Dickens, Charles – American Notes for General Circulation

Commissioners at the notion of these seats having arms and backs;

but small spines being of older date than their occupation of the

Board-room at Somerset House, I thought even this provision very

merciful and kind.

Here again, I was greatly pleased with the inscriptions on the

wall, which were scraps of plain morality, easily remembered and

understood: such as ‘Love one another’ – ‘God remembers the

smallest creature in his creation:’ and straightforward advice of

that nature. The books and tasks of these smallest of scholars,

were adapted, in the same judicious manner, to their childish

powers. When we had examined these lessons, four morsels of girls

(of whom one was blind) sang a little song, about the merry month

of May, which I thought (being extremely dismal) would have suited

an English November better. That done, we went to see their

sleeping-rooms on the floor above, in which the arrangements were

no less excellent and gentle than those we had seen below. And

after observing that the teachers were of a class and character

well suited to the spirit of the place, I took leave of the infants

with a lighter heart than ever I have taken leave of pauper infants

yet.

Connected with the House of Industry, there is also an Hospital,

which was in the best order, and had, I am glad to say, many beds

unoccupied. It had one fault, however, which is common to all

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Dickens, Charles – American Notes for General Circulation

American interiors: the presence of the eternal, accursed,

suffocating, red-hot demon of a stove, whose breath would blight

the purest air under Heaven.

There are two establishments for boys in this same neighbourhood.

One is called the Boylston school, and is an asylum for neglected

and indigent boys who have committed no crime, but who in the

ordinary course of things would very soon be purged of that

distinction if they were not taken from the hungry streets and sent

here. The other is a House of Reformation for Juvenile Offenders.

They are both under the same roof, but the two classes of boys

never come in contact.

The Boylston boys, as may be readily supposed, have very much the

advantage of the others in point of personal appearance. They were

in their school-room when I came upon them, and answered correctly,

without book, such questions as where was England; how far was it;

what was its population; its capital city; its form of government;

and so forth. They sang a song too, about a farmer sowing his

seed: with corresponding action at such parts as ”tis thus he

sows,’ ‘he turns him round,’ ‘he claps his hands;’ which gave it

greater interest for them, and accustomed them to act together, in

an orderly manner. They appeared exceedingly well-taught, and not

better taught than fed; for a more chubby-looking full-waistcoated

set of boys, I never saw.

The juvenile offenders had not such pleasant faces by a great deal,

and in this establishment there were many boys of colour. I saw

them first at their work (basket-making, and the manufacture of

palm-leaf hats), afterwards in their school, where they sang a

chorus in praise of Liberty: an odd, and, one would think, rather

aggravating, theme for prisoners. These boys are divided into four

classes, each denoted by a numeral, worn on a badge upon the arm.

On the arrival of a new-comer, he is put into the fourth or lowest

class, and left, by good behaviour, to work his way up into the

first. The design and object of this Institution is to reclaim the

youthful criminal by firm but kind and judicious treatment; to make

his prison a place of purification and improvement, not of

demoralisation and corruption; to impress upon him that there is

but one path, and that one sober industry, which can ever lead him

to happiness; to teach him how it may be trodden, if his footsteps

have never yet been led that way; and to lure him back to it if

they have strayed: in a word, to snatch him from destruction, and

restore him to society a penitent and useful member. The

importance of such an establishment, in every point of view, and

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