INDEX.

Part I.

Rambles ingipsydom.

page

Origin of the Gipsies and their Names

[1]

Article in The Daily News

[8]

The Travels of the Gipsies

[9]

Acts of Parliament relating to the Gipsies

[16]

Article in The Edinburgh Review

[23]

,, The Saturday Review

[25]

Professor Bott on the Gipsies

[29]

The Changars of India

[32]

The Doms of India

[33]

The Sanseeas of India

[35]

The Nuts of India

[36]

Grellmann on the Gipsies

[39]

Gipsies of Notting Hill

[40]

Rev. Charles Wesley

[42]

The Number of Gipsies

[44]

Part II.

Commencement ofthe Crusade.

Work begun

[48]

Letter to The Standard and DailyChronicle

[51]

Leading Article in The Standard

[53]

Correspondence in The Standard

[59]

Mr. Leland’s Letter, &c., &c.

[60]

My Reply

[66]

Leicester Free Press

[69]

Article in The Derby Daily Telegraph

[70]

The Figaro

[73]

Letter in The Daily News

[75]

Mr. Gorrie’s Letter

[78]

My Reply

[79]

Leading Article in The Standard

[82]

May’s Aldershot Advertiser

[87]

Article in Hand and Heart

[90]

Article in The Illustrated London News

[91]

Leading Article in The Daily News

[92]

Social Science Congress Paper

[95]

Article in Birmingham Daily Mail

[102]

The Weekly Dispatch

[106]

The Weekly Times

[109]

The Croydon Chronicle

[117]

Primitive Methodist

[119]

Illustrated LondonNews

[121]

The Quiver

[126]

Letter in Daily News and Chronicle

[127]

Article in Christian World

[129]

,, Sunday School Chronicle

[132]

Unitarian Herald

[134]

Weekly Times

[135]

Part III.

The Treatmentthe Gipsies have received in this Country.

The Social History of our Country

[142]

Acts of Parliament concerning the Gipsies

[145]

Treatment of the Gipsies in Scotland, Spain, andDenmark

[150]

Efforts put forth to improve their Condition

[155]

His Majesty George III. and the Dying Gipsy

[161]

Mr. Crabb at Southampton in 1827

[164]

Fiction and the Gipsies

[166]

Hubert Petalengro’s Gipsy Trip to Norway

[169]

Esmeralda’s Song

[174]

George Borrow’s Travels in Spain

[177]

Romance and Poetry about the Gipsies

[183]

Dean Stanley’s Prize Poem

[190]

Part IV.

Gipsy Life in aVariety of Aspects.

Persecution, Missionary Efforts, and Romance

[192]

The Gipsy Contrast and Punch

[193]

Gipsy Slang

[195]

Rees and Borrow’s Description of the Gipsies

[199]

Leland among the Russian Gipsies

[201]

Burning a Russian Fortune-teller

[203]

A Welsh Gipsy’s Letter

[208]

Ryley Bosvil and his Poetry: a Sad Example

[213]

My Visit to Canning Town Gipsies

[220]

Article in The Weekly Times

[222]

My Son’s Visit to Barking Road

[227]

Mrs. Simpson, a Christian Gipsy

[228]

Part V.

The SadCondition of the Gipsies, with Suggestions for theirImprovement.

Gipsy Beauty and Songsters

[237]

Gipsy Poetry

[239]

Smart and Crofton

[239]

A Little Gipsy Girl’s Letter

[242]

Scotch Gipsies

[243]

Gipsy Trickery

[244]

My Visit to the Gipsies at Kensal Green

[248]

Fortune-telling and other Sins

[249]

Wretched Condition of the Gipsies

[254]

Hungarian Gipsies

[259]

Visit to Cherry Island

[260]

The Cleanliness and Food of the Gipsies

[262]

A Gipsy Woman’s Opinion upon Religion

[264]

Gipsy Faithfulness and Fidelity

[264]

A Visit to Hackney Marshes

[266]

Sickness among the Gipsies

[270]

A Gipsy Woman’s Funeral

[271]

Gipsies and the Workhouse

[274]

Education of the Gipsy Children Sixty Years ago

[274]

Mission Work among the Gipsies

[275]

Gipsy Children upon Turnham Green and WandsworthCommon

[276]

Sad Condition of the Gipsy Children

[277]

The Hardships of the Gipsy Women

[281]

Efforts put forth in Hungary and other Countries

[282]

Things made by the Gipsies

[284]

Pity for the Gipsies

[285]

What the State has done for the Thugs

[286]

The Remedy

[287]

My Reasons for Government Interference

[289]

Illustrations.

page

Frontispiece. Among the GipsyChildren.

A Gipsy Beauty

[1]

A Gentleman Gipsy’s Tent and his dog“Grab”

[42]

A Gipsy’s Home for Man and Wife and Six Children

[48]

Gipsies Camping among the Heath

[66]

Gipsy Quarters, Mary Place

[76]

A Farmer’s Pig that does not like a Gipsy’sTent

[96]

Gipsies’ Winter Quarters, Latimer Road

[108]

A Gipsy Tent for Two Men, their Wives, and ElevenChildren, and in which “Deliverance” was born

[118]

A Gipsy Knife Grinder’s Home

[122]

A Gipsy Girl Washing Clothes

[132]

A Respectable Gipsy and his Family “on theRoad”

[170]

A Bachelor Gipsy’s Bed-room

[174]

A Gipsy’s Van, near Notting Hill

[192]

A Fortune-telling Gipsy enjoying her Pipe

[222]

Inside a Christian Gipsy’s Van—Mrs.Simpson’s

[228]

Inside a Gipsy Fortune-teller’s Van

[236]

Gipsy Fortune tellers Cooking their Evening Meal

[248]

Outside a Christian Gipsy’s Van

[272]

Four Little Gipsies sitting for the Artist

[277]

A Top Bed-room in a Gipsy’s Van

[281]

Part I.—Rambles in Gipsydom.

The origin of the Gipsies, as to who they are; when they became regarded as a peculiar race of wandering, wastrel, ragamuffin vagabonds; the primary object they had in view in setting out upon their shuffling, skulking, sneaking, dark pilgrimage; whether they were driven at the point of the sword, or allured onwards by the love of gold, designing dark deeds of plunder, cruelty, and murder, or anxious to seek a haven of rest; the route by which they travelled, whether over hill and dale, by the side of the river and valley, skirting the edge of forest and dell, delighting in the jungle, or pitching their tent in the desert, following the shores of the ocean, or topping the mountains; whether they were Indians, Persians, Egyptians, Ishmaelites, Roumanians, Peruvians, Turks, Hungarians, Spaniards, or Bohemians; the end of their destination; their religious views—if any—their habits and modes of life have been during the last three or four centuries wrapped, surrounded, and encircled in mystery, according to some writers who have been studying the Gipsy character. They have been a theme upon which a “bookworm” could gloat, a chest of secret drawers into which the curious delight to pry, a difficult problem in Euclid for the mathematician to solve; and an unreadable book for the author. A conglomeration of languages for the

scholar, a puzzle for the historian, and a subject for the novelist. These are points which it is not the object of this book to attempt to clear up and settle; all it aims at, as in the case of my “Cry of the Children from the Brick-yards of England,” and “Our Canal Population,” is, to tell “A Dark Chapter in the Annals of the Poor,” little wanderers, houseless, homeless, and friendless in our midst. At the same time it will be necessary to take a glimpse at some of the leading features of the historical part of their lives in order to get, to some extent, a knowledge of the “little ones” whose pitiable case I have ventured to take in hand.

Paint the words “mystery” and “secrecy” upon any man’s house, and you at once make him a riddle for the cunning, envious, and crafty to try to solve; and this has been the case with the Gipsies for generations, and the consequence has been, they have trotted out kings, queens, princes, bishops, nobles, ladies and gentlemen of all grades, wise men, fools, and fanatics, to fill their coffers, while they have been standing by laughing in their sleeves at the foolishness of the foolish.