Jersey Street and Jersey Lane, by 
H. C. Bunner 
 
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Title: Jersey Street and Jersey Lane Urban and Suburban Sketches 
Author: H. C. Bunner 
Illustrator: A. B. Frost B. West Clinedinst Irving R. Wiles Kenneth 
Frazier 
Release Date: May 24, 2007 [EBook #21597] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JERSEY 
STREET AND JERSEY LANE *** 
 
Produced by Janet Blenkinship and The Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced 
from images generously made available by The Internet 
Archive/American Libraries.)
JERSEY STREET AND JERSEY LANE 
URBAN AND SUBURBAN SKETCHES 
BY H. C. BUNNER 
ILLUSTRATED BY A. B. FROST, B. WEST CLINEDINST, IRVING 
R. WILES AND KENNETH FRAZIER 
[Illustration: A TANGLED PATH] 
NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1896 
COPYRIGHT, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER'S 
SONS 
Press of J. J. Little & Co. Astor Place, New York 
* * * * * 
TO 
A. L. B. 
* * * * * 
CONTENTS 
JERSEY AND MULBERRY 1 
TIEMANN'S TO TUBBY HOOK 33 
THE BOWERY AND BOHEMIA 67 
THE STORY OF A PATH 99 
THE LOST CHILD 135
A LETTER TO TOWN 175 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
"A tangled path" FRONTISPIECE 
"The old lady sat down and wrote that letter" 6 
"Sometimes a woman with a shawl over her head * * * exchanges a few 
words with him" 9 
"And down in the big, red chair big sister plunks little sister" 12 
"Then there is Mamie, the pretty girl in the window" 14 
"And plays on the Italian bagpipes" 16 
"A Jewish sweater with coats on his shoulder" 20 
"Glass-put-in man" 21 
"Poor woman with market-basket" 21 
"A Chinaman who stalks on with no expression at all" 24 
"The children are dancing" 25 
"The girl you loved was * * * really grown up and too old for you" 36 
"A few of the old family estates were kept up after a fashion" 40 
"A random goat of poverty" 41 
"The paint works that had paid for its building" 45 
"A mansion imposing still in spite of age" 49 
"She wound the great, tall, white columns with these strips" 53
"Here also was a certain dell" 57 
"The railroad embankment beyond which lay the pretty, blue Hudson" 
59 
"The wreck of the woods where I used to scramble" 60 
"A little enclosure that is called a park" 63 
"It was a very pretty young lady who opened the door" 64 
"An old gentleman from Rondout-on-the-Hudson" 70 
"Young gentlemen sitting in a pot-house at high noon" 72 
"A gentleman permanently in temporary difficulties" 74 
"A jackal is a man generally of good address" 81 
"The Bowery is the most marvellous thoroughfare in the world" 85 
"More and stranger wares than uptown people ever heard of" 89 
"Probably the edibles are in the majority" 91 
"The Polish Jews with their back-yards full of chickens" 93 
"The Anarchist Russians" 94 
"The Scandinavians of all sorts who come up from the wharfs" 96 
"Through the rich man's country" 108 
"A convenient way through the woods" 112 
"The lonely old trapper who had dwelt on that mountain" 114 
"Malvina Dodd * * * took the winding track that her husband had laid 
out" 118
"Here the old man would sit down and wait" 120 
"He did a little grading with a mattock" 121 
"The laborers found it and took it" 125 
"The tinkers * * * and the rest of the old-time gentry of the road" 128 
"I used to go down that path on the dead run" 131 
"'I'm Latimer,' said the man on the horse" 139 
"That boy of Penrhyn's--the little one with the yellow hair" 143 
"Lanterns and hand lamps dimly lit up faces" 149 
"The river, the river,--oh, my boy!" 152 
"The father leaned forward and clutched the arms of his chair" 155 
"They had just met after a long beat" 164 
"Half a dozen men naked to the waist scrubbing themselves" 167 
"The mother knew that her lost child was found" 173 
"The desperate young men of the bachelor apartments" 180 
"The hot, lifeless days of summer in your town house" 183 
"'That's no Johnny-jumper!'" 185 
"Other local troubles" 189 
"You send for Pat Brannigan" 192 
"A little plain strip of paper headed 'Memorandum of sale'" 200
JERSEY AND MULBERRY 
I found this letter and comment in an evening paper, some time ago, 
and I cut the slip out and kept it for its cruelty: 
TO THE EDITOR OF    
    
		
	
	
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