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Justice in the By-Ways A Tale of Life

Chapter 7 IN WHICH IS SEEN A COMMINGLING OF CITIZENS.

Word Count: 4034    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

soned equipages. The town is on tip-toe to be there; we reluctantly follow it. An hundred gaudily-decorated drinking saloon are filled with gaudier-dressed men. In loudest accent rin

shrine of midnight revelry; we bring licentiousness to our homes, but we

s the same as that leading to the house of the old hostess. A gaily-equipped carriage approaches. We hear the loud, coarse laughing of those it so buoyantly bears, then there comes full to view the glare of yellow silks and red satins, and doubtful jewels-worn by denizens from whose faded brows the laurel wreath hath fallen. How shrunken with the sorrow of their wretched lives, and yet how sportive they seem! The pale gaslight throws a spectre-like hue over their paler fea

logian, having assured him he would find a place to stow Tom Swiggs in,) wonders where the fashionable world of Charleston can be going? It is go

n a dress of sky-blue satin, that ever and anon streams, cloudlike, behind her, and a lace cap of approved fashion, with pink strings nicely bordered in gimp, and a rich Honiton cape, jauntily thrown over her shoulders, and secured under the chin with a great cluster of blazing diamonds, and rows of unpolished pearls at her wrists, which are immersed in crimped ruffles, she doddles up and down the hall in a state of general excitement. A corpulent colored man, dressed in the garb of a beadle,-a large staff in his right hand, a cocked hat on his head, and broad white stripes down his flowing coat, stands midway between the parlor doors. He is fussy enough, and stupid enough, for a Paddington beadle. Now Madame Flamingo looks scornfully at him, scolds him, pushes him aside; he is only a slave she purchased for the purpose; she commands that he gracefully touch his hat (she snatches it from his head, and having elevated it over her own, performs the delicate motion she would have him imitate) to every visitor. The least neglect of duty will incur (she tells him in language he cannot mistake) the pen

rdained it," smiles

ates could not o

for consulting them at all." She espies, for her trade of sin hath made keen her eye, the venerable figure of Judge Sleepyhorn advancing up the hall, masked. "Couldn't get along without you," she lisps, tripping towards him, and greeting him with the familiarity of an intimate friend. "I'm rather aristocratic, you

y favored, altogether! Fine weather, and the prospect o

oman!" interrupts the hostess, bowing a

! Cares no more about rules and precedents, on the bench, than he does for the rights and prec

acious bow keeping time with the motion of her hand, "he

fingering his long Saxon beard, and eyeing her mischievously. She sees a bevy of richly-dressed persons advancing up the hall in high glee. Ind

in his hand upon h

you want? I've shut up the great Italian opera, with its three squalling prima donnas, which in turn has shut up the poor, silly Empresario, as they call him; and the St. Cecilia I have just used up. I'm a team in my way, you see;-run all these fashionable oppositions right into bankruptcy." Never were words spoken with more t

r she regards a large score on the passport to a better world. A great marble stairway winds its way upward at the further end of the hall and near it are two small balconies, one on each side, presenting barricades of millinery surmo

ho has just saluted her with urbane deportment, "I must preserve the otium cum dignitate of my (did I get it right?) standing in society. I don't always get these Latin sayings right. Our Congressmen don't. And, you see,

he exclaims, closing the door quickly after him, "you will be discovered and exposed. I am not surprised at your passion for her, nor the means by which you seek to destroy the relations existing between her and George Mullholland. It is an eviden

creature and the good opinion of better society. The resolution to retain the good opinion of society is doing noble battle in your heart; but it is the weaker vessel, and it always will be so with a man of your mould, inasmuch as such resolutions are backed up by the les

ad as if heedless of the admonition, an

him by his judicial title, says

former in dresses as varied in hue as the fires of remorse burning out their unuttered thoughts. Two and two they jeer and crowd their way along into the spacious hall, the walls of which are frescoed in extravagant mythological designs, the roof painted in fret work, and the c

ssfully compare it. And to seek a comparison in the old world, where vi

nk rosettes, officiate as masters of ceremony, and form a crescent in front of the thronging procession, steps grad

-colored plush; at the signal of a lusty-tongued call-master, strike up a march, to which the motley th

of dissipation. There the grave and chivalric planter sports with the nice young man, who is cultivating a beard and his way into the by-ways. A little further on the suspicious looking gambler sits freely conversing with the man whom a degrading public

to wrong doing? Does it not show that the wrong-doer and the criminally inclined, too often receive encouragement by the example of those whose duty it is

ike into the foreground, then whirling seductively into the shadowy vista, where the joyous laugh dies out in the din of voices. The excitement has seized upon the hea

tal splendor of this grotesque assembly. He doesn't know who wouldn't patronize such a house! It suddenly

gifts on this fair creature, to whose charms no painter could give a touch more fascinating. This girl, whose elastic step and erect carriage contrasts strangely with the languid forms about her, is Anna Bonard, the neglected, the betrayed. There passes and repasses her, now contemplating her with a curious stare, then muttering inaudibly, a man of portly figure, in mask and cowl. He touches with a delicate hand his watch-guard, we see two sharp, lecherous eyes peering through the domino; he folds his arms and pauses a few seconds, as if to survey the metal of her companion, then crosses and recrosses her path. Presently his singular demeanor attracts her attention, a curl of sarcasm is seen on her lip, her brow darkens, her dark orbs flash as of fire,-all the heart-burnings of a soul stung with shame are seen to quicken and make ghastly those features that but a moment before shone lambent as summer lightning. He pauses as with a look of withering scorn she scans him from head to foot, raises covertly her left hand, tossing carelessly her glossy hair on her shoulder, and with lightning quickness snatches with her right the

own bosom. The weapon fell gory to the floor-the blood trickled down her bodice-a cry of "murder" resounded through the hall! The administrator of justice rushed out of the door as the unhappy girl swooned in the arms of her partner. A scene so confused and wild that it bewilders the brain, now ensued. M

way through the crowd, clasps Anna affectionately in his arms,

man, nobody thinks anything of it," he continues. And Mr. Soloman being an excellent diplomatist, does, with the aid of the hostess, her twelve masters of ceremony, her beadle, and two policemen, forthwith bring the house to a more orderly condition. But night has rolled into the page of the past, the gray dawn of morning is peeping in at the half-closed windows, the lights burning in the chandeliers shed a pale glow over the wearied features of those who drag, as it were, their languid bodies to the stifled music of unwilling slaves. And while daylight seems modestly contending with the vulgar glare within, there appears among the pale revellers a paler ghost, who, having stalked thrice up and down the hall, preserving the frigidity and ghostliness of the tomb, answering not the questions that are put to him, and otherwise deporting himself as becometh a gh

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1 Chapter 1 TOM SWIGGS' SEVENTH INTRODUCTION ON BOARD OF THE BRIG STANDFAST.2 Chapter 2 MADAME FLAMINGO-HER DISTINGUISHED PATRONS, AND HER VERY RESPECTABLE HOUSE.3 Chapter 3 IN WHICH THE READER IS PRESENTED WITH A VARIED PICTURE.4 Chapter 4 A FEW REFLECTIONS ON THE CURE OF VICE.5 Chapter 5 IN WHICH MR. SNIVEL, COMMONLY CALLED THE ACCOMMODATION MAN, IS INTRODUCED, AND WHAT TAKES PLACE BETWEEN HIM AND MRS. SWIGGS.6 Chapter 6 CONTAINING SUNDRY MATTERS APPERTAINING TO THIS HISTORY.7 Chapter 7 IN WHICH IS SEEN A COMMINGLING OF CITIZENS.8 Chapter 8 WHAT TAKES PLACE BETWEEN GEORGE MULLHOLLAND AND MR. SNIVEL.9 Chapter 9 IN WHICH A GLEAM OF LIGHT IS SHED ON THE HISTORY OF ANNA BONARD.10 Chapter 10 A CONTINUATION OF GEORGE MULLHOLLAND'S HISTORY.11 Chapter 11 IN WHICH THE READER IS INTRODUCED TO MR. ABSALOM M'ARTHUR.12 Chapter 12 IN WHICH ARE MATTERS THE READER MAY HAVE ANTICIPATED.13 Chapter 13 MRS. SWIGGS COMES TO THE RESCUE OF THE HOUSE OF THE FOREIGN MISSIONS.14 Chapter 14 MR. M'ARTHUR MAKES A DISCOVERY.15 Chapter 15 WHAT MADAME FLAMINGO WANTS TO BE.16 Chapter 16 IN WHICH TOM SWIGGS GAINS HIS LIBERTY, AND WHAT BEFALLS HIM.17 Chapter 17 IN WHICH THERE IS AN INTERESTING MEETING.18 Chapter 18 ANNA BONARD SEEKS AN INTERVIEW WITH THE ANTIQUARY.19 Chapter 19 A SECRET INTERVIEW.20 Chapter 20 LADY SWIGGS ENCOUNTERS DIFFICULTIES ON HER ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK.21 Chapter 21 MR. SNIVEL PURSUES HIS SEARCH FOR THE VOTE-CRIBBER.22 Chapter 22 MRS. SWIGGS FALLS UPON A MODERN HEATHEN WORLD.23 Chapter 23 IN WHICH THE VERY BEST INTENTIONS ARE SEEN TO FAIL.24 Chapter 24 MR. SNIVEL ADVISES GEORGE MULLHOLLAND HOW TO MAKE STRONG LOVE.25 Chapter 25 A SLIGHT CHANGE IN THE PICTURE.26 Chapter 26 IN WHICH A HIGH FUNCTIONARY IS MADE TO PLAY A SINGULAR PART.27 Chapter 27 THE HOUSE OF THE NINE NATIONS, AND WHAT MAY BE SEEN IN IT.28 Chapter 28 IN WHICH IS PRESENTED ANOTHER PICTURE OF THE HOUSE OF THE NINE NATIONS.29 Chapter 29 IN WHICH MAY BE SEEN A FEW OF OUR COMMON EVILS.30 Chapter 30 CONTAINING VARIOUS THINGS APPERTAINING TO THIS HISTORY.31 Chapter 31 THE KENO DEN, AND WHAT MAY BE SEEN IN IT.32 Chapter 32 WHICH A STATE OF SOCIETY IS SLIGHTLY REVEALED.33 Chapter 33 IN WHICH THERE IS A SINGULAR REVELATION.34 Chapter 34 THE TWO PICTURES.35 Chapter 35 IN WHICH A LITTLE LIGHT IS SHED UPON THE CHARACTER OF OUR CHIVALRY.36 Chapter 36 IN WHICH A LAW IS SEEN TO SERVE BASE PURPOSES.37 Chapter 37 A SHORT CHAPTER OF ORDINARY EVENTS.38 Chapter 38 A STORY WITHOUT WHICH THIS HISTORY WOULD BE FOUND WANTING.39 Chapter 39 A STORY WITH MANY COUNTERPARTS.40 Chapter 40 IN WHICH THE LAW IS SEEN TO CONFLICT WITH OUR CHERISHED CHIVALRY.41 Chapter 41 IN WHICH JUSTICE IS SEEN TO BE VERY ACCOMMODATING.42 Chapter 42 IN WHICH SOME LIGHT IS THROWN ON THE PLOT OF THIS HISTORY.43 Chapter 43 IN WHICH IS REVEALED THE ONE ERROR THAT BROUGHT SO MUCH SUFFERING UPON MANY.44 Chapter 44 IN WHICH IS RECORDED EVENTS THE READER MAY NOT HAVE EXPECTED.45 Chapter 45 ANOTHER SHADE OF THE PICTURE.46 Chapter 46 THE SOUL MAY GAIN STRENGTH IN A DREARY CELL.47 Chapter 47 IN WHICH IS A HAPPY MEETING, AND SOMETHING PLEASING.48 Chapter 48 A FEW WORDS WITH THE READER.