[The People of the Abyss by Jack London]@TWC D-Link book
The People of the Abyss

CHAPTER XXV--THE HUNGER WAIL
9/17

This diet in the case of a strong grown man is always productive of illness of some kind, chiefly of course diarrhoea, with its attendant weakness.

In fact, in a big prison astringent medicines are served out regularly by the warders as a matter of course.
In the case of a child, the child is, as a rule, incapable of eating the food at all.

Any one who knows anything about children knows how easily a child's digestion is upset by a fit of crying, or trouble and mental distress of any kind.

A child who has been crying all day long, and perhaps half the night, in a lonely dim-lit cell, and is preyed upon by terror, simply cannot eat food of this coarse, horrible kind.

In the case of the little child to whom Warder Martin gave the biscuits, the child was crying with hunger on Tuesday morning, and utterly unable to eat the bread and water served to it for its breakfast.


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