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Home  »  The Battle with the Slum  »  Page 324

Jacob A. Riis 1849–1914. The Battle with the Slum. 1902.

Page 324

any long stretch at a time. They made a racket at night, and had sport with “old man Quinn,” who was a victim of dropsy. He was “walking on dough,” they asseverated, and paid no attention to the explanation of the alley that he had “kidney feet.” But when the old man died and his wife was left penniless, I found some of them secretly contributing to her keep. It was not so long after that that another old pensioner of the alley, suddenly drawn into their cyclonic sport in the narrow passageway, fell and broke her arm. Apparently no one in the lot was individually to blame. It was an unfortunate accident, and it deprived her of her poor means of earning the few pennies with which she eked out the charity of the alley. Worse than that, it took from her hope after death, as it were. For years she had pinched and saved and denied herself to keep up a payment of twenty-five cents a week which insured her decent burial in consecrated ground. Now that she could no longer work, the dreaded trench in the Potter’s Field yawned to receive her. That was the blow that broke her down. She was put out by the landlord soon after the accident, as a hopeless tenant, and I thought that she had gone to the almshouse, when by chance I came upon her living quite happily in a tenement on the next block. “Living” is hardly the word; she was really waiting to die, but waiting with a