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

CHAPTER XIV
24/35

These men tramp from one town to another, and a week or two in each suits them admirably, till the warm weather and light nights arrive, and then they are off.
"This portion of the 'submerged' will always be submerged till some power takes hold of them and compels them to work out their own salvation.
"But there is such a procession of them that the labour homes, etc., get continual recruits, and the managers are enabled to contract for a great deal of unskilled work.
"In all our large towns there are numbers of self-respecting men, men who have committed no crime, save the unpardonable crime of growing old.

Time was when such men could get odd clerical work, envelope and circular addressing, and a variety of light but irregular employment, at which, by economy and the help of their wives, they made a sort of living.

But these men are now driven to the wall, for their poorly paid and irregular work is taken from them." In 1911 A.M.Nicholl, in his not unfriendly book on GENERAL BOOTH AND THE SALVATION ARMY, makes the following statement, which I make no apology for reproducing.
His judgment, considering the position he held with the Army for so many years, is worthy of consideration.

Here are some of his words-- "From an economic standpoint the social experiment of the Salvation Army stands condemned almost root and branch.

So much the worse for economics, the average Salvation Army officer will reply.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books