[London’s Underworld by Thomas Holmes]@TWC D-Link book
London’s Underworld

CHAPTER III
8/20

The police go to other duties, the soup barrows are removed; the grim ancient stone stands once more alone.
But a few hours later, even as Big Ben is booming six, the "Miserables" will be again waiting, silently waiting for the rolls of bread and the cups of soup, and having received them will again mysteriously disappear, to go through the same routine at twelve o'clock on the morrow.

Aye! and to return on every morrow when soup and rolls are to be had.
It looks very pitiful, this mass of misery.

It seems very comforting to know that they are fed twice a day with rolls and soup, but after all the matter wants looking at very carefully, and certain questions must be asked.
Who are these miserables?
How comes it that they are so ready to receive as a matter of course the doles of food provided for them?
Are they really helped, and is their position really improved by this kind of charity?
I venture to say no! I go farther, and I say very decidedly that so long as the bulk of these people can get food twice a day, and secure some kind of shelter at night, they will remain content to be as they are.

I will go still farther and say, that if this provision becomes permanent the number of the miserables will increase, and the Old Needle will continue to look down on an ever-growing volume of poverty and wretchedness.
For after receiving the soup and bread, these nomads disappear into the streets and by-ways of London, there by hook or crook, by begging or other means, to secure a few coppers, to pick up scraps of food, and to return to the Embankment.
I have walked up and down the Embankment, I have looked searchingly at the people assembled.

Some of them I have recognised as old acquaintances; many of them, I know, have no desire to be other than what they are.


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