<h2> CHAPTER XI.<br/> <i>Back to Prison.</i> </h2>
<p>I was not recognized by the authorities at
Sing Sing as having been there before. I
gave a different name and pedigree, of course,
but the reason I was not known as a second-timer
was that I had spent only nine months
at Sing Sing on my first term, the remainder
having been passed at Auburn. There was a
new warden at Sing Sing, too, and some of
the other officials had changed; and, besides,
I must have been lucky. Anyway, none of
the keepers knew me, and this meant a great
deal to me; for if I had been recognized as a
second-timer I should have had a great deal of
extra time to serve. On my first term I had
received commutation time for good behavior
amounting to over a year, and there is a rule
that if a released convict is sent back to
prison, he must serve, not only the time given
him on his second sentence, but the commutation
time on his first bit. Somebody must
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_229' name='Page_229'>[229]</SPAN></span>
have been very careless, for I beat the State
out of more than a year.</p>
<p>Some of the convicts, indeed, knew that I
had served before; but they did not squeal.
Even some of those who did not know me
had an inkling of it, but would not tell. It
was still another instance of honor among
thieves. If they had reported me to the authorities,
they might have had an easier time
in stir and had many privileges, such as better
jobs and better things to eat. There were
many stool-pigeons there, of course, but somehow
these rats did not get wind of me.</p>
<p>It did not take me long to get the Underground
Tunnel in working order again, and I
received contraband letters, booze, opium and
morphine as regularly as on my first bit. One
of the screws running the Tunnel at the time,
Jack R——, was a little heavier in his demands
than I thought fair. He wanted a third instead
of a fifth of the money sent the convicts
from home. But he was a good fellow, and
always brought in the hop as soon as it arrived.
Like the New York police he was hot after
the stuff, but who can blame him? He wanted
to rise in the world, and was more ambitious
than the other screws. I continued my pipe
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_230' name='Page_230'>[230]</SPAN></span>
dreams, and my reading; indeed, they were
often connected. I frequently used to imagine
that I was a character in one of the
books; and often choked the detestable Tarquin
into insensibility.</p>
<p>On one occasion I dreamed that I was
arraigned before my Maker and charged with
murder. I cried with fear and sorrow, for I
felt that even before the just God there was
no justice; but a voice silenced me and said
that to be guilty of the crime of murder, it was
not necessary to use weapons or poison. Suddenly
I seemed to see the sad faces of my
father and mother, and then I knew what the
voice meant. Indeed, I was guilty. I heard
the word, "Begone," and sank into the abyss.
After many thousand years of misery I was
led into the Chamber of Contentment where
I saw some of the great men whose books I
had read. Voltaire, Tom Paine and Galileo
sat on a throne, but when I approached them
with awe, the angel, who had the face of a
keeper, told me to leave. I appealed to Voltaire,
and begged him not to permit them to
send me among the hymn-singers. He said
he pitied me, but that I was not fit to be
with the great elect. I asked him where Dr.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_231' name='Page_231'>[231]</SPAN></span>
Parkhurst was, and he answered that the doctor
was hot stuff and had evaporated long
ago. I was led away sorrowing, and awoke
in misery and tears, in my dark and damp
cell.</p>
<p>On this bit I was assigned to the clothing
department, where I stayed six months, but
did very little work. Warden Sage replaced
Warden Darson and organized the system of
stool-pigeons in stir more carefully than ever
before; so it was more difficult than it was
before to neglect our work. I said to Sage
one day: "You're a cheap guy. You ought
to be President of a Woman's Sewing Society.
You can do nothing but make an aristocracy
of stool-pigeons." I gave up work after six
months because of my health, which had been
bad for a long time, but now grew worse.
My rapid life on the outside, my bad habits,
and my experience in prison were beginning to
tell on me badly. There was a general breaking-down
of my system. I was so weak and
coughed so badly that they thought I was
dying. The doctors said I had consumption
and transferred me to the prison hospital,
where I had better air and food and was far
more comfortable in body but terribly low in
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_232' name='Page_232'>[232]</SPAN></span>
my mind. I was so despondent that I did not
even "fan my face" (turn my head away to
avoid having the outside world become familiar
with my features) when visitors went
through the hospital. This was an unusual
degree of carelessness for a professional gun.
One reason I was so gloomy was that I was
now unable to get hold of my darling hop.</p>
<p>I was so despondent in the hospital that I
really thought I should soon become an angel;
and my environment was not very cheerful, for
several convicts died on beds near me. Whenever
anybody was going to die, every convict
in the prison knew about it, for the attendants
would put three screens around the dying
man's bed. There were about twenty beds in
the long room, and near me was an old boyhood
pal, Tommy Ward, in the last stages of
consumption. Tommy and I often talked
together about death, and neither of us was
afraid of it. I saw a dozen men die during my
experience in state prisons and I never heard
one of them clamor for a clergyman. Tommy
was doing life for murder, and ought to have
been afraid of death, if anyone was. But
when he was about to die, he sent word to me
to come to his bedside, and after a word or two
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_233' name='Page_233'>[233]</SPAN></span>
of good-bye he went into his agony. The last
words he ever said were: "Ah, give me a big
Peter (narcotic)." He did not receive the
last rites of the Catholic Church, and his ignorant
family refused to bury him. So Tommy's
cell number was put on the tombstone, if it
could be called such, which marked his grave
in the little burying ground outside the prison
walls.</p>
<p>Indeed, it is not easy to throw the religious
con (confidence game) into a convict. Often,
while we were in chapel, the dominie would
tell us that life was short; but hardly one of
the six or seven hundred criminals who were
listening believed the assertion. They felt
that the few years they were doing for the
good of their country were as long as centuries.
If there were a few "cons" who tried
the cheerful dodge, they did not deceive anybody,
for their brother guns knew that they
were sore in their hearts because they had
been caught without fall-money, and so had
to serve a few million years in stir.</p>
<p>After I got temporarily better in health and
had left the hospital, I began to read Lavater
on physiognomy more industriously than
ever. With his help I became a close student
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_234' name='Page_234'>[234]</SPAN></span>
of faces, and I learned to tell the thoughts
and emotions of my fellow convicts. I
watched them at work and when their faces
flushed I knew they were thinking of Her.
Sometimes I would ask a man how She was,
and he would look confused, and perhaps
angry because his day dream was disturbed.
And how the men used to look at women visitors
who went through the shops! It was
against the rules to look at the inhabitants of
the Upper World who visited stir, but I noticed
that after women visitors had been there the
convicts were generally more cheerful. Even
a momentary glimpse of those who lived within
the pale of civilization warmed their hearts.
After the ladies had gone the convicts would
talk about them for hours. Many of their
remarks were vulgar and licentious, but some
of the men were broken down with feeling and
would say soft things. They would talk about
their mothers and sweethearts and eventually
drift back on their ill-spent lives. How often
I thought of the life behind me! Then I
would look at the men about me, some of
whom had stolen millions and had international
reputations—but all discouraged now,
broken down in health, penniless and friendless.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_235' name='Page_235'>[235]</SPAN></span>
If a man died in stir he was just a cadaver
for the dissecting table, nothing more.
The end fitted in well with his misspent life.
These reflections would bring us around again
to good resolutions.</p>
<p>People who have never broken the law—I
beg pardon, who were never caught—can not
understand how a man who has once served
in stir will take another chance and go back
and suffer the same tortures. A society lady
I once met said she thought criminals who go
on grafting, when they know what the result
will be, must be lacking in imagination. I replied
to her: "Madam, why do you lace
tight and indulge in social dissipation even
after you know it is bad for the health? You
know it is a strain on your nerves, but you do
it. Is it because you have no imagination?
That which we all dread most—death—we all
defy."</p>
<p>The good book says that all men shall earn
their bread by the sweat of their brow, but we
grafters make of ourselves an exception, with
that overweening egotism and brash desire to
do others with no return, which is natural to
everybody. Only when the round-up comes,
either in the sick bed or in the toils, we often
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_236' name='Page_236'>[236]</SPAN></span>
can not bear our burdens and look around to
put the blame on someone else. If a man is
religious, why should he not drop it on Jesus?
Man! How despicable at times! How ungallant
to his ancestor of the softer sex!
From time immemorial he has exclaimed:
"Only for her, the deceiving one, my better
half, I should be perfect."</p>
<p>Convicts, particularly if they are broken in
health, often become like little children. It
is not unusual for them to grow dependent on
dumb pets, which they smuggle into prison by
means of the Underground Tunnel. The
man in stir who has a white mouse or robin is
envied by the other convicts, for he has something
to love. If an artist could only witness
the affection that is centered on a mouse or
dog, if he could only depict the emotions in
the hard face of the criminal, what a story! I
had a white rat, which I had obtained with
difficulty through the Underground. I used to
put him up my sleeve, and he would run all
over my body, he was so tame. He would
stand on his hind legs or lie down at my command.
Sometimes, when I was lonely and
melancholy, I loved this rat like a human
being.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_237' name='Page_237'>[237]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In May, 1896, when I still had about a year
to serve on my second term, a rumor circulated
through the prison that some of the Salvation
Army were going to visit the stir. The men
were greatly excited at the prospect of a break
in the dreary routine. I imagined that a big
burly Salvationist, beating a drum, with a
few very thin Salvation lasses, would march
through the prison yard. I was dumbfounded
by the reality, for I saw enter the Protestant
chapel, which was crowded with eager convicts,
two delicate, pretty women. No actor or actress
ever got a warmer welcome than that
given to Mrs. Booth and her secretary, Captain
Jennie Hughes. After the clapping of hands
and cheering had ceased, Mrs. Booth arose
and made a speech, which was listened to in
deep silence. Certainly she was eloquent, and
what she said impressed many an old gun.
She was the first visitor who ever promised
practical Christianity and eventually carried
out the promise. She promised to build
homes for us after our release; and in many
cases, she did, and we respect her. She spoke
for an hour, and afterwards granted private
interviews, and many of the convicts told her
all their troubles, and she promised to take
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_238' name='Page_238'>[238]</SPAN></span>
care of their old mothers, daughters and
wives.</p>
<p>Before leaving the chapel, she sang: "O
Lord, let the waves of thy crimson sea roll
over me." I did not see how such a pretty,
intelligent, refined and educated woman could
say such a bloody thing, but she probably had
forgotten what the words really meant. At
any rate, she is a good woman, for she tried
hard to have the Parole Bill passed. That
bill has recently become a law, and it is a
good one, in my opinion; but it has one fault.
It only effects first-timers. The second and
third timers, who went to Sing Sing years ago
when there was contract labor and who worked
harder than any laborer in New York City,
ought to have a chance, too. Show a little
confidence in any man, even though he be a
third-timer, as I have been, and he will be a
better man for it.</p>
<p>After the singing, on that first morning of
Mrs. Booth's visit, she asked those convicts
who wanted to lead a better life to stand up.
About seventy men out of the five or six hundred
arose, and the others remained seated.
I was not among those who stood up. I
never met anybody who could touch me in
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_239' name='Page_239'>[239]</SPAN></span>
that way. I don't believe in instantaneous
Christianity. I knew half a dozen of the men
who stood up, and they were not very strong
mentally. I often wondered what the motives
were that moved the men in that manner.
Man is a social animal, and Mrs. Booth was
a magnetic woman. After I had heard her
speak once, I knew that. She had a good
personal appearance and one other requisite
that appealed strongly to those who were in
our predicament—her sex. Who could entirely
resist the pleadings of a pretty woman
with large black eyes?</p>
<p>Certainly I was moved by this sincere and
attractive woman, but my own early religious
training had made me suspicious of the whole
business. Whenever anybody tried to reform
me through Christianity I always thought of
that powerful Celt who used to rush at me in
Sunday school with a hickory stick and shout
"Who made you?" And I don't think that
most of the men who profess religion in prison
are sincere. They usually want to curry favor
with the authorities, or get "staked" after
they leave stir. One convict, whom I used to
call "The Great American Identifier," because
he used to graft by claiming to be a relative
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_240' name='Page_240'>[240]</SPAN></span>
of everybody that died, from California to
Maine and weeping over the dead body, was
the worst hypocrite I ever saw—a regular
Uriah Heep. He was one of Mrs. Booth's
converts and stood up in chapel. After she
went away he said to me: "What a blessing
has been poured into my soul since I heard
Mrs. Booth." Another hypocrite said to me
on the same occasion: "I don't know what I
would do only for Mrs. Booth. She has
lightened my weary burdens." Now, I would
not trust either of those men with a box of
matches; and so I said to the Great American
Identifier: "You are the meanest, most despicable
thief in the whole stir. I'd respect
you if you had the nerve to rob a live man,
but you always stole from a cadaver." He
was horrified at my language and began to
talk of a favorite subject with him—his wealthy
relatives.</p>
<p>Some of these converts were not hypocrites,
but I don't think even they received any good
from their conversion. Some people go to
religion because they have nothing else to distract
their thoughts, and the subject sometimes
is a mania with them. The doctors
say that there is only one incurable mental
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_241' name='Page_241'>[241]</SPAN></span>
disease—religious insanity. In the eyes of
the reformers Mrs. Booth does a great thing
by making some of us converts, but experts in
mental diseases declare that it is very bad to
excite convicts to such a pitch. Many of the
weak-minded among them lose their balance
and become insane through these violent religious
emotions.</p>
<p>I did not meet so many of the big guns on
my second term as on my first; but, of course,
I came across many of my old pals and formed
some new acquaintances. It was on this term
that four of us used to have what I called a
tenement house oratory talk whenever we
worked together in the halls. Some of us
were lucky enough at times to serve as barbers,
hall-men and runners to and from the shops,
and we used to gather together in the halls and
amuse ourselves with conversation. Dickey,
Mull, Mickey and I became great pals in this
way. Dickey was a desperate river pirate
who would not stand a roast from anybody,
but was well liked. Mull was one of the best
principled convicts I ever knew in my life.
He was quiet, delicate and manly, and opposed
to abusing young boys, yet if you did him an
injury he would cut the liver out of you. He
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_242' name='Page_242'>[242]</SPAN></span>
was a good fellow. Mickey was what I called
a tenement house philosopher. He'd stick his
oar into every bit of talk that was started.
One day the talk began on Tammany Hall
and went something like this:</p>
<p>"All crooked officials," said Mull, "including
all of them, ought to be railroaded to Sing
Sing."</p>
<p><i>Dickey</i>: "Through their methods the
county offices are rotten from the judge to the
policeman."</p>
<p><i>Mull</i>: "I agree with you."</p>
<p><i>Mickey</i>: "Ah, wat's the matter wid Tammany?
My old man never voted any other
ticket. Neither did yours. When you get
into stir you act like college professors. Why
don't you practice what you spout? I always
voted the Tammany ticket—five or six times
every election day. How is it I never got a
long bit?"</p>
<p><i>Mull</i>: "How many times, Mickey, have
you been in stir?"</p>
<p><i>Mickey</i>: "This is the fourth, but the highest
I got was four years."</p>
<p><i>Dickey</i>: "You never done anything big
enough to get four."</p>
<p><i>Mickey</i>: "I didn't, eh? You have been
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_243' name='Page_243'>[243]</SPAN></span>
hollering that you are innocent, and get
twenty years for piracy. I only get four, but
I am guilty every time. There is a big difference
between that and twenty, aint it?"</p>
<p>Mull slapped Mickey on the back and said:
"Never mind. You will get yours yet on the
installment plan." Then, turning to me, Mull
asked: "Jim, don't you think that if everything
was square and on the level we'd stand
a better chance?"</p>
<p>"No," I replied. "In the first place we have
not reached the millennium. In the second
place they would devise some legal scheme to
keep a third timer the rest of his natural days.
I know a moccasin who would move heaven
and earth to have such a bill passed, and he is
one of the crookedest philanthropists in America
to-day. I am a grafter, and I believe that
the present administration is all right. I
know that I can stay out of prison as long as
I save my fall-money. When I blow that in I
ought to go to prison. Every gun who is capable
of stealing, knows that if he puts by
enough money he can not only keep out of
stir but can beat his way into heaven. I'm
arguing as a professional thief."</p>
<p>This was too much for Mickey, who said:
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_244' name='Page_244'>[244]</SPAN></span>
"Why don't you talk United States and not be
springing whole leaves out of a dictionary?"</p>
<p>Just then Big Jim came up. He had heard
what I said and he joined in: "You know
why I got the tenth of a century? I had
thousands in my pocket and went to buy some
silk underwear at a haberdasher's in New York.
But it seemed to me a waste of good coin to
buy them, so I stole a dozen pair of silk stockings.
They tried to arrest me, I shot, and got
ten years. I always did despise a petty thief,
but I never felt like kicking him till then.
Ten years for a few stockings! Can you
blame the judge? I didn't. Even a judge
admires a good thief. If I had robbed a bank
I'd never have got such a long bit. The old
saying is true: Kill one man and you will be
hanged. Kill sixteen, and the United States
Government is likely to pension you."</p>
<p>The tenement-house philosopher began to
object again, when the guard, as usual, came
along to stop our pleasant conversation. He
thought we were abusing our privileges.</p>
<p>It was during this bit that I met the man
with the white teeth, as he is now known
among his friends. I will call him Patsy, and
tell his story, for it is an unusual one. He
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_245' name='Page_245'>[245]</SPAN></span>
was a good deal older man than I and was
one of the old-school burglars, and a good
one. They were a systematic lot, and would
shoot before they stood the collar; but they
were gentlemanly grafters and never abused
anybody. The first thing Patsy's mob did
after entering a house was to round up all the
inmates and put them into one room. There
one burglar would stick them up with a revolver,
while the others went through the house.
On a fatal occasion Patsy took the daughter
of the house, a young girl of eighteen or
nineteen, in his arms and carried her down
stairs into the room where the rest of the family
had been put by the other grafters. As
he carried the girl down stairs, she said: "Mr.
Burglar, don't harm me." Patsy was masked,
all but his mouth, and when he said: "You
are as safe as if you were in your father's
arms," she saw his teeth, which were remarkably
fine and white. Patsy afterwards said
that the girl was not a bit alarmed, and was
such a perfect coquette that she noticed his
good points. The next morning she told the
police that one of the bad men had a beautiful
set of teeth. The flymen rounded up half
a dozen grafters on suspicion, among them
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_246' name='Page_246'>[246]</SPAN></span>
Patsy; and no sooner did he open his mouth,
than he was recognized, and settled for a long
bit. Poor Patsy has served altogether about
nineteen years, but now he has squared it, and
is a waiter in a Bowery saloon, more content
with his twelve dollars a week than he used to
be with his thousands. I often go around
and have a glass with him. He is now a
quiet, sober fellow, and his teeth are as fine
as ever.</p>
<p>One day a man named "Muir," a mean,
sure-thing grafter, came to the stir on a visit
to some of his acquaintances. He had never
done a bit himself, although he was a notorious
thief. But he liked to look at the misfortunes
of others, occasionally. On this visit
he got more than he bargained for. He came
to the clothing department where Mike, who
had grafted with Muir in New York, and I,
were at work. Muir went up to Mike and
offered him a bill. Mike threw it in Muir's
face and called him—well, the worst thing
known in Graftdom. "If it wasn't for you,"
he said, "I wouldn't be doing this bit."</p>
<p>There are several kinds of sure-thing grafters.
Some are crooked gamblers, some are plain
stool-pigeons, some are discouraged thieves
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_247' name='Page_247'>[247]</SPAN></span>
who continue to graft but take no risks.
Muir was one of the meanest of the rats that I
have known, yet in a way, he was handy
to the professional gun. He had somebody
"right" at headquarters and could generally
get protection for his mob; but he would
always throw the mob over if it was to his
advantage. He and two other house-work
men robbed a senator's home, and such a
howl went up that the police offered all manner
of protection to the grafter who would tip
them off to who got the stuff. Grafters who
work with the coppers don't want it known
among those of their own kind, for they would
be ostracized. If they do a dirty trick they
try to throw it on someone else who would not
stoop to such a thing. Muir was a diplomat,
and tipped off the Central Office, and those
who did the trick, all except Tom and Muir,
were nailed. A few nights after that the
whisper was passed among guns of both sexes,
who had gathered at a resort up-town, that
somebody had squealed. The muttered curses
meant that some Central Office man had by
wireless telegraphy put the under world next
that somebody had tipped off the police. But
it was not Muir that the hard names were
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_248' name='Page_248'>[248]</SPAN></span>
said against: the Central Office man took
care of that. With low cunning Muir had
had the rumor circulated that it was Tom who
had thrown them down, and Tommy was
ostracized.</p>
<p>I knew Muir and I knew Tommy, and I
was sure that the latter was innocent. Some
time after Tom had been cut by the rest of
the gang I saw Muir drinking with two Central
Office detectives, in a well-known resort, and I
was convinced that he was the rat. His personal
appearance bore out my suspicion. He
had a weak face, with no fight in it. He was
quiet of speech, always smiling, and as soft
and noiseless as the animal called the snake.
He had a narrow, hanging lip, small nose,
large ears, and characterless, protruding eyes.
The squint look from under the eye-brows,
and the quick jerk of the hand to the chin,
showed without doubt that he possessed the
low cunning too of that animal called the rat.
Partly through my influence, Muir gradually
got the reputation of being a sure-thing
grafter, but he was so sleek that he could
always find some grafter to work with him.
Pals with whom he fell out, always shortly
afterwards came to harm. That was the case
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_249' name='Page_249'>[249]</SPAN></span>
with Big Mike, who spat in Muir's face, when
the latter visited him in Sing Sing. When
Muir did pickpocket work, he never dipped
himself, but acted as a stall. This was another
sure-thing dodge. Muir never did a bit in
stir because he was of more value to headquarters
than a dozen detectives. The fact
that he never did time was another thing
that gradually made the gang suspicious of
him. Therefore, at the present time he is of
comparatively little value to the police force,
and may be settled before long. I hope so.</p>
<p>One of the meanest things Muir ever did
was to a poor old "dago" grafter, a queer-maker
(counterfeiter). The Italian was putting
out unusually good stuff, both paper and
metal, and the avaricious Muir thought he
saw a good chance to get a big bit of money
from the dago. He put up a plan with two
Central Office men to bleed the counterfeiter.
Then he went to the dago and said he had
got hold of some big buyers from the West
who would buy five thousand dollars worth of
the "queer." They met the supposed buyers,
who were in reality the two Central Office men,
at a little saloon. After a talk the detectives
came out in their true colors, showed their
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_250' name='Page_250'>[250]</SPAN></span>
shields, and demanded one thousand dollars.
The dago looked at Muir, who gave him the
tip to pay the one thousand dollars. The
Italian, however, thinking Muir was on the
level, misunderstood the sign, and did not pay.
The outraged detectives took the Italian to
police headquarters, but did not show up the
queer at first; they still wanted their one
thousand dollars. So the dago was remanded
and remanded, getting a hearing every twenty-four
hours, but there was never enough evidence.
Finally the poor fellow got a lawyer,
and then the Central Office men gave up the
game, and produced the queer as evidence.
The United States authorities prosecuted the
case, and the Italian was given three years
and a half. After he was released he met
Muir on the East Side, and tried to kill him
with a knife. That is the only way Muir will
ever get his deserts. A man like him very
seldom dies in state's prison, or is buried in
potter's field. He often becomes a gin-mill
keeper and captain of his election district, for
he understands how to control the repeaters
who give Tammany Hall such large majorities
on election day in Manhattan.</p>
<p>It was on this second bit in prison, as I
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_251' name='Page_251'>[251]</SPAN></span>
have said in another place, that the famous
"fence" operated in stir. I knew him well.
He was a clever fellow, and I often congratulated
him on his success with the keepers; for
he was no stool-pigeon and got his pull legitimately.
He was an older grafter than I and
remembered well Madame Mandelbaum, the
Jewess, one of the best fences, before my
time, in New York City. At the corner of
Clinton and Rivington Streets there stood
until a few years ago a small dry goods and
notions store, which was the scene of transactions
which many an old gun likes to talk
about. What plannings of great robberies
took place there, in Madame Mandelbaum's
store! She would buy any kind of stolen
property, from an ostrich feather to hundreds
and thousands of dollars' worth of gems. The
common shop-lifter and the great cracksman
alike did business at this famous place. Some
of the noted grafters who patronized her store
were Jimmy Hope, Shang Draper, Billy Porter,
Sheenie Mike, Red Leary, Johnnie Irving,
Jack Walsh, alias John the Mick, and a
brainy planner of big jobs, English George.</p>
<p>Madame Mandelbaum had two country residences
in Brooklyn where she invited her
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_252' name='Page_252'>[252]</SPAN></span>
friends, the most famous thieves in two continents.
English George, who used to send
money to his son, who was being educated in
England, was a frequent visitor, and used to
deposit with her all his valuables. She had
two beautiful daughters, one of whom became
infatuated with George, who did not return
her love. Later, she and her daughters, after
they became wealthy, tried to rise in the
world and shake their old companions. The
daughters were finely dressed and well-educated,
and the Madame hunted around for
respectable husbands for them. Once a bright
reporter wrote a play, in which the central
character was Madame Mandelbaum. She
read about it in the newspapers and went, with
her two daughters, to see it. They occupied
a private box, and were gorgeously dressed.
The old lady was very indignant when she saw
the woman who was supposed to be herself
appear on the stage. The actress, badly
dressed, and made up with a hooked nose, was
jeered by the audience. After the play,
Madame Mandelbaum insisted on seeing the
manager of the theatre. She showed him her
silks and her costly diamonds and then said:
"Look at me. I am Madame Mandelbaum.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_253' name='Page_253'>[253]</SPAN></span>
Does that huzzy look anything like me?"
Pointing to her daughters she continued:
"What must my children think of such an
impersonation? Both of them are better
dressed and have more money and education
than that strut, who is only a moment's plaything
for bankers and brokers!"</p>
<p>In most ways, of course, my life in prison
during the second term was similar to what it
was on my first term. Books and opium were
my main pleasures. If it had not been for
them and for the thoughts about life and
about my fellow convicts which they led me to
form, the monotony of the prison routine
would have driven me mad. My health was
by that time badly shattered. I was very
nervous and could seldom sleep without a
drug.</p>
<p>My moral health was far worse, too, than it
had been on my first term. Then I had made
strong efforts to overcome the opium habit,
and laid plans to give up grafting. Then I
had some decent ambitions, and did not look
upon myself as a confirmed criminal; whereas
on the second term, I had grown to take a
hopeless view of my case. I began to feel
that I could not reform, no matter how hard I
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_254' name='Page_254'>[254]</SPAN></span>
tried. It seemed to me, too, that it was hardly
worth while now to make an effort, for I
thought my health was worse than it really
was and that I should die soon, with no
opportunity to live the intelligent life I had
learned to admire through my books. I still
made good resolutions, and some effort to
quit the hop, but they were weak in comparison
with the efforts I had made during my
first term. More and more it seemed to me
that I belonged in the under world for good,
and that I might as well go through it to the
end. Stealing was my profession. It was all
I knew how to do, and I didn't believe that
anybody was interested enough in me to teach
me anything else. On the other hand, what
I had learned on the Rocky Path would never
leave me. I was sure of my knowledge of the
technique of graft, and I knew that a sucker
was born every minute.
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN id='Page_255' name='Page_255'>[255]</SPAN></span></p>
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