The People of the Abyss eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 229 pages of information about The People of the Abyss.

The People of the Abyss eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 229 pages of information about The People of the Abyss.
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.

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The People of the Abyss from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.