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قراءة كتاب The Autobiography of a Thief

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The Autobiography of a Thief

The Autobiography of a Thief

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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The Autobiography of a Thief.

Title Page

The Autobiography of
a Thief


Recorded by

HUTCHINS HAPGOOD

Author of "The Spirit of the Ghetto," etc.


NEW YORK
FOX, DUFFIELD & COMPANY
1903

Copyright, 1903, By
Fox, Duffield & Company


Entered at the Library of Congress, Washington, U. S. A.


Entered at Stationers' Hall, London, England.


Published May, 1903.

"Oh, happy he who can still hope to emerge from this sea of error!"

Faust.

"There is no man doth a wrong for the wrong's sake, but thereby to purchase himself profit, or pleasure, or honour, or the like; therefore why should I be angry with a man for loving himself better than me? And if any man should do wrong merely out of ill-nature, why, yet it is but like the thorn or briar, which prick and scratch because they can do no other."

Bacon.

CONTENTS.

Chapter   Page
  Editor's Note 9
I. Boyhood and Early Crime 15
II. My First Fall 34
III. Mixed Ale Life in the Fourth and Seventh Wards 50
IV. When the Graft Was Good 73
V. Mamie and the Negotiable Bonds 89
VI. What the Burglar Faces 107
VII. In Stir 132
VIII. In Stir (Continued) 154
IX. In Stir and Out 182
X. At the Graft Again 202
XI. Back to Prison 228
XII. On the Outside Again 255
XIII. In the Mad-House 300
XIV. Out of Hell 332
  Editor's Postscript 348

Editor's Note.

I met the ex-pickpocket and burglar whose autobiography follows soon after his release from a third term in the penitentiary. For several weeks I was not particularly interested in him. He was full of a desire to publish in the newspapers an exposé of conditions obtaining in two of our state institutions, his motive seeming partly revenge and partly a very genuine feeling that he had come in contact with a systematic crime against humanity. But as I continued to see more of him, and learned much about his life, my interest grew; for I soon perceived that he not only had led a typical thief's life, but was also a man of more than common natural intelligence, with a gift of vigorous expression. With little schooling he had yet educated himself, mainly by means of the prison libraries, until he had a good and individually expressed acquaintance with many of the English classics, and with some of the masterpieces of philosophy.

That this ex-convict, when a boy on the East Side of New York City, should have taken to the "graft" seemed to me, as he talked about it, the most natural thing in the world. His parents were honest, but ignorant and poor. One of his brothers, a normal and honorable man, is a truck driver with a large family; and his relatives and honest friends in general belong to the most modest class of working people. The swell among them is another brother, who is a policeman; but Jim, the ex-convict, is by far the cleverest and most intelligent of the lot. I have often seen him and his family together, on Saturday nights, when the clan gathers in the truckman's house for a good time, and he is the life of the occasion, and admired by the others. Jim was an unusually energetic and ambitious boy, but the respectable people he knew did not appeal to his imagination. As he played on the

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