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James Greenwood - The Seven Curses of London

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The Seven Curses of London: summary, description and annotation

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To certain squeamish readers this useful and well-written volume will prove an unsavoury book; and even to those who have the nerve to witness agony and explore the lurking-places of crime, it will occasion no ordinary sadness and sense of repugnance. Redolent with the unwholesome smell of ill-drained alleys and over-crowded dwellings for the poor, it resounds in every chapter with the cries of violence and the mutterings of woe ... [review of The Seven Curses of London from the Athenaeum, 1869] James Greenwood (c.1835-1927) was one of eleven children, born to a Lambeth coach trimmer. His elder brother Frederick, initially apprenticed to a publishing/printing firm, became a writer and editor; and it was under his brothers guidance that Greenwood wrote an article entitled A Night in a Workhouse (pub. Pall Mall Gazette, 12-15 January 1866). This was a ground-breaking piece of undercover reporting, in which Greenwood spent the night in a casual ward disguised as a pauper. In the style of the period, the article was anonymous, with Greenwood bestowing on himself the soubriquet of The Amateur Casual. The articles expos of maladministration and wretched conditions - and the exotic manner in which the information was gathered - sealed the authors reputation overnight. Greenwood would continue to expose various aspects of London low life for several decades, writing for the Pall Mall Gazette and then the Daily Telegraph. Many of these were anthologised into book form, but The Seven Curses of London was written as a single campaigning work, designed to stimulate debate about the manifold evils which beset the urban poor. It is not, however, a simple tract and the book includes many of the staples of Greenwoods distinctive style of journalism, including investigative reporting and interviews.

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Transcribed from the 1869 edition by David Price email ccx074pglaforg THE - photo 1
Transcribed from the [1869] edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
THE
SEVEN CURSES OF LONDON.
By JAMES GREENWOOD,
The Amateur Casual.
LONDON:
STANLEY RIVERS AND CO.
CONTENTS.
I. Neglected Children.
CHAPTER I.
STARTLING FACTS.
The Pauper Population.Pauper Children.Opinions concerning their proper Treatment.A Hundred Thousand Children loose in London Streets.Neglected Babies.Juvenile Market Prowlers
page
CHAPTER II.
RESPECTING THE PARENTAGE OF SOME OF OUR GUTTER POPULATION.
Who are the Mothers?The Infant Labour-Market.Watch London and Blackfriars Bridges.The Melancholy Types.The Flashy, Flaunting Infant.Keeping Company.Marriage.The Upshot
p.
CHAPTER III.
BABY-FARMING.
Baby-Farmers and Advertising Child-Adopters.F. X. of Stepney.The Authors Interview with Farmer Oxleek.The Case of Baby Frederick Wood
p.
CHAPTER IV.
WORKING BOYS.
The London Errand-Boy.His Drudgery and Privations.His Temptations.The London Boy after Dark.The Amusements provided for him
p.
CHAPTER V.
THE PROBLEM OF DELIVERANCE.
Curious Problem.The best Method of Treatment.The Child of the Gutter not to be entirely abolished.The genuine Alley-bred Arab.The Poor Lambs of the Ragged Flock.The Tree of Evil in our midst.The Breeding Places of Disease and Vice
p.
II. Professional Thieves.
CHAPTER VI.
THEIR NUMBER AND DIFFICULTIES.
Twenty Thousand Thieves in London.What it means.The Language of Weeds.Cleverness of the Pilfering Fraternity.A Protest against a barbarous Suggestion.The Prisoners great Difficulty.The Moment of Leaving Prison.Bad Friends.What becomes of Good Resolutions and the Chaplains Counsel?The Criminals Scepticism of Human Goodness.Life in Little Hell.The Cow-Cross Mission.
p.
CHAPTER VII.
HOMES AND HAUNTS OF THE BRITISH THIEF.
The Three Classes of Thieving Society.Popular Misapprehensions.A True Picture of the London Thief.A Fancy Sketch of the Under-ground Cellar.In Disguise at a Thieves Raffle.The Puzzle of Black Maria.Mr. Mullinss Speech and his Song
p.
CHAPTER VIII.
JUVENILE THIEVES.
The Beginning of the Downhill Journey.Candidates for Newgate Honours.Black Spots of London.Life from the Young Robbers Point of View.The Seedling Recruits the most difficult to reform.A doleful Summing-up.A Phase of the Criminal Question left unnoticed.Budding Burglars.Streams which keep at full flood the Black Sea of Crime.The Promoters of Gallows Literature.Another Shot at a Fortress of the Devil.Poison-Literature.Starlight Sall.Panther Bill
p.
CHAPTER IX.
THE THIEF NON-PROFESSIONAL.
The Registered and the Unregistered Thieves of the London Hunting-ground.The Certainty of the Crop of Vice.Omnibus Drivers and Conductors.The Watchers.The London General Omnibus Company.The Scandal of their System.The Shopkeeper Thief.False Weights and Measures.Adulteration of Food and Drink.Our Old Law, I am as honest as I can afford to be!Rudimentary Exercises in the Art of Pillage
p.
CHAPTER X.
CRIMINAL SUPPRESSION AND PUNISHMENT.
Lord Romillys Suggestion concerning the Education of the Children of Criminals.Desperate Criminals.The Alleys of the Borough.The worst Quarters not, as a rule, the most noisy.The Evil Example of Gallows Heroes, Dick Turpin, Blueskin, &c.The Talent for Gammoning Lady Green.A worthy Governors Opinion as to the best way of Breaking a Bad Boy.Affection for Mother.The Dark Cell and its Inmate.An Affecting Interview
p.
CHAPTER XI.
ADULT CRIMINALS AND THE NEW LAW FOR THEIR BETTER GOVERNMENT.
Recent Legislation.Statistics.Lord Kimberleys Habitual Criminals Bill.The Present System of License-Holders.Colonel Hendersons Report.Social Enemies of Suspected Men.The Wrong-headed Policeman and the Mischief he may cause.Looking out for a Chance.The last Resource of desperate Honesty.A Brotherly Appeal.Ginger will settle her.Ruffians who should be shut up
p.
III. Professional Beggars.
CHAPTER XII.
THE BEGGAR OF OLDEN TIME.
Only a Beggar.The Fraternity 333 Years ago.A savage Law.Origin of the Poor-Laws.Irish Distinction in the Ranks of Beggary.King Charless Proclamation.Cumberland Discipline
p.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE WORK OF PUNISHMENT AND RECLAMATION.
The Effect of The Society for the Suppression of Mendicity.State Business earned out by Individual Enterprise.The Discharged Prisoners Aid Society.The quiet Work of these Societies.Their Mode of Work.Curious Statistics.Singular Oscillations.Diabolical Swindling
p.
CHAPTER XIV.
BEGGING DODGES.
The Variety and Quality of the Imposture.Superior Accomplishments of the Modern Practitioner.The Recipe for Success.The Power of Cheek.Chanting and the Shallow Lay.Estimates of their Paying Value.The Art of touching Womens Hearts.The Half-resentful Trick.The Loudon Cadger.The Height of the Famine Season.
p.
CHAPTER XV.
GENTEEL ADVERTISING BEGGARS.
The Newspaper Plan and the delicate Process.Forms of Petition.Novel Applications of Photography.Personal Attractions of the Distressed.Help, or I perish!
IV. Fallen Women.
CHAPTER XVI.
THIS CURSE.
The Difficulty in handling it.The Question of its Recognition.The Argyll Rooms.Mr. Actons Visit there.The Women and their Patrons.The Floating Population of Windmill-street.Cremorne Gardens in the Season
p.
CHAPTER XVII.
THE PLAIN FACTS AND FIGURES OF PROSTITUTION.
Statistics of Westminster, Brompton, and Pimlico.Methods of conducting the nefarious Business.Aristocratic Dens.The High Tariff.The Horrors of the Social Evil.The Broken Bridge behind the Sinner.Dress Lodgers.Theres always a Watcher.Soldiers and Sailors.The Wrens of the Curragh
p.
CHAPTER XVIII.
THE PRESENT CONDITION OF THE QUESTION.
The Laws applying to Street-walkers.The Keepers of the Haymarket Night-houses.Present Position of the Police-magistrates.Music-hall Frequenters.Refreshment-bars.Midnight ProfligacySnuggeries.Over-zealous Blockheads.
p.
CHAPTER XIX.
SUGGESTIONS.
Ignoring the Evil.Punishment fit for the Deserter and the Seducer.The Know-nothing and Do-nothing Principle.The Emigration of Women of Bad Character
p.
V. The Curse of Drunkenness.
CHAPTER XX.
ITS POWER.
The crowning Curse.No form of sin or sorrow in which it does not play a part.The Slippery Stone of Life.Statistics.Matters not growing worse.The Army Returns.The System of Adulteration
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