Page:The queen's museum, and other fanciful tales.djvu/15

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

of the people were sent to prison, and as there was not room enough for them in the ordinary jails, large temporary prisons were erected in various parts of the city. Those persons who were actually needed for work or service which no one else could do were allowed to come out in the daytime on parole; but at night they had to return to their prisons.

It was during this deplorable state of affairs that a stranger entered the city one day. He was surprised at seeing so many prisons, and approaching the window in one of them, behind the bars of which he saw a very respectable-looking citizen, he asked what all this meant. The citizen informed him how matters stood, and then, with tears mounting to his eyes, he added:

'Oh, sir, I have tried my best to be interested in that museum; but it is impossible; I cannot make myself care for it in

7