London Labour and the London Poor, Volume 1
Mayhew, Henry
1861
Of Religious Tract Sellers.
THE sellers of religious tracts are now, I am informed, at the least, about , but they were at time, far more numerous. When penny books were few and very small, religious tracts were by far the cheapest things in print. It is common, moreover, for a religious society, or an individual, to give a poor person, children especially, tracts for sale. A great many tract sellers, from to years ago, were, or pre- | |
242 | tended to be, maimed old soldiers or sailors. The traffic is now in the hands of what may be called an anomalous body of men. More than half of the tract sellers are foreigners, such as Malays, Hindoos, and Negros. Of them, some cannot speak English, and some—who earn a spare subsistence by selling Christian tracts — are Mahometans, or worshippers of Bramah! The man whose portrait supplies the daguerrotyped illustration of this number is unable to speak a word of English, and the absence of an interpreter, through some accident, prevented his statement being taken at the time appointed. I shall give it, however, with the necessary details on the subject, under another head. |
With some men and boys, I am informed, tract-selling is but a pretext for begging. | |