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.

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.

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