ladder into the pit of perdition, excessive
drinking; second step, loss of character;
third step, loss of employment; fourth
 step, the pawnbroker; fifth step, more
drink; sixth step, desperation; seventh
 step, beggary and begging letters; eighth
step, prison; ninth step, the workhouse.
He had been a 'jolly good fellow,' as
the saying is; but the jolly good fellows
with whom he loved to associate, or who
loved to associate with him, forgot his
good fellowship as soon as his coat began
to grow threadbare, and as he himself
 began to hint that the loan of half-a-crown
would be useful. Nobody sent 
him any tea or tobacco. Nobody ever so
much as inquired after him. Only once a
 poor penny-a-liner—a real penny-a-liner,
with scarcely a shoe to his feet, and
with eyes that looked excessively beery—
who came to report an inquest on the body
 of an old woman found dead in her bed,
gave him a sixpence. I am sure the poor
young man could ill afford it. 'Thank you,
 my dear fellow,' said Montague, 'I accept
it as a loan. Keep out of this place, if you
can; except in the way of business. There'll
 be an inquest on me some day, perhaps, and
as you know something about me, you can
 lengthen out your report to the extent of
sixpence; and so repay yourself!' Now,
this Montague was one of the class that
ought not to come into the workhouse, and
he could certainly have kept out if he
 would.
"There was another with me up to a
short time ago, who had been a great
cheese merchant. He knew all about
 cheese, and made a fortune out of it. His
 name was—never mind—call him Jones;
 and before he was fifty he had scraped up
fifty thousand pounds, all out of cheese.
Unluckily for him, he retired from the
cheese business to live quietly on his money.
 But quietness did not suit him, and he had
scarcely been a twelvemonth trying to live
like a gentleman, his idea of a gentleman
 being a person who had nothing to do,
than he could stand that kind of life no
 longer, and went rioting roaring mad into
speculations of all kinds. What it had
 taken him five-and-twenty years to build
up with honest cheeses he knocked down
 in three years with rash, foolish, grasping
speculations, that had no bottom in
them. He 'bust up,' as the Yankees
say, and escaped with about a thousand
pounds.  With that he went into the
cheese business again. But there was
 another man in his old shop, who had
'got the pull,' as they say, and Jones
 could not rival the new man, for all his
knowledge of the article. Besides, he was
 down; and I do believe, whatever the
 world may say to the contrary, that when
 a man is down everybody, or almost everybody,
has a malicious pleasure in trying to
keep him down. The world will help a
young man forward, if he be honest, and
 straightforward, and likely to do well;
but it won't help an old man who has
 had his chance and lost it. At least,
that's my experience.  When you have
 come to be sixty, you must have often been
in people's way; and if those people live,
 and have got you out of the way, they
don't give themselves much trouble to help
 you into the way again. You are under
 the feet of the crowd, and the crowd rushing
on its own business, will trample you to
 death, without thinking about you. After
 four or five years of new struggle in the
cheese line, Mr. Jones gave it up as a bad
job, and passed into my care. He passed
out of it, however, before long, not into
 the next world, which might have been
about the best thing, but into the County
 Lunatic Asylum. There he is still, and
 great upon cheese.  He buys cheese by
 the thousand tons at a time, in his
 fancy, and drives a roaring trade.
Perhaps the poor old man is happy. I trust
 he may be; but if he had had ordinary
common sense, he would neither have
 come to the workhouse nor to the lunatic
 asylum."
"It is good, after all," said I, "that
there are workhouses and lunatic asylums
to receive these waifs and strays of
Fortune. But for my part, I am far more
 interested in the last of the three classes
of people into which you divided the world
—those who must come to the workhouse,
struggle against it as they will. It seems
to me that these are among the very
saddest products of our civilisation, and that
such people, call them what we will, are born
slaves and pariahs, though they may not
know it, to whom the world offers nothing
 from the outset to the end of their career
 but toil; toil from youth to maturity, and
from maturity to old age, until the grave
 receives them."
"No," said Mr. Gomm, all his double
consonant bristling in his face. "You are
not altogether right.  There are such
 people, too many of them, God knows,
and I shall speak of them by-and-bye;
but the mass of the poor—I know them, or ought
 to know—are not people who do, or who