Nayland Smith wasted no time in pursuing the plan of campaign which he had mentioned
to Inspector Weymouth. Less than forty-eight hours after quitting the house of the
murdered Slattin, I found myself bound along Whitechapel Road upon strange enough
business.
A very fine rain was falling, which rendered it difficult to see clearly from the windows;
but the weather apparently had little effect upon the commercial activities of the district.
The cab was threading a hazardous way through the cosmopolitan throng crowding the
street. On either side of me extended a row of stalls, seemingly established in opposition
to the more legitimate shops upon the inner side of the pavement.
Jewish hawkers, many of them in their shirt-sleeves, acclaimed the rarity of the bargains
which they had to offer; and, allowing for the difference of costume, these tireless
Israelites, heedless of climatic conditions, sweating at their mongery, might well have
stood, not in a squalid London thoroughfare, but in an equally squalid market-street of the
Orient.
They offered linen and fine raiment; from footgear to hair-oil their wares ranged. They
enlivened their auctioneering with conjuring tricks and witty stories, selling watches by
the aid of legerdemain, and fancy vests by grace of a seasonable anecdote.
Poles, Russians, Serbs, Roumanians, Jews of Hungary, and Italians of Whitechapel
mingled in the throng. Near East and Far East rubbed shoulders. Pidgin English contested
with Yiddish for the ownership of some tawdry article offered by an auctioneer whose
nationality defied conjecture, save that always some branch of his ancestry had drawn
nourishment from the soil of Eternal Judea.
Some wearing mens' caps, some with shawls thrown over their oily locks, and some,
more true to primitive instincts, defying, bare- headed, the unkindly elements, bedraggled
women--more often than not burdened with muffled infants--crowded the pavements and
the roadway, thronged about the stalls like white ants about some choicer carrion.
And the fine drizzling rain fell upon all alike, pattering upon the hood of the taxi-cab,
trickling down the front windows; glistening upon the unctuous hair of those in the street
who were hatless; dewing the bare arms of the auctioneers, and dripping, melancholy,
from the tarpaulin coverings of the stalls. Heedless of the rain above and of the mud
beneath, North, South, East, and West mingled their cries, their bids, their blandishments,
their raillery, mingled their persons in that joyless throng.
Sometimes a yellow face showed close to one of the streaming windows; sometimes a
black-eyed, pallid face, but never a face wholly sane and healthy. This was an
underworld where squalor and vice went hand in hand through the beautiless streets, a