EAST, WEST, NORTH, SOUTH
POOR
From jail he sought
her, and he found
A darkened
house, a darkened street,
A shrilly
sky that screamed of sleet,
And from The Lane quick
gusts of sound.
He mocked at life
that men call sweet.
He went
and wiped it out in beer
“Well,
dammit, why should I stick here,
By a dark house in a
dark street?"
For he and his but
serve defeat;
For kings
they gather gems and gold,
And life
for them, when all is told,
Is a dark house in a
dark street.
A CHARITABLE NIGHT
Charity ... the most nauseous of the
virtues, the practice of which degrades both giver
and receiver. The practice of Charity brings you
into the limelight; it elevates you to friendship with
the Almighty; you feel that you are a colleague of
the Saviour. It springs from Pity, the most unclean
of all human emotions. It is not akin to love;
it is akin to contempt. To be pitied is to be
in the last stages of spiritual degradation.
You cannot pity anything on your own level, for Pity
implies an assumption of superiority. You cannot
be pitied by your friends and equals, only by your
self-elected superiors. Let us see Pity at work
in London....
As I lounged some miles east of Aldgate
Pump, an old song of love and lovers and human kindliness
was softly ringing in my head, and it still haunted
me as I slid like a phantom into that low-lit causeway
that slinks from a crashing road to the dark wastes
of waters beyond. At the far end a brutal black
building broke the sky-line. A few windows were
thinly lit by gas. I climbed the stone steps,
hollowed by many feet, and stood in the entrance-hall.
Then, as it seemed from far away,
I heard an insistent murmur, like the breaking of
distant surf. I gazed around and speculated.
In the bare brick wall was a narrow, high door.
With the instinct of the journalist, I opened it.
The puzzle was explained. It was the Dining Hall
of the Metropolitan Orphanage, and the children were
at their seven o’clock supper. From the
cathedral-like calm of the vestibule, I passed into
an atmosphere billowing with the flutter of some five
hundred small tongues. Under the pendant circles
of gas-jets were ranged twelve long, narrow tables
packed with children talking and eating with no sense
of any speed-limit. On the one side were boys
in cruelly ugly brown suits, and on the other side,
little girls from seven to fifteen in frocks of some
dark material with a thin froth of lace at neck and
wrists and coarse, clean pinafores. Each table
was attended by a matron, who served out the dry bread
and hot milk to the prefects, who carried the basins
up and down the tables as deftly as Mr. Paul Cinquevalli.
Everywhere was a prospect of raw faces and figures,
which Charity had deliberately made as uncomely as
possible by clownish garb and simple toilet. The
children ate hungrily, and the place was full of the
spirit of childhood, an adulterated spirit. The
noise leaped and swelled on all sides in an exultant
joy of itself, but if here and there a jet of jolly
laughter shot from the stream, there were glances
from the matrons.
The hall was one of wide spaces, pierced
at intervals by the mouths of bleak, stark corridors.
The air of it was limp and heavy with the smell of
food. Polished beams ran below the roof, pretending
to uphold it, and massive columns of painted stone
flung themselves aggressively here and there, and
thought they were supporting a small gallery.
Outside a full moon shone, but it filtered through
the cheap, half-toned glass of the windows with a
quality of pale lilac. Here and there a window
of stained glass stabbed the brick wall with passionate
colour. The moral atmosphere suggested nut-foods
and proteid values.
At half-past seven a sharp bell rang,
and with much rumbling and manoeuvring of forms, the
children stood stiffly up, faced round, and, as a
shabby piano tinkled a melody, they sang grace, somewhat
in this fashion:
To Go doo give sus
dailyb read
Dour thankful song we
raise-se,
Sand prayth at he who
send susf ood,
Dwillf ill lour reart
swithp raise, Zaaaamen.
Then a wave of young faces rolled
upward to the balcony, where stood a grey-headed,
grey-bearded, spectacled figure. It was one of
the honorary managers. The children stood to
attention like birds before a snake. One almost
expected to hear them sing “God bless the squire
and his relations....” The Gentleman was
well-tailored, and apart from his habiliments there
was, in every line of his figure, that which suggested
solidity, responsibility, and the substantial virtues.
I have seen him at Committee meetings of various charitable
enterprises; himself, duplicated again and again.
One charitable worker is always exactly like the other,
allowing for differences of sex. They are of one
type, with one manner, and I feel sure with
one idea. I am certain that were you to ask twenty
members of a Charity committee for opinions on aviation,
Swedenborgism, the Royal Academy, and Little Tich,
each would express the same views in the same words
and with the same gestures.
This gentleman was of the City class;
he carried an air of sleekness. Clearly he was
a worthy citizen, a man who had Got On, and had now
abandoned himself to this most odious of vices.
And there he stood, in a lilac light, splashed with
voluptuous crimsons and purples, dispensing Charity
to the little ones before him whose souls were of hills
and the sea. He began to address them. It
appeared that the Orphanage had received, that very
morning, forty more children; and he wished to observe
how unnecessary it was for him to say with what pleasure
this had been done. Many thousands of children
now holding exalted positions in banks and the Civil
Service could look to him as to their father, in the
eighty or more years of the School’s life, and
he was proud to feel that his efforts were producing
such Fine Healthy Young Citizens. The children
knew did they not? that they
had a Good Home, with loving guardians who would give
them the most careful training suited to their position
in life. They were clothed, maintained, and drilled,
as concerned their bodies; and, as concerned their
souls, they had the habits of Industry and Frugality
inculcated into them, and they were guided in the
paths of Religion and Virtue. They had good plain
food, suited to their position in life, and healthy
exercise in the way of Manly Sports and Ladylike Recreations.
He quoted texts from the Scriptures, about the sight
of the Widow touching those chords which vibrate sympathetically
in all of us, and a lot of stuff about a Cup of Cold
Water and These Little Ones. He exuded self-content.
He went on to remark that the hazardous
occupations of Modern Industry had, by their many
mischances, stripped innumerable families of their
heads, and reduced them to a condition of the most
deplorable. He desired to remind them that the
class to which they belonged was not the Very Poor
of the gutters, but the Respectable Poor who would
not stoop to receive the aid doled out by the State.
No; they were not Gutter Children, but, at the same
time, the training they received was not such as to
create any distaste among them for the humblest employments
of Honest Industry, suitable to their position in
life. He redeemed the objects interested in his
exertions from the immoralities of the Very Poor,
while teaching them to respect their virtues, and to
do their duty in that station of life to which it
had pleased God to call them.
(The little objects seemed to appreciate
this, for they applauded with some spirit, on prompting
from the matrons.)
He went on to suggest, with stodgy
jocularity, that among them was possibly a Prime Minister
of 1955 think of Pitt and perhaps
a Lord Kitchener. He spoke in terms of the richest
enthusiasm of the fostering of the Manly Qualities
and the military drill such a Fine Thing
for the Lads; and he urged them to figure to themselves
that, even if they did not rise to great heights,
they might still achieve greatness by doing their
duty at office desk, or in factory, loom, or farmyard,
and so adding to the lustre of their Native Land a
land, he would say, in which they had so great a part.
(Here the children cheered, seemingly
with no intent of irony.) He added that, in his opinion,
kind hearts were, if he might so put it, more than
coronets.
The Gentleman smiled amiably.
He nourished no tiny doubt that he was doing the right
thing. He believed that Christ would be pleased
with him for turning out boys and girls of fourteen,
half-educated, mentally and socially, to spend their
lives in dingy offices in dingy alleys of the City.
There was no humbug here; impossible for a moment to
doubt his sincerity. He had a childlike faith
in his Great Work. He was, as he annually insisted,
with painful poverty of epithet, engaged in Philanthropic
Work, alleviating the Distresses of the Respectable
Poor and ameliorating Social Conditions Generally.
So he trained his children until he trained them into
desk or farm machines; trained them so that their
souls were starved, driven in on themselves, and there
stifled, and at last eaten away by the canker of their
murky routine.
I looked at those children as they
stood before me. I looked at their bright, clear
faces, their eyes wonder-wide, their clean brows alert
for knowledge, hungry for life and its beauty.
Despite their hideous clothes, they were the poetry
of the world: all that is young and fresh and
lovely. Then I thought of them five years hence,
their minds larded with a Sound Commercial Education,
tramping the streets of the City from nine o’clock
in the morning until six o’clock in the evening,
living in an atmosphere of intellectual vacuity, their
ardent temperaments fled, their souls no longer desiring
beauty. I felt a little sick.
But The Gentleman.... The Gentleman
stood there in a lilac light, and took unction unto
himself. He smiled benignly, a smile of sincere
pleasure. Then he called the children to attention
while he read to them a prayer of St. Chrysostom,
which he thought most suitable to their position in
life. A ring of gas-jets above his head hovered
like an aureole.
I do wish that something could somehow
be done to restrain the Benevolent. We are so
fond, as a nation, of patronizing that if we have
nothing immediately at hand to patronize, we must needs
go out into the highways and hedges and bring in anything
we can find, any old thing, so long as we can patronize
it. I have often thought of starting a League
(I believe it would be immensely popular) for The Suppression
of Social Service. The fussy, incompetent men
and women who thrust themselves forward for that work
are usually the last people who should rightly meddle
with it. They either perform it from a sense of
duty, or what they themselves call The Social Conscience
(the most nauseous kind of benevolence), or they play
with it because it is Something To Do. Always
their work is discounted by personal vanity. I
like the Fabians: they are funny without being
vulgar. But these Social Servants and their Crusades
for Pure and Holy Living Among Work-Girls are merely
fatuous and vulgar when they are not deliberately
insulting. Can you conceive a more bitter mind
than that which calls a girl of the streets a Fallen
Sister? Yet that is what these people have done;
they have labelled a house with the device of The
Midnight Crusade for the Reclamation of our Fallen
Sisters; and they expect self-respecting girls of that
profession to enter it....
I once attended one of these shows
in a North London slum. The people responsible
for it have the impudence to send women-scouts to the
West End thoroughfares at eleven o’clock every
night, there to interfere with these girls, to thrust
their attentions upon them, and, if possible, lure
them away to a service of song Brief, Bright,
and Brotherly. It was a bitter place in a narrow
street. The street was gay and loud with humanity,
only at its centre was a dark and forbidding door,
reticent and inhuman. There was no sign of good-fellowship
here; no warm touch of the flesh. It was as brutal
as justice; it seemed to have builded itself on that
most horrible of all texts: “Be just
before you are generous.”
I went in at an early hour, about
half-past ten, and only two victims had been secured.
The place stunk of The Church Times and practical
Christianity. In the main room was a thin fire,
as skimpy as though it had been lit by a spinster,
as, I suppose, it had. There was a bare deal
table. The seating accommodation was cane chairs,
which I hate; they always remind me of the Band of
Hope classes I was compelled to attend as a child.
They suggest something stale and cheesy, something
as squalid as the charity they serve. On a corner
table was a battered urn and a number of earthenware
cups, with many plates of thick, greasy bread-and-butter;
just the right fare to offer a girl who has put away
several benedictines and brandies. The room chilled
me. Place, people, appointments, even the name Midnight
Crusade for the Reclamation of our Fallen Sisters smacked
of everything that is most ugly. Smugness and
super-piety were in the place. The women I
mean, ladies who manage the place, were
the kind of women I have seen at the Palace when Gaby
is on. (For you will note that Gaby does not
attract the men; it is not they who pack the Palace
nightly to see her powder her legs and bosom.
They may be there, but most of them are at the bar.
If you look at the circle and stalls, they are full
of elderly, hard women, with dominant eyebrows, leering
through the undressing process, and moistening their
lips as Gaby appears in her semi-nakedness.)
The walls of the big bedroom were
adorned with florid texts, tastefully framed.
It was a room of many beds, each enclosed in a cubicle.
The beds were hard, covered with coarse sheets.
If I were a Fallen Brother, I hardly think they would
have tempted me from a life of ease. And there
were RULES.... Oh, how I loathe RULES! I
loathed them as a child at school. I loathed
drill, and I loathed compulsory games, and I loathed
all laws that were made without purpose. There
were long printed lists of Rules in this place, framed,
and hung in each room. You can never believe
how many things a Fallen Sister may not do. Certain
rules are, of course, essential; but the pedagogic
mind, once started on law-making, can never stop;
and it is usually the pedagogic type of mind, with
the lust for correction, that goes in for Charity.
Why may not the girls talk in certain rooms?
Why may they not read anything but the books provided?
Why may they not talk in bed? Why must they fold
their bed-clothes in such-and-such an exact way?
Why must they not descend from the bed-room as and
when they are dressed? Why must they let the
Superior read their letters? And why, oh, why
are these places run by white-faced men and elderly,
hard women?
I have written, I fear, rather flippantly
on this topic; but that is only because I dare not
trust myself to be serious. I realize as much
as any one that the life is a shameful life, and all
that sort of thing; but I boil with indignation at
the hundred shamefulnesses which these charity-mongers
heap upon defenceless girls who, in a weak moment,
have sought their protection. If you know anything
about the matter, you will know that these girls have
in their little souls an almost savage flame of self-respect
which burns with splendour before the bleak, miserable
flame of Organized Charity. If I spoke my mind
on the subject, this page would blaze with fury ...
and you would smile.
But amid all this welter of misdirected
endeavour, there is just one organized charity for
which I should like to say a word; and that is The
Salvation Army. I do not refer to its religious
activities so much as to its social work as represented
in the excellent Shelters which have been opened in
various districts. There is one in Whitechapel
Road, which is the identical building where General
Booth first started a small weekly mission service
which was afterwards known all over the world as The
Salvation Army. There is one in Hoxton. There
is one a large one in Blackfriars
Road. And there are others wherever they may
be most needed.
The doors open at five o’clock
every evening. The Shelter, mark you, is not
precisely a Charity. The men have to pay.
Here is shown the excellent understanding of the psychology
of the people which the University Socialist misses.
You cannot get hold of people by offering them something
for nothing; but you can get hold of them by tens of
thousands by offering them something good at a low
price. For a halfpenny the Salvation Army offers
them tea, coffee, cocoa, or soup, with bread-and-butter,
cake, or pudding. All this food is cooked and
prepared at the Islington headquarters, and the great
furnaces in the kitchens of the Shelters are roaring
night and day for the purpose of warming-up the food,
heating the Shelter, and serving the drying-rooms,
where the men can hang their wet clothes.
A spotlessly clean bed is offered
for threepence a night, which includes use of bathroom,
lavatory, and washhouse. The washhouse is in very
great demand on wet nights by those who have been
working out of doors, and by those who wish to wash
their underclothes, etc.
In addition to this, the men have
the service of the Army orderlies, in attention at
table and in “calling” in the morning.
The staff is at work all night, either attending new-comers
or going round with the various “calls,”
which, as some of the guests are market porters, are
for unearthly hours, such as half-past three or four
o’clock. The Shelters are patronized by
many “regulars” flower-sellers,
pedlars, Covent Garden or Billingsgate odd men, etc. who
lodge with them by the week, sometimes by the year.
Lights are officially out at half-past nine, but of
course the orderly is on duty at the door until eight
o’clock the following morning, and no stranger
who wants food and bed is refused. He is asked
for the threepence and for the halfpenny for his food,
but if he cannot produce these he has but to ask for
the Brigadier, and, if he is a genuine case, he is
at once taken in.
Every Saturday night at half-past
eleven certain of the orderlies, supplied with tickets,
go out, and to any hungry, homeless wanderer they
give a ticket with directions to the Shelter.
These Saturday night tickets entitle him, if he chooses
to accept them, to bath, breakfast, bed, and the Sunday
service.
Further, the Shelter acts as employment
agency, and, once having found their man, the first
step towards helping him is to awaken in him the latent
sense of responsibility. The quickest way is to
find him work, and this they do; and once their efforts
show results, they never lose sight of him.
Many heartbreaking cases go by the
orderly’s box at the door, and I would like
to set some of those young Oxford philanthropists who
write pamphlets or articles in The New Age
on social subjects by the door for a night. I
think they would learn a lot of things they never knew
before. Often, at two or three o’clock in
the morning, the scouts will bring in a bundle of
rain-sodden rags that hardly looks as if it could
ever have been a man. How can you deal scientifically
or religiously with that?
You can’t. But the rank
and file of The Salvation Army, with its almost uncanny
knowledge of men, has found a better, happier way.
I have spent many nights in various of their Shelters,
and I should like to put on record the fine spirit
which I have found prevailing there. It is a
spirit of camaraderie. In other charitable institutions
you will find timidity, the cowed manner, sometimes
symptoms of actual fear. But never at the Salvation
Army. There every new-comer is a pal, until he
is proved to be unworthy of that name. There
is no suspicion, no underhanded questioning, no brow-beating:
things which I have never found absent from any other
organized charity.
The Salvation Army method is food,
warmth, mateyness; and their answer to their critics,
and their reward, is the sturdy, respectable artisan
who comes along a few months later to shake hands with
them and give his own services in helping them in
their work.
Far away West, through the exultant
glamour of theatre and restaurant London, through
the solid, melancholic greys of Bayswater, you find
a little warm corner called Shepherd’s Bush.
You find also Notting Dale, where the bad burglars
live, but we will talk of that in another chapter.
Back of Shepherd’s Bush is a glorious slum, madly
lit, uncouth, and entirely wonderful.
To Shepherd’s Bush I went one
evening. I went to fairyland. I went to
tell stories and to lead music-hall choruses.
No; not at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire, but at
a dirty little corrugated hall in a locked byway.
Some time ago, the usual charitably minded person,
finding time hang heavy on her hands, or having some
private grief which she desired to forget in bustle
and activity, started a movement for giving children
happy evenings. I have not been to one of the
centres, and I am sure I should not like to go.
I dislike seeing children disciplined in their play.
Children do not need to be taught to play. Games
which are not spontaneous are as much a task as enforced
lessons. I have been a child myself. The
people who run charities, I think, never have been....
However....
This Shepherd’s Bush enterprise
was an entirely private affair. The idea was
based on the original inception, and much improved.
At these organized meetings the children are forced
to go through antics which, three hundred years ago,
were a perfectly natural expression of the joy of
life. These antics were called morris dances;
they were mad, vulgar, joyous abandonment to the mood
of the moment; just as the dances performed by little
gutter-arabs and factory-girls around street organs
are an abandonment to the mood of to-day’s moment.
But the elderly spinsters have found that what was
vulgar three hundred years ago is artistic to-day;
or if it isn’t they will make it so. Why
on earth a child should have to dance round a maypole
just because children danced round a maypole centuries
ago, I cannot understand. To-day, the morris
dance is completely self-conscious, stiff, and ugly.
The self-developed dance of the little girl at the
organ is a thing of beauty, because it is a quite
definite expression of something which the child feels;
it follows no convention, it changes measure at fancy,
it regards nothing but its own rapture.... The
morris dance isn’t.
So, at the hall to which I went, the
children were allowed to play exactly as and when
they liked. Any child could come from anywhere,
and bring other children. There was a piano,
and some one was always in attendance to play whatever
might be required by the children. If they wanted
“The Cubanola Glide,” or “Down in
Jungle-Town,” or “In the Shadows,”
they got it, or anything else they might choose.
Toys of all kinds were on hand dolls, engines,
railways, dolls’-houses, little cooking-stoves,
brick puzzles, regiments of soldiers, picture-books,
and, indeed, everything that a child could think of.
When I arrived I tripped over the
threshold of the narrow entrance, and fell into a
warmly lighted room, where the meetings of some local
Committee were usually held. All chairs had been
cleared to the wall, and the large central space was
littered with troops of glad girls and toddlers from
the stark streets around. Instead of teaching
the children to play, the management here set the
children to play by themselves and set elder children
to attend them. Great was the fun. Great
was the noise. On a little dais at the end, coffee
and sweet cakes were going, but there was no rush.
When the kiddies wanted a cake they went up and asked
for it; but for the most part they were immersed in
that subdued, serious excitement which means that
games are really being enjoyed. All of the attendants
were girls of 12 or 13, of that sweet age between
childhood and flapperhood, when girls are at their
loveliest, with short frocks that dance at every delicate
step, and with unconcealed glories of hair golden
or dusky; all morning light and melody and fearlessness,
not yet realizing that they are women. Many of
them, shabby and underfed as they were, were really
lovely girls, their beauty shining through their rags
with an almost religious radiance, as to move you to
prayer and tears. Their gentle ways with the
baby-children were a joy to watch. One group
was working a model railway. In another a little
twelve-year-old girl was nursing two tinies, and had
a cluster of others at her feet while she read “Jack
and the Beanstalk” from a luridly illustrated
rag-book. Another little girl was figuring certain
steps of a dance of her own invention, each step being
gravely followed by two youngsters who could scarcely
walk.
Then the wonderful woman a
local woman, she bought a small shop years ago, and
now owns a blazing rank of Stores who financed
the play-room went to the piano, crashed a few chords,
and instantly every head, golden or brown or dark,
was lifted to us. My hostess said something a
word of invitation and, as though it were
a signal, the crowd leaped up, and rushed, tumbled,
or toddled toward us.
“What about a song?” cried the lady.
“Ooo-er ... rather!”
“What’ll we have, then?”
The shrill babel half-stunned me.
No two called for the same thing. If my hearing
were correct, they wanted every popular song of the
last ten years. However, we compromised, for
a start, on “Jungle-Town,” and, though
I felt extremely nervous of such an audience, I gave
it them, and then invited them for the second chorus.
What a chorus! Even the babies,
who knew nothing of the words and could not have spoken
them if they had, seemed to know the tune, and they
let it out in every possible key. That song went
with a bang, and I had no rest for at least half an
hour. We managed to get them to write their favourites
on slips of paper, and I took them in rotation, the
symphony being in every case interrupted by long-drawn
groans from the disappointed ones, and shrieks of
glee from those who had chosen it. “On
the Mississippi” was the winner of the evening;
it was encored five times; and a hot second was “I
do Kinder Feel I’m in Love.”
When their demands had been exhausted
I had a rest, and some coffee, while Iris, a wicked
little girl of eleven, told the story of Joan of Arc.
Other girls followed her, each telling her own pet
story. Their skill in this direction was a thing
to marvel at. The audience was a joy, with half-raised
heads, wide eyes, open mouths, every nerve of them
hanging on the reciter’s words. Indeed,
I, too, found that one of the tale-tellers had “got”
me with her story of Andersen’s “Little
Match Girl.”
On their asking another song, I told
them the “creepy-creepy” story of Mark
Twain’s the one about “Who’s
got my Golden Arm,” where, if you have worked
it up properly, you get a shriek of horror on the last
word. I got it. A shriek of horror?
It nearly pierced the drums of the ear. Then
they all huddled together in a big bunch, each embracing
the other, and begged me to tell it again; so, while
they clung tightly together for safety, I told it
again, but instead of a shriek I got a hysterical
laugh which lasted for nearly a minute before they
disentangled themselves. Then I gave them Charles
Pond’s recital about the dog-hospital, and the
famous “Cohen at the Telephone.”
At half-past nine they were collected
into bunches, and dispatched home under the guidance
of the bigger girls. They paused at the door to
scream messages to me, to chant bits of the choruses
we had sung, to dance with loud, defiant feet on the
hollow floor, and one little girl gave me a pearl
button from her pinafore as a keepsake, and hoped I
would come again. Then she kissed me Good-Night,
and ran off amid jeers from the boys.
At ten o’clock I helped my hostess
in the clearing away of the cakes and coffee-cups,
and, half an hour later we were out in the clamorous
wilds of Shepherd’s Bush.