NED FROG’S EXPERIENCES AND SAMMY TWITTER’S
WOES
But Ned Frog, with strong drink combined,
rendered fruitless all the efforts that were put forth
in his behalf at that time.
When discharged with a lot of other
jail-birds, none of whom, however, he knew, he sauntered
leisurely homeward, wondering whether his wife was
alive, and, if so, in what condition he should find
her.
It may have been that better thoughts
were struggling in his breast for ascendency, because
he sighed deeply once or twice, which was not a usual
mode with Ned of expressing his feelings. A growl
was more common and more natural, considering his
character.
Drawing nearer and nearer to his old
haunts, yet taking a roundabout road, as the moth
is drawn to the candle, or as water descends to its
level, he went slowly on, having little hope of comfort
in his home, and not knowing very well what to do.
As he passed down one of the less
frequented streets leading into Whitechapel, he was
arrested by the sight of a purse lying on the pavement.
To become suddenly alive, pick it up, glance stealthily
round, and thrust it into his pocket, was the work
of an instant. The saunter was changed into
a steady businesslike walk. As he turned into
Commercial Street, Ned met Number 666 full in the face.
He knew that constable intimately, but refrained
from taking notice of him, and passed on with an air
and expression which were meant to convey the idea
of infantine innocence. Guilty men usually over-reach
themselves. Giles noted the air, and suspected
guilt, but, not being in a position to prove it, walked
gravely on, with his stern eyes straight to the front.
In a retired spot Ned examined his
“find.” It contained six sovereigns,
four shillings, threepence, a metropolitan railway
return ticket, several cuttings from newspapers, and
a recipe for the concoction of a cheap and wholesome
pudding, along with a card bearing the name of Mrs
Samuel Twitter, written in ink and without any address.
“You’re in luck, Ned,”
he remarked to himself, as he examined these treasures.
“Now, old boy you ’aven’t stole
this ’ere purse, so you ain’t a thief;
you don’t know w’ere Mrs S.T. lives, so
you can’t find ’er to return it to ’er.
Besides, it’s more than likely she won’t
feel the want of it w’ereas I feels
in want of it wery much indeed. Of course it’s
my dooty to ’and it over to the p’lice,
but, in the first place, I refuse to ‘ave
any communication wi’ the p’lice, friendly
or otherwise; in the second place, I ’ad no
‘and in makin’ the laws, so I don’t
feel bound to obey ’em; thirdly, I’m both
‘ungry an’ thirsty, an’ ’ere
you ’ave the remedy for them afflictions,
so, fourthly ’ere goes!”
Having thus cleared his conscience,
Ned committed the cash to his vest pocket, and presented
the purse with its remaining contents to the rats
in a neighbouring sewer.
Almost immediately afterwards he met
an Irishman, an old friend.
“Terence, my boy, well met!” he said,
offering his hand.
“Hooroo! Ned Frog, sure I thought ye was
in limbo!”
“You thought right, Terry; only
half-an-hour out. Come along, I’ll stand
you somethin’ for the sake of old times.
By the way, have you done that job yet?”
“What job?”
“Why, the dynamite job, of course.”
“No, I’ve gi’n that
up,” returned the Irishman with a look of contempt.
“To tell you the honest truth, I don’t
believe that the way to right Ireland is to blow up
England. But there’s an Englishman you’ll
find at the Swan an’ Anchor a sneakin’
blackguard, as would sell his own mother for dhrink he’ll
help you if you wants to have a hand in the job.
I’m off it.”
Notwithstanding this want of sympathy
on that point, the two friends found that they held
enough in common to induce a prolonged stay at the
public-house, from which Ned finally issued rather
late at night, and staggered homewards. He met
no acquaintance on the way, and was about to knock
at his own door when the sound of a voice within arrested
him.
It was Hetty, praying. The poor
wife and daughter had given up hope of his returning
at so late an hour that night, and had betaken themselves
to their usual refuge in distress. Ned knew the
sound well, and it seemed to rouse a demon in his
breast, for he raised his foot with the intention
of driving in the door, when he was again arrested
by another sound.
It was the voice of little Matty,
who, awaking suddenly out of a terrifying dream, set
up a shrieking which at once drowned all other sounds.
Ned lowered his foot, thrust his hands
into his pockets, and stood gazing in a state of indecision
at the broken pavement for a few minutes.
“No peace there,” he said,
sternly. “Prayin’ an’ squallin’
don’t suit me, so good-night to ’ee all.”
With that he turned sharp round, and
staggered away, resolving never more to return!
“Is that you, Ned Frog?”
inquired a squalid, dirty-looking woman, thrusting
her head out of a window as he passed.
“No, ’tain’t,” said Ned, fiercely,
as he left the court.
He went straight to a low lodging-house,
but before entering tied his money in a bit of rag,
and thrust it into an inner pocket of his vest, which
he buttoned tight, and fastened his coat over it.
Paying the requisite fourpence for the night’s
lodging, he entered, and was immediately hailed by
several men who knew him, but being in no humour for
good fellowship, he merely nodded and went straight
up to his lowly bed. It was one of seventy beds
that occupied the entire floor of an immense room.
Police supervision had secured that this room should
be well ventilated, and that the bedding should be
reasonably clean, though far from clean-looking, and
Ned slept soundly in spite of drink, for, as we have
said before, he was unusually strong.
Next day, having thought over his
plans in bed, and, being a man of strong determination,
he went forth to carry them into immediate execution.
He went to a lofty tenement in the neighbourhood of
Dean and Flower Street, one of the poorest parts of
the city, and hired a garret, which was so high up
that even the staircase ended before you reached it,
and the remainder of the upward flight had to be performed
on a ladder, at the top of which was a trap-door,
the only entrance to Ned’s new home.
Having paid a week’s rent in
advance he took possession, furnished the apartment
with one old chair, one older table, one bundle of
straw in a sack, one extremely old blanket, and one
brand-new pipe with a corresponding ounce or two of
tobacco. Then he locked the trap-door, put the
key in his pocket, and descended to the street, where
at Bird-fair he provided himself with sundry little
cages and a few birds. Having conveyed these
with some food for himself and the little birds to
his lodging he again descended to the street, and treated
himself to a pint of beer.
While thus engaged he was saluted
by an old friend, the owner of a low music-hall, who
begged for a few minutes’ conversation with him
outside.
“Ned,” he said, “I’m
glad I fell in with you, for I’m uncommon ’ard
up just now.”
“I never lends money,” said Ned, brusquely
turning away.
“’Old on, Ned, I don’t
want yer money, bless yer. I wants to give
you money.”
“Oh! that’s quite another story; fire
away, old man.”
“Well, you see, I’m ’ard
up, as I said, for a man to keep order in my place.
The last man I ’ad was a good ’un, ’e
was. Six futt one in ’is socks, an’
as strong as a ’orse, but by ill luck one
night, a sailor-chap that was bigger than ’im
come in to the ‘all, an’ they ’ad
a row, an’ my man got sitch a lickin’
that he ‘ad to go to hospital, an’ ‘e’s
been there for a week, an’ won’t be out,
they say, for a month or more. Now, Ned, will
you take the job? The pay’s good an’
the fun’s considerable. So’s the
fightin’, sometimes, but you’d put a stop
to that you know. An’, then, you’ll
’ave all the day to yourself to do as you
like.”
“I’m your man,” said Ned, promptly.
Thus it came to pass that the pugilist
obtained suitable employment as a peacemaker and keeper
of order, for a time at least, in one of those disreputable
places of amusement where the unfortunate poor of London
are taught lessons of vice and vanity which end often
in vexation of spirit, not only to themselves, but
to the strata of society which rest above them.
One night Ned betook himself to this
temple of vice, and on the way was struck by the appearance
of a man with a barrow a sort of book-stall
on wheels who was pushing his way through
the crowded street. It was the man who at the
temperance meeting had begun with “bah!”
and “pooh!” and had ended by putting on
the Blue Ribbon. He had once been a comrade of
Ned Frog, but had become so very respectable that his
old chum scarcely recognised him.
“Hallo! Reggie North, can that be you?”
North let down his barrow, wheeled
round, and held out his hand with a hearty, “how
are ‘ee, old man? W’y you’re
lookin’ well, close cropped an’ comfortable,
eh! Livin’ at Her Majesty’s expense
lately? Where d’ee live now, Ned?
I’d like to come and see you.”
Ned told his old comrade the locality of his new abode.
“But I say, North, how respectable
you are! What’s come over you? not become
a travellin’ bookseller, have you?”
“That’s just what I am, Ned.”
“Well, there’s no accountin’ for
taste. I hope it pays.”
“Ay, pays splendidly pays
the seller of the books and pays the buyers better.”
“How’s that?” asked
Ned, in some surprise, going up to the barrow; “oh!
I see, Bibles.”
“Yes, Ned, Bibles, the Word of God. Will
you buy one?”
“No, thank ’ee,” said Ned, drily.
“Here, I’ll make you a
present o’ one, then,” returned North,
thrusting a Bible into the other’s hand; “you
can’t refuse it of an old comrade. Good-night.
I’ll look in on you soon.”
“You needn’t trouble yourself,”
Ned called out as his friend went off; and he felt
half inclined to fling the Bible after him, but checked
himself. It was worth money! so he put it in
his pocket and went his way.
The hall was very full that night,
a new comic singer of great promise having been announced,
and oh! it was sad to see the youths of both sexes,
little more than big boys and girls, who went there
to smoke, and drink, and enjoy ribald songs and indecent
jests!
We do not mean to describe the proceedings.
Let it suffice to say that, after one or two songs
and a dance had been got through, Ned, part of whose
duty it was to announce the performances, rose and
in a loud voice said
“Signor Twittorini will now sing.”
The Signor stepped forward at once,
and was received with a roar of enthusiastic laughter,
for anything more lugubrious and woe-begone than the
expression of his face had never been seen on these
boards before. There was a slight look of shyness
about him, too, which increased the absurdity of the
thing, and it was all so natural, as one half-tipsy
woman remarked.
So it was intensely natural for
Signor Twittorini was no other than poor Sammy Twitter
in the extremest depths of his despair. Half-starved,
half-mad, yet ashamed to return to his father’s
house, the miserable boy had wandered in bye streets,
and slept in low lodging-houses as long as his funds
lasted. Then he tried to get employment with
only partial success, until at last, recollecting that
he had been noted among his companions for a sweet
voice and a certain power of singing serio-comic
songs, he thought of a low music-hall into which he
had staggered one evening when drunk as
much with misery as with beer. The manager,
on hearing a song or two, at once engaged him and
brought him out. As poor Sammy knew nothing about
acting, it was decided that he should appear in his
own garments, which, being shabby-genteel, were pretty
well suited for a great Italian singer in low society.
But Sammy had over-rated his own powers.
After the first burst of applause was over, he stood
gazing at the audience with his mouth half open, vainly
attempting to recollect the song he meant to sing,
and making such involuntary contortions with his thin
visage, that a renewed burst of laughter broke forth.
When it had partially subsided, Sammy once more opened
his mouth, gave vent to a gasp, burst into tears, and
rushed from the stage.
This was the climax! It brought
down the house! Never before had they seen such
an actor. He was inimitable, and the people made
the usual demand for an encore with tremendous
fervour, expecting that Signor Twittorini would repeat
the scene, probably with variations, and finish off
with the promised song. But poor Sammy did not
respond.
“I see, you can improvise,”
said the manager, quite pleased, “and I’ve
no objection when it’s well done like that; but
you’d better go on now, and stick to the programme.”
“I can’t sing,” said Sammy, in passionate
despair.
“Come, come, young feller, I
don’t like actin’ off the stage,
an’ the audience is gittin’ impatient.”
“But I tell you I can’t sing a note,”
repeated Sam.
“What! D’ye mean to tell me you’re
not actin’?”
“I wish I was!” cried
poor Sam, glancing upward with tearful eyes and clasping
his hands.
“Come now. You’ve
joked enough. Go on and do your part,”
said the puzzled manager.
“But I tell you I’m not
joking. I couldn’t sing just now if you
was to give me ten thousand pounds!”
It might have been the amount of the
sum stated, or the tone in which it was stated we
know not but the truth of what Sam said
was borne so forcibly in upon the manager, that he
went into a violent passion; sprang at Sam’s
throat; hustled him towards a back door, and kicked
him out into a back lane, where he sat down on an
empty packing case, covered his face with his hands,
bowed his head on his knees, and wept.
The manager returned on the stage,
and, with a calm voice and manner, which proved himself
to be a very fair actor, stated that Signor Twittorini
had met with a sudden disaster not a very
serious one which, however, rendered it
impossible for him to re-appear just then, but that,
if sufficiently recovered, he would appear towards
the close of the evening.
This, with a very significant look
and gesture from Ned Frog, quieted the audience to
the extent at least of inducing them to do nothing
worse than howl continuously for ten minutes, after
which they allowed the performances to go on, and
saved the keeper of order the trouble of knocking
down a few of the most unruly.
Ned was the first to quit the hall
when all was over. He did so by the back door,
and found Sam still sitting on the door-step.
“What’s the matter with
ye, youngster?” he said, going up to him.
“You’ve made a pretty mess of it to-night.”
“I couldn’t help it indeed
I couldn’t. Perhaps I’ll do better
next time.”
“Better! ha! ha! You couldn’t
ha’ done better if you’d on’y
gone on. But why do ye sit there?”
“Because I’ve nowhere to go to.”
“There’s plenty o’ common lodgin’-’ouses,
ain’t there?”
“Yes, but I haven’t got a single rap.”
“Well, then, ain’t there
the casual ward? Why don’t you go there?
You’ll git bed and board for nothin’ there.”
Having put this question, and received
no answer, Ned turned away without further remark.
Hardened though Ned was to suffering,
there was something in the fallen boy’s face
that had touched this fallen man. He turned back
with a sort of remonstrative growl, and re-entered
the back lane, but Signor Twittorini was gone.
He had heard the manager’s voice, and fled.
A policeman directed him to the nearest
casual ward, where the lowest stratum of abject poverty
finds its nightly level.
Here he knocked with trembling hand.
He was received; he was put in a lukewarm bath and
washed; he was fed on gruel and a bit of bread quite
sufficient to allay the cravings of hunger; he was
shown to a room in which appeared to be a row of corpses so
dead was the silence each rolled in a covering
of some dark brown substance, and stretched out stiff
on a trestle with a canvas bottom. One of the
trestles was empty. He was told he might appropriate
it.
“Are they dead?” he asked, looking round
with a shudder.
“Not quite,” replied his
jailer, with a short laugh, “but dead-beat most
of ’em tired out, I should say, and
disinclined to move.”
Sam Twitter fell on the couch, drew
the coverlet over him, and became a brown corpse like
the rest, while the guardian retired and locked the
door to prevent the egress of any who might chance
to come to life again.
In the morning Sam had a breakfast
similar to the supper; was made to pick oakum for
a few hours by way of payment for hospitality, and
left with a feeling that he had at last reached the
lowest possible depth of degradation.
So he had in that direction, but there
are other and varied depths in London depths
of crime and of sickness, as well as of suffering and
sorrow!
Aimlessly he wandered about for another
day, almost fainting with hunger, but still so ashamed
to face his father and mother that he would rather
have died than done so.
Some touch of pathos, or gruff tenderness
mayhap, in Ned Frog’s voice, induced him to
return at night to the scene of his discreditable
failure, and await the pugilist’s coming out.
He followed him a short way, and then running forward,
said
“Oh, sir! I’m very low!”
“Hallo! Signor Twittorini
again!” said Ned, wheeling round, sternly.
“What have I to do with your being low?
I’ve been low enough myself at times, an’
nobody helped ”
Ned checked himself, for he knew that
what he said was false.
“I think I’m dying,”
said Sam, leaning against a house for support.
“Well, if you do die, you’ll
be well out of it all,” replied Ned, bitterly.
“What’s your name?”
“Twitter,” replied Sam,
forgetting in his woe that he had not intended to
reveal his real name.
“Twitter Twitter.
I’ve heard that name before. Why, yes.
Father’s name Samuel eh? Mother
alive got cards with Mrs Samuel Twitter
on ‘em, an’ no address?”
“Yes yes. How
do you come to know?” asked Sam in surprise.
“Never you mind that, youngster,
but you come along wi’ me. I’ve got
a sort o’ right to feed you. Ha! ha! come
along.”
Sam became frightened at this sudden
burst of hilarity, and shrank away, but Ned grasped
him by the arm, and led him along with such decision,
that resistance he felt would be useless.
In a few minutes he was in Ned’s
garret eating bread and cheese with ravenous satisfaction.
“Have some beer!” said Ned, filling a
pewter pot.
“No no no no!”
said Sam, shuddering as he turned his head away.
“Well, youngster,” returned
Ned, with a slight look of surprise, “please
yourself, and here’s your health.”
He drained the pot to the bottom,
after which, dividing his straw into two heaps, and
throwing them into two corners, he bade Sam lie down
and rest.
The miserable boy was only too glad
to do so. He flung himself on the little heap
pointed out, and the last thing he remembered seeing
before the “sweet restorer” embraced him
was the huge form of Ned Frog sitting in his own corner
with his back to the wall, the pewter pot at his elbow,
and a long clay pipe in his mouth.