A man
named James Connor of Castle
Street was found dead in his ‘residence’ by the police and the
circumstances surrounding the tragedy show that a very low state of
civilization must have existed in the case of the deceased.
The condition
in which the deceased was found would, if exhibited realistically to the
public, produce a shock. The houses in
the close off Castle Street
in which he lived were let at the great sum of 1s per week. The tenements comprise kitchen, with a ladder
leading to a loft, which in each house is over the kitchen of the next
house. The deceased occupied one of
these hovels alone, and paid his shilling each week. He was a man of between 60 an 70 years of age
with a long beard, and his figure was well known in town as that of a man who
earned a precarious livelihood gathering bottles, rags etc for re-sale. When
trade was good the old man could get by; when trade was bad the neighbours in
kindness supplied out of their poverty some meagre fare, for none understand
hunger and wretchedness like the poor; none know its sorrows so well, therefore
none are so quick to relieve.
He was
tenant of the ‘house’ mentioned, and he held it under a respectable local landlord who
never foreclosed so long as the shilling a week came through the agent. The old man never seemed able to gather furniture
together for his own use, for on arrival of the police the place was bare.
The
neighbours yesterday missed the old man, and rapped for him; he came not, and
the police were sent for. Here is what
they saw.
Having
entered the house and ascended the ladder, the upper room was found to be in
darkness. The flickering of a match revealed
the spectacle of a corpse lying on the boards, completely naked. The head was turned towards the door, and fixed
in death on the features was a look of mute appeal: the beard covered part of
the chest, the arms were flung out, one partly upraised, one leg was propped
against the wall, the other was curled up: the whole was a photograph of the
soul’s struggle to leave even an unworthy tenement.
A few empty bottles stood in the corner,
evidently part of the deceased’s stock-in-trade. The window was plugged up with rags and paper, for the glass had long
since gone. There was a sickening odour
in the small room. In the corner of the
room were four sanitary receptacles and the contents of these gave off sickening
effluvia, so much so that the police were nauseated.
Is the
picture strong enough? The emaciated body, naked as when born, no signs of food
or fire, no provision to contain either - just a corpse, a few bottles, and the
other things. From the room below,
occupied by another family, a view could be had of part of the body, for there
were spaces between the floor boards, and there was no ceiling below.
The
deceased was last out on Saturday, and had since been supplied with tea etc by
the neighbours. The houses of which the
deceased’s formed one would probably be described on an auction bill as a “desirable” property. There will be no occasion to close up this
house so far as Connor is concerned.
Death has evicted him.
You will not find writing like that in today's Newry Reporter.