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Title: Ragged Dick, Or, Street Life in New York with the Boot-Blacks
Author: Alger, Horatio, Jr.
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Ragged Dick, Or, Street Life in New York with the Boot-Blacks" ***


Ragged Dick

OR,
STREET LIFE IN NEW YORK WITH THE BOOT-BLACKS.

by Horatio Alger Jr.


Contents

 PREFACE
 CHAPTER I. RAGGED DICK IS INTRODUCED TO THE READER
 CHAPTER II. JOHNNY NOLAN
 CHAPTER III. DICK MAKES A PROPOSITION
 CHAPTER IV. DICK’S NEW SUIT
 CHAPTER V. CHATHAM STREET AND BROADWAY
 CHAPTER VI. UP BROADWAY TO MADISON SQUARE
 CHAPTER VII. THE POCKET-BOOK
 CHAPTER VIII. DICK’S EARLY HISTORY
 CHAPTER IX. A SCENE IN A THIRD AVENUE CAR
 CHAPTER X. INTRODUCES A VICTIM OF MISPLACED CONFIDENCE
 CHAPTER XI. DICK AS A DETECTIVE
 CHAPTER XII. DICK HIRES A ROOM ON MOTT STREET
 CHAPTER XIII. MICKY MAGUIRE
 CHAPTER XIV. A BATTLE AND A VICTORY
 CHAPTER XV. DICK SECURES A TUTOR
 CHAPTER XVI. THE FIRST LESSON
 CHAPTER XVII. DICK’S FIRST APPEARANCE IN SOCIETY
 CHAPTER XVIII. MICKY MAGUIRE’S SECOND DEFEAT
 CHAPTER XIX. FOSDICK CHANGES HIS BUSINESS
 CHAPTER XX. NINE MONTHS LATER
 CHAPTER XXI. DICK LOSES HIS BANK-BOOK
 CHAPTER XXII. TRACKING THE THIEF
 CHAPTER XXIII. TRAVIS IS ARRESTED
 CHAPTER XXIV. DICK RECEIVES A LETTER
 CHAPTER XXV. DICK WRITES HIS FIRST LETTER
 CHAPTER XXVI. AN EXCITING ADVENTURE
 CHAPTER XXVII. CONCLUSION



To
Joseph W. Allen,
at whose suggestion this story
was undertaken,
it is
inscribed with friendly regard.



PREFACE


“Ragged Dick” was contributed as a serial story to the pages of the
Schoolmate, a well-known juvenile magazine, during the year 1867. While
in course of publication, it was received with so many evidences of
favor that it has been rewritten and considerably enlarged, and is now
presented to the public as the first volume of a series intended to
illustrate the life and experiences of the friendless and vagrant
children who are now numbered by thousands in New York and other
cities.

Several characters in the story are sketched from life. The necessary
information has been gathered mainly from personal observation and
conversations with the boys themselves. The author is indebted also to
the excellent Superintendent of the Newsboys’ Lodging House, in Fulton
Street, for some facts of which he has been able to make use. Some
anachronisms may be noted. Wherever they occur, they have been
admitted, as aiding in the development of the story, and will probably
be considered as of little importance in an unpretending volume, which
does not aspire to strict historical accuracy.

The author hopes that, while the volumes in this series may prove
interesting stories, they may also have the effect of enlisting the
sympathies of his readers in behalf of the unfortunate children whose
life is described, and of leading them to co-operate with the
praiseworthy efforts now making by the Children’s Aid Society and other
organizations to ameliorate their condition.

New York, April, 1868



CHAPTER I.
RAGGED DICK IS INTRODUCED TO THE READER


“Wake up there, youngster,” said a rough voice.

Ragged Dick opened his eyes slowly, and stared stupidly in the face of
the speaker, but did not offer to get up.

“Wake up, you young vagabond!” said the man a little impatiently; “I
suppose you’d lay there all day, if I hadn’t called you.”

“What time is it?” asked Dick.

“Seven o’clock.”

“Seven o’clock! I oughter’ve been up an hour ago. I know what ’twas
made me so precious sleepy. I went to the Old Bowery last night, and
didn’t turn in till past twelve.”

“You went to the Old Bowery? Where’d you get your money?” asked the
man, who was a porter in the employ of a firm doing business on Spruce
Street. “Made it by shines, in course. My guardian don’t allow me no
money for theatres, so I have to earn it.”

“Some boys get it easier than that,” said the porter significantly.

“You don’t catch me stealin’, if that’s what you mean,” said Dick.

“Don’t you ever steal, then?”

“No, and I wouldn’t. Lots of boys does it, but I wouldn’t.”

“Well, I’m glad to hear you say that. I believe there’s some good in
you, Dick, after all.”

“Oh, I’m a rough customer!” said Dick. “But I wouldn’t steal. It’s
mean.”

“I’m glad you think so, Dick,” and the rough voice sounded gentler than
at first. “Have you got any money to buy your breakfast?”

“No, but I’ll soon get some.”

While this conversation had been going on, Dick had got up. His
bedchamber had been a wooden box half full of straw, on which the young
boot-black had reposed his weary limbs, and slept as soundly as if it
had been a bed of down. He dumped down into the straw without taking
the trouble of undressing.

Getting up too was an equally short process. He jumped out of the box,
shook himself, picked out one or two straws that had found their way
into rents in his clothes, and, drawing a well-worn cap over his
uncombed locks, he was all ready for the business of the day.

Dick’s appearance as he stood beside the box was rather peculiar. His
pants were torn in several places, and had apparently belonged in the
first instance to a boy two sizes larger than himself. He wore a vest,
all the buttons of which were gone except two, out of which peeped a
shirt which looked as if it had been worn a month. To complete his
costume he wore a coat too long for him, dating back, if one might
judge from its general appearance, to a remote antiquity.

Washing the face and hands is usually considered proper in commencing
the day, but Dick was above such refinement. He had no particular
dislike to dirt, and did not think it necessary to remove several dark
streaks on his face and hands. But in spite of his dirt and rags there
was something about Dick that was attractive. It was easy to see that
if he had been clean and well dressed he would have been decidedly
good-looking. Some of his companions were sly, and their faces inspired
distrust; but Dick had a frank, straight-forward manner that made him a
favorite.

Dick’s business hours had commenced. He had no office to open. His
little blacking-box was ready for use, and he looked sharply in the
faces of all who passed, addressing each with, “Shine yer boots, sir?”

“How much?” asked a gentleman on his way to his office.

“Ten cents,” said Dick, dropping his box, and sinking upon his knees on
the sidewalk, flourishing his brush with the air of one skilled in his
profession.

“Ten cents! Isn’t that a little steep?”

“Well, you know ’taint all clear profit,” said Dick, who had already
set to work. “There’s the _blacking_ costs something, and I have to get
a new brush pretty often.”

“And you have a large rent too,” said the gentleman quizzically, with a
glance at a large hole in Dick’s coat.

“Yes, sir,” said Dick, always ready to joke; “I have to pay such a big
rent for my manshun up on Fifth Avenoo, that I can’t afford to take
less than ten cents a shine. I’ll give you a bully shine, sir.”

“Be quick about it, for I am in a hurry. So your house is on Fifth
Avenue, is it?”

“It isn’t anywhere else,” said Dick, and Dick spoke the truth there.

“What tailor do you patronize?” asked the gentleman, surveying Dick’s
attire.

“Would you like to go to the same one?” asked Dick, shrewdly.

“Well, no; it strikes me that he didn’t give you a very good fit.”

“This coat once belonged to General Washington,” said Dick, comically.
“He wore it all through the Revolution, and it got torn some, ’cause he
fit so hard. When he died he told his widder to give it to some smart
young feller that hadn’t got none of his own; so she gave it to me. But
if you’d like it, sir, to remember General Washington by, I’ll let you
have it reasonable.”

“Thank you, but I wouldn’t want to deprive you of it. And did your
pants come from General Washington too?”

“No, they was a gift from Lewis Napoleon. Lewis had outgrown ’em and
sent ’em to me,—he’s bigger than me, and that’s why they don’t fit.”

“It seems you have distinguished friends. Now, my lad, I suppose you
would like your money.”

“I shouldn’t have any objection,” said Dick.

“I believe,” said the gentleman, examining his pocket-book, “I haven’t
got anything short of twenty-five cents. Have you got any change?”

“Not a cent,” said Dick. “All my money’s invested in the Erie
Railroad.”

“That’s unfortunate.”

“Shall I get the money changed, sir?”

“I can’t wait; I’ve got to meet an appointment immediately. I’ll hand
you twenty-five cents, and you can leave the change at my office any
time during the day.”

“All right, sir. Where is it?”

“No. 125 Fulton Street. Shall you remember?”

“Yes, sir. What name?”

“Greyson,—office on second floor.”

“All right, sir; I’ll bring it.”

“I wonder whether the little scamp will prove honest,” said Mr. Greyson
to himself, as he walked away. “If he does, I’ll give him my custom
regularly. If he don’t as is most likely, I shan’t mind the loss of
fifteen cents.”

Mr. Greyson didn’t understand Dick. Our ragged hero wasn’t a model boy
in all respects. I am afraid he swore sometimes, and now and then he
played tricks upon unsophisticated boys from the country, or gave a
wrong direction to honest old gentlemen unused to the city. A clergyman
in search of the Cooper Institute he once directed to the Tombs Prison,
and, following him unobserved, was highly delighted when the
unsuspicious stranger walked up the front steps of the great stone
building on Centre Street, and tried to obtain admission.

“I guess he wouldn’t want to stay long if he did get in,” thought
Ragged Dick, hitching up his pants. “Leastways I shouldn’t. They’re so
precious glad to see you that they won’t let you go, but board you
gratooitous, and never send in no bills.”

Another of Dick’s faults was his extravagance. Being always wide-awake
and ready for business, he earned enough to have supported him
comfortably and respectably. There were not a few young clerks who
employed Dick from time to time in his professional capacity, who
scarcely earned as much as he, greatly as their style and dress
exceeded his. But Dick was careless of his earnings. Where they went he
could hardly have told himself. However much he managed to earn during
the day, all was generally spent before morning. He was fond of going
to the Old Bowery Theatre, and to Tony Pastor’s, and if he had any
money left afterwards, he would invite some of his friends in somewhere
to have an oyster-stew; so it seldom happened that he commenced the day
with a penny.

Then I am sorry to add that Dick had formed the habit of smoking. This
cost him considerable, for Dick was rather fastidious about his cigars,
and wouldn’t smoke the cheapest. Besides, having a liberal nature, he
was generally ready to treat his companions. But of course the expense
was the smallest objection. No boy of fourteen can smoke without being
affected injuriously. Men are frequently injured by smoking, and boys
always. But large numbers of the newsboys and boot-blacks form the
habit. Exposed to the cold and wet they find that it warms them up, and
the self-indulgence grows upon them. It is not uncommon to see a little
boy, too young to be out of his mother’s sight, smoking with all the
apparent satisfaction of a veteran smoker.

There was another way in which Dick sometimes lost money. There was a
noted gambling-house on Baxter Street, which in the evening was
sometimes crowded with these juvenile gamesters, who staked their hard
earnings, generally losing of course, and refreshing themselves from
time to time with a vile mixture of liquor at two cents a glass.
Sometimes Dick strayed in here, and played with the rest.

I have mentioned Dick’s faults and defects, because I want it
understood, to begin with, that I don’t consider him a model boy. But
there were some good points about him nevertheless. He was above doing
anything mean or dishonorable. He would not steal, or cheat, or impose
upon younger boys, but was frank and straight-forward, manly and
self-reliant. His nature was a noble one, and had saved him from all
mean faults. I hope my young readers will like him as I do, without
being blind to his faults. Perhaps, although he was only a boot-black,
they may find something in him to imitate.

And now, having fairly introduced Ragged Dick to my young readers, I
must refer them to the next chapter for his further adventures.



CHAPTER II.
JOHNNY NOLAN


After Dick had finished polishing Mr. Greyson’s boots he was fortunate
enough to secure three other customers, two of them reporters in the
Tribune establishment, which occupies the corner of Spruce Street and
Printing House Square.

When Dick had got through with his last customer the City Hall clock
indicated eight o’clock. He had been up an hour, and hard at work, and
naturally began to think of breakfast. He went up to the head of Spruce
Street, and turned into Nassau. Two blocks further, and he reached Ann
Street. On this street was a small, cheap restaurant, where for five
cents Dick could get a cup of coffee, and for ten cents more, a plate
of beefsteak with a plate of bread thrown in. These Dick ordered, and
sat down at a table.

It was a small apartment with a few plain tables unprovided with
cloths, for the class of customers who patronized it were not very
particular. Our hero’s breakfast was soon before him. Neither the
coffee nor the steak were as good as can be bought at Delmonico’s; but
then it is very doubtful whether, in the present state of his wardrobe,
Dick would have been received at that aristocratic restaurant, even if
his means had admitted of paying the high prices there charged.

Dick had scarcely been served when he espied a boy about his own size
standing at the door, looking wistfully into the restaurant. This was
Johnny Nolan, a boy of fourteen, who was engaged in the same profession
as Ragged Dick. His wardrobe was in very much the same condition as
Dick’s.

“Had your breakfast, Johnny?” inquired Dick, cutting off a piece of
steak.

“No.”

“Come in, then. Here’s room for you.”

“I aint got no money,” said Johnny, looking a little enviously at his
more fortunate friend.

“Haven’t you had any shines?”

“Yes, I had one, but I shan’t get any pay till to-morrow.”

“Are you hungry?”

“Try me, and see.”

“Come in. I’ll stand treat this morning.”

Johnny Nolan was nowise slow to accept this invitation, and was soon
seated beside Dick.

“What’ll you have, Johnny?”

“Same as you.”

“Cup o’ coffee and beefsteak,” ordered Dick.

These were promptly brought, and Johnny attacked them vigorously.

Now, in the boot-blacking business, as well as in higher avocations,
the same rule prevails, that energy and industry are rewarded, and
indolence suffers. Dick was energetic and on the alert for business,
but Johnny the reverse. The consequence was that Dick earned probably
three times as much as the other.

“How do you like it?” asked Dick, surveying Johnny’s attacks upon the
steak with evident complacency.

“It’s hunky.”

I don’t believe “hunky” is to be found in either Webster’s or
Worcester’s big dictionary; but boys will readily understand what it
means.

“Do you come here often?” asked Johnny.

“Most every day. You’d better come too.”

“I can’t afford it.”

“Well, you’d ought to, then,” said Dick. “What do you do I’d like to
know?”

“I don’t get near as much as you, Dick.”

“Well you might if you tried. I keep my eyes open,—that’s the way I get
jobs. You’re lazy, that’s what’s the matter.”

Johnny did not see fit to reply to this charge. Probably he felt the
justice of it, and preferred to proceed with the breakfast, which he
enjoyed the more as it cost him nothing.

Breakfast over, Dick walked up to the desk, and settled the bill. Then,
followed by Johnny, he went out into the street.

“Where are you going, Johnny?”

“Up to Mr. Taylor’s, on Spruce Street, to see if he don’t want a
shine.”

“Do you work for him reg’lar?”

“Yes. Him and his partner wants a shine most every day. Where are you
goin’?”

“Down front of the Astor House. I guess I’ll find some customers
there.”

At this moment Johnny started, and, dodging into an entry way, hid
behind the door, considerably to Dick’s surprise.

“What’s the matter now?” asked our hero.

“Has he gone?” asked Johnny, his voice betraying anxiety.

“Who gone, I’d like to know?”

“That man in the brown coat.”

“What of him. You aint scared of him, are you?”

“Yes, he got me a place once.”

“Where?”

“Ever so far off.”

“What if he did?”

“I ran away.”

“Didn’t you like it?”

“No, I had to get up too early. It was on a farm, and I had to get up
at five to take care of the cows. I like New York best.”

“Didn’t they give you enough to eat?”

“Oh, yes, plenty.”

“And you had a good bed?”

“Yes.”

“Then you’d better have stayed. You don’t get either of them here.
Where’d you sleep last night?”

“Up an alley in an old wagon.”

“You had a better bed than that in the country, didn’t you?”

“Yes, it was as soft as—as cotton.”

Johnny had once slept on a bale of cotton, the recollection supplying
him with a comparison.

“Why didn’t you stay?”

“I felt lonely,” said Johnny.

Johnny could not exactly explain his feelings, but it is often the case
that the young vagabond of the streets, though his food is uncertain,
and his bed may be any old wagon or barrel that he is lucky enough to
find unoccupied when night sets in, gets so attached to his precarious
but independent mode of life, that he feels discontented in any other.
He is accustomed to the noise and bustle and ever-varied life of the
streets, and in the quiet scenes of the country misses the excitement
in the midst of which he has always dwelt.

Johnny had but one tie to bind him to the city. He had a father living,
but he might as well have been without one. Mr. Nolan was a confirmed
drunkard, and spent the greater part of his wages for liquor. His
potations made him ugly, and inflamed a temper never very sweet,
working him up sometimes to such a pitch of rage that Johnny’s life was
in danger. Some months before, he had thrown a flat-iron at his son’s
head with such terrific force that unless Johnny had dodged he would
not have lived long enough to obtain a place in our story. He fled the
house, and from that time had not dared to re-enter it. Somebody had
given him a brush and box of blacking, and he had set up in business on
his own account. But he had not energy enough to succeed, as has
already been stated, and I am afraid the poor boy had met with many
hardships, and suffered more than once from cold and hunger. Dick had
befriended him more than once, and often given him a breakfast or
dinner, as the case might be.

“How’d you get away?” asked Dick, with some curiosity. “Did you walk?”

“No, I rode on the cars.”

“Where’d you get your money? I hope you didn’t steal it.”

“I didn’t have none.”

“What did you do, then?”

“I got up about three o’clock, and walked to Albany.”

“Where’s that?” asked Dick, whose ideas on the subject of geography
were rather vague.

“Up the river.”

“How far?”

“About a thousand miles,” said Johnny, whose conceptions of distance
were equally vague.

“Go ahead. What did you do then?”

“I hid on top of a freight car, and came all the way without their
seeing me.* That man in the brown coat was the man that got me the
place, and I’m afraid he’d want to send me back.”

* A fact.


“Well,” said Dick, reflectively, “I dunno as I’d like to live in the
country. I couldn’t go to Tony Pastor’s or the Old Bowery. There
wouldn’t be no place to spend my evenings. But I say, it’s tough in
winter, Johnny, ’specially when your overcoat’s at the tailor’s, an’
likely to stay there.”

“That’s so, Dick. But I must be goin’, or Mr. Taylor’ll get somebody
else to shine his boots.”

Johnny walked back to Nassau Street, while Dick kept on his way to
Broadway.

“That boy,” soliloquized Dick, as Johnny took his departure, “aint got
no ambition. I’ll bet he won’t get five shines to-day. I’m glad I aint
like him. I couldn’t go to the theatre, nor buy no cigars, nor get half
as much as I wanted to eat.—Shine yer boots, sir?”

Dick always had an eye to business, and this remark was addressed to a
young man, dressed in a stylish manner, who was swinging a jaunty cane.

“I’ve had my boots blacked once already this morning, but this
confounded mud has spoiled the shine.”

“I’ll make ’em all right, sir, in a minute.”

“Go ahead, then.”

The boots were soon polished in Dick’s best style, which proved very
satisfactory, our hero being a proficient in the art.

“I haven’t got any change,” said the young man, fumbling in his pocket,
“but here’s a bill you may run somewhere and get changed. I’ll pay you
five cents extra for your trouble.”

He handed Dick a two-dollar bill, which our hero took into a store
close by.

“Will you please change that, sir?” said Dick, walking up to the
counter.

The salesman to whom he proffered it took the bill, and, slightly
glancing at it, exclaimed angrily, “Be off, you young vagabond, or I’ll
have you arrested.”

“What’s the row?”

“You’ve offered me a counterfeit bill.”

“I didn’t know it,” said Dick.

“Don’t tell me. Be off, or I’ll have you arrested.”



CHAPTER III.
DICK MAKES A PROPOSITION


Though Dick was somewhat startled at discovering that the bill he had
offered was counterfeit, he stood his ground bravely.

“Clear out of this shop, you young vagabond,” repeated the clerk.

“Then give me back my bill.”

“That you may pass it again? No, sir, I shall do no such thing.”

“It doesn’t belong to me,” said Dick. “A gentleman that owes me for a
shine gave it to me to change.”

“A likely story,” said the clerk; but he seemed a little uneasy.

“I’ll go and call him,” said Dick.

He went out, and found his late customer standing on the Astor House
steps.

“Well, youngster, have you brought back my change? You were a precious
long time about it. I began to think you had cleared out with the
money.”

“That aint my style,” said Dick, proudly.

“Then where’s the change?”

“I haven’t got it.”

“Where’s the bill then?”

“I haven’t got that either.”

“You young rascal!”

“Hold on a minute, mister,” said Dick, “and I’ll tell you all about it.
The man what took the bill said it wasn’t good, and kept it.”

“The bill was perfectly good. So he kept it, did he? I’ll go with you
to the store, and see whether he won’t give it back to me.”

Dick led the way, and the gentleman followed him into the store. At the
reappearance of Dick in such company, the clerk flushed a little, and
looked nervous. He fancied that he could browbeat a ragged boot-black,
but with a gentleman he saw that it would be a different matter. He did
not seem to notice the newcomers, but began to replace some goods on
the shelves.

“Now,” said the young man, “point out the clerk that has my money.”

“That’s him,” said Dick, pointing out the clerk.

The gentleman walked up to the counter.

“I will trouble you,” he said a little haughtily, “for a bill which
that boy offered you, and which you still hold in your possession.”

“It was a bad bill,” said the clerk, his cheek flushing, and his manner
nervous.

“It was no such thing. I require you to produce it, and let the matter
be decided.”

The clerk fumbled in his vest-pocket, and drew out a bad-looking bill.

“This is a bad bill, but it is not the one I gave the boy.”

“It is the one he gave me.”

The young man looked doubtful.

“Boy,” he said to Dick, “is this the bill you gave to be changed?”

“No, it isn’t.”

“You lie, you young rascal!” exclaimed the clerk, who began to find
himself in a tight place, and could not see the way out.

This scene naturally attracted the attention of all in the store, and
the proprietor walked up from the lower end, where he had been busy.

“What’s all this, Mr. Hatch?” he demanded.

“That boy,” said the clerk, “came in and asked change for a bad bill. I
kept the bill, and told him to clear out. Now he wants it again to pass
on somebody else.”

“Show the bill.”

The merchant looked at it. “Yes, that’s a bad bill,” he said. “There is
no doubt about that.”

“But it is not the one the boy offered,” said Dick’s patron. “It is one
of the same denomination, but on a different bank.”

“Do you remember what bank it was on?”

“It was on the Merchants’ Bank of Boston.”

“Are you sure of it?”

“I am.”

“Perhaps the boy kept it and offered the other.”

“You may search me if you want to,” said Dick, indignantly.

“He doesn’t look as if he was likely to have any extra bills. I suspect
that your clerk pocketed the good bill, and has substituted the
counterfeit note. It is a nice little scheme of his for making money.”

“I haven’t seen any bill on the Merchants’ Bank,” said the clerk,
doggedly.

“You had better feel in your pockets.”

“This matter must be investigated,” said the merchant, firmly. “If you
have the bill, produce it.”

“I haven’t got it,” said the clerk; but he looked guilty
notwithstanding.

“I demand that he be searched,” said Dick’s patron.

“I tell you I haven’t got it.”

“Shall I send for a police officer, Mr. Hatch, or will you allow
yourself to be searched quietly?” said the merchant.

Alarmed at the threat implied in these words, the clerk put his hand
into his vest-pocket, and drew out a two-dollar bill on the Merchants’
Bank.

“Is this your note?” asked the shopkeeper, showing it to the young man.

“It is.”

“I must have made a mistake,” faltered the clerk.

“I shall not give you a chance to make such another mistake in my
employ,” said the merchant sternly. “You may go up to the desk and ask
for what wages are due you. I shall have no further occasion for your
services.”

“Now, youngster,” said Dick’s patron, as they went out of the store,
after he had finally got the bill changed. “I must pay you something
extra for your trouble. Here’s fifty cents.”

“Thank you, sir,” said Dick. “You’re very kind. Don’t you want some
more bills changed?”

“Not to-day,” said he with a smile. “It’s too expensive.”

“I’m in luck,” thought our hero complacently. “I guess I’ll go to
Barnum’s to-night, and see the bearded lady, the eight-foot giant, the
two-foot dwarf, and the other curiosities, too numerous to mention.”

Dick shouldered his box and walked up as far as the Astor House. He
took his station on the sidewalk, and began to look about him.

Just behind him were two persons,—one, a gentleman of fifty; the other,
a boy of thirteen or fourteen. They were speaking together, and Dick
had no difficulty in hearing what was said.

“I am sorry, Frank, that I can’t go about, and show you some of the
sights of New York, but I shall be full of business to-day. It is your
first visit to the city, too.”

“Yes, sir.”

“There’s a good deal worth seeing here. But I’m afraid you’ll have to
wait to next time. You can go out and walk by yourself, but don’t
venture too far, or you will get lost.”

Frank looked disappointed.

“I wish Tom Miles knew I was here,” he said. “He would go around with
me.”

“Where does he live?”

“Somewhere up town, I believe.”

“Then, unfortunately, he is not available. If you would rather go with
me than stay here, you can, but as I shall be most of the time in
merchants’-counting-rooms, I am afraid it would not be very
interesting.”

“I think,” said Frank, after a little hesitation, “that I will go off
by myself. I won’t go very far, and if I lose my way, I will inquire
for the Astor House.”

“Yes, anybody will direct you here. Very well, Frank, I am sorry I
can’t do better for you.”

“Oh, never mind, uncle, I shall be amused in walking around, and
looking at the shop-windows. There will be a great deal to see.”

Now Dick had listened to all this conversation. Being an enterprising
young man, he thought he saw a chance for a speculation, and determined
to avail himself of it.

Accordingly he stepped up to the two just as Frank’s uncle was about
leaving, and said, “I know all about the city, sir; I’ll show him
around, if you want me to.”

The gentleman looked a little curiously at the ragged figure before
him.

“So you are a city boy, are you?”

“Yes, sir,” said Dick, “I’ve lived here ever since I was a baby.”

“And you know all about the public buildings, I suppose?”

“Yes, sir.”

“And the Central Park?”

“Yes, sir. I know my way all round.”

The gentleman looked thoughtful.

“I don’t know what to say, Frank,” he remarked after a while. “It is
rather a novel proposal. He isn’t exactly the sort of guide I would
have picked out for you. Still he looks honest. He has an open face,
and I think can be depended upon.”

“I wish he wasn’t so ragged and dirty,” said Frank, who felt a little
shy about being seen with such a companion.

“I’m afraid you haven’t washed your face this morning,” said Mr.
Whitney, for that was the gentleman’s name.

“They didn’t have no wash-bowls at the hotel where I stopped,” said
Dick.

“What hotel did you stop at?”

“The Box Hotel.”

“The Box Hotel?”

“Yes, sir, I slept in a box on Spruce Street.”

Frank surveyed Dick curiously.

“How did you like it?” he asked.

“I slept bully.”

“Suppose it had rained.”

“Then I’d have wet my best clothes,” said Dick.

“Are these all the clothes you have?”

“Yes, sir.”

Mr. Whitney spoke a few words to Frank, who seemed pleased with the
suggestion.

“Follow me, my lad,” he said.

Dick in some surprise obeyed orders, following Mr. Whitney and Frank
into the hotel, past the office, to the foot of the staircase. Here a
servant of the hotel stopped Dick, but Mr. Whitney explained that he
had something for him to do, and he was allowed to proceed.

They entered a long entry, and finally paused before a door. This being
opened a pleasant chamber was disclosed.

“Come in, my lad,” said Mr. Whitney.

Dick and Frank entered.



CHAPTER IV.
DICK’S NEW SUIT


“Now,” said Mr. Whitney to Dick, “my nephew here is on his way to a
boarding-school. He has a suit of clothes in his trunk about half worn.
He is willing to give them to you. I think they will look better than
those you have on.”

Dick was so astonished that he hardly knew what to say. Presents were
something that he knew very little about, never having received any to
his knowledge. That so large a gift should be made to him by a stranger
seemed very wonderful.

The clothes were brought out, and turned out to be a neat gray suit.

“Before you put them on, my lad, you must wash yourself. Clean clothes
and a dirty skin don’t go very well together. Frank, you may attend to
him. I am obliged to go at once. Have you got as much money as you
require?”

“Yes, uncle.”

“One more word, my lad,” said Mr. Whitney, addressing Dick; “I may be
rash in trusting a boy of whom I know nothing, but I like your looks,
and I think you will prove a proper guide for my nephew.”

“Yes, I will, sir,” said Dick, earnestly. “Honor bright!”

“Very well. A pleasant time to you.”

The process of cleansing commenced. To tell the truth Dick needed it,
and the sensation of cleanliness he found both new and pleasant. Frank
added to his gift a shirt, stockings, and an old pair of shoes. “I am
sorry I haven’t any cap,” said he.

“I’ve got one,” said Dick.

“It isn’t so new as it might be,” said Frank, surveying an old felt
hat, which had once been black, but was now dingy, with a large hole in
the top and a portion of the rim torn off.

“No,” said Dick; “my grandfather used to wear it when he was a boy, and
I’ve kep’ it ever since out of respect for his memory. But I’ll get a
new one now. I can buy one cheap on Chatham Street.”

“Is that near here?”

“Only five minutes’ walk.”

“Then we can get one on the way.”

When Dick was dressed in his new attire, with his face and hands clean,
and his hair brushed, it was difficult to imagine that he was the same
boy.

He now looked quite handsome, and might readily have been taken for a
young gentleman, except that his hands were red and grimy.

“Look at yourself,” said Frank, leading him before the mirror.

“By gracious!” said Dick, starting back in astonishment, “that isn’t
me, is it?”

“Don’t you know yourself?” asked Frank, smiling.

“It reminds me of Cinderella,” said Dick, “when she was changed into a
fairy princess. I see it one night at Barnum’s. What’ll Johnny Nolan
say when he sees me? He won’t dare to speak to such a young swell as I
be now. Aint it rich?” and Dick burst into a loud laugh. His fancy was
tickled by the anticipation of his friend’s surprise. Then the thought
of the valuable gifts he had received occurred to him, and he looked
gratefully at Frank.

“You’re a brick,” he said.

“A what?”

“A brick! You’re a jolly good fellow to give me such a present.”

“You’re quite welcome, Dick,” said Frank, kindly. “I’m better off than
you are, and I can spare the clothes just as well as not. You must have
a new hat though. But that we can get when we go out. The old clothes
you can make into a bundle.”

“Wait a minute till I get my handkercher,” and Dick pulled from the
pocket of the pants a dirty rag, which might have been white once,
though it did not look like it, and had apparently once formed a part
of a sheet or shirt.

“You mustn’t carry that,” said Frank.

“But I’ve got a cold,” said Dick.

“Oh, I don’t mean you to go without a handkerchief. I’ll give you one.”

Frank opened his trunk and pulled out two, which he gave to Dick.

“I wonder if I aint dreamin’,” said Dick, once more surveying himself
doubtfully in the glass. “I’m afraid I’m dreamin’, and shall wake up in
a barrel, as I did night afore last.”

“Shall I pinch you so you can wake here?” asked Frank, playfully.

“Yes,” said Dick, seriously, “I wish you would.”

He pulled up the sleeve of his jacket, and Frank pinched him pretty
hard, so that Dick winced.

“Yes, I guess I’m awake,” said Dick; “you’ve got a pair of nippers, you
have. But what shall I do with my brush and blacking?” he asked.

“You can leave them here till we come back,” said Frank. “They will be
safe.”

“Hold on a minute,” said Dick, surveying Frank’s boots with a
professional eye, “you aint got a good shine on them boots. I’ll make
’em shine so you can see your face in ’em.”

And he was as good as his word.

“Thank you,” said Frank; “now you had better brush your own shoes.”

This had not occurred to Dick, for in general the professional
boot-black considers his blacking too valuable to expend on his own
shoes or boots, if he is fortunate enough to possess a pair.

The two boys now went downstairs together. They met the same servant
who had spoken to Dick a few minutes before, but there was no
recognition.

“He don’t know me,” said Dick. “He thinks I’m a young swell like you.”

“What’s a swell?”

“Oh, a feller that wears nobby clothes like you.”

“And you, too, Dick.”

“Yes,” said Dick, “who’d ever have thought as I should have turned into
a swell?”

They had now got out on Broadway, and were slowly walking along the
west side by the Park, when who should Dick see in front of him, but
Johnny Nolan?

Instantly Dick was seized with a fancy for witnessing Johnny’s
amazement at his change in appearance. He stole up behind him, and
struck him on the back.

“Hallo, Johnny, how many shines have you had?”

Johnny turned round expecting to see Dick, whose voice he recognized,
but his astonished eyes rested on a nicely dressed boy (the hat alone
excepted) who looked indeed like Dick, but so transformed in dress that
it was difficult to be sure of his identity.

“What luck, Johnny?” repeated Dick.

Johnny surveyed him from head to foot in great bewilderment.

“Who be you?” he said.

“Well, that’s a good one,” laughed Dick; “so you don’t know Dick?”

“Where’d you get all them clothes?” asked Johnny. “Have you been
stealin’?”

“Say that again, and I’ll lick you. No, I’ve lent my clothes to a young
feller as was goin’ to a party, and didn’t have none fit to wear, and
so I put on my second-best for a change.”

Without deigning any further explanation, Dick went off, followed by
the astonished gaze of Johnny Nolan, who could not quite make up his
mind whether the neat-looking boy he had been talking with was really
Ragged Dick or not.

In order to reach Chatham Street it was necessary to cross Broadway.
This was easier proposed than done. There is always such a throng of
omnibuses, drays, carriages, and vehicles of all kinds in the
neighborhood of the Astor House, that the crossing is formidable to one
who is not used to it. Dick made nothing of it, dodging in and out
among the horses and wagons with perfect self-possession. Reaching the
opposite sidewalk, he looked back, and found that Frank had retreated
in dismay, and that the width of the street was between them.

“Come across!” called out Dick.

“I don’t see any chance,” said Frank, looking anxiously at the prospect
before him. “I’m afraid of being run over.”

“If you are, you can sue ’em for damages,” said Dick.

Finally Frank got safely over after several narrow escapes, as he
considered them.

“Is it always so crowded?” he asked.

“A good deal worse sometimes,” said Dick. “I knowed a young man once
who waited six hours for a chance to cross, and at last got run over by
an omnibus, leaving a widder and a large family of orphan children. His
widder, a beautiful young woman, was obliged to start a peanut and
apple stand. There she is now.”

“Where?”

Dick pointed to a hideous old woman, of large proportions, wearing a
bonnet of immense size, who presided over an apple-stand close by.

Frank laughed.

“If that is the case,” he said, “I think I will patronize her.”

“Leave it to me,” said Dick, winking.

He advanced gravely to the apple-stand, and said, “Old lady, have you
paid your taxes?”

The astonished woman opened her eyes.

“I’m a gov’ment officer,” said Dick, “sent by the mayor to collect your
taxes. I’ll take it in apples just to oblige. That big red one will
about pay what you’re owin’ to the gov’ment.”

“I don’t know nothing about no taxes,” said the old woman, in
bewilderment.

“Then,” said Dick, “I’ll let you off this time. Give us two of your
best apples, and my friend here, the President of the Common Council,
will pay you.”

Frank smiling, paid three cents apiece for the apples, and they
sauntered on, Dick remarking, “If these apples aint good, old lady,
we’ll return ’em, and get our money back.” This would have been rather
difficult in his case, as the apple was already half consumed.

Chatham Street, where they wished to go, being on the East side, the
two boys crossed the Park. This is an enclosure of about ten acres,
which years ago was covered with a green sward, but is now a great
thoroughfare for pedestrians and contains several important public
buildings. Dick pointed out the City Hall, the Hall of Records, and the
Rotunda. The former is a white building of large size, and surmounted
by a cupola.

“That’s where the mayor’s office is,” said Dick. “Him and me are very
good friends. I once blacked his boots by partic’lar appointment.
That’s the way I pay my city taxes.”



CHAPTER V.
CHATHAM STREET AND BROADWAY


They were soon in Chatham Street, walking between rows of ready-made
clothing shops, many of which had half their stock in trade exposed on
the sidewalk. The proprietors of these establishments stood at the
doors, watching attentively the passersby, extending urgent invitations
to any who even glanced at the goods to enter.

“Walk in, young gentlemen,” said a stout man, at the entrance of one
shop.

“No, I thank you,” replied Dick, “as the fly said to the spider.”

“We’re selling off at less than cost.”

“Of course you be. That’s where you makes your money,” said Dick.
“There aint nobody of any enterprise that pretends to make any profit
on his goods.”

The Chatham Street trader looked after our hero as if he didn’t quite
comprehend him; but Dick, without waiting for a reply, passed on with
his companion.

In some of the shops auctions seemed to be going on.

“I am only offered two dollars, gentlemen, for this elegant pair of
doeskin pants, made of the very best of cloth. It’s a frightful
sacrifice. Who’ll give an eighth? Thank you, sir. Only seventeen
shillings! Why the cloth cost more by the yard!”

This speaker was standing on a little platform haranguing to three men,
holding in his hand meanwhile a pair of pants very loose in the legs,
and presenting a cheap Bowery look.

Frank and Dick paused before the shop door, and finally saw them
knocked down to rather a verdant-looking individual at three dollars.

“Clothes seem to be pretty cheap here,” said Frank.

“Yes, but Baxter Street is the cheapest place.”

“Is it?”

“Yes. Johnny Nolan got a whole rig-out there last week, for a
dollar,—coat, cap, vest, pants, and shoes. They was very good measure,
too, like my best clothes that I took off to oblige you.”

“I shall know where to come for clothes next time,” said Frank,
laughing. “I had no idea the city was so much cheaper than the country.
I suppose the Baxter Street tailors are fashionable?”

“In course they are. Me and Horace Greeley always go there for clothes.
When Horace gets a new suit, I always have one made just like it; but I
can’t go the white hat. It aint becomin’ to my style of beauty.”

A little farther on a man was standing out on the sidewalk,
distributing small printed handbills. One was handed to Frank, which he
read as follows,—

“GRAND CLOSING-OUT SALE!—A variety of Beautiful and Costly Articles for
Sale, at a Dollar apiece. Unparalleled Inducements! Walk in,
Gentlemen!”

“Whereabouts is this sale?” asked Frank.

“In here, young gentlemen,” said a black-whiskered individual, who
appeared suddenly on the scene. “Walk in.”

“Shall we go in, Dick?”

“It’s a swindlin’ shop,” said Dick, in a low voice. “I’ve been there.
That man’s a regular cheat. He’s seen me before, but he don’t know me
coz of my clothes.”

“Step in and see the articles,” said the man, persuasively. “You
needn’t buy, you know.”

“Are all the articles worth more’n a dollar?” asked Dick.

“Yes,” said the other, “and some worth a great deal more.”

“Such as what?”

“Well, there’s a silver pitcher worth twenty dollars.”

“And you sell it for a dollar. That’s very kind of you,” said Dick,
innocently.

“Walk in, and you’ll understand it.”

“No, I guess not,” said Dick. “My servants is so dishonest that I
wouldn’t like to trust ’em with a silver pitcher. Come along, Frank. I
hope you’ll succeed in your charitable enterprise of supplyin’ the
public with silver pitchers at nineteen dollars less than they are
worth.”

“How does he manage, Dick?” asked Frank, as they went on.

“All his articles are numbered, and he makes you pay a dollar, and then
shakes some dice, and whatever the figgers come to, is the number of
the article you draw. Most of ’em aint worth sixpence.”

A hat and cap store being close at hand, Dick and Frank went in. For
seventy-five cents, which Frank insisted on paying, Dick succeeded in
getting quite a neat-looking cap, which corresponded much better with
his appearance than the one he had on. The last, not being considered
worth keeping, Dick dropped on the sidewalk, from which, on looking
back, he saw it picked up by a brother boot-black who appeared to
consider it better than his own.

They retraced their steps and went up Chambers Street to Broadway. At
the corner of Broadway and Chambers Street is a large white marble
warehouse, which attracted Frank’s attention.

“What building is that?” he asked, with interest.

“That belongs to my friend A. T. Stewart,” said Dick. “It’s the biggest
store on Broadway.* If I ever retire from boot-blackin’, and go into
mercantile pursuits, I may buy him out, or build another store that’ll
take the shine off this one.”

* Mr. Stewart’s Tenth Street store was not open at the time Dick spoke.


“Were you ever in the store?” asked Frank.

“No,” said Dick; “but I’m intimate with one of Stewart’s partners. He
is a cash boy, and does nothing but take money all day.”

“A very agreeable employment,” said Frank, laughing.

“Yes,” said Dick, “I’d like to be in it.”

The boys crossed to the West side of Broadway, and walked slowly up the
street. To Frank it was a very interesting spectacle. Accustomed to the
quiet of the country, there was something fascinating in the crowds of
people thronging the sidewalks, and the great variety of vehicles
constantly passing and repassing in the street. Then again the
shop-windows with their multifarious contents interested and amused
him, and he was constantly checking Dick to look in at some
well-stocked window.

“I don’t see how so many shopkeepers can find people enough to buy of
them,” he said. “We haven’t got but two stores in our village, and
Broadway seems to be full of them.”

“Yes,” said Dick; “and its pretty much the same in the avenoos,
’specially the Third, Sixth, and Eighth avenoos. The Bowery, too, is a
great place for shoppin’. There everybody sells cheaper’n anybody else,
and nobody pretends to make no profit on their goods.”

“Where’s Barnum’s Museum?” asked Frank.

“Oh, that’s down nearly opposite the Astor House,” said Dick. “Didn’t
you see a great building with lots of flags?”

“Yes.”

“Well, that’s Barnum’s.* That’s where the Happy Family live, and the
lions, and bears, and curiosities generally. It’s a tip-top place.
Haven’t you ever been there? It’s most as good as the Old Bowery, only
the plays isn’t quite so excitin’.”

* Since destroyed by fire, and rebuilt farther up Broadway, and again
burned down in February.


“I’ll go if I get time,” said Frank. “There is a boy at home who came
to New York a month ago, and went to Barnum’s, and has been talking
about it ever since, so I suppose it must be worth seeing.”

“They’ve got a great play at the Old Bowery now,” pursued Dick. “’Tis
called the ‘Demon of the Danube.’ The Demon falls in love with a young
woman, and drags her by the hair up to the top of a steep rock where
his castle stands.”

“That’s a queer way of showing his love,” said Frank, laughing.

“She didn’t want to go with him, you know, but was in love with another
chap. When he heard about his girl bein’ carried off, he felt awful,
and swore an oath not to rest till he had got her free. Well, at last
he got into the castle by some underground passage, and he and the
Demon had a fight. Oh, it was bully seein’ ’em roll round on the stage,
cuttin’ and slashin’ at each other.”

“And which got the best of it?”

“At first the Demon seemed to be ahead, but at last the young Baron got
him down, and struck a dagger into his heart, sayin’, ‘Die, false and
perjured villain! The dogs shall feast upon thy carcass!’ and then the
Demon give an awful howl and died. Then the Baron seized his body, and
threw it over the precipice.”

“It seems to me the actor who plays the Demon ought to get extra pay,
if he has to be treated that way.”

“That’s so,” said Dick; “but I guess he’s used to it. It seems to agree
with his constitution.”

“What building is that?” asked Frank, pointing to a structure several
rods back from the street, with a large yard in front. It was an
unusual sight for Broadway, all the other buildings in that
neighborhood being even with the street.

“That is the New York Hospital,” said Dick. “They’re a rich
institution, and take care of sick people on very reasonable terms.”

“Did you ever go in there?”

“Yes,” said Dick; “there was a friend of mine, Johnny Mullen, he was a
newsboy, got run over by a omnibus as he was crossin’ Broadway down
near Park Place. He was carried to the Hospital, and me and some of his
friends paid his board while he was there. It was only three dollars a
week, which was very cheap, considerin’ all the care they took of him.
I got leave to come and see him while he was here. Everything looked so
nice and comfortable, that I thought a little of coaxin’ a omnibus
driver to run over me, so I might go there too.”

“Did your friend have to have his leg cut off?” asked Frank,
interested.

“No,” said Dick; “though there was a young student there that was very
anxious to have it cut off; but it wasn’t done, and Johnny is around
the streets as well as ever.”

While this conversation was going on they reached No. 365, at the
corner of Franklin Street.*

* Now the office of the Merchants’ Union Express Company.


“That’s Taylor’s Saloon,” said Dick. “When I come into a fortun’ I
shall take my meals there reg’lar.”

“I have heard of it very often,” said Frank. “It is said to be very
elegant. Suppose we go in and take an ice-cream. It will give us a
chance to see it to better advantage.”

“Thank you,” said Dick; “I think that’s the most agreeable way of
seein’ the place myself.”

The boys entered, and found themselves in a spacious and elegant
saloon, resplendent with gilding, and adorned on all sides by costly
mirrors. They sat down to a small table with a marble top, and Frank
gave the order.

“It reminds me of Aladdin’s palace,” said Frank, looking about him.

“Does it?” said Dick; “he must have had plenty of money.”

“He had an old lamp, which he had only to rub, when the Slave of the
Lamp would appear, and do whatever he wanted.”

“That must have been a valooable lamp. I’d be willin’ to give all my
Erie shares for it.”

There was a tall, gaunt individual at the next table, who apparently
heard this last remark of Dick’s. Turning towards our hero, he said,
“May I inquire, young man, whether you are largely interested in this
Erie Railroad?”

“I haven’t got no property except what’s invested in Erie,” said Dick,
with a comical side-glance at Frank.

“Indeed! I suppose the investment was made by your guardian.”

“No,” said Dick; “I manage my property myself.”

“And I presume your dividends have not been large?”

“Why, no,” said Dick; “you’re about right there. They haven’t.”

“As I supposed. It’s poor stock. Now, my young friend, I can recommend
a much better investment, which will yield you a large annual income. I
am agent of the Excelsior Copper Mining Company, which possesses one of
the most productive mines in the world. It’s sure to yield fifty per
cent. on the investment. Now, all you have to do is to sell out your
Erie shares, and invest in our stock, and I’ll insure you a fortune in
three years. How many shares did you say you had?”

“I didn’t say, that I remember,” said Dick. “Your offer is very kind
and obligin’, and as soon as I get time I’ll see about it.”

“I hope you will,” said the stranger. “Permit me to give you my card.
‘Samuel Snap, No. — Wall Street.’ I shall be most happy to receive a
call from you, and exhibit the maps of our mine. I should be glad to
have you mention the matter also to your friends. I am confident you
could do no greater service than to induce them to embark in our
enterprise.”

“Very good,” said Dick.

Here the stranger left the table, and walked up to the desk to settle
his bill.

“You see what it is to be a man of fortun’, Frank,” said Dick, “and
wear good clothes. I wonder what that chap’ll say when he sees me
blackin’ boots to-morrow in the street?”

“Perhaps you earn your money more honorably than he does, after all,”
said Frank. “Some of these mining companies are nothing but swindles,
got up to cheat people out of their money.”

“He’s welcome to all he gets out of me,” said Dick.



CHAPTER VI.
UP BROADWAY TO MADISON SQUARE


As the boys pursued their way up Broadway, Dick pointed out the
prominent hotels and places of amusement. Frank was particularly struck
with the imposing fronts of the St. Nicholas and Metropolitan Hotels,
the former of white marble, the latter of a subdued brown hue, but not
less elegant in its internal appointments. He was not surprised to be
informed that each of these splendid structures cost with the
furnishing not far from a million dollars.

At Eighth Street Dick turned to the right, and pointed out the Clinton
Hall Building now occupied by the Mercantile Library, comprising at
that time over fifty thousand volumes.*

* Now not far from one hundred thousand.


A little farther on they came to a large building standing by itself
just at the opening of Third and Fourth Avenues, and with one side on
each.

“What is that building?” asked Frank.

“That’s the Cooper Institute,” said Dick; “built by Mr. Cooper, a
particular friend of mine. Me and Peter Cooper used to go to school
together.”

“What is there inside?” asked Frank.

“There’s a hall for public meetin’s and lectures in the basement, and a
readin’ room and a picture gallery up above,” said Dick.

Directly opposite Cooper Institute, Frank saw a very large building of
brick, covering about an acre of ground.

“Is that a hotel?” he asked.

“No,” said Dick; “that’s the Bible House. It’s the place where they
make Bibles. I was in there once,—saw a big pile of ’em.”

“Did you ever read the Bible?” asked Frank, who had some idea of the
neglected state of Dick’s education.

“No,” said Dick; “I’ve heard it’s a good book, but I never read one. I
aint much on readin’. It makes my head ache.”

“I suppose you can’t read very fast.”

“I can read the little words pretty well, but the big ones is what
stick me.”

“If I lived in the city, you might come every evening to me, and I
would teach you.”

“Would you take so much trouble about me?” asked Dick, earnestly.

“Certainly; I should like to see you getting on. There isn’t much
chance of that if you don’t know how to read and write.”

“You’re a good feller,” said Dick, gratefully. “I wish you did live in
New York. I’d like to know somethin’. Whereabouts do you live?”

“About fifty miles off, in a town on the left bank of the Hudson. I
wish you’d come up and see me sometime. I would like to have you come
and stop two or three days.”

“Honor bright?”

“I don’t understand.”

“Do you mean it?” asked Dick, incredulously.

“Of course I do. Why shouldn’t I?”

“What would your folks say if they knowed you asked a boot-black to
visit you?”

“You are none the worse for being a boot-black, Dick.”

“I aint used to genteel society,” said Dick. “I shouldn’t know how to
behave.”

“Then I could show you. You won’t be a boot-black all your life, you
know.”

“No,” said Dick; “I’m goin’ to knock off when I get to be ninety.”

“Before that, I hope,” said Frank, smiling.

“I really wish I could get somethin’ else to do,” said Dick, soberly.
“I’d like to be a office boy, and learn business, and grow up
’spectable.”

“Why don’t you try, and see if you can’t get a place, Dick?”

“Who’d take Ragged Dick?”

“But you aint ragged now, Dick.”

“No,” said Dick; “I look a little better than I did in my Washington
coat and Louis Napoleon pants. But if I got in a office, they wouldn’t
give me more’n three dollars a week, and I couldn’t live ’spectable on
that.”

“No, I suppose not,” said Frank, thoughtfully. “But you would get more
at the end of the first year.”

“Yes,” said Dick; “but by that time I’d be nothin’ but skin and bones.”

Frank laughed. “That reminds me,” he said, “of the story of an
Irishman, who, out of economy, thought he would teach his horse to feed
on shavings. So he provided the horse with a pair of green spectacles
which made the shavings look eatable. But unfortunately, just as the
horse got learned, he up and died.”

“The hoss must have been a fine specimen of architectur’ by the time he
got through,” remarked Dick.

“Whereabouts are we now?” asked Frank, as they emerged from Fourth
Avenue into Union Square.

“That is Union Park,” said Dick, pointing to a beautiful enclosure, in
the centre of which was a pond, with a fountain playing.

“Is that the statue of General Washington?” asked Frank, pointing to a
bronze equestrian statue, on a granite pedestal.

“Yes,” said Dick; “he’s growed some since he was President. If he’d
been as tall as that when he fit in the Revolution, he’d have walloped
the Britishers some, I reckon.”

Frank looked up at the statue, which is fourteen and a half feet high,
and acknowledged the justice of Dick’s remark.

“How about the coat, Dick?” he asked. “Would it fit you?”

“Well, it might be rather loose,” said Dick, “I aint much more’n ten
feet high with my boots off.”

“No, I should think not,” said Frank, smiling. “You’re a queer boy,
Dick.”

“Well, I’ve been brought up queer. Some boys is born with a silver
spoon in their mouth. Victoria’s boys is born with a gold spoon, set
with di’monds; but gold and silver was scarce when I was born, and mine
was pewter.”

“Perhaps the gold and silver will come by and by, Dick. Did you ever
hear of Dick Whittington?”

“Never did. Was he a Ragged Dick?”

“I shouldn’t wonder if he was. At any rate he was very poor when he was
a boy, but he didn’t stay so. Before he died, he became Lord Mayor of
London.”

“Did he?” asked Dick, looking interested. “How did he do it?”

“Why, you see, a rich merchant took pity on him, and gave him a home in
his own house, where he used to stay with the servants, being employed
in little errands. One day the merchant noticed Dick picking up pins
and needles that had been dropped, and asked him why he did it. Dick
told him he was going to sell them when he got enough. The merchant was
pleased with his saving disposition, and when soon after, he was going
to send a vessel to foreign parts, he told Dick he might send anything
he pleased in it, and it should be sold to his advantage. Now Dick had
nothing in the world but a kitten which had been given him a short time
before.”

“How much taxes did he have to pay on it?” asked Dick.

“Not very high, probably. But having only the kitten, he concluded to
send it along. After sailing a good many months, during which the
kitten grew up to be a strong cat, the ship touched at an island never
before known, which happened to be infested with rats and mice to such
an extent that they worried everybody’s life out, and even ransacked
the king’s palace. To make a long story short, the captain, seeing how
matters stood, brought Dick’s cat ashore, and she soon made the rats
and mice scatter. The king was highly delighted when he saw what havoc
she made among the rats and mice, and resolved to have her at any
price. So he offered a great quantity of gold for her, which, of
course, the captain was glad to accept. It was faithfully carried back
to Dick, and laid the foundation of his fortune. He prospered as he
grew up, and in time became a very rich merchant, respected by all, and
before he died was elected Lord Mayor of London.”

“That’s a pretty good story,” said Dick; “but I don’t believe all the
cats in New York will ever make me mayor.”

“No, probably not, but you may rise in some other way. A good many
distinguished men have once been poor boys. There’s hope for you, Dick,
if you’ll try.”

“Nobody ever talked to me so before,” said Dick. “They just called me
Ragged Dick, and told me I’d grow up to be a vagabone (boys who are
better educated need not be surprised at Dick’s blunders) and come to
the gallows.”

“Telling you so won’t make it turn out so, Dick. If you’ll try to be
somebody, and grow up into a respectable member of society, you will.
You may not become rich,—it isn’t everybody that becomes rich, you
know—but you can obtain a good position, and be respected.”

“I’ll try,” said Dick, earnestly. “I needn’t have been Ragged Dick so
long if I hadn’t spent my money in goin’ to the theatre, and treatin’
boys to oyster-stews, and bettin’ money on cards, and such like.”

“Have you lost money that way?”

“Lots of it. One time I saved up five dollars to buy me a new rig-out,
cos my best suit was all in rags, when Limpy Jim wanted me to play a
game with him.”

“Limpy Jim?” said Frank, interrogatively.

“Yes, he’s lame; that’s what makes us call him Limpy Jim.”

“I suppose you lost?”

“Yes, I lost every penny, and had to sleep out, cos I hadn’t a cent to
pay for lodgin’. ’Twas a awful cold night, and I got most froze.”

“Wouldn’t Jim let you have any of the money he had won to pay for a
lodging?”

“No; I axed him for five cents, but he wouldn’t let me have it.”

“Can you get lodging for five cents?” asked Frank, in surprise.

“Yes,” said Dick, “but not at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. That’s it right
out there.”



CHAPTER VII.
THE POCKET-BOOK


They had reached the junction of Broadway and of Fifth Avenue. Before
them was a beautiful park of ten acres. On the left-hand side was a
large marble building, presenting a fine appearance with its extensive
white front. This was the building at which Dick pointed.

“Is that the Fifth Avenue Hotel?” asked Frank. “I’ve heard of it often.
My Uncle William always stops there when he comes to New York.”

“I once slept on the outside of it,” said Dick. “They was very
reasonable in their charges, and told me I might come again.”

“Perhaps sometime you’ll be able to sleep inside,” said Frank.

“I guess that’ll be when Queen Victoria goes to the Five Points to
live.”

“It looks like a palace,” said Frank. “The queen needn’t be ashamed to
live in such a beautiful building as that.”

Though Frank did not know it, one of the queen’s palaces is far from
being as fine a looking building as the Fifth Avenue Hotel. St. James’
Palace is a very ugly-looking brick structure, and appears much more
like a factory than like the home of royalty. There are few hotels in
the world as fine-looking as this democratic institution.

At that moment a gentleman passed them on the sidewalk, who looked back
at Dick, as if his face seemed familiar.

“I know that man,” said Dick, after he had passed. “He’s one of my
customers.”

“What is his name?”

“I don’t know.”

“He looked back as if he thought he knew you.”

“He would have knowed me at once if it hadn’t been for my new clothes,”
said Dick. “I don’t look much like Ragged Dick now.”

“I suppose your face looked familiar.”

“All but the dirt,” said Dick, laughing. “I don’t always have the
chance of washing my face and hands in the Astor House.”

“You told me,” said Frank, “that there was a place where you could get
lodging for five cents. Where’s that?”

“It’s the News-boys’ Lodgin’ House, on Fulton Street,” said Dick, “up
over the ‘Sun’ office. It’s a good place. I don’t know what us boys
would do without it. They give you supper for six cents, and a bed for
five cents more.”

“I suppose some boys don’t even have the five cents to pay,—do they?”

“They’ll trust the boys,” said Dick. “But I don’t like to get trusted.
I’d be ashamed to get trusted for five cents, or ten either. One night
I was comin’ down Chatham Street, with fifty cents in my pocket. I was
goin’ to get a good oyster-stew, and then go to the lodgin’ house; but
somehow it slipped through a hole in my trowses-pocket, and I hadn’t a
cent left. If it had been summer I shouldn’t have cared, but it’s
rather tough stayin’ out winter nights.”

Frank, who had always possessed a good home of his own, found it hard
to realize that the boy who was walking at his side had actually walked
the streets in the cold without a home, or money to procure the common
comfort of a bed.

“What did you do?” he asked, his voice full of sympathy.

“I went to the ‘Times’ office. I knowed one of the pressmen, and he let
me set down in a corner, where I was warm, and I soon got fast asleep.”

“Why don’t you get a room somewhere, and so always have a home to go
to?”

“I dunno,” said Dick. “I never thought of it. P’rhaps I may hire a
furnished house on Madison Square.”

“That’s where Flora McFlimsey lived.”

“I don’t know her,” said Dick, who had never read the popular poem of
which she is the heroine.

While this conversation was going on, they had turned into Twenty-fifth
Street, and had by this time reached Third Avenue.

Just before entering it, their attention was drawn to the rather
singular conduct of an individual in front of them. Stopping suddenly,
he appeared to pick up something from the sidewalk, and then looked
about him in rather a confused way.

“I know his game,” whispered Dick. “Come along and you’ll see what it
is.”

He hurried Frank forward until they overtook the man, who had come to a
stand-still.

“Have you found anything?” asked Dick.

“Yes,” said the man, “I’ve found this.”

He exhibited a wallet which seemed stuffed with bills, to judge from
its plethoric appearance.

“Whew!” exclaimed Dick; “you’re in luck.”

“I suppose somebody has lost it,” said the man, “and will offer a
handsome reward.”

“Which you’ll get.”

“Unfortunately I am obliged to take the next train to Boston. That’s
where I live. I haven’t time to hunt up the owner.”

“Then I suppose you’ll take the pocket-book with you,” said Dick, with
assumed simplicity.

“I should like to leave it with some honest fellow who would see it
returned to the owner,” said the man, glancing at the boys.

“I’m honest,” said Dick.

“I’ve no doubt of it,” said the other. “Well, young man, I’ll make you
an offer. You take the pocket-book—”

“All right. Hand it over, then.”

“Wait a minute. There must be a large sum inside. I shouldn’t wonder if
there might be a thousand dollars. The owner will probably give you a
hundred dollars reward.”

“Why don’t you stay and get it?” asked Frank.

“I would, only there is sickness in my family, and I must get home as
soon as possible. Just give me twenty dollars, and I’ll hand you the
pocket-book, and let you make whatever you can out of it. Come, that’s
a good offer. What do you say?”

Dick was well dressed, so that the other did not regard it as at all
improbable that he might possess that sum. He was prepared, however, to
let him have it for less, if necessary.

“Twenty dollars is a good deal of money,” said Dick, appearing to
hesitate.

“You’ll get it back, and a good deal more,” said the stranger,
persuasively.

“I don’t know but I shall. What would you do, Frank?”

“I don’t know but I would,” said Frank, “if you’ve got the money.” He
was not a little surprised to think that Dick had so much by him.

“I don’t know but I will,” said Dick, after some irresolution. “I guess
I won’t lose much.”

“You can’t lose anything,” said the stranger briskly. “Only be quick,
for I must be on my way to the cars. I am afraid I shall miss them
now.”

Dick pulled out a bill from his pocket, and handed it to the stranger,
receiving the pocket-book in return. At that moment a policeman turned
the corner, and the stranger, hurriedly thrusting the bill into his
pocket, without looking at it, made off with rapid steps.

“What is there in the pocket-book, Dick?” asked Frank in some
excitement. “I hope there’s enough to pay you for the money you gave
him.”

Dick laughed.

“I’ll risk that,” said he.

“But you gave him twenty dollars. That’s a good deal of money.”

“If I had given him as much as that, I should deserve to be cheated out
of it.”

“But you did,—didn’t you?”

“He thought so.”

“What was it, then?”

“It was nothing but a dry-goods circular got up to imitate a
bank-bill.”

Frank looked sober.

“You ought not to have cheated him, Dick,” he said, reproachfully.

“Didn’t he want to cheat me?”

“I don’t know.”

“What do you s’pose there is in that pocket-book?” asked Dick, holding
it up.

Frank surveyed its ample proportions, and answered sincerely enough,
“Money, and a good deal of it.”

“There aint stamps enough in it to buy a oyster-stew,” said Dick. “If
you don’t believe it, just look while I open it.”

So saying he opened the pocket-book, and showed Frank that it was
stuffed out with pieces of blank paper, carefully folded up in the
shape of bills. Frank, who was unused to city life, and had never heard
anything of the “drop-game” looked amazed at this unexpected
development.

“I knowed how it was all the time,” said Dick. “I guess I got the best
of him there. This wallet’s worth somethin’. I shall use it to keep my
stiffkit’s of Erie stock in, and all my other papers what aint of no
use to anybody but the owner.”

“That’s the kind of papers it’s got in it now,” said Frank, smiling.

“That’s so!” said Dick.

“By hokey!” he exclaimed suddenly, “if there aint the old chap comin’
back ag’in. He looks as if he’d heard bad news from his sick family.”

By this time the pocket-book dropper had come up.

Approaching the boys, he said in an undertone to Dick, “Give me back
that pocket-book, you young rascal!”

“Beg your pardon, mister,” said Dick, “but was you addressin’ me?”

“Yes, I was.”

“’Cause you called me by the wrong name. I’ve knowed some rascals, but
I aint the honor to belong to the family.”

He looked significantly at the other as he spoke, which didn’t improve
the man’s temper. Accustomed to swindle others, he did not fancy being
practised upon in return.

“Give me back that pocket-book,” he repeated in a threatening voice.

“Couldn’t do it,” said Dick, coolly. “I’m go’n’ to restore it to the
owner. The contents is so valooable that most likely the loss has made
him sick, and he’ll be likely to come down liberal to the honest
finder.”

“You gave me a bogus bill,” said the man.

“It’s what I use myself,” said Dick.

“You’ve swindled me.”

“I thought it was the other way.”

“None of your nonsense,” said the man angrily. “If you don’t give up
that pocket-book, I’ll call a policeman.”

“I wish you would,” said Dick. “They’ll know most likely whether it’s
Stewart or Astor that’s lost the pocket-book, and I can get ’em to
return it.”

The “dropper,” whose object it was to recover the pocket-book, in order
to try the same game on a more satisfactory customer, was irritated by
Dick’s refusal, and above all by the coolness he displayed. He resolved
to make one more attempt.

“Do you want to pass the night in the Tombs?” he asked.

“Thank you for your very obligin’ proposal,” said Dick; “but it aint
convenient to-day. Any other time, when you’d like to have me come and
stop with you, I’m agreeable; but my two youngest children is down with
the measles, and I expect I’ll have to set up all night to take care of
’em. Is the Tombs, in gineral, a pleasant place of residence?”

Dick asked this question with an air of so much earnestness that Frank
could scarcely forbear laughing, though it is hardly necessary to say
that the dropper was by no means so inclined.

“You’ll know sometime,” he said, scowling.

“I’ll make you a fair offer,” said Dick. “If I get more’n fifty dollars
as a reward for my honesty, I’ll divide with you. But I say, aint it
most time to go back to your sick family in Boston?”

Finding that nothing was to be made out of Dick, the man strode away
with a muttered curse.

“You were too smart for him, Dick,” said Frank.

“Yes,” said Dick, “I aint knocked round the city streets all my life
for nothin’.”



CHAPTER VIII.
DICK’S EARLY HISTORY


“Have you always lived in New York, Dick?” asked Frank, after a pause.

“Ever since I can remember.”

“I wish you’d tell me a little about yourself. Have you got any father
or mother?”

“I aint got no mother. She died when I wasn’t but three years old. My
father went to sea; but he went off before mother died, and nothin’ was
ever heard of him. I expect he got wrecked, or died at sea.”

“And what became of you when your mother died?”

“The folks she boarded with took care of me, but they was poor, and
they couldn’t do much. When I was seven the woman died, and her husband
went out West, and then I had to scratch for myself.”

“At seven years old!” exclaimed Frank, in amazement.

“Yes,” said Dick, “I was a little feller to take care of myself, but,”
he continued with pardonable pride, “I did it.”

“What could you do?”

“Sometimes one thing, and sometimes another,” said Dick. “I changed my
business accordin’ as I had to. Sometimes I was a newsboy, and diffused
intelligence among the masses, as I heard somebody say once in a big
speech he made in the Park. Them was the times when Horace Greeley and
James Gordon Bennett made money.”

“Through your enterprise?” suggested Frank.

“Yes,” said Dick; “but I give it up after a while.”

“What for?”

“Well, they didn’t always put news enough in their papers, and people
wouldn’t buy ’em as fast as I wanted ’em to. So one mornin’ I was stuck
on a lot of Heralds, and I thought I’d make a sensation. So I called
out ‘GREAT NEWS! QUEEN VICTORIA ASSASSINATED!’ All my Heralds went off
like hot cakes, and I went off, too, but one of the gentlemen what got
sold remembered me, and said he’d have me took up, and that’s what made
me change my business.”

“That wasn’t right, Dick,” said Frank.

“I know it,” said Dick; “but lots of boys does it.”

“That don’t make it any better.”

“No,” said Dick, “I was sort of ashamed at the time, ’specially about
one poor old gentleman,—a Englishman he was. He couldn’t help cryin’ to
think the queen was dead, and his hands shook when he handed me the
money for the paper.”

“What did you do next?”

“I went into the match business,” said Dick; “but it was small sales
and small profits. Most of the people I called on had just laid in a
stock, and didn’t want to buy. So one cold night, when I hadn’t money
enough to pay for a lodgin’, I burned the last of my matches to keep me
from freezin’. But it cost too much to get warm that way, and I
couldn’t keep it up.”

“You’ve seen hard times, Dick,” said Frank, compassionately.

“Yes,” said Dick, “I’ve knowed what it was to be hungry and cold, with
nothin’ to eat or to warm me; but there’s one thing I never could do,”
he added, proudly.

“What’s that?”

“I never stole,” said Dick. “It’s mean and I wouldn’t do it.”

“Were you ever tempted to?”

“Lots of times. Once I had been goin’ round all day, and hadn’t sold
any matches, except three cents’ worth early in the mornin’. With that
I bought an apple, thinkin’ I should get some more bimeby. When evenin’
come I was awful hungry. I went into a baker’s just to look at the
bread. It made me feel kind o’ good just to look at the bread and
cakes, and I thought maybe they would give me some. I asked ’em
wouldn’t they give me a loaf, and take their pay in matches. But they
said they’d got enough matches to last three months; so there wasn’t
any chance for a trade. While I was standin’ at the stove warmin’ me,
the baker went into a back room, and I felt so hungry I thought I would
take just one loaf, and go off with it. There was such a big pile I
don’t think he’d have known it.”

“But you didn’t do it?”

“No, I didn’t and I was glad of it, for when the man came in ag’in, he
said he wanted some one to carry some cake to a lady in St. Mark’s
Place. His boy was sick, and he hadn’t no one to send; so he told me
he’d give me ten cents if I would go. My business wasn’t very pressin’
just then, so I went, and when I come back, I took my pay in bread and
cakes. Didn’t they taste good, though?”

“So you didn’t stay long in the match business, Dick?”

“No, I couldn’t sell enough to make it pay. Then there was some folks
that wanted me to sell cheaper to them; so I couldn’t make any profit.
There was one old lady—she was rich, too, for she lived in a big brick
house—beat me down so, that I didn’t make no profit at all; but she
wouldn’t buy without, and I hadn’t sold none that day; so I let her
have them. I don’t see why rich folks should be so hard upon a poor boy
that wants to make a livin’.”

“There’s a good deal of meanness in the world, I’m afraid, Dick.”

“If everybody was like you and your uncle,” said Dick, “there would be
some chance for poor people. If I was rich I’d try to help ’em along.”

“Perhaps you will be rich sometime, Dick.”

Dick shook his head.

“I’m afraid all my wallets will be like this,” said Dick, indicating
the one he had received from the dropper, “and will be full of papers
what aint of no use to anybody except the owner.”

“That depends very much on yourself, Dick,” said Frank. “Stewart wasn’t
always rich, you know.”

“Wasn’t he?”

“When he first came to New York as a young man he was a teacher, and
teachers are not generally very rich. At last he went into business,
starting in a small way, and worked his way up by degrees. But there
was one thing he determined in the beginning: that he would be strictly
honorable in all his dealings, and never overreach any one for the sake
of making money. If there was a chance for him, Dick, there is a chance
for you.”

“He knowed enough to be a teacher, and I’m awful ignorant,” said Dick.

“But you needn’t stay so.”

“How can I help it?”

“Can’t you learn at school?”

“I can’t go to school ’cause I’ve got my livin’ to earn. It wouldn’t do
me much good if I learned to read and write, and just as I’d got
learned I starved to death.”

“But are there no night-schools?”

“Yes.”

“Why don’t you go? I suppose you don’t work in the evenings.”

“I never cared much about it,” said Dick, “and that’s the truth. But
since I’ve got to talkin’ with you, I think more about it. I guess I’ll
begin to go.”

“I wish you would, Dick. You’ll make a smart man if you only get a
little education.”

“Do you think so?” asked Dick, doubtfully.

“I know so. A boy who has earned his own living since he was seven
years old must have something in him. I feel very much interested in
you, Dick. You’ve had a hard time of it so far in life, but I think
better times are in store. I want you to do well, and I feel sure you
can if you only try.”

“You’re a good fellow,” said Dick, gratefully. “I’m afraid I’m a pretty
rough customer, but I aint as bad as some. I mean to turn over a new
leaf, and try to grow up ’spectable.”

“There’ve been a great many boys begin as low down as you, Dick, that
have grown up respectable and honored. But they had to work pretty hard
for it.”

“I’m willin’ to work hard,” said Dick.

“And you must not only work hard, but work in the right way.”

“What’s the right way?”

“You began in the right way when you determined never to steal, or do
anything mean or dishonorable, however strongly tempted to do so. That
will make people have confidence in you when they come to know you.
But, in order to succeed well, you must manage to get as good an
education as you can. Until you do, you cannot get a position in an
office or counting-room, even to run errands.”

“That’s so,” said Dick, soberly. “I never thought how awful ignorant I
was till now.”

“That can be remedied with perseverance,” said Frank. “A year will do a
great deal for you.”

“I’ll go to work and see what I can do,” said Dick, energetically.



CHAPTER IX.
A SCENE IN A THIRD AVENUE CAR


The boys had turned into Third Avenue, a long street, which, commencing
just below the Cooper Institute, runs out to Harlem. A man came out of
a side street, uttering at intervals a monotonous cry which sounded
like “glass puddin’.”

“Glass pudding!” repeated Frank, looking in surprised wonder at Dick.
“What does he mean?”

“Perhaps you’d like some,” said Dick.

“I never heard of it before.”

“Suppose you ask him what he charges for his puddin’.”

Frank looked more narrowly at the man, and soon concluded that he was a
glazier.

“Oh, I understand,” he said. “He means ‘glass put in.’”

Frank’s mistake was not a singular one. The monotonous cry of these men
certainly sounds more like “glass puddin’,” than the words they intend
to utter.

“Now,” said Dick, “where shall we go?”

“I should like to see Central Park,” said Frank. “Is it far off?”

“It is about a mile and a half from here,” said Dick. “This is
Twenty-ninth Street, and the Park begins at Fifty-ninth Street.”

It may be explained, for the benefit of readers who have never visited
New York, that about a mile from the City Hall the cross-streets begin
to be numbered in regular order. There is a continuous line of houses
as far as One Hundred and Thirtieth Street, where may be found the
terminus of the Harlem line of horse-cars. When the entire island is
laid out and settled, probably the numbers will reach two hundred or
more. Central Park, which lies between Fifty-ninth Street on the south,
and One Hundred and Tenth Street on the north, is true to its name,
occupying about the centre of the island. The distance between two
parallel streets is called a block, and twenty blocks make a mile. It
will therefore be seen that Dick was exactly right, when he said they
were a mile and a half from Central Park.

“That is too far to walk,” said Frank.

“’Twon’t cost but six cents to ride,” said Dick.

“You mean in the horse-cars?”

“Yes.”

“All right then. We’ll jump aboard the next car.”

The Third Avenue and Harlem line of horse-cars is better patronized
than any other in New York, though not much can be said for the cars,
which are usually dirty and overcrowded. Still, when it is considered
that only seven cents are charged for the entire distance to Harlem,
about seven miles from the City Hall, the fare can hardly be complained
of. But of course most of the profit is made from the way-passengers
who only ride a short distance.

A car was at that moment approaching, but it seemed pretty crowded.

“Shall we take that, or wait for another?” asked Frank.

“The next’ll most likely be as bad,” said Dick.

The boys accordingly signalled to the conductor to stop, and got on the
front platform. They were obliged to stand up till the car reached
Fortieth Street, when so many of the passengers had got off that they
obtained seats.

Frank sat down beside a middle-aged woman, or lady, as she probably
called herself, whose sharp visage and thin lips did not seem to
promise a very pleasant disposition. When the two gentlemen who sat
beside her arose, she spread her skirts in the endeavor to fill two
seats. Disregarding this, the boys sat down.

“There aint room for two,” she said, looking sourly at Frank.

“There were two here before.”

“Well, there ought not to have been. Some people like to crowd in where
they’re not wanted.”

“And some like to take up a double allowance of room,” thought Frank;
but he did not say so. He saw that the woman had a bad temper, and
thought it wisest to say nothing.

Frank had never ridden up the city as far as this, and it was with much
interest that he looked out of the car windows at the stores on either
side. Third Avenue is a broad street, but in the character of its
houses and stores it is quite inferior to Broadway, though better than
some of the avenues further east. Fifth Avenue, as most of my readers
already know, is the finest street in the city, being lined with
splendid private residences, occupied by the wealthier classes. Many of
the cross streets also boast houses which may be considered palaces, so
elegant are they externally and internally. Frank caught glimpses of
some of these as he was carried towards the Park.

After the first conversation, already mentioned, with the lady at his
side, he supposed he should have nothing further to do with her. But in
this he was mistaken. While he was busy looking out of the car window,
she plunged her hand into her pocket in search of her purse, which she
was unable to find. Instantly she jumped to the conclusion that it had
been stolen, and her suspicions fastened upon Frank, with whom she was
already provoked for “crowding her,” as she termed it.

“Conductor!” she exclaimed in a sharp voice.

“What’s wanted, ma’am?” returned that functionary.

“I want you to come here right off.”

“What’s the matter?”

“My purse has been stolen. There was four dollars and eighty cents in
it. I know, because I counted it when I paid my fare.”

“Who stole it?”

“That boy,” she said pointing to Frank, who listened to the charge in
the most intense astonishment. “He crowded in here on purpose to rob
me, and I want you to search him right off.”

“That’s a lie!” exclaimed Dick, indignantly.

“Oh, you’re in league with him, I dare say,” said the woman spitefully.
“You’re as bad as he is, I’ll be bound.”

“You’re a nice female, you be!” said Dick, ironically.

“Don’t you dare to call me a female, sir,” said the lady, furiously.

“Why, you aint a man in disguise, be you?” said Dick.

“You are very much mistaken, madam,” said Frank, quietly. “The
conductor may search me, if you desire it.”

A charge of theft, made in a crowded car, of course made quite a
sensation. Cautious passengers instinctively put their hands on their
pockets, to make sure that they, too, had not been robbed. As for
Frank, his face flushed, and he felt very indignant that he should even
be suspected of so mean a crime. He had been carefully brought up, and
been taught to regard stealing as low and wicked.

Dick, on the contrary, thought it a capital joke that such a charge
should have been made against his companion. Though he had brought
himself up, and known plenty of boys and men, too, who would steal, he
had never done so himself. He thought it mean. But he could not be
expected to regard it as Frank did. He had been too familiar with it in
others to look upon it with horror.

Meanwhile the passengers rather sided with the boys. Appearances go a
great ways, and Frank did not look like a thief.

“I think you must be mistaken, madam,” said a gentleman sitting
opposite. “The lad does not look as if he would steal.”

“You can’t tell by looks,” said the lady, sourly. “They’re deceitful;
villains are generally well dressed.”

“Be they?” said Dick. “You’d ought to see me with my Washington coat
on. You’d think I was the biggest villain ever you saw.”

“I’ve no doubt you are,” said the lady, scowling in the direction of
our hero.

“Thank you, ma’am,” said Dick. “’Tisn’t often I get such fine
compliments.”

“None of your impudence,” said the lady, wrathfully. “I believe you’re
the worst of the two.”

Meanwhile the car had been stopped.

“How long are we going to stop here?” demanded a passenger,
impatiently. “I’m in a hurry, if none of the rest of you are.”

“I want my pocket-book,” said the lady, defiantly.

“Well, ma’am, I haven’t got it, and I don’t see as it’s doing you any
good detaining us all here.”

“Conductor, will you call a policeman to search that young scamp?”
continued the aggrieved lady. “You don’t expect I’m going to lose my
money, and do nothing about it.”

“I’ll turn my pockets inside out if you want me to,” said Frank,
proudly. “There’s no need of a policeman. The conductor, or any one
else, may search me.”

“Well, youngster,” said the conductor, “if the lady agrees, I’ll search
you.”

The lady signified her assent.

Frank accordingly turned his pockets inside out, but nothing was
revealed except his own porte-monnaie and a penknife.

“Well, ma’am, are you satisfied?” asked the conductor.

“No, I aint,” said she, decidedly.

“You don’t think he’s got it still?”

“No, but he’s passed it over to his confederate, that boy there that’s
so full of impudence.”

“That’s me,” said Dick, comically.

“He confesses it,” said the lady; “I want him searched.”

“All right,” said Dick, “I’m ready for the operation, only, as I’ve got
valooable property about me, be careful not to drop any of my Erie
Bonds.”

The conductor’s hand forthwith dove into Dick’s pocket, and drew out a
rusty jack-knife, a battered cent, about fifty cents in change, and the
capacious pocket-book which he had received from the swindler who was
anxious to get back to his sick family in Boston.

“Is that yours, ma’am?” asked the conductor, holding up the wallet
which excited some amazement, by its size, among the other passengers.

“It seems to me you carry a large pocket-book for a young man of your
age,” said the conductor.

“That’s what I carry my cash and valooable papers in,” said Dick.

“I suppose that isn’t yours, ma’am,” said the conductor, turning to the
lady.

“No,” said she, scornfully. “I wouldn’t carry round such a great wallet
as that. Most likely he’s stolen it from somebody else.”

“What a prime detective you’d be!” said Dick. “P’rhaps you know who I
took it from.”

“I don’t know but my money’s in it,” said the lady, sharply.
“Conductor, will you open that wallet, and see what there is in it?”

“Don’t disturb the valooable papers,” said Dick, in a tone of pretended
anxiety.

The contents of the wallet excited some amusement among the passengers.

“There don’t seem to be much money here,” said the conductor, taking
out a roll of tissue paper cut out in the shape of bills, and rolled
up.

“No,” said Dick. “Didn’t I tell you them were papers of no valoo to
anybody but the owner? If the lady’d like to borrow, I won’t charge no
interest.”

“Where is my money, then?” said the lady, in some discomfiture. “I
shouldn’t wonder if one of the young scamps had thrown it out of the
window.”

“You’d better search your pocket once more,” said the gentleman
opposite. “I don’t believe either of the boys is in fault. They don’t
look to me as if they would steal.”

“Thank you, sir,” said Frank.

The lady followed out the suggestion, and, plunging her hand once more
into her pocket, drew out a small porte-monnaie. She hardly knew
whether to be glad or sorry at this discovery. It placed her in rather
an awkward position after the fuss she had made, and the detention to
which she had subjected the passengers, now, as it proved, for nothing.

“Is that the pocket-book you thought stolen?” asked the conductor.

“Yes,” said she, rather confusedly.

“Then you’ve been keeping me waiting all this time for nothing,” he
said, sharply. “I wish you’d take care to be sure next time before you
make such a disturbance for nothing. I’ve lost five minutes, and shall
not be on time.”

“I can’t help it,” was the cross reply; “I didn’t know it was in my
pocket.”

“It seems to me you owe an apology to the boys you accused of a theft
which they have not committed,” said the gentleman opposite.

“I shan’t apologize to anybody,” said the lady, whose temper was not of
the best; “least of all to such whipper-snappers as they are.”

“Thank you, ma’am,” said Dick, comically; “your handsome apology is
accepted. It aint of no consequence, only I didn’t like to expose the
contents of my valooable pocket-book, for fear it might excite the envy
of some of my poor neighbors.”

“You’re a character,” said the gentleman who had already spoken, with a
smile.

“A bad character!” muttered the lady.

But it was quite evident that the sympathies of those present were
against the lady, and on the side of the boys who had been falsely
accused, while Dick’s drollery had created considerable amusement.

The cars had now reached Fifty-ninth Street, the southern boundary of
the Park, and here our hero and his companion got off.

“You’d better look out for pickpockets, my lad,” said the conductor,
pleasantly. “That big wallet of yours might prove a great temptation.”

“That’s so,” said Dick. “That’s the misfortin’ of being rich. Astor and
me don’t sleep much for fear of burglars breakin’ in and robbin’ us of
our valooable treasures. Sometimes I think I’ll give all my money to an
Orphan Asylum, and take it out in board. I guess I’d make money by the
operation.”

While Dick was speaking, the car rolled away, and the boys turned up
Fifty-ninth Street, for two long blocks yet separated them from the
Park.



CHAPTER X.
INTRODUCES A VICTIM OF MISPLACED CONFIDENCE


“What a queer chap you are, Dick!” said Frank, laughing. “You always
seem to be in good spirits.”

“No, I aint always. Sometimes I have the blues.”

“When?”

“Well, once last winter it was awful cold, and there was big holes in
my shoes, and my gloves and all my warm clothes was at the tailor’s. I
felt as if life was sort of tough, and I’d like it if some rich man
would adopt me, and give me plenty to eat and drink and wear, without
my havin’ to look so sharp after it. Then agin’ when I’ve seen boys
with good homes, and fathers, and mothers, I’ve thought I’d like to
have somebody to care for me.”

Dick’s tone changed as he said this, from his usual levity, and there
was a touch of sadness in it. Frank, blessed with a good home and
indulgent parents, could not help pitying the friendless boy who had
found life such up-hill work.

“Don’t say you have no one to care for you, Dick,” he said, lightly
laying his hand on Dick’s shoulder. “I will care for you.”

“Will you?”

“If you will let me.”

“I wish you would,” said Dick, earnestly. “I’d like to feel that I have
one friend who cares for me.”

Central Park was now before them, but it was far from presenting the
appearance which it now exhibits. It had not been long since work had
been commenced upon it, and it was still very rough and unfinished. A
rough tract of land, two miles and a half from north to south, and a
half a mile broad, very rocky in parts, was the material from which the
Park Commissioners have made the present beautiful enclosure. There
were no houses of good appearance near it, buildings being limited
mainly to rude temporary huts used by the workmen who were employed in
improving it. The time will undoubtedly come when the Park will be
surrounded by elegant residences, and compare favorably in this respect
with the most attractive parts of any city in the world. But at the
time when Frank and Dick visited it, not much could be said in favor
either of the Park or its neighborhood.

“If this is Central Park,” said Frank, who naturally felt disappointed,
“I don’t think much of it. My father’s got a large pasture that is much
nicer.”

“It’ll look better some time,” said Dick. “There aint much to see now
but rocks. We will take a walk over it if you want to.”

“No,” said Frank, “I’ve seen as much of it as I want to. Besides, I
feel tired.”

“Then we’ll go back. We can take the Sixth Avenue cars. They will bring
us out at Vesey Street just beside the Astor House.”

“All right,” said Frank. “That will be the best course. I hope,” he
added, laughing, “our agreeable lady friend won’t be there. I don’t
care about being accused of _stealing_ again.”

“She was a tough one,” said Dick. “Wouldn’t she make a nice wife for a
man that likes to live in hot water, and didn’t mind bein’ scalded two
or three times a day?”

“Yes, I think she’d just suit him. Is that the right car, Dick?”

“Yes, jump in, and I’ll follow.”

The Sixth Avenue is lined with stores, many of them of very good
appearance, and would make a very respectable principal street for a
good-sized city. But it is only one of several long business streets
which run up the island, and illustrate the extent and importance of
the city to which they belong.

No incidents worth mentioning took place during their ride down town.
In about three-quarters of an hour the boys got out of the car beside
the Astor House.

“Are you goin’ in now, Frank?” asked Dick.

“That depends upon whether you have anything else to show me.”

“Wouldn’t you like to go to Wall Street?”

“That’s the street where there are so many bankers and brokers,—isn’t
it?”

“Yes, I s’pose you aint afraid of bulls and bears,—are you?”

“Bulls and bears?” repeated Frank, puzzled.

“Yes.”

“What are they?”

“The bulls is what tries to make the stocks go up, and the bears is
what try to growl ’em down.”

“Oh, I see. Yes, I’d like to go.”

Accordingly they walked down on the west side of Broadway as far as
Trinity Church, and then, crossing, entered a street not very wide or
very long, but of very great importance. The reader would be astonished
if he could know the amount of money involved in the transactions which
take place in a single day in this street. It would be found that
although Broadway is much greater in length, and lined with stores, it
stands second to Wall Street in this respect.

“What is that large marble building?” asked Frank, pointing to a
massive structure on the corner of Wall and Nassau Streets. It was in
the form of a parallelogram, two hundred feet long by ninety wide, and
about eighty feet in height, the ascent to the entrance being by
eighteen granite steps.

“That’s the Custom House,” said Dick.

“It looks like pictures I’ve seen of the Parthenon at Athens,” said
Frank, meditatively.

“Where’s Athens?” asked Dick. “It aint in York State,—is it?”

“Not the Athens I mean, at any rate. It is in Greece, and was a famous
city two thousand years ago.”

“That’s longer than I can remember,” said Dick. “I can’t remember
distinctly more’n about a thousand years.”

“What a chap you are, Dick! Do you know if we can go in?”

The boys ascertained, after a little inquiry, that they would be
allowed to do so. They accordingly entered the Custom House and made
their way up to the roof, from which they had a fine view of the
harbor, the wharves crowded with shipping, and the neighboring shores
of Long Island and New Jersey. Towards the north they looked down for
many miles upon continuous lines of streets, and thousands of roofs,
with here and there a church-spire rising above its neighbors. Dick had
never before been up there, and he, as well as Frank, was interested in
the grand view spread before them.

At length they descended, and were going down the granite steps on the
outside of the building, when they were addressed by a young man, whose
appearance is worth describing.

He was tall, and rather loosely put together, with small eyes and
rather a prominent nose. His clothing had evidently not been furnished
by a city tailor. He wore a blue coat with brass buttons, and
pantaloons of rather scanty dimensions, which were several inches too
short to cover his lower limbs. He held in his hand a piece of paper,
and his countenance wore a look of mingled bewilderment and anxiety.

“Be they a-payin’ out money inside there?” he asked, indicating the
interior by a motion of his hand.

“I guess so,” said Dick. “Are you a-goin’ in for some?”

“Wal, yes. I’ve got an order here for sixty dollars,—made a kind of
speculation this morning.”

“How was it?” asked Frank.

“Wal, you see I brought down some money to put in the bank, fifty
dollars it was, and I hadn’t justly made up my mind what bank to put it
into, when a chap came up in a terrible hurry, and said it was very
unfortunate, but the bank wasn’t open, and he must have some money
right off. He was obliged to go out of the city by the next train. I
asked him how much he wanted. He said fifty dollars. I told him I’d got
that, and he offered me a check on the bank for sixty, and I let him
have it. I thought that was a pretty easy way to earn ten dollars, so I
counted out the money and he went off. He told me I’d hear a bell ring
when they began to pay out money. But I’ve waited most two hours, and I
haint heard it yet. I’d ought to be goin’, for I told dad I’d be home
to-night. Do you think I can get the money now?”

“Will you show me the check?” asked Frank, who had listened attentively
to the countryman’s story, and suspected that he had been made the
victim of a swindler. It was made out upon the “Washington Bank,” in
the sum of sixty dollars, and was signed “Ephraim Smith.”

“Washington Bank!” repeated Frank. “Dick, is there such a bank in the
city?”

“Not as I knows on,” said Dick. “Leastways I don’t own any shares in
it.”

“Aint this the Washington Bank?” asked the countryman, pointing to the
building on the steps of which the three were now standing.

“No, it’s the Custom House.”

“And won’t they give me any money for this?” asked the young man, the
perspiration standing on his brow.

“I am afraid the man who gave it to you was a swindler,” said Frank,
gently.

“And won’t I ever see my fifty dollars again?” asked the youth in
agony.

“I am afraid not.”

“What’ll dad say?” ejaculated the miserable youth. “It makes me feel
sick to think of it. I wish I had the feller here. I’d shake him out of
his boots.”

“What did he look like? I’ll call a policeman and you shall describe
him. Perhaps in that way you can get track of your money.”

Dick called a policeman, who listened to the description, and
recognized the operator as an experienced swindler. He assured the
countryman that there was very little chance of his ever seeing his
money again. The boys left the miserable youth loudly bewailing his bad
luck, and proceeded on their way down the street.

“He’s a baby,” said Dick, contemptuously. “He’d ought to know how to
take care of himself and his money. A feller has to look sharp in this
city, or he’ll lose his eye-teeth before he knows it.”

“I suppose you never got swindled out of fifty dollars, Dick?”

“No, I don’t carry no such small bills. I wish I did,” he added.

“So do I, Dick. What’s that building there at the end of the street?”

“That’s the Wall-Street Ferry to Brooklyn.”

“How long does it take to go across?”

“Not more’n five minutes.”

“Suppose we just ride over and back.”

“All right!” said Dick. “It’s rather expensive; but if you don’t mind,
I don’t.”

“Why, how much does it cost?”

“Two cents apiece.”

“I guess I can stand that. Let us go.”

They passed the gate, paying the fare to a man who stood at the
entrance, and were soon on the ferry-boat, bound for Brooklyn.

They had scarcely entered the boat, when Dick, grasping Frank by the
arm, pointed to a man just outside of the gentlemen’s cabin.

“Do you see that man, Frank?” he inquired.

“Yes, what of him?”

“He’s the man that cheated the country chap out of his fifty dollars.”



CHAPTER XI.
DICK AS A DETECTIVE


Dick’s ready identification of the rogue who had cheated the
countryman, surprised Frank.

“What makes you think it is he?” he asked.

“Because I’ve seen him before, and I know he’s up to them kind of
tricks. When I heard how he looked, I was sure I knowed him.”

“Our recognizing him won’t be of much use,” said Frank. “It won’t give
back the countryman his money.”

“I don’t know,” said Dick, thoughtfully. “May be I can get it.”

“How?” asked Frank, incredulously.

“Wait a minute, and you’ll see.”

Dick left his companion, and went up to the man whom he suspected.

“Ephraim Smith,” said Dick, in a low voice.

The man turned suddenly, and looked at Dick uneasily.

“What did you say?” he asked.

“I believe your name is Ephraim Smith,” continued Dick.

“You’re mistaken,” said the man, and was about to move off.

“Stop a minute,” said Dick. “Don’t you keep your money in the
Washington Bank?”

“I don’t know any such bank. I’m in a hurry, young man, and I can’t
stop to answer any foolish questions.”

The boat had by this time reached the Brooklyn pier, and Mr. Ephraim
Smith seemed in a hurry to land.

“Look here,” said Dick, significantly; “you’d better not go on shore
unless you want to jump into the arms of a policeman.”

“What do you mean?” asked the man, startled.

“That little affair of yours is known to the police,” said Dick; “about
how you got fifty dollars out of a greenhorn on a false check, and it
mayn’t be safe for you to go ashore.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said the swindler with
affected boldness, though Dick could see that he was ill at ease.

“Yes you do,” said Dick. “There isn’t but one thing to do. Just give me
back that money, and I’ll see that you’re not touched. If you don’t,
I’ll give you up to the first p’liceman we meet.”

Dick looked so determined, and spoke so confidently, that the other,
overcome by his fears, no longer hesitated, but passed a roll of bills
to Dick and hastily left the boat.

All this Frank witnessed with great amazement, not understanding what
influence Dick could have obtained over the swindler sufficient to
compel restitution.

“How did you do it?” he asked eagerly.

“I told him I’d exert my influence with the president to have him tried
by _habeas corpus_,” said Dick.

“And of course that frightened him. But tell me, without joking, how
you managed.”

Dick gave a truthful account of what occurred, and then said, “Now
we’ll go back and carry the money.”

“Suppose we don’t find the poor countryman?”

“Then the p’lice will take care of it.”

They remained on board the boat, and in five minutes were again in New
York. Going up Wall Street, they met the countryman a little distance
from the Custom House. His face was marked with the traces of deep
anguish; but in his case even grief could not subdue the cravings of
appetite. He had purchased some cakes of one of the old women who
spread out for the benefit of passers-by an array of apples and
seed-cakes, and was munching them with melancholy satisfaction.

“Hilloa!” said Dick. “Have you found your money?”

“No,” ejaculated the young man, with a convulsive gasp. “I shan’t ever
see it again. The mean skunk’s cheated me out of it. Consarn his
picter! It took me most six months to save it up. I was workin’ for
Deacon Pinkham in our place. Oh, I wish I’d never come to New York! The
deacon, he told me he’d keep it for me; but I wanted to put it in the
bank, and now it’s all gone, boo hoo!”

And the miserable youth, having despatched his cakes, was so overcome
by the thought of his loss that he burst into tears.

“I say,” said Dick, “dry up, and see what I’ve got here.”

The youth no sooner saw the roll of bills, and comprehended that it was
indeed his lost treasure, than from the depths of anguish he was
exalted to the most ecstatic joy. He seized Dick’s hand, and shook it
with so much energy that our hero began to feel rather alarmed for its
safety.

“’Pears to me you take my arm for a pump-handle,” said he. “Couldn’t
you show your gratitood some other way? It’s just possible I may want
to use my arm ag’in some time.”

The young man desisted, but invited Dick most cordially to come up and
stop a week with him at his country home, assuring him that he wouldn’t
charge him anything for board.

“All right!” said Dick. “If you don’t mind I’ll bring my wife along,
too. She’s delicate, and the country air might do her good.”

Jonathan stared at him in amazement, uncertain whether to credit the
fact of his marriage. Dick walked on with Frank, leaving him in an
apparent state of stupefaction, and it is possible that he has not yet
settled the affair to his satisfaction.

“Now,” said Frank, “I think I’ll go back to the Astor House. Uncle has
probably got through his business and returned.”

“All right,” said Dick.

The two boys walked up to Broadway, just where the tall steeple of
Trinity faces the street of bankers and brokers, and walked leisurely
to the hotel. When they arrived at the Astor House, Dick said,
“Good-by, Frank.”

“Not yet,” said Frank; “I want you to come in with me.”

Dick followed his young patron up the steps. Frank went to the
reading-room, where, as he had thought probable, he found his uncle
already arrived, and reading a copy of “The Evening Post,” which he had
just purchased outside.

“Well, boys,” he said, looking up, “have you had a pleasant jaunt?”

“Yes, sir,” said Frank. “Dick’s a capital guide.”

“So this is Dick,” said Mr. Whitney, surveying him with a smile. “Upon
my word, I should hardly have known him. I must congratulate him on his
improved appearance.”

“Frank’s been very kind to me,” said Dick, who, rough street-boy as he
was, had a heart easily touched by kindness, of which he had never
experienced much. “He’s a tip-top fellow.”

“I believe he is a good boy,” said Mr. Whitney. “I hope, my lad, you
will prosper and rise in the world. You know in this free country
poverty in early life is no bar to a man’s advancement. I haven’t risen
very high myself,” he added, with a smile, “but have met with moderate
success in life; yet there was a time when I was as poor as you.”

“Were you, sir,” asked Dick, eagerly.

“Yes, my boy, I have known the time I have been obliged to go without
my dinner because I didn’t have enough money to pay for it.”

“How did you get up in the world,” asked Dick, anxiously.

“I entered a printing-office as an apprentice, and worked for some
years. Then my eyes gave out and I was obliged to give that up. Not
knowing what else to do, I went into the country, and worked on a farm.
After a while I was lucky enough to invent a machine, which has brought
me in a great deal of money. But there was one thing I got while I was
in the printing-office which I value more than money.”

“What was that, sir?”

“A taste for reading and study. During my leisure hours I improved
myself by study, and acquired a large part of the knowledge which I now
possess. Indeed, it was one of my books that first put me on the track
of the invention, which I afterwards made. So you see, my lad, that my
studious habits paid me in money, as well as in another way.”

“I’m awful ignorant,” said Dick, soberly.

“But you are young, and, I judge, a smart boy. If you try to learn, you
can, and if you ever expect to do anything in the world, you must know
something of books.”

“I will,” said Dick, resolutely. “I aint always goin’ to black boots
for a livin’.”

“All labor is respectable, my lad, and you have no cause to be ashamed
of any honest business; yet when you can get something to do that
promises better for your future prospects, I advise you to do so. Till
then earn your living in the way you are accustomed to, avoid
extravagance, and save up a little money if you can.”

“Thank you for your advice,” said our hero. “There aint many that takes
an interest in Ragged Dick.”

“So that’s your name,” said Mr. Whitney. “If I judge you rightly, it
won’t be long before you change it. Save your money, my lad, buy books,
and determine to be somebody, and you may yet fill an honorable
position.”

“I’ll try,” said Dick. “Good-night, sir.”

“Wait a minute, Dick,” said Frank. “Your blacking-box and old clothes
are upstairs. You may want them.”

“In course,” said Dick. “I couldn’t get along without my best clothes,
and my stock in trade.”

“You may go up to the room with him, Frank,” said Mr. Whitney. “The
clerk will give you the key. I want to see you, Dick, before you go.”

“Yes, sir,” said Dick.

“Where are you going to sleep to-night, Dick?” asked Frank, as they
went upstairs together.

“P’r’aps at the Fifth Avenue Hotel—on the outside,” said Dick.

“Haven’t you any place to sleep, then?”

“I slept in a box, last night.”

“In a box?”

“Yes, on Spruce Street.”

“Poor fellow!” said Frank, compassionately.

“Oh, ’twas a bully bed—full of straw! I slept like a top.”

“Don’t you earn enough to pay for a room, Dick?”

“Yes,” said Dick; “only I spend my money foolish, goin’ to the Old
Bowery, and Tony Pastor’s, and sometimes gamblin’ in Baxter Street.”

“You won’t gamble any more,—will you, Dick?” said Frank, laying his
hand persuasively on his companion’s shoulder.

“No, I won’t,” said Dick.

“You’ll promise?”

“Yes, and I’ll keep it. You’re a good feller. I wish you was goin’ to
be in New York.”

“I am going to a boarding-school in Connecticut. The name of the town
is Barnton. Will you write to me, Dick?”

“My writing would look like hens’ tracks,” said our hero.

“Never mind. I want you to write. When you write you can tell me how to
direct, and I will send you a letter.”

“I wish you would,” said Dick. “I wish I was more like you.”

“I hope you will make a much better boy, Dick. Now we’ll go in to my
uncle. He wishes to see you before you go.”

They went into the reading-room. Dick had wrapped up his blacking-brush
in a newspaper with which Frank had supplied him, feeling that a guest
of the Astor House should hardly be seen coming out of the hotel
displaying such a professional sign.

“Uncle, Dick’s ready to go,” said Frank.

“Good-by, my lad,” said Mr. Whitney. “I hope to hear good accounts of
you sometime. Don’t forget what I have told you. Remember that your
future position depends mainly upon yourself, and that it will be high
or low as you choose to make it.”

He held out his hand, in which was a five-dollar bill. Dick shrunk
back.

“I don’t like to take it,” he said. “I haven’t earned it.”

“Perhaps not,” said Mr. Whitney; “but I give it to you because I
remember my own friendless youth. I hope it may be of service to you.
Sometime when you are a prosperous man, you can repay it in the form of
aid to some poor boy, who is struggling upward as you are now.”

“I will, sir,” said Dick, manfully.

He no longer refused the money, but took it gratefully, and, bidding
Frank and his uncle good-by, went out into the street. A feeling of
loneliness came over him as he left the presence of Frank, for whom he
had formed a strong attachment in the few hours he had known him.



CHAPTER XII.
DICK HIRES A ROOM ON MOTT STREET


Going out into the fresh air Dick felt the pangs of hunger. He
accordingly went to a restaurant and got a substantial supper. Perhaps
it was the new clothes he wore, which made him feel a little more
aristocratic. At all events, instead of patronizing the cheap
restaurant where he usually procured his meals, he went into the
refectory attached to Lovejoy’s Hotel, where the prices were higher and
the company more select. In his ordinary dress, Dick would have been
excluded, but now he had the appearance of a very respectable,
gentlemanly boy, whose presence would not discredit any establishment.
His orders were therefore received with attention by the waiter and in
due time a good supper was placed before him.

“I wish I could come here every day,” thought Dick. “It seems kind o’
nice and ’spectable, side of the other place. There’s a gent at that
other table that I’ve shined boots for more’n once. He don’t know me in
my new clothes. Guess he don’t know his boot-black patronizes the same
establishment.”

His supper over, Dick went up to the desk, and, presenting his check,
tendered in payment his five-dollar bill, as if it were one of a large
number which he possessed. Receiving back his change he went out into
the street.

Two questions now arose: How should he spend the evening, and where
should he pass the night? Yesterday, with such a sum of money in his
possession, he would have answered both questions readily. For the
evening, he would have passed it at the Old Bowery, and gone to sleep
in any out-of-the-way place that offered. But he had turned over a new
leaf, or resolved to do so. He meant to save his money for some useful
purpose,—to aid his advancement in the world. So he could not afford
the theatre. Besides, with his new clothes, he was unwilling to pass
the night out of doors.

“I should spile ’em,” he thought, “and that wouldn’t pay.”

So he determined to hunt up a room which he could occupy regularly, and
consider as his own, where he could sleep nights, instead of depending
on boxes and old wagons for a chance shelter. This would be the first
step towards respectability, and Dick determined to take it.

He accordingly passed through the City Hall Park, and walked leisurely
up Centre Street.

He decided that it would hardly be advisable for him to seek lodgings
in Fifth Avenue, although his present cash capital consisted of nearly
five dollars in money, besides the valuable papers contained in his
wallet. Besides, he had reason to doubt whether any in his line of
business lived on that aristocratic street. He took his way to Mott
Street, which is considerably less pretentious, and halted in front of
a shabby brick lodging-house kept by a Mrs. Mooney, with whose son Tom,
Dick was acquainted.

Dick rang the bell, which sent back a shrill metallic response.

The door was opened by a slatternly servant, who looked at him
inquiringly, and not without curiosity. It must be remembered that Dick
was well dressed, and that nothing in his appearance bespoke his
occupation. Being naturally a good-looking boy, he might readily be
mistaken for a gentleman’s son.

“Well, Queen Victoria,” said Dick, “is your missus at home?”

“My name’s Bridget,” said the girl.

“Oh, indeed!” said Dick. “You looked so much like the queen’s picter
what she gave me last Christmas in exchange for mine, that I couldn’t
help calling you by her name.”

“Oh, go along wid ye!” said Bridget. “It’s makin’ fun ye are.”

“If you don’t believe me,” said Dick, gravely, “all you’ve got to do is
to ask my partic’lar friend, the Duke of Newcastle.”

“Bridget!” called a shrill voice from the basement.

“The missus is calling me,” said Bridget, hurriedly. “I’ll tell her ye
want her.”

“All right!” said Dick.

The servant descended into the lower regions, and in a short time a
stout, red-faced woman appeared on the scene.

“Well, sir, what’s your wish?” she asked.

“Have you got a room to let?” asked Dick.

“Is it for yourself you ask?” questioned the woman, in some surprise.

Dick answered in the affirmative.

“I haven’t got any very good rooms vacant. There’s a small room in the
third story.”

“I’d like to see it,” said Dick.

“I don’t know as it would be good enough for you,” said the woman, with
a glance at Dick’s clothes.

“I aint very partic’lar about accommodations,” said our hero. “I guess
I’ll look at it.”

Dick followed the landlady up two narrow stair-cases, uncarpeted and
dirty, to the third landing, where he was ushered into a room about ten
feet square. It could not be considered a very desirable apartment. It
had once been covered with an oilcloth carpet, but this was now very
ragged, and looked worse than none. There was a single bed in the
corner, covered with an indiscriminate heap of bed-clothing, rumpled
and not over-clean. There was a bureau, with the veneering scratched
and in some parts stripped off, and a small glass, eight inches by ten,
cracked across the middle; also two chairs in rather a disjointed
condition. Judging from Dick’s appearance, Mrs. Mooney thought he would
turn from it in disdain.

But it must be remembered that Dick’s past experience had not been of a
character to make him fastidious. In comparison with a box, or an empty
wagon, even this little room seemed comfortable. He decided to hire it
if the rent proved reasonable.

“Well, what’s the tax?” asked Dick.

“I ought to have a dollar a week,” said Mrs. Mooney, hesitatingly.

“Say seventy-five cents, and I’ll take it,” said Dick.

“Every week in advance?”

“Yes.”

“Well, as times is hard, and I can’t afford to keep it empty, you may
have it. When will you come?”

“To-night,” said Dick.

“It aint lookin’ very neat. I don’t know as I can fix it up to-night.”

“Well, I’ll sleep here to-night, and you can fix it up to-morrow.”

“I hope you’ll excuse the looks. I’m a lone woman, and my help is so
shiftless, I have to look after everything myself; so I can’t keep
things as straight as I want to.”

“All right!” said Dick.

“Can you pay me the first week in advance?” asked the landlady,
cautiously.

Dick responded by drawing seventy-five cents from his pocket, and
placing it in her hand.

“What’s your business, sir, if I may inquire?” said Mrs. Mooney.

“Oh, I’m professional!” said Dick.

“Indeed!” said the landlady, who did not feel much enlightened by this
answer.

“How’s Tom?” asked Dick.

“Do you know my Tom?” said Mrs. Mooney in surprise. “He’s gone to
sea,—to Californy. He went last week.”

“Did he?” said Dick. “Yes, I knew him.”

Mrs. Mooney looked upon her new lodger with increased favor, on finding
that he was acquainted with her son, who, by the way, was one of the
worst young scamps in Mott Street, which is saying considerable.

“I’ll bring over my baggage from the Astor House this evening,” said
Dick in a tone of importance.

“From the Astor House!” repeated Mrs. Mooney, in fresh amazement.

“Yes, I’ve been stoppin’ there a short time with some friends,” said
Dick.

Mrs. Mooney might be excused for a little amazement at finding that a
guest from the Astor House was about to become one of her lodgers—such
transfers not being common.

“Did you say you was purfessional?” she asked.

“Yes, ma’am,” said Dick, politely.

“You aint a—a—” Mrs. Mooney paused, uncertain what conjecture to
hazard.

“Oh, no, nothing of the sort,” said Dick, promptly. “How could you
think so, Mrs. Mooney?”

“No offence, sir,” said the landlady, more perplexed than ever.

“Certainly not,” said our hero. “But you must excuse me now, Mrs.
Mooney, as I have business of great importance to attend to.”

“You’ll come round this evening?”

Dick answered in the affirmative, and turned away.

“I wonder what he is!” thought the landlady, following him with her
eyes as he crossed the street. “He’s got good clothes on, but he don’t
seem very particular about his room. Well; I’ve got all my rooms full
now. That’s one comfort.”

Dick felt more comfortable now that he had taken the decisive step of
hiring a lodging, and paying a week’s rent in advance. For seven nights
he was sure of a shelter and a bed to sleep in. The thought was a
pleasant one to our young vagrant, who hitherto had seldom known when
he rose in the morning where he should find a resting-place at night.

“I must bring my traps round,” said Dick to himself. “I guess I’ll go
to bed early to-night. It’ll feel kinder good to sleep in a reg’lar
bed. Boxes is rather hard to the back, and aint comfortable in case of
rain. I wonder what Johnny Nolan would say if he knew I’d got a room of
my own.”



CHAPTER XIII.
MICKY MAGUIRE


About nine o’clock Dick sought his new lodgings. In his hands he
carried his professional wardrobe, namely, the clothes which he had
worn at the commencement of the day, and the implements of his
business. These he stowed away in the bureau drawers, and by the light
of a flickering candle took off his clothes and went to bed. Dick had a
good digestion and a reasonably good conscience; consequently he was a
good sleeper. Perhaps, too, the soft feather bed conduced to slumber.
At any rate his eyes were soon closed, and he did not awake until
half-past six the next morning.

He lifted himself on his elbow, and stared around him in transient
bewilderment.

“Blest if I hadn’t forgot where I was,” he said to himself. “So this is
my room, is it? Well, it seems kind of ’spectable to have a room and a
bed to sleep in. I’d orter be able to afford seventy-five cents a week.
I’ve throwed away more money than that in one evenin’. There aint no
reason why I shouldn’t live ’spectable. I wish I knowed as much as
Frank. He’s a tip-top feller. Nobody ever cared enough for me before to
give me good advice. It was kicks, and cuffs, and swearin’ at me all
the time. I’d like to show him I can do something.”

While Dick was indulging in these reflections, he had risen from bed,
and, finding an accession to the furniture of his room, in the shape of
an ancient wash-stand bearing a cracked bowl and broken pitcher,
indulged himself in the rather unusual ceremony of a good wash. On the
whole, Dick preferred to be clean, but it was not always easy to
gratify his desire. Lodging in the street as he had been accustomed to
do, he had had no opportunity to perform his toilet in the customary
manner. Even now he found himself unable to arrange his dishevelled
locks, having neither comb nor brush. He determined to purchase a comb,
at least, as soon as possible, and a brush too, if he could get one
cheap. Meanwhile he combed his hair with his fingers as well as he
could, though the result was not quite so satisfactory as it might have
been.

A question now came up for consideration. For the first time in his
life Dick possessed two suits of clothes. Should he put on the clothes
Frank had given him, or resume his old rags?

Now, twenty-four hours before, at the time Dick was introduced to the
reader’s notice, no one could have been less fastidious as to his
clothing than he. Indeed, he had rather a contempt for good clothes, or
at least he thought so. But now, as he surveyed the ragged and dirty
coat and the patched pants, Dick felt ashamed of them. He was unwilling
to appear in the streets with them. Yet, if he went to work in his new
suit, he was in danger of spoiling it, and he might not have it in his
power to purchase a new one. Economy dictated a return to the old
garments. Dick tried them on, and surveyed himself in the cracked
glass; but the reflection did not please him.

“They don’t look ’spectable,” he decided; and, forthwith taking them
off again, he put on the new suit of the day before.

“I must try to earn a little more,” he thought, “to pay for my room,
and to buy some new clo’es when these is wore out.”

He opened the door of his chamber, and went downstairs and into the
street, carrying his blacking-box with him.

It was Dick’s custom to commence his business before breakfast;
generally it must be owned, because he began the day penniless, and
must earn his meal before he ate it. To-day it was different. He had
four dollars left in his pocket-book; but this he had previously
determined not to touch. In fact he had formed the ambitious design of
starting an account at a savings’ bank, in order to have something to
fall back upon in case of sickness or any other emergency, or at any
rate as a reserve fund to expend in clothing or other necessary
articles when he required them. Hitherto he had been content to live on
from day to day without a penny ahead; but the new vision of
respectability which now floated before Dick’s mind, owing to his
recent acquaintance with Frank, was beginning to exercise a powerful
effect upon him.

In Dick’s profession as in others there are lucky days, when everything
seems to flow prosperously. As if to encourage him in his new-born
resolution, our hero obtained no less than six jobs in the course of an
hour and a half. This gave him sixty cents, quite abundant to purchase
his breakfast, and a comb besides. His exertions made him hungry, and,
entering a small eating-house he ordered a cup of coffee and a
beefsteak. To this he added a couple of rolls. This was quite a
luxurious breakfast for Dick, and more expensive than he was accustomed
to indulge himself with. To gratify the curiosity of my young readers,
I will put down the items with their cost,—

Coffee, . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5 cts.
Beefsteak, . . . . . . . . . . .  15
A couple of rolls,  . . . . . . .  5
—25 cts.


It will thus be seen that our hero had expended nearly one-half of his
morning’s earnings. Some days he had been compelled to breakfast on
five cents, and then he was forced to content himself with a couple of
apples, or cakes. But a good breakfast is a good preparation for a busy
day, and Dick sallied forth from the restaurant lively and alert, ready
to do a good stroke of business.

Dick’s change of costume was liable to lead to one result of which he
had not thought. His brother boot-blacks might think he had grown
aristocratic, and was putting on airs,—that, in fact, he was getting
above his business, and desirous to outshine his associates. Dick had
not dreamed of this, because in fact, in spite of his new-born
ambition, he entertained no such feeling. There was nothing of what
boys call “big-feeling” about him. He was a borough democrat, using the
word not politically, but in its proper sense, and was disposed to
fraternize with all whom he styled “good fellows,” without regard to
their position. It may seem a little unnecessary to some of my readers
to make this explanation; but they must remember that pride and
“big-feeling” are confined to no age or class, but may be found in boys
as well as men, and in boot-blacks as well as those of a higher rank.

The morning being a busy time with the boot-blacks, Dick’s changed
appearance had not as yet attracted much attention. But when business
slackened a little, our hero was destined to be reminded of it.

Among the down-town boot-blacks was one hailing from the Five Points,—a
stout, red-haired, freckled-faced boy of fourteen, bearing the name of
Micky Maguire. This boy, by his boldness and recklessness, as well as
by his personal strength, which was considerable, had acquired an
ascendancy among his fellow professionals, and had a gang of
subservient followers, whom he led on to acts of ruffianism, not
unfrequently terminating in a month or two at Blackwell’s Island. Micky
himself had served two terms there; but the confinement appeared to
have had very little effect in amending his conduct, except, perhaps,
in making him a little more cautious about an encounter with the
“copps,” as the members of the city police are, for some unknown
reason, styled among the Five-Point boys.

Now Micky was proud of his strength, and of the position of leader
which it had secured him. Moreover he was democratic in his tastes, and
had a jealous hatred of those who wore good clothes and kept their
faces clean. He called it putting on airs, and resented the implied
superiority. If he had been fifteen years older, and had a trifle more
education, he would have interested himself in politics, and been
prominent at ward meetings, and a terror to respectable voters on
election day. As it was, he contented himself with being the leader of
a gang of young ruffians, over whom he wielded a despotic power.

Now it is only justice to Dick to say that, so far as wearing good
clothes was concerned, he had never hitherto offended the eyes of Micky
Maguire. Indeed, they generally looked as if they patronized the same
clothing establishment. On this particular morning it chanced that
Micky had not been very fortunate in a business way, and, as a natural
consequence, his temper, never very amiable, was somewhat ruffled by
the fact. He had had a very frugal breakfast,—not because he felt
abstemious, but owing to the low state of his finances. He was walking
along with one of his particular friends, a boy nicknamed Limpy Jim, so
called from a slight peculiarity in his walk, when all at once he
espied our friend Dick in his new suit.

“My eyes!” he exclaimed, in astonishment; “Jim, just look at Ragged
Dick. He’s come into a fortun’, and turned gentleman. See his new
clothes.”

“So he has,” said Jim. “Where’d he get ’em, I wonder?”

“Hooked ’em, p’raps. Let’s go and stir him up a little. We don’t want
no gentlemen on our beat. So he’s puttin’ on airs,—is he? I’ll give him
a lesson.”

So saying the two boys walked up to our hero, who had not observed
them, his back being turned, and Micky Maguire gave him a smart slap on
the shoulder.

Dick turned round quickly.



CHAPTER XIV.
A BATTLE AND A VICTORY


“What’s that for?” demanded Dick, turning round to see who had struck
him.

“You’re gettin’ mighty fine!” said Micky Maguire, surveying Dick’s new
clothes with a scornful air.

There was something in his words and tone, which Dick, who was disposed
to stand up for his dignity, did not at all relish.

“Well, what’s the odds if I am?” he retorted. “Does it hurt you any?”

“See him put on airs, Jim,” said Micky, turning to his companion.
“Where’d you get them clo’es?”

“Never mind where I got ’em. Maybe the Prince of Wales gave ’em to me.”

“Hear him, now, Jim,” said Micky. “Most likely he stole ’em.”

“Stealin’ aint in _my_ line.”

It might have been unconscious the emphasis which Dick placed on the
word “my.” At any rate Micky chose to take offence.

“Do you mean to say _I_ steal?” he demanded, doubling up his fist, and
advancing towards Dick in a threatening manner.

“I don’t say anything about it,” answered Dick, by no means alarmed at
this hostile demonstration. “I know you’ve been to the Island twice.
P’r’aps ’twas to make a visit along of the Mayor and Aldermen. Maybe
you was a innocent victim of oppression. I aint a goin’ to say.”

Micky’s freckled face grew red with wrath, for Dick had only stated the
truth.

“Do you mean to insult me?” he demanded shaking the fist already
doubled up in Dick’s face. “Maybe you want a lickin’?”

“I aint partic’larly anxious to get one,” said Dick, coolly. “They
don’t agree with my constitution which is nat’rally delicate. I’d
rather have a good dinner than a lickin’ any time.”

“You’re afraid,” sneered Micky. “Isn’t he, Jim?”

“In course he is.”

“P’r’aps I am,” said Dick, composedly, “but it don’t trouble me much.”

“Do you want to fight?” demanded Micky, encouraged by Dick’s quietness,
fancying he was afraid to encounter him.

“No, I don’t,” said Dick. “I aint fond of fightin’. It’s a very poor
amusement, and very bad for the complexion, ’specially for the eyes and
nose, which is apt to turn red, white, and blue.”

Micky misunderstood Dick, and judged from the tenor of his speech that
he would be an easy victim. As he knew, Dick very seldom was concerned
in any street fight,—not from cowardice, as he imagined, but because he
had too much good sense to do so. Being quarrelsome, like all bullies,
and supposing that he was more than a match for our hero, being about
two inches taller, he could no longer resist an inclination to assault
him, and tried to plant a blow in Dick’s face which would have hurt him
considerably if he had not drawn back just in time.

Now, though Dick was far from quarrelsome, he was ready to defend
himself on all occasions, and it was too much to expect that he would
stand quiet and allow himself to be beaten.

He dropped his blacking-box on the instant, and returned Micky’s blow
with such good effect that the young bully staggered back, and would
have fallen, if he had not been propped up by his confederate, Limpy
Jim.

“Go in, Micky!” shouted the latter, who was rather a coward on his own
account, but liked to see others fight. “Polish him off, that’s a good
feller.”

Micky was now boiling over with rage and fury, and required no urging.
He was fully determined to make a terrible example of poor Dick. He
threw himself upon him, and strove to bear him to the ground; but Dick,
avoiding a close hug, in which he might possibly have got the worst of
it, by an adroit movement, tripped up his antagonist, and stretched him
on the side walk.

“Hit him, Jim!” exclaimed Micky, furiously.

Limpy Jim did not seem inclined to obey orders. There was a quiet
strength and coolness about Dick, which alarmed him. He preferred that
Micky should incur all the risks of battle, and accordingly set himself
to raising his fallen comrade.

“Come, Micky,” said Dick, quietly, “you’d better give it up. I wouldn’t
have touched you if you hadn’t hit me first. I don’t want to fight.
It’s low business.”

“You’re afraid of hurtin’ your clo’es,” said Micky, with a sneer.

“Maybe I am,” said Dick. “I hope I haven’t hurt yours.”

Micky’s answer to this was another attack, as violent and impetuous as
the first. But his fury was in the way. He struck wildly, not measuring
his blows, and Dick had no difficulty in turning aside, so that his
antagonist’s blow fell upon the empty air, and his momentum was such
that he nearly fell forward headlong. Dick might readily have taken
advantage of his unsteadiness, and knocked him down; but he was not
vindictive, and chose to act on the defensive, except when he could not
avoid it.

Recovering himself, Micky saw that Dick was a more formidable
antagonist than he had supposed, and was meditating another assault,
better planned, which by its impetuosity might bear our hero to the
ground. But there was an unlooked-for interference.

“Look out for the ‘copp,’” said Jim, in a low voice.

Micky turned round and saw a tall policeman heading towards him, and
thought it might be prudent to suspend hostilities. He accordingly
picked up his black-box, and, hitching up his pants, walked off,
attended by Limpy Jim.

“What’s that chap been doing?” asked the policeman of Dick.

“He was amoosin’ himself by pitchin’ into me,” replied Dick.

“What for?”

“He didn’t like it ’cause I patronized a different tailor from him.”

“Well, it seems to me you _are_ dressed pretty smart for a boot-black,”
said the policeman.

“I wish I wasn’t a boot-black,” said Dick.

“Never mind, my lad. It’s an honest business,” said the policeman, who
was a sensible man and a worthy citizen. “It’s an honest business.
Stick to it till you get something better.”

“I mean to,” said Dick. “It aint easy to get out of it, as the prisoner
remarked, when he was asked how he liked his residence.”

“I hope you don’t speak from experience.”

“No,” said Dick; “I don’t mean to get into prison if I can help it.”

“Do you see that gentleman over there?” asked the officer, pointing to
a well-dressed man who was walking on the other side of the street.

“Yes.”

“Well, he was once a newsboy.”

“And what is he now?”

“He keeps a bookstore, and is quite prosperous.”

Dick looked at the gentleman with interest, wondering if he should look
as respectable when he was a grown man.

It will be seen that Dick was getting ambitious. Hitherto he had
thought very little of the future, but was content to get along as he
could, dining as well as his means would allow, and spending the
evenings in the pit of the Old Bowery, eating peanuts between the acts
if he was prosperous, and if unlucky supping on dry bread or an apple,
and sleeping in an old box or a wagon. Now, for the first time, he
began to reflect that he could not black boots all his life. In seven
years he would be a man, and, since his meeting with Frank, he felt
that he would like to be a respectable man. He could see and appreciate
the difference between Frank and such a boy as Micky Maguire, and it
was not strange that he preferred the society of the former.

In the course of the next morning, in pursuance of his new resolutions
for the future, he called at a savings bank, and held out four dollars
in bills besides another dollar in change. There was a high railing,
and a number of clerks busily writing at desks behind it. Dick, never
having been in a bank before, did not know where to go. He went, by
mistake, to the desk where money was paid out.

“Where’s your book?” asked the clerk.

“I haven’t got any.”

“Have you any money deposited here?”

“No, sir, I want to leave some here.”

“Then go to the next desk.”

Dick followed directions, and presented himself before an elderly man
with gray hair, who looked at him over the rims of his spectacles.

“I want you to keep that for me,” said Dick, awkwardly emptying his
money out on the desk.

“How much is there?”

“Five dollars.”

“Have you got an account here?”

“No, sir.”

“Of course you can write?”

The “of course” was said on account of Dick’s neat dress.

“Have I got to do any writing?” asked our hero, a little embarrassed.

“We want you to sign your name in this book,” and the old gentleman
shoved round a large folio volume containing the names of depositors.

Dick surveyed the book with some awe.

“I aint much on writin’,” he said.

“Very well; write as well as you can.”

The pen was put into Dick’s hand, and, after dipping it in the
inkstand, he succeeded after a hard effort, accompanied by many
contortions of the face, in inscribing upon the book of the bank the
name

DICK HUNTER.


“Dick!—that means Richard, I suppose,” said the bank officer, who had
some difficulty in making out the signature.

“No; Ragged Dick is what folks call me.”

“You don’t look very ragged.”

“No, I’ve left my rags to home. They might get wore out if I used ’em
too common.”

“Well, my lad, I’ll make out a book in the name of Dick Hunter, since
you seem to prefer Dick to Richard. I hope you will save up your money
and deposit more with us.”

Our hero took his bank-book, and gazed on the entry “Five Dollars” with
a new sense of importance. He had been accustomed to joke about Erie
shares, but now, for the first time, he felt himself a capitalist; on a
small scale, to be sure, but still it was no small thing for Dick to
have five dollars which he could call his own. He firmly determined
that he would lay by every cent he could spare from his earnings
towards the fund he hoped to accumulate.

But Dick was too sensible not to know that there was something more
than money needed to win a respectable position in the world. He felt
that he was very ignorant. Of reading and writing he only knew the
rudiments, and that, with a slight acquaintance with arithmetic, was
all he did know of books. Dick knew he must study hard, and he dreaded
it. He looked upon learning as attended with greater difficulties than
it really possesses. But Dick had good pluck. He meant to learn,
nevertheless, and resolved to buy a book with his first spare earnings.

When Dick went home at night he locked up his bank-book in one of the
drawers of the bureau. It was wonderful how much more independent he
felt whenever he reflected upon the contents of that drawer, and with
what an important air of joint ownership he regarded the bank building
in which his small savings were deposited.



CHAPTER XV.
DICK SECURES A TUTOR


The next morning Dick was unusually successful, having plenty to do,
and receiving for one job twenty-five cents,—the gentleman refusing to
take change. Then flashed upon Dick’s mind the thought that he had not
yet returned the change due to the gentleman whose boots he had blacked
on the morning of his introduction to the reader.

“What’ll he think of me?” said Dick to himself. “I hope he won’t think
I’m mean enough to keep the money.”

Now Dick was scrupulously honest, and though the temptation to be
otherwise had often been strong, he had always resisted it. He was not
willing on any account to keep money which did not belong to him, and
he immediately started for 125 Fulton Street (the address which had
been given him) where he found Mr. Greyson’s name on the door of an
office on the first floor.

The door being open, Dick walked in.

“Is Mr. Greyson in?” he asked of a clerk who sat on a high stool before
a desk.

“Not just now. He’ll be in soon. Will you wait?”

“Yes,” said Dick.

“Very well; take a seat then.”

Dick sat down and took up the morning “Tribune,” but presently came to
a word of four syllables, which he pronounced to himself a “sticker,”
and laid it down. But he had not long to wait, for five minutes later
Mr. Greyson entered.

“Did you wish to speak to me, my lad?” said he to Dick, whom in his new
clothes he did not recognize.

“Yes, sir,” said Dick. “I owe you some money.”

“Indeed!” said Mr. Greyson, pleasantly; “that’s an agreeable surprise.
I didn’t know but you had come for some. So you are a debtor of mine,
and not a creditor?”

“I b’lieve that’s right,” said Dick, drawing fifteen cents from his
pocket, and placing in Mr. Greyson’s hand.

“Fifteen cents!” repeated he, in some surprise. “How do you happen to
be indebted to me in that amount?”

“You gave me a quarter for a-shinin’ your boots, yesterday mornin’, and
couldn’t wait for the change. I meant to have brought it before, but I
forgot all about it till this mornin’.”

“It had quite slipped my mind also. But you don’t look like the boy I
employed. If I remember rightly he wasn’t as well dressed as you.”

“No,” said Dick. “I was dressed for a party, then, but the clo’es was
too well ventilated to be comfortable in cold weather.”

“You’re an honest boy,” said Mr. Greyson. “Who taught you to be
honest?”

“Nobody,” said Dick. “But it’s mean to cheat and steal. I’ve always
knowed that.”

“Then you’ve got ahead of some of our business men. Do you read the
Bible?”

“No,” said Dick. “I’ve heard it’s a good book, but I don’t know much
about it.”

“You ought to go to some Sunday School. Would you be willing?”

“Yes,” said Dick, promptly. “I want to grow up ’spectable. But I don’t
know where to go.”

“Then I’ll tell you. The church I attend is at the corner of Fifth
Avenue and Twenty-first Street.”

“I’ve seen it,” said Dick.

“I have a class in the Sunday School there. If you’ll come next Sunday,
I’ll take you into my class, and do what I can to help you.”

“Thank you,” said Dick, “but p’r’aps you’ll get tired of teaching me.
I’m awful ignorant.”

“No, my lad,” said Mr. Greyson, kindly. “You evidently have some good
principles to start with, as you have shown by your scorn of
dishonesty. I shall hope good things of you in the future.”

“Well, Dick,” said our hero, apostrophizing himself, as he left the
office; “you’re gettin’ up in the world. You’ve got money invested, and
are goin’ to attend church, by partic’lar invitation, on Fifth Avenue.
I shouldn’t wonder much if you should find cards, when you get home,
from the Mayor, requestin’ the honor of your company to dinner, along
with other distinguished guests.”

Dick felt in very good spirits. He seemed to be emerging from the world
in which he had hitherto lived, into a new atmosphere of
respectability, and the change seemed very pleasant to him.

At six o’clock Dick went into a restaurant on Chatham Street, and got a
comfortable supper. He had been so successful during the day that,
after paying for this, he still had ninety cents left. While he was
despatching his supper, another boy came in, smaller and slighter than
Dick, and sat down beside him. Dick recognized him as a boy who three
months before had entered the ranks of the boot-blacks, but who, from a
natural timidity, had not been able to earn much. He was ill-fitted for
the coarse companionship of the street boys, and shrank from the rude
jokes of his present associates. Dick had never troubled him; for our
hero had a certain chivalrous feeling which would not allow him to
bully or disturb a younger and weaker boy than himself.

“How are you, Fosdick?” said Dick, as the other seated himself.

“Pretty well,” said Fosdick. “I suppose you’re all right.”

“Oh, yes, I’m right side up with care. I’ve been havin’ a bully supper.
What are you goin’ to have?”

“Some bread and butter.”

“Why don’t you get a cup o’ coffee?”

“Why,” said Fosdick, reluctantly, “I haven’t got money enough
to-night.”

“Never mind,” said Dick; “I’m in luck to-day, I’ll stand treat.”

“That’s kind in you,” said Fosdick, gratefully.

“Oh, never mind that,” said Dick.

Accordingly he ordered a cup of coffee, and a plate of beefsteak, and
was gratified to see that his young companion partook of both with
evident relish. When the repast was over, the boys went out into the
street together, Dick pausing at the desk to settle for both suppers.

“Where are you going to sleep to-night, Fosdick?” asked Dick, as they
stood on the sidewalk.

“I don’t know,” said Fosdick, a little sadly. “In some doorway, I
expect. But I’m afraid the police will find me out, and make me move
on.”

“I’ll tell you what,” said Dick, “you must go home with me. I guess my
bed will hold two.”

“Have you got a room?” asked the other, in surprise.

“Yes,” said Dick, rather proudly, and with a little excusable
exultation. “I’ve got a room over in Mott Street; there I can receive
my friends. That’ll be better than sleepin’ in a door-way,—won’t it?”

“Yes, indeed it will,” said Fosdick. “How lucky I was to come across
you! It comes hard to me living as I do. When my father was alive I had
every comfort.”

“That’s more’n I ever had,” said Dick. “But I’m goin’ to try to live
comfortable now. Is your father dead?”

“Yes,” said Fosdick, sadly. “He was a printer; but he was drowned one
dark night from a Fulton ferry-boat, and, as I had no relations in the
city, and no money, I was obliged to go to work as quick as I could.
But I don’t get on very well.”

“Didn’t you have no brothers nor sisters?” asked Dick.

“No,” said Fosdick; “father and I used to live alone. He was always so
much company to me that I feel very lonesome without him. There’s a man
out West somewhere that owes him two thousand dollars. He used to live
in the city, and father lent him all his money to help him go into
business; but he failed, or pretended to, and went off. If father
hadn’t lost that money he would have left me well off; but no money
would have made up his loss to me.”

“What’s the man’s name that went off with your father’s money?”

“His name is Hiram Bates.”

“P’r’aps you’ll get the money again, sometime.”

“There isn’t much chance of it,” said Fosdick. “I’d sell out my chances
of that for five dollars.”

“Maybe I’ll buy you out sometime,” said Dick. “Now, come round and see
what sort of a room I’ve got. I used to go to the theatre evenings,
when I had money; but now I’d rather go to bed early, and have a good
sleep.”

“I don’t care much about theatres,” said Fosdick. “Father didn’t use to
let me go very often. He said it wasn’t good for boys.”

“I like to go to the Old Bowery sometimes. They have tip-top plays
there. Can you read and write well?” he asked, as a sudden thought came
to him.

“Yes,” said Fosdick. “Father always kept me at school when he was
alive, and I stood pretty well in my classes. I was expecting to enter
at the Free Academy* next year.”

* Now the college of the city of New York.


“Then I’ll tell you what,” said Dick; “I’ll make a bargain with you. I
can’t read much more’n a pig; and my writin’ looks like hens’ tracks. I
don’t want to grow up knowin’ no more’n a four-year-old boy. If you’ll
teach me readin’ and writin’ evenin’s, you shall sleep in my room every
night. That’ll be better’n door-steps or old boxes, where I’ve slept
many a time.”

“Are you in earnest?” said Fosdick, his face lighting up hopefully.

“In course I am,” said Dick. “It’s fashionable for young gentlemen to
have private tootors to introduct ’em into the flower-beds of
literatoor and science, and why shouldn’t I foller the fashion? You
shall be my perfessor; only you must promise not to be very hard if my
writin’ looks like a rail-fence on a bender.”

“I’ll try not to be too severe,” said Fosdick, laughing. “I shall be
thankful for such a chance to get a place to sleep. Have you got
anything to read out of?”

“No,” said Dick. “My extensive and well-selected library was lost
overboard in a storm, when I was sailin’ from the Sandwich Islands to
the desert of Sahara. But I’ll buy a paper. That’ll do me a long time.”

Accordingly Dick stopped at a paper-stand, and bought a copy of a
weekly paper, filled with the usual variety of reading matter,—stories,
sketches, poems, etc.

They soon arrived at Dick’s lodging-house. Our hero, procuring a lamp
from the landlady, led the way into his apartment, which he entered
with the proud air of a proprietor.

“Well, how do you like it, Fosdick?” he asked, complacently.

The time was when Fosdick would have thought it untidy and not
particularly attractive. But he had served a severe apprenticeship in
the streets, and it was pleasant to feel himself under shelter, and he
was not disposed to be critical.

“It looks very comfortable, Dick,” he said.

“The bed aint very large,” said Dick; “but I guess we can get along.”

“Oh, yes,” said Fosdick, cheerfully. “I don’t take up much room.”

“Then that’s all right. There’s two chairs, you see, one for you and
one for me. In case the mayor comes in to spend the evenin’ socially,
he can sit on the bed.”

The boys seated themselves, and five minutes later, under the guidance
of his young tutor, Dick had commenced his studies.



CHAPTER XVI.
THE FIRST LESSON


Fortunately for Dick, his young tutor was well qualified to instruct
him. Henry Fosdick, though only twelve years old, knew as much as many
boys of fourteen. He had always been studious and ambitious to excel.
His father, being a printer, employed in an office where books were
printed, often brought home new books in sheets, which Henry was always
glad to read. Mr. Fosdick had been, besides, a subscriber to the
Mechanics’ Apprentices’ Library, which contains many thousands of
well-selected and instructive books. Thus Henry had acquired an amount
of general information, unusual in a boy of his age. Perhaps he had
devoted too much time to study, for he was not naturally robust. All
this, however, fitted him admirably for the office to which Dick had
appointed him,—that of his private instructor.

The two boys drew up their chairs to the rickety table, and spread out
the paper before them.

“The exercises generally Commence with ringin’ the bell,” said Dick;
“but as I aint got none, we’ll have to do without.”

“And the teacher is generally provided with a rod,” said Fosdick.
“Isn’t there a poker handy, that I can use in case my scholar doesn’t
behave well?”

“’Taint lawful to use fire-arms,” said Dick.

“Now, Dick,” said Fosdick, “before we begin, I must find out how much
you already know. Can you read any?”

“Not enough to hurt me,” said Dick. “All I know about readin’ you could
put in a nutshell, and there’d be room left for a small family.”

“I suppose you know your letters?”

“Yes,” said Dick, “I know ’em all, but not intimately. I guess I can
call ’em all by name.”

“Where did you learn them? Did you ever go to school?”

“Yes; I went two days.”

“Why did you stop?”

“It didn’t agree with my constitution.”

“You don’t look very delicate,” said Fosdick.

“No,” said Dick, “I aint troubled much that way; but I found lickins
didn’t agree with me.”

“Did you get punished?”

“Awful,” said Dick.

“What for?”

“For indulgin’ in a little harmless amoosement,” said Dick. “You see
the boy that was sittin’ next to me fell asleep, which I considered
improper in school-time; so I thought I’d help the teacher a little by
wakin’ him up. So I took a pin and stuck into him; but I guess it went
a little too far, for he screeched awful. The teacher found out what it
was that made him holler, and whipped me with a ruler till I was black
and blue. I thought ’twas about time to take a vacation; so that’s the
last time I went to school.”

“You didn’t learn to read in that time, of course?”

“No,” said Dick; “but I was a newsboy a little while; so I learned a
little, just so’s to find out what the news was. Sometimes I didn’t
read straight and called the wrong news. One mornin’ I asked another
boy what the paper said, and he told me the King of Africa was dead. I
thought it was all right till folks began to laugh.”

“Well, Dick, if you’ll only study well, you won’t be liable to make
such mistakes.”

“I hope so,” said Dick. “My friend Horace Greeley told me the other day
that he’d get me to take his place now and then when he was off makin’
speeches if my edication hadn’t been neglected.”

“I must find a good piece for you to begin on,” said Fosdick, looking
over the paper.

“Find an easy one,” said Dick, “with words of one story.”

Fosdick at length found a piece which he thought would answer. He
discovered on trial that Dick had not exaggerated his deficiencies.
Words of two syllables he seldom pronounced right, and was much
surprised when he was told how “through” was sounded.

“Seems to me it’s throwin’ away letters to use all them,” he said.

“How would you spell it?” asked his young teacher.

“T-h-r-u,” said Dick.

“Well,” said Fosdick, “there’s a good many other words that are spelt
with more letters than they need to have. But it’s the fashion, and we
must follow it.”

But if Dick was ignorant, he was quick, and had an excellent capacity.
Moreover he had perseverance, and was not easily discouraged. He had
made up his mind he must know more, and was not disposed to complain of
the difficulty of his task. Fosdick had occasion to laugh more than
once at his ludicrous mistakes; but Dick laughed too, and on the whole
both were quite interested in the lesson.

At the end of an hour and a half the boys stopped for the evening.

“You’re learning fast, Dick,” said Fosdick. “At this rate you will soon
learn to read well.”

“Will I?” asked Dick with an expression of satisfaction. “I’m glad of
that. I don’t want to be ignorant. I didn’t use to care, but I do now.
I want to grow up ’spectable.”

“So do I, Dick. We will both help each other, and I am sure we can
accomplish something. But I am beginning to feel sleepy.”

“So am I,” said Dick. “Them hard words make my head ache. I wonder who
made ’em all?”

“That’s more than I can tell. I suppose you’ve seen a dictionary.”

“That’s another of ’em. No, I can’t say I have, though I may have seen
him in the street without knowin’ him.”

“A dictionary is a book containing all the words in the language.”

“How many are there?”

“I don’t rightly know; but I think there are about fifty thousand.”

“It’s a pretty large family,” said Dick. “Have I got to learn ’em all?”

“That will not be necessary. There are a large number which you would
never find occasion to use.”

“I’m glad of that,” said Dick; “for I don’t expect to live to be more’n
a hundred, and by that time I wouldn’t be more’n half through.”

By this time the flickering lamp gave a decided hint to the boys that
unless they made haste they would have to undress in the dark. They
accordingly drew off their clothes, and Dick jumped into bed. But
Fosdick, before doing so, knelt down by the side of the bed, and said a
short prayer.

“What’s that for?” asked Dick, curiously.

“I was saying my prayers,” said Fosdick, as he rose from his knees.
“Don’t you ever do it?”

“No,” said Dick. “Nobody ever taught me.”

“Then I’ll teach you. Shall I?”

“I don’t know,” said Dick, dubiously. “What’s the good?”

Fosdick explained as well as he could, and perhaps his simple
explanation was better adapted to Dick’s comprehension than one from an
older person would have been. Dick felt more free to ask questions, and
the example of his new friend, for whom he was beginning to feel a warm
attachment, had considerable effect upon him. When, therefore, Fosdick
asked again if he should teach him a prayer, Dick consented, and his
young bedfellow did so. Dick was not naturally irreligious. If he had
lived without a knowledge of God and of religious things, it was
scarcely to be wondered at in a lad who, from an early age, had been
thrown upon his own exertions for the means of living, with no one to
care for him or give him good advice. But he was so far good that he
could appreciate goodness in others, and this it was that had drawn him
to Frank in the first place, and now to Henry Fosdick. He did not,
therefore, attempt to ridicule his companion, as some boys better
brought up might have done, but was willing to follow his example in
what something told him was right. Our young hero had taken an
important step toward securing that genuine respectability which he was
ambitious to attain.

Weary with the day’s work, and Dick perhaps still more fatigued by the
unusual mental effort he had made, the boys soon sank into a deep and
peaceful slumber, from which they did not awaken till six o’clock the
next morning. Before going out Dick sought Mrs. Mooney, and spoke to
her on the subject of taking Fosdick as a room-mate. He found that she
had no objection, provided he would allow her twenty-five cents a week
extra, in consideration of the extra trouble which his companion might
be expected to make. To this Dick assented, and the arrangement was
definitely concluded.

This over, the two boys went out and took stations near each other.
Dick had more of a business turn than Henry, and less shrinking from
publicity, so that his earnings were greater. But he had undertaken to
pay the entire expenses of the room, and needed to earn more.
Sometimes, when two customers presented themselves at the same time, he
was able to direct one to his friend. So at the end of the week both
boys found themselves with surplus earnings. Dick had the satisfaction
of adding two dollars and a half to his deposits in the Savings Bank,
and Fosdick commenced an account by depositing seventy-five cents.

On Sunday morning Dick bethought himself of his promise to Mr. Greyson
to come to the church on Fifth Avenue. To tell the truth, Dick recalled
it with some regret. He had never been inside a church since he could
remember, and he was not much attracted by the invitation he had
received. But Henry, finding him wavering, urged him to go, and offered
to go with him. Dick gladly accepted the offer, feeling that he
required someone to lend him countenance under such unusual
circumstances.

Dick dressed himself with scrupulous care, giving his shoes a “shine”
so brilliant that it did him great credit in a professional point of
view, and endeavored to clean his hands thoroughly; but, in spite of
all he could do, they were not so white as if his business had been of
a different character.

Having fully completed his preparations, he descended into the street,
and, with Henry by his side, crossed over to Broadway.

The boys pursued their way up Broadway, which on Sunday presents a
striking contrast in its quietness to the noise and confusion of
ordinary week-days, as far as Union Square, then turned down Fourteenth
Street, which brought them to Fifth Avenue.

“Suppose we dine at Delmonico’s,” said Fosdick, looking towards that
famous restaurant.

“I’d have to sell some of my Erie shares,” said Dick.

A short walk now brought them to the church of which mention has
already been made. They stood outside, a little abashed, watching the
fashionably attired people who were entering, and were feeling a little
undecided as to whether they had better enter also, when Dick felt a
light touch upon his shoulder.

Turning round, he met the smiling glance of Mr. Greyson.

“So, my young friend, you have kept your promise,” he said. “And whom
have you brought with you?”

“A friend of mine,” said Dick. “His name is Henry Fosdick.”

“I am glad you have brought him. Now follow me, and I will give you
seats.”



CHAPTER XVII.
DICK’S FIRST APPEARANCE IN SOCIETY


It was the hour for morning service. The boys followed Mr. Greyson into
the handsome church, and were assigned seats in his own pew.

There were two persons already seated in it,—a good-looking lady of
middle age, and a pretty little girl of nine. They were Mrs. Greyson
and her only daughter Ida. They looked pleasantly at the boys as they
entered, smiling a welcome to them.

The morning service commenced. It must be acknowledged that Dick felt
rather awkward. It was an unusual place for him, and it need not be
wondered at that he felt like a cat in a strange garret. He would not
have known when to rise if he had not taken notice of what the rest of
the audience did, and followed their example. He was sitting next to
Ida, and as it was the first time he had ever been near so well-dressed
a young lady, he naturally felt bashful. When the hymns were announced,
Ida found the place, and offered a hymn-book to our hero. Dick took it
awkwardly, but his studies had not yet been pursued far enough for him
to read the words readily. However, he resolved to keep up appearances,
and kept his eyes fixed steadily on the hymn-book.

At length the service was over. The people began to file slowly out of
church, and among them, of course, Mr. Greyson’s family and the two
boys. It seemed very strange to Dick to find himself in such different
companionship from what he had been accustomed, and he could not help
thinking, “Wonder what Johnny Nolan ’ould say if he could see me now!”

But Johnny’s business engagements did not often summon him to Fifth
Avenue, and Dick was not likely to be seen by any of his friends in the
lower part of the city.

“We have our Sunday school in the afternoon,” said Mr. Greyson. “I
suppose you live at some distance from here?”

“In Mott Street, sir,” answered Dick.

“That is too far to go and return. Suppose you and your friend come and
dine with us, and then we can come here together in the afternoon.”

Dick was as much astonished at this invitation as if he had really been
invited by the Mayor to dine with him and the Board of Aldermen. Mr.
Greyson was evidently a rich man, and yet he had actually invited two
boot-blacks to dine with him.

“I guess we’d better go home, sir,” said Dick, hesitating.

“I don’t think you can have any very pressing engagements to interfere
with your accepting my invitation,” said Mr. Greyson, good-humoredly,
for he understood the reason of Dick’s hesitation. “So I take it for
granted that you both accept.”

Before Dick fairly knew what he intended to do, he was walking down
Fifth Avenue with his new friends.

Now, our young hero was not naturally bashful; but he certainly felt so
now, especially as Miss Ida Greyson chose to walk by his side, leaving
Henry Fosdick to walk with her father and mother.

“What is your name?” asked Ida, pleasantly.

Our hero was about to answer “Ragged Dick,” when it occurred to him
that in the present company he had better forget his old nickname.

“Dick Hunter,” he answered.

“Dick!” repeated Ida. “That means Richard, doesn’t it?”

“Everybody calls me Dick.”

“I have a cousin Dick,” said the young lady, sociably. “His name is
Dick Wilson. I suppose you don’t know him?”

“No,” said Dick.

“I like the name of Dick,” said the young lady, with charming
frankness.

Without being able to tell why, Dick felt rather glad she did. He
plucked up courage to ask her name.

“My name is Ida,” answered the young lady. “Do you like it?”

“Yes,” said Dick. “It’s a bully name.”

Dick turned red as soon as he had said it, for he felt that he had not
used the right expression.

The little girl broke into a silvery laugh.

“What a funny boy you are!” she said.

“I didn’t mean it,” said Dick, stammering. “I meant it’s a tip-top
name.”

Here Ida laughed again, and Dick wished himself back in Mott Street.

“How old are you?” inquired Ida, continuing her examination.

“I’m fourteen,—goin’ on fifteen,” said Dick.

“You’re a big boy of your age,” said Ida. “My cousin Dick is a year
older than you, but he isn’t as large.”

Dick looked pleased. Boys generally like to be told that they are large
of their age.

“How old be you?” asked Dick, beginning to feel more at his ease.

“I’m nine years old,” said Ida. “I go to Miss Jarvis’s school. I’ve
just begun to learn French. Do you know French?”

“Not enough to hurt me,” said Dick.

Ida laughed again, and told him that he was a droll boy.

“Do you like it?” asked Dick.

“I like it pretty well, except the verbs. I can’t remember them well.
Do you go to school?”

“I’m studying with a private tutor,” said Dick.

“Are you? So is my cousin Dick. He’s going to college this year. Are
you going to college?”

“Not this year.”

“Because, if you did, you know you’d be in the same class with my
cousin. It would be funny to have two Dicks in one class.”

They turned down Twenty-fourth Street, passing the Fifth Avenue Hotel
on the left, and stopped before an elegant house with a brown stone
front. The bell was rung, and the door being opened, the boys, somewhat
abashed, followed Mr. Greyson into a handsome hall. They were told
where to hang their hats, and a moment afterwards were ushered into a
comfortable dining-room, where a table was spread for dinner.

Dick took his seat on the edge of a sofa, and was tempted to rub his
eyes to make sure that he was really awake. He could hardly believe
that he was a guest in so fine a mansion.

Ida helped to put the boys at their ease.

“Do you like pictures?” she asked.

“Very much,” answered Henry.

The little girl brought a book of handsome engravings, and, seating
herself beside Dick, to whom she seemed to have taken a decided fancy,
commenced showing them to him.

“There are the Pyramids of Egypt,” she said, pointing to one engraving.

“What are they for?” asked Dick, puzzled. “I don’t see any winders.”

“No,” said Ida, “I don’t believe anybody lives there. Do they, papa?”

“No, my dear. They were used for the burial of the dead. The largest of
them is said to be the loftiest building in the world with one
exception. The spire of the Cathedral of Strasburg is twenty-four feet
higher, if I remember rightly.”

“Is Egypt near here?” asked Dick.

“Oh, no, it’s ever so many miles off; about four or five hundred.
Didn’t you know?”

“No,” said Dick. “I never heard.”

“You don’t appear to be very accurate in your information, Ida,” said
her mother. “Four or five thousand miles would be considerably nearer
the truth.”

After a little more conversation they sat down to dinner. Dick seated
himself in an embarrassed way. He was very much afraid of doing or
saying something which would be considered an impropriety, and had the
uncomfortable feeling that everybody was looking at him, and watching
his behavior.

“Where do you live, Dick?” asked Ida, familiarly.

“In Mott Street.”

“Where is that?”

“More than a mile off.”

“Is it a nice street?”

“Not very,” said Dick. “Only poor folks live there.”

“Are you poor?”

“Little girls should be seen and not heard,” said her mother, gently.

“If you are,” said Ida, “I’ll give you the five-dollar gold-piece aunt
gave me for a birthday present.”

“Dick cannot be called poor, my child,” said Mrs. Greyson, “since he
earns his living by his own exertions.”

“Do you earn your living?” asked Ida, who was a very inquisitive young
lady, and not easily silenced. “What do you do?”

Dick blushed violently. At such a table, and in presence of the servant
who was standing at that moment behind his chair, he did not like to
say that he was a shoe-black, although he well knew that there was
nothing dishonorable in the occupation.

Mr. Greyson perceived his feelings, and to spare them, said, “You are
too inquisitive, Ida. Sometime Dick may tell you, but you know we don’t
talk of business on Sundays.”

Dick in his embarrassment had swallowed a large spoonful of hot soup,
which made him turn red in the face. For the second time, in spite of
the prospect of the best dinner he had ever eaten, he wished himself
back in Mott Street. Henry Fosdick was more easy and unembarrassed than
Dick, not having led such a vagabond and neglected life. But it was to
Dick that Ida chiefly directed her conversation, having apparently
taken a fancy to his frank and handsome face. I believe I have already
said that Dick was a very good-looking boy, especially now since he
kept his face clean. He had a frank, honest expression, which generally
won its way to the favor of those with whom he came in contact.

Dick got along pretty well at the table by dint of noticing how the
rest acted, but there was one thing he could not manage, eating with
his fork, which, by the way, he thought a very singular arrangement.

At length they arose from the table, somewhat to Dick’s relief. Again
Ida devoted herself to the boys, and exhibited a profusely illustrated
Bible for their entertainment. Dick was interested in looking at the
pictures, though he knew very little of their subjects. Henry Fosdick
was much better informed, as might have been expected.

When the boys were about to leave the house with Mr. Greyson for the
Sunday school, Ida placed her hand in Dick’s, and said persuasively,
“You’ll come again, Dick, won’t you?”

“Thank you,” said Dick, “I’d like to,” and he could not help thinking
Ida the nicest girl he had ever seen.

“Yes,” said Mrs. Greyson, hospitably, “we shall be glad to see you both
here again.”

“Thank you very much,” said Henry Fosdick, gratefully. “We shall like
very much to come.”

I will not dwell upon the hour spent in Sunday school, nor upon the
remarks of Mr. Greyson to his class. He found Dick’s ignorance of
religious subjects so great that he was obliged to begin at the
beginning with him. Dick was interested in hearing the children sing,
and readily promised to come again the next Sunday.

When the service was over Dick and Henry walked homewards. Dick could
not help letting his thoughts rest on the sweet little girl who had
given him so cordial a welcome, and hoping that he might meet her
again.

“Mr. Greyson is a nice man,—isn’t he, Dick?” asked Henry, as they were
turning into Mott Street, and were already in sight of their
lodging-house.

“Aint he, though?” said Dick. “He treated us just as if we were young
gentlemen.”

“Ida seemed to take a great fancy to you.”

“She’s a tip-top girl,” said Dick, “but she asked so many questions
that I didn’t know what to say.”

He had scarcely finished speaking, when a stone whizzed by his head,
and, turning quickly, he saw Micky Maguire running round the corner of
the street which they had just passed.



CHAPTER XVIII.
MICKY MAGUIRE’S SECOND DEFEAT


Dick was no coward. Nor was he in the habit of submitting passively to
an insult. When, therefore, he recognized Micky as his assailant, he
instantly turned and gave chase. Micky anticipated pursuit, and ran at
his utmost speed. It is doubtful if Dick would have overtaken him, but
Micky had the ill luck to trip just as he had entered a narrow alley,
and, falling with some violence, received a sharp blow from the hard
stones, which made him scream with pain.

“Ow!” he whined. “Don’t you hit a feller when he’s down.”

“What made you fire that stone at me?” demanded our hero, looking down
at the fallen bully.

“Just for fun,” said Micky.

“It would have been a very agreeable s’prise if it had hit me,” said
Dick. “S’posin’ I fire a rock at you jest for fun.”

“Don’t!” exclaimed Micky, in alarm.

“It seems you don’t like agreeable s’prises,” said Dick, “any more’n
the man did what got hooked by a cow one mornin’, before breakfast. It
didn’t improve his appetite much.”

“I’ve most broke my arm,” said Micky, ruefully, rubbing the affected
limb.

“If it’s broke you can’t fire no more stones, which is a very cheerin’
reflection,” said Dick. “Ef you haven’t money enough to buy a wooden
one I’ll lend you a quarter. There’s one good thing about wooden ones,
they aint liable to get cold in winter, which is another cheerin’
reflection.”

“I don’t want none of yer cheerin’ reflections,” said Micky, sullenly.
“Yer company aint wanted here.”

“Thank you for your polite invitation to leave,” said Dick, bowing
ceremoniously. “I’m willin’ to go, but ef you throw any more stones at
me, Micky Maguire, I’ll hurt you worse than the stones did.”

The only answer made to this warning was a scowl from his fallen
opponent. It was quite evident that Dick had the best of it, and he
thought it prudent to say nothing.

“As I’ve got a friend waitin’ outside, I shall have to tear myself
away,” said Dick. “You’d better not throw any more stones, Micky
Maguire, for it don’t seem to agree with your constitution.”

Micky muttered something which Dick did not stay to hear. He backed out
of the alley, keeping a watchful eye on his fallen foe, and rejoined
Henry Fosdick, who was awaiting his return.

“Who was it, Dick?” he asked.

“A partic’lar friend of mine, Micky Maguire,” said Dick. “He playfully
fired a rock at my head as a mark of his ’fection. He loves me like a
brother, Micky does.”

“Rather a dangerous kind of a friend, I should think,” said Fosdick.
“He might have killed you.”

“I’ve warned him not to be so ’fectionate another time,” said Dick.

“I know him,” said Henry Fosdick. “He’s at the head of a gang of boys
living at the Five-Points. He threatened to whip me once because a
gentleman employed me to black his boots instead of him.”

“He’s been at the Island two or three times for stealing,” said Dick.
“I guess he won’t touch me again. He’d rather get hold of small boys.
If he ever does anything to you, Fosdick, just let me know, and I’ll
give him a thrashing.”

Dick was right. Micky Maguire was a bully, and like most bullies did
not fancy tackling boys whose strength was equal or superior to his
own. Although he hated Dick more than ever, because he thought our hero
was putting on airs, he had too lively a remembrance of his strength
and courage to venture upon another open attack. He contented himself,
therefore, whenever he met Dick, with scowling at him. Dick took this
very philosophically, remarking that, “if it was soothin’ to Micky’s
feelings, he might go ahead, as it didn’t hurt him much.”

It will not be necessary to chronicle the events of the next few weeks.
A new life had commenced for Dick. He no longer haunted the gallery of
the Old Bowery; and even Tony Pastor’s hospitable doors had lost their
old attractions. He spent two hours every evening in study. His
progress was astonishingly rapid. He was gifted with a natural
quickness; and he was stimulated by the desire to acquire a fair
education as a means of “growin’ up ’spectable,” as he termed it. Much
was due also to the patience and perseverance of Henry Fosdick, who
made a capital teacher.

“You’re improving wonderfully, Dick,” said his friend, one evening,
when Dick had read an entire paragraph without a mistake.

“Am I?” said Dick, with satisfaction.

“Yes. If you’ll buy a writing-book to-morrow, we can begin writing
to-morrow evening.”

“What else do you know, Henry?” asked Dick.

“Arithmetic, and geography, and grammar.”

“What a lot you know!” said Dick, admiringly.

“I don’t _know_ any of them,” said Fosdick. “I’ve only studied them. I
wish I knew a great deal more.”

“I’ll be satisfied when I know as much as you,” said Dick.

“It seems a great deal to you now, Dick, but in a few months you’ll
think differently. The more you know, the more you’ll want to know.”

“Then there aint any end to learnin’?” said Dick.

“No.”

“Well,” said Dick, “I guess I’ll be as much as sixty before I know
everything.”

“Yes; as old as that, probably,” said Fosdick, laughing.

“Anyway, you know too much to be blackin’ boots. Leave that to ignorant
chaps like me.”

“You won’t be ignorant long, Dick.”

“You’d ought to get into some office or countin’-room.”

“I wish I could,” said Fosdick, earnestly. “I don’t succeed very well
at blacking boots. You make a great deal more than I do.”

“That’s cause I aint troubled with bashfulness,” said Dick.
“Bashfulness aint as natural to me as it is to you. I’m always on hand,
as the cat said to the milk. You’d better give up shines, Fosdick, and
give your ’tention to mercantile pursuits.”

“I’ve thought of trying to get a place,” said Fosdick; “but no one
would take me with these clothes;” and he directed his glance to his
well-worn suit, which he kept as neat as he could, but which, in spite
of all his care, began to show decided marks of use. There was also
here and there a stain of blacking upon it, which, though an
advertisement of his profession, scarcely added to its good appearance.

“I almost wanted to stay at home from Sunday school last Sunday,” he
continued, “because I thought everybody would notice how dirty and worn
my clothes had got to be.”

“If my clothes wasn’t two sizes too big for you,” said Dick,
generously, “I’d change. You’d look as if you’d got into your
great-uncle’s suit by mistake.”

“You’re very kind, Dick, to think of changing,” said Fosdick, “for your
suit is much better than mine; but I don’t think that mine would suit
you very well. The pants would show a little more of your ankles than
is the fashion, and you couldn’t eat a very hearty dinner without
bursting the buttons off the vest.”

“That wouldn’t be very convenient,” said Dick. “I aint fond of lacin’
to show my elegant figger. But I say,” he added with a sudden thought,
“how much money have we got in the savings’ bank?”

Fosdick took a key from his pocket, and went to the drawer in which the
bank-books were kept, and, opening it, brought them out for inspection.

It was found that Dick had the sum of eighteen dollars and ninety cents
placed to his credit, while Fosdick had six dollars and forty-five
cents. To explain the large difference, it must be remembered that Dick
had deposited five dollars before Henry deposited anything, being the
amount he had received as a gift from Mr. Whitney.

“How much does that make, the lot of it?” asked Dick. “I aint much on
figgers yet, you know.”

“It makes twenty-five dollars and thirty-five cents, Dick,” said his
companion, who did not understand the thought which suggested the
question.

“Take it, and buy some clothes, Henry,” said Dick, shortly.

“What, your money too?”

“In course.”

“No, Dick, you are too generous. I couldn’t think of it. Almost
three-quarters of the money is yours. You must spend it on yourself.”

“I don’t need it,” said Dick.

“You may not need it now, but you will some time.”

“I shall have some more then.”

“That may be; but it wouldn’t be fair for me to use your money, Dick. I
thank you all the same for your kindness.”

“Well, I’ll lend it to you, then,” persisted Dick, “and you can pay me
when you get to be a rich merchant.”

“But it isn’t likely I ever shall be one.”

“How d’you know? I went to a fortun’ teller once, and she told me I was
born under a lucky star with a hard name, and I should have a rich man
for my particular friend, who would make my fortun’. I guess you are
going to be the rich man.”

Fosdick laughed, and steadily refused for some time to avail himself of
Dick’s generous proposal; but at length, perceiving that our hero
seemed much disappointed, and would be really glad if his offer were
accepted, he agreed to use as much as might be needful.

This at once brought back Dick’s good-humor, and he entered with great
enthusiasm into his friend’s plans.

The next day they withdrew the money from the bank, and, when business
got a little slack, in the afternoon set out in search of a clothing
store. Dick knew enough of the city to be able to find a place where a
good bargain could be obtained. He was determined that Fosdick should
have a good serviceable suit, even if it took all the money they had.
The result of their search was that for twenty-three dollars Fosdick
obtained a very neat outfit, including a couple of shirts, a hat, and a
pair of shoes, besides a dark mixed suit, which appeared stout and of
good quality.

“Shall I send the bundle home?” asked the salesman, impressed by the
off-hand manner in which Dick drew out the money in payment for the
clothes.

“Thank you,” said Dick, “you’re very kind, but I’ll take it home
myself, and you can allow me something for my trouble.”

“All right,” said the clerk, laughing; “I’ll allow it on your next
purchase.”

Proceeding to their apartment in Mott Street, Fosdick at once tried on
his new suit, and it was found to be an excellent fit. Dick surveyed
his new friend with much satisfaction.

“You look like a young gentleman of fortun’,” he said, “and do credit
to your governor.”

“I suppose that means you, Dick,” said Fosdick, laughing.

“In course it does.”

“You should say _of_ course,” said Fosdick, who, in virtue of his
position as Dick’s tutor, ventured to correct his language from time to
time.

“How dare you correct your gov’nor?” said Dick, with comic indignation.
“‘I’ll cut you off with a shillin’, you young dog,’ as the Markis says
to his nephew in the play at the Old Bowery.”



CHAPTER XIX.
FOSDICK CHANGES HIS BUSINESS


Fosdick did not venture to wear his new clothes while engaged in his
business. This he felt would have been wasteful extravagance. About ten
o’clock in the morning, when business slackened, he went home, and
dressing himself went to a hotel where he could see copies of the
“Morning Herald” and “Sun,” and, noting down the places where a boy was
wanted, went on a round of applications. But he found it no easy thing
to obtain a place. Swarms of boys seemed to be out of employment, and
it was not unusual to find from fifty to a hundred applicants for a
single place.

There was another difficulty. It was generally desired that the boy
wanted should reside with his parents. When Fosdick, on being
questioned, revealed the fact of his having no parents, and being a boy
of the street, this was generally sufficient of itself to insure a
refusal. Merchants were afraid to trust one who had led such a vagabond
life. Dick, who was always ready for an emergency, suggested borrowing
a white wig, and passing himself off for Fosdick’s father or
grandfather. But Henry thought this might be rather a difficult
character for our hero to sustain. After fifty applications and as many
failures, Fosdick began to get discouraged. There seemed to be no way
out of his present business, for which he felt unfitted.

“I don’t know but I shall have to black boots all my life,” he said,
one day, despondently, to Dick.

“Keep a stiff upper lip,” said Dick. “By the time you get to be a
gray-headed veteran, you may get a chance to run errands for some big
firm on the Bowery, which is a very cheerin’ reflection.”

So Dick by his drollery and perpetual good spirits kept up Fosdick’s
courage.

“As for me,” said Dick, “I expect by that time to lay up a colossal
fortun’ out of shines, and live in princely style on the Avenoo.”

But one morning, Fosdick, straying into French’s Hotel, discovered the
following advertisement in the columns of “The Herald,”—

“WANTED—A smart, capable boy to run errands, and make himself generally
useful in a hat and cap store. Salary three dollars a week at first.
Inquire at No. — Broadway, after ten o’clock, A.M.”

He determined to make application, and, as the City Hall clock just
then struck the hour indicated, lost no time in proceeding to the
store, which was only a few blocks distant from the Astor House. It was
easy to find the store, as from a dozen to twenty boys were already
assembled in front of it. They surveyed each other askance, feeling
that they were rivals, and mentally calculating each other’s chances.

“There isn’t much chance for me,” said Fosdick to Dick, who had
accompanied him. “Look at all these boys. Most of them have good homes,
I suppose, and good recommendations, while I have nobody to refer to.”

“Go ahead,” said Dick. “Your chance is as good as anybody’s.”

While this was passing between Dick and his companion, one of the boys,
a rather supercilious-looking young gentleman, genteelly dressed, and
evidently having a very high opinion of his dress and himself turned
suddenly to Dick, and remarked,—

“I’ve seen you before.”

“Oh, have you?” said Dick, whirling round; “then p’r’aps you’d like to
see me behind.”

At this unexpected answer all the boys burst into a laugh with the
exception of the questioner, who, evidently, considered that Dick had
been disrespectful.

“I’ve seen you somewhere,” he said, in a surly tone, correcting
himself.

“Most likely you have,” said Dick. “That’s where I generally keep
myself.”

There was another laugh at the expense of Roswell Crawford, for that
was the name of the young aristocrat. But he had his revenge ready. No
boy relishes being an object of ridicule, and it was with a feeling of
satisfaction that he retorted,—

“I know you for all your impudence. You’re nothing but a boot-black.”

This information took the boys who were standing around by surprise,
for Dick was well-dressed, and had none of the implements of his
profession with him.

“S’pose I be,” said Dick. “Have you got any objection?”

“Not at all,” said Roswell, curling his lip; “only you’d better stick
to blacking boots, and not try to get into a store.”

“Thank you for your kind advice,” said Dick. “Is it gratooitous, or do
you expect to be paid for it?”

“You’re an impudent fellow.”

“That’s a very cheerin’ reflection,” said Dick, good-naturedly.

“Do you expect to get this place when there’s gentlemen’s sons applying
for it? A boot-black in a store! That would be a good joke.”

Boys as well as men are selfish, and, looking upon Dick as a possible
rival, the boys who listened seemed disposed to take the same view of
the situation.

“That’s what I say,” said one of them, taking sides with Roswell.

“Don’t trouble yourselves,” said Dick. “I aint agoin’ to cut you out. I
can’t afford to give up a independent and loocrative purfession for a
salary of three dollars a week.”

“Hear him talk!” said Roswell Crawford, with an unpleasant sneer. “If
you are not trying to get the place, what are you here for?”

“I came with a friend of mine,” said Dick, indicating Fosdick, “who’s
goin’ in for the situation.”

“Is he a boot-black, too?” demanded Roswell, superciliously.

“He!” retorted Dick, loftily. “Didn’t you know his father was a member
of Congress, and intimately acquainted with all the biggest men in the
State?”

The boys surveyed Fosdick as if they did not quite know whether to
credit this statement, which, for the credit of Dick’s veracity, it
will be observed he did not assert, but only propounded in the form of
a question. There was no time for comment, however, as just then the
proprietor of the store came to the door, and, casting his eyes over
the waiting group, singled out Roswell Crawford, and asked him to
enter.

“Well, my lad, how old are you?”

“Fourteen years old,” said Roswell, consequentially.

“Are your parents living?”

“Only my mother. My father is dead. He was a gentleman,” he added,
complacently.

“Oh, was he?” said the shop-keeper. “Do you live in the city?”

“Yes, sir. In Clinton Place.”

“Have you ever been in a situation before?”

“Yes, sir,” said Roswell, a little reluctantly.

“Where was it?”

“In an office on Dey Street.”

“How long were you there?”

“A week.”

“It seems to me that was a short time. Why did you not stay longer?”

“Because,” said Roswell, loftily, “the man wanted me to get to the
office at eight o’clock, and make the fire. I’m a gentleman’s son, and
am not used to such dirty work.”

“Indeed!” said the shop-keeper. “Well, young gentleman, you may step
aside a few minutes. I will speak with some of the other boys before
making my selection.”

Several other boys were called in and questioned. Roswell stood by and
listened with an air of complacency. He could not help thinking his
chances the best. “The man can see I’m a gentleman, and will do credit
to his store,” he thought.

At length it came to Fosdick’s turn. He entered with no very sanguine
anticipations of success. Unlike Roswell, he set a very low estimate
upon his qualifications when compared with those of other applicants.
But his modest bearing, and quiet, gentlemanly manner, entirely free
from pretension, prepossessed the shop-keeper, who was a sensible man,
in his favor.

“Do you reside in the city?” he asked.

“Yes, sir,” said Henry.

“What is your age?”

“Twelve.”

“Have you ever been in any situation?”

“No, sir.”

“I should like to see a specimen of your handwriting. Here, take the
pen and write your name.”

Henry Fosdick had a very handsome handwriting for a boy of his age,
while Roswell, who had submitted to the same test, could do little more
than scrawl.

“Do you reside with your parents?”

“No, sir, they are dead.”

“Where do you live, then?”

“In Mott Street.”

Roswell curled his lip when this name was pronounced, for Mott Street,
as my New York readers know, is in the immediate neighborhood of the
Five-Points, and very far from a fashionable locality.

“Have you any testimonials to present?” asked Mr. Henderson, for that
was his name.

Fosdick hesitated. This was the question which he had foreseen would
give him trouble.

But at this moment it happened most opportunely that Mr. Greyson
entered the shop with the intention of buying a hat.

“Yes,” said Fosdick, promptly; “I will refer to this gentleman.”

“How do you do, Fosdick?” asked Mr. Greyson, noticing him for the first
time. “How do you happen to be here?”

“I am applying for a place, sir,” said Fosdick. “May I refer the
gentleman to you?”

“Certainly, I shall be glad to speak a good word for you. Mr.
Henderson, this is a member of my Sunday-school class, of whose good
qualities and good abilities I can speak confidently.”

“That will be sufficient,” said the shop-keeper, who knew Mr. Greyson’s
high character and position. “He could have no better recommendation.
You may come to the store to-morrow morning at half past seven o’clock.
The pay will be three dollars a week for the first six months. If I am
satisfied with you, I shall then raise it to five dollars.”

The other boys looked disappointed, but none more so than Roswell
Crawford. He would have cared less if any one else had obtained the
situation; but for a boy who lived in Mott Street to be preferred to
him, a gentleman’s son, he considered indeed humiliating. In a spirit
of petty spite, he was tempted to say,

“He’s a boot-black. Ask him if he isn’t.”

“He’s an honest and intelligent lad,” said Mr. Greyson. “As for you,
young man, I only hope you have one-half his good qualities.”

Roswell Crawford left the store in disgust, and the other unsuccessful
applicants with him.

“What luck, Fosdick?” asked Dick, eagerly, as his friend came out of
the store.

“I’ve got the place,” said Fosdick, in accents of satisfaction; “but it
was only because Mr. Greyson spoke up for me.”

“He’s a trump,” said Dick, enthusiastically.

The gentleman, so denominated, came out before the boys went away, and
spoke with them kindly.

Both Dick and Henry were highly pleased at the success of the
application. The pay would indeed be small, but, expended economically,
Fosdick thought he could get along on it, receiving his room rent, as
before, in return for his services as Dick’s private tutor. Dick
determined, as soon as his education would permit, to follow his
companion’s example.

“I don’t know as you’ll be willin’ to room with a boot-black,” he said,
to Henry, “now you’re goin’ into business.”

“I couldn’t room with a better friend, Dick,” said Fosdick,
affectionately, throwing his arm round our hero. “When we part, it’ll
be because you wish it.”

So Fosdick entered upon a new career.



CHAPTER XX.
NINE MONTHS LATER


The next morning Fosdick rose early, put on his new suit, and, after
getting breakfast, set out for the Broadway store in which he had
obtained a position. He left his little blacking-box in the room.

“It’ll do to brush my own shoes,” he said. “Who knows but I may have to
come back to it again?”

“No danger,” said Dick; “I’ll take care of the feet, and you’ll have to
look after the heads, now you’re in a hat-store.”

“I wish you had a place too,” said Fosdick.

“I don’t know enough yet,” said Dick. “Wait till I’ve gradooated.”

“And can put A.B. after your name.”

“What’s that?”

“It stands for Bachelor of Arts. It’s a degree that students get when
they graduate from college.”

“Oh,” said Dick, “I didn’t know but it meant A Boot-black. I can put
that after my name now. Wouldn’t Dick Hunter, A.B., sound tip-top?”

“I must be going,” said Fosdick. “It won’t do for me to be late the
very first morning.”

“That’s the difference between you and me,” said Dick. “I’m my own
boss, and there aint no one to find fault with me if I’m late. But I
might as well be goin’ too. There’s a gent as comes down to his store
pretty early that generally wants a shine.”

The two boys parted at the Park. Fosdick crossed it, and proceeded to
the hat-store, while Dick, hitching up his pants, began to look about
him for a customer. It was seldom that Dick had to wait long. He was
always on the alert, and if there was any business to do he was always
sure to get his share of it. He had now a stronger inducement than ever
to attend strictly to business; his little stock of money in the
savings bank having been nearly exhausted by his liberality to his
room-mate. He determined to be as economical as possible, and moreover
to study as hard as he could, that he might be able to follow Fosdick’s
example, and obtain a place in a store or counting-room. As there were
no striking incidents occurring in our hero’s history within the next
nine months, I propose to pass over that period, and recount the
progress he made in that time.

Fosdick was still at the hat-store, having succeeded in giving perfect
satisfaction to Mr. Henderson. His wages had just been raised to five
dollars a week. He and Dick still kept house together at Mrs. Mooney’s
lodging-house, and lived very frugally, so that both were able to save
up money. Dick had been unusually successful in business. He had
several regular patrons, who had been drawn to him by his ready wit,
and quick humor, and from two of them he had received presents of
clothing, which had saved him any expense on that score. His income had
averaged quite seven dollars a week in addition to this. Of this amount
he was now obliged to pay one dollar weekly for the room which he and
Fosdick occupied, but he was still able to save one half the remainder.
At the end of nine months therefore, or thirty-nine weeks, it will be
seen that he had accumulated no less a sum than one hundred and
seventeen dollars. Dick may be excused for feeling like a capitalist
when he looked at the long row of deposits in his little bank-book.
There were other boys in the same business who had earned as much
money, but they had had little care for the future, and spent as they
went along, so that few could boast a bank-account, however small.

“You’ll be a rich man some time, Dick,” said Henry Fosdick, one
evening.

“And live on Fifth Avenoo,” said Dick.

“Perhaps so. Stranger things have happened.”

“Well,” said Dick, “if such a misfortin’ should come upon me I should
bear it like a man. When you see a Fifth Avenoo manshun for sale for a
hundred and seventeen dollars, just let me know and I’ll buy it as an
investment.”

“Two hundred and fifty years ago you might have bought one for that
price, probably. Real estate wasn’t very high among the Indians.”

“Just my luck,” said Dick; “I was born too late. I’d orter have been an
Indian, and lived in splendor on my present capital.”

“I’m afraid you’d have found your present business rather unprofitable
at that time.”

But Dick had gained something more valuable than money. He had studied
regularly every evening, and his improvement had been marvellous. He
could now read well, write a fair hand, and had studied arithmetic as
far as Interest. Besides this he had obtained some knowledge of grammar
and geography. If some of my boy readers, who have been studying for
years, and got no farther than this, should think it incredible that
Dick, in less than a year, and studying evenings only, should have
accomplished it, they must remember that our hero was very much in
earnest in his desire to improve. He knew that, in order to grow up
respectable, he must be well advanced, and he was willing to work. But
then the reader must not forget that Dick was naturally a smart boy.
His street education had sharpened his faculties, and taught him to
rely upon himself. He knew that it would take him a long time to reach
the goal which he had set before him, and he had patience to keep on
trying. He knew that he had only himself to depend upon, and he
determined to make the most of himself,—a resolution which is the
secret of success in nine cases out of ten.

“Dick,” said Fosdick, one evening, after they had completed their
studies, “I think you’ll have to get another teacher soon.”

“Why?” asked Dick, in some surprise. “Have you been offered a more
loocrative position?”

“No,” said Fosdick, “but I find I have taught you all I know myself.
You are now as good a scholar as I am.”

“Is that true?” said Dick, eagerly, a flush of gratification coloring
his brown cheek.

“Yes,” said Fosdick. “You’ve made wonderful progress. I propose, now
that evening schools have begun, that we join one, and study together
through the winter.”

“All right,” said Dick. “I’d be willin’ to go now; but when I first
began to study I was ashamed to have anybody know that I was so
ignorant. Do you really mean, Fosdick, that I know as much as you?”

“Yes, Dick, it’s true.”

“Then I’ve got you to thank for it,” said Dick, earnestly. “You’ve made
me what I am.”

“And haven’t you paid me, Dick?”

“By payin’ the room-rent,” said Dick, impulsively. “What’s that? It
isn’t half enough. I wish you’d take half my money; you deserve it.”

“Thank you, Dick, but you’re too generous. You’ve more than paid me.
Who was it took my part when all the other boys imposed upon me? And
who gave me money to buy clothes, and so got me my situation?”

“Oh, that’s nothing!” said Dick.

“It’s a great deal, Dick. I shall never forget it. But now it seems to
me you might try to get a situation yourself.”

“Do I know enough?”

“You know as much as I do.”

“Then I’ll try,” said Dick, decidedly.

“I wish there was a place in our store,” said Fosdick. “It would be
pleasant for us to be together.”

“Never mind,” said Dick; “there’ll be plenty of other chances. P’r’aps
A. T. Stewart might like a partner. I wouldn’t ask more’n a quarter of
the profits.”

“Which would be a very liberal proposal on your part,” said Fosdick,
smiling. “But perhaps Mr. Stewart might object to a partner living on
Mott Street.”

“I’d just as lieves move to Fifth Avenoo,” said Dick. “I aint got no
prejudices in favor of Mott Street.”

“Nor I,” said Fosdick, “and in fact I have been thinking it might be a
good plan for us to move as soon as we could afford. Mrs. Mooney
doesn’t keep the room quite so neat as she might.”

“No,” said Dick. “She aint got no prejudices against dirt. Look at that
towel.”

Dick held up the article indicated, which had now seen service nearly a
week, and hard service at that,—Dick’s avocation causing him to be
rather hard on towels.

“Yes,” said Fosdick, “I’ve got about tired of it. I guess we can find
some better place without having to pay much more. When we move, you
must let me pay my share of the rent.”

“We’ll see about that,” said Dick. “Do you propose to move to Fifth
Avenoo?”

“Not just at present, but to some more agreeable neighborhood than
this. We’ll wait till you get a situation, and then we can decide.”

A few days later, as Dick was looking about for customers in the
neighborhood of the Park, his attention was drawn to a fellow
boot-black, a boy about a year younger than himself, who appeared to
have been crying.

“What’s the matter, Tom?” asked Dick. “Haven’t you had luck to-day?”

“Pretty good,” said the boy; “but we’re havin’ hard times at home.
Mother fell last week and broke her arm, and to-morrow we’ve got to pay
the rent, and if we don’t the landlord says he’ll turn us out.”

“Haven’t you got anything except what you earn?” asked Dick.

“No,” said Tom, “not now. Mother used to earn three or four dollars a
week; but she can’t do nothin’ now, and my little sister and brother
are too young.”

Dick had quick sympathies. He had been so poor himself, and obliged to
submit to so many privations that he knew from personal experience how
hard it was. Tom Wilkins he knew as an excellent boy who never
squandered his money, but faithfully carried it home to his mother. In
the days of his own extravagance and shiftlessness he had once or twice
asked Tom to accompany him to the Old Bowery or Tony Pastor’s, but Tom
had always steadily refused.

“I’m sorry for you, Tom,” he said. “How much do you owe for rent?”

“Two weeks now,” said Tom.

“How much is it a week?”

“Two dollars a week—that makes four.”

“Have you got anything towards it?”

“No; I’ve had to spend all my money for food for mother and the rest of
us. I’ve had pretty hard work to do that. I don’t know what we’ll do. I
haven’t any place to go to, and I’m afraid mother’ll get cold in her
arm.”

“Can’t you borrow the money somewhere?” asked Dick.

Tom shook his head despondingly.

“All the people I know are as poor as I am,” said he. “They’d help me
if they could, but it’s hard work for them to get along themselves.”

“I’ll tell you what, Tom,” said Dick, impulsively, “I’ll stand your
friend.”

“Have you got any money?” asked Tom, doubtfully.

“Got any money!” repeated Dick. “Don’t you know that I run a bank on my
own account? How much is it you need?”

“Four dollars,” said Tom. “If we don’t pay that before to-morrow night,
out we go. You haven’t got as much as that, have you?”

“Here are three dollars,” said Dick, drawing out his pocket-book. “I’ll
let you have the rest to-morrow, and maybe a little more.”

“You’re a right down good fellow, Dick,” said Tom; “but won’t you want
it yourself?”

“Oh, I’ve got some more,” said Dick.

“Maybe I’ll never be able to pay you.”

“S’pose you don’t,” said Dick; “I guess I won’t fail.”

“I won’t forget it, Dick. I hope I’ll be able to do somethin’ for you
sometime.”

“All right,” said Dick. “I’d ought to help you. I haven’t got no mother
to look out for. I wish I had.”

There was a tinge of sadness in his tone, as he pronounced the last
four words; but Dick’s temperament was sanguine, and he never gave way
to unavailing sadness. Accordingly he began to whistle as he turned
away, only adding, “I’ll see you to-morrow, Tom.”

The three dollars which Dick had handed to Tom Wilkins were his savings
for the present week. It was now Thursday afternoon. His rent, which
amounted to a dollar, he expected to save out of the earnings of Friday
and Saturday. In order to give Tom the additional assistance he had
promised, Dick would be obliged to have recourse to his bank-savings.
He would not have ventured to trench upon it for any other reason but
this. But he felt that it would be selfish to allow Tom and his mother
to suffer when he had it in his power to relieve them. But Dick was
destined to be surprised, and that in a disagreeable manner, when he
reached home.



CHAPTER XXI.
DICK LOSES HIS BANK-BOOK


It was hinted at the close of the last chapter that Dick was destined
to be disagreeably surprised on reaching home.

Having agreed to give further assistance to Tom Wilkins, he was
naturally led to go to the drawer where he and Fosdick kept their
bank-books. To his surprise and uneasiness _the drawer proved to be
empty!_

“Come here a minute, Fosdick,” he said.

“What’s the matter, Dick?”

“I can’t find my bank-book, nor yours either. What’s ’come of them?”

“I took mine with me this morning, thinking I might want to put in a
little more money. I’ve got it in my pocket, now.”

“But where’s mine?” asked Dick, perplexed.

“I don’t know. I saw it in the drawer when I took mine this morning.”

“Are you sure?”

“Yes, positive, for I looked into it to see how much you had got.”

“Did you lock it again?” asked Dick.

“Yes; didn’t you have to unlock it just now?”

“So I did,” said Dick. “But it’s gone now. Somebody opened it with a
key that fitted the lock, and then locked it ag’in.”

“That must have been the way.”

“It’s rather hard on a feller,” said Dick, who, for the first time
since we became acquainted with him, began to feel down-hearted.

“Don’t give it up, Dick. You haven’t lost the money, only the
bank-book.”

“Aint that the same thing?”

“No. You can go to the bank to-morrow morning, as soon as it opens, and
tell them you have lost the book, and ask them not to pay the money to
any one except yourself.”

“So I can,” said Dick, brightening up. “That is, if the thief hasn’t
been to the bank to-day.”

“If he has, they might detect him by his handwriting.”

“I’d like to get hold of the one that stole it,” said Dick,
indignantly. “I’d give him a good lickin’.”

“It must have been somebody in the house. Suppose we go and see Mrs.
Mooney. She may know whether anybody came into our room to-day.”

The two boys went downstairs, and knocked at the door of a little back
sitting-room where Mrs. Mooney generally spent her evenings. It was a
shabby little room, with a threadbare carpet on the floor, the walls
covered with a certain large-figured paper, patches of which had been
stripped off here and there, exposing the plaster, the remainder being
defaced by dirt and grease. But Mrs. Mooney had one of those
comfortable temperaments which are tolerant of dirt, and didn’t mind it
in the least. She was seated beside a small pine work-table,
industriously engaged in mending stockings.

“Good-evening, Mrs. Mooney,” said Fosdick, politely.

“Good-evening,” said the landlady. “Sit down, if you can find chairs.
I’m hard at work as you see, but a poor lone widder can’t afford to be
idle.”

“We can’t stop long, Mrs. Mooney, but my friend here has had something
taken from his room to-day, and we thought we’d come and see you about
it.”

“What is it?” asked the landlady. “You don’t think I’d take anything?
If I am poor, it’s an honest name I’ve always had, as all my lodgers
can testify.”

“Certainly not, Mrs. Mooney; but there are others in the house that may
not be honest. My friend has lost his bank-book. It was safe in the
drawer this morning, but to-night it is not to be found.”

“How much money was there in it?” asked Mrs. Mooney.

“Over a hundred dollars,” said Fosdick.

“It was my whole fortun’,” said Dick. “I was goin’ to buy a house next
year.”

Mrs. Mooney was evidently surprised to learn the extent of Dick’s
wealth, and was disposed to regard him with increased respect.

“Was the drawer locked?” she asked.

“Yes.”

“Then it couldn’t have been Bridget. I don’t think she has any keys.”

“She wouldn’t know what a bank-book was,” said Fosdick. “You didn’t see
any of the lodgers go into our room to-day, did you?”

“I shouldn’t wonder if it was Jim Travis,” said Mrs. Mooney, suddenly.

This James Travis was a bar-tender in a low groggery in Mulberry
Street, and had been for a few weeks an inmate of Mrs. Mooney’s
lodging-house. He was a coarse-looking fellow who, from his appearance,
evidently patronized liberally the liquor he dealt out to others. He
occupied a room opposite Dick’s, and was often heard by the two boys
reeling upstairs in a state of intoxication, uttering shocking oaths.

This Travis had made several friendly overtures to Dick and his
room-mate, and had invited them to call round at the bar-room where he
tended, and take something. But this invitation had never been
accepted, partly because the boys were better engaged in the evening,
and partly because neither of them had taken a fancy to Mr. Travis;
which certainly was not strange, for nature had not gifted him with
many charms, either of personal appearance or manners. The rejection of
his friendly proffers had caused him to take a dislike to Dick and
Henry, whom he considered stiff and unsocial.

“What makes you think it was Travis?” asked Fosdick. “He isn’t at home
in the daytime.”

“But he was to-day. He said he had got a bad cold, and had to come home
for a clean handkerchief.”

“Did you see him?” asked Dick.

“Yes,” said Mrs. Mooney. “Bridget was hanging out clothes, and I went
to the door to let him in.”

“I wonder if he had a key that would fit our drawer,” said Fosdick.

“Yes,” said Mrs. Mooney. “The bureaus in the two rooms are just alike.
I got ’em at auction, and most likely the locks is the same.”

“It must have been he,” said Dick, looking towards Fosdick.

“Yes,” said Fosdick, “it looks like it.”

“What’s to be done? That’s what I’d like to know,” said Dick. “Of
course he’ll say he hasn’t got it; and he won’t be such a fool as to
leave it in his room.”

“If he hasn’t been to the bank, it’s all right,” said Fosdick. “You can
go there the first thing to-morrow morning, and stop their paying any
money on it.”

“But I can’t get any money on it myself,” said Dick. “I told Tom
Wilkins I’d let him have some more money to-morrow, or his sick
mother’ll have to turn out of their lodgin’s.”

“How much money were you going to give him?”

“I gave him three dollars to-day, and was goin’ to give him two dollars
to-morrow.”

“I’ve got the money, Dick. I didn’t go to the bank this morning.”

“All right. I’ll take it, and pay you back next week.”

“No, Dick; if you’ve given three dollars, you must let me give two.”

“No, Fosdick, I’d rather give the whole. You know I’ve got more money
than you. No, I haven’t, either,” said Dick, the memory of his loss
flashing upon him. “I thought I was rich this morning, but now I’m in
destitoot circumstances.”

“Cheer up, Dick; you’ll get your money back.”

“I hope so,” said our hero, rather ruefully.

The fact was, that our friend Dick was beginning to feel what is so
often experienced by men who do business of a more important character
and on a larger scale than he, the bitterness of a reverse of
circumstances. With one hundred dollars and over carefully laid away in
the savings bank, he had felt quite independent. Wealth is comparative,
and Dick probably felt as rich as many men who are worth a hundred
thousand dollars. He was beginning to feel the advantages of his steady
self-denial, and to experience the pleasures of property. Not that Dick
was likely to be unduly attached to money. Let it be said to his credit
that it had never given him so much satisfaction as when it enabled him
to help Tom Wilkins in his trouble.

Besides this, there was another thought that troubled him. When he
obtained a place he could not expect to receive as much as he was now
making from blacking boots,—probably not more than three dollars a
week,—while his expenses without clothing would amount to four dollars.
To make up the deficiency he had confidently relied upon his savings,
which would be sufficient to carry him along for a year, if necessary.
If he should not recover his money, he would be compelled to continue a
boot-black for at least six months longer; and this was rather a
discouraging reflection. On the whole it is not to be wondered at that
Dick felt unusually sober this evening, and that neither of the boys
felt much like studying.

The two boys consulted as to whether it would be best to speak to
Travis about it. It was not altogether easy to decide. Fosdick was
opposed to it.

“It will only put him on his guard,” said he, “and I don’t see as it
will do any good. Of course he will deny it. We’d better keep quiet,
and watch him, and, by giving notice at the bank, we can make sure that
he doesn’t get any money on it. If he does present himself at the bank,
they will know at once that he is a thief, and he can be arrested.”

This view seemed reasonable, and Dick resolved to adopt it. On the
whole, he began to think prospects were brighter than he had at first
supposed, and his spirits rose a little.

“How’d he know I had any bank-book? That’s what I can’t make out,” he
said.

“Don’t you remember?” said Fosdick, after a moment’s thought, “we were
speaking of our savings, two or three evenings since?”

“Yes,” said Dick.

“Our door was a little open at the time, and I heard somebody come
upstairs, and stop a minute in front of it. It must have been Jim
Travis. In that way he probably found out about your money, and took
the opportunity to-day to get hold of it.”

This might or might not be the correct explanation. At all events it
seemed probable.

The boys were just on the point of going to bed, later in the evening,
when a knock was heard at the door, and, to their no little surprise,
their neighbor, Jim Travis, proved to be the caller. He was a
sallow-complexioned young man, with dark hair and bloodshot eyes.

He darted a quick glance from one to the other as he entered, which did
not escape the boys’ notice.

“How are ye, to-night?” he said, sinking into one of the two chairs
with which the room was scantily furnished.

“Jolly,” said Dick. “How are you?”

“Tired as a dog,” was the reply. “Hard work and poor pay; that’s the
way with me. I wanted to go to the theater, to-night, but I was hard
up, and couldn’t raise the cash.”

Here he darted another quick glance at the boys; but neither betrayed
anything.

“You don’t go out much, do you?” he said

“Not much,” said Fosdick. “We spend our evenings in study.”

“That’s precious slow,” said Travis, rather contemptuously. “What’s the
use of studying so much? You don’t expect to be a lawyer, do you, or
anything of that sort?”

“Maybe,” said Dick. “I haven’t made up my mind yet. If my
feller-citizens should want me to go to Congress some time, I shouldn’t
want to disapp’int ’em; and then readin’ and writin’ might come handy.”

“Well,” said Travis, rather abruptly, “I’m tired and I guess I’ll turn
in.”

“Good-night,” said Fosdick.

The boys looked at each other as their visitor left the room.

“He came in to see if we’d missed the bank-book,” said Dick.

“And to turn off suspicion from himself, by letting us know he had no
money,” added Fosdick.

“That’s so,” said Dick. “I’d like to have searched them pockets of
his.”



CHAPTER XXII.
TRACKING THE THIEF


Fosdick was right in supposing that Jim Travis had stolen the
bank-book. He was also right in supposing that that worthy young man
had come to the knowledge of Dick’s savings by what he had accidentally
overheard. Now, Travis, like a very large number of young men of his
class, was able to dispose of a larger amount of money than he was able
to earn. Moreover, he had no great fancy for work at all, and would
have been glad to find some other way of obtaining money enough to pay
his expenses. He had recently received a letter from an old companion,
who had strayed out to California, and going at once to the mines had
been lucky enough to get possession of a very remunerative claim. He
wrote to Travis that he had already realized two thousand dollars from
it, and expected to make his fortune within six months.

Two thousand dollars! This seemed to Travis a very large sum, and quite
dazzled his imagination. He was at once inflamed with the desire to go
out to California and try his luck. In his present situation he only
received thirty dollars a month, which was probably all that his
services were worth, but went a very little way towards gratifying his
expensive tastes. Accordingly he determined to take the next steamer to
the land of gold, if he could possibly manage to get money enough to
pay the passage.

The price of a steerage passage at that time was seventy-five
dollars,—not a large sum, certainly,—but it might as well have been
seventy-five hundred for any chance James Travis had of raising the
amount at present. His available funds consisted of precisely two
dollars and a quarter; of which sum, one dollar and a half was due to
his washerwoman. This, however, would not have troubled Travis much,
and he would conveniently have forgotten all about it; but, even
leaving this debt unpaid, the sum at his command would not help him
materially towards paying his passage money.

Travis applied for help to two or three of his companions; but they
were all of that kind who never keep an account with savings banks, but
carry all their spare cash about with them. One of these friends
offered to lend him thirty-seven cents, and another a dollar; but
neither of these offers seemed to encourage him much. He was about
giving up his project in despair, when he learned, accidentally, as we
have already said, the extent of Dick’s savings.

One hundred and seventeen dollars! Why, that would not only pay his
passage, but carry him up to the mines, after he had arrived in San
Francisco. He could not help thinking it over, and the result of this
thinking was that he determined to borrow it of Dick without leave.
Knowing that neither of the boys were in their room in the daytime, he
came back in the course of the morning, and, being admitted by Mrs.
Mooney herself, said, by way of accounting for his presence, that he
had a cold, and had come back for a handkerchief. The landlady
suspected nothing, and, returning at once to her work in the kitchen,
left the coast clear.

Travis at once entered Dick’s room, and, as there seemed to be no other
place for depositing money, tried the bureau-drawers. They were all
readily opened, except one, which proved to be locked. This he
naturally concluded must contain the money, and going back to his own
chamber for the key of the bureau, tried it on his return, and found to
his satisfaction that it would fit. When he discovered the bank-book,
his joy was mingled with disappointment. He had expected to find
bank-bills instead. This would have saved all further trouble, and
would have been immediately available. Obtaining money at the savings
bank would involve fresh risk. Travis hesitated whether to take it or
not; but finally decided that it would be worth the trouble and hazard.

He accordingly slipped the book into his pocket, locked the drawer
again, and, forgetting all about the handkerchief for which he had come
home went downstairs, and into the street.

There would have been time to go to the savings bank that day, but
Travis had already been absent from his place of business some time,
and did not venture to take the additional time required. Besides, not
being very much used to savings banks, never having had occasion to use
them, he thought it would be more prudent to look over the rules and
regulations, and see if he could not get some information as to the way
he ought to proceed. So the day passed, and Dick’s money was left in
safety at the bank.

In the evening, it occurred to Travis that it might be well to find out
whether Dick had discovered his loss. This reflection it was that
induced the visit which is recorded at the close of the last chapter.
The result was that he was misled by the boys’ silence on the subject,
and concluded that nothing had yet been discovered.

“Good!” thought Travis, with satisfaction. “If they don’t find out for
twenty-four hours, it’ll be too late, then, and I shall be all right.”

There being a possibility of the loss being discovered before the boys
went out in the morning, Travis determined to see them at that time,
and judge whether such was the case. He waited, therefore, until he
heard the boys come out, and then opened his own door.

“Morning, gents,” said he, sociably. “Going to business?”

“Yes,” said Dick. “I’m afraid my clerks’ll be lazy if I aint on hand.”

“Good joke!” said Travis. “If you pay good wages, I’d like to speak for
a place.”

“I pay all I get myself,” said Dick. “How’s business with you?”

“So so. Why don’t you call round, some time?”

“All my evenin’s is devoted to literatoor and science,” said Dick.
“Thank you all the same.”

“Where do you hang out?” inquired Travis, in choice language,
addressing Fosdick.

“At Henderson’s hat and cap store, on Broadway.”

“I’ll look in upon you some time when I want a tile,” said Travis. “I
suppose you sell cheaper to your friends.”

“I’ll be as reasonable as I can,” said Fosdick, not very cordially; for
he did not much fancy having it supposed by his employer that such a
disreputable-looking person as Travis was a friend of his.

However, Travis had no idea of showing himself at the Broadway store,
and only said this by way of making conversation, and encouraging the
boys to be social.

“You haven’t any of you gents seen a pearl-handled knife, have you?” he
asked.

“No,” said Fosdick; “have you lost one?”

“Yes,” said Travis, with unblushing falsehood. “I left it on my bureau
a day or two since. I’ve missed one or two other little matters.
Bridget don’t look to me any too honest. Likely she’s got ’em.”

“What are you goin’ to do about it?” said Dick.

“I’ll keep mum unless I lose something more, and then I’ll kick up a
row, and haul her over the coals. Have you missed anything?”

“No,” said Fosdick, answering for himself, as he could do without
violating the truth.

There was a gleam of satisfaction in the eyes of Travis, as he heard
this.

“They haven’t found it out yet,” he thought. “I’ll bag the money
to-day, and then they may whistle for it.”

Having no further object to serve in accompanying the boys, he bade
them good-morning, and turned down another street.

“He’s mighty friendly all of a sudden,” said Dick.

“Yes,” said Fosdick; “it’s very evident what it all means. He wants to
find out whether you have discovered your loss or not.”

“But he didn’t find out.”

“No; we’ve put him on the wrong track. He means to get his money
to-day, no doubt.”

“My money,” suggested Dick.

“I accept the correction,” said Fosdick.

“Of course, Dick, you’ll be on hand as soon as the bank opens.”

“In course I shall. Jim Travis’ll find he’s walked into the wrong
shop.”

“The bank opens at ten o’clock, you know.”

“I’ll be there on time.”

The two boys separated.

“Good luck, Dick,” said Fosdick, as he parted from him. “It’ll all come
out right, I think.”

“I hope ’twill,” said Dick.

He had recovered from his temporary depression, and made up his mind
that the money would be recovered. He had no idea of allowing himself
to be outwitted by Jim Travis, and enjoyed already, in anticipation,
the pleasure of defeating his rascality.

It wanted two hours and a half yet to ten o’clock, and this time to
Dick was too precious to be wasted. It was the time of his greatest
harvest. He accordingly repaired to his usual place of business,
succeeded in obtaining six customers, which yielded him sixty cents. He
then went to a restaurant, and got some breakfast. It was now half-past
nine, and Dick, feeling that it wouldn’t do to be late, left his box in
charge of Johnny Nolan, and made his way to the bank.

The officers had not yet arrived, and Dick lingered on the outside,
waiting till they should come. He was not without a little uneasiness,
fearing that Travis might be as prompt as himself, and finding him
there, might suspect something, and so escape the snare. But, though
looking cautiously up and down the street, he could discover no traces
of the supposed thief. In due time ten o’clock struck, and immediately
afterwards the doors of the bank were thrown open, and our hero
entered.

As Dick had been in the habit of making a weekly visit for the last
nine months, the cashier had come to know him by sight.

“You’re early, this morning, my lad,” he said, pleasantly. “Have you
got some more money to deposit? You’ll be getting rich, soon.”

“I don’t know about that,” said Dick. “My bank-book’s been stole.”

“Stolen!” echoed the cashier. “That’s unfortunate. Not so bad as it
might be, though. The thief can’t collect the money.”

“That’s what I came to see about,” said Dick. “I was afraid he might
have got it already.”

“He hasn’t been here yet. Even if he had, I remember you, and should
have detected him. When was it taken?”

“Yesterday,” said Dick. “I missed it in the evenin’ when I got home.”

“Have you any suspicion as to the person who took it?” asked the
cashier.

Dick thereupon told all he knew as to the general character and
suspicious conduct of Jim Travis, and the cashier agreed with him that
he was probably the thief. Dick also gave his reason for thinking that
he would visit the bank that morning, to withdraw the funds.

“Very good,” said the cashier. “We’ll be ready for him. What is the
number of your book?”

“No. 5,678,” said Dick.

“Now give me a little description of this Travis whom you suspect.”

Dick accordingly furnished a brief outline sketch of Travis, not
particularly complimentary to the latter.

“That will answer. I think I shall know him,” said the cashier. “You
may depend upon it that he shall receive no money on your account.”

“Thank you,” said Dick.

Considerably relieved in mind, our hero turned towards the door,
thinking that there would be nothing gained by his remaining longer,
while he would of course lose time.

He had just reached the doors, which were of glass, when through them
he perceived James Travis himself just crossing the street, and
apparently coming towards the bank. It would not do, of course, for him
to be seen.

“Here he is,” he exclaimed, hurrying back. “Can’t you hide me
somewhere? I don’t want to be seen.”

The cashier understood at once how the land lay. He quickly opened a
little door, and admitted Dick behind the counter.

“Stoop down,” he said, “so as not to be seen.”

Dick had hardly done so when Jim Travis opened the outer door, and,
looking about him in a little uncertainty, walked up to the cashier’s
desk.



CHAPTER XXIII.
TRAVIS IS ARRESTED


Jim Travis advanced into the bank with a doubtful step, knowing well
that he was on a dishonest errand, and heartily wishing that he were
well out of it. After a little hesitation, he approached the
paying-teller, and, exhibiting the bank-book, said, “I want to get my
money out.”

The bank-officer took the book, and, after looking at it a moment,
said, “How much do you want?”

“The whole of it,” said Travis.

“You can draw out any part of it, but to draw out the whole requires a
week’s notice.”

“Then I’ll take a hundred dollars.”

“Are you the person to whom the book belongs?”

“Yes, sir,” said Travis, without hesitation.

“Your name is—”

“Hunter.”

The bank-clerk went to a large folio volume, containing the names of
depositors, and began to turn over the leaves. While he was doing this,
he managed to send out a young man connected with the bank for a
policeman. Travis did not perceive this, or did not suspect that it had
anything to do with himself. Not being used to savings banks, he
supposed the delay only what was usual. After a search, which was only
intended to gain time that a policeman might be summoned, the cashier
came back, and, sliding out a piece of paper to Travis, said, “It will
be necessary for you to write an order for the money.”

Travis took a pen, which he found on the ledge outside, and wrote the
order, signing his name “Dick Hunter,” having observed that name on the
outside of the book.

“Your name is Dick Hunter, then?” said the cashier, taking the paper,
and looking at the thief over his spectacles.

“Yes,” said Travis, promptly.

“But,” continued the cashier, “I find Hunter’s age is put down on the
bank-book as fourteen. Surely you must be more than that.”

Travis would gladly have declared that he was only fourteen; but, being
in reality twenty-three, and possessing a luxuriant pair of whiskers,
this was not to be thought of. He began to feel uneasy.

“Dick Hunter’s my younger brother,” he said. “I’m getting out the money
for him.”

“I thought you said your own name was Dick Hunter,” said the cashier.

“I said my name was Hunter,” said Travis, ingeniously. “I didn’t
understand you.”

“But you’ve signed the name of Dick Hunter to this order. How is that?”
questioned the troublesome cashier.

Travis saw that he was getting himself into a tight place; but his
self-possession did not desert him.

“I thought I must give my brother’s name,” he answered.

“What is your own name?”

“Henry Hunter.”

“Can you bring any one to testify that the statement you are making is
correct?”

“Yes, a dozen if you like,” said Travis, boldly. “Give me the book, and
I’ll come back this afternoon. I didn’t think there’d be such a fuss
about getting out a little money.”

“Wait a moment. Why don’t your brother come himself?”

“Because he’s sick. He’s down with the measles,” said Travis.

Here the cashier signed to Dick to rise and show himself. Our hero
accordingly did so.

“You will be glad to find that he has recovered,” said the cashier,
pointing to Dick.

With an exclamation of anger and dismay, Travis, who saw the game was
up, started for the door, feeling that safety made such a course
prudent. But he was too late. He found himself confronted by a burly
policeman, who seized him by the arm, saying, “Not so fast, my man. I
want you.”

“Let me go,” exclaimed Travis, struggling to free himself.

“I’m sorry I can’t oblige you,” said the officer. “You’d better not
make a fuss, or I may have to hurt you a little.”

Travis sullenly resigned himself to his fate, darting a look of rage at
Dick, whom he considered the author of his present misfortune.

“This is your book,” said the cashier, handing back his rightful
property to our hero. “Do you wish to draw out any money?”

“Two dollars,” said Dick.

“Very well. Write an order for the amount.”

Before doing so, Dick, who now that he saw Travis in the power of the
law began to pity him, went up to the officer, and said,—

“Won’t you let him go? I’ve got my bank-book back, and I don’t want
anything done to him.”

“Sorry I can’t oblige you,” said the officer; “but I’m not allowed to
do it. He’ll have to stand his trial.”

“I’m sorry for you, Travis,” said Dick. “I didn’t want you arrested. I
only wanted my bank-book back.”

“Curse you!” said Travis, scowling vindictively. “Wait till I get free.
See if I don’t fix you.”

“You needn’t pity him too much,” said the officer. “I know him now.
He’s been to the Island before.”

“It’s a lie,” said Travis, violently.

“Don’t be too noisy, my friend,” said the officer. “If you’ve got no
more business here, we’ll be going.”

He withdrew with the prisoner in charge, and Dick, having drawn his two
dollars, left the bank. Notwithstanding the violent words the prisoner
had used towards himself, and his attempted robbery, he could not help
feeling sorry that he had been instrumental in causing his arrest.

“I’ll keep my book a little safer hereafter,” thought Dick. “Now I must
go and see Tom Wilkins.”

Before dismissing the subject of Travis and his theft, it may be
remarked that he was duly tried, and, his guilt being clear, was sent
to Blackwell’s Island for nine months. At the end of that time, on his
release, he got a chance to work his passage on a ship to San
Francisco, where he probably arrived in due time. At any rate, nothing
more has been heard of him, and probably his threat of vengence against
Dick will never be carried into effect.

Returning to the City Hall Park, Dick soon fell in with Tom Wilkins.

“How are you, Tom?” he said. “How’s your mother?”

“She’s better, Dick, thank you. She felt worried about bein’ turned out
into the street; but I gave her that money from you, and now she feels
a good deal easier.”

“I’ve got some more for you, Tom,” said Dick, producing a two-dollar
bill from his pocket.

“I ought not to take it from you, Dick.”

“Oh, it’s all right, Tom. Don’t be afraid.”

“But you may need it yourself.”

“There’s plenty more where that came from.”

“Any way, one dollar will be enough. With that we can pay the rent.”

“You’ll want the other to buy something to eat.”

“You’re very kind, Dick.”

“I’d ought to be. I’ve only got myself to take care of.”

“Well, I’ll take it for my mother’s sake. When you want anything done
just call on Tom Wilkins.”

“All right. Next week, if your mother doesn’t get better, I’ll give you
some more.”

Tom thanked our hero very gratefully, and Dick walked away, feeling the
self-approval which always accompanies a generous and disinterested
action. He was generous by nature, and, before the period at which he
is introduced to the reader’s notice, he frequently treated his friends
to cigars and oyster-stews. Sometimes he invited them to accompany him
to the theatre at his expense. But he never derived from these acts of
liberality the same degree of satisfaction as from this timely gift to
Tom Wilkins. He felt that his money was well bestowed, and would save
an entire family from privation and discomfort. Five dollars would, to
be sure, make something of a difference in the amount of his savings.
It was more than he was able to save up in a week. But Dick felt fully
repaid for what he had done, and he felt prepared to give as much more,
if Tom’s mother should continue to be sick, and should appear to him to
need it.

Besides all this, Dick felt a justifiable pride in his financial
ability to afford so handsome a gift. A year before, however much he
might have desired to give, it would have been quite out of his power
to give five dollars. His cash balance never reached that amount. It
was seldom, indeed, that it equalled one dollar. In more ways than one
Dick was beginning to reap the advantage of his self-denial and
judicious economy.

It will be remembered that when Mr. Whitney at parting with Dick
presented him with five dollars, he told him that he might repay it to
some other boy who was struggling upward. Dick thought of this, and it
occurred to him that after all he was only paying up an old debt.

When Fosdick came home in the evening, Dick announced his success in
recovering his lost money, and described the manner it had been brought
about.

“You’re in luck,” said Fosdick. “I guess we’d better not trust the
bureau-drawer again.”

“I mean to carry my book round with me,” said Dick.

“So shall I, as long as we stay at Mrs. Mooney’s. I wish we were in a
better place.”

“I must go down and tell her she needn’t expect Travis back. Poor chap,
I pity him!”

Travis was never more seen in Mrs. Mooney’s establishment. He was owing
that lady for a fortnight’s rent of his room, which prevented her
feeling much compassion for him. The room was soon after let to a more
creditable tenant who proved a less troublesome neighbor than his
predecessor.



CHAPTER XXIV.
DICK RECEIVES A LETTER


It was about a week after Dick’s recovery of his bank-book, that
Fosdick brought home with him in the evening a copy of the “Daily Sun.”

“Would you like to see your name in print, Dick?” he asked.

“Yes,” said Dick, who was busy at the wash-stand, endeavoring to efface
the marks which his day’s work had left upon his hands. “They haven’t
put me up for mayor, have they? ’Cause if they have, I shan’t accept.
It would interfere too much with my private business.”

“No,” said Fosdick, “they haven’t put you up for office yet, though
that may happen sometime. But if you want to see your name in print,
here it is.”

Dick was rather incredulous, but, having dried his hands on the towel,
took the paper, and following the directions of Fosdick’s finger,
observed in the list of advertised letters the name of “RAGGED DICK.”

“By gracious, so it is,” said he. “Do you s’pose it means me?”

“I don’t know of any other Ragged Dick,—do you?”

“No,” said Dick, reflectively; “it must be me. But I don’t know of
anybody that would be likely to write to me.”

“Perhaps it is Frank Whitney,” suggested Fosdick, after a little
reflection. “Didn’t he promise to write to you?”

“Yes,” said Dick, “and he wanted me to write to him.”

“Where is he now?”

“He was going to a boarding-school in Connecticut, he said. The name of
the town was Barnton.”

“Very likely the letter is from him.”

“I hope it is. Frank was a tip-top boy, and he was the first that made
me ashamed of bein’ so ignorant and dirty.”

“You had better go to the post-office to-morrow morning, and ask for
the letter.”

“P’r’aps they won’t give it to me.”

“Suppose you wear the old clothes you used to a year ago, when Frank
first saw you? They won’t have any doubt of your being Ragged Dick
then.”

“I guess I will. I’ll be sort of ashamed to be seen in ’em though,”
said Dick, who had considerable more pride in a neat personal
appearance than when we were first introduced to him.

“It will be only for one day, or one morning,” said Fosdick.

“I’d do more’n that for the sake of gettin’ a letter from Frank. I’d
like to see him.”

The next morning, in accordance with the suggestion of Fosdick, Dick
arrayed himself in the long disused Washington coat and Napoleon pants,
which he had carefully preserved, for what reason he could hardly
explain.

When fairly equipped, Dick surveyed himself in the mirror,—if the
little seven-by-nine-inch looking-glass, with which the room was
furnished, deserved the name. The result of the survey was not on the
whole a pleasing one. To tell the truth, Dick was quite ashamed of his
appearance, and, on opening the chamber-door, looked around to see that
the coast was clear, not being willing to have any of his
fellow-boarders see him in his present attire.

He managed to slip out into the street unobserved, and, after attending
to two or three regular customers who came down-town early in the
morning, he made his way down Nassau Street to the post-office. He
passed along until he came to a compartment on which he read ADVERTISED
LETTERS, and, stepping up to the little window, said,—

“There’s a letter for me. I saw it advertised in the ‘Sun’ yesterday.”

“What name?” demanded the clerk.

“Ragged Dick,” answered our hero.

“That’s a queer name,” said the clerk, surveying him a little
curiously. “Are you Ragged Dick?”

“If you don’t believe me, look at my clo’es,” said Dick.

“That’s pretty good proof, certainly,” said the clerk, laughing. “If
that isn’t your name, it deserves to be.”

“I believe in dressin’ up to your name,” said Dick.

“Do you know any one in Barnton, Connecticut?” asked the clerk, who had
by this time found the letter.

“Yes,” said Dick. “I know a chap that’s at boardin’-school there.”

“It appears to be in a boy’s hand. I think it must be yours.”

The letter was handed to Dick through the window. He received it
eagerly, and drawing back so as not to be in the way of the throng who
were constantly applying for letters, or slipping them into the boxes
provided for them, hastily opened it, and began to read. As the reader
may be interested in the contents of the letter as well as Dick, we
transcribe it below.

It was dated Barnton, Conn., and commenced thus,—

“DEAR DICK,—You must excuse my addressing this letter to ‘Ragged Dick’;
but the fact is, I don’t know what your last name is, nor where you
live. I am afraid there is not much chance of your getting this letter;
but I hope you will. I have thought of you very often, and wondered how
you were getting along, and I should have written to you before if I
had known where to direct.

“Let me tell you a little about myself. Barnton is a very pretty
country town, only about six miles from Hartford. The boarding-school
which I attend is under the charge of Ezekiel Munroe, A.M. He is a man
of about fifty, a graduate of Yale College, and has always been a
teacher. It is a large two-story house, with an addition containing a
good many small bed-chambers for the boys. There are about twenty of
us, and there is one assistant teacher who teaches the English
branches. Mr. Munroe, or Old Zeke, as we call him behind his back,
teaches Latin and Greek. I am studying both these languages, because
father wants me to go to college.

“But you won’t be interested in hearing about our studies. I will tell
you how we amuse ourselves. There are about fifty acres of land
belonging to Mr. Munroe; so that we have plenty of room for play. About
a quarter of a mile from the house there is a good-sized pond. There is
a large, round-bottomed boat, which is stout and strong. Every
Wednesday and Saturday afternoon, when the weather is good, we go out
rowing on the pond. Mr. Barton, the assistant teacher, goes with us, to
look after us. In the summer we are allowed to go in bathing. In the
winter there is splendid skating on the pond.

“Besides this, we play ball a good deal, and we have various other
plays. So we have a pretty good time, although we study pretty hard
too. I am getting on very well in my studies. Father has not decided
yet where he will send me to college.

“I wish you were here, Dick. I should enjoy your company, and besides I
should like to feel that you were getting an education. I think you are
naturally a pretty smart boy; but I suppose, as you have to earn your
own living, you don’t get much chance to learn. I only wish I had a few
hundred dollars of my own. I would have you come up here, and attend
school with us. If I ever have a chance to help you in any way, you may
be sure that I will.

“I shall have to wind up my letter now, as I have to hand in a
composition to-morrow, on the life and character of Washington. I might
say that I have a friend who wears a coat that once belonged to the
general. But I suppose that coat must be worn out by this time. I don’t
much like writing compositions. I would a good deal rather write
letters.

“I have written a longer letter than I meant to. I hope you will get
it, though I am afraid not. If you do, you must be sure to answer it,
as soon as possible. You needn’t mind if your writing does look like
‘hens-tracks,’ as you told me once.

“Good-by, Dick. You must always think of me, as your very true friend,

“FRANK WHITNEY.”


Dick read this letter with much satisfaction. It is always pleasant to
be remembered, and Dick had so few friends that it was more to him than
to boys who are better provided. Again, he felt a new sense of
importance in having a letter addressed to him. It was the first letter
he had ever received. If it had been sent to him a year before, he
would not have been able to read it. But now, thanks to Fosdick’s
instructions, he could not only read writing, but he could write a very
good hand himself.

There was one passage in the letter which pleased Dick. It was where
Frank said that if he had the money he would pay for his education
himself.

“He’s a tip-top feller,” said Dick. “I wish I could see him ag’in.”

There were two reasons why Dick would like to have seen Frank. One was,
the natural pleasure he would have in meeting a friend; but he felt
also that he would like to have Frank witness the improvement he had
made in his studies and mode of life.

“He’d find me a little more ’spectable than when he first saw me,”
thought Dick.

Dick had by this time got up to Printing House Square. Standing on
Spruce Street, near the “Tribune” office, was his old enemy, Micky
Maguire.

It has already been said that Micky felt a natural enmity towards those
in his own condition in life who wore better clothes than himself. For
the last nine months, Dick’s neat appearance had excited the ire of the
young Philistine. To appear in neat attire and with a clean face Micky
felt was a piece of presumption, and an assumption of superiority on
the part of our hero, and he termed it “tryin’ to be a swell.”

Now his astonished eyes rested on Dick in his ancient attire, which was
very similar to his own. It was a moment of triumph to him. He felt
that “pride had had a fall,” and he could not forbear reminding Dick of
it.

“Them’s nice clo’es you’ve got on,” said he, sarcastically, as Dick
came up.

“Yes,” said Dick, promptly. “I’ve been employin’ your tailor. If my
face was only dirty we’d be taken for twin brothers.”

“So you’ve give up tryin’ to be a swell?”

“Only for this partic’lar occasion,” said Dick. “I wanted to make a
fashionable call, so I put on my regimentals.”

“I don’t b’lieve you’ve got any better clo’es,” said Micky.

“All right,” said Dick, “I won’t charge you nothin’ for what you
believe.”

Here a customer presented himself for Micky, and Dick went back to his
room to change his clothes, before resuming business.



CHAPTER XXV.
DICK WRITES HIS FIRST LETTER


When Fosdick reached home in the evening, Dick displayed his letter
with some pride.

“It’s a nice letter,” said Fosdick, after reading it. “I should like to
know Frank.”

“I’ll bet you would,” said Dick. “He’s a trump.”

“When are you going to answer it?”

“I don’t know,” said Dick, dubiously. “I never writ a letter.”

“That’s no reason why you shouldn’t. There’s always a first time, you
know.”

“I don’t know what to say,” said Dick.

“Get some paper and sit down to it, and you’ll find enough to say. You
can do that this evening instead of studying.”

“If you’ll look it over afterwards, and shine it up a little.”

“Yes, if it needs it; but I rather think Frank would like it best just
as you wrote it.”

Dick decided to adopt Fosdick’s suggestion. He had very serious doubts
as to his ability to write a letter. Like a good many other boys, he
looked upon it as a very serious job, not reflecting that, after all,
letter-writing is nothing but talking upon paper. Still, in spite of
his misgivings, he felt that the letter ought to be answered, and he
wished Frank to hear from him. After various preparations, he at last
got settled down to his task, and, before the evening was over, a
letter was written. As the first letter which Dick had ever produced,
and because it was characteristic of him, my readers may like to read
it.

Here it is,—

“DEAR FRANK,—I got your letter this mornin’, and was very glad to hear
you hadn’t forgotten Ragged Dick. I aint so ragged as I was. Openwork
coats and trowsers has gone out of fashion. I put on the Washington
coat and Napoleon pants to go to the post-office, for fear they
wouldn’t think I was the boy that was meant. On my way back I received
the congratulations of my intimate friend, Micky Maguire, on my
improved appearance.

“I’ve give up sleepin’ in boxes, and old wagons, findin’ it didn’t
agree with my constitution. I’ve hired a room in Mott Street, and have
got a private tooter, who rooms with me and looks after my studies in
the evenin’. Mott Street aint very fashionable; but my manshun on Fifth
Avenoo isn’t finished yet, and I’m afraid it won’t be till I’m a
gray-haired veteran. I’ve got a hundred dollars towards it, which I’ve
saved up from my earnin’s. I haven’t forgot what you and your uncle
said to me, and I’m tryin’ to grow up ’spectable. I haven’t been to
Tony Pastor’s, or the Old Bowery, for ever so long. I’d rather save up
my money to support me in my old age. When my hair gets gray, I’m goin’
to knock off blackin’ boots, and go into some light, genteel
employment, such as keepin’ an apple-stand, or disseminatin’ pea-nuts
among the people.

“I’ve got so as to read pretty well, so my tooter says. I’ve been
studyin’ geography and grammar also. I’ve made such astonishin’
progress that I can tell a noun from a conjunction as far away as I can
see ’em. Tell Mr. Munroe that if he wants an accomplished teacher in
his school, he can send for me, and I’ll come on by the very next
train. Or, if he wants to sell out for a hundred dollars, I’ll buy the
whole concern, and agree to teach the scholars all I know myself in
less than six months. Is teachin’ as good business, generally speakin’,
as blackin’ boots? My private tooter combines both, and is makin’ a
fortun’ with great rapidity. He’ll be as rich as Astor some time, _if
he only lives long enough._

“I should think you’d have a bully time at your school. I should like
to go out in the boat, or play ball with you. When are you comin’ to
the city? I wish you’d write and let me know when you do, and I’ll call
and see you. I’ll leave my business in the hands of my numerous clerks,
and go round with you. There’s lots of things you didn’t see when you
was here before. They’re getting on fast at the Central Park. It looks
better than it did a year ago.

“I aint much used to writin’ letters. As this is the first one I ever
wrote, I hope you’ll excuse the mistakes. I hope you’ll write to me
again soon. I can’t write so good a letter as you; but, I’ll do my
best, as the man said when he was asked if he could swim over to
Brooklyn backwards. Good-by, Frank. Thank you for all your kindness.
Direct your next letter to No. — Mott Street.

“Your true friend,
“DICK HUNTER.”


When Dick had written the last word, he leaned back in his chair, and
surveyed the letter with much satisfaction.

“I didn’t think I could have wrote such a long letter, Fosdick,” said
he.

“Written would be more grammatical, Dick,” suggested his friend.

“I guess there’s plenty of mistakes in it,” said Dick. “Just look at
it, and see.”

Fosdick took the letter, and read it over carefully.

“Yes, there are some mistakes,” he said; “but it sounds so much like
you that I think it would be better to let it go just as it is. It will
be more likely to remind Frank of what you were when he first saw you.”

“Is it good enough to send?” asked Dick, anxiously.

“Yes; it seems to me to be quite a good letter. It is written just as
you talk. Nobody but you could have written such a letter, Dick. I
think Frank will be amused at your proposal to come up there as
teacher.”

“P’r’aps it would be a good idea for us to open a seleck school here in
Mott Street,” said Dick, humorously. “We could call it ‘Professor
Fosdick and Hunter’s Mott Street Seminary.’ Boot-blackin’ taught by
Professor Hunter.”

The evening was so far advanced that Dick decided to postpone copying
his letter till the next evening. By this time he had come to have a
very fair handwriting, so that when the letter was complete it really
looked quite creditable, and no one would have suspected that it was
Dick’s first attempt in this line. Our hero surveyed it with no little
complacency. In fact, he felt rather proud of it, since it reminded him
of the great progress he had made. He carried it down to the
post-office, and deposited it with his own hands in the proper box.
Just on the steps of the building, as he was coming out, he met Johnny
Nolan, who had been sent on an errand to Wall Street by some gentleman,
and was just returning.

“What are you doin’ down here, Dick?” asked Johnny.

“I’ve been mailin’ a letter.”

“Who sent you?”

“Nobody.”

“I mean, who writ the letter?”

“I wrote it myself.”

“Can you write letters?” asked Johnny, in amazement.

“Why shouldn’t I?”

“I didn’t know you could write. I can’t.”

“Then you ought to learn.”

“I went to school once; but it was too hard work, so I give it up.”

“You’re lazy, Johnny,—that’s what’s the matter. How’d you ever expect
to know anything, if you don’t try?”

“I can’t learn.”

“You can, if you want to.”

Johnny Nolan was evidently of a different opinion. He was a
good-natured boy, large of his age, with nothing particularly bad about
him, but utterly lacking in that energy, ambition, and natural
sharpness, for which Dick was distinguished. He was not adapted to
succeed in the life which circumstances had forced upon him; for in the
street-life of the metropolis a boy needs to be on the alert, and have
all his wits about him, or he will find himself wholly distanced by his
more enterprising competitors for popular favor. To succeed in his
profession, humble as it is, a boot-black must depend upon the same
qualities which gain success in higher walks in life. It was easy to
see that Johnny, unless very much favored by circumstances, would never
rise much above his present level. For Dick, we cannot help hoping much
better things.



CHAPTER XXVI.
AN EXCITING ADVENTURE


Dick now began to look about for a position in a store or
counting-room. Until he should obtain one he determined to devote half
the day to blacking boots, not being willing to break in upon his small
capital. He found that he could earn enough in half a day to pay all
his necessary expenses, including the entire rent of the room. Fosdick
desired to pay his half; but Dick steadily refused, insisting upon
paying so much as compensation for his friend’s services as instructor.

It should be added that Dick’s peculiar way of speaking and use of
slang terms had been somewhat modified by his education and his
intimacy with Henry Fosdick. Still he continued to indulge in them to
some extent, especially when he felt like joking, and it was natural to
Dick to joke, as my readers have probably found out by this time. Still
his manners were considerably improved, so that he was more likely to
obtain a situation than when first introduced to our notice.

Just now, however, business was very dull, and merchants, instead of
hiring new assistants, were disposed to part with those already in
their employ. After making several ineffectual applications, Dick began
to think he should be obliged to stick to his profession until the next
season. But about this time something occurred which considerably
improved his chances of preferment.

This is the way it happened.

As Dick, with a balance of more than a hundred dollars in the savings
bank, might fairly consider himself a young man of property, he thought
himself justified in occasionally taking a half holiday from business,
and going on an excursion. On Wednesday afternoon Henry Fosdick was
sent by his employer on an errand to that part of Brooklyn near
Greenwood Cemetery. Dick hastily dressed himself in his best, and
determined to accompany him.

The two boys walked down to the South Ferry, and, paying their two
cents each, entered the ferry boat. They remained at the stern, and
stood by the railing, watching the great city, with its crowded
wharves, receding from view. Beside them was a gentleman with two
children,—a girl of eight and a little boy of six. The children were
talking gayly to their father. While he was pointing out some object of
interest to the little girl, the boy managed to creep, unobserved,
beneath the chain that extends across the boat, for the protection of
passengers, and, stepping incautiously to the edge of the boat, fell
over into the foaming water.

At the child’s scream, the father looked up, and, with a cry of horror,
sprang to the edge of the boat. He would have plunged in, but, being
unable to swim, would only have endangered his own life, without being
able to save his child.

“My child!” he exclaimed in anguish,—“who will save my child? A
thousand—ten thousand dollars to any one who will save him!”

There chanced to be but few passengers on board at the time, and nearly
all these were either in the cabins or standing forward. Among the few
who saw the child fall was our hero.

Now Dick was an expert swimmer. It was an accomplishment which he had
possessed for years, and he no sooner saw the boy fall than he resolved
to rescue him. His determination was formed before he heard the liberal
offer made by the boy’s father. Indeed, I must do Dick the justice to
say that, in the excitement of the moment, he did not hear it at all,
nor would it have stimulated the alacrity with which he sprang to the
rescue of the little boy.

Little Johnny had already risen once, and gone under for the second
time, when our hero plunged in. He was obliged to strike out for the
boy, and this took time. He reached him none too soon. Just as he was
sinking for the third and last time, he caught him by the jacket. Dick
was stout and strong, but Johnny clung to him so tightly, that it was
with great difficulty he was able to sustain himself.

“Put your arms round my neck,” said Dick.

The little boy mechanically obeyed, and clung with a grasp strengthened
by his terror. In this position Dick could bear his weight better. But
the ferry-boat was receding fast. It was quite impossible to reach it.
The father, his face pale with terror and anguish, and his hands
clasped in suspense, saw the brave boy’s struggles, and prayed with
agonizing fervor that he might be successful. But it is probable, for
they were now midway of the river, that both Dick and the little boy
whom he had bravely undertaken to rescue would have been drowned, had
not a row-boat been fortunately near. The two men who were in it
witnessed the accident, and hastened to the rescue of our hero.

“Keep up a little longer,” they shouted, bending to their oars, “and we
will save you.”

Dick heard the shout, and it put fresh strength into him. He battled
manfully with the treacherous sea, his eyes fixed longingly upon the
approaching boat.

“Hold on tight, little boy,” he said. “There’s a boat coming.”

The little boy did not see the boat. His eyes were closed to shut out
the fearful water, but he clung the closer to his young preserver. Six
long, steady strokes, and the boat dashed along side. Strong hands
seized Dick and his youthful burden, and drew them into the boat, both
dripping with water.

“God be thanked!” exclaimed the father, as from the steamer he saw the
child’s rescue. “That brave boy shall be rewarded, if I sacrifice my
whole fortune to compass it.”

“You’ve had a pretty narrow escape, young chap,” said one of the
boatmen to Dick. “It was a pretty tough job you undertook.”

“Yes,” said Dick. “That’s what I thought when I was in the water. If it
hadn’t been for you, I don’t know what would have ’come of us.”

“Anyhow you’re a plucky boy, or you wouldn’t have dared to jump into
the water after this little chap. It was a risky thing to do.”

“I’m used to the water,” said Dick, modestly. “I didn’t stop to think
of the danger, but I wasn’t going to see that little fellow drown
without tryin’ to save him.”

The boat at once headed for the ferry wharf on the Brooklyn side. The
captain of the ferry-boat, seeing the rescue, did not think it
necessary to stop his boat, but kept on his way. The whole occurrence
took place in less time than I have occupied in telling it.

The father was waiting on the wharf to receive his little boy, with
what feelings of gratitude and joy can be easily understood. With a
burst of happy tears he clasped him to his arms. Dick was about to
withdraw modestly, but the gentleman perceived the movement, and,
putting down the child, came forward, and, clasping his hand, said with
emotion, “My brave boy, I owe you a debt I can never repay. But for
your timely service I should now be plunged into an anguish which I
cannot think of without a shudder.”

Our hero was ready enough to speak on most occasions, but always felt
awkward when he was praised.

“It wasn’t any trouble,” he said, modestly. “I can swim like a top.”

“But not many boys would have risked their lives for a stranger,” said
the gentleman. “But,” he added with a sudden thought, as his glance
rested on Dick’s dripping garments, “both you and my little boy will
take cold in wet clothes. Fortunately I have a friend living close at
hand, at whose house you will have an opportunity of taking off your
clothes, and having them dried.”

Dick protested that he never took cold; but Fosdick, who had now joined
them, and who, it is needless to say, had been greatly alarmed at
Dick’s danger, joined in urging compliance with the gentleman’s
proposal, and in the end our hero had to yield. His new friend secured
a hack, the driver of which agreed for extra recompense to receive the
dripping boys into his carriage, and they were whirled rapidly to a
pleasant house in a side street, where matters were quickly explained,
and both boys were put to bed.

“I aint used to goin’ to bed quite so early,” thought Dick. “This is
the queerest excursion I ever took.”

Like most active boys Dick did not enjoy the prospect of spending half
a day in bed; but his confinement did not last as long as he
anticipated.

In about an hour the door of his chamber was opened, and a servant
appeared, bringing a new and handsome suit of clothes throughout.

“You are to put on these,” said the servant to Dick; “but you needn’t
get up till you feel like it.”

“Whose clothes are they?” asked Dick.

“They are yours.”

“Mine! Where did they come from?”

“Mr. Rockwell sent out and bought them for you. They are the same size
as your wet ones.”

“Is he here now?”

“No. He bought another suit for the little boy, and has gone back to
New York. Here’s a note he asked me to give you.”

Dick opened the paper, and read as follows,—

“Please accept this outfit of clothes as the first instalment of a debt
which I can never repay. I have asked to have your wet suit dried, when
you can reclaim it. Will you oblige me by calling to-morrow at my
counting room, No. —, Pearl Street.

“Your friend,
“JAMES ROCKWELL.”



CHAPTER XXVII.
CONCLUSION


When Dick was dressed in his new suit, he surveyed his figure with
pardonable complacency. It was the best he had ever worn, and fitted
him as well as if it had been made expressly for him.

“He’s done the handsome thing,” said Dick to himself; “but there wasn’t
no ’casion for his givin’ me these clothes. My lucky stars are shinin’
pretty bright now. Jumpin’ into the water pays better than shinin’
boots; but I don’t think I’d like to try it more’n once a week.”

About eleven o’clock the next morning Dick repaired to Mr. Rockwell’s
counting-room on Pearl Street. He found himself in front of a large and
handsome warehouse. The counting-room was on the lower floor. Our hero
entered, and found Mr. Rockwell sitting at a desk. No sooner did that
gentleman see him than he arose, and, advancing, shook Dick by the hand
in the most friendly manner.

“My young friend,” he said, “you have done me so great service that I
wish to be of some service to you in return. Tell me about yourself,
and what plans or wishes you have formed for the future.”

Dick frankly related his past history, and told Mr. Rockwell of his
desire to get into a store or counting-room, and of the failure of all
his applications thus far. The merchant listened attentively to Dick’s
statement, and, when he had finished, placed a sheet of paper before
him, and, handing him a pen, said, “Will you write your name on this
piece of paper?”

Dick wrote in a free, bold hand, the name Richard Hunter. He had very
much improved in his penmanship, as has already been mentioned, and now
had no cause to be ashamed of it.

Mr. Rockwell surveyed it approvingly.

“How would you like to enter my counting-room as clerk, Richard?” he
asked.

Dick was about to say “Bully,” when he recollected himself, and
answered, “Very much.”

“I suppose you know something of arithmetic, do you not?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Then you may consider yourself engaged at a salary of ten dollars a
week. You may come next Monday morning.”

“Ten dollars!” repeated Dick, thinking he must have misunderstood.

“Yes; will that be sufficient?”

“It’s more than I can earn,” said Dick, honestly.

“Perhaps it is at first,” said Mr. Rockwell, smiling; “but I am willing
to pay you that. I will besides advance you as fast as your progress
will justify it.”

Dick was so elated that he hardly restrained himself from some
demonstration which would have astonished the merchant; but he
exercised self-control, and only said, “I’ll try to serve you so
faithfully, sir, that you won’t repent having taken me into your
service.”

“And I think you will succeed,” said Mr. Rockwell, encouragingly. “I
will not detain you any longer, for I have some important business to
attend to. I shall expect to see you on Monday morning.”

Dick left the counting-room, hardly knowing whether he stood on his
head or his heels, so overjoyed was he at the sudden change in his
fortunes. Ten dollars a week was to him a fortune, and three times as
much as he had expected to obtain at first. Indeed he would have been
glad, only the day before, to get a place at three dollars a week. He
reflected that with the stock of clothes which he had now on hand, he
could save up at least half of it, and even then live better than he
had been accustomed to do; so that his little fund in the savings bank,
instead of being diminished, would be steadily increasing. Then he was
to be advanced if he deserved it. It was indeed a bright prospect for a
boy who, only a year before, could neither read nor write, and depended
for a night’s lodging upon the chance hospitality of an alley-way or
old wagon. Dick’s great ambition to “grow up ’spectable” seemed likely
to be accomplished after all.

“I wish Fosdick was as well off as I am,” he thought generously. But he
determined to help his less fortunate friend, and assist him up the
ladder as he advanced himself.

When Dick entered his room on Mott Street, he discovered that some one
else had been there before him, and two articles of wearing apparel had
disappeared.

“By gracious!” he exclaimed; “somebody’s stole my Washington coat and
Napoleon pants. Maybe it’s an agent of Barnum’s, who expects to make a
fortun’ by exhibitin’ the valooable wardrobe of a gentleman of
fashion.”

Dick did not shed many tears over his loss, as, in his present
circumstances, he never expected to have any further use for the
well-worn garments. It may be stated that he afterwards saw them
adorning the figure of Micky Maguire; but whether that estimable young
man stole them himself, he never ascertained. As to the loss, Dick was
rather pleased that it had occurred. It seemed to cut him off from the
old vagabond life which he hoped never to resume. Henceforward he meant
to press onward, and rise as high as possible.

Although it was yet only noon, Dick did not go out again with his
brush. He felt that it was time to retire from business. He would leave
his share of the public patronage to other boys less fortunate than
himself. That evening Dick and Fosdick had a long conversation. Fosdick
rejoiced heartily in his friend’s success, and on his side had the
pleasant news to communicate that his pay had been advanced to six
dollars a week.

“I think we can afford to leave Mott Street now,” he continued. “This
house isn’t as neat as it might be, and I shall like to live in a nicer
quarter of the city.”

“All right,” said Dick. “We’ll hunt up a new room to-morrow. I shall
have plenty of time, having retired from business. I’ll try to get my
reg’lar customers to take Johnny Nolan in my place. That boy hasn’t any
enterprise. He needs some body to look out for him.”

“You might give him your box and brush, too, Dick.”

“No,” said Dick; “I’ll give him some new ones, but mine I want to keep,
to remind me of the hard times I’ve had, when I was an ignorant
boot-black, and never expected to be anything better.”

“When, in short, you were ‘Ragged Dick.’ You must drop that name, and
think of yourself now as”—

“Richard Hunter, Esq.,” said our hero, smiling.

“A young gentleman on the way to fame and fortune,” added Fosdick.


Here ends the story of Ragged Dick. As Fosdick said, he is Ragged Dick
no longer. He has taken a step upward, and is determined to mount still
higher. There are fresh adventures in store for him, and for others who
have been introduced in these pages. Those who have felt interested in
his early life will find his history continued in a new volume, forming
the second of the series, to be called,—

FAME AND FORTUNE;
OR,
THE PROGRESS OF RICHARD HUNTER.





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