AN OUTCAST;
OR,
VIRTUE AND FAITH.
BY
F. COLBURN ADAMS.
"Be merciful to the erring."
NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY M. DOOLADY, 49 WALKER STREET. 1861.
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1861,
BY M. DOOLADY,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York.
PREFACE.
When reason and conscience are a man's true guides to what he undertakes, and he acts strictly in obedience to them, he has little to fear from what the unthinking may say. You cannot, I hold, mistake a man intent only on doing good. You may differ with him on the means he calls to his aid; but having formed a distinct plan, and carried it out in obedience to truth and right, it will be difficult to impugn the sincerity of his motives. For myself, I care not what weapon a man choose, so long as he wield it effectively, and in the cause of humanity and justice. We are a sensitive nation, prone to pass great moral evils over in silence rather than expose them boldly, or trace them to their true sources. I am not indifferent to the duty every writer owes to public opinion, nor the penalties he incurs in running counter to it. But fear of public opinion, it seems to me, has been productive of much evil, inasmuch as it prefers to let crime exist rather than engage in reforms. Taking this view of the matter, I hold fear of public opinion to be an evil much to be deplored. It aids in keeping out of sight that which should be exposed to public view, and is satisfied to pass unheeded the greatest of moral evils. Most writers touch these great moral evils with a timidity that amounts to fear, and in describing crimes of the greatest magnitude, do it so daintily as to divest their arguments of all force. The public cannot reasonably be expected to apply a remedy for an evil, unless the cause as well as the effect be exposed truthfully to its view. It is the knowledge of their existence and the magnitude of their influence upon society, which no false delicacy should keep out of sight, that nerves the good and generous to action. I am aware that in exciting this action, great care should be taken lest the young and weak-minded become fascinated with the gilding of the machinery called to the writer's aid. It is urged by many good people, who take somewhat narrow views of this subject, that in dealing with the mysteries of crime vice should only be described as an ugly dame with most repulsive features. I differ with those persons. It would be a violation of the truth to paint her thus, and few would read of her in such an unsightly dress. These persons do not, I think, take a sufficiently clear view of the grades into which the vicious of our community are divided, and their different modes of living. They found their opinions solely on the moral and physical condition of the most wretched and abject class, whose sufferings they would have us hold up to public view, a warning to those who stand hesitating on the brink between virtue and vice. I hold it better to expose the allurements first, and then paint vice in her natural colors--a dame so gay and fascinating that it is difficult not to become enamored of her. The ugly and repulsive dame would have few followers, and no need of writers to caution the unwary against her snares. And I cannot forget, that truth always carries the more forcible lesson. But we must paint the road to vice as well as the castle, if we would give effect to our warning. That road is too frequently strewn with the brightest of flowers, the thorns only discovering themselves when the sweetness of the flowers has departed. I have chosen, then, to describe things as they are. You, reader, must be the judge whether I have put too much gilding on the decorations.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: An Outcast by F. Colburn Adams
- 2: And there was high carnival in the kitchen
- 3: Though Major Longstring and Mr
- 4: He is commonly called Snivel the lawyer
- 5: Snivel twirls his hat in the air
- 6: Or Phin and me never'd a got him 'ere
- 7: There's no man in this jail shall say a word agin Tom Swiggs
- 8: And old Charleston looks in now and then
- 9: Converses in the right hand parlor
- 10: Snivel is the spirit of this house
- 11: Manfredo passes the wine to her guests
- 12: But Madame Flamingo and the devil
- 13: And your friends Tom interrupts by saying
- 14: Swiggs is the stately old member of a crispy old family
- 15: Swiggs increases the velocity of her rocking
- 16: Then you have read of Sir Sunderland Swiggs
- 17: Twitches the shawl about her shoulders
- 18: McArthur is a dealer in curiosities
- 19: Spunyarn shakes his head reprovingly
- 20: Spunyarn something different all over me
- 21: It'll taste just as strong to a vote cribber
- 22: That spark the vote cribber had touched
- 23: Soloman again taps her on the arm with his glove
- 24: As I was going on to say of this dashing Baronet
- 25: Stepfast invited him to a quiet family dinner
- 26: Had been carrying on a villanous intrigue yes
- 27: Swiggs in sundry well filled glasses
- 28: But we lay claim to Grecian refinement of manners
- 29: That you have looked in at Almacks
- 30: And on whom George Mullholland swore to have revenge
- 31: Is at the house of Madame Flamingo
- 32: Now Madame Flamingo looks scornfully at him
- 33: Soloman has lain his hand upon her arm retentively
- 34: And reconcile the matter with this Mullholland
- 35: A soul inspiring seductiveness
- 36: Lecherous eyes peering through the domino
- 37: What takes place between george mullholland and mr
- 38: And reclining on satin and velvet
- 39: Opening an avalanche of shirt bosom
- 40: Soloman assumes great seriousness of countenance
- 41: If they had anything darker in Sodom
- 42: McCarty paid eight dollars a month for
- 43: Poor Lizza had a hard time of it
- 44: McCarty brought him a basin of water
- 45: Had come to arrest Mullholland
- 46: We have got through the muck of the mucky Bowery
- 47: And the progeny of these negroes swarmed over the cove
- 48: This man lived with Hag Zogbaum
- 49: Hag Zogbaum had many places for her female pupils
- 50: So Hag Zogbaum lighted the fire with them
- 51: Singleton Spyke off to Antioch
- 52: And Brother Spyke not got off to Antioch
- 53: Singleton Spyke off to Antioch
- 54: I induced her to accompany me to Charleston
- 55: McArthur makes supply the place of glass
- 56: Of a summer morning you will see McArthur
- 57: McArthur stood five feet eight exactly
- 58: McArthur will lend him a skull
- 59: It's in here as my name's Absalom McArthur
- 60: And chuckles over what he gets of Keepum
- 61: In the right hand procenium box sits
- 62: In which sits the stately figure of Madame Montford
- 63: Swiggs can finish her sentence
- 64: Brother Hadger takes a sup of ice water
- 65: We have conceived a mission to Antioch
- 66: And Cato's seventy four four years older than Zeff
- 67: And I have for years longed to see Sister Slocum
- 68: Swiggs replies that nobody will buy two old people together
- 69: Sildon that the child does well
- 70: Madame Flamingo opens her forts
- 71: Grouski is a high old fellow a most celebrated man
- 72: And under the shadow of the wife of Prince Grouski
- 73: And how sturdily they bear up statuettes
- 74: Grant me an order of release for Tom Swiggs
- 75: Snivel has placed himself against it
- 76: In which tom swiggs gains his liberty
- 77: I alwas sed there war better weather ahead
- 78: The stalworth figure of the vote cribber
- 79: Forsheu is very kind to the old people he sells
- 80: Swiggs began questioning his ability as a merchant
- 81: Forsheu being exceedingly prompt in business
- 82: To day Tom Swiggs feels himself free
- 83: The antiquarian seems bewildered
- 84: Anna bonard seeks an interview with the antiquary
- 85: How would an alliance with Maria affect his mother's dignity
- 86: That name was given me by Hag Zogbaum
- 87: The figure in the talma answers with a bow
- 88: Snivel perceives her agitation
- 89: Snivel frets his fingers through his beard
- 90: Just inquire of the vote cribber
- 91: Lady Swiggs wears that same faded silk dress
- 92: The Prince and Princess Grouski
- 93: Is rolled away to the mansion of Sister Slocum
- 94: Swiggs hesitates in the doorway
- 95: Swiggs sets her cup in her saucer
- 96: But what is singular of Brother Spyke is
- 97: Brother Spyke chose a mission to Antioch
- 98: Snivel having helped himself to a cigar
- 99: Snivel rushing into the street
- 100: Again rising to his feet and bowing to the cribber
- 101: All we have to do is to crib them
- 102: Snivel draws from his pocket a copy of the forged papers
- 103: Snivel thanks the vote cribber
- 104: Swiggs is seized with fear and trembling
- 105: Toddleworth a long line of irregular
- 106: Dens where negro dancers nightly revel
- 107: Toddleworth beckons Lady Swiggs away
- 108: Mister Toddleworth is uppish this morning
- 109: Brother Spyke shrugs his shoulders
- 110: She sets her eyes fixedly upon Brother Spyke
- 111: Brother Spyke continues nearly an hour
- 112: Brother Spyke pricks up his courage
- 113: We are governed here by the laws of chivalry
- 114: Which is set with cameos and unpolished pearls
- 115: That into the dungeon I was impelled against my will
- 116: Snivel runs his fingers through his hair
- 117: Stubbs fails to find the assassin
- 118: Snivel exchanges a wink with the Judge
- 119: The charging the fees to Donahue
- 120: Hardscrabble views him with an air of satisfaction
- 121: Again interrupts Madame Ashley
- 122: Parson Patterson thanks his Honor
- 123: Krone is an intimate friend of more than one Councilman
- 124: This Toddleworth is a harmless creature
- 125: Turning methodically to Brother Spyke
- 126: The detective lights his lantern
- 127: Mister Toddleworth did that same
- 128: Krone thinks it comfortable enough the authorities think Mr
- 129: Downey startles at the appearance of the detective
- 130: To day we made a lion of the notorious Hines
- 131: Says the young man of the studious face
- 132: I'm shuffled in again fees charged to the State
- 133: Awakened the generous impulses of Tom Swiggs
- 134: The vote cribber has seen him before
- 135: And complimented the vote cribber for his skill
- 136: Snivel thinks the woman better be removed
- 137: As Madame Montford says His wife was got away from him
- 138: Madame casts a glance at the hearse
- 139: Glentworthy shrugs his shoulders
- 140: Glentworthy remembers very well
- 141: Glentworthy says she tells her own tale
- 142: And contemplating the next best course to pursue
- 143: Snivel here receives a nostrum from the lady's purse
- 144: Brother Spyke says the Lord be merciful
- 145: And buried myself among those whose destitution
- 146: And lined with virtuous white satin within
- 147: She recalls to mind the interview with Madame Montford
- 148: And her bosom fills with dark and stormy emotions
- 149: A less penetrating observer than the chivalrous Keepum
- 150: Exchanges a significant wink with his friend Keepum
- 151: Snivel for dissolving the Union
- 152: Hardscrabble condescends to say
- 153: Hardscrabble puts locks and bolts upon his curiosity shop
- 154: The adroit Crimpton rises to object to the Schedule
- 155: Are withheld from the schedule
- 156: Maria returns the old man's kiss
- 157: Beset your path through Trafalgar and Liecester squares
- 158: Huddled along the cold pavement
- 159: And while the policeman goes in search of medical aid
- 160: A story with many counterparts
- 161: And left me destitute of money or friends
- 162: Undine for such is her name applauds this with great gusto
- 163: Crimpton is singularly scrupulous
- 164: Keepum says while throwing his hat sullenly upon the floor
- 165: Keepum valorously betakes himself into the street
- 166: Keepum is subjected to a night in jail
- 167: Then throw fantastic lights over the swaying foliage
- 168: Then into the sombre entrance of the mansion
- 169: Scanning along the spacious hall
- 170: Detective Fitzgerald is the visitor
- 171: 'Your name wasn't always Munday
- 172: From it Madame Montford alights
- 173: Then she was known as Anna Bonard Anna Bonard
- 174: The scandal leveled at her in Charleston
- 175: Noiselessly he arranges the rope
- 176: He recrosses the millpond over another bridge
- 177: Recommend that the said Mullholland be brought to justice
- 178: Keepum has made my father's release the condition of my ruin
- 179: Maria grasps the old man's hand
- 180: Am I not the subject of slander
- 181: Keepum extinguishes the lights
- 182: He has already heard of the fate of the old man McArthur
- 183: Seargent Stubbs what the charge is
- 184: Succeeded by Keepum and Snivel silently entering her room
- 185: Snivel staggers against the door
- 186: Chief among the group is old Cato
- 187: And Cato returned the recognition
