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Justice in the By-Ways, a Tale of Life
Chapter 31. The Keno Den, And What May Be Seen In It
F.Colburn Adams
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       _ CHAPTER XXXI. THE KENO DEN, AND WHAT MAY BE SEEN IN IT
       THE clock has just struck twelve. Mr. Snivel and George, passing from the scenes of our last chapter, enter a Keno den,
       A gambling den. situated on Meeting street. "You must get money, George. Here you are nothing without money. Take this, try your hand, make your genius serve you." Mr. Snivel puts twenty dollars into George's hand. They are in a room some twenty by thirty feet in dimensions, dimly-lighted. Standing here and there are gambling tables, around which are seated numerous mechanics, losing, and being defrauded of that for which they have labored hard during the week. Hope, anxiety, and even desperation is pictured on the countenances of the players. Maddened and disappointed, one young man rises from a table, at which sits a craven-faced man sweeping the winnings into his pile, and with profane tongue, says he has lost his all. Another, with flushed face and bloodshot eyes, declares it the sixth time he has lost his earnings here. A third reels confusedly about the room, says a mechanic is but a dog in South Carolina; and the sooner he comes to a dog's end the better.
       Mr. Snivel points George to a table, at which he is soon seated. "Blank-blank-blank!" he reiterates, as the numbers turn up, and one by one the moody bank-keeper sweeps the money into his fast-increasing heap. "Cursed fate!--it is against me," mutters the forlorn man. "Another gone, and yet another! How this deluding, this fascinating money tortures me." With hectic face and agitated nerve, he puts down his last dollar. "Luck's mysterious!" exclaims Mr. Snivel, looking on unmoved, as the man of the moody face declares a blank, and again sweeps the money into his heap. "Gone!" says George, "all's gone now." He rises from his seat, in despair.
       "Don't get frantic, George-be a philosopher-try again-here's a ten. Luck 'll turn," says Mr. Snivel, patting the deluded man familiarly on the shoulder, as he resumes his seat. "Will poverty never cease torturing me? I have tried to be a man, an honest man, a respectable man. And yet, here I am, again cast upon a gambler's sea, struggling with its fearful tempests. How cold, how stone-like the faces around me!" he muses, watching with death-like gaze each number as it turns up. Again he has staked his last dollar; again fortune frowns upon him. Like a furnace of livid flame, the excitement seems burning up his brain. "I am a fool again," he says, throwing the blank number contemptuously upon the table. "Take it-take it, speechless, imperturbable man! Rake it into your pile, for my eyes are dim, and my fortune I must seek elsewhere."
       A noise at the door, as of some one in distress, is heard, and there rushes frantically into the den a pale, dejected-looking woman, bearing in her arms a sick and emaciated babe. "Oh, William! William!--has it come to this?" she shrieks, casting a wild glance round the den, until, with a dark, sad expression, her eye falls upon the object of her search. It is her husband, once a happy mechanic. Enticed by degrees into this den of ruin, becoming fascinated with its games of chance, he is now an habitue. To-night he left his suffering family, lost his all here, and now, having drank to relieve his feelings, lies insensible on the floor. "Come home!--come home! for God's sake come home to your suffering family," cries the woman, vaulting to him and taking him by the hand, her hair floating dishevelled down her shoulders. "I sent Tommy into the street to beg-I am ashamed-and he is picked up by the watch for a thief, a vagrant!" The prostrate man remains insensible to her appeal. Two policemen, who have been quietly neglecting their duties while taking a few chances, sit unmoved. Mr. Snivel thinks the woman better be removed. "Our half-starved mechanics," he says, "are a depraved set; and these wives they bring with them from the North are a sort of cross between a lean stage-driver and a wildcat. She seems a poor, destitute creature-just what they all come to, out here." Mr. Snivel shrugs his shoulders, bids George good night, and takes his departure. "Take care of yourself, George," he says admonitiously, as the destitute man watches him take his leave. The woman, frantic at the coldness and apathy manifested for her distress, lays her babe hurriedly upon the floor, and with passion and despair darting from her very eyes, makes a lunge across the keno table at the man who sits stoically at the bank. In an instant everything is turned into uproar and confusion. Glasses, chairs, and tables, are hurled about the floor; shriek follows shriek--"help! pity me! murder!" rises above the confusion, the watch without sound the alarm, and the watch within suddenly become conscious of their duty. In the midst of all the confusion, a voice cries out: "My pocket book-my pocket book!--I have been robbed." A light flashes from a guardsman's lantern, and George Mullholland is discovered with the forlorn woman in his arms-she clings tenaciously to her babe-rushing into the street. _
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Preface
Chapter 1. Tom Swiggs' Seventh Introduction On Board Of The Brig Standfast
Chapter 2. Madame Flamingo-Her Distinguished Patrons...
Chapter 3. In Which The Reader Is Presented With A Varied Picture
Chapter 4. A Few Reflections On The Cure Of Vice
Chapter 5. In Which Mr. Snivel, Commonly Called The Accommodation Man...
Chapter 6. Containing Sundry Matters Appertaining To This History
Chapter 7. In Which Is Seen A Commingling Of Citizens
Chapter 8. What Takes Place Between George Mullholland And Mr. Snivel
Chapter 9. In Which A Gleam Of Light Is Shed On The History Of Anna Bonard
Chapter 10. A Continuation Of George Mullholland's History
Chapter 11. In Which The Reader Is Introduced To Mr. Absalom M'arthur
Chapter 12. In Which Are Matters The Reader May Have Anticipated
Chapter 13. Mrs. Swiggs Comes To The Rescue Of The House Of The Foreign Missions
Chapter 14. Mr. M'arthur Makes A Discovery
Chapter 15. What Madame Flamingo Wants To Be
Chapter 16. In Which Tom Swiggs Gains His Liberty, And What Befalls Him
Chapter 17. In Which There Is An Interesting Meeting
Chapter 18. Anna Bonard Seeks An Interview With The Antiquary
Chapter 19. A Secret Interview
Chapter 20. Lady Swiggs Encounters Difficulties On Her Arrival In New York
Chapter 21. Mr. Snivel Pursues His Search For The Vote-Cribber
Chapter 22. Mrs. Swiggs Falls Upon A Modern Heathen World
Chapter 23. In Which The Very Best Intentions Are Seen To Fail
Chapter 24. Mr. Snivel Advises George Mullholland How To Make Strong Love
Chapter 25. A Slight Change In The Picture
Chapter 26. In Which A High Functionary Is Made To Play A Singular Part
Chapter 27. The House Of The Nine Nations, And What May Be Seen In It
Chapter 28. In Which Is Presented Another Picture Of The House Of The Nine Nations
Chapter 29. In Which May Be Seen A Few Of Our Common Evils
Chapter 30. Containing Various Things Appertaining To This History
Chapter 31. The Keno Den, And What May Be Seen In It
Chapter 32. Which A State Of Society Is Slightly Revealed
Chapter 33. In Which There Is A Singular Revelation
Chapter 34. The Two Pictures
Chapter 35. In Which A Little Light Is Shed Upon The Character Of Our Chivalry
Chapter 36. In Which A Law Is Seen To Serve Base Purposes
Chapter 37. A Short Chapter Of Ordinary Events
Chapter 38. A Story Without Which This History Would Be Found Wanting
Chapter 39. A Story With Many Counterparts
Chapter 40. In Which The Law Is Seen To Conflict With Our Cherished Chivalry
Chapter 41. In Which Justice Is Seen To Be Very Accommodating
Chapter 42. In Which Some Light Is Thrown On The Plot Of This History
Chapter 43. In Which Is Revealed The One Error...
Chapter 44. In Which Is Recorded Events The Reader May Not Have Expected
Chapter 45. Another Shade Of The Picture
Chapter 46. The Soul May Gain Strength In A Dreary Cell
Chapter 47. In Which Is A Happy Meeting, And Something Pleasing
Chapter 48. A Few Words With The Reader