AN UNHALLOWED SPOT.
Snyder (writing in the Weekly Herald) has been visiting the lodging-houses of the City of Auckland, and gives some of his Bxperiences. We extract a portion: —In the first house we entered—and it was getting on towards midnight at the time—was a room where there were three prostitutes. , Not young women, but withered harridans, whoso countenances, in whatever image they had been cast had been stamped out of them —battered, maimed and scarred—revolting to look upon; with scarcely a semblance of humai?il,y remaining to them. These women, to the detective's enquiries, I said they were married, that their husbands were up country, that they had just that moment come into the house, that they were going away in the morning. To all of which the detective said, " Of course," ?nd then asked one of them, with a black eye and swollen lips, how long it would take before the Governor of Mount Eden gaol would turn tho key of the gate-lock and let her old man out into the fresh air. I don't think I ever saw a woman struck so inrfocent-looking as when this question was placed before her. She didn't even answer. And the questions he put to the other two women and the information he imparted to them shewed at once how intimately lie was acquainted with all their private circumstances and domestic -relations in life. From this room we went up a flight of steps to the apartments above. In one of these—a small room some twelve feet by ten, were lying on broken stretchers, or on Ihe floor, covered with filthy rags, eight miserable wretched men: six of these notorious characters known to the Police Courti as thieves, rogues, vagabonds, irreclaimable drunkards, and professional loafers. One had come out of the gaol that day, another a fortnight before. A third had undergone the penalties of more than twenty convictions. The stench of that room was intolerable. There was no ventilation, and the air so foul as to cause the candle the woman held in her hand to burn with a dim light, and surround the flame with a thick halo. None of these men were undressed : two of them were awake and drunk, and two in a "drunken sleep, their heads hanging over the sides of the stretchers ; and all this in the city of Auckland, with its by-laws heaped up and overlapping each other in such multitude that the casting of a piece of orange peel on the footpath, or a leaky verandah, or for a cabman to be seen off his stand looking for a fare, i 3 made to amount almost to a criminal offence."
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Thames Star, Volume VI, Issue 1783, 19 September 1874, Page 2
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446AN UNHALLOWED SPOT. Thames Star, Volume VI, Issue 1783, 19 September 1874, Page 2
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