[London’s Underworld by Thomas Holmes]@TWC D-Link bookLondon’s Underworld CHAPTER VII 12/28
When I last spoke to you I thought my little boys were much better, but I am sorry to say that when I took them to Great Ormond Street Hospital, they said they were both suffering from heart disease, and I was to keep them from school for a time; and they also suffer from rheumatics.
They are to get out all they can.
I have been taking them to the hospital for over two years, and sometimes I feel downhearted, as I had hoped they would have improved before this. "The eldest boy does not have fits now, and this I am thankful for.
But I feel that I am wasting a lot of your time reading this letter, so I must thank you very much for all your great goodness to me." But one of the boys is now dead, to the other "fits" have returned, and the widow still sits, sits and sits at her tooth-brushes in poverty and hunger. Listen to an old maid's story; she is a shoe machinist: "Yes, sir, I have kept them for six years, and I hope to keep them till they can keep themselves, and then perhaps they will help to keep me." The speaker was a worn and feeble woman of fifty-five years, at least that was the age she gave me, and most certainly she did not look less. We were talking about her two boys, her nephews, whose respective ages were eleven and thirteen. "Both their parents died six years ago; their father was my only brother, and their mother had neither brothers nor sisters! Of course I took them; what else could I do? What! Send them to the workhouse? Not while I can work for them.
Ah, sir! you were only joking!" In this she was partly right, for I had merely offered the suggestion in order to draw her out. "So after the double funeral they came to live with you ?" "Yes." "Did their parents leave any money ?" "Money, no! How can poor people leave any money? their club money paid for the funeral and the doctor's bill." "So they owed nothing ?" "Not a penny; if they had, I should have paid it somehow." And doubtless she would, though how, it passes my wit to conceive.
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