by the man in blue who used to watch over her miserable
alley. Before she became accustomed to receiving
food at regular intervals, she fairly touched the
hearts of her foster-parents by one queer request.
The housewife was washing some Brussels sprouts, when
the little stray said timidly, “Please, may
I eat a bit of that stalk?” Of course the stringy
mass was uneatable; but it turned out that the forlorn
child had been very glad to worry at the stalks from
the gutter as a dog does at an unclean bone.
Another little girl was taken from the den which she
knew as home, after her parents had been sent to prison
for treating her with unspeakable cruelty. The
matron of the country home found that the child’s
body was scarred from neck to ankle in a fashion which
no lapse of years could efface. The explanation
of the disfigurement was very simple. “If
I didn’t bring in any money mother beat me first;
and then, when father came in drunk, she tied my hands
behind my back and told him to give me the buckle.
Then they strapped me on the bed and fastened my feet,
and he whacked me with the buckle-end of his strap.”
It sounds very horrible, does it not? Nevertheless,
the facts remain that the wretched parents were caught
in the act and convicted, and that the child must carry
her scars to her grave. No one who has not seen
these lost children can form an idea of their darkness
and helplessness of mind. We all know the story
of the South Sea islanders, who said, “What a
big pig!” when they first saw a horse; one little
London savage quite equalled this by remarking, “What
a little cow!” when she saw a tiny Maltese terrier
brought by a lady missionary. The child had some
vague conception regarding a cow; but, like others
of her class, her notions of size, form, and colour,
were quite cloudy. Another of these city phenomena
did not know how to blow out a candle; and in many
cases it is most difficult to persuade those newly
reclaimed to go to bed without keeping their boots
on. We cannot call such beings barbarians, because
“barbarian” implies something wild, strong,
and even noble; yet, to our shame, we must call them
savages, and we must own that they are born and bred
within easy gunshot distance of our centres of culture,
enlightenment, and luxury. They swarm, do these
children of suffering: and easy-going people
have no idea of the density of the savagery amid which
such scions of our noble English race are reared.
A gentleman once offered sixpence to a little girl
who appeared before him dressed in a single garment
which seemed to have been roughly made from some sort
of sacking. He expected to see her snatch at the
coin with all the eagerness of the ordinary hardy
street-arab; but she showed her jagged brown teeth,
and said huskily, “No! Big money!”
A lady, divining with the rapid feminine instinct
what was meant by the enigmatic muttering, explained,
“She does not know the sixpence. She has
had coppers to spend before.” And so it
turned out to be.