THE ITALIAN SLUM CHILDREN
Who and where are the slum children
of New York to-day? That depends on what is understood
by the term. The moralist might seek them in Hell’s
Kitchen, in Battle Row, and in the tenements, east
and west, where the descendants of the poorest Irish
immigrants live. They are the ones, as I have
before tried to show, upon whom the tenement and the
saloon set their stamp soonest and deepest. The
observer of physical facts merely would doubtless
pick out the Italian ragamuffins first, and from his
standpoint he would be right. Irish poverty is
not picturesque in the New World, whatever it may
have been in the Old. Italian poverty is.
The worst old rookeries fall everywhere in this
city to the share of the immigrants from Southern
Italy, who are content to occupy them, partly, perhaps,
because they are no worse than the hovels they left
behind, but mainly because they are tricked or bullied
into putting up with them by their smarter countrymen
who turn their helplessness and ignorance to good account.
Wherever the invasion of some old home section by the
tide of business has left ramshackle tenements falling
into hopeless decay, as in the old “Africa,”
in the Bend, and in many other places in the down-town
wards, the Italian sweater landlord is ready with
his offer of a lease to bridge over the interregnum,
a lease that takes no account of repairs or of the
improvements the owner sought to avoid. The crowds
to make it profitable to him are never wanting.
The bait he holds out is a job at the ash-dump with
which he connects at the other end of the line.
The house, the job, and the man as he comes to them
fit in well together, and the copartnership has given
the Italian a character which, I am satisfied from
close observation of him, he does not wholly deserve.
At all events, his wife does not. Dirty as he
seems and is in the old rags that harmonize so well
with his surroundings, there is that about her which
suggests not only the capacity for better things,
but a willingness to be clean and to look decent,
if cause can be shown. It may be a bright kerchief,
a bit of old-fashioned jewelry, or the neatly smoothed
and braided hair of the wrinkled old hag who presides
over the stale bread counter. Even in the worst
dens occupied by these people, provided that they had
not occupied them too long, I have found this trait
crop out in the careful scrubbing of some piece of
oil-cloth rescued from the dump and laid as a mat in
front of the family bed; or in a bit of fringe on the
sheet or quilt, ragged and black with age though it
was, that showed what a fruitful soil proper training
and decent housing would have found there.
I have in mind one Italian “flat”
among many, a half underground hole in a South Fifth
Avenue yard, reached by odd passage-ways through a
tumbledown tenement that was always full of bad smells
and scooting rats. Across the foul and slippery
yard, down three steps made of charred timbers from
some worse wreck, was this “flat,” where
five children slept with their elders. How many
of those there were I never knew. There were three
big family beds, and they nearly filled the room,
leaving only patches of the mud floor visible.
The walls were absolutely black with age and smoke.
The plaster had fallen off in patches and there was
green mould on the ceiling. And yet, with it
all, with the swarm of squirming youngsters that were
as black as the floor they rolled upon, there was evidence
of a desperate, if hopeless, groping after order,
even neatness. The beds were made up as nicely
as they could be with the old quilts and pieces of
carpet that served for covering. In Poverty Gap,
where an Italian would be stoned as likely as not,
there would have been a heap of dirty straw instead
of beds, and the artistic arrangement of tallow-dips
stuck in the necks of bottles about the newspaper
cut of a saint on the corner shelf would have been
missing altogether, fervent though the personal regard
might be of Poverty Gap for the saint. The bottles
would have been the only part of the exhibition sure
to be seen there.
I am satisfied that this instinct
inhabits not only the more aristocratic Genoese, but
his fellow countryman from the southern hills as well,
little as they resemble each other or agree in most
things. But the Neapolitan especially does not
often get a chance to prove it. He is so altogether
uninviting an object when he presents himself, fresh
from the steamer, that he falls naturally the victim
of the slum tenement, which in his keep becomes, despite
the vigilance of the sanitary police, easily enough
the convenient depot and half-way house between the
garbage-dump and the bone-factory. Starting thus
below the bottom, as it were, he has an up-hill journey
before him if he is to work out of the slums, and the
promise, to put it mildly, is not good. He does
it all the same, or, if not he, his boy. It is
not an Italian sediment that breeds the tough.
Parental authority has a strong enough grip on the
lad in Mulberry Street to make him work, and that
is his salvation. “In seventeen years,”
said the teacher of the oldest Italian ragged school
in the city that, day and night, takes in quite six
hundred, “I have seen my boys work up into decent
mechanics and useful citizens almost to a man, and
of my girls only two I know of have gone astray.”
I had observed the process often enough myself to
know that she was right. It is to be remembered,
furthermore, that her school is in the very heart
of the Five Points district, and takes in always the
worst and the dirtiest crowds of children.
Within a year there has been, through
some caprice of immigration, a distinct descent in
the quality of the children, viewed from even the
standard of cleanliness that prevails at the Five Points.
Perhaps the exodus from Italy has worked farther south,
where there seems to be an unusual supply of mud.
Perhaps the rivalry of steamship lines has brought
it about. At any rate, the testimony is positive
that the children that came to the schools after last
vacation, and have kept coming since, were the worst
seen here since the influx began. I have watched
with satisfaction, since this became apparent, some
of the bad old tenements, which the newcomers always
sought in droves, disappear to make room for great
factory buildings. But there are enough left.
The cleaning out of a Mulberry Street block left one
lop-sided old rear tenement that had long since been
shut in on three sides by buildings four stories higher
than itself, and forgotten by all the world save the
miserable wretches who burrowed in that dark and dismal
pit at the bottom of a narrow alley. Now, when
the fourth structure goes up against its very windows,
it will stand there in the heart of the block, a survival
of the unfittest, that, in all its disheartening dreariness,
bears testimony, nevertheless, to the beneficent activity
of the best Board of Health New York has ever had the
onward sweep of business. It will wipe that last
remnant out also, even if the law lack the power to
reach it.
Shoals of Italian children lived in
that rookery, and in those the workmen tore down,
in the actual physical atmosphere of the dump.
Not a gun-shot away there is a block of tenements,
known as the Mott Street Barracks, in which still
greater shoals are I was going to say housed,
but that would have been a mistake. Happily they
are that very rarely, except when they are asleep,
and not then if they can help it. Out on the street
they may be found tumbling in the dirt, or up on the
roof lying stark-naked, blinking in the sun content
with life as they find it. If they are not a
very cleanly crew, they are at least as clean as the
frame they are set in, though it must be allowed that
something has been done of late years to redeem the
buildings from the reproach of a bad past. The
combination of a Jew for a landlord and a saloon-keeper Italian,
of course for a lessee, was not propitious;
but the buildings happen to be directly under the
windows of the Health Board, and something, I suppose,
was due to appearances. The authorities did all
that could be done, short of tearing down the tenement,
but though comparatively clean, and not nearly as
crowded as it was, it is still the old slum. It
is an instructive instance of what can and cannot
be done with the tenements into which we invite these
dirty strangers to teach them American ways and the
self-respect of future citizens and voters. There
are five buildings that is, five front
and four rear houses, the latter a story higher than
those on the street; that is because the rear houses
were built last, to “accommodate” this
very Italian immigration that could be made to pay
for anything. Chiefly Irish had lived there before,
but they moved out then. There were 360 tenants
in the Barracks when the police census was taken in
1888, and 40 of them were babies. How many were
romping children I do not know. The “yard”
they had to play in is just 5 feet 10 inches wide,
and a dozen steps below the street-level. The
closets of all the buildings are in the cellar of
the rear houses and open upon this “yard,”
where it is always dark and damp as in a dungeon.
Its foul stenches reach even the top floor, but so
also does the sun at mid-day, and that is a luxury
that counts as an extra in the contract with the landlord.
The rent is nearly one-half higher near the top than
it is on the street-level. Nine dollars above,
six and a half below, for one room with windows, two
without, and with barely space for a bed in each.
But water-pipes have been put in lately, under orders
from the Health Department, and the rents have doubtless
been raised. “No windows” means no
ventilation. The rear building backs up against
the tenement on the next street; a space a foot wide
separates them, but an attempt to ventilate the bed-rooms
by windows on that was a failure.
When the health officers got through
with the Barracks in time for the police census of
1891, the 360 tenants had been whittled down to 238,
of whom 47 were babies under five years. Persistent
effort had succeeded in establishing a standard of
cleanliness that was a very great improvement upon
the condition prevailing in 1888. But still, as
I have said, the slum remained and will remain as
long as that rear tenement stands. In the four
years fifty-one funerals had gone out from the Barracks.
The white hearse alone had made thirty-five trips
carrying baby coffins. This was the way the two
standards showed up in the death returns at the Bureau
of Vital Statistics: in 1888 the adult death-rate,
in a population of 320 over five years old, was 15.62
per 1,000; the baby death-rate, 325.00 per 1,000,
or nearly one-third in a total of 40. As a matter
of fact 13 of the 40 had died that year. The
adult death-rate for the entire tenement population
of more than a million souls was that year 12.81,
and the baby death-rate 88.38. Last year, in
1891, the case stood thus: Total population, 238,
including 47 babies. Adult death-rate per 1,000,
20.94; child death-rate (under five years) per 1,000,
106.38. General adult death-rate for 1891 in
the tenements, 14.25; general child death-rate for
1891 in the tenements, 86.67. It should be added
that the reduced baby death-rate of the Barracks,
high as it was, was probably much lower than it can
be successfully maintained. The year before,
in 1890, when practically the same improved conditions
prevailed, it was twice as high. Twice as many
babies died.
I have referred to some of the typical
Italian tenements at some length to illustrate the
conditions under which their children grow up and absorb
the impressions that are to shape their lives as men
and women. Is it to be marvelled at, if the first
impression of them is sometimes not favorable?
I recall, not without amusement, one of the early experiences
of a committee with which I was trying to relieve some
of the child misery in the East Side tenements by
providing an outing for the very poorest of the little
ones, who might otherwise have been overlooked.
In our anxiety to make our little charges as presentable
as possible, it seems we had succeeded so well as
to arouse a suspicion in our friends at the other end
of the line that something was wrong, either with us
or with the poor of which the patrician youngsters
in new frocks and with clean faces, that came to them,
were representatives. They wrote to us that they
were in the field for the “slum children,”
and slum children they wanted. It happened that
their letter came just as we had before us two little
lads from the Mulberry Street Bend, ragged, dirty,
unkempt, and altogether a sight to see. Our wardrobe
was running low, and we were at our wits’ end
how to make these come up to our standard. We
sat looking at each other after we had heard the letter
read, all thinking the same thing, until the most
courageous said it: “Send them as they are.”
Well, we did, and waited rather breathlessly for the
verdict. It came, with the children, in a note
by return train, that said: “Not that
kind, please!” And after that we were allowed
to have things our own way.
The two little fellows were Italians.
In justice to our frightened friends, it should be
said that it was not their nationality, but their
rags, to which they objected; but not very many seasons
have passed since the crowding of the black-eyed brigade
of “guinnies,” as they were contemptuously
dubbed, in ever-increasing numbers, into the ragged
schools and the kindergartens, was watched with regret
and alarm by the teachers, as by many others who had
no better cause. The event proved that the children
were the real teachers. They had a more valuable
lesson to impart than they came to learn, and it has
been a salutary one. To-day they are gladly welcomed.
Their sunny temper, which no hovel is dreary enough,
no hardship has power to cloud, has made them universal
favorites, and the discovery has been made by their
teachers that as the crowds pressed harder their school-rooms
have marvellously expanded, until they embrace within
their walls an unsuspected multitude, even many a slum
tenement itself, cellar, “stoop,” attic,
and all. Every lesson of cleanliness, of order,
and of English taught at the school is reflected into
some wretched home, and rehearsed there as far as
the limited opportunities will allow. No demonstration
with soap and water upon a dirty little face but widens
the sphere of these chief promoters of education in
the slums. “By ’m by,” said
poor crippled Pietro to me, with a sober look, as he
labored away on his writing lesson, holding down the
paper with his maimed hand, “I learn t’
make an Englis’ letter; maybe my fadder he learn
too.” I had my doubts of the father.
He sat watching Pietro with a pride in the achievement
that was clearly proportionate to the struggle it
cost, and mirrored in his own face every grimace and
contortion the progress of education caused the boy.
“Si! si!” he nodded, eagerly. “Pietro
he good a boy; make Englis’, Englis’!”
and he made a flourish with his clay-pipe, as if he
too were making the English letter that was the object
of their common veneration.
Perhaps it is as much his growing
and well-founded distrust of the middle-man, whose
unresisting victim he has heretofore been, and his
need of some other joint to connect him with the English-speaking
world that surrounds him, as any personal interest
in book-learning, that impels the illiterate Italian
to bring his boy to school early and see that he attends
it. Greed has something to do with it too.
In their anxiety to lay hold of the child, the charity
schools have fallen into a way of bidding for him
with clothes, shoes, and other bait that is never lost
on Mulberry Street. Even sectarian scruples yield
to such an argument, and the parochial school, where
they get nothing but on the contrary are expected
to contribute, gets left.
In a few charity schools where the
children are boarded they have discovered this, and
frown upon Italian children unless there is the best
of evidence that the father is really unable to pay
for their keep and not simply unwilling. But
whatever his motive, the effect is to demonstrate
in a striking way the truth of the observation that
real reform of poverty and ignorance must begin with
the children. In his case, at all events, the
seed thus sown bears some fruit in the present as well
as in the coming generation of toilers. The little
ones, with their new standards and new ambitions,
become in a very real sense missionaries of the slums,
whose work of regeneration begins with their parents.
They are continually fetched away from school by the
mother or father to act as interpreters or go-betweens
in all the affairs of daily life, to be conscientiously
returned within the hour stipulated by the teacher,
who offers no objection to this sort of interruption,
knowing it to be the best condition of her own success.
One cannot help the hope that the office of trust
with which the children are thus invested may, in some
measure, help to mitigate their home-hardships.
From their birth they have little else, though Italian
parents are rarely cruel in the sense of abusing their
offspring.
It is the home itself that constitutes
their chief hardship. It is only when his years
offer the boy an opportunity of escape to the street,
that a ray of sunlight falls into his life. In
his backyard or in his alley it seldom finds him out.
Thenceforward most of his time is spent there, until
the school and the shop claim him, but not in idleness.
His mother toiled, while she bore him at her breast,
under burdens heavy enough to break a man’s
back. She lets him out of her arms only to share
her labor. How well he does it anyone may see
for himself by watching the children that swarm where
an old house is being torn down, lugging upon their
heads loads of kindling wood twice their own size
and sometimes larger than that. They come, as
crows scenting carrion, from every side at the first
blow of the axe. Their odd old-mannish or old-womanish
appearance, due more to their grotesque rags than
to anything in the children themselves, betrays their
race even without their chatter. Be there ever
so many children of other nationalities nearer by the
wood-gatherers are nearly all Italians. There
are still a lot of girls among them who drag as big
loads as their brothers, but since the sewing machine
found its way, with the sweater’s mortgage,
into the Italian slums also, little Antonia has been
robbed to a large extent even of this poor freedom,
and has taken her place among the wage-earners when
not on the school-bench. Once taken, the place
is hers to keep for good. Sickness, unless it
be mortal, is no excuse from the drudgery of the tenement.
When, recently, one little Italian girl, hardly yet
in her teens, stayed away from her class in the Mott
Street Industrial School so long that her teacher
went to her home to look her up, she found the child
in a high fever, in bed, sewing on coats, with swollen
eyes, though barely able to sit up.
But neither poverty nor hard knocks
has power to discourage the child of Italy. His
nickname he pockets with a grin that has in it no thought
of the dagger and the revenge that come to solace
his after years. Only the prospect of immediate
punishment eclipses his spirits for the moment.
While the teacher of the sick little girl was telling
me her pitiful story in the Mott Street school, a
characteristic group appeared on the stairway.
Three little Italian culprits in the grasp of Nellie,
the tall and slender Irish girl who was the mentor
of her class for the day. They had been arrested
“fur fightin’” she briefly explained
as she dragged them by the collar toward the principal,
who just then appeared to inquire the cause of the
rumpus, and thrust them forward to receive sentence.
The three, none of whom was over eight years old,
evidently felt that they were in the power of an enemy
from whom no mercy was to be expected, and made no
appeal for any. One scowled defiance. He
was evidently the injured party.
“He hit-a me a clip on de jaw,”
he said in his defence, in the dialect of Mott Street
with a slight touch of “the Bend.”
The aggressor, a heavy browed little ruffian, hung
back with a dreary howl, knuckling his eyes with a
pair of fists that were nearly black. The third
and youngest was in a state of bewilderment that was
most ludicrous. He only knew that he had received
a kick on the back and had struck out in self-defence,
when he was seized and dragged away a prisoner.
He was so dirty school had only just begun
and there had been no time for the regular inspection that
he was sentenced on the spot to be taken down and
washed, while the other two were led away to the principal’s
desk. All three went out howling.
I said that the Italians do not often
abuse their children downright. The padrone has
had his day; the last was convicted seven years ago,
and an end has been put to the business of selling
children into a slavery that meant outrage, starvation,
and death; but poverty and ignorance are fearful allies
in the homes of the poor against defenceless childhood,
even without the child-beating fiend. Two cases
which I encountered in the East Side tenements, in
the summer of 1891, show how the combination works
at its worst. Without a doubt they are typical
of very many, though I hope that few come quite up
to their standard. The one was the case of little
Carmen, who last March died in the New York Hospital,
where she had lain five long months, the special care
of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
One of the summer corps doctors found her in a Mott
Street tenement, within stone-throw of the Health Department
office, suffering from a wasting disease that could
only be combated by the most careful nursing.
He put her case into the hands of the King’s
Daughters’ Committee that followed in the steps
of the doctor, and it was then that I saw her.
She lay in a little back room, up two flights and giving
upon a narrow yard where it was always twilight.
The room was filthy and close, and entirely devoid
of furniture, with the exception of a rickety stool,
a slop pail, and a rusty old stove, one end of which
was propped up with bricks. Carmen’s bed
was a board laid across the top of a barrel and a
trunk set on end. I could not describe, if I would,
the condition of the child when she was raised from
the mess of straw and rags in which she lay.
The sight unnerved even the nurse, who had seen little
else than such scenes all summer. Loathsome bedsores
had attacked the wasted little body, and in truth
Carmen was more dead than alive. But when, shocked
and disgusted, we made preparations for her removal
with all speed to the hospital, the parents objected
and refused to let us take her away. They had
to be taken into court and forced to surrender the
child under warrant of law, though it was clearly
the little sufferer’s only chance for life,
and only the slenderest of chances at that.
Carmen was the victim of the stubborn
ignorance that dreads the hospital and the doctor
above the discomfort of the dirt and darkness and suffering
that are its every-day attendants. Her parents
were no worse than the Monroe Street mother who refused
to let the health officer vaccinate her baby, because
her crippled boy, with one leg an inch shorter than
the other, had “caught it” the
lame leg, that is to say from his vaccination.
She knew it was so, and with ignorance of that stamp
there is no other argument than force. But another
element entered into the case of a sick Essex Street
baby. The tenement would not let it recover from
a bad attack of scarlet fever, and the parents would
not let it be taken to the country or to the sea-shore,
despite all efforts and entreaties. When their
motive came out at last, it proved to be a mercenary
one. They were behind with the rent, and as long
as they had a sick child in the house the landlord
could not put them out. Sick, the baby was to
them a source of income, at all events a bar to expense,
and in that way so much capital. Well, or away,
it would put them at the mercy of the rent-collector
at once. So they chose to let it suffer.
The parents were Jews, a fact that emphasizes the
share borne by desperate poverty in the transaction,
for the family tie is notoriously strong among their
people.
No doubt Mott Street echoed with the
blare of brass bands when poor little Carmen was carried
from her bed of long suffering to her grave in Calvary.
Scarce a day passes now in these tenements that does
not see some little child, not rarely a new-born babe,
carried to the grave in solemn state, preceded by
a band playing mournful dirges and followed by a host
with trailing banners, from some wretched home that
barely sheltered it alive. No suspicion of the
ludicrous incongruity of the show disturbs the paraders.
It seems as if, but one remove from the dump, an insane
passion for pomp and display, perhaps a natural reaction
from the ash-barrel, lies in wait for this Italian,
to which he falls a helpless victim. Not content
with his own national and religious holidays and those
he finds awaiting him here, he has invented or introduced
a system of his own, a sort of communal celebration
of proprietary saints, as it were, that has taken
Mulberry Street by storm. As I understand it,
the townsmen of some Italian village, when there is
a sufficient number of them within reach, club together
to celebrate its patron saint, and hire a band and
set up a gorgeous altar in a convenient back yard.
The fire-escapes overlooking it are draped with flags
and transformed into reserved-seat galleries with
the taste these people display under the most adverse
circumstances. Crowds come and go, parading at
intervals in gorgeous uniforms around the block.
Admission is by the saloon-door, which nearly always
holds the key to the situation, the saloonist who
prompts the sudden attack of devotion being frequently
a namesake of the saint and willing to go shares on
the principle that he takes the profit and the saint
the glory.
The partnership lasts as long as there
is any profit in it, sometimes the better part of
the week, during which time all work stops. If
the feast panned out well, the next block is liable
to be the scene of a rival celebration before the
first is fairly ended. As the supply of Italian
villages represented in New York is practically as
inexhaustible as that of the saloons, there is no
reason why Mulberry Street may not become a perennial
picnic ground long before the scheme to make a park
of one end of it gets under way. From the standpoint
of the children there can be no objection to this,
but from that of the police there is. They found
themselves called upon to interfere in such a four
days’ celebration of St. Rocco last year, when
his votaries strung cannon fire-crackers along the
street the whole length of the block and set them all
off at once. It was at just such a feast, in
honor of the same saint, that a dozen Italians were
killed a week later at Newark in the explosion of their
fireworks.
It goes without saying that the children
enter into this sort of thing with all the enthusiasm
of their little souls. The politician watches
it attentively, alert for some handle to catch his
new allies by and effect their “organization.”
If it is a new experience for him to find the saloon
put to such use, he betrays no surprise. It is
his vantage ground, and whether it serve as the political
bait for the Irishman, or as the religious initiative
of the Italian, is of less account than that its patrons,
young and old, in the end fall into his trap.
Conclusive proof that the Italian has been led into
camp came to me on last St. Patrick’s Day through
the assurance of a certain popular clergyman, that
he had observed, on a walk through the city, a number
of hand-organs draped in green, evidently for the
occasion.
This dump of which I have spoken as
furnishing the background of the social life of Mulberry
Street, has lately challenged attention as a slum
annex to the Bend, with fresh horrors in store for
defenceless childhood. To satisfy myself upon
this point I made a personal inspection of the dumps
along both rivers last winter and found the Italian
crews at work there making their home in every instance
among the refuse they picked from the scows.
The dumps are wooden bridges raised above the level
of the piers upon which they are built to allow the
discharge of the carts directly into the scows moored
under them. Under each bridge a cabin had been
built of old boards, oil-cloth, and the like, that
had found its way down on the carts; an old milk-can
had been made into a fireplace without the ceremony
of providing stove-pipe or draught, and here, flanked
by mountains of refuse, slept the crews of from half
a dozen to three times that number of men, secure
from the police, who had grown tired of driving them
from dump to dump and had finally let them alone.
There were women at some of them, and at four dumps,
three on the North River and one on the East Side,
I found boys who ought to have been at school, picking
bones and sorting rags. They said that they slept
there, and as the men did, why should they not?
It was their home. They were children of the dump,
literally. All of them except one were Italians.
That one was a little homeless Jew who had drifted
down at first to pick cinders. Now that his mother
was dead and his father in a hospital, he had become
a sort of fixture there, it seemed, having made the
acquaintance of the other lads.
Two boys whom I found at the West
Nineteenth Street dumps sorting bones were as bright
lads as I had seen anywhere. One was nine years
old and the other twelve. Filthy and ragged,
they fitted well into their environment even
the pig I had encountered at one of the East River
dumps was much the more respectable, as to appearance,
of the lot but were entirely undaunted
by it. They scarcely remembered anything but the
dump. Neither could read, of course. Further
down the river I came upon one seemingly not over
fifteen, who assured me that he was twenty-one.
I thought it possible when I took a closer look at
him. The dump had stunted him. He did not
even know what a letter was. He had been there
five years, and garbage limited his mental as well
as his physical horizon.
Enough has been said to show that
the lot of the poor child of the Mulberry Street Bend,
or of Little Italy, is not a happy one, courageously
and uncomplainingly, even joyously, though it be borne.
The stories of two little lads from the region of
Crosby Street always stand to me as typical of their
kind. One I knew all about from personal observation
and acquaintance; the other I give as I have it from
his teachers in the Mott Street Industrial School,
where he was a pupil in spells. It was the death
of little Giuseppe that brought me to his home, a dismal
den in a rear tenement down a dark and forbidding
alley. I have seldom seen a worse place.
There was no trace there of a striving for better things the
tenement had stamped that out nothing but
darkness and filth and misery. From this hole
Giuseppe had come to the school a mass of rags, but
with that jovial gleam in his brown eyes that made
him an instant favorite with the teachers as well
as with the boys. One of them especially, little
Mike, became attached to him, and a year after his
cruel death shed tears yet, when reminded of it.
Giuseppe had not been long at the school when he was
sent to an Elizabeth Street tenement for a little absentee.
He brought her, shivering in even worse rags than
his own; it was a cold winter day.
“This girl is very poor,”
he said, presenting her to the teacher, with a pitying
look. It was only then that he learned that she
had no mother. His own had often stood between
the harsh father and him when he came home with unsold
evening papers. Giuseppe fished his only penny
out of his pocket his capital for the afternoon’s
trade. “I would like to give her that,”
he said. After that he brought her pennies regularly
from his day’s sale, and took many a thrashing
for it. He undertook the general supervision
of the child’s education, and saw to it that
she came to school every day. Giuseppe was twelve
years old.
There came an evening when business
had been very bad, so bad that he thought a bed in
the street healthier for him than the Crosby Street
alley. With three other lads in similar straits
he crawled into the iron chute that ventilated the
basement of the Post-office on the Mail Street side
and snuggled down on the grating. They were all
asleep, when fire broke out in the cellar. The
three climbed out, but Giuseppe, whose feet were wrapped
in a mail-bag, was too late. He was burned to
death.
The little girl still goes to the
Mott Street school. She is too young to understand,
and marvels why Giuseppe comes no more with his pennies.
Mike cries for his friend. When, some months
ago, I found myself in the Crosby Street alley, and
went up to talk to Giuseppe’s parents, they would
answer no questions before I had replied to one of
theirs. It was thus interpreted to me by a girl
from the basement, who had come in out of curiosity:
“Are youse goin’ to give us any money?”
Poor Giuseppe!
My other little friend was Pietro,
of whom I spoke before. Perhaps of all the little
life-stories of poor Italian children I have come across
in the course of years and they are many
and sad, most of them none comes nearer
to the hard every-day fact of those dreary tenements
than his, exceptional as was his own heavy misfortune
and its effect upon the boy. I met him first
in the Mulberry Street police-station, where he was
interpreting the defence in a shooting case, having
come in with the crowd from Jersey Street, where the
thing had happened at his own door. With his
rags, his dirty bare feet, and his shock of tousled
hair, he seemed to fit in so entirely there of all
places, and took so naturally to the ways of the police-station,
that he might have escaped my notice altogether but
for his maimed hand and his oddly grave yet eager face,
which no smile ever crossed despite his thirteen years.
Of both, his story, when I afterward came to know
it, gave me full explanation. He was the oldest
son of a laborer, not “borned here” as
the rest of his sisters and brothers. There were
four of them, six in the family besides himself, as
he put it: “2 sisters, 2 broders, 1 fader,
1 modder,” subsisting on an unsteady maximum
income of $9 a week, the rent taking always the earnings
of one week in four. The home thus dearly paid
for was a wretched room with a dark alcove for a bed-chamber,
in one of the vile old barracks that until very recently
preserved to Jersey Street the memory of its former
bad eminence as among the worst of the city’s
slums. Pietro had gone to the Sisters’
school, blacking boots in a haphazard sort of way in
his off-hours, until the year before, upon his mastering
the alphabet, his education was considered to have
sufficiently advanced to warrant his graduating into
the ranks of the family wage-earners, that were sadly
in need of recruiting. A steady job of “shinin’”
was found for him in an Eighth Ward saloon, and that
afternoon, just before Christmas, he came home from
school and putting his books away on the shelf for
the next in order to use, ran across Broadway full
of joyous anticipation of his new dignity in an independent
job. He did not see the street-car until it was
fairly upon him, and then it was too late. They
thought he was killed, but he was only crippled for
life. When, after many months, he came out of
the hospital, where the company had paid his board
and posed as doing a generous thing, his bright smile
was gone; his “shining” was at an end,
and with it his career as it had been marked out for
him. He must needs take up something new, and
he was bending all his energies, when I met him, toward
learning to make the “Englis’ letter”
with a degree of proficiency that would justify the
hope of his doing something somewhere at sometime
to make up for what he had lost. It was a far-off
possibility yet. With the same end in view, probably,
he was taking nightly writing-lessons in his mother-tongue
from one of the perambulating schoolmasters who circulate
in the Italian colony, peddling education cheap in
lots to suit. In his sober, submissive way he
was content with the prospect. It had its compensations.
The boys who used to worry him, now let him alone.
“When they see this,” he said, holding
up his scarred and misshapen arm, “they don’t
strike me no more.” Then there was his
fourteen months old baby brother who was beginning
to walk, and could almost “make a letter.”
Pietro was much concerned about his education, anxious
evidently that he should one day take his place.
“I take him to school sometime,” he said,
piloting him across the floor and talking softly to
the child in his own melodious Italian. I watched
his grave, unchanging face.
“Pietro,” I said, with a sudden yearning
to know, “did you ever laugh?”
The boy glanced from the baby to me with a wistful
look.
“I did wonst,” he said,
quietly, and went on his way. And I would gladly
have forgotten that I ever asked the question; even
as Pietro had forgotten his laugh.