find me a job. He told me not to trouble myself, as +the firm was not cold-hearted. I would be right enough in any case . . +. Mr. Manton stopped coming to see me; and the last time, he said he +thought of asking the directors to give me a fifty-pound note, so I +could go home to my friends in Ireland. + + +Poor M’Garry! He received rather better pay than the other men because +he was ambitious and took shifts, and when heavy work was to be done he +was the man picked out to do it. And then the thing happened, and he +went into the workhouse. The alternative to the workhouse is to go home +to Ireland and burden his friends for the rest of his life. Comment is +superfluous. + +It must be understood that efficiency is not determined by the workers +themselves, but is determined by the demand for labour. If three men +seek one position, the most efficient man will get it. The other two, +no matter how capable they may be, will none the less be inefficients. +If Germany, Japan, and the United States should capture the entire +world market for iron, coal, and textiles, at once the English workers +would be thrown idle by hundreds of thousands. Some would emigrate, but +the rest would rush their labour into the remaining industries. A +general shaking up of the workers from top to bottom would result; and +when equilibrium had been restored, the number of the inefficients at +the bottom of the Abyss would have been increased by hundreds of +thousands. On the other hand, conditions remaining constant and all the +workers doubling their efficiency, there would still be as many +inefficients, though each inefficient were twice as capable as he had +been and more capable than many of the efficients had previously been. + +When there are more men to work than there is work for men to do, just +as many men as are in excess of work will be inefficients, and as +inefficients they are doomed to lingering and painful destruction. It +shall be the aim of future chapters to show, by their work and manner +of living, not only how the inefficients are weeded out and destroyed, +but to show how inefficients are being constantly and wantonly created +by the forces of industrial society as it exists to-day. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. +WAGES + + +When I learned that in Lesser London there were 1,292,737 people who +received twenty-one shillings or less a week per family, I became +interested as to how the wages could best be spent in order to maintain +the physical efficiency of such families. Families of six, seven, eight +or ten being beyond consideration, I have based the following table +upon a family of five—a father, mother, and three children; while I +have made twenty-one shillings equivalent to $5.25, though actually, +twenty-one shillings are equivalent to about $5.11. + +Rent $1.50 or 6/0 +Bread 1.00 ” 4/0 +Meat O.87.5 ” 3/6 +Vegetables O.62.5 ” 2/6 +Coals 0.25 ” 1/0 +Tea 0.18 ” 0/9 +Oil 0.16 ” 0/8 +Sugar 0.18 ” 0/9 +Milk 0.12 ” 0/6 +Soap 0.08 ” 0/4 +Butter 0.20 ” 0/10 +Firewood 0.08 ” 0/4 +Total $5.25 21/2 + +An analysis of one item alone will show how little room there is for +waste. _Bread_, $1: for a family of five, for seven days, one dollar’s +worth of bread will give each a daily ration of 2.8 cents; and if they +eat three meals a day, each may consume per meal 9.5 mills’ worth of +bread, a little less than one halfpennyworth. Now bread is the heaviest +item. They will get less of meat per mouth each meal, and still less of +vegetables; while the smaller items become too microscopic for +consideration. On the other hand, these food articles are all bought at +small retail, the most expensive and wasteful method of purchasing. + +While the table given above will permit no extravagance, no overloading +of stomachs, it will be noticed that there is no surplus. The whole +guinea is spent for food and rent. There is no pocket-money left over. +Does the man buy a glass of beer, the family must eat that much less; +and in so far as it eats less, just that far will it impair its +physical efficiency. The members of this family cannot ride in busses +or trams, cannot write letters, take outings, go to a “tu’penny gaff” +for cheap vaudeville, join social or benefit clubs, nor can they buy +sweetmeats, tobacco, books, or newspapers. + +And further, should one child (and there are three) require a pair of +shoes, the family must strike meat for a week from its bill of fare. +And since there are five pairs of feet requiring shoes, and five heads +requiring hats, and five bodies requiring clothes, and since there are +laws regulating indecency, the family must constantly impair its +physical efficiency in order to keep warm and out of jail. For notice, +when rent, coals, oil, soap, and firewood are extracted from the weekly +income, there remains a daily allowance for food of 4.5d. to each +person; and that 4.5d. cannot be lessened by buying clothes without +impairing the physical efficiency. + +All of which is hard enough. But the thing happens; the husband and +father breaks his leg or his neck. No 4.5d. a day per mouth for food is +coming in; no halfpennyworth of bread per meal; and, at the end of the +week, no six shillings for rent. So out they must go, to the streets or +the workhouse, or to a miserable den, somewhere, in which the mother +will desperately endeavour to hold the family together on the ten +shillings she may possibly be able to earn. + +While in London there are 1,292,737 people who receive twenty-one +shillings or less a week per family, it must be remembered that we have +investigated a family of five living on a twenty-one shilling basis. +There are larger families, there are many families that live on less +than twenty-one shillings, and there is much irregular employment. The +question naturally arises, How do _they_ live? The answer is that they +do not live. They do not know what life is. They drag out a +subterbestial existence until mercifully released by death. + +Before descending to the fouler depths, let the case of the telephone +girls be cited. Here are clean, fresh English maids, for whom a higher +standard of living than that of the beasts is absolutely necessary. +Otherwise they cannot remain clean, fresh English maids. On entering +the service, a telephone girl receives a weekly wage of eleven +shillings. If she be quick and clever, she may, at the end of five +years, attain a minimum wage of one pound. Recently a table of such a +girl’s weekly expenditure was furnished to Lord Londonderry. Here it +is:— + + s. d. +Rent, fire, and light 7 6 +Board at home 3 6 +Board at the office 4 6 +Street car fare 1 6 +Laundry 1 0 +Total 18 0 + +This leaves nothing for clothes, recreation, or sickness. And yet many +of the girls are receiving, not eighteen shillings, but eleven +shillings, twelve shillings, and fourteen shillings per week. They must +have clothes and recreation, and— + +Man to Man so oft unjust, +Is always so to Woman. + + +At the Trades Union Congress now being held in London, the Gasworkers’ +Union moved that instructions be given the Parliamentary Committee to +introduce a Bill to prohibit the employment of children under fifteen +years of age. Mr. Shackleton, Member of Parliament and a representative +of the Northern Counties Weavers, opposed the resolution on behalf of +the textile workers, who, he said, could not dispense with the earnings +of their children and live on the scale of wages which obtained. The +representatives of 514,000 workers voted against the resolution, while +the representatives of 535,000 workers voted in favour of it. When +514,000 workers oppose a resolution prohibiting child-labour under +fifteen, it is evident that a less-than-living wage is being paid to an +immense number of the adult workers of the country. + +I have spoken with women in Whitechapel who receive right along less +than one shilling for a twelve-hour day in the coat-making sweat shops; +and with women trousers finishers who receive an average princely and +weekly wage of three to four shillings. + +A case recently cropped up of men, in the employ of a wealthy business +house, receiving their board and six shillings per week for six working +days of sixteen hours each. The sandwich men get fourteenpence per day +and find themselves. The average weekly earnings of the hawkers and +costermongers are not more than ten to twelve shillings. The average of +all common labourers, outside the dockers, is less than sixteen +shillings per week, while the dockers average from eight to nine +shillings. These figures are taken from a royal commission report and +are authentic. + +Conceive of an old woman, broken and dying, supporting herself and four +children, and paying three shillings per week rent, by making match +boxes at 2.25d. per gross. Twelve dozen boxes for 2.25d., and, in +addition, finding her own paste and thread! She never knew a day off, +either for sickness, rest, or recreation. Each day and every day, +Sundays as well, she toiled fourteen hours. Her day’s stint was seven +gross, for which she received 1s. 3.75d. In the week of ninety-eight +hours’ work, she made 7066 match boxes, and earned 4s. 10.25d., less +her paste and thread. + +Last year, Mr. Thomas Holmes, a police-court missionary of note, after +writing about the condition of the women workers, received the +following letter, dated April 18, 1901:— + +Sir,—Pardon the liberty I am taking, but, having read what you said +about poor women working fourteen hours a day for ten shillings per +week, I beg to state my case. I am a tie-maker, who, after working all +the week, cannot earn more than five shillings, and I have a poor +afflicted husband to keep who hasn’t earned a penny for more than ten +years. + + +Imagine a woman, capable of writing such a clear, sensible, grammatical +letter, supporting her husband and self on five shillings per week! Mr. +Holmes visited her. He had to squeeze to get into the room. There lay +her sick husband; there she worked all day long; there she cooked, ate, +washed, and slept; and there her husband and she performed all the +functions of living and dying. There was no space for the missionary to +sit down, save on the bed, which was partially covered with ties and +silk. The sick man’s lungs were in the last stages of decay. He coughed +and expectorated constantly, the woman ceasing from her work to assist +him in his paroxysms. The silken fluff from the ties was not good for +his sickness; nor was his sickness good for the ties, and the handlers +and wearers of the ties yet to come. + +Another case Mr. Holmes visited was that of a young girl, twelve years +of age, charged in the police court with stealing food. He found her +the deputy mother of a boy of nine, a crippled boy of seven, and a +younger child. Her mother was a widow and a blouse-maker. She paid five +shillings a week rent. Here are the last items in her housekeeping +account: Tea. 0.5d.; sugar, 0.5d.; bread, 0.25d.; margarine, 1d.; oil, +1.5d.; and firewood, 1d. Good housewives of the soft and tender folk, +imagine yourselves marketing and keeping house on such a scale, setting +a table for five, and keeping an eye on your deputy mother of twelve to +see that she did not steal food for her little brothers and sisters, +the while you stitched, stitched, stitched at a nightmare line of +blouses, which stretched away into the gloom and down to the pauper’s +coffin a-yawn for you. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. +THE GHETTO + + +Is it well that while we range with Science, glorying in the time, +City children soak and blacken soul and sense in city slime? +There among the gloomy alleys Progress halts on palsied feet; +Crime and hunger cast out maidens by the thousand on the street; + +There the master scrimps his haggard seamstress of her daily bread; +There the single sordid attic holds the living and the dead; +There the smouldering fire of fever creeps across the rotted floor, +And the crowded couch of incest, in the warrens of the poor. + + +At one time the nations of Europe confined the undesirable Jews in city +ghettos. But to-day the dominant economic class, by less arbitrary but +none the less rigorous methods, has confined the undesirable yet +necessary workers into ghettos of remarkable meanness and vastness. +East London is such a ghetto, where the rich and the powerful do not +dwell, and the traveller cometh not, and where two million workers +swarm, procreate, and die. + +It must not be supposed that all the workers of London are crowded into +the East End, but the tide is setting strongly in that direction. The +poor quarters of the city proper are constantly being destroyed, and +the main stream of the unhoused is toward the east. In the last twelve +years, one district, “London over the Border,” as it is called, which +lies well beyond Aldgate, Whitechapel, and Mile End, has increased +260,000, or over sixty per cent. The churches in this district, by the +way, can seat but one in every thirty-seven of the added population. + +The City of Dreadful Monotony, the East End is often called, especially +by well-fed, optimistic sightseers, who look over the surface of things +and are merely shocked by the intolerable sameness and meanness of it +all. If the East End is worthy of no worse title than The City of +Dreadful Monotony, and if working people are unworthy of variety and +beauty and surprise, it would not be such a bad place in which to live. +But the East End does merit a worse title. It should be called The City +of Degradation. + +While it is not a city of slums, as some people imagine, it may well be +said to be one gigantic slum. From the standpoint of simple decency and +clean manhood and womanhood, any mean street, of all its mean streets, +is a slum. Where sights and sounds abound which neither you nor I would +care to have our children see and hear is a place where no man’s +children should live, and see, and hear. Where you and I would not care +to have our wives pass their lives is a place where no other man’s wife +should have to pass her life. For here, in the East End, the +obscenities and brute vulgarities of life are rampant. There is no +privacy. The bad corrupts the good, and all fester together. Innocent +childhood is sweet and beautiful: but in East London innocence is a +fleeting thing, and you must catch them before they crawl out of the +cradle, or you will find the very babes as unholily wise as you. + +The application of the Golden Rule determines that East London is an +unfit place in which to live. Where you would not have your own babe +live, and develop, and gather to itself knowledge of life and the +things of life, is not a fit place for the babes of other men to live, +and develop, and gather to themselves knowledge of life and the things +of life. It is a simple thing, this Golden Rule, and all that is +required. Political economy and the survival of the fittest can go hang +if they say otherwise. What is not good enough for you is not good +enough for other men, and there’s no more to be said. + +There are 300,000 people in London, divided into families, that live in +one-room tenements. Far, far more live in two and three rooms and are +as badly crowded, regardless of sex, as those that live in one room. +The law demands 400 cubic feet of space for each person. In army +barracks each soldier is allowed 600 cubic feet. Professor Huxley, at +one time himself a medical officer in East London, always held that +each person should have 800 cubic feet of space, and that it should be +well ventilated with pure air. Yet in London there are 900,000 people +living in less than the 400 cubic feet prescribed by the law. + +Mr. Charles Booth, who engaged in a systematic work of years in +charting and classifying the toiling city population, estimates that +there are 1,800,000 people in London who are _poor_ and _very poor_. It +is of interest to mark what he terms poor. By _poor_ he means families +which have a total weekly income of from eighteen to twenty-one +shillings. The _very poor_ fall greatly below this standard. + +The workers, as a class, are being more and more segregated by their +economic masters; and this process, with its jamming and overcrowding, +tends not so much toward immorality as unmorality. Here is an extract +from a recent meeting of the London County Council, terse and bald, but +with a wealth of horror to be read between the lines:— + +Mr. Bruce asked the Chairman of the Public Health Committee whether his +attention had been called to a number of cases of serious overcrowding +in the East End. In St. Georges-in-the-East a man and his wife and +their family of eight occupied one small room. This family consisted of +five daughters, aged twenty, seventeen, eight, four, and an infant; and +three sons, aged fifteen, thirteen, and twelve. In Whitechapel a man +and his wife and their three daughters, aged sixteen, eight, and four, +and two sons, aged ten and twelve years, occupied a smaller room. In +Bethnal Green a man and his wife, with four sons, aged twenty-three, +twenty-one, nineteen, and sixteen, and two daughters, aged fourteen and +seven, were also found in one room. He asked whether it was not the +duty of the various local authorities to prevent such serious +overcrowding. + + +But with 900,000 people actually living under illegal conditions, the +authorities have their hands full. When the overcrowded folk are +ejected they stray off into some other hole; and, as they move their +belongings by night, on hand-barrows (one hand-barrow accommodating the +entire household goods and the sleeping children), it is next to +impossible to keep track of them. If the Public Health Act of 1891 were +suddenly and completely enforced, 900,000 people would receive notice +to clear out of their houses and go on to the streets, and 500,000 +rooms would have to be built before they were all legally housed again. + +The mean streets merely look mean from the outside, but inside the +walls are to be found squalor, misery, and tragedy. While the following +tragedy may be revolting to read, it must not be forgotten that the +existence of it is far more revolting. + +In Devonshire Place, Lisson Grove, a short while back died an old woman +of seventy-five years of age. At the inquest the coroner’s officer +stated that “all he found in the room was a lot of old rags covered +with vermin. He had got himself smothered with the vermin. The room was +in a shocking condition, and he had never seen anything like it. +Everything was absolutely covered with vermin.” + +The doctor said: “He found deceased lying across the fender on her +back. She had one garment and her stockings on. The body was quite +alive with vermin, and all the clothes in the room were absolutely grey +with insects. Deceased was very badly nourished and was very emaciated. +She had extensive sores on her legs, and her stockings were adherent to +those sores. The sores were the result of vermin.” + +A man present at the inquest wrote: “I had the evil fortune to see the +body of the unfortunate woman as it lay in the mortuary; and even now +the memory of that gruesome sight makes me shudder. There she lay in +the mortuary shell, so starved and emaciated that she was a mere bundle +of skin and bones. Her hair, which was matted with filth, was simply a +nest of vermin. Over her bony chest leaped and rolled hundreds, +thousands, myriads of vermin!” + +If it is not good for your mother and my mother so to die, then it is +not good for this woman, whosoever’s mother she might be, so to die. + +Bishop Wilkinson, who has lived in Zululand, recently said, “No human +of an African village would allow such a promiscuous mixing of young +men and women, boys and girls.” He had reference to the children of the +overcrowded folk, who at five have nothing to learn and much to unlearn +which they will never unlearn. + +It is notorious that here in the Ghetto the houses of the poor are +greater profit earners than the mansions of the rich. Not only does the +poor worker have to live like a beast, but he pays proportionately more +for it than does the rich man for his spacious comfort. A class of +house-sweaters has been made possible by the competition of the poor +for houses. There are more people than there is room, and numbers are +in the workhouse because they cannot find shelter elsewhere. Not only +are houses let, but they are sublet, and sub-sublet down to the very +rooms. + +“A part of a room to let.” This notice was posted a short while ago in +a window not five minutes’ walk from St. James’s Hall. The Rev. Hugh +Price Hughes is authority for the statement that beds are let on the +three-relay system—that is, three tenants to a bed, each occupying it +eight hours, so that it never grows cold; while the floor space +underneath the bed is likewise let on the three-relay system. Health +officers are not at all unused to finding such cases as the following: +in one room having a cubic capacity of 1000 feet, three adult females +in the bed, and two adult females under the bed; and in one room of +1650 cubic feet, one adult male and two children in the bed, and two +adult females under the bed. + +Here is a typical example of a room on the more respectable two-relay +system. It is occupied in the daytime by a young woman employed all +night in a hotel. At seven o’clock in the evening she vacates the room, +and a bricklayer’s labourer comes in. At seven in the morning he +vacates, and goes to his work, at which time she returns from hers. + +The Rev. W. N. Davies, rector of Spitalfields, took a census of some of +the alleys in his parish. He says:— + +In one alley there are ten houses—fifty-one rooms, nearly all about 8 +feet by 9 feet—and 254 people. In six instances only do 2 people occupy +one room; and in others the number varied from 3 to 9. In another court +with six houses and twenty-two rooms were 84 people—again 6, 7, 8, and +9 being the number living in one room, in several instances. In one +house with eight rooms are 45 people—one room containing 9 persons, one +8, two 7, and another 6. + + +This Ghetto crowding is not through inclination, but compulsion. Nearly +fifty per cent. of the workers pay from one-fourth to one-half of their +earnings for rent. The average rent in the larger part of the East End +is from four to six shillings per week for one room, while skilled +mechanics, earning thirty-five shillings per week, are forced to part +with fifteen shillings of it for two or three pokey little dens, in +which they strive desperately to obtain some semblance of home life. +And rents are going up all the time. In one street in Stepney the +increase in only two years has been from thirteen to eighteen +shillings; in another street from eleven to sixteen shillings; and in +another street, from eleven to fifteen shillings; while in Whitechapel, +two-room houses that recently rented for ten shillings are now costing +twenty-one shillings. East, west, north, and south the rents are going +up. When land is worth from £20,000 to £30,000 an acre, some one must +pay the landlord. + +Mr. W. C. Steadman, in the House of Commons, in a speech concerning his +constituency in Stepney, related the following:— + +This morning, not a hundred yards from where I am myself living, a +widow stopped me. She has six children to support, and the rent of her +house was fourteen shillings per week. She gets her living by letting +the house to lodgers and doing a day’s washing or charring. That woman, +with tears in her eyes, told me that the landlord had increased the +rent from fourteen shillings to eighteen shillings. What could the +woman do? There is no accommodation in Stepney. Every place is taken up +and overcrowded. + + +Class supremacy can rest only on class degradation; and when the +workers are segregated in the Ghetto, they cannot escape the consequent +degradation. A short and stunted people is created—a breed strikingly +differentiated from their masters’ breed, a pavement folk, as it were, +lacking stamina and strength. The men become caricatures of what +physical men ought to be, and their women and children are pale and +anæmic, with eyes ringed darkly, who stoop and slouch, and are early +twisted out of all shapeliness and beauty. + +To make matters worse, the men of the Ghetto are the men who are left—a +deteriorated stock, left to undergo still further deterioration. For a +hundred and fifty years, at least, they have been drained of their +best. The strong men, the men of pluck, initiative, and ambition, have +been faring forth to the fresher and freer portions of the globe, to +make new lands and nations. Those who are lacking, the weak of heart +and head and hand, as well as the rotten and hopeless, have remained to +carry on the breed. And year by year, in turn, the best they breed are +taken from them. Wherever a man of vigour and stature manages to grow +up, he is haled forthwith into the army. A soldier, as Bernard Shaw has +said, “ostensibly a heroic and patriotic defender of his country, is +really an unfortunate man driven by destitution to offer himself as +food for powder for the sake of regular rations, shelter, and +clothing.” + +This constant selection of the best from the workers has impoverished +those who are left, a sadly degraded remainder, for the great part, +which, in the Ghetto, sinks to the deepest depths. The wine of life has +been drawn off to spill itself in blood and progeny over the rest of +the earth. Those that remain are the lees, and they are segregated and +steeped in themselves. They become indecent and bestial. When they +kill, they kill with their hands, and then stupidly surrender +themselves to the executioners. There is no splendid audacity about +their transgressions. They gouge a mate with a dull knife, or beat his +head in with an iron pot, and then sit down and wait for the police. +Wife-beating is the masculine prerogative of matrimony. They wear +remarkable boots of brass and iron, and when they have polished off the +mother of their children with a black eye or so, they knock her down +and proceed to trample her very much as a Western stallion tramples a +rattlesnake. + +A woman of the lower Ghetto classes is as much the slave of her husband +as is the Indian squaw. And I, for one, were I a woman and had but the +two choices, should prefer being a squaw. The men are economically +dependent on their masters, and the women are economically dependent on +the men. The result is, the woman gets the beating the man should give +his master, and she can do nothing. There are the kiddies, and he is +the bread-winner, and she dare not send him to jail and leave herself +and children to starve. Evidence to convict can rarely be obtained when +such cases come into the courts; as a rule, the trampled wife and +mother is weeping and hysterically beseeching the magistrate to let her +husband off for the kiddies’ sakes. + +The wives become screaming harridans or, broken-spirited and doglike, +lose what little decency and self-respect they have remaining over from +their maiden days, and all sink together, unheeding, in their +degradation and dirt. + +Sometimes I become afraid of my own generalizations upon the massed +misery of this Ghetto life, and feel that my impressions are +exaggerated, that I am too close to the picture and lack perspective. +At such moments I find it well to turn to the testimony of other men to +prove to myself that I am not becoming over-wrought and addle-pated. +Frederick Harrison has always struck me as being a level-headed, +well-controlled man, and he says:— + +To me, at least, it would be enough to condemn modern society as hardly +an advance on slavery or serfdom, if the permanent condition of +industry were to be that which we behold, that ninety per cent. of the +actual producers of wealth have no home that they can call their own +beyond the end of the week; have no bit of soil, or so much as a room +that belongs to them; have nothing of value of any kind, except as much +old furniture as will go into a cart; have the precarious chance of +weekly wages, which barely suffice to keep them in health; are housed, +for the most part, in places that no man thinks fit for his horse; are +separated by so narrow a margin from destitution that a month of bad +trade, sickness, or unexpected loss brings them face to face with +hunger and pauperism . . . But below this normal state of the average +workman in town and country, there is found the great band of destitute +outcasts—the camp followers of the army of industry—at least one-tenth +the whole proletarian population, whose normal condition is one of +sickening wretchedness. If this is to be the permanent arrangement of +modern society, civilization must be held to bring a curse on the great +majority of mankind. + + +Ninety per cent.! The figures are appalling, yet Mr. Stopford Brooke, +after drawing a frightful London picture, finds himself compelled to +multiply it by half a million. Here it is:— + +I often used to meet, when I was curate at Kensington, families +drifting into London along the Hammersmith Road. One day there came +along a labourer and his wife, his son and two daughters. Their family +had lived for a long time on an estate in the country, and managed, +with the help of the common-land and their labour, to get on. But the +time came when the common was encroached upon, and their labour was not +needed on the estate, and they were quietly turned out of their +cottage. Where should they go? Of course to London, where work was +thought to be plentiful. They had a little savings, and they thought +they could get two decent rooms to live in. But the inexorable land +question met them in London. They tried the decent courts for lodgings, +and found that two rooms would cost ten shillings a week. Food was dear +and bad, water was bad, and in a short time their health suffered. Work +was hard to get, and its wage was so low that they were soon in debt. +They became more ill and more despairing with the poisonous +surroundings, the darkness, and the long hours of work; and they were +driven forth to seek a cheaper lodging. They found it in a court I knew +well—a hotbed of crime and nameless horrors. In this they got a single +room at a cruel rent, and work was more difficult for them to get now, +as they came from a place of such bad repute, and they fell into the +hands of those who sweat the last drop out of man and woman and child, +for wages which are the food only of despair. And the darkness and the +dirt, the bad food and the sickness, and the want of water was worse +than before; and the crowd and the companionship of the court robbed +them of the last shreds of self-respect. The drink demon seized upon +them. Of course there was a public-house at both ends of the court. +There they fled, one and all, for shelter, and warmth, and society, and +forgetfulness. And they came out in deeper debt, with inflamed senses +and burning brains, and an unsatisfied craving for drink they would do +anything to satiate. And in a few months the father was in prison, the +wife dying, the son a criminal, and the daughters on the street. +_Multiply this by half a million, and you will be beneath the truth_. + + +No more dreary spectacle can be found on this earth than the whole of +the “awful East,” with its Whitechapel, Hoxton, Spitalfields, Bethnal +Green, and Wapping to the East India Docks. The colour of life is grey +and drab. Everything is helpless, hopeless, unrelieved, and dirty. Bath +tubs are a thing totally unknown, as mythical as the ambrosia of the +gods. The people themselves are dirty, while any attempt at cleanliness +becomes howling farce, when it is not pitiful and tragic. Strange, +vagrant odours come drifting along the greasy wind, and the rain, when +it falls, is more like grease than water from heaven. The very +cobblestones are scummed with grease. + +Here lives a population as dull and unimaginative as its long grey +miles of dingy brick. Religion has virtually passed it by, and a gross +and stupid materialism reigns, fatal alike to the things of the spirit +and the finer instincts of life. + +It used to be the proud boast that every Englishman’s home was his +castle. But to-day it is an anachronism. The Ghetto folk have no homes. +They do not know the significance and the sacredness of home life. Even +the municipal dwellings, where live the better-class workers, are +overcrowded barracks. They have no home life. The very language proves +it. The father returning from work asks his child in the street where +her mother is; and back the answer comes, “In the buildings.” + +A new race has sprung up, a street people. They pass their lives at +work and in the streets. They have dens and lairs into which to crawl +for sleeping purposes, and that is all. One cannot travesty the word by +calling such dens and lairs “homes.” The traditional silent and +reserved Englishman has passed away. The pavement folk are noisy, +voluble, high-strung, excitable—when they are yet young. As they grow +older they become steeped and stupefied in beer. When they have nothing +else to do, they ruminate as a cow ruminates. They are to be met with +everywhere, standing on curbs and corners, and staring into vacancy. +Watch one of them. He will stand there, motionless, for hours, and when +you go away you will leave him still staring into vacancy. It is most +absorbing. He has no money for beer, and his lair is only for sleeping +purposes, so what else remains for him to do? He has already solved the +mysteries of girl’s love, and wife’s love, and child’s love, and found +them delusions and shams, vain and fleeting as dew-drops, +quick-vanishing before the ferocious facts of life. + +As I say, the young are high-strung, nervous, excitable; the +middle-aged are empty-headed, stolid, and stupid. It is absurd to think +for an instant that they can compete with the workers of the New World. +Brutalised, degraded, and dull, the Ghetto folk will be unable to +render efficient service to England in the world struggle for +industrial supremacy which economists declare has already begun. +Neither as workers nor as soldiers can they come up to the mark when +England, in her need, calls upon them, her forgotten ones; and if +England be flung out of the world’s industrial orbit, they will perish +like flies at the end of summer. Or, with England critically situated, +and with them made desperate as wild beasts are made desperate, they +may become a menace and go “swelling” down to the West End to return +the “slumming” the West End has done in the East. In which case, before +rapid-fire guns and the modern machinery of warfare, they will perish +the more swiftly and easily. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. +COFFEE-HOUSES AND DOSS-HOUSES + + +Another phrase gone glimmering, shorn of romance and tradition and all +that goes to make phrases worth keeping! For me, henceforth, +“coffee-house” will possess anything but an agreeable connotation. Over +on the other side of the world, the mere mention of the word was +sufficient to conjure up whole crowds of its historic frequenters, and +to send trooping through my imagination endless groups of wits and +dandies, pamphleteers and bravos, and bohemians of Grub Street. + +But here, on this side of the world, alas and alack, the very name is a +misnomer. Coffee-house: a place where people drink coffee. Not at all. +You cannot obtain coffee in such a place for love or money. True, you +may call for coffee, and you will have brought you something in a cup +purporting to be coffee, and you will taste it and be disillusioned, +for coffee it certainly is not. + +And what is true of the coffee is true of the coffee-house. +Working-men, in the main, frequent these places, and greasy, dirty +places they are, without one thing about them to cherish decency in a +man or put self-respect into him. Table-cloths and napkins are unknown. +A man eats in the midst of the débris left by his predecessor, and +dribbles his own scraps about him and on the floor. In rush times, in +such places, I have positively waded through the muck and mess that +covered the floor, and I have managed to eat because I was abominably +hungry and capable of eating anything. + +This seems to be the normal condition of the working-man, from the zest +with which he addresses himself to the board. Eating is a necessity, +and there are no frills about it. He brings in with him a primitive +voraciousness, and, I am confident, carries away with him a fairly +healthy appetite. When you see such a man, on his way to work in the +morning, order a pint of tea, which is no more tea than it is ambrosia, +pull a hunk of dry bread from his pocket, and wash the one down with +the other, depend upon it, that man has not the right sort of stuff in +his belly, nor enough of the wrong sort of stuff, to fit him for his +day’s work. And further, depend upon it, he and a thousand of his kind +will not turn out the quantity or quality of work that a thousand men +will who have eaten heartily of meat and potatoes, and drunk coffee +that is coffee. + +As a vagrant in the “Hobo” of a California jail, I have been served +better food and drink than the London workman receives in his +coffee-houses; while as an American labourer I have eaten a breakfast +for twelvepence such as the British labourer would not dream of eating. +Of course, he will pay only three or four pence for his; which is, +however, as much as I paid, for I would be earning six shillings to his +two or two and a half. On the other hand, though, and in return, I +would turn out an amount of work in the course of the day that would +put to shame the amount he turned out. So there are two sides to it. +The man with the high standard of living will always do more work and +better than the man with the low standard of living. + +There is a comparison which sailormen make between the English and +American merchant services. In an English ship, they say, it is poor +grub, poor pay, and easy work; in an American ship, good grub, good +pay, and hard work. And this is applicable to the working populations +of both countries. The ocean greyhounds have to pay for speed and +steam, and so does the workman. But if the workman is not able to pay +for it, he will not have the speed and steam, that is all. The proof of +it is when the English workman comes to America. He will lay more +bricks in New York than he will in London, still more bricks in St. +Louis, and still more bricks when he gets to San Francisco.[3] His +standard of living has been rising all the time. + + [3] The San Francisco bricklayer receives twenty shillings per day, + and at present is on strike for twenty-four shillings. + + +Early in the morning, along the streets frequented by workmen on the +way to work, many women sit on the sidewalk with sacks of bread beside +them. No end of workmen purchase these, and eat them as they walk +along. They do not even wash the dry bread down with the tea to be +obtained for a penny in the coffee-houses. It is incontestable that a +man is not fit to begin his day’s work on a meal like that; and it is +equally incontestable that the loss will fall upon his employer and +upon the nation. For some time, now, statesmen have been crying, “Wake +up, England!” It would show more hard-headed common sense if they +changed the tune to “Feed up, England!” + +Not only is the worker poorly fed, but he is filthily fed. I have stood +outside a butcher-shop and watched a horde of speculative housewives +turning over the trimmings and scraps and shreds of beef and +mutton—dog-meat in the States. I would not vouch for the clean fingers +of these housewives, no more than I would vouch for the cleanliness of +the single rooms in which many of them and their families lived; yet +they raked, and pawed, and scraped the mess about in their anxiety to +get the worth of their coppers. I kept my eye on one particularly +offensive-looking bit of meat, and followed it through the clutches of +over twenty women, till it fell to the lot of a timid-appearing little +woman whom the butcher bluffed into taking it. All day long this heap +of scraps was added to and taken away from, the dust and dirt of the +street falling upon it, flies settling on it, and the dirty fingers +turning it over and over. + +The costers wheel loads of specked and decaying fruit around in the +barrows all day, and very often store it in their one living and +sleeping room for the night. There it is exposed to the sickness and +disease, the effluvia and vile exhalations of overcrowded and rotten +life, and next day it is carted about again to be sold. + +The poor worker of the East End never knows what it is to eat good, +wholesome meat or fruit—in fact, he rarely eats meat or fruit at all; +while the skilled workman has nothing to boast of in the way of what he +eats. Judging from the coffee-houses, which is a fair criterion, they +never know in all their lives what tea, coffee, or cocoa tastes like. +The slops and water-witcheries of the coffee-houses, varying only in +sloppiness and witchery, never even approximate or suggest what you and +I are accustomed to drink as tea and coffee. + +A little incident comes to me, connected with a coffee-house not far +from Jubilee Street on the Mile End Road. + +“Cawn yer let me ’ave somethin’ for this, daughter? Anythin’, Hi don’t +mind. Hi ’aven’t ’ad a bite the blessed dy, an’ Hi’m that fynt . . . ” + +She was an old woman, clad in decent black rags, and in her hand she +held a penny. The one she had addressed as “daughter” was a careworn +woman of forty, proprietress and waitress of the house. + +I waited, possibly as anxiously as the old woman, to see how the appeal +would be received. It was four in the afternoon, and she looked faint +and sick. The woman hesitated an instant, then brought a large plate of +“stewed lamb and young peas.” I was eating a plate of it myself, and it +is my judgment that the lamb was mutton and that the peas might have +been younger without being youthful. However, the point is, the dish +was sold at sixpence, and the proprietress gave it for a penny, +demonstrating anew the old truth that the poor are the most charitable. + +The old woman, profuse in her gratitude, took a seat on the other side +of the narrow table and ravenously attacked the smoking stew. We ate +steadily and silently, the pair of us, when suddenly, explosively and +most gleefully, she cried out to me,— + +“Hi sold a box o’ matches! Yus,” she confirmed, if anything with +greater and more explosive glee. “Hi sold a box o’ matches! That’s ’ow +Hi got the penny.” + +“You must be getting along in years,” I suggested. + +“Seventy-four yesterday,” she replied, and returned with gusto to her +plate. + +“Blimey, I’d like to do something for the old girl, that I would, but +this is the first I’ve ’ad to-dy,” the young fellow alongside +volunteered to me. “An’ I only ’ave this because I ’appened to make an +odd shilling washin’ out, Lord lumme! I don’t know ’ow many pots.” + +“No work at my own tryde for six weeks,” he said further, in reply to +my questions; “nothin’ but odd jobs a blessed long wy between.” + +* * * * * + +One meets with all sorts of adventures in coffee-house, and I shall not +soon forget a Cockney Amazon in a place near Trafalgar Square, to whom +I tendered a sovereign when paying my score. (By the way, one is +supposed to pay before he begins to eat, and if he be poorly dressed he +is compelled to pay before he eats). + +The girl bit the gold piece between her teeth, rang it on the counter, +and then looked me and my rags witheringly up and down. + +“Where’d you find it?” she at length demanded. + +“Some mug left it on the table when he went out, eh, don’t you think?” +I retorted. + +“Wot’s yer gyme?” she queried, looking me calmly in the eyes. + +“I makes ’em,” quoth I. + +She sniffed superciliously and gave me the change in small silver, and +I had my revenge by biting and ringing every piece of it. + +“I’ll give you a ha’penny for another lump of sugar in the tea,” I +said. + +“I’ll see you in ’ell first,” came the retort courteous. Also, she +amplified the retort courteous in divers vivid and unprintable ways. + +I never had much talent for repartee, but she knocked silly what little +I had, and I gulped down my tea a beaten man, while she gloated after +me even as I passed out to the street. + +While 300,000 people of London live in one-room tenements, and 900,000 +are illegally and viciously housed, 38,000 more are registered as +living in common lodging-houses—known in the vernacular as +“doss-houses.” There are many kinds of doss-houses, but in one thing +they are all alike, from the filthy little ones to the monster big ones +paying five per cent. and blatantly lauded by smug middle-class men who +know but one thing about them, and that one thing is their +uninhabitableness. By this I do not mean that the roofs leak or the +walls are draughty; but what I do mean is that life in them is +degrading and unwholesome. + +“The poor man’s hotel,” they are often called, but the phrase is +caricature. Not to possess a room to one’s self, in which sometimes to +sit alone; to be forced out of bed willy-nilly, the first thing in the +morning; to engage and pay anew for a bed each night; and never to have +any privacy, surely is a mode of existence quite different from that of +hotel life. + +This must not be considered a sweeping condemnation of the big private +and municipal lodging-houses and working-men’s homes. Far from it. They +have remedied many of the atrocities attendant upon the irresponsible +small doss-houses, and they give the workman more for his money than he +ever received before; but that does not make them as habitable or +wholesome as the dwelling-place of a man should be who does his work in +the world. + +The little private doss-houses, as a rule, are unmitigated horrors. I +have slept in them, and I know; but let me pass them by and confine +myself to the bigger and better ones. Not far from Middlesex Street, +Whitechapel, I entered such a house, a place inhabited almost entirely +by working men. The entrance was by way of a flight of steps descending +from the sidewalk to what was properly the cellar of the building. Here +were two large and gloomily lighted rooms, in which men cooked and ate. +I had intended to do some cooking myself, but the smell of the place +stole away my appetite, or, rather, wrested it from me; so I contented +myself with watching other men cook and eat. + +One workman, home from work, sat down opposite me at the rough wooden +table, and began his meal. A handful of salt on the not over-clean +table constituted his butter. Into it he dipped his bread, mouthful by +mouthful, and washed it down with tea from a big mug. A piece of fish +completed his bill of fare. He ate silently, looking neither to right +nor left nor across at me. Here and there, at the various tables, other +men were eating, just as silently. In the whole room there was hardly a +note of conversation. A feeling of gloom pervaded the ill-lighted +place. Many of them sat and brooded over the crumbs of their repast, +and made me wonder, as Childe Roland wondered, what evil they had done +that they should be punished so. + +From the kitchen came the sounds of more genial life, and I ventured +into the range where the men were cooking. But the smell I had noticed +on entering was stronger here, and a rising nausea drove me into the +street for fresh air. + +On my return I paid fivepence for a “cabin,” took my receipt for the +same in the form of a huge brass check, and went upstairs to the +smoking-room. Here, a couple of small billiard tables and several +checkerboards were being used by young working-men, who waited in +relays for their turn at the games, while many men were sitting around, +smoking, reading, and mending their clothes. The young men were +hilarious, the old men were gloomy. In fact, there were two types of +men, the cheerful and the sodden or blue, and age seemed to determine +the classification. + +But no more than the two cellar rooms did this room convey the remotest +suggestion of home. Certainly there could be nothing home-like about it +to you and me, who know what home really is. On the walls were the most +preposterous and insulting notices regulating the conduct of the +guests, and at ten o’clock the lights were put out, and nothing +remained but bed. This was gained by descending again to the cellar, by +surrendering the brass check to a burly doorkeeper, and by climbing a +long flight of stairs into the upper regions. I went to the top of the +building and down again, passing several floors filled with sleeping +men. The “cabins” were the best accommodation, each cabin allowing +space for a tiny bed and room alongside of it in which to undress. The +bedding was clean, and with neither it nor the bed do I find any fault. +But there was no privacy about it, no being alone. + +To get an adequate idea of a floor filled with cabins, you have merely +to magnify a layer of the pasteboard pigeon-holes of an egg-crate till +each pigeon-hole is seven feet in height and otherwise properly +dimensioned, then place the magnified layer on the floor of a large, +barnlike room, and there you have it. There are no ceilings to the +pigeon-holes, the walls are thin, and the snores from all the sleepers +and every move and turn of your nearer neighbours come plainly to your +ears. And this cabin is yours only for a little while. In the morning +out you go. You cannot put your trunk in it, or come and go when you +like, or lock the door behind you, or anything of the sort. In fact, +there is no door at all, only a doorway. If you care to remain a guest +in this poor man’s hotel, you must put up with all this, and with +prison regulations which impress upon you constantly that you are +nobody, with little soul of your own and less to say about it. + +Now I contend that the least a man who does his day’s work should have +is a room to himself, where he can lock the door and be safe in his +possessions; where he can sit down and read by a window or look out; +where he can come and go whenever he wishes; where he can accumulate a +few personal belongings other than those he carries about with him on +his back and in his pockets; where he can hang up pictures of his +mother, sister, sweet-heart, ballet dancers, or bulldogs, as his heart +listeth—in short, one place of his own on the earth of which he can +say: “This is mine, my castle; the world stops at the threshold; here +am I lord and master.” He will be a better citizen, this man; and he +will do a better day’s work. + +I stood on one floor of the poor man’s hotel and listened. I went from +bed to bed and looked at the sleepers. They were young men, from twenty +to forty, most of them. Old men cannot afford the working-man’s home. +They go to the workhouse. But I looked at the young men, scores of +them, and they were not bad-looking fellows. Their faces were made for +women’s kisses, their necks for women’s arms. They were lovable, as men +are lovable. They were capable of love. A woman’s touch redeems and +softens, and they needed such redemption and softening instead of each +day growing harsh and harsher. And I wondered where these women were, +and heard a “harlot’s ginny laugh.” Leman Street, Waterloo Road, +Piccadilly, The Strand, answered me, and I knew where they were. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. +THE PRECARIOUSNESS OF LIFE + + +I was talking with a very vindictive man. In his opinion, his wife had +wronged him and the law had wronged him. The merits and morals of the +case are immaterial. The meat of the matter is that she had obtained a +separation, and he was compelled to pay ten shillings each week for the +support of her and the five children. “But look you,” said he to me, +“wot’ll ’appen to ’er if I don’t py up the ten shillings? S’posin’, +now, just s’posin’ a accident ’appens to me, so I cawn’t work. S’posin’ +I get a rupture, or the rheumatics, or the cholera. Wot’s she goin’ to +do, eh? Wot’s she goin’ to do?” + +He shook his head sadly. “No ’ope for ’er. The best she cawn do is the +work’ouse, an’ that’s ’ell. An’ if she don’t go to the work’ouse, it’ll +be a worse ’ell. Come along ’ith me an’ I’ll show you women sleepin’ in +a passage, a dozen of ’em. An’ I’ll show you worse, wot she’ll come to +if anythin’ ’appens to me and the ten shillings.” + +The certitude of this man’s forecast is worthy of consideration. He +knew conditions sufficiently to know the precariousness of his wife’s +grasp on food and shelter. For her game was up when his working +capacity was impaired or destroyed. And when this state of affairs is +looked at in its larger aspect, the same will be found true of hundreds +of thousands and even millions of men and women living amicably +together and co-operating in the pursuit of food and shelter. + +The figures are appalling: 1,800,000 people in London live on the +poverty line and below it, and 1,000,000 live with one week’s wages +between them and pauperism. In all England and Wales, eighteen per +cent. of the whole population are driven to the parish for relief, and +in London, according to the statistics of the London County Council, +twenty-one per cent. of the whole population are driven to the parish +for relief. Between being driven to the parish for relief and being an +out-and-out pauper there is a great difference, yet London supports +123,000 paupers, quite a city of folk in themselves. One in every four +in London dies on public charity, while 939 out of every 1000 in the +United Kingdom die in poverty; 8,000,000 simply struggle on the ragged +edge of starvation, and 20,000,000 more are not comfortable in the +simple and clean sense of the word. + +It is interesting to go more into detail concerning the London people +who die on charity. + +In 1886, and up to 1893, the percentage of pauperism to population was +less in London than in all England; but since 1893, and for every +succeeding year, the percentage of pauperism to population has been +greater in London than in all England. Yet, from the +Registrar-General’s Report for 1886, the following figures are taken:— + +Out of 81,951 deaths in London (1884):— + +In workhouses 9,909 +In hospitals 6,559 +In lunatic asylums 278 +Total in public refuges 16,746 + + +Commenting on these figures, a Fabian writer says: “Considering that +comparatively few of these are children, it is probable that one in +every three London adults will be driven into one of these refuges to +die, and the proportion in the case of the manual labour class must of +course be still larger.” + +These figures serve somewhat to indicate the proximity of the average +worker to pauperism. Various things make pauperism. An advertisement, +for instance, such as this, appearing in yesterday morning’s paper:— + +“Clerk wanted, with knowledge of shorthand, typewriting, and invoicing: +wages ten shillings ($2.50) a week. Apply by letter,” &c. + +And in to-day’s paper I read of a clerk, thirty-five years of age and +an inmate of a London workhouse, brought before a magistrate for +non-performance of task. He claimed that he had done his various tasks +since he had been an inmate; but when the master set him to breaking +stones, his hands blistered, and he could not finish the task. He had +never been used to an implement heavier than a pen, he said. The +magistrate sentenced him and his blistered hands to seven days’ hard +labour. + +Old age, of course, makes pauperism. And then there is the accident, +the thing happening, the death or disablement of the husband, father, +and bread-winner. Here is a man, with a wife and three children, living +on the ticklish security of twenty shillings per week—and there are +hundreds of thousands of such families in London. Perforce, to even +half exist, they must live up to the last penny of it, so that a week’s +wages (one pound) is all that stands between this family and pauperism +or starvation. The thing happens, the father is struck down, and what +then? A mother with three children can do little or nothing. Either she +must hand her children over to society as juvenile paupers, in order to +be free to do something adequate for herself, or she must go to the +sweat-shops for work which she can perform in the vile den possible to +her reduced income. But with the sweat-shops, married women who eke out +their husband’s earnings, and single women who have but themselves +miserably to support, determine the scale of wages. And this scale of +wages, so determined, is so low that the mother and her three children +can live only in positive beastliness and semi-starvation, till decay +and death end their suffering. + +To show that this mother, with her three children to support, cannot +compete in the sweating industries, I instance from the current +newspapers the two following cases:— + +A father indignantly writes that his daughter and a girl companion +receive 8.5d. per gross for making boxes. They made each day four +gross. Their expenses were 8d. for car fare, 2d. for stamps, 2.5d. for +glue, and 1d. for string, so that all they earned between them was 1s. +9d., or a daily wage each of 10.5d. + +In the second case, before the Luton Guardians a few days ago, an old +woman of seventy-two appeared, asking for relief. “She was a straw-hat +maker, but had been compelled to give up the work owing to the price +she obtained for them—namely, 2.25d. each. For that price she had to +provide plait trimmings and make and finish the hats.” + +Yet this mother and her three children we are considering have done no +wrong that they should be so punished. They have not sinned. The thing +happened, that is all; the husband, father and bread-winner, was struck +down. There is no guarding against it. It is fortuitous. A family +stands so many chances of escaping the bottom of the Abyss, and so many +chances of falling plump down to it. The chance is reducible to cold, +pitiless figures, and a few of these figures will not be out of place. + +Sir A. Forwood calculates that— + +1 of every 1400 workmen is killed annually. +1 of every 2500 workmen is totally disabled. +1 of every 300 workmen is permanently partially disabled. +1 of every 8 workmen is temporarily disabled 3 or 4 weeks. + + +But these are only the accidents of industry. The high mortality of the +people who live in the Ghetto plays a terrible part. The average age at +death among the people of the West End is fifty-five years; the average +age at death among the people of the East End is thirty years. That is +to say, the person in the West End has twice the chance for life that +the person has in the East End. Talk of war! The mortality in South +Africa and the Philippines fades away to insignificance. Here, in the +heart of peace, is where the blood is being shed; and here not even the +civilised rules of warfare obtain, for the women and children and babes +in the arms are killed just as ferociously as the men are killed. War! +In England, every year, 500,000 men, women, and children, engaged in +the various industries, are killed and disabled, or are injured to +disablement by disease. + +In the West End eighteen per cent. of the children die before five +years of age; in the East End fifty-five per cent. of the children die +before five years of age. And there are streets in London where out of +every one hundred children born in a year, fifty die during the next +year; and of the fifty that remain, twenty-five die before they are +five years old. Slaughter! Herod did not do quite so badly. + +That industry causes greater havoc with human life than battle does no +better substantiation can be given than the following extract from a +recent report of the Liverpool Medical Officer, which is not applicable +to Liverpool alone:— + +In many instances little if any sunlight could get to the courts, and +the atmosphere within the dwellings was always foul, owing largely to +the saturated condition of the walls and ceilings, which for so many +years had absorbed the exhalations of the occupants into their porous +material. Singular testimony to the absence of sunlight in these courts +was furnished by the action of the Parks and Gardens Committee, who +desired to brighten the homes of the poorest class by gifts of growing +flowers and window-boxes; but these gifts could not be made in courts +such as these, _as flowers and plants were susceptible to the +unwholesome surroundings, and would not live_. + + +Mr. George Haw has compiled the following table on the three St. +George’s parishes (London parishes):— + +Percentage of Population Overcrowded Death-rate per 1000 St. +George’s West 10 13.2 St. George’s South 35 23.7 St. +George’s East 40 26.4 + +Then there are the “dangerous trades,” in which countless workers are +employed. Their hold on life is indeed precarious—far, far more +precarious than the hold of the twentieth-century soldier on life. In +the linen trade, in the preparation of the flax, wet feet and wet +clothes cause an unusual amount of bronchitis, pneumonia, and severe +rheumatism; while in the carding and spinning departments the fine dust +produces lung disease in the majority of cases, and the woman who +starts carding at seventeen or eighteen begins to break up and go to +pieces at thirty. The chemical labourers, picked from the strongest and +most splendidly-built men to be found, live, on an average, less than +forty-eight years. + +Says Dr. Arlidge, of the potter’s trade: “Potter’s dust does not kill +suddenly, but settles, year after year, a little more firmly into the +lungs, until at length a case of plaster is formed. Breathing becomes +more and more difficult and depressed, and finally ceases.” + +Steel dust, stone dust, clay dust, alkali dust, fluff dust, fibre +dust—all these things kill, and they are more deadly than machine-guns +and pom-poms. Worst of all is the lead dust in the white-lead trades. +Here is a description of the typical dissolution of a young, healthy, +well-developed girl who goes to work in a white-lead factory:— + +Here, after a varying degree of exposure, she becomes anæmic. It may be +that her gums show a very faint blue line, or perchance her teeth and +gums are perfectly sound, and no blue line is discernible. Coincidently +with the anaemia she has been getting thinner, but so gradually as +scarcely to impress itself upon her or her friends. Sickness, however, +ensues, and headaches, growing in intensity, are developed. These are +frequently attended by obscuration of vision or temporary blindness. +Such a girl passes into what appears to her friends and medical adviser +as ordinary hysteria. This gradually deepens without warning, until she +is suddenly seized with a convulsion, beginning in one half of the +face, then involving the arm, next the leg of the same side of the +body, until the convulsion, violent and purely epileptic form in +character, becomes universal. This is attended by loss of +consciousness, out of which she passes into a series of convulsions, +gradually increasing in severity, in one of which she dies—or +consciousness, partial or perfect, is regained, either, it may be, for +a few minutes, a few hours, or days, during which violent headache is +complained of, or she is delirious and excited, as in acute mania, or +dull and sullen as in melancholia, and requires to be roused, when she +is found wandering, and her speech is somewhat imperfect. Without +further warning, save that the pulse, which has become soft, with +nearly the normal number of beats, all at once becomes low and hard; +she is suddenly seized with another convulsion, in which she dies, or +passes into a state of coma from which she never rallies. In another +case the convulsions will gradually subside, the headache disappears +and the patient recovers, only to find that she has completely lost her +eyesight, a loss that may be temporary or permanent. + + +And here are a few specific cases of white-lead poisoning:— + + +Charlotte Rafferty, a fine, well-grown young woman with a splendid +constitution—who had never had a day’s illness in her life—became a +white-lead worker. Convulsions seized her at the foot of the ladder in +the works. Dr. Oliver examined her, found the blue line along her gums, +which shows that the system is under the influence of the lead. He knew +that the convulsions would shortly return. They did so, and she died. + +Mary Ann Toler—a girl of seventeen, who had never had a fit in her +life—three times became ill, and had to leave off work in the factory. +Before she was nineteen she showed symptoms of lead poisoning—had fits, +frothed at the mouth, and died. + +Mary A., an unusually vigorous woman, was able to work in the lead +factory for _twenty years_, having colic once only during that time. +Her eight children all died in early infancy from convulsions. One +morning, whilst brushing her hair, this woman suddenly lost all power +in both her wrists. + +Eliza H., aged twenty-five, _after five months_ at lead works, was +seized with colic. She entered another factory (after being refused by +the first one) and worked on uninterruptedly for two years. Then the +former symptoms returned, she was seized with convulsions, and died in +two days of acute lead poisoning. + + +Mr. Vaughan Nash, speaking of the unborn generation, says: “The +children of the white-lead worker enter the world, as a rule, only to +die from the convulsions of lead poisoning—they are either born +prematurely, or die within the first year.” + +And, finally, let me instance the case of Harriet A. Walker, a young +girl of seventeen, killed while leading a forlorn hope on the +industrial battlefield. She was employed as an enamelled ware brusher, +wherein lead poisoning is encountered. Her father and brother were both +out of employment. She concealed her illness, walked six miles a day to +and from work, earned her seven or eight shillings per week, and died, +at seventeen. + +Depression in trade also plays an important part in hurling the workers +into the Abyss. With a week’s wages between a family and pauperism, a +month’s enforced idleness means hardship and misery almost +indescribable, and from the ravages of which the victims do not always +recover when work is to be had again. Just now the daily papers contain +the report of a meeting of the Carlisle branch of the Dockers’ Union, +wherein it is stated that many of the men, for months past, have not +averaged a weekly income of more than from four to five shillings. The +stagnated state of the shipping industry in the port of London is held +accountable for this condition of affairs. + +To the young working-man or working-woman, or married couple, there is +no assurance of happy or healthy middle life, nor of solvent old age. +Work as they will, they cannot make their future secure. It is all a +matter of chance. Everything depends upon the thing happening, the +thing with which they have nothing to do. Precaution cannot fend it +off, nor can wiles evade it. If they remain on the industrial +battlefield they must face it and take their chance against heavy odds. +Of course, if they are favourably made and are not tied by kinship +duties, they may run away from the industrial battlefield. In which +event the safest thing the man can do is to join the army; and for the +woman, possibly, to become a Red Cross nurse or go into a nunnery. In +either case they must forego home and children and all that makes life +worth living and old age other than a nightmare. + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. +SUICIDE + + +With life so precarious, and opportunity for the happiness of life so +remote, it is inevitable that life shall be cheap and suicide common. +So common is it, that one cannot pick up a daily paper without running +across it; while an attempt-at-suicide case in a police court excites +no more interest than an ordinary “drunk,” and is handled with the same +rapidity and unconcern. + +I remember such a case in the Thames Police Court. I pride myself that +I have good eyes and ears, and a fair working knowledge of men and +things; but I confess, as I stood in that court-room, that I was half +bewildered by the amazing despatch with which drunks, disorderlies, +vagrants, brawlers, wife-beaters, thieves, fences, gamblers, and women +of the street went through the machine of justice. The dock stood in +the centre of the court (where the light is best), and into it and out +again stepped men, women, and children, in a stream as steady as the +stream of sentences which fell from the magistrate’s lips. + +I was still pondering over a consumptive “fence” who had pleaded +inability to work and necessity for supporting wife and children, and +who had received a year at hard labour, when a young boy of about +twenty appeared in the dock. “Alfred Freeman,” I caught his name, but +failed to catch the charge. A stout and motherly-looking woman bobbed +up in the witness-box and began her testimony. Wife of the Britannia +lock-keeper, I learned she was. Time, night; a splash; she ran to the +lock and found the prisoner in the water. + +I flashed my gaze from her to him. So that was the charge, self-murder. +He stood there dazed and unheeding, his bonny brown hair rumpled down +his forehead, his face haggard and careworn and boyish still. + +“Yes, sir,” the lock-keeper’s wife was saying. “As fast as I pulled to +get ’im out, ’e crawled back. Then I called for ’elp, and some workmen +’appened along, and we got ’im out and turned ’im over to the +constable.” + +The magistrate complimented the woman on her muscular powers, and the +court-room laughed; but all I could see was a boy on the threshold of +life, passionately crawling to muddy death, and there was no laughter +in it. + +A man was now in the witness-box, testifying to the boy’s good +character and giving extenuating evidence. He was the boy’s foreman, or +had been. Alfred was a good boy, but he had had lots of trouble at +home, money matters. And then his mother was sick. He was given to +worrying, and he worried over it till he laid himself out and wasn’t +fit for work. He (the foreman), for the sake of his own reputation, the +boy’s work being bad, had been forced to ask him to resign. + +“Anything to say?” the magistrate demanded abruptly. + +The boy in the dock mumbled something indistinctly. He was still dazed. + +“What does he say, constable?” the magistrate asked impatiently. + +The stalwart man in blue bent his ear to the prisoner’s lips, and then +replied loudly, “He says he’s very sorry, your Worship.” + +“Remanded,” said his Worship; and the next case was under way, the +first witness already engaged in taking the oath. The boy, dazed and +unheeding, passed out with the jailer. That was all, five minutes from +start to finish; and two hulking brutes in the dock were trying +strenuously to shift the responsibility of the possession of a stolen +fishing-pole, worth probably ten cents. + +The chief trouble with these poor folk is that they do not know how to +commit suicide, and usually have to make two or three attempts before +they succeed. This, very naturally, is a horrid nuisance to the +constables and magistrates, and gives them no end of trouble. +Sometimes, however, the magistrates are frankly outspoken about the +matter, and censure the prisoners for the slackness of their attempts. +For instance Mr. R. S---, chairman of the S--- B--- magistrates, in the +case the other day of Ann Wood, who tried to make away with herself in +the canal: “If you wanted to do it, why didn’t you do it and get it +done with?” demanded the indignant Mr. R. S---. “Why did you not get +under the water and make an end of it, instead of giving us all this +trouble and bother?” + +Poverty, misery, and fear of the workhouse, are the principal causes of +suicide among the working classes. “I’ll drown myself before I go into +the workhouse,” said Ellen Hughes Hunt, aged fifty-two. Last Wednesday +they held an inquest on her body at Shoreditch. Her husband came from +the Islington Workhouse to testify. He had been a cheesemonger, but +failure in business and poverty had driven him into the workhouse, +whither his wife had refused to accompany him. + +She was last seen at one in the morning. Three hours later her hat and +jacket were found on the towing path by the Regent’s Canal, and later +her body was fished from the water. _Verdict: Suicide during temporary +insanity_. + +Such verdicts are crimes against truth. The Law is a lie, and through +it men lie most shamelessly. For instance, a disgraced woman, forsaken +and spat upon by kith and kin, doses herself and her baby with +laudanum. The baby dies; but she pulls through after a few weeks in +hospital, is charged with murder, convicted, and sentenced to ten +years’ penal servitude. Recovering, the Law holds her responsible for +her actions; yet, had she died, the same Law would have rendered a +verdict of temporary insanity. + +Now, considering the case of Ellen Hughes Hunt, it is as fair and +logical to say that her husband was suffering from temporary insanity +when he went into the Islington Workhouse, as it is to say that she was +suffering from temporary insanity when she went into the Regent’s +Canal. As to which is the preferable sojourning place is a matter of +opinion, of intellectual judgment. I, for one, from what I know of +canals and workhouses, should choose the canal, were I in a similar +position. And I make bold to contend that I am no more insane than +Ellen Hughes Hunt, her husband, and the rest of the human herd. + +Man no longer follows instinct with the old natural fidelity. He has +developed into a reasoning creature, and can intellectually cling to +life or discard life just as life happens to promise great pleasure or +pain. I dare to assert that Ellen Hughes Hunt, defrauded and bilked of +all the joys of life which fifty-two years’ service in the world has +earned, with nothing but the horrors of the workhouse before her, was +very rational and level-headed when she elected to jump into the canal. +And I dare to assert, further, that the jury had done a wiser thing to +bring in a verdict charging society with temporary insanity for +allowing Ellen Hughes Hunt to be defrauded and bilked of all the joys +of life which fifty-two years’ service in the world had earned. + +Temporary insanity! Oh, these cursed phrases, these lies of language, +under which people with meat in their bellies and whole shirts on their +backs shelter themselves, and evade the responsibility of their +brothers and sisters, empty of belly and without whole shirts on their +backs. + +From one issue of the _Observer_, an East End paper, I quote the +following commonplace events:— + + +A ship’s fireman, named Johnny King, was charged with attempting to +commit suicide. On Wednesday defendant went to Bow Police Station and +stated that he had swallowed a quantity of phosphor paste, as he was +hard up and unable to obtain work. King was taken inside and an emetic +administered, when he vomited up a quantity of the poison. Defendant +now said he was very sorry. Although he had sixteen years’ good +character, he was unable to obtain work of any kind. Mr. Dickinson had +defendant put back for the court missionary to see him. + +Timothy Warner, thirty-two, was remanded for a similar offence. He +jumped off Limehouse Pier, and when rescued, said, “I intended to do +it.” + +A decent-looking young woman, named Ellen Gray, was remanded on a +charge of attempting to commit suicide. About half-past eight on Sunday +morning Constable 834 K found defendant lying in a doorway in Benworth +Street, and she was in a very drowsy condition. She was holding an +empty bottle in one hand, and stated that some two or three hours +previously she had swallowed a quantity of laudanum. As she was +evidently very ill, the divisional surgeon was sent for, and having +administered some coffee, ordered that she was to be kept awake. When +defendant was charged, she stated that the reason why she attempted to +take her life was she had neither home nor friends. + + +I do not say that all people who commit suicide are sane, no more than +I say that all people who do not commit suicide are sane. Insecurity of +food and shelter, by the way, is a great cause of insanity among the +living. Costermongers, hawkers, and pedlars, a class of workers who +live from hand to mouth more than those of any other class, form the +highest percentage of those in the lunatic asylums. Among the males +each year, 26.9 per 10,000 go insane, and among the women, 36.9. On the +other hand, of soldiers, who are at least sure of food and shelter, 13 +per 10,000 go insane; and of farmers and graziers, only 5.1. So a +coster is twice as likely to lose his reason as a soldier, and five +times as likely as a farmer. + +Misfortune and misery are very potent in turning people’s heads, and +drive one person to the lunatic asylum, and another to the morgue or +the gallows. When the thing happens, and the father and husband, for +all of his love for wife and children and his willingness to work, can +get no work to do, it is a simple matter for his reason to totter and +the light within his brain go out. And it is especially simple when it +is taken into consideration that his body is ravaged by innutrition and +disease, in addition to his soul being torn by the sight of his +suffering wife and little ones. + +“He is a good-looking man, with a mass of black hair, dark, expressive +eyes, delicately chiselled nose and chin, and wavy, fair moustache.” +This is the reporter’s description of Frank Cavilla as he stood in +court, this dreary month of September, “dressed in a much worn grey +suit, and wearing no collar.” + +Frank Cavilla lived and worked as a house decorator in London. He is +described as a good workman, a steady fellow, and not given to drink, +while all his neighbours unite in testifying that he was a gentle and +affectionate husband and father. + +His wife, Hannah Cavilla, was a big, handsome, light-hearted woman. She +saw to it that his children were sent neat and clean (the neighbours +all remarked the fact) to the Childeric Road Board School. And so, with +such a man, so blessed, working steadily and living temperately, all +went well, and the goose hung high. + +Then the thing happened. He worked for a Mr. Beck, builder, and lived +in one of his master’s houses in Trundley Road. Mr. Beck was thrown +from his trap and killed. The thing was an unruly horse, and, as I say, +it happened. Cavilla had to seek fresh employment and find another +house. + +This occurred eighteen months ago. For eighteen months he fought the +big fight. He got rooms in a little house in Batavia Road, but could +not make both ends meet. Steady work could not be obtained. He +struggled manfully at casual employment of all sorts, his wife and four +children starving before his eyes. He starved himself, and grew weak, +and fell ill. This was three months ago, and then there was absolutely +no food at all. They made no complaint, spoke no word; but poor folk +know. The housewives of Batavia Road sent them food, but so respectable +were the Cavillas that the food was sent anonymously, mysteriously, so +as not to hurt their pride. + +The thing had happened. He had fought, and starved, and suffered for +eighteen months. He got up one September morning, early. He opened his +pocket-knife. He cut the throat of his wife, Hannah Cavilla, aged +thirty-three. He cut the throat of his first-born, Frank, aged twelve. +He cut the throat of his son, Walter, aged eight. He cut the throat of +his daughter, Nellie, aged four. He cut the throat of his +youngest-born, Ernest, aged sixteen months. Then he watched beside the +dead all day until the evening, when the police came, and he told them +to put a penny in the slot of the gas-meter in order that they might +have light to see. + +Frank Cavilla stood in court, dressed in a much worn grey suit, and +wearing no collar. He was a good-looking man, with a mass of black +hair, dark, expressive eyes, delicately chiselled nose and chin, and +wavy, fair moustache. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. +THE CHILDREN + + +“Where home is a hovel, and dull we grovel, + Forgetting the world is fair.” + + +There is one beautiful sight in the East End, and only one, and it is +the children dancing in the street when the organ-grinder goes his +round. It is fascinating to watch them, the new-born, the next +generation, swaying and stepping, with pretty little mimicries and +graceful inventions all their own, with muscles that move swiftly and +easily, and bodies that leap airily, weaving rhythms never taught in +dancing school. + +I have talked with these children, here, there, and everywhere, and +they struck me as being bright as other children, and in many ways even +brighter. They have most active little imaginations. Their capacity for +projecting themselves into the realm of romance and fantasy is +remarkable. A joyous life is romping in their blood. They delight in +music, and motion, and colour, and very often they betray a startling +beauty of face and form under their filth and rags. + +But there is a Pied Piper of London Town who steals them all away. They +disappear. One never sees them again, or anything that suggests them. +You may look for them in vain amongst the generation of grown-ups. Here +you will find stunted forms, ugly faces, and blunt and stolid minds. +Grace, beauty, imagination, all the resiliency of mind and muscle, are +gone. Sometimes, however, you may see a woman, not necessarily old, but +twisted and deformed out of all womanhood, bloated and drunken, lift +her draggled skirts and execute a few grotesque and lumbering steps +upon the pavement. It is a hint that she was once one of those children +who danced to the organ-grinder. Those grotesque and lumbering steps +are all that is left of the promise of childhood. In the befogged +recesses of her brain has arisen a fleeting memory that she was once a +girl. The crowd closes in. Little girls are dancing beside her, about +her, with all the pretty graces she dimly recollects, but can no more +than parody with her body. Then she pants for breath, exhausted, and +stumbles out through the circle. But the little girls dance on. + +The children of the Ghetto possess all the qualities which make for +noble manhood and womanhood; but the Ghetto itself, like an infuriated +tigress turning on its young, turns upon and destroys all these +qualities, blots out the light and laughter, and moulds those it does +not kill into sodden and forlorn creatures, uncouth, degraded, and +wretched below the beasts of the field. + +As to the manner in which this is done, I have in previous chapters +described it at length; here let Professor Huxley describe it in +brief:— + +“Any one who is acquainted with the state of the population of all +great industrial centres, whether in this or other countries, is aware +that amidst a large and increasing body of that population there reigns +supreme . . . that condition which the French call _la misère_, a word +for which I do not think there is any exact English equivalent. It is a +condition in which the food, warmth, and clothing which are necessary +for the mere maintenance of the functions of the body in their normal +state cannot be obtained; in which men, women, and children are forced +to crowd into dens wherein decency is abolished, and the most ordinary +conditions of healthful existence are impossible of attainment; in +which the pleasures within reach are reduced to brutality and +drunkenness; in which the pains accumulate at compound interest in the +shape of starvation, disease, stunted development, and moral +degradation; in which the prospect of even steady and honest industry +is a life of unsuccessful battling with hunger, rounded by a pauper’s +grave.” + +In such conditions, the outlook for children is hopeless. They die like +flies, and those that survive, survive because they possess excessive +vitality and a capacity of adaptation to the degradation with which +they are surrounded. They have no home life. In the dens and lairs in +which they live they are exposed to all that is obscene and indecent. +And as their minds are made rotten, so are their bodies made rotten by +bad sanitation, overcrowding, and underfeeding. When a father and +mother live with three or four children in a room where the children +take turn about in sitting up to drive the rats away from the sleepers, +when those children never have enough to eat and are preyed upon and +made miserable and weak by swarming vermin, the sort of men and women +the survivors will make can readily be imagined. + +“Dull despair and misery +Lie about them from their birth; +Ugly curses, uglier mirth, +Are their earliest lullaby.” + + +A man and a woman marry and set up housekeeping in one room. Their +income does not increase with the years, though their family does, and +the man is exceedingly lucky if he can keep his health and his job. A +baby comes, and then another. This means that more room should be +obtained; but these little mouths and bodies mean additional expense +and make it absolutely impossible to get more spacious quarters. More +babies come. There is not room in which to turn around. The youngsters +run the streets, and by the time they are twelve or fourteen the +room-issue comes to a head, and out they go on the streets for good. +The boy, if he be lucky, can manage to make the common lodging-houses, +and he may have any one of several ends. But the girl of fourteen or +fifteen, forced in this manner to leave the one room called home, and +able to earn at the best a paltry five or six shillings per week, can +have but one end. And the bitter end of that one end is such as that of +the woman whose body the police found this morning in a doorway in +Dorset Street, Whitechapel. Homeless, shelterless, sick, with no one +with her in her last hour, she had died in the night of exposure. She +was sixty-two years old and a match vendor. She died as a wild animal +dies. + +Fresh in my mind is the picture of a boy in the dock of an East End +police court. His head was barely visible above the railing. He was +being proved guilty of stealing two shillings from a woman, which he +had spent, not for candy and cakes and a good time, but for food. + +“Why didn’t you ask the woman for food?” the magistrate demanded, in a +hurt sort of tone. “She would surely have given you something to eat.” + +“If I ’ad arsked ’er, I’d got locked up for beggin’,” was the boy’s +reply. + +The magistrate knitted his brows and accepted the rebuke. Nobody knew +the boy, nor his father or mother. He was without beginning or +antecedent, a waif, a stray, a young cub seeking his food in the jungle +of empire, preying upon the weak and being preyed upon by the strong. + +The people who try to help, who gather up the Ghetto children and send +them away on a day’s outing to the country, believe that not very many +children reach the age of ten without having had at least one day +there. Of this, a writer says: “The mental change caused by one day so +spent must not be undervalued. Whatever the circumstances, the children +learn the meaning of fields and woods, so that descriptions of country +scenery in the books they read, which before conveyed no impression, +become now intelligible.” + +One day in the fields and woods, if they are lucky enough to be picked +up by the people who try to help! And they are being born faster every +day than they can be carted off to the fields and woods for the one day +in their lives. One day! In all their lives, one day! And for the rest +of the days, as the boy told a certain bishop, “At ten we ’ops the wag; +at thirteen we nicks things; an’ at sixteen we bashes the copper.” +Which is to say, at ten they play truant, at thirteen steal, and at +sixteen are sufficiently developed hooligans to smash the policemen. + +The Rev. J. Cartmel Robinson tells of a boy and girl of his parish who +set out to walk to the forest. They walked and walked through the +never-ending streets, expecting always to see it by-and-by; until they +sat down at last, faint and despairing, and were rescued by a kind +woman who brought them back. Evidently they had been overlooked by the +people who try to help. + +The same gentleman is authority for the statement that in a street in +Hoxton (a district of the vast East End), over seven hundred children, +between five and thirteen years, live in eighty small houses. And he +adds: “It is because London has largely shut her children in a maze of +streets and houses and robbed them of their rightful inheritance in sky +and field and brook, that they grow up to be men and women physically +unfit.” + +He tells of a member of his congregation who let a basement room to a +married couple. “They said they had two children; when they got +possession it turned out that they had four. After a while a fifth +appeared, and the landlord gave them notice to quit. They paid no +attention to it. Then the sanitary inspector who has to wink at the law +so often, came in and threatened my friend with legal proceedings. He +pleaded that he could not get them out. They pleaded that nobody would +have them with so many children at a rental within their means, which +is one of the commonest complaints of the poor, by-the-bye. What was to +be done? The landlord was between two millstones. Finally he applied to +the magistrate, who sent up an officer to inquire into the case. Since +that time about twenty days have elapsed, and nothing has yet been +done. Is this a singular case? By no means; it is quite common.” + +Last week the police raided a disorderly house. In one room were found +two young children. They were arrested and charged with being inmates +the same as the women had been. Their father appeared at the trial. He +stated that himself and wife and two older children, besides the two in +the dock, occupied that room; he stated also that he occupied it +because he could get no other room for the half-crown a week he paid +for it. The magistrate discharged the two juvenile offenders and warned +the father that he was bringing his children up unhealthily. + +But there is no need further to multiply instances. In London the +slaughter of the innocents goes on on a scale more stupendous than any +before in the history of the world. And equally stupendous is the +callousness of the people who believe in Christ, acknowledge God, and +go to church regularly on Sunday. For the rest of the week they riot +about on the rents and profits which come to them from the East End +stained with the blood of the children. Also, at times, so peculiarly +are they made, they will take half a million of these rents and profits +and send it away to educate the black boys of the Soudan. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. +A VISION OF THE NIGHT + + +All these were years ago little red-coloured, pulpy infants, capable of +being kneaded, baked, into any social form you chose.—CARLYLE. + + +Late last night I walked along Commercial Street from Spitalfields to +Whitechapel, and still continuing south, down Leman Street to the +docks. And as I walked I smiled at the East End papers, which, filled +with civic pride, boastfully proclaim that there is nothing the matter +with the East End as a living place for men and women. + +It is rather hard to tell a tithe of what I saw. Much of it is +untenable. But in a general way I may say that I saw a nightmare, a +fearful slime that quickened the pavement with life, a mess of +unmentionable obscenity that put into eclipse the “nightly horror” of +Piccadilly and the Strand. It _was_ a menagerie of garmented bipeds +that looked something like humans and more like beasts, and to complete +the picture, brass-buttoned keepers kept order among them when they +snarled too fiercely. + +I was glad the keepers were there, for I did not have on my “seafaring” +clothes, and I was what is called a “mark” for the creatures of prey +that prowled up and down. At times, between keepers, these males looked +at me sharply, hungrily, gutter-wolves that they were, and I was afraid +of their hands, of their naked hands, as one may be afraid of the paws +of a gorilla. They reminded me of gorillas. Their bodies were small, +ill-shaped, and squat. There were no swelling muscles, no abundant +thews and wide-spreading shoulders. They exhibited, rather, an +elemental economy of nature, such as the cave-men must have exhibited. +But there was strength in those meagre bodies, the ferocious, +primordial strength to clutch and gripe and tear and rend. When they +spring upon their human prey they are known even to bend the victim +backward and double its body till the back is broken. They possess +neither conscience nor sentiment, and they will kill for a +half-sovereign, without fear or favour, if they are given but half a +chance. They are a new species, a breed of city savages. The streets +and houses, alleys and courts, are their hunting grounds. As valley and +mountain are to the natural savage, street and building are valley and +mountain to them. The slum is their jungle, and they live and prey in +the jungle. + +The dear soft people of the golden theatres and wonder-mansions of the +West End do not see these creatures, do not dream that they exist. But +they are here, alive, very much alive in their jungle. And woe the day, +when England is fighting in her last trench, and her able-bodied men +are on the firing line! For on that day they will crawl out of their +dens and lairs, and the people of the West End will see them, as the +dear soft aristocrats of Feudal France saw them and asked one another, +“Whence came they?” “Are they men?” + +But they were not the only beasts that ranged the menagerie. They were +only here and there, lurking in dark courts and passing like grey +shadows along the walls; but the women from whose rotten loins they +spring were everywhere. They whined insolently, and in maudlin tones +begged me for pennies, and worse. They held carouse in every boozing +ken, slatternly, unkempt, bleary-eyed, and towsled, leering and +gibbering, overspilling with foulness and corruption, and, gone in +debauch, sprawling across benches and bars, unspeakably repulsive, +fearful to look upon. + +And there were others, strange, weird faces and forms and twisted +monstrosities that shouldered me on every side, inconceivable types of +sodden ugliness, the wrecks of society, the perambulating carcasses, +the living deaths—women, blasted by disease and drink till their shame +brought not tuppence in the open mart; and men, in fantastic rags, +wrenched by hardship and exposure out of all semblance of men, their +faces in a perpetual writhe of pain, grinning idiotically, shambling +like apes, dying with every step they took and each breath they drew. +And there were young girls, of eighteen and twenty, with trim bodies +and faces yet untouched with twist and bloat, who had fetched the +bottom of the Abyss plump, in one swift fall. And I remember a lad of +fourteen, and one of six or seven, white-faced and sickly, homeless, +the pair of them, who sat upon the pavement with their backs against a +railing and watched it all. + +The unfit and the unneeded! Industry does not clamour for them. There +are no jobs going begging through lack of men and women. The dockers +crowd at the entrance gate, and curse and turn away when the foreman +does not give them a call. The engineers who have work pay six +shillings a week to their brother engineers who can find nothing to do; +514,000 textile workers oppose a resolution condemning the employment +of children under fifteen. Women, and plenty to spare, are found to +toil under the sweat-shop masters for tenpence a day of fourteen hours. +Alfred Freeman crawls to muddy death because he loses his job. Ellen +Hughes Hunt prefers Regent’s Canal to Islington Workhouse. Frank +Cavilla cuts the throats of his wife and children because he cannot +find work enough to give them food and shelter. + +The unfit and the unneeded! The miserable and despised and forgotten, +dying in the social shambles. The progeny of prostitution—of the +prostitution of men and women and children, of flesh and blood, and +sparkle and spirit; in brief, the prostitution of labour. If this is +the best that civilisation can do for the human, then give us howling +and naked savagery. Far better to be a people of the wilderness and +desert, of the cave and the squatting-place, than to be a people of the +machine and the Abyss. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. +THE HUNGER WAIL + + +“My father has more stamina than I, for he is country-born.” + +The speaker, a bright young East Ender, was lamenting his poor physical +development. + +“Look at my scrawny arm, will you.” He pulled up his sleeve. “Not +enough to eat, that’s what’s the matter with it. Oh, not now. I have +what I want to eat these days. But it’s too late. It can’t make up for +what I didn’t have to eat when I was a kiddy. Dad came up to London +from the Fen Country. Mother died, and there were six of us kiddies and +dad living in two small rooms. + +“He had hard times, dad did. He might have chucked us, but he didn’t. +He slaved all day, and at night he came home and cooked and cared for +us. He was father and mother, both. He did his best, but we didn’t have +enough to eat. We rarely saw meat, and then of the worst. And it is not +good for growing kiddies to sit down to a dinner of bread and a bit of +cheese, and not enough of it. + +“And what’s the result? I am undersized, and I haven’t the stamina of +my dad. It was starved out of me. In a couple of generations there’ll +be no more of me here in London. Yet there’s my younger brother; he’s +bigger and better developed. You see, dad and we children held +together, and that accounts for it.” + +“But I don’t see,” I objected. “I should think, under such conditions, +that the vitality should decrease and the younger children be born +weaker and weaker.” + +“Not when they hold together,” he replied. “Whenever you come along in +the East End and see a child of from eight to twelve, good-sized, +well-developed, and healthy-looking, just you ask and you will find +that it is the youngest in the family, or at least is one of the +younger. The way of it is this: the older children starve more than the +younger ones. By the time the younger ones come along, the older ones +are starting to work, and there is more money coming in, and more food +to go around.” + +He pulled down his sleeve, a concrete instance of where chronic +semi-starvation kills not, but stunts. His voice was but one among the +myriads that raise the cry of the hunger wail in the greatest empire in +the world. On any one day, over 1,000,000 people are in receipt of +poor-law relief in the United Kingdom. One in eleven of the whole +working-class receive poor-law relief in the course of the year; +37,500,000 people receive less than £12 per month, per family; and a +constant army of 8,000,000 lives on the border of starvation. + +A committee of the London County school board makes this declaration: +“At times, _when there is no special distress_, 55,000 children in a +state of hunger, which makes it useless to attempt to teach them, are +in the schools of London alone.” The italics are mine. “When there is +no special distress” means good times in England; for the people of +England have come to look upon starvation and suffering, which they +call “distress,” as part of the social order. Chronic starvation is +looked upon as a matter of course. It is only when acute starvation +makes its appearance on a large scale that they think something is +unusual. + +I shall never forget the bitter wail of a blind man in a little East +End shop at the close of a murky day. He had been the eldest of five +children, with a mother and no father. Being the eldest, he had starved +and worked as a child to put bread into the mouths of his little +brothers and sisters. Not once in three months did he ever taste meat. +He never knew what it was to have his hunger thoroughly appeased. And +he claimed that this chronic starvation of his childhood had robbed him +of his sight. To support the claim, he quoted from the report of the +Royal Commission on the Blind, “Blindness is more prevalent in poor +districts, and poverty accelerates this dreadful affliction.” + +But he went further, this blind man, and in his voice was the +bitterness of an afflicted man to whom society did not give enough to +eat. He was one of an enormous army of blind in London, and he said +that in the blind homes they did not receive half enough to eat. He +gave the diet for a day:— + +Breakfast—0.75 pint of skilly and dry bread. +Dinner —3 oz. meat. + 1 slice of bread. + 0.5 lb. potatoes. +Supper —0.75 pint of skilly and dry bread. + +Oscar Wilde, God rest his soul, voices the cry of the prison child, +which, in varying degree, is the cry of the prison man and woman:— + +“The second thing from which a child suffers in prison is hunger. The +food that is given to it consists of a piece of usually bad-baked +prison bread and a tin of water for breakfast at half-past seven. At +twelve o’clock it gets dinner, composed of a tin of coarse Indian meal +stirabout (skilly), and at half-past five it gets a piece of dry bread +and a tin of water for its supper. This diet in the case of a strong +grown man is always productive of illness of some kind, chiefly of +course diarrhoea, with its attendant weakness. In fact, in a big prison +astringent medicines are served out regularly by the warders as a +matter of course. In the case of a child, the child is, as a rule, +incapable of eating the food at all. Any one who knows anything about +children knows how easily a child’s digestion is upset by a fit of +crying, or trouble and mental distress of any kind. A child who has +been crying all day long, and perhaps half the night, in a lonely +dim-lit cell, and is preyed upon by terror, simply cannot eat food of +this coarse, horrible kind. In the case of the little child to whom +Warder Martin gave the biscuits, the child was crying with hunger on +Tuesday morning, and utterly unable to eat the bread and water served +to it for its breakfast. Martin went out after the breakfasts had been +served and bought the few sweet biscuits for the child rather than see +it starving. It was a beautiful action on his part, and was so +recognised by the child, who, utterly unconscious of the regulations of +the Prison Board, told one of the senior wardens how kind this junior +warden had been to him. The result was, of course, a report and a +dismissal.” + +Robert Blatchford compares the workhouse pauper’s daily diet with the +soldier’s, which, when he was a soldier, was not considered liberal +enough, and yet is twice as liberal as the pauper’s. + +PAUPER DIET SOLDIER +3.25 oz. Meat 12 oz. +15.5 oz. Bread 24 oz. +6 oz. Vegetables 8 oz. + +The adult male pauper gets meat (outside of soup) but once a week, and +the paupers “have nearly all that pallid, pasty complexion which is the +sure mark of starvation.” + +Here is a table, comparing the workhouse officer’s weekly allowance:— + +OFFICER DIET PAUPER +7 lb. Bread 6.75 lb. +5 lb. Meat 1 lb. 2 oz. +12 oz. Bacon 2.5 oz. +8 oz. Cheese 2 oz. +7 lb. Potatoes 1.5 lb. +6 lb. Vegetables none. +1 lb. Flour none. +2 oz. Lard none. +12 oz. Butter 7 oz. +none. Rice Pudding 1 lb. + +And as the same writer remarks: “The officer’s diet is still more +liberal than the pauper’s; but evidently it is not considered liberal +enough, for a footnote is added to the officer’s table saying that ‘a +cash payment of two shillings and sixpence a week is also made to each +resident officer and servant.’ If the pauper has ample food, why does +the officer have more? And if the officer has not too much, can the +pauper be properly fed on less than half the amount?” + +But it is not alone the Ghetto-dweller, the prisoner, and the pauper +that starve. Hodge, of the country, does not know what it is always to +have a full belly. In truth, it is his empty belly which has driven him +to the city in such great numbers. Let us investigate the way of living +of a labourer from a parish in the Bradfield Poor Law Union, Berks. +Supposing him to have two children, steady work, a rent-free cottage, +and an average weekly wage of thirteen shillings, which is equivalent +to $3.25, then here is his weekly budget:— + + s. d. +Bread (5 quarterns) 1 10 +Flour (0.5 gallon) 0 4 +Tea (0.25 lb.) 0 6 +Butter (1 lb.) 1 3 +Lard (1 lb.) 0 6 +Sugar (6 lb.) 1 0 +Bacon or other meat (about 0.25 lb.) 2 8 +Cheese (1 lb.) 0 8 +Milk (half-tin condensed) 0 3.25 +Coal 1 6 +Beer none +Tobacco none +Insurance (“Prudential”) 0 3 +Labourers’ Union 0 1 +Wood, tools, dispensary, &c. 0 6 +Insurance (“Foresters”) and margin 1 1.75 + for clothes +Total 13 0 + +The guardians of the workhouse in the above Union pride themselves on +their rigid economy. It costs per pauper per week:— + + s. d. +Men 6 1.5 +Women 5 6.5 +Children 5 1.25 + +If the labourer whose budget has been described should quit his toil +and go into the workhouse, he would cost the guardians for + + s. d. +Himself 6 1.5 +Wife 5 6.5 +Two children 10 2.5 +Total 21 10.5 +Or roughly, $5.46 + +It would require more than a guinea for the workhouse to care for him +and his family, which he, somehow, manages to do on thirteen shillings. +And in addition, it is an understood fact that it is cheaper to cater +for a large number of people—buying, cooking, and serving +wholesale—than it is to cater for a small number of people, say a +family. + +Nevertheless, at the time this budget was compiled, there was in that +parish another family, not of four, but eleven persons, who had to live +on an income, not of thirteen shillings, but of twelve shillings per +week (eleven shillings in winter), and which had, not a rent-free +cottage, but a cottage for which it paid three shillings per week. + +This must be understood, and understood clearly: _Whatever is true of +London in the way of poverty and degradation, is true of all England_. +While Paris is not by any means France, the city of London is England. +The frightful conditions which mark London an inferno likewise mark the +United Kingdom an inferno. The argument that the decentralisation of +London would ameliorate conditions is a vain thing and false. If the +6,000,000 people of London were separated into one hundred cities each +with a population of 60,000, misery would be decentralised but not +diminished. The sum of it would remain as large. + +In this instance, Mr. B. S. Rowntree, by an exhaustive analysis, has +proved for the country town what Mr. Charles Booth has proved for the +metropolis, that fully one-fourth of the dwellers are condemned to a +poverty which destroys them physically and spiritually; that fully +one-fourth of the dwellers do not have enough to eat, are inadequately +clothed, sheltered, and warmed in a rigorous climate, and are doomed to +a moral degeneracy which puts them lower than the savage in cleanliness +and decency. + +After listening to the wail of an old Irish peasant in Kerry, Robert +Blatchford asked him what he wanted. “The old man leaned upon his spade +and looked out across the black peat fields at the lowering skies. +‘What is it that I’m wantun?’ he said; then in a deep plaintive tone he +continued, more to himself than to me, ‘All our brave bhoys and dear +gurrls is away an’ over the says, an’ the agent has taken the pig off +me, an’ the wet has spiled the praties, an’ I’m an owld man, _an’ I +want the Day av Judgment_.’” + +The Day of Judgment! More than he want it. From all the land rises the +hunger wail, from Ghetto and countryside, from prison and casual ward, +from asylum and workhouse—the cry of the people who have not enough to +eat. Millions of people, men, women, children, little babes, the blind, +the deaf, the halt, the sick, vagabonds and toilers, prisoners and +paupers, the people of Ireland, England, Scotland, Wales, who have not +enough to eat. And this, in face of the fact that five men can produce +bread for a thousand; that one workman can produce cotton cloth for 250 +people, woollens for 300, and boots and shoes for 1000. It would seem +that 40,000,000 people are keeping a big house, and that they are +keeping it badly. The income is all right, but there is something +criminally wrong with the management. And who dares to say that it is +not criminally mismanaged, this big house, when five men can produce +bread for a thousand, and yet millions have not enough to eat? + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. +DRINK, TEMPERANCE, AND THRIFT + + +The English working classes may be said to be soaked in beer. They are +made dull and sodden by it. Their efficiency is sadly impaired, and +they lose whatever imagination, invention, and quickness may be theirs +by right of race. It may hardly be called an acquired habit, for they +are accustomed to it from their earliest infancy. Children are begotten +in drunkenness, saturated in drink before they draw their first breath, +born to the smell and taste of it, and brought up in the midst of it. + +The public-house is ubiquitous. It flourishes on every corner and +between corners, and it is frequented almost as much by women as by +men. Children are to be found in it as well, waiting till their fathers +and mothers are ready to go home, sipping from the glasses of their +elders, listening to the coarse language and degrading conversation, +catching the contagion of it, familiarising themselves with +licentiousness and debauchery. + +Mrs. Grundy rules as supremely over the workers as she does over the +bourgeoisie; but in the case of the workers, the one thing she does not +frown upon is the public-house. No disgrace or shame attaches to it, +nor to the young woman or girl who makes a practice of entering it. + +I remember a girl in a coffee-house saying, “I never drink spirits when +in a public-’ouse.” She was a young and pretty waitress, and she was +laying down to another waitress her pre-eminent respectability and +discretion. Mrs. Grundy drew the line at spirits, but allowed that it +was quite proper for a clean young girl to drink beer, and to go into a +public-house to drink it. + +Not only is this beer unfit for the people to drink, but too often the +men and women are unfit to drink it. On the other hand, it is their +very unfitness that drives them to drink it. Ill-fed, suffering from +innutrition and the evil effects of overcrowding and squalor, their +constitutions develop a morbid craving for the drink, just as the +sickly stomach of the overstrung Manchester factory operative hankers +after excessive quantities of pickles and similar weird foods. +Unhealthy working and living engenders unhealthy appetites and desires. +Man cannot be worked worse than a horse is worked, and be housed and +fed as a pig is housed and fed, and at the same time have clean and +wholesome ideals and aspirations. + +As home-life vanishes, the public-house appears. Not only do men and +women abnormally crave drink, who are overworked, exhausted, suffering +from deranged stomachs and bad sanitation, and deadened by the ugliness +and monotony of existence, but the gregarious men and women who have no +home-life flee to the bright and clattering public-house in a vain +attempt to express their gregariousness. And when a family is housed in +one small room, home-life is impossible. + +A brief examination of such a dwelling will serve to bring to light one +important cause of drunkenness. Here the family arises in the morning, +dresses, and makes its toilet, father, mother, sons, and daughters, and +in the same room, shoulder to shoulder (for the room is small), the +wife and mother cooks the breakfast. And in the same room, heavy and +sickening with the exhalations of their packed bodies throughout the +night, that breakfast is eaten. The father goes to work, the elder +children go to school or into the street, and the mother remains with +her crawling, toddling youngsters to do her housework—still in the same +room. Here she washes the clothes, filling the pent space with soapsuds +and the smell of dirty clothes, and overhead she hangs the wet linen to +dry. + +Here, in the evening, amid the manifold smells of the day, the family +goes to its virtuous couch. That is to say, as many as possible pile +into the one bed (if bed they have), and the surplus turns in on the +floor. And this is the round of their existence, month after month, +year after year, for they never get a vacation save when they are +evicted. When a child dies, and some are always bound to die, since +fifty-five per cent. of the East End children die before they are five +years old, the body is laid out in the same room. And if they are very +poor, it is kept for some time until they can bury it. During the day +it lies on the bed; during the night, when the living take the bed, the +dead occupies the table, from which, in the morning, when the dead is +put back into the bed, they eat their breakfast. Sometimes the body is +placed on the shelf which serves as a pantry for their food. Only a +couple of weeks ago, an East End woman was in trouble, because, in this +fashion, being unable to bury it, she had kept her dead child three +weeks. + +Now such a room as I have described is not home but horror; and the men +and women who flee away from it to the public-house are to be pitied, +not blamed. There are 300,000 people, in London, divided into families +that live in single rooms, while there are 900,000 who are illegally +housed according to the Public Health Act of 1891—a respectable +recruiting-ground for the drink traffic. + +Then there are the insecurity of happiness, the precariousness of +existence, the well-founded fear of the future—potent factors in +driving people to drink. Wretchedness squirms for alleviation, and in +the public-house its pain is eased and forgetfulness is obtained. It is +unhealthy. Certainly it is, but everything else about their lives is +unhealthy, while this brings the oblivion that nothing else in their +lives can bring. It even exalts them, and makes them feel that they are +finer and better, though at the same time it drags them down and makes +them more beastly than ever. For the unfortunate man or woman, it is a +race between miseries that ends with death. + +It is of no avail to preach temperance and teetotalism to these people. +The drink habit may be the cause of many miseries; but it is, in turn, +the effect of other and prior miseries. The temperance advocates may +preach their hearts out over the evils of drink, but until the evils +that cause people to drink are abolished, drink and its evils will +remain. + +Until the people who try to help realise this, their well-intentioned +efforts will be futile, and they will present a spectacle fit only to +set Olympus laughing. I have gone through an exhibition of Japanese +art, got up for the poor of Whitechapel with the idea of elevating +them, of begetting in them yearnings for the Beautiful and True and +Good. Granting (what is not so) that the poor folk are thus taught to +know and yearn after the Beautiful and True and Good, the foul facts of +their existence and the social law that dooms one in three to a +public-charity death, demonstrate that this knowledge and yearning will +be only so much of an added curse to them. They will have so much more +to forget than if they had never known and yearned. Did Destiny to-day +bind me down to the life of an East End slave for the rest of my years, +and did Destiny grant me but one wish, I should ask that I might forget +all about the Beautiful and True and Good; that I might forget all I +had learned from the open books, and forget the people I had known, the +things I had heard, and the lands I had seen. And if Destiny didn’t +grant it, I am pretty confident that I should get drunk and forget it +as often as possible. + +These people who try to help! Their college settlements, missions, +charities, and what not, are failures. In the nature of things they +cannot but be failures. They are wrongly, though sincerely, conceived. +They approach life through a misunderstanding of life, these good folk. +They do not understand the West End, yet they come down to the East End +as teachers and savants. They do not understand the simple sociology of +Christ, yet they come to the miserable and the despised with the pomp +of social redeemers. They have worked faithfully, but beyond relieving +an infinitesimal fraction of misery and collecting a certain amount of +data which might otherwise have been more scientifically and less +expensively collected, they have achieved nothing. + +As some one has said, they do everything for the poor except get off +their backs. The very money they dribble out in their child’s schemes +has been wrung from the poor. They come from a race of successful and +predatory bipeds who stand between the worker and his wages, and they +try to tell the worker what he shall do with the pitiful balance left +to him. Of what use, in the name of God, is it to establish nurseries +for women workers, in which, for instance, a child is taken while the +mother makes violets in Islington at three farthings a gross, when more +children and violet-makers than they can cope with are being born right +along? This violet-maker handles each flower four times, 576 handlings +for three farthings, and in the day she handles the flowers 6912 times +for a wage of ninepence. She is being robbed. Somebody is on her back, +and a yearning for the Beautiful and True and Good will not lighten her +burden. They do nothing for her, these dabblers; and what they do not +do for the mother, undoes at night, when the child comes home, all that +they have done for the child in the day. + +And one and all, they join in teaching a fundamental lie. They do not +know it is a lie, but their ignorance does not make it more of a truth. +And the lie they preach is “thrift.” An instant will demonstrate it. In +overcrowded London, the struggle for a chance to work is keen, and +because of this struggle wages sink to the lowest means of subsistence. +To be thrifty means for a worker to spend less than his income—in other +words, to live on less. This is equivalent to a lowering of the +standard of living. In the competition for a chance to work, the man +with a lower standard of living will underbid the man with a higher +standard. And a small group of such thrifty workers in any overcrowded +industry will permanently lower the wages of that industry. And the +thrifty ones will no longer be thrifty, for their income will have been +reduced till it balances their expenditure. + +In short, thrift negates thrift. If every worker in England should heed +the preachers of thrift and cut expenditure in half, the condition of +there being more men to work than there is work to do would swiftly cut +wages in half. And then none of the workers of England would be +thrifty, for they would be living up to their diminished incomes. The +short-sighted thrift-preachers would naturally be astounded at the +outcome. The measure of their failure would be precisely the measure of +the success of their propaganda. And, anyway, it is sheer bosh and +nonsense to preach thrift to the 1,800,000 London workers who are +divided into families which have a total income of less than 21s. per +week, one quarter to one half of which must be paid for rent. + +Concerning the futility of the people who try to help, I wish to make +one notable, noble exception, namely, the Dr. Barnardo Homes. Dr. +Barnardo is a child-catcher. First, he catches them when they are +young, before they are set, hardened, in the vicious social mould; and +then he sends them away to grow up and be formed in another and better +social mould. Up to date he has sent out of the country 13,340 boys, +most of them to Canada, and not one in fifty has failed. A splendid +record, when it is considered that these lads are waifs and strays, +homeless and parentless, jerked out from the very bottom of the Abyss, +and forty-nine out of fifty of them made into men. + +Every twenty-four hours in the year Dr. Barnardo snatches nine waifs +from the streets; so the enormous field he has to work in may be +comprehended. The people who try to help have something to learn from +him. He does not play with palliatives. He traces social viciousness +and misery to their sources. He removes the progeny of the gutter-folk +from their pestilential environment, and gives them a healthy, +wholesome environment in which to be pressed and prodded and moulded +into men. + +When the people who try to help cease their playing and dabbling with +day nurseries and Japanese art exhibits and go back and learn their +West End and the sociology of Christ, they will be in better shape to +buckle down to the work they ought to be doing in the world. And if +they do buckle down to the work, they will follow Dr. Barnardo’s lead, +only on a scale as large as the nation is large. They won’t cram +yearnings for the Beautiful, and True, and Good down the throat of the +woman making violets for three farthings a gross, but they will make +somebody get off her back and quit cramming himself till, like the +Romans, he must go to a bath and sweat it out. And to their +consternation, they will find that they will have to get off that +woman’s back themselves, as well as the backs of a few other women and +children they did not dream they were riding upon. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. +THE MANAGEMENT + + +In this final chapter it were well to look at the Social Abyss in its +widest aspect, and to put certain questions to Civilisation, by the +answers to which Civilisation must stand or fall. For instance, has +Civilisation bettered the lot of man? “Man,” I use in its democratic +sense, meaning the average man. So the question re-shapes itself: _Has +Civilisation bettered the lot of the average man_? + +Let us see. In Alaska, along the banks of the Yukon River, near its +mouth, live the Innuit folk. They are a very primitive people, +manifesting but mere glimmering adumbrations of that tremendous +artifice, Civilisation. Their capital amounts possibly to £2 per head. +They hunt and fish for their food with bone-headed spears and arrows. +They never suffer from lack of shelter. Their clothes, largely made +from the skins of animals, are warm. They always have fuel for their +fires, likewise timber for their houses, which they build partly +underground, and in which they lie snugly during the periods of intense +cold. In the summer they live in tents, open to every breeze and cool. +They are healthy, and strong, and happy. Their one problem is food. +They have their times of plenty and times of famine. In good times they +feast; in bad times they die of starvation. But starvation, as a +chronic condition, present with a large number of them all the time, is +a thing unknown. Further, they have no debts. + +In the United Kingdom, on the rim of the Western Ocean, live the +English folk. They are a consummately civilised people. Their capital +amounts to at least £300 per head. They gain their food, not by hunting +and fishing, but by toil at colossal artifices. For the most part, they +suffer from lack of shelter. The greater number of them are vilely +housed, do not have enough fuel to keep them warm, and are +insufficiently clothed. A constant number never have any houses at all, +and sleep shelterless under the stars. Many are to be found, winter and +summer, shivering on the streets in their rags. They have good times +and bad. In good times most of them manage to get enough to eat, in bad +times they die of starvation. They are dying now, they were dying +yesterday and last year, they will die to-morrow and next year, of +starvation; for they, unlike the Innuit, suffer from a chronic +condition of starvation. There are 40,000,000 of the English folk, and +939 out of every 1000 of them die in poverty, while a constant army of +8,000,000 struggles on the ragged edge of starvation. Further, each +babe that is born, is born in debt to the sum of £22. This is because +of an artifice called the National Debt. + +In a fair comparison of the average Innuit and the average Englishman, +it will be seen that life is less rigorous for the Innuit; that while +the Innuit suffers only during bad times from starvation, the +Englishman suffers during good times as well; that no Innuit lacks +fuel, clothing, or housing, while the Englishman is in perpetual lack +of these three essentials. In this connection it is well to instance +the judgment of a man such as Huxley. From the knowledge gained as a +medical officer in the East End of London, and as a scientist pursuing +investigations among the most elemental savages, he concludes, “Were +the alternative presented to me, I would deliberately prefer the life +of the savage to that of those people of Christian London.” + +The creature comforts man enjoys are the products of man’s labour. +Since Civilisation has failed to give the average Englishman food and +shelter equal to that enjoyed by the Innuit, the question arises: _Has +Civilisation increased the producing power of the average man_? If it +has not increased man’s producing power, then Civilisation cannot +stand. + +But, it will be instantly admitted, Civilisation has increased man’s +producing power. Five men can produce bread for a thousand. One man can +produce cotton cloth for 250 people, woollens for 300, and boots and +shoes for 1000. Yet it has been shown throughout the pages of this book +that English folk by the millions do not receive enough food, clothes, +and boots. Then arises the third and inexorable question: _If +Civilisation has increased the producing power of the average man, why +has it not bettered the lot of the average man_? + +There can be one answer only—MISMANAGEMENT. Civilisation has made +possible all manner of creature comforts and heart’s delights. In these +the average Englishman does not participate. If he shall be forever +unable to participate, then Civilisation falls. There is no reason for +the continued existence of an artifice so avowed a failure. But it is +impossible that men should have reared this tremendous artifice in +vain. It stuns the intellect. To acknowledge so crushing a defeat is to +give the death-blow to striving and progress. + +One other alternative, and one other only, presents itself. +_Civilisation must be compelled to better the lot of the average man_. +This accepted, it becomes at once a question of business management. +Things profitable must be continued; things unprofitable must be +eliminated. Either the Empire is a profit to England, or it is a loss. +If it is a loss, it must be done away with. If it is a profit, it must +be managed so that the average man comes in for a share of the profit. + +If the struggle for commercial supremacy is profitable, continue it. If +it is not, if it hurts the worker and makes his lot worse than the lot +of a savage, then fling foreign markets and industrial empire +overboard. For it is a patent fact that if 40,000,000 people, aided by +Civilisation, possess a greater individual producing power than the +Innuit, then those 40,000,000 people should enjoy more creature +comforts and heart’s delights than the Innuits enjoy. + +If the 400,000 English gentlemen, “of no occupation,” according to +their own statement in the Census of 1881, are unprofitable, do away +with them. Set them to work ploughing game preserves and planting +potatoes. If they are profitable, continue them by all means, but let +it be seen to that the average Englishman shares somewhat in the +profits they produce by working at no occupation. + +In short, society must be reorganised, and a capable management put at +the head. That the present management is incapable, there can be no +discussion. It has drained the United Kingdom of its life-blood. It has +enfeebled the stay-at-home folk till they are unable longer to struggle +in the van of the competing nations. It has built up a West End and an +East End as large as the Kingdom is large, in which one end is riotous +and rotten, the other end sickly and underfed. + +A vast empire is foundering on the hands of this incapable management. +And by empire is meant the political machinery which holds together the +English-speaking people of the world outside of the United States. Nor +is this charged in a pessimistic spirit. Blood empire is greater than +political empire, and the English of the New World and the Antipodes +are strong and vigorous as ever. But the political empire under which +they are nominally assembled is perishing. The political machine known +as the British Empire is running down. In the hands of its management +it is losing momentum every day. + +It is inevitable that this management, which has grossly and criminally +mismanaged, shall be swept away. Not only has it been wasteful and +inefficient, but it has misappropriated the funds. Every worn-out, +pasty-faced pauper, every blind man, every prison babe, every man, +woman, and child whose belly is gnawing with hunger pangs, is hungry +because the funds have been misappropriated by the management. + +Nor can one member of this managing class plead not guilty before the +judgment bar of Man. “The living in their houses, and in their graves +the dead,” are challenged by every babe that dies of innutrition, by +every girl that flees the sweater’s den to the nightly promenade of +Piccadilly, by every worked-out toiler that plunges into the canal. The +food this managing class eats, the wine it drinks, the shows it makes, +and the fine clothes it wears, are challenged by eight million mouths +which have never had enough to fill them, and by twice eight million +bodies which have never been sufficiently clothed and housed. + +There can be no mistake. Civilisation has increased man’s producing +power an hundred-fold, and through mismanagement the men of +Civilisation live worse than the beasts, and have less to eat and wear +and protect them from the elements than the savage Innuit in a frigid +climate who lives to-day as he lived in the stone age ten thousand +years ago. + + + +CHALLENGE + +I have a vague remembrance + Of a story that is told +In some ancient Spanish legend + Or chronicle of old. + +It was when brave King Sanchez + Was before Zamora slain, +And his great besieging army + Lay encamped upon the plain. + +Don Diego de Ordenez + Sallied forth in front of all, +And shouted loud his challenge + To the warders on the wall. + +All the people of Zamora, + Both the born and the unborn, +As traitors did he challenge + With taunting words of scorn. + +The living in their houses, + And in their graves the dead, +And the waters in their rivers, + And their wine, and oil, and bread. + +There is a greater army + That besets us round with strife, +A starving, numberless army + At all the gates of life. + +The poverty-stricken millions + Who challenge our wine and bread, +And impeach us all as traitors, + Both the living and the dead. + +And whenever I sit at the banquet, + Where the feast and song are high, +Amid the mirth and music + I can hear that fearful cry. + +And hollow and haggard faces + Look into the lighted hall, +And wasted hands are extended + To catch the crumbs that fall. + +And within there is light and plenty, + And odours fill the air; +But without there is cold and darkness, + And hunger and despair. + +And there in the camp of famine, + In wind, and cold, and rain, +Christ, the great Lord of the Army, +vLies dead upon the plain. + + +LONGFELLOW + + + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PEOPLE OF THE ABYSS *** + +***** This file should be named 1688-0.txt or 1688-0.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/8/1688/ + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will +be renamed. + +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, +so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the +United States without permission and without paying copyright +royalties. 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