About This Book
A collection of linked vignettes portrays mid‑nineteenth‑century urban life in New York, focusing on poverty, addiction, and the daily struggles of street vendors, ragpickers, and sewing girls. Scenes move from slum tenements, fires, and arrests to temperance meetings, charitable efforts, fleeting kindnesses, and tragic outcomes. Recurring sketches follow young women and children caught between desperation and small mercies while examining moral choices and social vice. The volume pairs narrative sketches with moral commentary and illustrations to depict hardship and argue for temperance, reform, and compassionate relief.
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