Jacob A. Riis 1849–1914. The Battle with the Slum. 1902.
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was in a way of learning that without long delay, for ever since he was a little shaver he had had to fight his own way, and sometimes his mother’s. He was thirteen when I met him, and most of his time had been put in around the Rag Gang’s quarters, along First Avenue and the river front, where that kind of learning was abundant and came cheap. |
His mother drank. I do not know what made her do it—whether it was the loss of the first husband, or getting the second, or both. It did not seem important when she stood there, weak and wretched and humble, with Jim. And as for my preaching to her, sitting in my easy-chair, well fed and respectable, that would come near to being impertinence. So it always struck me. Perhaps I was wrong. Anyway, it would have done her no good. Too much harm had been done her already. She would disappear for days, sometimes for weeks at a time, on her frequent sprees. Jim never made any inquiries. On those occasions he kept aloof from us, and paddled his own canoe, lest we should ask questions. It was when she had come home sobered that we saw them always together. Now it was the rent, and then again a few groceries. With such lifts as she got, sandwiched in with much good advice, and by the aid of an odd job now and then, Mrs. Kelly managed to keep a bit |