"It was not hard to "get in" with the children. Finding that I was willing to play with them at their games in the alleys and on top of their rickety tenement-houses, they edged up to me rather cordially, and we were soon "pals." There was nothing very new in their life, but I was struck with the great interest they took in their petty thefts. In the midst of the most boisterous play they would gladly stop if some one suggested a clever plan by which even a can of preserves could be "swiped," as they called it, and the next instant they were trying to carry it to a finish. They were not what I could call instinctive criminals—far from it; but a long intimacy with the practices of outlawry, though small in their way, had so deadened their moral sense that sneak-thieving came to them almost as naturally as it does to the kleptomaniac."
Mr. Flynt's magazine articles have shown him to be an expert in the life of Vagabondia; and this volume, in which the best of them are embodied, has the merit of being not only intensely interesting, but from a scientific point of view important. According to Dr. Andrew D. White, Ambassador to Germany, America is getting to be looked upon by the criminals of Europe as a happy hunting-ground, and in his judgment Mr. Flynt's work, which opens with a study of "The Criminal in the Open" must be productive of much good. The author has "tramped with tramps" in Russia, Germany and England as well as the United States. To the general reader his work will reveal an entirely new world.
"This book, fascinating from the point of the mere reader, is a genuine contribution to sociology." -Daily Chronicle
"He is so thoroughly at home in the underworld that he ignores many things in it which would impinge sharply on the consciousness of an outsider. Whether by the early and excessive use of narcotics or by long-continued roughing it, his sensibilities have become so blunted as to be almost indifferent to physical hardships. Cold, filth, wetness, hunger pass with little comment. Beggary and theft have become the day's work. Though he does not write of these things with the unblushing candor of De Foe, he sense of life is similar, and his style has the same matter-of-fact sincerity. There is something wholesome and manly in his declaration that he has discovered nothing precious for the spirit in the Beyond of the vagabond....Flynt himself sums up his impressions thus: 'Laziness, loafing, wanderlust, and begging are today what they ever have been - qualities and habits passed on from generation to generation, practically intact.' The value of his work is in the clear, unrefracted light which it sheds, not over civilization on a romantic truancy, but over civilization going quietly, furtively to the dogs." -The Nation
"Mr. Flynt has been a complete tramp in many countries....His name among the American tramps is 'Cigarette,' and at those times his other character and interests are not suspected by the vagabonds. In the intervals between his tramps he moves in the world of the best intelligence and social rank. Though he has been in jails, ridden on the trucks of fast expresses, spent nights on freight trains, begged from door to door, such a life would never be suspected by the man who meets him in the ordinary course of polite society....His manner in conversation, as well as in writing, is simple and direct. His interest is in facts....He has said on more than one occasion that he would like, above everything, to be a professor of criminology, for he looks upon the criminal as the aristocrat among tramps, on the tramp as a 'discouraged criminal." -New York Commercial Advertiser
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: Brand New. 318 pages. 9.00x6.00x0.72 inches. This item is printed on demand. Seller Inventory # zk1541076931