The Mysteries of Modern London
CONTENTS
Unrecorded crimes—The mystery of the grave—The fascination of the unknown—The shady friends we make—The romance of the railway carriage—Who and what is your neighbour?—How I find my way about
A MYSTERY is, in a popular sense, that which cannot be easily explained; a circumstance that cannot be readily accounted for. Something is, but how or why we cannot tell. The mysteries of modern London are as the sands of the seashore. The mighty city itself is a mystery. The lives of thousands of its inhabitants are mysteries. In the glare and clamour of the noonday, as in the darkness and silence of the night, the mysteries arise, sometimes to startle the world, sometimes to attract so little attention that the story of them never reaches the public ear.
There are mysteries blazoned forth with all the glamour that the contents-bill and the headline can give them, and there are mysteries that are jealously guarded by those high in authority, lest public curiosity should seek to fathom them.
There are mysteries in splendid mansions and in squalid garrets which contain all the elements of criminal romance, and yet pass with the police and the press as matter-of-fact incidents of London's daily life.
The great river hides more mysteries than ever the Seine gave up to the Paris Morgue, and many of them end with a little rest in a quiet mortuary, a found drowned hand-bill posted for a day or two on a police-station notice-board, an inquest, an open verdict, and a pauper's funeral.
But among the victims have been men and women the story of whose doing to death would have thrilled the masses and the classes alike; in some instances would have revealed the presence in our midst of active agents of the most desperate secret societies in the world.
There are no mysteries of modern London more terrible than its unrecorded ones. There are disappearances that are never chronicled; murders that are never discovered; victims of foul play who go certified to the grave as having succumbed to natural causes.
George R. Sims
THE MYSTERIES OF MODERN LONDON
Author Of "How The Poor Live," "Mary Jane's Memoirs," "Ballads Of Babylon"
With Frontispiece In Colours By S. Spurrier
London
1906
THE MYSTERIES OF MODERN LONDON
CHAPTER II—BY THE WATERSIDE
CHAPTER III—AT THE FASHIONABLE HOTEL
CHAPTER IV—IN A COMMON LODGING-HOUSE
CHAPTER V—THE WAYS OF CRIME
CHAPTER VI—IN THE CITY OF REFUGE
CHAPTER VII—BEHIND THE SCENES
CHAPTER VIII—THE HOUSES OF TRAGEDY
CHAPTER IX—LUNATICS AT LARGE
CHAPTER X—"FROM INFORMATION RECEIVED"
CHAPTER XI—THE MYSTERY OF MONEY SPENT
CHAPTER XII—THE UNKNOWN FATE
CHAPTER XIII—THE FAMILY SKELETON
CHAPTER XIV—THE ROMANCE OF POVERTY
CHAPTER XV—THE GARDEN OF GUILT
CHAPTER XVI—THE BLACK SHEEP
CHAPTER XVII—CHILDREN AND CRIME
CHAPTER XVIII—BEHIND BRICK WALLS
CHAPTER XIX—THE SOCIAL MASK
CHAPTER XX.—THE SINS OF THE FATHERS
CHAPTER XXI.—THE ROMANCE OF REALITY
CHAPTER XXII.—SOME CONTRASTS
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CHAPTER XXIII.—AT DEAD OF NIGHT
CHAPTER XXIV—THE UNDIVULGED SECRET